collections.mun.cacollections.mun.ca/pdfs/dailynews/thedailynewsstjohnsnl...i inson t.c.,...

16
I INSON t.c., LIMiTED est Big. Three Wants ·Parley With . . . I WEATHER REPORJ' THE 'DAlLY NEWS PI:ESJ::N'l'S t RAVEL . ' .... aullable at with occasion rain. High tci•Y 62. Vol. 63. No, 233 ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER .19, 1956 (Price' 5 cents) Charles Hutton & Sons esl Ponders hcv Visit 0 .TollS 1:.\m.r. , LGR IDE 1 nrutrrsl - "est· !E hm HC ponderins /.Jp.. · rca•ons for plrtY . I'ISit to ·icl lcailrr i.< due here thr ,,(hcial reason Is 1 n . ";; few da,·s .pen<. .. in 1\'e>tcrn dip· liCTC, hoWCI'Cr, rl' would not l'lslt . , he wanted to · di>cmsions with .... , 1 ,h,t ·,,_,, here In lila)' an .l'isit; to· , Pmmer Niko· Tilt: nnt:.\l'H r:.;i: rc•ullrd !n henl.ing the between and .,,i;' 11·:1 ich opened when .. ' "a• expelled from 1 of the rna· E ... 1 ,ran Communist pHtlesl •• i -inl·c ha' been ; •• an.i T1tn " high!)• re· ·'•i . .;', t 1 ror:r• ro1· Khn1shchev's ' m bc:n: mentioned In \\'est· · · H; ;.' 1 :i to .muoth Ol'er a ; ..• •• o' under the ·: .. the So1·ict and (ommuni;t parties. rozn•n rints in Poland 1:1r nu.1sians, reports, hal'e Is· to East European or . · too quicklj·. rc?lTtrd adl·icc Is said to annoyance in Bel· to the theory, 11ishes to cap(. ar,Ji \\'estern · feeling man1 Asian and Air!· b)· the Suez Canal ;cs. who ar: b.r •Prcial plane frnm Cairo Ib:ut SO other employees of n:al told reporters E;!ptianc 11oulrl nm into their rul difficulties in October, 1 mi!ty month on the ca· !mplo)rel told reporters a1Jo11 to bring only II uf luggage and francs fi56J with them. The cl. their assets had been b Egypl. Sm Canal Company an· that pilots returning from wilt be on leave f pay until a decision on lture is taktn. , SPEAKS AT CAMPAIGN KICK·OFF-Getlysburg. Pa.-l'resldent ·Eisenhower .Is shown addressing:.. some 500 top GOP leaders who, gathered at the' Chle! Executive's Gettysburg farni for-a rally that officially klcked:Of£ his re-election campaign. The President made a frank and parUsan,_plca for election on a note of "get out ·the vote-or else".-IN Photo. Hicks· Set$ ·Nova Scotia Election For Octo·ber 30 BULLETIN HALU'AX (CP) .- Premier Henry Hicks, going to the ,polls for the first time as .leader of Nova Scotia's Liberal government announced Tuesday night· that .a provincial general election will be held Oct, 30 ... This ended weeks of speculation that an election would be held sometime this !aU. The pre'mier's announcement that the 43 provincial seats will be contested came a few hours alter he returned from Bar ·Harbor, Me., where lie attended an eco· nomic development conference. Reporters were summoned to his office at 8 p.m. ADT; . The 43 seats at stake time arc six more than were. in the legislature when the last election was 'held May 26, 19j3 and when Premier Angus L. Macdonald led the _"Liberal government to re·elec· tlon. . . Standings after that election were, Liberals 23, Progressive Con. servatives 12, CCF two, Present standings are: Liberal 19, PC 13, CCF · two, vacant three, PREftllER ·IN 195( The six new seats were "added at the 1955 session of .the leg!sla· .ture. 1 Liberals liavc been In power since 1933 In Nova Scotia. , Premier Hicks, leading the gov. el'llmcnl lo the poUs for the first time, look over his oUic1l In Sept. 1951, after t·hc death Mr. Mac· donald. T'rcvlously he was educa t!_on mln!st!ll'• . The election announcement was no surprise to most Nova Scotians. Oct. 30and Nov, 6 had been men· 'lion for ,several weeks as the probable dales and while such speculation was never confirmed, it was never discounted. ' 'l'he Progressive Consevatives under R, L, Stanfield have ,1. ready b.egun campaigning and the CCF under Michael MacDonald, also lndicate•d they were expecting an early election, ' · Waiit6 · Ex change Fisheries USSia enttsts, 81 H. L. Press Stall Writer !CP) - wants scientists with Canada •and modern Canadian fish· equIp m c n t for the her own industry, So. Alexander With. mated to be worth 'about $200,000 pan led him across the country, 'Mr. Ishkov said he had seen In apiece-would depend on outcome and his deputy, George Clark, for Canada the most modern type of of . trials· Of the vessel and the the WCII·Organlzed tour and kind fish-processing equipment, Which· price and conditions laid down by treatment he had received. · Russia could adopt. He. felt Can· the .Vancouver builders. · The Russian minister wlll spend ada's fishing Industry, both in pro· Asked abou't' the posslb!lltlcs of two .days at the Russian Embassy duction and processing, had a a visit here by Premier Bulganln here before going to Montreal to great future. . . pit or. LONDON (CP) - The Western Big Three agreed Tuesday night to seck working arrangements with Egypt to share control of Suez Canal traffic as a step to- ward pcacefuf settlement of the crisis. . . U.S. State Secretary Dulles un· dcrtook to Jaunch the American· British-French project for an 18· nation association of canal users at the second London Suez con· ference opening today. . . Dulles w!U outline the plan, em- phasizing Its peaceful purpose, be· fore diplomats of the 18 ni!tions representing 90 to 95 Per cent of shiping, through the canal. The talks will open at 11 a.m. (7 a.m. ADT) in 'Lancaster House under chairmanship of Foreign Secre. tary Selwyn Lloyd, There was· an unmistakable mood of skepticism and even some opposition · to the proposed users' ontro ana I JISIS ett ement ,., association as foreign ministers lots last Friday has ended and and special· envoys assembled in that the· traffic situation in the this capital. T)Jc same 18 nations waterway "is returning t11 nor· had backed last month the Dul- mal." lcs plan for International control Dulles conferred Tuesday night of the canal, which Egypt's Presi- on financial aspects of the Suez dent Nasser rejected Ieven as a issue with Harold Macmillaq basis for negotiation. chancellor of the exchequer. ISSUEs· CHALLENGII: Informed sources said Prime As If to underline the doubts, Minister Eden asked Dulles ear· one of the bosses of the ,Egyptian licr in the day about. the extent Suez Canal Authority sent. forth of American assistance available what secme·d to be a challenge if ships of Western nations were to the organizers of the users' as· around the Cape of Good sociation, Hope. · Managing director Mahmoud NO AGREEMENT lions [f their supplies through the canalt become "impractical." In Washington Tuesday it was announced the United States Is set- ting up plans to ship from 500,. 000 to 1,100,000 additional barrels of oil daily to West Europe !or sale if llliddle East o!) supplies are interrupted. Should Egypt refuse to co-oper· ate in tlic Western plan, the Big Three is counting on support from the 15 others for United Nations intervention in the dispute. APPEAL TO UN Yunis, speaking In the canal half· Dulles denied in Washington The UN would be asked to en· way house port of Ismaliia, was Monday that the Unitecl Stales dorse a resolution condemning asked by reporters what would plans to finance diversion of ships Nasser's regime and asking it to happen if the association tried to 1 from the Suez or had agreed to restore the international character send ships thiough Suez with their provide $,;00,000,000 to . help gov- of the canal he. took over July 26 own pilots. crnments meet their oil needs. from the old Suez Canal Co. them Yunis retorted.! He said only that the United 1 The Big Three are conlidcnt of Yun1s declared the crisis .set is. prepared to finance Am· I the support of the majority of UN by a mass w<!.lkout of foreign PI· !!r1can 011 exports to Western na. members for such a resolution. Pilo·t Problem Solved, Says Egypt; She Can-and Will-Run Waterway PORT SAID (Rcutcrs)-Egypt the canal, Yunis replied: "Let Tuesday to have solved them try." · the Suez .Canal pilot crisis and in· Since the nationalized canal sislcd she can-and will-run the 1 started operating without Euro· vital gaterway by, herself. pean pilots last Saturday, 144 Twenty American pilots have i ships have passed through the answered Egypt's world-wide call waterway-about 65 per cent of for experienced foreign pl!ots to them tankers. replace those who walked off-their This is about a drop of 12.5 per jobs last Friday, according to cent In the average daily figure compared to the average main·! company, scizet! by Egypt July 26, taincd between nationalization and! hoped shorUy to return to the last Friday. · 1 regular system of three ·convoys MAY NOT ARRIVE · I a day through the canal instead Yunis said many American:; 1 of the present two. have applied for pilot jobs with Canal authorities earlier an· the Egyptian authority, but he nounced that 31 shlps-16 south. didn't know ''whether they will bound and . 15 northbound-were come or if they will be stopped." passing through the canal Tucs· He said the nationalized canal day. .. Egypt's canal chief. Col. Matimoud Yunis, director· general of the canal, told a press conference that 14 Russian pilots have started training and might be called upon to guide American , warships through the waterway. "We arc .neutral and treat ev. erybody the same way.'' he said. U •. S. · Drafts· Emergency Plans Ship Oil Supplies To Europ_e ALL NEED PILOTS . By JOHN SCALI I would come mainly from Texas, ' Secretary Dulles said last week, All ships passing· through the WASHINGTON (AP) - Th c Louisiana, Oklahoma and New I Stewart reported no American canal "must ask for a pilot from United States has drafted em erg. Mexico as part of a nearly-com· 1 tankers laid up in mothball fleets our organization," said Yun!s, in': Mcy plans for rushing from 500, pletcd plan to avert "slow pet.. have yet been ordered recondit· rercrenec to the West's proposed 000 to 1,100,000 barrels "Of Amcri· rolcum starvation" in Western ioned for the possible task ahead. canal users' "l!ssochition which can oil to Europe each day in Europe. Stewart made it clear European would run ships through the ca· event the Suez crisis slows down ·H. A. Stewart, director of the cuunlries would be asked to pay . nal, using Its own pilots. oil deliveries from the Middle interior department's gas and oil in dollars for emergency oil sup. Asked what would happen if the East. division, said the advance plan plies. users association tried to sail\ A government oil spokesman ning is based on belief prompt ac i "They'll either arrange it or ships with their 0 wn pilots' through said these emergency oil supplies lion will be necessary in the event i they won't get the oil," he said. that one or both of these develop·! Dulles said Mmiday that he was P .llo· ts 'Bow For Crow'ds' rnents enter into the Suez picture: I con!ident the governments EX· 1, Western European nations de.: !JOrt-lmporl Bank would find it ap. · cidc to avoid U1c Suez .Canal, semi· I propriatc to make loans to dollar. . PORT SAID (neuters stevedores, dockworkers and of. ing tankers. carrying oil on the 1 short European countries in an; ian pilots bowed and· waved from lice workers roared out I heir ton::er route around Africa. I such emergency. , the bridges ar vessels passinel greetings. 2. The flow of oil through Mid. Stewart said a survey has dis. through the Suez Canal here Tues. The crowds waved, clapped an;! die East pipe Jines is dosed the United States has · a day to the cheers shouted. Many of them raced by Arahs rallying lo Eg')'pt's side 1 1 "comfortable surplus" of oil cap- and applause of crowds of their along the waterfront lo keep BIG BOTTLENECK acity amounting to 2,250,000 bar· countrymen lining the harbor. with the ships as they glided At a press conference, Stewart rels daily which could be put into As each vessel moved towards the entrance· or the 103 mlle waterway, Egyptian sloll'ly along; · acknowledged transportation diffi· production quickly. . Each pilot doffed his cap to the I c'ultics arc the •'bigscst bottle· . Europe's needs could be mel, lit crowds and some bowed ·as if they neck" to be sQlved in the oil sbip·l said, without resorting to gas ra. were taking a curtain ca11. ment plan. Contrary to what State tioning in the United States, and com m•u n Is t party chief take of! Thursday for Russia by F!shst!cks ·now were manufac- Khrushchev, the Russian minister air, The remainder of the party- tured In Russia. But Canadian said they do a .Jot of travelling deputy minister I, M. Semlnov, equipment was more modern. Be· but he did not know of any lm· deputy minister A. M. Verevkln cause of this he had given the Tor· mediate plans to visit and P, A. Moiseyev who acled as onto firm a letter of Intent to pur· The press conference wound up lnlllrpreter-le!t Tuesday night for chase between 10 and 15 ·· _,..., •• a trip which began In Newfound· .Halifax to board the • Russian picted Iish stick manufacturing . )and Aug; 22 for Mr. Ishkov and trawler brought U1em to lines which take the raw fish· with Fish. his rour-man party. He. paid tri· Canada. and turn It out and lllhster Sinclair about pos· bute to Mr •. sinclair, who ac.com- METHODS MORE MODERN ready for usc. ; Ut.ange of Canadian and R d A·-f. la"nl .[nsnected. B_ -e s.·. I aclhe salmon. He had . r .J :ut possible accl!matfza. · · · , uss!an sturgeon In Cana· By JOHN E. BIRD last Yl!ar. 000,000, Ontario. Hydro $3,500,000. •• I. tlui:rs and Canadian lobster Canadlaa Press. Staff Writer The Communist diplomats will ani! Canadian General Electric n waters OTTAWA (CP)'-Canada's once be part of a l!Z·member d!plo· $2,000,000. · . ;' had · t secret atomic energy project matte party which will visit the E:xpectcd to be In operation In T given a letter of Intent op 111 b i project today after attending cer· m!d·195D the plant will generate or1nll) firm for pur h f at Chalk River, Ont., w e n. , ·lUck manufact . c ase 0 'spected 'today for the first time emonles marking the start of con· , about 20,000 kilowatts of electric: thith equ$41p. by representatives of Communist structlon of Canada's It will not produce electricity to S3.00Q 000 Th m • countries. • . , power project, , economically but will give sclen: ronsuuatlr•n;' with crj hatd But Russian Ambassador Dmitri SEE TWO REAcrORS tlsts the• !nformaton they need to other Canadla v ew 1 ° s: h u v a h 1 n, Czechoslovakian The experimental power plant build· large atomic stations cap. an equ P' Minister . OSL-NIFOKRUS A Yu· will. be built at the· site of the On· able of producing power In compe· Js•L goslav Ambassador Obrad M, Cfc. tarlo: hydro electric power com· tiUon with plants powered by con· u..ov, llho began his car mil will i!Ot see anything that ls mission's Des Jonchims generating, ventional thermal fuels. 1 manage 1 t 1 d bll knowledge station on the Ottawa River some · . r n Russia's no .a rea Y pu c . 150 miles northwest of Ottawa. The. NRX reactor and NRU, t. ustry, said he was Little of the research,belng .con. The station -.'to be known as code name for a new high-power ad new-type trawler ducted at the cbaiic. River plant nuclear 'power demonstr.atlon-is ·experimental reactor now under . and .. r on the Pacific Into peacetime uses or afomic·cn· being. built .by Ontario Hydro, construction, will bc.shown to the htd liJ fuould not object it ergy , Is classllled. The security Atomic Eneray of Canada Ltd. vl.s!tors. NRX In opera· tr.xns OS em." wraps ori. such Jnformatlo.n were and. Canad!anP General Slcclr!c at linn since and. NRU is CX· PI' RICE removed In great, part at the Inter. cost of $14,500,000. Atomic En·. Mpected ln be operalmg by the end so 01 e .rl '!!!Ia woulr! pur· national conference on » of 0 the uses of atomic energy ·at a crgy of Canada will cOntribute $9,· ' the year. !·. -, . .. 'l J NASSER TELLS· CADETS EGYPT TO DEFEND RIGHTS "AT ANY COST"-Calro, Egypt.-E.gyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser is shown in this radiopb.oto. as he addrcs<cd Air Fol'.cl! Cadets at Bilbcis. Nasser that. Egypt will defend her l'hl.hts t the suez Canal "at any cost-to the last drop of our blood' He attacked the British ant! French for the walkoul ?f f:Jretgn , declaring' "1 accuse the British· Fre11ch '1 Lloyd ( Foreig!} ,lumsclf_.lor , Instigating this mass walkout ... in the hope of bri!lging llon .. of the Canal to· a stan.dsllll. the .. emphaolzed. his country's readiness to· neg(Jtiale any settlement which was uot imposed by wh01l he termed "ampcnahstlc cond1hons photo . \f ... I ·. \ l I '. j' I i I: •, i I I I I. :r.

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I

INSON t.c., cq~.:r?A'f{ LIMiTED

est Big. Three Wants ·Parley With . . .

I

WEATHER REPORJ' THE 'DAlLY NEWS PI:ESJ::N'l'S t

RAVEL . ' .... aullable at f)~ud~ with occasion rain. High

tci•Y 62. Vol. 63. No, 233 ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER .19, 1956 (Price' 5 cents) • Charles Hutton & Sons

esl Ponders hcv Visit

0 Yu~oslavia •~ .TollS 1:.\m.r. ,

LGR IDE 1 nrutrrsl - "est· !E ,,~ah hm HC ponderins

/.Jp.. · rca•ons for nu~sian plrtY rhi.~f ~.lklla

. "pdl'~tc I'ISit to

~ ·icl lcailrr i.< due here • 1~ thr ,,(hcial reason Is 1n . • ";; few da,·s .pen<. .. •

in 1\'e>tcrn dip· liCTC, hoWCI'Cr, ~~

rl' would not l'lslt . , he wanted to

· ~ di>cmsions with

.... ,1,h,t ·,,_,, here In lila)' r~r an ~lficial .l'isit; to· , ~l'irt Pmmer Niko·

Tilt: nnt:.\l'H r:.;i: rc•ullrd !n henl.ing the

between Rll~!la and .,,i;' 11·:1ich opened when .. ' ;t~lc "a• expelled from

1 :rr•Jpin~ of the rna· E ... 1,ran Communist pHtlesl

•• ~ i

i?:\,m:~!nnn -inl·c ha' been ; •• , 1 ~. an.i T1tn " high!)• re· ·'•i 1 ~ ~lo.=ro1r . .;', t1ror:r• ro1· Khn1shchev's ' m bc:n: mentioned In \\'est·

c··;·'t"~ · · H; ;.'1:i ir~ to .muoth Ol'er a ; ..• •• o' r~lation> under the ·: .. ··;~t·.~crn the So1·ict and

(ommuni;t parties. rozn•n rints in Poland

1:1r nu.1sians, a~· reports, hal'e Is·

to East European th~ dan~crs or

. · too quicklj·. rc?lTtrd adl·icc Is said to

~r"Hkrd annoyance in Bel·

~:~,h~hrr. ac~ordlng to the theory, 11ishes to cap(. ar,Ji • \\'estern · feeling man1 Asian and Air!·

b)· the Suez Canal

i::;;r~lt·tJ~;r'no~ ;cs. who ar: b.r •Prcial plane frnm Cairo Ib:ut SO other employees of

n:al ~ompan:·. told reporters E;!ptianc 11oulrl nm into their rul difficulties in October,

1 mi!ty month on the ca·

!mplo)rel told reporters a1Jo11 ~ci to bring only

II !lC'Jn~! uf luggage and francs fi56J with them. The

cl. their assets had been b Egypl. Sm Canal Company an·

that pilots returning from wilt be ~ent on leave

f pay until a decision on lture is taktn.

,

• SPEAKS AT CAMPAIGN KICK·OFF-Getlysburg. Pa.-l'resldent ·Eisenhower .Is shown addressing:.. some 500 top GOP leaders who, gathered at the' Chle! Executive's Gettysburg farni for-a rally that officially klcked:Of£ his re-election campaign. The President made a frank and parUsan,_plca for r~~o election on a note of "get out ·the vote-or else".-IN Photo.

Hicks· Set$ ·Nova Scotia Election For Octo·ber 30

BULLETIN HALU'AX (CP) .- Premier

Henry Hicks, going to the ,polls for the first time as .leader of Nova Scotia's Liberal government announced Tuesday night· that .a provincial general election will be held Oct, 30 ...

This ended weeks of speculation that an election would be held sometime this !aU.

The pre'mier's announcement that the 43 provincial seats will be contested came a few hours alter he returned from Bar ·Harbor, Me., where lie attended an eco· nomic development conference. Reporters were summoned to his office at 8 p.m. ADT; .

The 43 seats at stake thl~ time arc six more than were. in the legislature when the last election was 'held May 26, 19j3 and when Premier Angus L. Macdonald led the _"Liberal government to re·elec· tlon. . .

Standings after that election were, Liberals 23, Progressive Con. servatives 12, CCF two, Present standings are: Liberal 19, PC 13, CCF · two, vacant three, PREftllER ·IN 195(

The six new seats were "added at the 1955 session of .the leg!sla· .ture. 1

Liberals liavc been In power since 1933 In Nova Scotia. , Premier Hicks, leading the gov.

el'llmcnl lo the poUs for the first time, look over his oUic1l In Sept. 1951, after t·hc death ~r Mr. Mac· donald. T'rcvlously he was educa t!_on mln!st!ll'• .

The election announcement was no surprise to most Nova Scotians. Oct. 30and Nov, 6 had been men· 'lion for , several weeks as the probable dales and while such speculation was never confirmed, it was never discounted.

' 'l'he Progressive Consevatives

under R, L, Stanfield have ,1. ready b.egun campaigning and the CCF under Michael MacDonald, also lndicate•d they were expecting an early election, ' ·

Waiit6 · Ex change Fisheries • USSia • • enttsts, 81 H. L. JO~ES

Press Stall Writer !CP) - Russi~ wants

li~heries scientists with Canada •and

modern Canadian fish· equIp m c n t for the her own industry, So.

~linister Alexander

With. Ca~tfa.da mated to be worth 'about $200,000 pan led him across the country, 'Mr. Ishkov said he had seen In apiece-would depend on outcome and his deputy, George Clark, for Canada the most modern type of of . trials· Of the vessel and the the WCII·Organlzed tour and kind fish-processing equipment, Which· price and conditions laid down by treatment he had received. · Russia could adopt. He. felt Can· the .Vancouver builders. · The Russian minister wlll spend ada's fishing Industry, both in pro·

Asked abou't' the posslb!lltlcs of two .days at the Russian Embassy duction and processing, had a a visit here by Premier Bulganln here before going to Montreal to great future. . .

pit or.

LONDON (CP) - The Western Big Three agreed Tuesday night to seck working arrangements with Egypt to share control of Suez Canal traffic as a step to­ward pcacefuf settlement of the crisis. . .

U.S. State Secretary Dulles un· dcrtook to Jaunch the American· British-French project for an 18· nation association of canal users at the second London Suez con· ference opening today. . .

Dulles w!U outline the plan, em­phasizing Its peaceful purpose, be· fore diplomats of the 18 ni!tions representing 90 to 95 Per cent of shiping, through the canal. The talks will open at 11 a.m. (7 a.m. ADT) in 'Lancaster House under chairmanship of Foreign Secre. tary Selwyn Lloyd,

There was· an unmistakable mood of skepticism and even some opposition · to the proposed users'

ontro ana • • I

JISIS ett ement ,.,

association as foreign ministers lots last Friday has ended and and special· envoys assembled in that the· traffic situation in the this capital. T)Jc same 18 nations waterway "is returning t11 nor· had backed last month the Dul- mal." lcs plan for International control Dulles conferred Tuesday night of the canal, which Egypt's Presi- on financial aspects of the Suez dent Nasser rejected Ieven as a issue with Harold Macmillaq basis for negotiation. chancellor of the exchequer. ISSUEs· CHALLENGII: Informed sources said Prime

As If to underline the doubts, Minister Eden asked Dulles ear· one of the bosses of the ,Egyptian licr in the day about. the extent Suez Canal Authority sent. forth of American assistance available what secme·d to be a challenge if ships of Western nations were to the organizers of the users' as· devert~d around the Cape of Good sociation, • Hope. ·

Managing director Mahmoud NO AGREEMENT

lions [f their supplies through the canalt become "impractical."

In Washington Tuesday it was announced the United States Is set­ting up plans to ship from 500,. 000 to 1,100,000 additional barrels of oil daily to West Europe !or sale if llliddle East o!) supplies are interrupted.

Should Egypt refuse to co-oper· ate in tlic Western plan, the Big Three is counting on support from the 15 others for United Nations intervention in the dispute.

APPEAL TO UN Yunis, speaking In the canal half· Dulles denied in Washington The UN would be asked to en· way house port of Ismaliia, was Monday that the Unitecl Stales dorse a resolution condemning asked by reporters what would plans to finance diversion of ships Nasser's regime and asking it to happen if the association tried to

1

from the Suez or had agreed to restore the international character send ships thiough Suez with their provide $,;00,000,000 to . help gov- of the canal he. took over July 26 own pilots. crnments meet their oil needs. from the old Suez Canal Co. "Lc~ them try,~' Yunis retorted.! He said only that the United 1 The Big Three are conlidcnt of Yun1s declared the crisis .set o~f St~tes is. prepared to finance Am· I the support of the majority of UN

by a mass w<!.lkout of foreign PI· !!r1can 011 exports to Western na. members for such a resolution.

Pilo·t Problem Solved, Says Egypt; She Can-and Will-Run Waterway

PORT SAID (Rcutcrs)-Egypt the canal, Yunis replied: "Let cl~imed Tuesday to have solved them try." · the Suez .Canal pilot crisis and in· Since the nationalized canal sislcd she can-and will-run the

1

started operating without Euro· vital gaterway by, herself. pean pilots last Saturday, 144

Twenty American pilots have i ships have passed through the answered Egypt's world-wide call waterway-about 65 per cent of for experienced foreign pl!ots to them tankers. replace those who walked off-their This is about a drop of 12.5 per jobs last Friday, according to cent In the average daily figure

compared to the average main·! company, scizet! by Egypt July 26, taincd between nationalization and! hoped shorUy to return to the last Friday. · 1 regular system of three ·convoys MAY NOT ARRIVE · I a day through the canal instead

Yunis said many American:; 1 of the present two. have applied for pilot jobs with Canal authorities earlier an· the Egyptian authority, but he nounced that 31 shlps-16 south. didn't know ''whether they will bound and . 15 northbound-were come or if they will be stopped." passing through the canal Tucs·

He said the nationalized canal day. .. Egypt's canal chief.

• Col. Matimoud Yunis, director· general of the canal, told a press conference that 14 Russian pilots have started training and might be called upon to guide American

, warships through the waterway. "We arc .neutral and treat ev.

erybody the same way.'' he said.

U •. S. · Drafts· Emergency Plans Ship Oil Supplies To Europ_e

ALL NEED PILOTS . By JOHN SCALI I would come mainly from Texas, ' Secretary Dulles said last week, All ships passing· through the WASHINGTON (AP) - Th c Louisiana, Oklahoma and New I Stewart reported no American

canal "must ask for a pilot from United States has drafted em erg. Mexico as part of a nearly-com· 1 tankers laid up in mothball fleets our organization," said Yun!s, in': Mcy plans for rushing from 500, pletcd plan to avert "slow pet.. have yet been ordered recondit· rercrenec to the West's proposed 000 to 1,100,000 barrels "Of Amcri· rolcum starvation" in Western ioned for the possible task ahead. canal users' "l!ssochition which can oil to Europe each day in Europe. Stewart made it clear European would run ships through the ca· event the Suez crisis slows down ·H. A. Stewart, director of the cuunlries would be asked to pay . nal, using Its own pilots. oil deliveries from the Middle interior department's gas and oil in dollars for emergency oil sup.

Asked what would happen if the East. division, said the advance plan plies. users association tried to sail\ A government oil spokesman ning is based on belief prompt ac i "They'll either arrange it or ships with their 0 wn pilots' through said these emergency oil supplies lion will be necessary in the event i they won't get the oil," he said.

that one or both of these develop·! Dulles said Mmiday that he was

P.llo· ts 'Bow For Crow'ds' rnents enter into the Suez picture: I con!ident the governments EX· 1, Western European nations de.: !JOrt-lmporl Bank would find it ap.

· • cidc to avoid U1c Suez .Canal, semi· I propriatc to make loans to dollar. . PORT SAID (neuters )-E~YPt· stevedores, dockworkers and of. ing tankers. carrying oil on the 1 short European countries in an; ian pilots bowed and· waved from lice workers roared out I heir ton::er route around Africa. I such emergency. , the bridges ar vessels passinel greetings. 2. The flow of oil through Mid. Stewart said a survey has dis. through the Suez Canal here Tues. The crowds waved, clapped an;! die East pipe Jines is ~isruptcd dosed the United States has · a day to ll:kno~~ledge the cheers shouted. Many of them raced by Arahs rallying lo Eg')'pt's side

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1 "comfortable surplus" of oil cap­and applause of crowds of their along the waterfront lo keep pac~ BIG BOTTLENECK acity amounting to 2,250,000 bar· countrymen lining the harbor. with the ships as they glided At a press conference, Stewart rels daily which could be put into

As each vessel moved towards the entrance· or the 103 • mlle waterway, Egyptian workm~n,

sloll'ly along; · acknowledged transportation diffi· production quickly. . Each pilot doffed his cap to the I c'ultics arc the •'bigscst bottle· . Europe's needs could be mel, lit

crowds and some bowed ·as if they neck" to be sQlved in the oil sbip·l said, without resorting to gas ra. were taking a curtain ca11. ment plan. Contrary to what State tioning in the United States,

and com m•u n Is t party chief take of! Thursday for Russia by F!shst!cks ·now were manufac­Khrushchev, the Russian minister air, The remainder of the party- tured In Russia. But Canadian said they do a .Jot of travelling deputy minister I, M. Semlnov, equipment was more modern. Be· but he did not know of any lm· deputy minister A. M. Verevkln cause of this he had given the Tor· mediate plans to visit r.an~da,. and P, A. Moiseyev who acled as onto firm a letter of Intent to pur·

The press conference wound up lnlllrpreter-le!t Tuesday night for chase between 10 and 15 ~om· · · _,..., •• a trip which began In Newfound· .Halifax to board the • Russian picted Iish • stick manufacturing . )and Aug; 22 for Mr. Ishkov and trawler ~hlch brought U1em to lines which take the raw fish·

\~d 1ton~cr;ations with Fish. his rour-man party. He. paid tri· Canada. and turn It out pac~aged and lllhster Sinclair about pos· bute to Mr •. sinclair, who ac.com- METHODS MORE MODERN ready for usc.

; Ut.ange of Canadian and R d Pf~;~~~~:e"~!~t~~~1a~le; A·-f. la"nl .[nsnected. B_ ~v -e s.·. I aclhe salmon. He had . r .J

:ut possible accl!matfza. · · · , ~~~ uss!an sturgeon In Cana· By JOHN E. BIRD last Yl!ar. 000,000, Ontario. Hydro $3,500,000.

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tlui:rs and Canadian lobster Canadlaa Press. Staff Writer The Communist diplomats will ani! Canadian General Electric n waters OTTAWA (CP)'-Canada's once be part of a l!Z·member d!plo· $2,000,000. · . ;'

had · t secret atomic energy project matte party which will visit the E:xpectcd to be In operation In T given a letter of Intent op 111 b i project today after attending cer· m!d·195D the plant will generate or1nll) firm for pur h f at Chalk River, Ont., w e n. , ·lUck manufact . c ase 0 'spected 'today for the first time emonles marking the start of con· , about 20,000 kilowatts of electric: thith ml~ht tot~~m!~o equ$41p. by representatives of Communist structlon of Canada's firs~ atom!~ ~ty. It will not produce electricity

to S3.00Q 000 Th m • countries. • . , power project, , economically but will give sclen: ronsuuatlr•n;' with crj hatd But Russian Ambassador Dmitri SEE TWO REAcrORS tlsts the• !nformaton they need to

other Canadla v ew 1 ° s: ~ h u v a h 1 n, Czechoslovakian The experimental power plant build· large atomic stations cap. an equ P' Minister . OSL-NIFOKRUS A Yu· will. be built at the· site of the On· able of producing power In compe·

Js•L goslav Ambassador Obrad M, Cfc. tarlo: hydro electric power com· tiUon with plants powered by con· u..ov, llho began his car mil will i!Ot see anything that ls mission's Des Jonchims generating, ventional thermal fuels. 1 manage 1 t 1 d bll knowledge station on the Ottawa River some ·

. !~d r n Russia's no . a rea Y pu c . 150 miles northwest of Ottawa. The. NRX reactor and NRU, t. ustry, said he was Little of the research,belng .con. The station -.'to be known as code name for a new high-power

dtl'~l~ ad new-type trawler ducted at the cbaiic. River plant nuclear 'power demonstr.atlon-is ·experimental reactor now under . and .. r on the Pacific Into peacetime uses or afomic·cn· being. built .by Ontario Hydro, construction, will bc.shown to the htd liJ ~r fuould not object it ergy , Is classllled. The security Atomic Eneray of Canada Ltd. vl.s!tors. NRX h~s ~ecn In opera· tr.xns OS em." wraps ori. such Jnformatlo.n were and. Canad!anP General Slcclr!c at linn since 15~7 and. NRU is CX·

~h·t~.' PI' RICE removed In great, part at the Inter. a· cost of $14,500,000. Atomic En·. Mpected ln be operalmg by the end so01e .rl '!!!Ia woulr! pur· national conference on peacetlm~ » of

0 the trui~en-eatl•, uses of atomic energy ·at Gene~ a crgy of Canada will cOntribute $9,· ' the year.

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NASSER TELLS· CADETS EGYPT TO DEFEND RIGHTS "AT ANY COST"-Calro, Egypt.-E.gyptian President Gamal Abdel Nasser is shown in this radiopb.oto. as he addrcs<cd Air Fol'.cl! Cadets at Bilbcis. Nasser ll'ar~cd that. Egypt will defend her l'hl.hts t the suez Canal "at any cost-to the last drop of our blood' He attacked the British ant! French for the walkoul ?f f:Jretgn

, p~lols, declaring' "1 accuse the British· ~nd Fre11ch govcrnmen~s. n.u~. '1 ~ccitse. Sclw~n Lloyd ( ~ritish Foreig!} Secrcla~y) ,lumsclf_.lor , Instigating this mass walkout ... in the hope of bri!lging nav1~" llon .. of the Canal to· a stan.dsllll. .Howc~e~, the ·Eg~~tlan .. emphaolzed.

his country's readiness to· neg(Jtiale any settlement which was uot imposed by wh01l he termed "ampcnahstlc cond1hons :-1~ photo .

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. .' . ,T\"IE DAILY NEWS! WEDNESO'AY, SEPT.

Th I •. ·ti· G · ! J n ' Bl • , the • Burinese ·government has l_l } · F curls and wav.es she talks cheer: H WI · D · and pubs as neighborhood gather-e ,!t e roue 1- DUrma s uepnnt pnoe!~tcerr.had, Mr. Bru.ce to,ld a I'C• ~1e p . or. . Cully to patients. Soon; they start ot water· nut ing'piaces. But In thC'luiusing es· · asking for her to visit them. tatcs people missed their rela·

Begl"ns S. cllool For The' Future I But the country or pagodas· ls Cancer ·Vl~'~tliDS . Tho ~medical and nursing staff No Fri"enJ~Ili.P lives, there was no one to turn to • no longer sntlsCied with just b~r- " · \. make requests for Ida to; go .and • H.· in an emergency and some neigh·

. - OTTAWA (CP) - Part of ·rowing technical experts from TORONTO (CPl-Wpen she left clleer np a lonely, depresse~ suf •. LONDON (CP)- Families mov·l b~rs were "toffce·noscd," or un-. WILLINGLY BUT HARDLY \VITl:l Burma's blueprint for the future other countries. Burma wants to hospital after successful elnccr fcrcr. S~mctlmes, t~e patient .has in" from the cast end of London:· fnendly. · · •· EN 'HVSIAS'I ld

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1 1 train her own technicians. t t t 1 1 d ld s k no relahves or friends to pay . " 1 · •

1 1 · , . · . 1 " is prov lng her own ec n ca . per- rcn men ,· 1n r resser a oar s .visits, and Tda tells tho special mto new !OUsmg cs a .es e.nJo> "We had expected that neigh.

sonnet,. says nn Ottawa teacher 1\lr, Bruc~ ··said 'this will be 'a wonder~d what she could do lo visiting group of th ·Toronto havlnl! hot and cold runnmg water bars would take tbn place of rela-B~· THE OLD GROUCH .who reccnUy returnell from the long term project for Burma, helP otlicr vlct!!l1s of the disease. branch of the oclety e . and other amenities, but arc W?r· tives but. in fact thls did· not GLENWOOD, Sept. l2 _ AI· colorful Far East countr~·. where science teaching now is The only .skill in·• "doctoring" s · ricd by the lack or commu!llty happ~n 1

any marked extent," lhmogh tho G"~b I• ""''' .,uy · VIol" N. B noo o, ~to•>'"' I po 1 "boook!.;h" ood "'"'m"tol op· t hot '' 0 hod w" to boolldffig " LAND 0 F orr OR TUNI'l'Y oplrit. . D, 'Yo,: • · "; d to , op oooh •~Y from homo '" mo" "" • of OPo o! tho "''"' ' '"'' '"' "~'" '"""'· m

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1 ' by ''""'"''' ood TORONI'O (CPJ - Co,.do '" D•. '"""' Yo~g,' ""''" o! ' · " · .

AAort llmo-b•rl•og ' '''" to Go~ '"""'• """ """ ' "" " • boo "1' "" tmooU, , I"' o( booodtm opportwtt••· mm mwrl ty otodto< to Loodoo'' "N olghbo" ''"' Y '"' mo" th" · d L • rl 'I h UNESCO m•otoo lo B"'mo. T<o C"'""'' ,p;ot;, t.ok "" Now mo 'h" ""'ttod 50 bolo. sto Edw"d IVII•how, '"'"'" of Botb"l G'"' ""· ,ld tbl• •" ""'' '""'"" 'ill limo of m. .

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appen· Burma's planned expansions In to advise Burmese educational of- dressers who devote every Mon~ the British Empire's largest In· shown in a three-year surv~y con· I ness, rarely looked after· children

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SURPIUSEil Tll!tr

ed that he and the two little al(rlculture, industry aDII mining rlcials on the training or science day to givinR free hair·do's In the vestment 1 r 11 s t, said Monday dueled ~mong some 1,000 persons. when the wives were out at work, ·Grouches had gone to visit a will require a consldcrnble nnm· teachers and the actual teaching cancer wards or city hospitals. night. ,The head or Cable and The new estates were cold and. rarely ever c.alled in for a sociable · neighbour Olr. and Mrs. Strong ber of technlcnl personnel which of science at all school levels. A movie ·of th'elr work was re- Wireless (Holding) Ltd., said in lacked neighborliness, he said.

1 evening .

. of St. John's, who usually spend · -dd ."But the real need is ror trained ecntly ·shown to the On tar 1 o an interview that his country is In East London, families were

BRADFORD, Engbnd' mounted policcnnn ,, .• ing his horse when h• ;~ ... with a suitc~s~ lc•p ·~,;'

"Neighbors were said to he .big. The rider j:~mped the r headed, high and might, )ealou,s

1• cornered the man, bu~d

and a cut above everybody else. ' stolen goods. s e same s rue •Or branc'b . of ·,the Canadian , Cancer about to Increase ils present Cana- on friendly terms with t eir ne1g •

·at le· asl ·part o( their sumn1er In tlui Grouch's father some sixty 0 teacher and th 1 t • · ' .. h · h their cabin down by the river), years ago, a~d its· example bas Canada and every' other country," Society, ·~ . · dian Investment of $5,500,000 by bors and each ''turning," as the

·when 1\lr. Harvey Pike, an old sprca,d to many places. . he said. · .' · As Ida. shamp!!Os, dries and.sets about $700,000. street was called, had its shops

friend ol DAILY NEWS compan· ionship, arrived for a brief call. One was disappointed· as Madame

·.Grouch had also gone on a herry· · picking trip while her yciung sis·

ter kept house. The Grouches have also had the

.: pleasure of a two-week vlsll from Madame Grouch's mother •

. . · Little Grouch has begun school. · .. One can't say that he goes "creep­. lng like a snail unwillingly to

ichool. After two days he Inform· , ed the Grouch that he was going ·to have a "holldar." It was point·

· ed out to him that by waiting '· three days more he would have , · two holidars (Saturday and Sun· ; da~·), so this assurance seemed to ; ·satisfy him: , . Asked who he bad made friends · 1\ith he comprehensively included

·•all t!1c boys and girl~". So far he ha~ hart motor transportation over the half mile or so to the school, hut ha~ been warned that

• ·ran not continue indefinite!~·. At · 'the rate he and his chum move he 1 will need to take his lunch on , . ll'ith him when he bas to usc ; . "shanks mare." 4 \\'hen the work of reconstruvt· , .Ins this section of the highway was ; ·.finished, at the bottom of the

:, ··Grouch garden was left n hu~c. deep ditch. :\lnce the recent shower of rain it has co:1taincd a slz~· able trickle of water. Yrsterda~· I. G. proudly Invited the Grouch to

. see his "road", He had scrape1 a , .smooth path down one and up the

uthP.r slrle and at the bottom had placed n large, nat stone to form

• ·. n cuh·erl. underneath which the '· water l'3n fr~cly ' \\'hatr,·cr his pleasure It was

.. ' ' no1 sh~:·~r' b~· the Grouc\1 who . was faced wtl h having to scrape , the mud of£ his coatrd shoe'! ~or

. were Littlest Grouch's · ~ho.P.s In · au~· better condition, since sh~ had ' bceu "!lclplng." ·, As lor onr sarden, It show~ the

hli;:htln;: breath or autumn's chill. ' Fortunately there bas been no

frost yet •. but flowers are turning .. , to ~eed or withering, or both. .. The little greenhouse bas gil•en, 1 , • and is ~till gll'ing, ripe tomatoes •· • and cucumbers, to the delight of ; Madame G. who Is making pickles.

· This same .lady who, as one bas previously remarked, is an accom·

,, . pUshed berry-picker, has been ,, fortunate ln twice this week being . ln,•ltr.d to 'join a berry . picking

. • r~rty out to Alexander Bay. It • · . rna~; be recalled that this section

·particularly Glovertown-was dev­·, ~~tated b~· forest fire in 1942. As 1·r.wlt both blueberries and part· lid~c berries are plentiful in the burnt country, and her visit.~ were amply repaid by the big bucket o( berries secured on each occas· ion.

As there has been no frost yet the birches have not turned their

' · foliage to golden, but many of the little rock maples are brilliant scarlet, All through any , open IJIICH In the woods Goldenrnd tnd Mic:kelmas daisies provide a ~al:rt. high covering for !lumps or rotting branches-blind and un· comforllble to walk through.

Glenwond Is certainly not 8\atle. In recent weeks several families

' · hR\'t mond either to other part. f'lf the province or to the main·

~ • land and ha\'e put their bou8es tm :;:. . the market. It Is Indicative of the i!': continued . Immigration to the ;:; · settlermmt that these houses have ~·· heen qulekly bought up. r;_;:, !tart hAve been frequently seen ~:..i a!'flund this locality and :roun1 :; . : ml'!n 'l'lho 1et a snare fnr bears ; ~·:: C"3UI[ht a half grown cub In one. .- i Of course It was dead wnen found. &: .. ~ Salmon .fillhlng, closing In an· ~· other day or .two, has dropped off j2:: ~!nee mid-August. Because the .,;::: river was 10 high In early summer :;:: • flshenr.en .. ,. the bulk of ' tne ~.:;.·. "run" paued up lllream early,

PROVING GROUNDS ·oF . CHEVROLET POPULARITY

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East, West ••• across ·the land, wherever cars are parked~ on ·every street . ' . .

and hig~Way, you lee mol'e Chevrolets than any oth8r car ... because far ~ore p8ople drive Chevrolet than any other car! And the preferenc:~ fOr. Chevrolet

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·is groVfing eVer greater. Because more cind more· peop'e are discovering· •••.

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Ti·me ·Ru OiltOn . 'Evictees · Hunt's ·:Lane

Sti.ll · ,W ~.its. No" action, ~as yet been enforce an el'lctlon notl residents .or a ro\'f' of

Iiouses' on Hunt's ·'-~11'"'""'~ Erid st·. John's.

.,,:.C!.,·Irti1~n n'otlce ellplred M ·News was lnf

ll:~.:;tre,ter·da)'. tliat' no steys 'taken io evlcl the. 27 ~4 children from the

•'""-"' declared unfit for. It •·;,.:aolhiloltiiiD by Health Depar

and· the engln •• ,.1111,m of the Municipal C

· The Hunt's Lane res l:'-'~h~1re bceri looking for alt

tor months but th ha1·en't been able t

offitlal statement ba. • .... ~ mau• on the expiry of th a";:Hio"n notice. '

Welfare Workers at th sonal Instruction of the H J, ,\bbolt, pro\'lnclal nt lor Welfare, conducted ~

.,.,, .• ·'·-L IDI'Cstlgatlon Into t of the people Assistant Deput)

ister Stuart Godfrey to! Sews yesterday, "We h further Information on it. Welfare Minister, himself,

(QWD,

In' his first pubiic com October. 2nd election, Conservative Leader .

•. c:JIOI~Clt Tuesday forecast ·partY.· In all but 'on

•·•·•Aoo·•'ft" Peninsula dlstrlctf six districts out;

~cnins1lla • lcadP.r looked io

'for ;his· party in dbtricts ·of Grand F

and .in two or t E2Jricts on the Wesl Coast.

Hollett did not rc1•e on. the Avalon p

·.mo11gm would go Lib Smallwood has

II':,·:Prenict•ed ·a complete . sw ·J.l[lera;Js outside St. J1

.Leader. Sam Dr said· in a

a·;~reS5 ·he· had no illusio party winning, but it

_,,,mak~ :Ne.wfoundlander.'s ,..~.,< ·'"' what'-the CCF s

"''""CI•now CCE· ·members b

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·~~ .; Moose bunters eome and ao­E£ usual!,. wltll utlsfac\ory result. l':j ~ from their hunting. Tracks of the ~~ animals ma1 often be seen in the ~t\~ woodJ, but In none of their jour­t.t:,· ners 10 far have the Grouchel §t seen any animali, Next month It· ~-4 will bt common enough to aee or ~~. meet one on the blcbway or by It, :S: · somehow, onl1 oceulonall1 doet ~:: the Gl'oueh 11t new• of Twillln·

There'·s· No Value like Chevrolet Value! A. GEtiERAL MOTORS VALUl

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:; i. :rate. l'hanh to Mlsa Edith Man­!s~ tiel he letrnt ·.that the annual ~k flower mvlee of the Ohureb of ~:·.England there was on Sunday last, i;: 10 a box of flowers was packed ': and sent down by motor boal-at

•! least one hopes they were. ati no· ; word ha~ come yet of their arriv, :ing. In the cemetery there lie U1e ; mortal· remains or father~ mother, . :sl~ter and wife, so his lnlerrst ·;therein 1! understandable thou::h. IPfmnt home ties pre\;~nt frequent ~1sit.~ .to the old hom~ lown. That ~~bal.' myici! . was i'nstliuied .. bY .

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MOTORS, LIMITED . ST •. JOHN'S, .NEWFOUNDLAND ... . '

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ST• JOHN'S,· NEWFOUNDlAND,

!io acllon ha\ ~ d hrrn taken t,.cnforrt ~n rrlrtlnn notice lor 11 rrsidrntl nl a row ~~ con· !•:nncd hnusrs nn Hunts Lane 1; t:ad r:nd ~t. John'~. The rtiction n'otlrr e~plrctl Monda).

Tbt llaily Sell~. was informed . 'tistrrday that no stcrs have krn ta~rn to c1 let the .. 7 adults ad :1 rhlldrrn from the build·. 111,, drc!md unlll for human ~•bilatlan b) llcalth Depanmcnt tllirbls and the engineering ~Ill ol thr ~lunlrlpal Council.

Tht Hunt'~ Lane residents h1t brrn looking lor alternate i!UIIn' ror months but they say tir1 hmn't been able to find ID!• •

So ollidal statement has been 111dr on the eJplry of the evk· titn notice.

11'rllm \\'orkm at the per· I!Dillnstrurtlon of the Hon, B. J, .lbbott, prOI'inclal ~llnlstcr fir 1\'rlfm, conducted 1 thor· 111h lmstlgatlon Into the dis· ltllllon or the people to be tlittrd .• \nbtant Deputy ~lin· illtr Stuart Godlre~· told the Srws )Uitrday, "We hne no luthtr ln!ormalion on it." The lfrllare :lllnl!ter, hlmsclr, Is out II !I'D,

P.Cs To Swe.ep. Amlon-Says. llalcolm Hollett

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1956

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Tilt Cove:

COinpany ~stimates 5-Million, Profit

PYJAMAS FLANNELETTE

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Fit little girl's 2-6, fancy prints or solid colors, wilh or without enclosed feet.

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GIRL'S BLOOMERS

Fit 7 • 14 · years. Navy or White Fleecy Cotton .................... SSe

RA.YO~ STRIP~

GIRL'S. VESTS Cream Cotton, 1h sleeves. 14 years ............................ 45c

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SUITS

Fit ~oys' 'N' Girls' 2-6. ~nk, ~mon or b~e

fleecy cotton .:with en-

closed .feet

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THE·. DAILY. NEWS I' _; ·.n· · 'l'he News • \ . l Newfoundland's Only Mor 1ing Pap.ei ·. '

DAILl' SUBSCRIPTION RATES Canada ........... , .. $ 8.00 per annum'

·United Kingdom· and all . For.elea Countrlu .... $12.00 per annum·

Authorized 111 aecond elias mall Pll!lt O(fice Deptr:mcnt, Ottawa. ·

· T~~ DAILY.' NEWS fl a:'n~ornlng ,paper established In' 1894, •nd .Published at the. News 'Building, 355·359 Ou'ckworth Street, St. John's, New(oundland1 by Jtoblnson. & ·

' Company, l.lmltcd, · MEI'tlBr.R OF THE CANADIAN .PRESS The CanJIIt.n Press Is exclusively ·~ntlllcd

to 'the use for republication .ol all ne.w• ... splilches In this paper credited to It or !o

·, l'lle Associated Press or Reuters and also the local news published therein. ·

1\U Press service and leature articles In this paper are eopyrleht and tllrlr reprDdur.tlor 11 prohibited.

• Mem~er Audit Bureau Of ' • · Circulations .

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By WAYFARER -F<\IR ·REPRESENTATION . his recent television appcar~ucc.

. There Is .a wcakneis In, tlie J1is chosen associates for the , ·present' system of political re· performance were, howe\•cr,

• 1Ircscnt.ation that could quite ~omcwhat Ill. at ease. What w.as· · conceivably produce very un· most noticeable was Mr. Smnll· fair results. It Is possible, for wood's rest!llnt. There were example, that one party would mo menls when' one might well win every scat In pa~llament by have thought that ·he was c.an· a tiny majority In each district. vasslng votes for his opponenls. And were thnt to happen, Jt · He spoke most fairly of Mr. Mol· would mean that almost one-half lett and he hoped that the best the electorate ·would be without m~n on botltl sides would be rcp~esentatlon. : elected to make .one of the best

~ • •· legislatures for many years. It actually did happen in • • •

Prince · Edward Islalfd a few He discussed .also the 'problem ·years ago that one -party captur·· of candidate selection and spoke 'ed every scat'. in the provincial 'quit~ frankly of the comparatil·e legislature. . Unfortunately, we· ease with which a goycr~mr.nt have no record eft the dlstribu· could recruit them. But even Cor tion· o( the popular vote In that government to make up its slate,

' :-, extraordinary electlbn but ·we was necessary to raid the senior . ' .

... WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 191 1956

party loyalty.. This election is, 'in Ifact, are pretty confident that the ranks of the Civil Service. This a test. for many voters. of their moral losers received enough to justify Is not a good thing.' It Is dif· courage and democratic outlook. The them in having some members flcult for a civil servant to re-

In parliament. Bul, everi when fu a equ t b th h ad f · ' Like Henry the Fifth before Har- issue is not a .party one put a matter of the losing side docs have a few th!e go:ern~~nt Y to \e~ome 0

a fleurs, the-Newfoundland Board of Trade whether the modifying influence of a spokesmen in the legislature, it · candidate. And a further dif·

The "(arson"· ·Again ·

had .moved once more unto the breach.. good opposition is to be exerted in the can often be d~prlved of the· flcully must necessarily arise.

t • d • th tt k b th . ht House of Assembly. The need is there. representation that would be when a mim who has stepped

sus a me Ill e a ac Y e rtg ness fair under a just system of dis· !rom .the non-partisan ranks of of its demand that the ferry "William It is up to the voters to supply it. trlbutlon. • the permanent administration Carson"· should be given work to do that • • • has been defeated .and goes bock is more appropriate to her dignity and Some years ago, an English' · to· his job. The Act which r.l· ability, L . ' E · ... • political observer put forward lows civil servants to volunteer

h I 1 th Oggers arnlngs a plan by ·which this kind ·or or be drafted for party sen•ice This time t e assault 1aS ta ten e I • ' inequity could be ended. His alnd to apply subsequently for

form of a mectin~ with the internal com- Baclt in 1934, an cnquir.v into the idea was this. There would be restoration of their jobs and full mltteo of Canadian National Railways voting In a national ballot for seniority is one that should

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THE DAILY NEW~, WEr NESOA Y., SEPT. 191

Not Cqmfortobfe---But Still Alive~. •.

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now engngcd in examining the transport· logging industry. (.liscl.osed thnt loggers party leaders. Each party would .never have been put on I he

1 I h' . t•eceived from a clbllar to $1.30 a cord, then be allotted the number or statute books and must 'some .

ation prob ems o t IS provmce. · that the average cut pet• mnn ·was 1.3 representatives in· parliament day be 'rem!!_ved from them. -----------;------------:----------==:...It~ This is a high-powered committee for d d 1 that corresponded with its pro- ,

it includes two executives of the Railway COl' 5 a ay, and t 18t 66 cents .a day w~s portion of the popular vote. H • • • To The Corporation. But its 1 members quickly was deducted for boa1'd. Since there I his system )Vere applicable to 'The only virtue to be found TRUST THE By BRUCE BIOSSAT

for completin 1959: tile am

the federal ·gove emerging from a dream. to physica

made l't kno"'n that they were present wet'e other Incidental deductions, a man Newfoundland, for example, and in this unfortunate piece of

" t whose ·production was low was hardly the distribution of the party legislation is the fact that it at the meeting to listen but not o ~om- bl t b • h' f ,t,. 1.010 was sixty-forty, the party, has allowed the Liberals to fill ment. That does not mean that they a e 0 rmg anyt mg home a ter we-,.s with 60 per cent would have 22 their ranks with some .vecy failed to appreciate the case put forth in <\ loggin~ camp. . . . seats and the party with 40 per . good men. Yet it is wrong tlut

E'ditor President Eisenhower understands well that if a ~yslem cl1r;ll!~~~~~~~~ ernment is truly strong it need not fear the competition t1 olhtn That is why he urges that American schools teach the lath a'Y.ii communism, democracy's most l'igorous rival. .• 1 t ld b d d 14 they should be available to a GOOD POLITICI •N

bv the Board of Trade or that they wil The first improvements in the work- ccn wou 0 awar e s~ats. " ·' l . · It would, o! course,, he a tidy govcrnhlent and not to its op· Dear Sir:-What ever ,other not report favourab Y on tt. it1g and living cqJlditions oi loggers were arrangement on all sides. Per· poncnts. If the civil service can qualities in which Mr. Smallwood

But-and it is a ,;ery big "but" which _ introduced by Sir John Hope Simpson sonalitles would have to be ~c raided for candidates, the may be lacking, no one can say out!. ht to be spelled out in capital l.etters following the report of a special coin- restricted ·to a minimum if em·. 'same privilece of re-employ· that he is lacking in those

l C 1 d t II d II . ment ought to apply, regardless 1' · k' f d -the disposition Of t 1e arson ~~ Un• mission Of investigated Under the direC• p oye a a an party po CleS of .thE) side to which the official qua !tiCS, rna mg or a goo happily a matter o£ politics rather than tion of the present 'Senator Bradley·. would be. the real, Issue In every was recruited. However, this politician. Incidentally, that is

Commo'nsense. And there .

1·s po"'erful part of the p~ov!nce0 , t . b t 1 unfortunate because a good poll· " Even then, .with the mills on short time • • argumcn 15 0 tcr avo ded by tician can never .make a good

political opposition, spearheaded by the and people on a shorter diet, a real im- BUt Ibis, !Ike all. systems of making-it difficult for any civil statesman.· , B

'f t tl 1 i servant to be recruited for party I' · 1 b · d · member for Burin- urgeo I our. secre provem~nt in earnings was slow in com- propCll' onu representnt on, un· politics except on the condition His po Lhca a ihly an hts

Ser,•ice infonnation is sound, to the · y t 1 · • doubtedly h.as its faults. Political understanding of mass psy·

h C b t mg. e oggmg wp.s an economlc . phllosphers since John Stuart that once he is out of the !er· chology are evident in his an·

diversion of the Carson from t e a 0 mainstay during the bitter thirties. l\1111 have been trying to find 1111 vice, he siays out. .. nouncement that his first address Strait ser\'ice.• _ i_mprovem~nt on the present sys· • • • · is going to consist of criticism

But e\•en politicians, their claims to. Today loggers are the big earners ·in tern of electing a parliament and ' 'fbe practice. of bringing cil'il or his blunders. That is a mas· the contrary notwit11standing, cannot local labour. Men usirig the 'bucksaw every scheme thnt has been put set'\'anls into public life is ·not tcr stroke on the part of Mr.

h• 1 · 'bl Tl , cannot can often cut three cords a day although forward has· Its wcaknc~s. new. Sir John Anderson came Smallwood because it shows that

ac 1e\'e t 1e · tmposst e. 1ej this is difficult· to sustain. Men with .Nevertheless, it is disturbing to to the British cabinet from liw he understands the value or self· mal\e Port aliX Basques a good, safe port · think that grill'e inJ·ustice can senior civil · service. Lester criticism as a means to win

1 C A d I ·1 the power saws arc able to maintain this for the Wi Jiam arson. n W 11 e result 'from the present srstem Pearson and Jack Pickersgill are votes and offsets the eflect of men of science at•e having fun at the output' on a fairly steady basis. The an1t that many thousands of examples o( civif servants re· Opposition 'criticism of his blund· National Research Council's l~boratories result is that some. loggers can gross as poople can be deprived of np· cruited to politics in canada. n1c ers.

. I I . l d 1 r p t aux much as five Ol' :;' •: hundred dollars a prupriate rcprcscnta.Uon of their had feature or the present legis· Self criticism is' a form o[ Wtt 1 t 1Cil' SCD e llJO e O or ' opinions In the legislature he· Jalion is that the cil'i! serl';mt confession-and the good book Basques hat•bour antl the Carson, while month when working in good stands of cause of the anomalies to which can quit his job without lisk tells us tbat iJ we confess our thC\' arc puffing and. blowing at tl.Hl timber. that system can give rise. under the new legislation and sins we shall be Iorgi1·en our waler in their tanlt to find out what w1ll Ycal'l.v earnings 011 the an~rage are * • • even go back to it years ·1ner sins; and that is just what most happen when, Hurricane Ermynlrudc diffic,:uJt>ito compute because of the sea- th~\'ep;~~fe~~!!lits~lol~n:al:~hl: ~~ a successful tenure in the stlhere ~-~f~Pi~a~;~~o~o c·~~i~~s t~i~Ybl~~~~ sweeps over Port au:\ Basques, the .car· · sonal )1alure of logging operations and of party .Polllic!. · ers. . son continues in her role of low'~· fretght- the large labour turnover. But the man . . - • - Had the excusable blunders er. Well might it be said of her that· with the power saw is today able to Wh f Of' h . A · s af Mr. Sma]lwootl been proclaim· She is the Ship that has had good ,CaUSe SUStain an-earning pOW,el' that pUtS him . . a f . er·s . re ay1ng ~~iti~t~~h:( ~::~s~~Ol~lr~~~a~f. to die of shame. in ·the topmost list . of the province's ,._· · ~ ~- · • wood, the Opposition criticism

Frankly-not .that ·it may mahe any wage-earners. . ' · .• . would c.my weight Qnd win votes difference to the powers that be in Ot- STOCKING SLOGANS doctor a'nd v,ahent which !s not . but sine~. Mr. Smallwood is go·

He believes, obviously, that truth is on our side, that a full II: look at bc·th democracy and communism will lead you:tg Arne~;~ unfailingly to tht! choice ot democracy .

, :lllorc .important, he clearly appreciates that their devotion l • democracy will be deeply enhanced by their having had opporluq to compare it honestly with communism and ether political S)1te:u

This is one of the big points missed hY. those few among us r~ .feel there is peril in leaching the facts of communism.

'!'he way' to win dedicated a.dhercnls to democracy is net lo have .as if you feared its ability to stand up to other systems ir.t test of truth. The wise teaching of d~mocracy does not eon;ift ~ declaring flatly that it is wonderful and all other ways are bal

The alert, questioning American youngster wants better tmf ment than that. He has no wish to be a rubber stamp for an)!r:t,ll l'iews. He likes to bcliei'C , thai he can come lo his own w::l conclusions after hearing the facts.

As lhe President says: "Competition for men's minds be(.!! when 11ICr arc students. This is when they must be t:~ught bo< :t mal:e that distinction. But ha1·ing hccn t~ughl, lie dcsim to rr.J\t the actual choices himself, not t'J accept ha:~d·me·down be~ej fas~ioncd by others.

llis right thus to decidr. fr.r hinn:~lf, el'en to rrarh conclu;ir.~ which are wrong, is "\ I he \'Cry hrarl or' dcmo.crar!·l mm:t; An~ one who wnulrl deny him I he.! pi·!l·i!e;:c ~c~k~ lo ~mp!~y c democratic methods to enforce a fal>c !lotion of what democn:; real!)· is.

Si!ys ~lr. Eisenhower: "Our .leaehcrs are presented wilh 1 ma::) Jess cpportunity to leach lhe truth frcclr."

lndred I hey arc. And by lending his 'mural leadership to 1

reaCfirmalion of thaf opportunity, the President, may hm btli!l to diminish what resistance still remains iu his countr)' lo I he t!Kt ing Of deUJOCracy in ~~~ free, compe!itii'C market of j>Jiitica! idlil

tawa-we are ·sh:k to the point of nausea·.. (Charlottetown Guardian) easy to bridge. ing to criticize himself for his

f th Some womer. high In Rcpub- - ~ • • own blunders, anything 'the Op-

tion with the tragic-comedy o e llcan ~ounc!ls are wearing st~~· SUICIDE Pll:.LS position might say about the • William Carson. And what sickens u~ F Th D kings b~~rmg ·the slogan. I (Fort William Times·olournal) blunders will carry no weight U J! Aid For most is the deliberate refusal of all con- Strength . or . .. e ay like Ike. It Is reported, how· . Till! distribution of .poison n'or win • \.. ·,

Canadian

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cerned, the politicians and the C.N.R.; to ever, that some anxiety. is being . pllls, to lleinber~ of the armed . That. is Mr. Smallwood's· mas· H d' d C 0 . . appl

" the Sl'mple laws of commonsense to e~pressed In olflc!al, quarter~ forces Wh!) po~sess top-secret ter stroke because it leaves the . an Icappe omnoser 11 ·' over 1\lr. Elsen.hov;er s making ·Information waa recommended opposition in the air. · • ~ · l!. ~ ·

the problem of a ship which has been-~ ". SII.ENT PENETRATION no comment on the practice. He by .a United States' psycll!'atrlst: The- people generally will t Child w ld T rAil ' . found unsuitable fot.' the pal'ticular route . Scientists 'have been warning the public, re- proba~ly hasn't notlced.the In·. psychologist. The pills of cyan· analyze. th!! blunders of ~!~ _fell ~ Of 0Uf . VV 4f/h for which she was built, · ccntly, .of the dimgers of atomic radiation. ll novatwn.. • • • ..~ducal ~~u;:m~~~~~lcllJ: a~~d~~: Smallv.;ood .and sift the excusabl~ BENENDEN, England (CP) - LONDON (CPl - Ian .. ···"-"' L..,Jh,. ...

If this stor,; .of the Carson is indica· seems that the radlatlcn released by atomic bombs · . HAPPY VALLEY feat the attempt of tltc enemy from the mexcusable ones; they Authorities on child care are Jan, 27. rear. old Canadia3. 1/tJf/ftr. • • tive of ti1C ldncl o[ lhing that cnn go on so far exploded d~es not really .conslitutc R proh· (St .• lull!t's. News) to. get &licret information will lump ·them all together' Un· watching n. British experiment in poser and conductor. has .1. .. in Ol1awn. it is a wondet• the \'Oter~ of !em. Who! WOI'r~t'S l~c srlenttsls Is !lint wht•n · !Inppy Vnll1•.\ Is a satellite through coercion. Even a sug· der thu heading -. el'eryone which about 100 handicapped chil· in Brilain to slart what he IW/~ .Ll--.

C I I . 'l \'.ISCI' lot'" .. •

111!'e ill l't!\'Oll l'rnt•tors ore built IO.IIIl!crcnt tJarls or the cnunlry town which nwl's Its existence gestlon of this klnt!t•eflects the makes fllistakes, and forgh·e M1·. dreu are enjo~·ing outdoor ramp will lw a world tuur. !lis - 1lle

:lilaC n 11\\'(!ll . I 1

1:1 " • r . I ' r 1 ·l . t I I I I r I tl III G . r Smallwood fur hUI'ing 'made holidnys wilh the ltehl of t•adrts tn tlrP~I'Ilt l':wadian mu;!e h.. I' • tl C· .,

0 thr.re is onh• one nl tIP pm pn~r o supp ~ nc a om o. ma er u or u w g au·po1·t nt oose · harsh aspect of some tlJasl's of them, r01. the peopl~ are as and girl guide,. Millie a; c~tunlril·;

• " Ot '~ I ,\!.I n, 1 . 1.1 . !:'·ate in twncl'ful use, the t![el•t upon the surroundln!( Hay. 'l'hQ name, In t,he begin· lntel·nalional n·loliuns in this gullible tntlay aS' they were twu In this Weald of K~nt rommun· "t'anadian mu>ir ;. Lring l'il\ll!' on wllll' 1 ;,'e !i ~Olll op 1\

11 pnpulntirm mny hf disastrous, It is sahl that nlng, lnul nn ironic flal·or. But. day and age. 'fo carry out the 'thousand years ago. ily, at 011 ,. nf ~e\'e 1·a1 c~ntn•:< up. h•c(I'JI." hr ,~ill in ""

Ncwroundland. Chat IS lte _1'011 e 0• ·tun·m!nl eff~d~ mnr lie prothW~JI which will last llapJtY \'alley 1" rnpldly berom· sugKestlons II'O~lltl be lo 11 dmit Youn trul.1·, Hrah•1l Lt,· tho British Ht•ll l'n~>s · ·'Thrn• i; an all,lllde

l · 1 1 · [ 1 1 '11cl can ct1\'C mtl~l· lug a pro'gressl\'e as well as a thnl under. fhe clrcmnstanccs · c ·\\' lll' 1 n S llp 0 lei' " 1> · • not just through the lifetime or 1he tJ('l'Sil!lS hnrm· OU'rl'OR'l' M 1\::-.' Socicl\.·, 11 children-,ome spa;;. parls or th~ 1\'orld tllat

II I . I l ~ lhrh·lng Clllllllllllllty and the lhe safeguarding of military In· ••.

mum. sel'\•ice und earn 1e ug 11es .re\

1'- ed, bnl lhrough lhl' lln•s of all ~heir desccnclants. Importance or Goose nirpmt venlli'Cttess Is more Important tic, som~ crippled,, som" liPaf or music i< mPI:,,h. a ,.,,<lllw

cnues. 'l'o put her anywhere e se IS o And the \'lctlm of lhls rndinlion will p:robably see'ms 10 undel write it'S future. • than the lil'e.; of m~n. It is not blind-are lrarnin~ cmtfidencc in or cont~mporar:r Arill·rir•n

{!\, ·

11, tJ

1e face o( .t·eason and common- not !:now that an~thlng Is happening to him until • • • "S ''' H outdoor activilic.< under super~'i· There was some 'I I ' ' a pleasant thought. weet arvest slon of 18 Red eros.·· C"del." "\!"II th' b I ·r ''"'''ner·e~

:;cnsc. he Is in a desTlllrate state. . . . CODE· OF TAXES . • • • , " , u.,c IS, 11 I one no '!'his, remind~ one o( the encrm\chmcnls which (Kingston WtJg-Standarcb - between 12 and IS. and' six girl by es!ablishcd Cnnarli

3n

Something To Think About When people fail to think long and

hard about the \lse 'of their vote, the n1ach1nery of democracy be~ins to ci'_eak &nd slow down. It cannot work effechv~­Iy when everyone is the victim of bli~d partisanship. · It can only operate at tts highest' levels when people are prepared io welglt seriously the consequence . of .mal'kirig a ballot. · we· realize, of course, that many may regard a thesis of this kind a_s a for~ of idealism that has nci place m pracltcal politics •. 'But what is· pr~ctical p~litics? It may have its seamy s1de but tts ?b· · jective is surely. to procure the best k:nd of government. And that is the mqttve that ought to animate every voter when he ~oes to the. polls. . .

· In the presel)t provincial general election, people ~l!VC· to ask the!nselves'

. if. a _govemment with an excess1ve ·t~1a­jority in the legisl~tU}'e is" the best kmd of-government. It tsn t. · No govel'nn:tent should be so strong that it is able to

' ·ignore its' opposition. No government • ahould be so str.png that it can b~ at?ove, criticism. 'And the only·way to .prevent

,a government· from becomi~g~a virt~~l dictatorship Is to confront tt .m parl1a·

·, ment with ,a good opposition. ·

Faced with that th.ought, ~any voters ma~· well . be encouraged to set better government above the ltaser claim \~f

·: \.

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TAXPAYaRs BEWARE LETHBRIDGE, Alia. (CP)-A guides, as wrll as some older per, 'ers, it could rnnk \lilh the evil is constantly mal:lng on human life. Its most ' ' 0• l' s no · Ir. mmnn, na Uri! (Kitc.hencr-Watcrloo Record). special group of farmers in thi• sons. anv other country. d rl r h1 d In th mlrlst ( to love the lax collector and Q ·1 1 f tl d 1 b 1 • b (' 1 t 1 h'll 1 · '.·! ac'.lt'llan,· of ·rot·"nt,, an~ )lr. angerous a vanccs. a e a e ' c o some oC the ·lhlngs tnx collec· Ul e a num 1cr o te c e· a my- reczc ·bell of southern AI· .a1 e s an1 c 1 ( ren s cep m .• .• .. quiet, domcsllc :sit'uallons-in home, business ailil tors do cet·talnly lank. a great gates at the l'i'cenL convention bcrta Is getting ready for a sweet dormitories, but :ts muc1h timetha~ rc:tl, has maJ!c-tcnt•til'r . . ~oclal life. It is not the ,falling of n great atomic deal like legal gouging. But,· n! the Canadian l!'edoration of harvest,"unaffecled by grain. slor· pos>iblc is spent outsi( e and c ronrluct orrhcslra; in I bomb of trouble· or disappointment which most as was sugecst"(''ln thc·Queens 1\fayors and Munlcipa'lilics wax· age problems or dispute~- over handicapped ones arc encouraged Portugal thi, autumn. ar.d 1

· b 1

d 1

· rd enthusiast!.: over an arrange demurrage charges. ·. to take an active p'art in the pro· appearances in Pori> m Ill often prcclpltatP.s people· Into el'il, ut t te gra ua , Unh•e1·s1ty seminar .on income ment wlicreby Increased Feder· And .recent unseasonable frmts gram. A correspondent. of The the offing. penetration of their lives by el'i! Influences wltlch tax, the only t!lmg to do is to al grants to· the provinces haven't harmed the. crop, which 'l'imes who visited Bencnden said ha1•e about them very mudt of the sub\)cly of look out for YO\:r own intere&ts would be uond1tional on· the should be ncar. a record. the ''i~it left "man)' a picture" atomic radiation. . and try to play the game with··· amount of ~he Increase turned The :crop is sugar beets, esti· etched on the mind. · T • • C 11

l'ntrutblulness ·leads to crime, . jealousy, to In the rules~ 0

• ·over 'to the municipal author!· mated to total 4.16,000 tons" this "There is the su~den ,sfnilc ~n fllllty 0 ege murder;. moderate drinking, to alcoh'JIIsm; fUrta· ties to spend as they please. year; to be processed into refined the !ace of a deaf g1rl,. VIolet H1b· .

· tion, te mcral Iniquity. Silent, penetrating, de· . ~~~::e~.:~t~~~~~~~ , Such reasoning, reduced · ·t~ ~ t;ugar In three factories for prairie bet, 13, as a cadet speaks to her Tl f vastatlng-tbus by the radiation of evil, . the The world·famed Edinburgh . simplest form. ·means if the pro consumption. • In sign ·language, and her evident IeOfV 0 ponents of the plan had thetr. Gross return to the farmers will pride. . .in mincing_ some vcge. -victim finds himself destroyed and his loved ones · Fesjlvalln Scotland hailed Can· way folks In Kitcbener would probably be about $15 a ton, con- tables for lunch; there Is Annie 1\'fu' Sl•C Results with him. · · ada's Shakesr.eare ·compan1 be taxed tu pay for sidewalks sldered good for the 36,210 acres Chilcott, a ·blind girl. of eight. ll

·, · -:o:_;__ . . from· Stratford Ontado. Tho In Ecum Sccum. ~S, and res!-. sown 'In beets this year. Joining lustily in the washing-up 45 COI,UMNS ON M!IIULYN ~·event ·was a, performance, o! dents of Wat~rloo would be ACREAGE CUT SLIGHTLY chorus of Green Grow lhc Rushes ST.' JOSI~Pif.iiCo~rt~T

• Shakespeare's Richard Ill,· in footing part a{ the bill for a Seeding contracts were issued o-,as ·she feels her way over the · J:ist step~ (St. Thomas Times-Journal) . which Christopher Plumer of munlclp. al waterworks and sew· · last spring· for .as;iss acres, p..1( a dishes with n ·mop; and .Julie· 11 . l'c"""

Th Toronto TelA gram· one or tl1c •ponsoi'S o! l\lon~reat, pinyin"" the· title role 1 t · 1 1 1 · h t 1 D ' 12 · t 1 · " I 1 !1 • unours. - •~· • · c ~ ' " t er system somewhere In British a e sprmg a~J a Jor s or a;:c cu ol\nc, ! \Ia c Hn~ ron ~~ 100%·, Shirlcv Youn~ 100'•• Marliyn Bell's Juan de Fuca swim, bad about 45, scored a pcrsor.a triumph. At · Columbia. t.he acreage flgUl'C, l.oss from Uti· whc!!l chatr, as shr. ·carefully ,. P ·95, •. EJ1'zabeth

· · long last Canadians arc seen f'" bl h · k · d · r k rison · ower ·' • eolu'mns of stories and pictures about the event, • ., • • • . / . · · avora c weal cr nnd other lac. stac s .each drte p1ece .o croc · d 95, •• p lricia Greene h ' b bl tl u 1 h 1 · by Britain as br.mg something. tors was only abpnt 2,000 acr~;s. cry In hc1· lap." .zar ,. ,c, a ,. 93~;

T ats pro a. y more 1a~ leY wou d ave II ven .. more l.!mn hewets of•wood,and CHOOSING SENATORS , HarvesUM will begin about Ejffortfi will be marie to keep in GcneHel'e Connoll;. to the outbreak \of a tlurd war, or the murder drawers or walcr. · . ·' (LethbrldJ;e Herald)' Sept. · 25. Officials of Canadian loitch i1·iUt U1c children ·afto,· the:,- staqce Marshall 8~ ·•· or the Queen by the Duke of Edlnlmrgb. On the • • • . .Frankly, we think the pepplc. Sugar Factories LUI., who refine II:~ a I' e. It' is hoped eventually the · . . Junior e other-hand we perused three pf the· leading Unltea . ·'<;HANGES IN ·DOCTORS · of Canada ar.: perfectly cap· the bcets·at Taber, Raymond and camps may run all Utrough the -Honour•, - Diann ,States pewspapers ·which pw·porl to fiVe all the · . (Hallfax ChL'onlcle-Herald). able of chqoslng thei~ senators • Picture ;Butte, expJ!ct the harvest summer. BH%. ' ,. • . 66lf· news. that 'matters and we couldn't find

11 line · FatnllY doctors are still to be wisely. And If ailowmg them wm,·nearly equal the record 459,- l'ass-I:orrame Po'tler .

about It in any of them, · found in many rural communi· to do so Is th~ best· means of 156 .tons takm. from S6,788 acres . -().,...- . ties ·and In th~ ~mall towm, putting the Senate on its feet, jn 1952, Production last year was PRlNCE !lliCHAEL JIURT g · 1

. NO ·HARVEST TRAINS carrying ~n devotqd service. the sooner ·the/' begin the bet· 420,005 tons from 36,488 acres, . LONDON (Reuters) _ Prince STRIKE OVER CITY , • •

1 But their numbers h\ the Jars· ter. , , . . The .crop, still gaining weight, !Uichael, 14-year-old youncr son PARIS (Reuters)-The

· (Broekvllle Reearder) . · er urban centres have been • • • · needs more· moisture during the of the :Duchess of Kent, roke his m~dtet, Les Hailes, a Illustrative· o! {he· way thlnp have clmnged in, dwindling rapidly as more and . '·, SCHOOL INTEGRA"(ION final growing perio~, ·factory off!- wrist at Balmoral , castle, Scot-. bustling, noisy area of

Canada ln th_e last t'ieniy years Is the, fact that · more: medical graduates turn · (Windsor Star) ', cials :iald. The beets are showing land, 1\Ionday ·within a few hour3 ers' store rooms, was only four ·harveater. went from the Brockvllle to speclallzatlou. There· has ·de· In London, Ont., . an lmh tlie effect of a Jack of sunshine or arriving to' stay wit~ the Royal serted Tuesday on the , tll' district lasf month to work In 'th~. wheat fields veloped, as a re •• •ult, an lncreaRe achoo,l teacher .~1th. a brogue and of ample moisture during Family. Buckingham Palace, an· the Paris 1·egetable :c.ll .. n! western Canada . Gon are the old·tim . h .•. in medlcal 1.nsts-whlch, In that Is . unintelul!lble to her August and ea1·ly September, an~ nouncing this .Tuesday, added ·tha! hour "shutdown. s t r 1 k f.

• · • . e . c ar turn, has brought tJ1e &Welling Can.adlpn.pupils, has the same sugar content mliy be a.litl!e low. thP.. fracture has been ~el at an strike is a protr;! vestlne trains whJch used to carry hund.rcds Df mnv~ment for national health difficulty und~I sttpding them Aherdeen nursing home and the ordrr Ii:<ing .the 111 farm hands, permantnt or temporary,, to .the .Insurance. ~The~e also has de· ·lind, furthermr.re, must leach the En~llsh lat!guage. Canada. prince Is expected back at .the· wholesale priers. · d Pralrlea every !'aU,. · · I · · · veloped a new aulf bet wee:" · four Italian lmmiJnnt students · has lnteg~atlon problems too. castle tOOay;

1 charee for frUit an

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. . . Bere'a 'good For the aecon .July,, The Ro increasing the llvinp. At 0

· bank Will i .. '. pa ng •nteren · , A .

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ew Town ln' The. ·ArCti_c 1 I . I

Rl'sSt:LL _l:IJI.'•~ sible for nebrly tlme months of As a·· new, town, the site will rrrss Stall \\rller the year during the spring break· bR\'C \two distinct 1uncUons. Prl· . ·~

;-.:.\\'.1\ (CI'- up and thb fall freeze-up. Its marily It will' be an administrative'

101~0 is risi~g on a streets usually are .a soupy mire; ·centr~ •. with the area headquar, bluff o1·crlookmg the there Is no modern plumbing and tcrs of the RCMP, nort4ern af. ckcnzic nlnr more no land airpot·t. · fars !department district admlnh·

~t~cs north oi the Arctic .Ah·eady over.crowded, the town, . trator, a large sChool and hoapl· ·' rn .• with 350 permanent. residents· and tal, But It will also have a lar~e

for completion. by with sometimes more than 1,000 native population,.

19~9 · the ambitious at peak periods such as Easter, 'nle town will be able to bold at c federal government has no room to expand, being al· least '5,000 persons, mor~ than

. 1~crging from a draw· most surrounded by marsH, lake double the num~er, anticipated ~ream to ph~·sical real· and river. \~hen It first· goes Into full opera·

The old town was built on so bon. . m~r East Three-as a few· inches above permafrost- !lODERN FACILmES • - .

surn~0011'0 Joe alii' and offi. ground permanently frozen. The ;\II ·the government • bulldlnas, 11 the fir1t linic tool< on heat of the buildings causes per· schools and a portion 'of the bus!.'

'""aran~r oi a town. Roads mafrost to melt, often rcsultin~:, ness and rcsldenlial districts Will docks installed, oil because of poor drainage, ln. serl· be on ·a $8,000,000 centrally.:Oper·

1 d and the first houses ou.1 heaving and sagging. atcd, steam·heated -aewaae and

trtC c The rh•cr, too, Is an en piny, heating grid. The above-groupd srs tmLPS There were severe floods in 194P pipes, put in at a cost of $50 to

t~P ~p~cd beneath and even when the Mac!tenzlc Is $100· a foot, will serve hall the sun a force of 150 not In flood, the edge of the town town, but the· system ....011 cost the

~nd Indians each is gradually being eaten' away, householder no more than a sep. a nell' gleaming-while For these reasons, the govern· aratc neatlng ~an. ·, ·

::bin with a brightly-col· ment In 195~. decided to move the Most of the· government em· roof to form the nucleus of a town to a new site. Following long ployees and better-paid natives ~o.,struct!on camp that next .and detailed surven, the p\'_j!sent arc expected to ·live .In the "ser· llill !tart an all·out build· site, was c~osen on the east side viced" area, In the "unservlced"

the ~ile wl~ Its •·••'"'"~ roads, lined by

birches, might re· 1 new ;ub·di,·ls!on on the

of the, eastern arm .of the Mac· area, water will be piped past ken~le, about 90 miles from the each house· In summer from a Arctic Occarr. Work started la,t small lake above the town and t>b· year with the clearing of the .site tnlnnblc · fro m "nel~hborhood' and the mo\·ing in of materials for supply tanks tn winter, ·

ol a large citr In south· rather than an Arctic

1.200 mil~~ as the crow n)flhiiC>I of Edmonton.

this year's work. Sanitation wllJ be · ehemlcally BUILD NEW'STRUCl'URES treated, with regular. gal.'lbage re·

As the job progressed, hoil'e\'Cr, moval. · it has become more and more ap· l\lost of these amenities have parent that the building . of New yet to be put\ ln. At present the Aklavik ts a town-mo\•lng project• town is a work. camp and' will o~ly on paper. E~ccpt for the remain as such for at least· two people, most of whom w111 cventu· )'Cars

n•at little hon;c5 bear no . · ~ the ramshackle home~

of vld ,\J;Ial·ik, 3S miles

· , . :\rw :\1\l~l'ik, or • all~· mol'e all hough there I~ con. ' ;;..· -'~----r.1rr:. i; ~ 101\R·OlOI'illl: prn·l slrlcrable opo~ltlon ·to the chan;:c, .\! ~"'crnmcnt a~tll'lt~· in i nothing is being mol'cd •from the G 0 B BLERS

r::tJ m;, ~nd al011~ thr. Arc· ' olrt town. r,1;1 r{pondd. f;;cilitic~ at In fact, New Aklal'il> i> a com· . . 1k!a1i~ brcamr increasingly plctclr new town and becanoe of

. this it rna)' eventually ha1·c ~ TORONTO (CP) - A pretly'

Dutch 1\'altress, Theres~ \\1ienen;la Is horrified at •lhc way CanadliJIS TOllS 1!.\:-illll',\rl'Eil brancl·ncw nnmr.! Present plnns,

k't on • ll~'l·l)·in~ pcnin5ula 1 hol\'e\'el·, call for ll·amfcrl'inl! the gobble Utelr food; · ::r llt·lrrn ~ranch o( the I post office at the old site to New . , thr olrl toll'n i~ inal'CCS• Akla1·ik in 19.19,

. "'rhcy seem to tool< on eallng as a necessary chore rather than a pleasant occupation, which Is the 'II'RY. most Europeans 'consider it," sR~'s '111eresa. In 2 Seconcls

ASPIRIN 'l'he bluc-c)·cd, red·hab;ed girl b 1

working In a restaurant here to help finance a modelling .career.

She can spot newcomers to the country by 'their .leisurely. eating habits. Canadians, she says, even read over their meals so that they don't waste a; second.

TrlllollortRrr.

is ready to go· to work! Most Europeans look on eating as an art nnh take their time about II; she explains.

STOPS HEADACHE

FAST!

But Canadians ar.e.' generous with tips, she adds. ·

You .. can take ASPIRIN BDY time

RF.ACII CLYDE AGREE1\IENT GLASGOW (Reuters) -· Man·

ngcment and u n I on officials agreed Jllonday night on a s~ttle· mcnt to end a ~trike that has left more than 10,000 workers Idle and parah·zed production In .28 River Clyde shipbuilding yards, Term.~ of thr · settlement w ~ r e not immediately disclosed. The slrik~ ~tarlcd three week; ago to har.l; demands for ~ ·Juar11nteed werkl~! wase •. .._

It's usea by millions more people than any other pain r~liever- ATOmC·AC:E DISCOVERY

Clm!land CAP) - The Na· tiona! Carbon Company said Mon: · da~· u~ scientists have "melted .aml welded" graphite for ihc first time in history, Dr. Robert G, Breckenridge said the new pro· cedurc suggests the possiblllty of Pl'l!,fabrlcating sheets and panels for !Jle assembly of. nuclear rc. actor moderators. Presently the moderators must be built up from graphite blocks.

WITHOUT STOMACH UPSET! ' .

STOPS PAIN FAST ACHING MUSClES IACKACHI

COLD DISCOMFORTS RHIUMA11C PAIN NEURALGIA

'&EEF TO HOLD FIRM . TORONTO (CP) - The Meat

Pac\-ers Council of Canada said Monday prices of high • · quallty beef-now at their highest since .. 1952-are·llkely to remain around their present level.· A spokesman snld prices on lowcr.quallly grass· fed beef may drop s!lqhtly mixt • month as animals are brought In

• frpm pasture. -------~----·-··------·-- ·---

lnte'rest or. Savings

increased to

Here's · d · F goo news for aerioua savers,· or the aecond time Iince the end of

lwr Th . • e Royal Bank of Canada ia lncreaeing th · · ' · e mtereat rate on personal. I&' Tin~. Aa o{ September 15th, tbia hank will In i , . pay 2}S% a year, er~dit·

1 nteren enrv six months on A 'I ' ' .

pn lOth and October ·3bt, to 70\lr accoun~

.. NOW your money ,.

• grows ev~n faster

in your Royal Bank I

SavingS Account

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· Y!>ur eavinga will grow even fast'er at lh;i• higher rate-a liron&'induce• ment io build· ·up y~:mr account by. making. regUlar~ . ayatematlc . deposits

every pay day. . · · . ) . . Real1a vera profi~ m~at. Each month; 1et asi~ a fixed amount, eahnarked for your Royal Bank Savings Account,

••

and leave it tpero to earn 2).1%' i'ntereet, ' ' l . .• .. \

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' . . .. . There Is nothin1 quite' like mon~y-in the b~tnk . ' 1

tilE ROYAL -lANK OF.''C.NA~ ~ I •

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AT AYRE'S '·

Kitchen . Towels Hand, Face and . _in '• stripes and solid colours Small, medium and large Sizes.

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REG. 70c . .

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SPECIAL IN OUR MEN'S DEPARTMENT '

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PLAIDS and CHECKS· Small, ..Medium and Large Sizes

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''VALUES 3.25 ,., ·.

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AlRIVED Yt:STERD,\Y 'Mr. Norman Janes, uf the De·

ptttment of Public WeHare, who left here on Thursday. last · to nc· company Newfoundland children to the Ilallrax school lor thu blind, returned to the cit)' yestcr: day,

LEFT l\lOND,\ Y llli5s Marlo Winter, daughter of

LJ;F1' MOND.-\ Y ~ . Penny, Cloustori, daughter of Mr. ·

und Mrs. J. K. Clouston, Winlel' Avenue, lcH here nn Monll:ty to retum to school at Edgehlll,". Nova Scotia. ·Miss GIILChnlkeJ·,. dau~6· te~ of Hon~ J. n. Chlilkcr, and !lll~s .1 udy Randell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. V •. Rendell, lefrat the same lime to return to EdgehUI.

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Winter, R-cn· LEFT FOR BOSTON '.. , nic's :llill Ro:1d,' left here on b'!on· Miss Myra Bridgham . and Mr. dily by TCA, for Nova Scotia, where William McCurdy, who were visit· she will enter Edgchlll School for ing Mr. a·nd Mrs. Whitfield Laite Girls at Windsor. · · at 1'rinity, 1leit here last weck·end · -- 1 to return to .(!oston, HOLIDAY TRIP· · · , -- ·

Miss Olga Jensen, Mount F'leas· S'f, JOUN;S l'LAYERS ant A\'cnue, returned to the city . The St. John's Players will hold by TCA last week a!ter spcnUIU!l a general meeting at room 216' an enjoyable holiday at Hazleton, of lllemoriai University toni!lht at Pcnns)'lvania, as the guest of .Mr. 8 o'clock. All members · arc re· and Mrs. Kenneth Laver. quested to attend as urgent bua-

VISITING CITY Mrs. Kenneth Laver of Hazleton,

Penn., accompanied by her smull daughter, Cindy Lou, ardved by TCA last week on a visit with her parents, M1·. and Mrs. John Bart· lett, of St. Clare Avenue. · She plans to sla)' for two months, when she wlll be joined. by her husbJnd who will spend his vac'ation here before their return to the· United States.

lness wlll be discussed.-

LEFT YESTERDAY Mr .and Mrs, Max. Thornhill or

Fortune, and l\lrs: 'Gerald· Patten o£ Grand Bank left he1·e yesterday • by car to return home· after spend· lng a short holida)' in St. John's,

CHOOSING A Ct\REE!t Girls of Grades 10 and 11 hi St.

John's will liave the opportunity In competing In an essay contest from now to the middle or October.

Ot)T OF HOSI'IT,\L The subject will· be, "Choosing A Her man)' friends will bo slad career," and all entries must be

to· learn that ~Irs. Hannah Lush, I sent to Box E5388, lei the Business wlio was rcccll'ins treatment· at and Protessional \Vomen's Club, the General Hospital has return· who arc sponsoring the contest. ed .. to her home at 11 An~el !;lace.

RETURNED IIO~IE :llr. and Mr;;. Harold Lake,

Portugal Col'c Road, whu spent a holiday in the United States, re· turned tQ the city by 1'1,;,\ on Mon· day.

u:n FOR IIOI.IIIA \'

•·no~l 1\IONTREAL :ltr. and Mrs. John Costello· ahd

their two children recently mol'· ed to the clly from Montreat· and arc lh•lng at 4 Gulf Avenue. Mr. Costello .Is the manager of the Newfoundland Steamships Com· pan~·.

')lr, and ~Irs. Charles l>al~·. 3 Wl-:UDINH ANH,I\'ERSARl'

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: . THE' DAILY NEWS, ·w·EDNESDAY. ·SEPt 19 . I

BY AI.ICIA HART

In addition· to many women with unfortunate · teeth !!r what :they consider "bad" noses, there ar"­manv other. women who want to call 'attention to ~ood-!ookin~ eyes without looking like ~ vamp, ·

The tricks are fc\v and. they don't take much practice. · ··Resillts, . hoivev~r; should be tested under,;ordiriary room light· lng as weu:·ns'bcfore the mirror, since room··:Jighting ·.tends to cast shadows ~ndcr. the .. eyes. anyway. Snmetime~:).rhat ~cems like a little

.eyeshadow.·niay look .like bvo ~leep. less rilght<n·".'hen seen. in nrdinary ovarhead ·H~~t. : .. The ey!lbrinvs are .the. first con· sldcration: ·Todav, the .. trend Is to­ward. slightly . thicker, naturally curved. br.ows. Take a look at the lovely girls 'In ·the advertising .lket­ches !oday ·as compared to some years 'ago to see what {his means.

The brows should not be plucked Into skimoy, e~al!gerateo arches. P.luck under the brows, if at all. u~e a sharp e,vcbrow pencil to

, i>oinf up the top of the curve or lengthen the brows,. if necessary Usc feathe-ry strokes to mal:e lash like lines. ·

A !iqbt film of baby nil wiped over brows and lids will gi1•c an attracth·e shine. And ~been, as the girl with the polished nose knows. always attract~ a!tentiort,

Eyeshadow, used sparingh·, can deepen the apparent color of the eyes and add sparkle, Brown and

To pre1'e11t srnsltlre from peeiin~: an~ add lo lllstrr., a film of bah)' Oil II good choice.

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Betwe~n Us Women B1' RUTH MlLLE'IT

• Cork Place, accompanied b~· ~Irs. I Mt·. and Mr~. ~1. F. Huringlon, Gu~ l.awlor, Portugal Co\'1! Roaci, 1

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12 Dartmouth Place, cclchrated the lett here b~· TCA on Saturday to lllh annil·crsary of their wedding 1·i~it relatll'e5 in the United States. on Tuesday, Soptcmber 18th, ''1~, ,,,·

. --. 1 1raik as proudly .,! , ht~. •:;:cinh'< I.ACK OF. BEAU!\ SIIOULII BE: She ~ior>11't nc~d prettl~!;; '"'w"'''" CHALLENGE, NOT A nEFE.\ I glow With fricndlin~·s •m1

;-.;.:wt.:omms Scr~eant and Mrs. Thomas Both

~11d their twu <iaughtcl's arc nell'• eomcrs to St .. lt!hn s and arc iil'ing ~~ :m Smith Arcnnr. ScJ•gcanL Both i; lrom Hl'itish Columbia and i~ stationed here with the· Can· adian ,\rm~·.

I ·nmt RIWI:'oiA ~lr. and ~irs. \\'alter ~llttlcslcd

~r:d their two chlldl'cn recently 110I'ed to St. John's from Regina and arc li1·ing at 263 t reshwaLcr Road, ~lr. ~littlested is the ~hm· :t~er or the National Films in St John's.

ENTER NOW

$15·,000 BAKEftST CONTEST

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..................... · ........ : ARRI\'Io:D JIIONUA 1'

Mrs. H. \\', Quinton art·h·ed hack In the city nn Honda~· from hcl' summer residence at Sel'cn· Oaks, Portland, Boual'ista Bay, _

.mSCELLMIIWUS SJIOWER On Friday evening, September

l-Ith, a miscellaneous shower was held at the home o( l'rlrs. Raymond Legge, Newtown Road, Jn honour of Miss ·Joan Martin, whose mar· riage ld Mr. Barrie Strang oi •St. John's will take place qt St. Thomas'. Anglican Church on Scp· !ember 27th, nt 7 p.m. i\liss Mar· tin l'cceil•ed many lovely and use· rut ~irtR.

LOS ANf"ELES. CaliforniR-I.oi5 Cole, of Cole's of Ca lifomia, models a titnel,, swimsuit called "!!olden hour". as. the suit for the lacly who Is alwavs late. It is made ~f white suede ancl has·~ built-in watch th~t is shock proof and water proof. ·It sells fot• $75. The latest in men's swim wear take.' a backward turn and smacks of the gay. '90's. Jantzen's "Great John L" Knee length beach outfit (right) will be the rage of resorts and beaches next summer, say the dcsigncrs:-(I.N. Photo). 1 •

The Family ', :f'l~'·

C \~.1 OUf!Cl

11EDlTOR;S NOTE: The Family Cmmell eonsist~ of a Judge, .• psychiatrist, a newsp:t.per editor, 1 womrn'a page editor and two

• FRO~I \'I<..'TOIUA t·

• newspaper writers. These consult with clergymen or all. fallhs a~ll denn111lnallon~o All lettera 1n held In complete ~onrtdrnce. · ·

Mrs. W. H. Decosl~. formerly Miss Glndys Williams, an·Jved !lere last week from Victoria, Brltlsh Columbia, to spend a vacation with her .brother, Mr. Max Chaplin of

GRACE-He freezes up when hul'e tried In el'l\rY way to hnprBs my parents come. : them favorably. But it seems no

ARTIIUS-They · gave me a use trying. very hard time. • • •

10 Gilbert Street. , 1 • • • GRACE-My· parents have mis· ARTHUR-I cannot understand understood Arthur, but that is no

. why it should be so, but It seems reason why he should go out or PREP,\REs I•'OR . thqt el'ery -time. my in-laws come his way to con!irm their wrong

LOND TRI~ to l'islt us, m) wife ~nd 1 get suspicion. :II , , ON CRcutcrsl - P1'1nccs.1 Into a nasty argum.ent. rhe !\IOYY. They alwa)'s warned me that Bal~~~t I glc~l to S L~ndon from thlqg Is that we never seem to he would be difficult, in consider· lo a as. c, col and, lnday argue· except when her par~nts ate and cruel .fo me. He has lwen rlal~r~~arhc(oll~crt d~nturc f'gt·i·l are l'isiting. Whc.n we ~re alone, anything but that, except that he Ti • Q r .a.~ I can tour. when !rilmds l'islt or when my, free1.cs liP to me the minute thty

le ucen Mother. who has also 1 parepts call we never ~cern to ~how ·up. 1 feel very hurl that e,1c.n ~ 1 '!!1'ln w(th I he Ro~·a,l Fam. run Into any' dif£lculty. they should al\VB''s leave our house ~ at ualmoral, .will traevb) with . '

withstand. Instead of crying about our hum.

an weakness, we ou~ht to thank God for our strength. We need to express olll' appreciation .fur the vruteclion which is oms.

We need· to add our human stret)glh of will to the power of

The human !Jody 15 made to l'esistence which the Creator gave withstand a great. deal o! shock. us. If we were to use the abilities

The delicate membra.nes and wlllch are .latent in us we should mechanisms of the eye are bat· l1e able to ·meet shook with more tered by thousands of tiny par· ease U1an We do, tlcles of dust. Many a man-made Our fears, our worries, our sus­object which had to withstand the · plclons weaken the inner powers .shock of the eye would be worn which we have never used to their out in much icss than a human fullest extent. "God ga\'e us the lifetime. ability to use the strength we

· h d h · t' lta\"e." Our feel, our an ~. oil!' ear s withstand shocks beyond our un· rlcrstanding. The minrl take~ buf· feting which would break down ~ rock-bound coa.~t. ·

· . • -.- She doesn't need looks to She 1sn t l!ne btl pretty but that U1e most of her brains.

fact never has cramped. her st~·~c. She doesn't ·ha1·c to hatt She walks tall and proud, 1nlh a1·erage good looks to'

m u c h grace and. pols~ as though pleasant impression on she wct·c a ~ea~llful g1rl. . . Being les.; than pretty

She has subshlutcd s h t n 1 n g ;low down an1· "irl wh~ cleanliness, good grooming, ~nd a her lack of hc'aut~· a< a Clair for cio~he~. for prcttlne~~. rather than as a liabilit!' !:e And the subslltutwn has an appeal possibh· o1·crcomc o! its own. ·

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· · · She is a doer instead of a wisher D J }

So she goes after the things she fC(lnl S aiJ~ wants. . . .

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She l! friendly and gracious aod · SYDNEY fCPl - .llor1 t\:.:t:lf{~tme quick to admire othcr.1, instead of nersons altrnded l!t• mt';l 'pirking flaws and finding fault. here or a "dream·• i;lanl ~

She is dcpentbble and reliable, Pacific. but nob~~·· hid t·p It Qualities that will long oullast re<ervc Pt'ire of iii21..i00. those that many prettier g i I' Is Top hid wa.' ~tOOJI')) b:; h~ve already ;tarted to rrly nn. nwnrt·. c;m~tp 1'1pl. G··rn?r ·

'l'liere lll:ty have been a da,v lsy, lortnerh· of lh~ Hoy:! when a girl born without hi>Juty or tralian Air Fon·r, refu·ed It e1•en prettiness was doomed to cent it. t-ake a bark seat, If so, that day Hi~ island is in the [.lu

has passed. oil Vitu Lel'u (Fiji) She Can !\lake Use 0[ Her Brain~ Nabavatu, th~· i>land

Toda)'' any girl can o1•ercome miles of coastline. a the ,handicap o£ having less than dence with electricity and i~l average good looks. The sooner radio·lelephone. she realizes that, the sooner she It has a copra plant~tic~ starts being lire kind' of per~on sh~.: tic, pigs and poultry, an thinks it would be easy to be if 1 dane~ of tropirnl and cilm >he wrre only prct(y. , and ~upolics of lmd·llool

A ~:irl doesn't need hcanly lo I ~nd lt·och~ts shrll.

her to sec her off. ' . My wife accuses me ot dehiler· shaking tlicir heads in pity for ··-· - .. ·-·-·-----___;...:....::.:__:..:.::. ___ ~ ately being unpleasant jn order to me when they are so wrong. I

hurt her parents, but Ifcel It Is want Arthur to justify me In n:y the other way around. Ordinarily marriage, hut be seems unable to we are never self-conscious. We behave like himscl£ on those oc· say what we please to each other casions.

We accept the beating which b!· faih us without enough a warcness o! the stresses 'and the strains whch God has prepare~ . us to

Get CASH lOW.· PAY LA

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and anything goes. The ll)lnute • • · • her parcn~s fhow up, my e\'CIY TilE COUNCIL-This may be a wnrd Is analyzed and found want· case o£ making the dog bad by

· lnJl, If !speak lightly, my wife !living him, a bad .name. It H dif· picks me up. Cor belltting h~r. ~nd ficull to suhdue the sci£ -con· if I weigh ,my words carefttlly, she sciousness that b forced on a per· picks· me liP for . being. cold or son 'when· he is made the tl!rget pompous. . of sharp accusation. ·

It Is true, o[ course, that. I Grace may be making an· error feel · sueer when .her. parents visit, in .her approac~ .. sh~ is concerning hec.guse they gave me a very hard herself with·lhe lesser of two con· time be'rore our marriage, 'fhey sidct:allons. She is too ea~cr to ·,vet·e not at all subtle in exprt>ss· justll~· her marriage to her par­Ing their disapproval of nie. I hiwe 1cnts and not sufficiently co'ncern· swallowed all tliat, however, and ed iwlth her husband's feelings. have never said ··an unkind word She would accomplish ' much to them. I have, In fact; · always more if, Instead of complaining to been attentive· ·to them; have. her. husband about his . self-con· bought: my 'fa~her-in-law gi!ts nnd scions behaviour In the presence

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of her family, she would explain to her parents that Arthur js ·Self· conscious with them because of the strain they created by their unjust criticism· of him .before marriage;~ 1

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' . . One apl)recia~ive word . form

her parent:;...-.,a remark .to the ·ef· feet that· they· are happy to kriow that they were wrong· about him -would ~o· very far ·to dispel his scif·conscioilsncss and help him to .be • his : U5Ual, : agrcca)lle ·self when. they· ~all.' .. · ·

,If it .were Ar.tliur. who ·ca~ld· not accepl tlie .parents,· she ·W9Ufd to work .on,him;. but;it.is .the. par· cnts wlio have b'een. unwilling to accept ·Arthur, and it .is certainly· time for them to· express their· ac-' ccptanc!!. ·. ·- ' • · " · "

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, I .. R ! .. emoves;St4b.born.Stainsi Kills germs! Deodorizes!

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. ' THE DAILY NEWS, '. -·-·- ·.

In $qujds ..

r ; Aussies Ban ·Rabbits

their f11ture llve!lhO.,d. l · At the same time the 'vahi" of to see a single one. calm Sargent,· conducto.~ of the Eight years . ago ~he "killer'' rabbits was greatly reduced. Ex· The success ol U1e campaign British Broadcasting Corporation

Money syst~m was. introduced· p~rtially . port ·of carcases wa~ pwhiliited has encouraged the governmcJ,Jt to ·Myxmatosls, the· disease ' which and a 66 2·3 per cent levy was. consider the logical final stage- Symphony Orchestra, said Mo!l-, b'as killed millions of rabbits in Imposed on U1e sale of skins, so an a~oliitc ban on the sale o[ day the "rock and roll" craze Australla and Europo, was of no that .It scarcely paid any ,long~r rabbits in any form and a final swecpmg. Britain is "noihlog more· •

He was using a jigger Instead of . By J, C. GRAHAM use in New Zealand since condi- to engage in trapping. drive for the complete eradication thim an exhibition. of primitive: . GER.\Lil FllE};)I~N '

B! rrtSS Staff \\rlter a dipnet that day, he explained, E' ' Child · WELLINGTON1 . N.Z. (CP) - tlo~s did not favor its spread. In. The pol!'cy of total war bas of. the pest. A ~arliamcntary com· tom-tom thumpng.'! He told l'i· because rain In the morning left uropeall reD .Rabbit pie. will soon be only a stead large-scale poisoning cam- yielded spectacular • results in .mlttee is studymg these move·s. porters: "There is nothing new or fresh wdtcr no a ling near the sur- ; memory ln. New Zealand It pro· .paigns were wag~dr financed .b9 many districts which were opec wonderful about. it.· Rock and' roll" fac~. 'nlr. squid stayed deep to S •a B T ' h · posals being studied by the gov- farmers and govqrnment· com· gravely· Infested. In some areas

' arr pullrd squirting avoid it. aJ e 00g er ernmcnt come· Into effect. blned. • which were alive with' rabbits a OLD. STUFF has been played In ~e jungle fc>r' th~tog !ram Conception FAI\1ED IN LEGEND ' · It Is considering imposing a TRAPPING· DECLINED {ew years ago 'it Is now unusual LONDON (Reulers) - Sir Mal· centuries."

~~~~~M~g~,and Thck~d ~s~!dj~~ng that ~ J, ~GRAHAM rom~~b~oothes~eof~~ ~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-

fiD~~~~D Sfl:!. (CP)-1'here aoL\ to b~ maue on the squid·

illf wr lr 3, much. makes Newfou~dlan~ers wrIte WELLINGTON, N.Z, (CP) bit meat or skin~, either for do-

.:r:~ ~lr ;30

·,10 a ~nod day can poems and sing songs Is st!ll car: The Idea that children In the meslic use or· for export. T h I s .~ •"

10 ° hut th~ ••I'Crl\gc 'runs r!ed out by cod fishermen In vii- newer countries are filler than means the deliberate wiping. out,

SS 'c•u ,\ "hupping .$150 a ia!les all along the coast. Men go those in .Europe has been given a as a matter of nationaJ.pollcy, uf tJ ·; · unhrml or. Three out at the end of their fishing day, rude jolt by a physical education an Industry which at times earned ~0

111, corn pete for 200,000 cluster in their boats and yarn expert. His survey: shows tl1at an export Income of $6,000,000 a

r·~!oiHoorl ,quid dally in I untli squid strike ln. They jig tough youna· Europeans, growing year. . ..•........ · ~~ .,iul until their capa. 1 enough to bait their trawls for up the hard way, are far fitter In some years pealers handled

. sea,on.lillcrl tile~-'11 buy. £rom ! the next morning's fishing. The than their counterparts In richer 20,000,000 or more rabbit skins. r.~l! 1rc OlP~ 111 ,cript i1 as good federal government maintains a ·countries abroad, 'nlere was a thriving export trade ll;e~r .. 0 her~ · · frozen bait servlc~ when squid In rabbit meat.

r:l)r.r(·ns com•~:TE aren't running. The sur1•ey was prepared by WREAK HAVOC , , TE

150 of thr 2jU fishermen The Newfoundland squid Is fa· D. R. Wills, superintendent of the But the government maintain~

J.J;t after thr ,quid here from mous In story as well as song. A physical education section of the that this income w a s dearly J:l ,o to late ortoher arc Hoh·· Holyrood man who asked not to New Zealand education depart- earned. 'Th.e losses caused by rab­

n The 11thm come from be named I ells of the squid and ment. · He maintains that New· bits, in erosion and reduction uf

rr.~.kt ~ortlwrn Bay, Car· .Tohn Cnbot, recognized here as Zealand children are too pam· the herds. and flocks the country's ~Jtl! 1 0~ ·thr '<nuthrrn Shore. discoverer of Newfoundland ~n pered, especially In their pre- pastures could carry have been ):~c:r \·ho 'work In Sl. Jchn'~ 1497.' school years, As a result they are put as high as $50,ooO,OOO a year,

Dt .. t~~t at ni~ht to ji~ and nil\ . Everyone knows squid emit a soft and flabby through lack of For many years the government · Thi• make; the regular 1 black ink as an underwater smoke sufficient physical activity before· . sought to control the pest by pay­: men nnhapp)·. They sa)' peo- screen, ho said. But people don't starting school. Also he thinks a ing a bounty ofi' rabbits trapped, uho ~~kr ~"''II livin~s · 'tould .know squid carry pens as well, lot of them are overfed. on top 'Of anything r~bbiters could

· ~,~·htle<'ll' hntt in ann take the Holyrood man said. He slit Euwpeans, on the other hand, earn for skins or carcases. But the t-• 1~01 thr:·r who~c ~ole ll~·c· open a squid and removed Its only have a harder time maintaining system made little -progress In re­

a: t:1e time 1s catc!ung , bone, the transparent, flat, one- eKlstence. In spite. of any deflcl· duclng numbers of rabbits. 'l'l I piece spine shaped like a stylus encles In diet, their 111 ore rigorous In some areas U1ey ~ecame so \ ••

1;a1 ~mrtary 'Ia~ L~ne of! on either end. l!fe seems to fit them physically numerous that settlers were

... ·~r•r!oundland Fedrratton o! 1 "John Cabot had a rough pas· for the conditions they-experience. driven off their farms •. Untold ~- ,;11; ":her(~ n~l much 1 sage coming to Newfoundland," he SCHOOL HELPS U1ousands ·spread ruin and ~es<ifa-

t;Jn rl' The ;ra 1s free. : said with a twinkle. "He lost tlon o1•er great stretches o£ coun-a;t thrrr f<~r the tl~ing. i man)' of his things', includiJ'!g pen The survey shows that New Zea• trysidc, , •te an' :h:n: wron~ w1th a :'and Ink When he reached New- land children rapidly· catch up The situation led to the advu·

r.:o ::1in :rt::n; 1.,,,. 11'3~e> ~ll;t· i £ound!a~d and found the squid he with Europeans In p~yslcal fitness cacr of a "killer" pol!cy. The ~i::.~; r, 1• :n•·"mc hy c~tchin;: : opened 11 squid and took from its alter starUng scho01 •. No figures baSIS of this was that the rabbit ... :1 i' .::rrn11·:1 for example. : backbone a pen. are given for Canadians, but the should be made of absolutely no .... · ~,~· 1 :rt IIi::• wag~; and I ! "He opened the lnksac In the returns. for United States children I commercial value -:- It . must be

r·.1:rrn11 o "hn catch aml 1 "Ut of the squid and wrote the com pate. even less favorably than ~a de completely wortillcss l.o oq~.n in thrir nff-~'!tY hours. 1 ~:Jartcr of the dlsco\·ery of New- those from New Zealand with the

1 a~f~~e. , .

1 d 1;~mr ''· 1th h1~ mone)' i foundland He sent It back to the situation In Europe. - Killer advocates mamtalncd ·a·n: a fiN the extra <\OI·J Q 1 E n! d " • _ d 1 \"Ill , !! · A • that so long as a living could b~ I · · · . . · '· · · ucen o n., an • 1 :-ccor l~g o • s gures, ~-I made from'.the sale or rabbits RYUKYUS, Japan-Typhoon E,mma whtch h1t the coast of .Japan challenged the imagination of personnel at.

· · · ·r er1can clu!dren are e1•en less f1t • • . . . . . . . . : 1

. . ·•·11 thrn· squul or 1 L F on going to school and they are farmers and rabblters would be tached to the Ryukyus army hospital whtch had to evacur• oe to an emergency site. Not expectmg a bumper crop'-

r:bccnt·1 :'1; JlOinl~:~~3 _:qu:~ I avettes or fttlll way below standud up to the t,:~pt~dg "tol•aveinngage f In b~'ra~lbl~ of new babies. 14 in all there was an acute shortage of .:ribs. So the new arrivals found themselves bunked iA .' a ·'·11 1" ,·J· ' · ' g of 16 m ' • g a ew ee nb t' b f'l b' d d k d 'I 'b ld b h . · •

1

o! st . .John's, Fish- B b" a. e • pairs In each locality to ensure ra 1011 oxes, 1 e ca mets an es rawers untt more en s cou be roug t from the old hospital site.-(I.N.P.f

Ltd. or.Iinl;-roml ami a Jes 'Th.e standard or fitness lmt:rOV~fi . ·; Ltrl. of Jlarhor Grace. In the higher schools In the it >;' r:::; 1~r !Cr:p1 i; u;NI like money KITCHENER, Ont. < CP)-An~· United States, Wills says, and b • •

: H;!yr;..'lil anrl r~rhoncar. · mother.to·bc assembllng clothing best in the universities, In sharp : .• \IT nl"J''I'~S for the new baby may be Inter· N z 1 d h B. ~ ·' .. • contrast to ew ea an w ere one qfthe WOlidS fine cars ~:r.plnir~ fre~zr squid and ested to know that this summer, there Is a marked decline in fit-

to thP l'ortu~uese fish· three Kitchencr women hnvc made ness among university students. 11ho cro" the Atlantic In 100 babies' layettes, Including 1•" '.L'he effect of specialist excr ,. h 11 d hi h 500 articles, for needy families 'll'oollt • :r ~ ~ ps eac. clses, games and dally physical to l:;h until fa!! on the overseas, training on the fl,!ness of N e w

k P 1 I b • The clothind Is to be distributed Ban.,. or u~a un a,· " Zealand children Is clearly s!1011'n ~-~.r·!l pound' of frozen New- by the Canadian Unitarian Service In graphs Wll!s has prepared. The !x;:::and !quid a year £or price! committee, which has beadquar- Incidence of fal!ure in standards

! A s il 1 ters In Ottawa. ~' ire cent• a poun". • qu < s · of fitness shows a sharp drop from bait-it'; ruhhcn· and wnn'l Mrs.· Carl Kaufman, her mother, s(x.to nine, r\ses slightly to about , off thr ho11k. l'orllish con· j Mrs. George Pence and B~ss 11 (the "]egg~·" period>, and then '\

,1 dt!idw•. Feathers hal'e made 62 dres~es, 1 R'1n[l(ld i• tlw centrr nr t11e I ·150 toques, too pairs o1 ~ocks, declines stead ly to 16, !

. · •qu.id fi;hcr~·, and \ )00 rag do !Is and numerous bunt·' . The moral W!l!s dl'all's from· th.c : ~'l ii•·in' ~~ •uch l,n't prac- m~ bngs. . ' hsurcs is thnt good food, fresn 1 ~;d mu~h herr I Each layette contains six dia· ! air and sunshine may bul!d bon!l)' I

.I ::un named Lrw 1 ~ in a dory pers, two ~lghlgowns, two vests, I babies, but they are not everv· I r,1 Lit grcunrl•. clad in slicker, I bootees, m11ls, a bonnet, coat, I thing. He believes children shouirl I

and hll' rubbers with .blnnltel, soap nnd safety • Pi?,s· I not bo pampered In their. pre· I 1quid iu:rr running down hls Says ~Irs. K a n f man. We school years and. should get l'eal I

to!d 11hr 11hilc he worked hi;; bouRht 1,000 yurds of flannelette, physical a:tlvit)', on bacltyard l1 "It ial;e• all da1· to flll and120 pounds of wool to com-1 "jungle 11yms" and the ll.ke. , usin• ~ j 1~~cr.'' 'he said. plete the articles."

1

. ------.~ 1 ,,~ a d;p;ct l'r~ can fill a boat I The trio have just received 250 make toward a shipment of ab,000 ;·., • h • ·., cut·out dresses whiclt, ther w!ll to be sent overseas in Novem er. 1

.1 .. an o.1r.

insist on

. ·.

ROOFMASTER 3T4B

210Lil.

kphalJ ~ s·HINGiiE·$~ •• •

, •. the new .DRAMATICALLY-DIFFERENr Asph~lt Shingles • ' • In 15 modern,.luxurto~s blends. ·

SHAW STREET

DIAL I

80291

ALSO IN STOCK · ..

RO~F COA'~NGS

PLASTIC CEMENTS ROOF NAILS

CRESTA, 4-DOOR A GENERAL MOTORS VALUE

,

. .. siizce IUngEdwafd's dny

Every modem Vauxhall · is the proud 'successor: . ·to an illustrious'~past.

TERR. -:j\·:· ; ' . · ... ft

CREST A 6 CYLIHOER

Even in the day~ of Edwardian manners and graces, Vauxhall was an established tradition for everything in an automobile .in its class. Today, that tradition lives onl And the Vauxhall you buy now also bas in it the wealth of experience gained through two generations of progress. Quality, style and value .... those are the

1 watchwords of Vauxhall excellence.1f the best is all that's sood enough •• , see your Vawiliall dealer.

• I

THE BRITISH CAR _BUILT BV GENERAL MOTORS

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Stock c Market RepOrt · Faraday 5300 131 1:15 1:15 -1 Teck llu:h ~2110 ll!l · · 1110 · 1111 : -5 · Enrtka 4300 130 I:U 127 -5 Tomaroml 000 8U. 600 '8110 -:15 F'wos\ • Tr :tOOO 31 30 so -.1 '11tonl' Ld 1100 ·1:0 Ill 1!0 +4 Fora ... ts 3~0 55 51 55t +5 Tiara I · 410 ·11 ·II ll '> Fed Kirk , 1100 43 II u -3 Trinllr Co . • :15:15 . :11 :II ~

TOIOST(I CLOSISO IITOCIU , Francoeur 41100 Ul :lO 21 .t I II M:ninK 1000' 22 · :'2 2:! 111 Tto• Cau•taw Pren ma . ., "(X 3215 5110 5M 580 U Asblstoo 110 1110 610 110

To,..nto ~\41<t •F.sthoncos.,a. U Goldo1e llOO :15 ~l\1 2.1 ·+2 u E•tella 1309 IB. 17 II . IQ·•olatlona In '""'' untr" ma•ktd 1 Fed Kirk 4300 43 41 II -3 \In Keno :!50 6.10 ~0 Mil

1-0~d lot, ~d-Ex-dlvldend, xr-E·uhls )'roblsher 2m :m 3tcl MD .' -10 U Nontaub 1MO' 20 20 20 w-ENronants.l, I I Gold Eallt 1:100 1\i ~\i · IIi Upp Cal aDO 90 !HI 90 +2

JII~F.I •• Ooldoresl 21:100-1111 1l\lo 11 -I Vandoo 3170 ~6 · 22', 23 -l ~ lllr Miner :)110 31 lB 31 -1 Vontureo 1039 $41'.4 em 41\1 - ~~

Arad \!ran 3n\ft llli tl U Hard Rock 1:100 14 13 13 -1 Vloo 47660 32 so 32 -1 Ad•-oc•te :!011 175 U-1 t.H - 10 oold Man 1~35 2.12 250 :UD Vlolamac 3100 200 191 191 -14 A'<oltchn ~no M ~n ~n , _ 1 Greyhaw~ 47JO ~~ 47 47 Wall• Am !10 114\i II 14 Alba Epl ~ 22'1 21 21 Grandue 190 570 530 i\$0 -20 Weedon • JOG M 50 ~n -1 ' Alcam "II 21:15!100 111 !>4111 Gunnar wls , 3110 870 Ill rro -ll Wtrner MOO II 4D 40 -s Am Stphl 11110 :15 Jill :u - 1 Grah Boua alOO 21 ,20 211 -IIi Wilber 3700 1ft 15 tl, Anoeon :11110 :159 ~6 :!J! •I llealb 19900 27 %1\'o n -2 Wlnchutrr 2{ll)ll to 10 I 10 Ant llou)·n 22011 110 131 132 ; 2 Oeco Mlnu aDO $11'.4 II II Windward 3000 21 22 22 -I Ape, 1101 UOIIO Uti 11 1~ II ol Lakeo 3000 13 13 13 -1 Wr llorl 230 172 llD 170 Artadlo 11~00 2!1'1 :110 ~~ ;.,to oenex 1100 35 35 3l \'ellorex !1000 lMi 1l 15 Arjon lOW! :!II 11 ll!i Gattwln 3000 31, lO M Yk Bear 5-Sll 212 ~ 2011 -2 A<to\ 13110 ll II II H Grandlntl , I:IJOO 33 11ft 31 ' - li Yukeno 1050 10\i ID\i 10\i + li Atlln·IIUI . ~ ~~~." 1017 170, _I" llull Lead 2100 II 1m 13\1 - li Zonmoc • 2500 ill 31 32 AubtUo ~- • • llo\'1 1000 I 110 I Curb Aumocho 123\!0 -:r~ 31 311 -2 1111111 Boll 1000 I! 15 i1 -1 Jlulolo 400 175 l1l 175 ATillobona 11100 ~~~ ''i ~~~ Hollll\llor 510 Ullllo ~ll :a - 10 Gospo Cop . teol$41 4! · II Aunor 17!!!20 %2-~< 2'115 ': lloylo . 1100 7110 71.1 790 I' dC Pain ~ ~ ~ ~)! -s Jlacam•• 1;;nn tnl~ IO!Io tnl~ •~ Bay 775 llll 11 1-11 II • . ·pend oro - ~ ·~ ·~ ::~."'4 4Uln ~• . 51 ~~ -1 ttoUinaer m •nm 2!1< 111 -li Acme Gu uoo 0!~ 1111 19'.1 ~ 1 llamnl• 1200 31ll ~ 7M -s 1 Hlloylhe p ~ 711101 7:: '!: -1 •lox , !tOO 11!1 ·liS 'M +I

1·- -\" ".3\L :n~ ' Ul am -~ n 1 .. - I Jlaslca -· •• • • • lnd Lak• S0700 :14 22 24 +I Am 'Leduc 31300 01 ~ .. -Jluucaa• S\011 3:0 3M )()! -!'0 lnsptrotl•• ~1100 1:!0 lJ.I 1:1.\ -1 Amurex !1011 lllO 6tS 61l0 +! JltoY Lodlo 4WI· Ill l! l!" -7 tnt Ntckrl ~ $1041\ 1~\1 101 - ~~ Anohnr .soo· 16\i 1&1.\ 16') JI·Duq 12101! :W 220 ~1l + l3 lnt Nickel pr u ma 121 121 - II llaj +ley Sol pr oliO t3& 3nl 31 + Jloleltrr 3~112 !10 :111 ~~ -23 Irish Cop 400 :.'5~ ZM :1M + S Jla a 1000 13 · 13 13 Jlolhtohtm 710!1 29S 290 2llll too 2&2 250 110 -15 Brat1man JOG 110 110 110 !Ionon 1m l3 · 31 31 -,1 ll'l)n BaY1 2100 •t 2011 :1011 211 cat Ed 23! tmi 291A :.~ll + 11 Jllbla 4000 II 9ti ~ 1.1 <II Joe~ . Wa 1•1303 " " 71 78 ll c Oil L wlo 500 I~ 170 170 -15 Jlicrolt 18P75 ~ 110 :155 • 5 ,!aye Expl "" •• •t "II" --212 CS Pelt , 100 530 ~ 50! -40

I Ito to Jtllleoe ll3l33 - • • • • Jllerofl wts 200 1111 I 0 + Joburke moo ll 14, 14 -112 C Ad Ott 1100 5! 5 - 2 Jlldeop <500' 72 M u -n Jonamlth 11000 :as 20\i 20\'.o -210 c Atl 011 ::no 71 700 70! -20 Jllack liar lDOO n 70 70 -t Jo~·seY 2SII 103 90 110 -10 c Brit J:m U4D .&a eo 6Cl -3 'llon•illo .330001141 11! 111t 1113 _ 2 Kerr Add 150 JIHl 17~1 tm HI c Colllerlu 110 !~li · ,1411

6141< - ,li

JlordUioe • Kllombe , 1000 3ll 3.10 3SO C Dtnl ... t. 500 ~ ' • -• B.,.nn 111M 200 1~5 "a -2, Kllembe wtl '1700 110 152 IS% c DeY Polo 11130 690 500 680 Jlllymar 4000 I IIi, Ill ••- I" 110 1110 -s C Ex Goa 1!00 62.1 1!00 6:15 US

rll d :70 0C 100 10 -T Kirk Min ~n ~ C Homo • 3111 ~ W U9 l,.,~r Reo! mo .13.\ 131 Ill -1 Kirk Town 500 22 22 22 -1 c PL Polo 11220 390 :110 3.10 -!

2000 • 9 • 1 p Labrador !131 ~i lltl lOti -5 500 500 500 -25 ==:::-:! 30C8 11 1 lDIO . lOVo · Lake Cinch 1300 70 ~ iJ -1 B •• ~~~~e\ 1~:g teO l&a 110 Bnonoton 10000 14 13 Ill'.> - li L Dtifoult •1100 230 11 15 - It conoo 21 171 171 171 ·+I 'lull Cdn POCO U 11 3 Lake Llnl 1: ~ 115 15 -5 Conm ott 101 281 3114 3114 +I Cln·Met IJ00\171 115 0 t:"i\z 100 110 110 10 S -1-' Coni Leduc ~75 500 m liD -15 llvrchotl "4100 10 311 36 -2 L Shore 615 4U lOS 40l -ll Chtl1 Oil 10110 2M :1M 24 -II

~!~.E~~k 1ts: 1~ ~~~ 1~~ :: Len•••rt ~00 1!51 1U10 1U" :A" ccon:ott~nbee 1~ i~v. it1~ ~~ -IIi P t :t3ll 22' 122 122 · LL Lat •• ' \i n l 66 1D C.nt • 1 r1 IOOO ll 31 34 tl LOJI\t" ~.1300 1310 ll 5\i -" C DraJOn 17(\9 73 I -

Cdn nolo • , t Lorado mt 12 · 105 101 -· C l\Ut' Moe 319l 525 505 5::5 +2 c.tutar 530 15D 110 'II• + , •uvlcouro :IJOO 22 . lltl .20 -2 con p.,.k 1000 13 ·u 13 Coni Pore 1500 13\1 13\i 13\i - li ... Lyndlturat 11700 1!5 110 UO +I c Weot Pete 300 11011 1010 IDIO - \i Chtm Ilea 1011 145 140 110 . I90 190 190 3 •· I Ill II" ... ~ :te3 2 I C'.onlremaq 1000 16 ll\i m\ -I ~lacu•• !()() 70 70 -5 ld·e • .. - -~.amp Chlb 917 S19 11'i tm +11 Macdonald 4200 73 - Farro 2800 212, • 5 :!'15 -1

Toronto

..

'o'OU 60T GUITE. A PIVI66tlol' WHEN 1BA'T 'TREE LtMB. OIUGH'T 'I'OU Ui'JDER '1'14' CHit-! AIJ' KIJOC.KED V0U OFF 't'OUR ' HOSS··I WISH YOU COUI.P S!!IE

'{OUR BACK!

With MAJOR HOOPLE' "

TH~ DAILY .NEWS, wEONf:SDAY, SEPT. 19, l

THE NIILD GRE/\ I LAI\E!I ~;ov~· Scotia lcavm• STEAMSHIPS I.TD. Sept.. 26, due St. John's

·M.V Perth !rom I11mil!on about Leavmg for Halifax and Sept. 16, Toronto Sept. 17, a.nd Oct. · 3, due Halifax O:t. Montreal S~pt. 20 !or St. John's. Boston Oct. 8. Leaving s0,10

FUllNESS WARllEN LINE 9, and Halifr.x Oct. 13 .. n Newfoundland dut Sit John's- John's Oct .. .'J. Sailing ior

Sept. 18, leaving !or Halifax and pool Oct. 16. Baston Sept. 10, due Hali!ax Sept. . Newfourdlnnd lcavino 21 and Boston Sept. 24. Leavin~ Oct: 13 due St. Jnhn~s Boston Sept. 5 and Halifax Sept. Leaving for lhlifax anj !!9, due St. ,John's Oct. 1. Sailing Oct. :!:J, due Halifa~ O:t

I for Liverpool' Oct. 2. Boston Oct. 23. lca1in• Oct. -26 und [JQ!ilax Oct' .,1

• lands as far No;th as Twillingatc St. John's Nu~. I. 8Jilin;' 1'hc ~I.V. Clara Hallett, Fcltham same day lor Ltverpool.

is lhc m::t~r. boded a full gcn Nova .Scotia lcarin~ crd ami dcd: cargo for the usual Nov. )0, ,due ~alifax l':yv.

1 1ortltcr:t p.1rls, sailed ;CD Sunday Boston Nov. Ia .. LcH11ng · imt rcttrmcd lo port owinn !11 ~ov. 1,6 ~nd llaltlux l':o1. I ~ ·t Joom s Nov ~·· ,. 'I · .onc•fir" heal'" ~ens. Will sail ~ • : ~ •. -.a11ng c~-=, when a 'suili\ble slhing tim~ same day fqr Lil'crpon.

rm:N .:ss ram cnoss , . "fl:~ RV. Hir'.~ln M.a)'. llo;cr• I l•'o; t Hamilton du~ ~\. J ! •o t ·n "'"<[r•. J< t·l;'"~ f"r•~ltt Sept. 20, s~iling Sept. ?2 1 · I'·" r<:lalir~. Pori Union and Bon flx), • ... ·-·~. · Fori t.l'~lon lea1in~ Xr~

T'•n :'<' V "· .t· S .• Toh~.;nn . .los. Sep~. 2;;, SI.,John, X. ·n, ~----~ i• '"" m?·~~r. i~ tit;i~·· Hdtfn:: Sept. 20, c: 11e

I ,.,.:~t.t lnr the usual ports iro Oct. 1. ~ailing Oct. 3 7r'nity p~~·. Brook and New \'orkl.

Fort Hamilton lea\'in• ,\T \VJ!r.' t<, SO:\'~ J.Tn, . Sept. 20, clue St. John's• Se I

-r•,e MY. \1'csl~""''le, Wimer' sailing Oct. 1 !Halifax). P ll '• thr rrrster f"'"' B•Y pol)~rt• Fort Av;;lon lcal'in;; New mJo••• a ror"n nl fi<lt w~s Jo'ld~d Oct. 16, St. John, :'/.B., 's •• ,.:,.~ f••i"'·l r,.,.. T •nc au T,Ot1" Halifax Oct. 20, rluc St

'J'hr ·G. s. ro1tln• n"~•r< I< tt.o Oct. 22, sailing Ocl. 24. ~·~tcr. io t1kiro~ f·~jnl•f I"" T•i~· NFLD. C.\!11. STF.A~ISHIPS a.. o11d Ire usual Trinity Ba)' Belle Isle II due S\. John's """

1<. 20, sailing Se>t. 21. T]1n ~I.V. T{unter. Fnr\onP. Is Bedford 11 leavin • llalir

Ch,, to"lr" .,_ 11 JOI" 11 +\I Macllo ' 1000 13 1-3 13 Gtn Pete . A 400 SIS 575 575 • • ~ ' k U360 !() II II -s Gr Plain Dv 325 til tl • tl - I\

Cheshille 4600 3.1 31 34 - 2 Mat can ' 300 1~ 130 1•• +3 G s .. ·eetG 17'- 31' 300 '31! •t 1 ~ "".•00 II 3J 38 -3 MacLeod •• "" r - • • 1: ·' • 1 " 5 1110 4911 30 Mapel 1000 11 II II Hllh creal 1500 39 31 3.1 -·,L· Ctolh Jae :111167 10 - Mortllm• 18150 :'13 )61 281 -I llllhwood 30011 39 311 . 39 .,. •

the "'""'cr. l·n~ H•rl the ~ncine 19, due St. John's s' pt llax -~"aired ~~rl i• l~'·in" f•eight for Sept. 22. · c · '""111!;j 1J';;'d'~y; ·•·e u~uat n~rthern ports. B~lle Isle 11. Je"·ing tl<li!;~-~.:~~ Ollb Kar uoo !WI !5 !! -2 •tar !!' wta 1930 ., Ill ~ !lome o/1 · A ""596 11311 13,. tm - ••

Clllh M ~'(100 3<10 315 l7l -10 i\tal1ln 13200 13 1!11 12 · -I Home o t B 574 113'.'• 13\1 13\1 - !~ ~llhmoExpl !601003 1~61 ~ ~~~ =~ Ma•brun 2JQ1I 112 10.1 JM -3,. HUskY 430 Sll 13 13 \o '" ' " •·· ' •• •M II M + • llu•o~y "'" 110 1110 690 690 C'<>ball 2lt9 sq AI &\ Mclntrro - • 1 ti> Jupllor 2600 21! 200 20!1 -s Cnlnmor 4000 12 11'.1 12 Mc~larmac 7l00 11 12 I +" Kroy Oil 12100 ~ 212 215 -1 r: C•l!lnon 16CO JA ~~ ~ ~leWaller• UOO 37 ~~ :U ..._, 1.1 Petr 4300 II 16 16

60 '7 ~ ~~ • l ,•.tentor new !:lOll "" .s ~~ -Cr.'. lll!ertlalekG·,•no ~~~~~ '.'8·• 2i i.l -2 ~tertii! 7:l00 2'10 2~·3 :155 -11 Mali;otd 100 31 ~~ 33 •• · ooo 2' "l 1~ 1 ~1err 1·n ret• 130 $1GI'• 161.1 16\1 - !I (' .llenl<nn 110~ p;n · 9l.l, P8.1 -·tn ~fela· llran I • • • - "Midcon 11640 130 112 121 -I C"h.omlum :~1 :un ~3~ 110 -tO • ~lldrtm 43100 lla 130 l~ -8 Sa\ Pele 700 460 160 '4!10 -& L'old•tr W:lll t\8 1411 112 -~ ~IIIII~•• aoo Ill liS :. -t N Brl•lot IIOO 116 110 Ill ... r. !len "'' no :!15 lM !61 -lo Mlndamar 2300 20 20 .a I ,. Sew R nom 700 233 ut ::15 -5 r: reolmor• U!~ lfiO J:\.1 1&11 'l ~linin: r.orp:\7 1:15\2 25 211 • ' 1 N Chbntrln :IG.IO ~10 23S 210' -12 (' !lo>CO\OrY. m 310 3.10 330 ~~ ~!In Cndtov 21!10 12 ,\0 .'10 ·I N Continent 67:!.1 79 76 76 -I r. liuayana :~1 II 31 .\1 • 2 ~lone Ia 1700 7B M 70 -I' N navl.. 3100 %4 23 ~~ C'onlltii'Um . 1'\11 17 4 1 \l ·~Jin Ore 1000 21 21 21 -I S GoP EKpl Mil 16.1 160 1&! + S 1 I hill~ ttl - ::7421· Ul ···!In .. I :Ill -II ~lo~ul 101 iO 3!0 Jill\ 301 -IS XortheRI 4100 IS~ , 110 tlO C ~llrbtMI ll[lol I!J.. 1.1. ·!I -I tNal E•rt UZ30 33 .13 ll -.\ SC: lllh :120 ~65 &&l 511 -~1 l'on )I an~ 5 ~~:t !1:.; ll'o !Oil - '• :o>oou Cr 4~JO 101 tno 103 • sc ott. "'' 170 320 320 :no -IS r ~lorrhnn Jll\ll 31 30 in -I ' ;.;etlo moo 21 ~'2 12 -'·' :-iorthland ~700 P2 11'1 " -I M So<UI ;,I)Q ~~ 21 21 •;e, l.>btne ~lOll 130 l:tn 120 -! ' Oil Stlecl :,'$500 13 12\o 13 1 ,.., Slcho1 :1~61 ll~~ 12 12 -1 Sew .\11tr J~~oo ~~·: uu~ '~~~ - ~·= oka\tl ~100 ~ 230 290 1 + C SCorthl>nd 3;?B J'lQ ' 5 ~~ -3 Sow 111<1 4000 tl 14 H -.~ PotPett 10150 $17!1 17\it IT!I - \o

cne~·ooorl 3~1011 I'll Ill 11~ -to ~ew C>t 3100 " !0 ~s ;.3 Pon IV•st 2100 311 30 10 -1 c·ned ron tr.ln ~- :·r. 21 -2 I :-\ell' nolhl moo too 14 7.1 -74 l'alh!lndrr ~0100 132 145 I~ -co-. ~nrt 1 r:n ~:!3 .tfl J•:ll - :\ ~#'W nh:kPn 1000 1~7 l~A lM -~ _1'en.IV OIIJ . AOO 192 192 l!n -a ron su<l 1121 tll lib 111 -~ s rorlune 21323 :rl 21 2! -· 't'elrol a20o 127 1!!2 122 -4 (' Tu,;,lrn 2103 11 4\ ~~ -~ S Goi~\'UO 1200 :!<l 11 l7 - 4 Phttllpo 400 114 Ill llS -7 t ·~•"' t 1111 .1'6l 4!0 100 It~\ ··Ill IS ll.rrlcona 1000 21 ~~ 21 _2 Permo 0 pr 40921 211 200 200 -IS c'opp:• t ,.1, n•J m 1~0 l"o - 10 1 s 111:111'1 10000 62 Rn 110 Ponder 3100 70 70 70 t.'oppt:cr:!1t '!'.!:0 r-1 U f''~ -2 · ~C'\\' Host•n \0()1'1 ltl ~ ~~ • Pra'trlc" 011 200 4.\3 44\ 4.U -s \1900' )lon 6;03 IR 17 17 -I'' , Se\1' .taJDn mOO :!<! 11\i IM': -II: Provo Gu 6211 20) 200 :103 +I · c 1 ~ltlt \Ill 10~ 101 •· 1 I :-; Kclnce 1\lOO 22 20 2~ -I 1:131 14 11 11 l·rn'~~;e 4,':C3 3 l ZR 30 -I :o\ew·,,j !1:76 12 IO ' 4• +I ~f~l ~~~or 3812 :103 19! :/0-1 -J ll'.\ro~n1 t::cn 6R 6: 6: -1 1 :-! \l0111l0ba 3100 120 It: 120 +7 noyalllr RIS $!lli mi t!li - li rro~~·• ;)no ~~ 29 23~>-I'.J s \!Inti• 11100 4B II 4 -I sapphll"' PIOO 22l 213 220 ('U~(''1 ~iOO ~~ 1: 111 -2 '!"ew noU)'n ll=>O 1& 13 n - 2 Secur Free 1200t03 s nr Clur ~II 1013 16 \6 16 Sew Ron•n 11721 Ill 395 lOS - 5 Sapphire 9100, 222 . 113 2211 Jte 1.'01'1' f:i U 1.\ 'l - 3 S StMior 9000 9 • 8 8'.i Sapphire debo 70 $90 90 110 Dumor.\ r.:n 21 •••t :1 - I• S•w Thurb 4000 H 14 II StUrrY·IIn 222l0 370 250 MD -s neua l"C'l 11 "i1 13 Sickel 11111' 769! 110 liS 400 -& sccur l'ret 1200 ~n:l 390 390 -13 n•ll'• 310 fll'• 131, JJ'1 - 14 Slpl.,lnr 2800 385 31.1 36° Sourt• 500 Zll 26 2li -1 .J "'''••I•• 3:Jo 17 16 16 -1 Nlsto !300 II ll\1 II Spooner :1.100 39 11 39 5 + nonal•l• GllJ 16 41 H -2 Xor .\cmt 31100 11. · 70 7D Slanwttl 500 :fl 73 73 -2 lluv>n :P3'l 62 ll 18 -4 Soronda 7•D fBlli 61 61 ~ \\ suretf Oils 3100 110 lOS too : 1: Ar.tp~l ~:t~ 9'' 911 9!> Xoraold 3000 17 17 17 Tranto Can 1100 ISS lBO 180 -1 F>tro•b1· 11111 S391o 30~; 3> '4 • \I Sormel•l 1710 B!OO 1100 690· -to Tran•·Emp 11.10 23! %10 230 -5 i:n1 Gl•c••• ~01)() m; 17'> J71!o s nonkn 82200 41 131 131 2 + Tran• Era 4!00 33 33 3l -1 1:1 sc.l &!3toJ 31 Zl 23 -2 Norpox 125300 194 179 Ill -1 'trend 'Pelt 2000 14 13 u -1 •:Td•lr:• • 16100 63 5I .;3 -s Northopan liiU 43S 110 40 -~o Trlod oil 1&30 110\4 10 10 - ~i i:ut ~hlarl :l'l 160 160 1~0 North Can %!00 211 1:11 120 -IO lln Oils 168~ 231 211 29 ,-a l:ut ~u'l tro ~BQ .16.\ 3r.s £no + no 5 UlO' 42 ' J9 U · +2 Weapac 200 . lO 29\~ 29\i - \~ l:nt .\tb !',1 7! 7! 75 -5 Obulto 23011 9\; ! t w Ashley 41100 11 \4 ·II tl Eall ~lin~ 1C991 610 7! 1 53.1 -:0 O'Brien 100 tO 110 110 - 2 W Deeolto 8670 ITI 161 !75

01ama 11600 27\i 2e~ 26\\ -1 IV Dent "'' soo 1.1 1.1 ~~ +3

FIRST The original

mulual in,esiment fund in Canada it

• CIIIIIU,'IIIACGiltMAY . 6 IIMIIII ....................

Oka naro llOO 110 10 BD w Naco 2'17S 115 110 140 ~s O'Leary l:IOO 2l 22 :&'1 +l W Naeo wlo 2000 ~ :!.II> 2!110 Omnltrant 5000 I I • Wllrlch 1232$ .12 40 40 -2 Opeml•~• 2133 • tlllt 1m 1411 - ~~ \'an co huck :1300 11 11\~ 11 + 1 Orenada 110011 34 32 32 <:arb Ormoby :16100 41 « 4! -s 1 Ollsko 4300 31 1'1 3! -3\i DllhOUJ t Pauma• 8.\DO 13 I~ U Monl l'arbcc 8.\00 11 101> 10\1 - 'h l'ormaater moo Zl Ill )6 -1 Pilch Ore 20110 11 II II Prom !lord 700 II 11 IS · -1 Pronto wt1 330 75 175 11.1 -25

NS Imp Royal Tor-Dam

1500 12 21 Ill ISS M\o

BANKS 110 1.11\1 31\i 200 $.11 5I Cl $65\1 651-io 3.'<0 Ill 14!1

lNDUSTIIIALS

:t:z 5110'- II

~· ...... 5I 6.1\i - l'o

'"~· - \~ !'roo •Air 550 110 110 110 •tumlaJum Punl•• !JOG 24 23 22 n Que Cop 2100 m 155 15.1 -1 ADJIO Nfld Que l.ab 1300 15\i U 15\i +II\ g W:!"

m mm 13210 ll2Ho -211 100 tt~• 10'!4 !MI 862 S27 211\0 ~~~ - !~

Quo Man 500 90 90 90 • Q Molal 48.10 m 2110 290 -ll D Strol Quemonl ~ mli Jl\4 2114 - ~ Nor Star

m s m• 11 11 1205 12th 31~ 21\1 - !1 ~ IIIII 1411 111\ - I~

S'IO 17214 7 7111 - I> Rare Cao1h 6700 m 110 ISO -1 Walker• nto RupuD 6000 ttf 17\i 17\i - I> Totil ooles on Tnronta Slotk Exchanle, nl• Atha~ 27%5 72 19 " seA\, ·Ill 3,093,000 ohartl. Ro<he JOOO 11\1. II U - ~ • nook~ In !36t 111 M M San Ant 300 II !0 /II Sl Mlehael 11100 30 21 :Ill +I · Montreal Sand River 1&:00 21 . ,:rl\i .21 + 10 Showkey 500 15 15 15 Sheep Cr 500 W 135 lSI til ' . MONTIII!:AL CLOSDIG BTOCKB Sherrill . 4011 150 1140 140 , -to 111 Tho Cono41an 'l'reu Sima ::00 .4ft5 'W • · tl5 I Sit ~Uller 2100 117 110 115 +I Abitibi· 36 Gl Loku U\4

V I - Ablt pr 21' How Smtih U Stocan R ~000 2S 2 ~ •o~·oto• :It HUd Bav Min ll Slseoe 2100HI313 n- • ston!el1b 11011 :rrs :1'10 :rro -1 llaak Moat M Imp ·Oil 5~\1 Sullivan 1MMI 130 4!5 W -1 Bank NS ill lnl Nlet 104 Surf Inlet 2000 , IIi 1\i l\i _ " Bnque C Nat II · In! l'ap 1161 'J'andem , 1100 · 11 1l 11 1+ Bolbur11 'B 11 lnl Pel• 31 Taurconlo :1000 11 • 'II. 11 · · Brnll 7 N 51 Co 1!2!

-.:=-------:~-:---......:.:=.:;;:::::::.__;:;:_;:;__:::._..::..__ Bldr Pn4 J8 Noranda 1111

F WI h & c c C01111ftl 32 Po1ce ~

urness, .. 1t y _ ompanJ L.td. J .. ~~g;: i~ ,rJ~~:t.~ :u Liverpool St. John'• : Boltoll Balllu M. · ltW• ~a:-• ': ~~·'tt~•l N ·

to to Jlf:L & to to .. cPa .. Wallttr 71!1 ·St. John'• 'BoatoD RI)Jfu IL' JoJm'• U..,.. • .,

"Nova Scotia" "Newfoundland" "Nova Scotia" "Newfoundland'' "NO\'a Scotia" "Newfoundland''

Sept. 12 Sept. 26 Oct. 13 Nov. 3 Nov. 21

Sept.lll Oct. 3 Oct. 20 Nov.10 Nov. 28 ·

I sept. u llpt. u Sept. 211 Sept. 211 . 0¢. t Oct. 9 Oct. 13 _Oct. 11 Oct. 26 Oct. 30 'Nov,' 1 · Nov. 18 Nov. 20 Nov. 22 Dec, 4 · Dec. 8 bu .. 11

Persuna (ontemplating passage to Europe 1hould make bqoklnp •ell In 1 d l'lnce.

A.lr Passages arra!lged· b' B.O.A.C. - K.L.M. -.Scandinavian· Air lints-Pan American Airways - T.W.A.. and conaeetin1 Au­lines.

... Consult ua regarding YQUr travel problem~. . .. FURNESS TRAVEL ·'OFFICE "

. . . DWFOUNDLAND HOTEL 'PBONJ: llli

·Children'~ .Puzzle·

Sep~. 25, dtte St. John's Sept. ,\T R.\ll'i'F. ·"'"'"t;TON & CO su1ltng Sept. 29.

J:TD. Bedford II leal'ing l!aiib1,

1 Thr '' V. Annett'' l,01·ettn. r.r" 28, due St. .John's Oct. 1 .,

I """""ft ;, fhn I!J"•tr.r. fr'"l Burin Oct, 2. ' ;, t?'·•··~ '··•~••I rn• Purin. Bell~ hie II leo\ in~

rv 'Tnr;: ~OTJTil'im~ ... , ~ct. 3, due St. John'' Oct5,!21.1!'.~'w Thr ~t \'. Robo•t .T. Kntcl:lc.' mg Oct. 6.

c:,-·•trl Rl•cl;woo~ i.e the l"a~t~•. i< rli~""~r"il'" ~ ouanlity nf frei.,ht . CLARKE STEA~ISHIP & ant] wh·~ 11l••hor~ecl · will slti£1 Ellcspoint sailing IOd<y. ,.,·r-· to A~-r~ t· Sons lndav to take Nol'aport lea \'In~ .\lonlml c,,

lrcinht for LaScic :\nd the. other 26• 'due St. .John's Oct. I,~~ usunl nr.rthcrn pori~. Oct. 3 Bay Roberts

1 Elcspoint leal'in; ~lonlreal ~~ ;:t':t" The Portu~:uese Hospital Shin 5, due St. John's Oct. IO,

_____ ....;.,;...;~~;.:.:.~,;_--...!"!.!':!:"'~"~"~'!: ...... :::::.~··. r:il Eannrs from the Grand Bim~s Oct. 12. ll!tlj·i~~~~r.

------------------------------..---------~ £1s_hery, took a supply of batt, Novaport lcal·ing \J 1 I . • sat led nn Sa!urda1·, returned .. to 17 due St Joh , · ur. ;u W/.-'TERFRONT AT A. H. MURRAY'S CO. LTD Cove ~outh. 1n command o.f Ca~t. nort a~rl is now ~chcdt•lccl to ~ail odt. 24. · n ~ Oct. 2., ll' f\ l'he Egyptian steamer Port Said Butt, ts still moored up tndefm· tor!ay for the Grand Banks fish·

DIRECTORY is loading five hundred tons of itely •. sa!ling .li.me and destination ery. • CONST,\NTI:>a; L\.\'ADI.l\ fish packed In casks and boxes; is sttll mdcfm1tc. SER\'11:£S expect to finish loading last mid· J.IS'f OF S.\IUXGS M.V. Avonwootl arril·ing

ON DRY DOCK nigh(. after which the steamer AT nOWRING BROS. LTD. The M.V. Sid k Sam, G .. Glover John's Sept. 20. The S.S. Glencoe, M.V. lnrcstl· wm· sail this a.m. for Genoa and The !ll.V. We~ ley & Ralph, Steve • i~ the master. ~ailed for Bona1•ista li!.V. Edenwoorl

gator II, and the M.V. Cinderella. Naples. Goodyear is the master, is taking Bay ports at 6 a.m. Wr.dpesday. ton Sept. 26. Toronlo These three will remain on dry Th~ M.V. Catarmoran which ar· freight for the· following ports:- Scot. 19th., cailling at Bona vista Montreal Oct. I, arril'in0 Sl dock about ~nother two weells. rived from HaliCax Portugal Gander Bay, f.ogo, Change Is· first. 0~. 6.

AT DOCK The 1 !II.V. Sainte Adresse, Porn·

eroy Is the master, from Halifax with a cargo of lumber to dis· charge; part of which ivas last Saturday discharged. The balance will be continued to. discharge and after the full cargo is discharged the vessel will sail for Halifax.

The Norwegian steamer Kathryn Is In port to hal'e the boilers re­paired, and the l\I.V. Clarenl'lltc is still having the bow rcllaired, next sailing time is ittde!inite.

AT ftfl'NICIPAT. BASIN The 1\f.V. Ett!!cne Roy which was

moored un all last winter at Ayrc & Sons, Is ·waiting her turn to ~o on dry deck c••rntually, and the Ronl Flrctug No. 3, which re· reiently came· off dry dock after having some minor. renairs, will shift to the HMC Dockyard for harbour firr. service. · .

The M.V. Otterville i~ also at the Municipal Ba~ln nnd will later on shift to the· HMC Doek~·ard, and afterwards 'to · her moorin" nlace at the south west of the barbour . '.

AT Hl\IC DO'cKYARD The 1\I.V. Marinus is moored up

Indefinitely, and the M.V. Parr Is moored· up for the s.eason.

AT STEERS LTD. ·The 1\I,V.· Maxwell Corkum. ?o~ur·

phy Is· the master, Is taking f~etght for En~lec.

The )I.V. Bertha ,Joyce •. ~l:m BerkshlrP Is ·tlte master, Is takmt: frci'!ht for, Soencer's Cove, Hr. Buffett ;racks Beach. Da1•is Cove and other ports In Placentia Bay.

PRF.!IHSF.S, 1\AlRD'S COVF.l A'l' STF.f.ltS J,TD. m.~'iT END ThP 1tf .v. Silver Jubilee. Par·

sons Is tltP. maste~. finished dis· eharglnl( {he cargo or sail bulk fish and ·slJifted un to Bowring Bros. to take freieht for German· ville, 'Gander -Bay, , Twillingate. Pilley's Tslanrl ~nd Lcwlsporte. T~e M.V. ·Lydl~ ·Marie, Spurrell Here's the deodorant soap- for ~usy pe,ople

PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND ST I 'J,OHN'S.

Is the masicr, will finish discharl!· In!! the carl!o of· salt bttllc fish and will shift up to Ayre & Sons. to take ·freight for the usu~l north·

... so ef~ective· it keeps you clean and f~esh hours long~

of Passe:~-l Wabana Ore 1 for Highest ~

"'";naur• on Bel!. Isla

\

DIRECT STEAMSHIP . SERVICf

"M,V. FERGUS ,.

· WEEKLY SAILINGS· ·FROM I

CHARLOnElOWN. TP ST. JOH~'S

1or Information ~n~ Rates contact ' '

'

' . .

Murray Agen~ies-& , Transport:~. .... . . ' ." ( '

c~., ~td. · - -DIAL 2031'·2·3 · . . ' \ Je2!J,wed•;tt • ·

ern ports._ ·

'AT CANADA PACKERS LTD. The M.V Norma Gladys, Charles

Kean is ;the master, 'discharged ~ carJ!o of· fish at Steers cast end. and Is now takin11 frel!!ht for ports from En~\ee to Cook's Hr.

AT ·cROSJITE &\CO, LTD .. The M.V, Western Explorer !~

mcored ·nn lnd•finltP.]y,' , as .well as ·the· M.V. Colin 11. the latter recentlv came nff'· drv clock to ent!~l!ed P.Ventuilllv In the herrlns: flsberv. The whalers Finbnck and Gunn,'VI nr'e' ll)OOred up for the

·: ia~7 roves to go to tho store , . • and 'dol. hla .. ~lother's .. shopping. · '.-.HisllitJ.I·qulte }On!( so be·brougbt· .... AT ~· HALLET!' t,TD •• bts·wigon, •Join aU·tbe'numbered The_M.V .. Fenmore, ~: Blacl\w~od 'dots· together . startlna: 'Nith' .dot .Is. l~l! master, . fr'!~· Cl~r~nvtlle, number one·:~nd eiuibii'.wlth dot I• w~ltln~ tbr ~r.~lvaJ·~f two en· number tJdrty and'· y'ou" will :see !'""5 w~irlt .• .. 111 .~rrl 10 r ·l)••.;~tr.aTpr . what. he Ia· buying, -~Complete ·this ·to he;}oPrl!!cl_on .tleel; _Rfler."wliich',' picture with your paints o.r cray,ons ~~tvesscl.wlll :~~~ fo~ ·N~rt,!t Sy~- . , .

'---~-----.... ------..-----------=1 , ~ I ·. ~ ' • • . ...... ·--. ,.

\

Get lasting protection! Life~uoy is 3 to '4 times more effective than any. deodorant for removing bacteria that cause unpleasant body odour. . . '

Lifebuoy users. can miss a bath if they must (and who has not?) because _Lifebuoy safeguards personal freslmcss h2!!!!! longer. Lifebuoy, with its special pUrifying lngretlient, actually~ tht bacteria that cause perspiration odour. Ordinary soaps just can't give you the lasting freslmesa - the wonderful "after-bath" clenriliness I 'bat Lifebuoy olfen. No matter how busy, how active you. are - you'll want th8 enra protection of Lifebuoy.. • ..

~ ' . LifebuBYw~~h ..-

thepleasing)J,ew pyrfumJ I

~!-,June Hiscoe! X-Robert Rees. IX-Margaret Pe

... · I. i

, oAIL'' ;~EWS, WErNESDAY,. SEPT. 19, 19~6 -- ·•

Sport Activities News From .Bell. ·Island ..

ITEMS OF INTEREST TO COMMUNITY I ·,

. . Annual Meeting William·). -:- Two 1\Jlore Road· H~1CS "Trinity".: Apron Alley

Social ·Personal

,

::.,~~~~:.~~ :~.~;.~~~~~M· ~~~:nee .~:te~way. B::~;LA~:t U!;, ... /:E:~,~:.no~sl~n=.!What's Cooking p :n· tht ]~land \'lslllng Mr. Ilarrlson r:Jarke spent the -- Boards were set-up on the Island ada's most modern minesweepers,: On Bell Isl'an· d. · .

.:ir' fiiC Ctm·kc. weekend Rl his home In Clarke's BELL ISLAND-The 51. ,John BELL ISLAND-EI'eryone RS· Sunday allernoon, one at the HMCS. "Trinity" arrived here Sal· I 1011· 011111 ~ rc,idcnu attend· B~'ach. Ambulance Association held their sociated with the operations at Front, and one at the East End. urday, on a three' day visit.

runrral of .the lnt.e 1\lrs. l\1rs. W. E. l\ormore paid a annual meeting ·and election or Bell Island and the community in The meeting r~r the, Front toQJ; The "~rinity", commissio~ed 1 ~ I BELL ·ISLAND--Next lime I sulved. Add to lu.kcwarm mixturP

· \lirli~cl 11 Jnrh took place brief visit to the Capital last orrtt:ers, In the old survey of. genet•al were ~hocked to hear or P!acc in St. Mtchlel 5 Hall at· 3 1954• has complement. of stx ofh·: ~·ou'd like tn serve a !!akc for· above. HI end in eggs, one at a ·Johr.'; \londaY morning. Friday afternoon · rice on Sunday a!lcrnoon, Sep· tile passing of Mr. William J. 0 clock anti was nt~cndcd by ~nc ccrs and 41 men, and ts comm~nd·; dessert, but don't feel like .going time." stirring well after each.

Jo·crh (". Sapp, .Joseph l\lr. C. E. Ca··~w. Asst. Purch· tember, 9th. With President, Roy Cantwell; whose death occurred hu~drcd· people. 1 he follui\IDg ed ~Y Lt.· Cdr. R. C. !h?rber of to the trouble of creaming but· Add flour gradually, mix until t:lia• Ba>ha. ll:lrold ashlng Agent Dt!mlnlon Wabana Recs In the chair. '!'he election of at his home, Grammar Street, al rcstdcnts of the area ~~·:re cl.eclcd Halifax. !he !50 ton shtp 1~ po\\.cr· lcr and sugar, sifting flour etc.; 1 well blended, and place in greased

. •.

11 .. , J.1·.·,tan Carbage and Ore resumed I!Jr dulles at the officers for the coming ''Car, was 7 o'clock Monday morning follow· to form a road boa.td. -~llc)lael cd by ~wm l~OO horse po.w~r d•€s· we suoaest you -take a plain white howl .• ' . . Stoyles Chairman; Clifton Squtres cl enr;mes. ~ap~tlle of driVIng her o11o k · · . •

· \t~crt 5~ 1, 1 , Warehouse 1\lo!i•la)l morning Col· conducted by Dr. B. J. Egan, past lng, an 1llness of approximately, Robert Fitzpatrick, Edgar Benncti ;;t a ~peed o(.o;er 16 kno;~. Ht~r or ye ow ca c m1x from. your Cover and _clnll at least. 1110 · \1 .• \.llo·r -~··~It the week lowing a very enJoyable-holiday. "president or the local branch and one ~·enr. and Lloyd· Snow. up-to-dale crew bccommodat!On In· panl~y shelf, and prepare 11 .ac· ho~rs or ,unttl. needed. 5hap~ n.l'tr ltll·~: m~mlnnd. l\llss Thelma rower who was resulted ns follows Wllllam Cantwell was born .~t · . eludes surh ft•,ttures as tclevi:ion. cord,mg .to the tollowmg rcctpc. chlllc~ dough mto two !~aves:

0 f•rd nitll'oul rctumed to working in the rumpanw's ware·· Chairman-Roy Rees, Cape Spear, on the lOth. Aprtl, '!'he East End meeting took a cinema projector, all-electric Don t g1ve aw.ay ?'o~r ~cerci, and place m two grease~ 9"x~"x3' loa! ll;:lar.'d )!t~·.~.l)"· house as stenographer !or the· Vlce·Chnlrman-Jamcs Peddle. 1898, antJ was a son of thl' lair; place in the R.C. School and was Monc·mclal galley an automatic your ·most dtscnmmahng guest pans; cover. Let rtsc tn warm

· and ~lr· .\rthur .lanes summer month's. has returned to . Secretary·Treasurer-r'rank B. ~Jr. and ,Mrs. Wm. Cantwell. Com· attended by sixty people. The wash!n~ machine ;nd a library. ;~ill n,cvcr know th.~t you didn't P.lacc (80 t~ 85 degrees F.) un· rtttnl

1 i·t.t•r~ to the local the mainland ol Canada where Squire. . mg lo ,tllc Is13nd In 1922 h~ en· following residents were elected Possibly. the most publicized start from scratch. ttl doubled !n bulk; about two

~.he wlll resume her educational The only change in the executive tel'td 1ne employ .of the Mining to form the Board:. Jack Fl!rrar member or the "Trinity's" crew WALNUT APPLE SAUCE CAKE hours. Bake m moderate oven, 350 llil<•• ~rmcrtn~ or Top· st~dlcs. Miss Power Is a daugh· slate Is In the position of Sec· Compnny a~ a m?tor mech::mc, Chalrm.an; Thomas Jackman, wn: is Able Wren "Spike", the ship's 1 pkg. ";hite or yellow cake mix degrees F. ouc ~our. . ·

. ,prnriin~ a holiday here tcr of i\lr. and ~1rs. J. S. Power. rctary·Treasurer, which was held skilled at •lis 1\ork, he wa& Ham Fitzgerald, Daniel Dwyer and canine mascot. "Spike" now one· 1 tsp. cmnamon Unbaked cookies, so qutck and 1~!' aunl. \\r~. Cli!lon Squl· 1 the Front. for the past two years, by Mrs. c\'entually pr.:.:noted to ·the pos1· Brian Fitzgerald. Messrs. Stoyles ·year-old and a fully ciedged sea· 1

/4 tsp. ·baking Soda simple to make; yet so delightful · · l\llss Regina Conway who has Pierre Coxworthy. A hearty votv tion or garage foreman, the du~les and Farrar the respective Chair· dog,,was a·n under-nourished dock- ~~ tsp. nutmeg • . to eat, are .bec.oming i~crea~ingly

1\la'i;tra\l'l B. J. White been engaged at stenographlcal of. thanks to Mrs. •Coxworthy for of whlc~ he very capably cawed men of, the bOJrds were sworn in side waif when brought aboard ;4 cup seedless ratsms. popular. ThiS htlle rccJpe Will be · • rnrlstinc return· wor~ In- the company's main of· her services was passed by ac· out ••ntll he was obliged to re- by ~!aglstrate Brian White at the by sympathetic crew members at % tsp. powdered cloves ?n~ ?[ your "quickie" favourites,

t'.c l<l~:·d .1 rew dnys ago Clce for some n•onths past, will clamatlon, . llnqulsh his dulles about two Court House this week and they in a port on the Great Lakes. Able 1 cup canne_d apple sauce 1! 1t ts not already so. ••tndin; " \"CrY ~njoyable be transferred to the warehouse The Branch decided to hold a months due t? Ill health: . turn will swear In the. other mcm· Wren "Spike" recently establish· 1 cup finely chopped walnuts RICE KRISPIES COOKIES ., in tl" L mtcd Kingdom this week. 1 card game and dance In the CLB . After a per1od of hospllahzat!on hers of their boards, when they ed a new precedent in the Royal Preheat oven to 375. degrees F. ~z lb dales

c~ I he Cnn• inrnt of Europe. 1\lr. Robel"! Davis spent the Armoury on Friday night; October n: returned. b.ome somewhat !m·l hold their first meetings. Canadian Navy when she gave Grease, th:n line with waxed 1 cup sugar

11• 'i. Ct•\ o' St .• John's ·was weekend at l1ls !•orne In Harbour 12th. Further details of the event ptoved. Ho~le~e· the ~rent Cre· birth to a family of· six aboard paper two B·mch layer pans. 2 eggs, slightly beaten

·,·;,i;·m \1•1\UI tu the Island Grace. . will be announced later. at or, hu~ w.tlltll. otherw~~e .and his Road Boards have now ,been set· ship. Turn ~akc mix into bowl. Add I 3 cups rice krispies • · 1 Mr. , Walter . J~nmmond visit· ~e~tle .,plrJt P~lis.ed 11tlh1n the up at Lance Col'c, The front and HMCS "Trinity" is one of sev· soda, cmnamon, nutmeg and . Cocoanut

.lor r .. rhagc ~nd lllc· ed the !lktropolls last Friday 1 ell on the above mc~tlonc~ date. the East End, and a tot~ I o£ eral "Bay" class minesweepers cloves. Cook chopped dales, su~ar and 11

r• (' in st. .John's 11tr. Larry B:lller of Chal& . . In the community m wh1ch he $B,qoo.oo will therefore become of the 1st. canadian Mineswccp· Add apple sauce in place of lh eggs for 7 to 10 minutes in heavy on hu•i· r>~ rur the cur· and Company I•, presently h~ Extended hved lor. 50 many years, ~e wlll. avatlab~c to be spent o~ the ~Y· ing Squadron based on Hal!f~x. cup . of !iqui.d c~lled for in fir~l saucc)lan or frying pan, stirring

Clnh on a· business tup. J b_c sadly missed. Possessmg a Roads ,m these ar_eas. The . \\a· She takes her name from 'l'rmtty healing m d1rccttons on cake mtx constantly to prevent burning. Cuol Charltr ::-•:a1r returned to ~lr~ Pctc1 Pitts has returned S ) fmc sense of humour he was·. a bana 'l.own Councll· had preVIOUS· Bay in Newfoundland, ori;:ina!ly box. j ~ml stir in Rice Krispies. Form

: J~~.~·~ sun<l,l) aftcl' ~pending to his desk, In the Pay Depart·. ympal 1y great fitory-telle.~. and ~!any Will ly ~£ce1v~d $16,000.00 to ~pend on selllcd by immigrants from the . Complete recipe as directed. Stir •

1

tnto balls and roll in cocoanut. •ummrr mcouth; nn the Is- mcnt foluwln .. b \'CI'Y enoya!Jle. rpmembej the llttty stones told to the by·roads In the Council ~rea. Channel Islatls. The ship's crest lm nuts and raisins. ----·-·---·~ith hi· 1 ;n·cnt~. ,\lr. and holiday. . -1!1em thro~gh the years. A de· incorpora\r8 the · Pitcher P1ar.t, '!'urn into pans. Bake 25 min· l. ~ Sha1 r. ~lnin street. 1\lr. Addlsor Bown made a BELL lSLAND-W.t extend our 1otcd fam1ly man, the dec~ased, NcwfoundlaPd's national flower. utes, or until done. I Local Road

· . i• a m~nd yrar 'l'hcolo- business trip tu St. John's yes· deepest sympathf to Mr. Albert nevertheless, used every available T 0 and· the arms or the Channel Is· Cool in pans for 10 minutes. Re·! ,tudcr.t al ~uccn's College. terday morning He returned the Michael of 74 New Gower St., St. moment ro: the dcyelopm~nt of · O pen · lands. move, peel off paper and finish I B d M >I! momp.tnictl by ~lr. same day. John's on the death of his wife the home mto. the !nstltutlon: .he · HMCS "Trinity" docked at the cooling on cake racks. Fill and I Oaf eetS

'IICCtl:tnd who was a Mr. nnd 1\trs 1'... L. Oke o[ Hr. which occurred on Saturday Sept. reslred, and ~\5 un:lmlli p;sslnll Ne\A' Store Dominion Pier and wa~ op~n to frost with your favourite icing. i • , o!.tl!. s

1 a 1 ~ (amity o\·er Grace were recc11t'Vlsltors to the .15th. Following High Requiem S· a severe ow 0 15 a~ Y ' inspection by the public. She .- I BELL ISLAND-Thu newly

utkrn~ \1! Sweetland Is Island. W'hllc l•cre they were Mass at !hr. Basilica of St. John and la~gc ch·c;le ~r !~lends. ~ailed from here Monday at 4 p.m. An interesting bread can o I f?rmed Rr.;d Board for Lan~e at:t~din~ . l~urcn·~. the guests• of J\tr. and Mrs. Reid the Baptist, Monday morning. 'l'hc Survl\"ln~ htm ts hts wife, (nee wonders in perking up an ~·I ~ove and. Freshwater, ~l?t lor Jl.J

r. . I ttlejohn C C F Proudfoot funeral took place to. Mount Car· Asenlth Clark) of Brie. us, t~ree ordtn I fml :c:.~mn Monday n•~••' at the ,a) ·1 . . , • · · ' · I' d sons, Gcorqe, Cllfiord and ·J\)hn, BELL ISLAND - Mr; Hong ary meal. · l:omc of t hr Chair013n, Mr. Peter

tor lit D~olll~t of Bell 1\fr. J. U. Ta . .lon ma c a bus· Bell Island· two daughters :Miss Chong, proprietor of the Holly· A • OATlHEAL BREAD P•t:s Pr'nr to the me"t' J• ~~~ ?Aid a ,.•.•t to t.:te Capital !ness trip to St. John's Monday , Shirley, R.N., of the Grac~ Hos· wood Fruit Store, on Town Square flfilVersary % cup boiling water riu . ." ~nci' rr,cmbcrs of ;,~{. 'hc~:d

fnday afternoon. morning. Jl" . • D • pi tal nursing staff, Elizabeth, ~trs. tl ld h' 1 cup hot coffee •'11.1: c a survev of the rold• :n Gcor~r lotlcout who Is a 1\lr. Ralph ,~oberts was here ~~ w aniS mngs Dave Mahoney, Linwood, .Pa., ~~~;n yt~~ w!~~~~~~~~~ 11\~at~~~ Of we_ d dii12: 1 cup rolled oats I that lo~al:ty in compan)• wi: .. h· :.tr •

. 'u th~ ltra~e rllftsplt~ll Is ~roT St. ,Johns recently doing U!P.A.; two brothers, Frank, Cape Jeweller, who will be opening up u ~~ cu"p shortening . !\!!disc•· Bown, Ch3irmnn of ;l:e ~-~" arounn an cc ng ne. us ness. BELL' ISLAND-At the regular Spcaf Weston St John's· ·also b I th h th . . 12 cup light molasses loc-I roa . . • • · • us ness ere w en e necessary 1 • " u •••

weekly meeting. of the Club, the moe grand children. improvements arc made I BELL SILAND-Rcverend T. F. 3 tsps. ·sa t I The following member~ ot the

Wedding Bells following guests were present: The fuperal takes place -this · - · and lllrs. Honeygold are ·receiving, 2 pkgs. granular yeast 'newly formed board were duly Albert Blackmore guest of lllnx morning following solemn requiem Hong, as he Is familiarly knowlt the congratulations or their many I \t cup lukewarm water II sworn in by. Mr. Pills, Vice-Chair· Kitchen and James Murphy, Roy mass. Interment will be in the to all, has been a residerlt o£ lhc friends on the attainment of the 2 eggs, ~nbcatcn man Roland Parsons. Edward p,

BELL ISLAND-The marriage Rccs and Ron Pumphrey "Ucsts of R. C. Cemetery. Island for the past ~6 yc.:Jrs, and ·13th anniversary of their wed.ding

1

5~~ cups sJft~d. flour , necR, Augustus Stoyles, Thomas of Miss Margaret Murphy, daugh· the Club. . D Deepest sympathy Is extended to is one of the most htghly respect· which they celebrated on Fnday, Combt!Jc bmhng water, coffee,· N. nccs. ter of Mr. and Mrs. Chris Murphy Fred Newhook and 1 Charlie the berea\·ed family, ed Chinese residents. He also _con· Sept&ber 14th. They were mar- rolled oats, shortening, molasses: A work programme is now l;een

.l~GI.Ir.IS ,\l",-\l)f;.IIY BELl. ISLA:'\ D

GI:.IDE XI ~ll~~n:-June lliscock,

or Bell Island lo Mr. Richard Cohen were welcomed back to the du~ts a similar sto.re at the Front, ri~d at the .church of St. John I and, sail. Cool lo lukewarm. ; <lrawn up and will appear un the Hawco, son or Mr. and 1\lrs. lllich· club after their recent ab~ence Fr.om 1,1le FI"les wh1ch he has earned on very sue· the Evangeltst, Corner Brook Add yeast to lukewarm wat.er. Bell Island page in a sullscquent acl Hawco also of Bell Island, was from the Island. cessfuily for a number of ·years. 1943. and ~lir until thoroughly dis·: issue.

1 solem"nizcd nt· the Immaculate -------------Car Conception Church with Nuptial Cyril Butler received .the con· 0£ Y

Mass on Saturday, August 25th., gratulations. o!· the club on- his esteryear . Bennett, Heber at ten o'clock. Rev. Father' Purcell blr~.hday Ser,t. : Dth., and Len ' . . . . . ··." ·.

GOI'CT, Rae GU)', olficlnted. . . . . . ·.. · ... Hughes and Jack CohclJ. w~r~ con· anc~. Victoria Atkins, The wedding music was played gratu!ated on their weddmg· an·· SEPTEMBER71943 .;-. !

Bic~!ord, .Joan Budgell, ·Lor- ·by "Miss Margaret Ezekiel: The n_lversarles Sept. 8th. . BELL ISLA!'/D-1\~r~. · • Geo:ge Butlc\~~\1!5ep~~-~~~: ~~~~: Ave Marie was beautifully ung Mr .. James Murphy, Vice Chair. Hutchings rece1_ved !he lollowmg . llarie nee~. Shirley by Miss Joan l\letcalfe. man of the Arend Association was telegram from the Secretary for \'imy Warford. The· bride who· was given In presented • Wit~ · a cheque for D~!encc: . ,

marriage by her father· looked $500 -by the Ch~irman : of the Infor~atlon , received from Dimicl Scholarship:- charming 111 a ballerina length Street Dance Comm.Jttec Addison War Office that your husband,. No.

of Pmes:-86~. GRADE X

-Robert Rw. Louglas Clarence Tucker, Win·

Butler, Lloyd Somerton, 1\lar·

Atkins, Alice Butler, Olive Emma Hammond, Joan

gown of white silk swiss lace nylon Bown. Mr .. ll!urphy thank'cd the 971398 Gunner George H,~teh11~gs, and satin, ·long sleeve bolero of Clu~ for their successful effort ~.A., has bee~. awarded. ; Mel\hon lace: Her finger· tip" veil hung on behalf of the new Arena Build· m Despatches ln. re~ogmUon of from a coronet studded with rhine· lng · Fu_nd and he assured them G.nlla~t and . DistmgUished . Ser· stortes, and she carried a bouquet that their gift ·would help much In VJces ln. North Africa. Thts ap· of carnations . and fern. Her' only the .recovery of the promoter or pearcd Jn London Gazette, dated attendant was· Miss Rose l\lary the new Arena, Rt. Rev. Msgr. G. 23rd September 1943. Hawco, sister of the groom, who F. Bartlett. . wore a . blue · ta!Ceta drcs~ with It was announced that National nylon netllng, and matching head· Kids Day will be celebrated on ~.O.A. Bow_li~g·

.~ll~ys ~largaret Hancock,

Han·cy, oyce l.amswood, Lamswood. Inez Rccs, Ruth

Una Skanes, llildred lluriel Taylor, nuth War·

Butler, :o;e\illc French, Lutfman, Donald Mercer, Reo.

dress of heart shape design. Her 'Sept. 22nd. bouquet was multi-coloured flow· A meeting of the represcntatlv~s ers. !r~.m the Kiwanis Club, The

L1ons Club and The Canadian Le· glon.-who were recently appointed to the Bell Island Branch of the Call!ldlan National Institute Branch of the' Canadian National Institute for tbc" Blind was held Immediate. ly following the Luncheon meeting and plans laid !or the Annual Cam· palgn to take place in the last

lr.ttnta;~ ot ra;ses:-77%. GR,\DE IX

rwtJ:-Ra)·mond Atkin~. Cords· Bennett, \\'alter Bennett,

BDnncll, Clarence Clarke, CoombJ, Ronald Coombs, Crue, Cyril Hann, Lloyd

Char!M Hussey, James Hls­Ed;;.rd King, Robert Nor­Edllin Rces, Gerald Saund·

CordS\\"ell Somerton, Robert Margaret Anthon)', Evelyn E~elyn lla11en, Elsie B·at·

Benne:t. \'Ida Bennett Phyllis Bickford, Fran: Laura Clarke, Jean

l\lr;John Murphy, brother of the bride, carried out the duties of best man. The mother of the bride wore· a ·ro):al blue dress with pink corsage. The groom's mother wore a navy blue dress with. red cor· sage.

Following . the ceremony, the wedding par.ty motored around the Island· then to St. James: Hall where the reception was held. The toast to the. bride was pro· posed by Mr. Pat Hurley. The groom responded. ...

rhc three tier wedding cdie ~·as made and d~corated hy lllrr. Farrell.

• • • 0

Gosse, Janet Hann, For· goinG ;,y.ay, the· bride wore Joan Luffman, 1 k 1 1 1 • · Th Juliet ~Iilier, Linda p n w t t \1' Jo:t• accessorws. e

honeymoon· ·l'~i spent at the :e~;~~s,Pa~~~~ Goulds, at the home of the bride's

Rose, Gloria Rowe, ~Isler. ·'!'hey ·have since rehu·ned Sheppard, Lorraine to thr. h!ali() where they wili

, •. 1 . ·make ;heir fulure ·h. orne. ,,CI, T

rial Sclwlar&li!p- ' . R d ~~~~laor .nl Pam~-aa~. Happy jirth ~Y

.. nl~n \hh~na Ore Co, Ltd., BL'LL for Highest ~larks in .. . ISLANIJ-IIappy birth·

on Bell l>land day lltough belated to 1\lrs. t~; . · • George Peppr.r who reached Lhc r,;;:' ~1-.lunr lliscock. venerable age of 81 years on Gr.i: ·:-Robert nm. Wednesday. Sept 12. 1\trs. Pep·

' lX-~iargaret Pepper. per was forme• :y or Bay Rob· crts, and Is ont' of the two pup­

Congratulations Bttt lSI ';--D • · ltz .. ~., -Congratulations

• lnd ~Irs. Leol\3rd E. 1tho Ctlebratcd the 17th S o! their wedding on ~:pt. 13. Mrs. Buller was · 115 Alftha Templeman

$ENTER NOW

1s,ooo· IAKEFEST

CONTEST

Ils stlll living wl'r went to school to Dr. Arthu1,. Barnes, many happy returns fllrs. Pepper.

Congratulatlor.! and ·best wish· es to Mr. Howar1l Pitts who· cele­brated his blrthaay , on Sunday, Sept. 16. Greetings from t.he family.

Miss MariorlP A.tklns cclebral· ed her 'birthday Sunday, Sept. 16. Gre~Ungs from her· friends.

week· of September.

·Sport A~tivity

BELL ISLAND-The winner of the ca~e or Pepsi-Cola last week was Mr. Hubert Hammond,· and the winner of Ladles nylon stock· ing~ won by :'llrs. Clyde Ryan. ~1r. Hammond rolled the score of 280 and ~Irs. Ryan rolled 2GB.

All persons interested In enter· ing a learn 'In this year's league arc asked to form · their teams now ,and have the name of their team anil the names of the per· sons playing on the team at the canteen. ·

BELL. ISLAND-The Bell Js. land Curling Club held the an"imal F arewell.Party" . meeting and election of officers at tbe club lounge on last ·Sunday BELL ISLAND - A farewell afternoon, Reports from the· presJ. party was tendered Douglas Har· de!Jt · and committee chairmen ncy ·of the Royal Canadian Air were read at the meeting. Force at .the Wabana Country

The following ex~cullve officers Club,· Friday night, September w~re elected for. the coming year: 14th. Ho_n. President, H. P. Dickey;· A delightful evening of enter· President, F:red Rose; Vlce-Prcsl· talnment was had by all present dent, J. D. Taillon, Hon. Seely., with ~!r. Pat Fillpatrlck acting as Charlie Noseworthy; Hon. Treas- floor manager, and the Bell Is· urcr, Gil Inkpen. Committee landers providing the music The Chairman, B .. J. Egan, Bri~n Mur· grand sum of $160.00 . was: pre­ph)' and Cyril llloakler. Dtrectors, sented to the young airman which P. T. Murphy, J, G. Archibald, he appreciates very much,' and Is P,!!ler Recs, Robert Cohen and Tom also very grateful to the proprietor, Godin. . Mr. Frank Hammond, for giving

'l'he new hockey arena roof him !lie usc of the club free of covering Is ·almost completed and charge. Another purse of $25.30 everything is now in readiness to was taken up at Mr. 111. D. Hutch· Install the piping 'for the artificial ing's Club for Doug. ,Ice-freezing plant. Th~ opening The party concluded at . the date .Is expected to be1on October, home of his parents, Mr. and 15th. Mrs. 'Herbert Harney, Th~atre

Avenue, where a grand time was

A · • t" N' · enjoyed by all· who ·attended. P. preCia lOll . ote Doug left for the l\lalnlnnd of

Canada Saturday, taking with him

1\!rs. Edwin Q'<Jlk and her· two the .best wishes of all his friends.

daughters, Mrs· R. J. Imrie and STUDY OR GET OUT• Miss Phyllis TUlk of 1\lassachusetts,. PORT ARTiiUR, • Ont., (CP)- ' U. S, A., who were ;here on al) The board of education here extend~d hollday to their former cracked down Monday night on hom!!, wish lq sincerely thank senior l!igh s,choov students ·who

.their num~rous friends and rc· habitually' neglect their studies. Iatlvcs on Bell Island and· the trustees, who estimated student

·local mainland for making their !allures cost the city about $140 . visit such an enjoyable and 000 a year, rul~d Utal .studenis happy stay. Thr.y shall always must "toe the line or' get out and remember the - warm hospitality go lo work." Students not· con.' ex~cnd~d lo th~n, and once again forming .. to school standards .wlll say thsnk !OU sll. , .• be given a one or two-week sus·

-1\II"s .• Tul~ ana her daughters pension. If thl.~ is not e!fectiye •. returned to the 1Jniled Stales last the expulsion will become perma· weekend. nent.

DDI DNA HARDBOARD . .

ev ALEXANDER MURRAY

ADDS· LASTING BEAUTY To· 'ANY ·ROOM A strong, versatile pro"d.uct, Donnacona Hardboard 'is made from actual wood fibres compicsscd'by a special. process into "large" panels with a smooth, hard·surface that resists knocks,-scratches, chipping and cracking. Easy-to install, they, can be laid right over any surface to give low-cos~ .?ecorative beauty

that is both permanent and serviceable. Donnacona Hardboard has scores of uses - wall

panelling, partitioning, or remodelling basements, attics, and rooms. The "do·it·yourselfcr" will find that casual furniture, wall sections, etc., arc easier to build with Donnacona Hardboard.

. Ask for ALEXANDER MURRAY building materials at your local building r supply dealer, or contact Alexander Murray's resident Newfoundland representative

Les Tucker, 4 Rendell Place, St. John's, Teleph011e 91959F. · . I "I

i

'1.30-CBC News. 7.35-Top of the Mornine. · 8.00-CBC' News and Weather. 8.15-Musical Clock. !I.OD-Mornlng Devotions. 9.15-Program Preview. 9.30-Records at Random.

4 10.00-Hil of the Day. ~ 10.15-lris Power. · ~! 10.25-CBC News. :"- 10.30-Morning Musicale. . 10.45-BBC Variety. · ll.l5-lllusical Programme.

11.30-Nlld. School Broadc:~st. ·~ 1 j.4l>-Parade of Stars. ~ ·.P.~l. '·12.00-Announcers Choice. . · 12.15-Dinner Bell Breakdown. • 12.30-Farm Broadcast. ·

l2.45-llld Day Serenade. 1.00-Do)·le Bulletin. 1.30-Laura Limited .. 1.30-CBC News and Weather. 1.45-Aunt Lucy. 2.00-Words and Music. !!.29-Dominlon Time Signal. !!.30-0ff the Record. !!.-15-The li3PPY Gang. 3.15-1-'or the Plano. 3.30-Tr3ns Canada Matinee. 4.30-CBC News. 4.35-Timely Tunes. 4.43-Children's Story. 5.15-)luslc of the West. l.30-Fisheries Broadcast.

·• 5.45-Kindcrgarten of the Air. ' · G.OO-lntermczzu.

·:.' 6.30-Suppcr Guest. 6.-15-Sunset Valley Bo)·s. 7.00-CBC News and \\'catner.

• 7 .l~Curtai n Calls. 7.30-Tops Today.'

'· i.-15-Doylc Bulletin. ,. 8.15-~lerel)' 1'13)'ers. . , ' 7 8.30-Rawhidc.

11.30-Audrc:Y rnrncll-Soprano. !l.CO-Chambcr ~lusic.

'·' 9.30-BBC Trnnscription. '. 11.3\l-Ruddlgorc. 11.30-CBC NationAl News, Nell'S

I; Roundup and Midweek Re· . ' l'icw,

' '··

... '· -:.,

8,00-Vie· Obeek. WEDNESDAY, September 19

5.011-Howdy Doody, 5.3~Kids Show. 6.00-Ranch Time •. 8.311-News.

8,30-1 LO\'e Lucy, , . 9.011-Cross Canada Hit Parade, 11,30-Levcr .Brolhera Present.

• 10.00-CUmax. 11,00-News.

'7.00-Feature Mol'it;· U.10-The Late Show. '

Previous Punle ~ ~rf to 1 .. IM •, I ~.'. ~IIi 1:

Popular Fairs

ACROSS l-and Mike 4-and•

stocking B- but not

least' ·

~ ·f-- and f~\'e 3 ModcrRt~ 4- tlrt 5- in one 6 Prayer 7 Plec~ out R Burdens Y Opposed

'61P

... ~ .. 1.::::

" IC OIA

I• """

''""' IH

·I Bt>

1!: lA N

'N~

"" ... 16 ll'tiB

C> 12"- loa

Grecian Urn" 13-and

beans 10 Let It ltoud II Throw

IW &i[A ~ AlB ItS I

14 Atup 17 '!'Idler 28 lndlvidliRb 43 Emperor- : 19 Motlonlc~s 29 East and- ' and hl1 ftd~le I 23 Runud p1a\e~ 31 Slops , ·. 44 Good and-

16 r:slrnnges 24 Hlrelinl: 33 More unu~unl 46 Slop sucklln1 tB ncahns 2S Fru~ter 38 Bed cano>py · 47 Discord·

15 Prnrod and

"O He\'l<cs 26 Type purls 40 Run logeth~r goddess ;, Compass point ~j Quoth the . 41 rrench pri~~~ 48- o! honor I

22 llar~in roorl\:; raven " " 42 Bedouin 50 Anger· ~4 Ireland ::11- and iJUrl 27 -and then 3tl Rare 32 Calm 34 Snarer 35 Dc~ircs 36 llc!ure 3i !meets 3U -In peace 40 F.~scntial

being H -diem· 4~ .~noint 4~ Thron,cd 49 Called aG~in 5 t ~llneral PJck b2 Dry

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CJON · WEDNESDAY, September 19 •

6.30-Bob Lewis Show. 6.30-Nfld. News. 6.35-Weather. 1}.45-Fishermen's News and Forr:

'ast. ·

-'-

'P2: ~ 'HI ,I() II&

15D 51

153 I~ . 5b 51

10.55-Wife Saver, • 11.00-News. . ll.Dl-John Turner's Family. 11.31-Casino. 11.55-Tops Today,

II

1.00-Local and NatlnnRI HCid lines News and Weather,

1.10-Tops Today, 1.15-News. · 1:35-Dally Interview. " 1.40-Sports Review. 1.45-lnvltatlon to Music. 2.00-News.

..

. rlage, · 7.30-News. / ..

7.15-Atom 1970. 7.4&!-Royal Stores Theatre. B.Dl-Caslno. 9.45--Dosco News.

10.00-Biue Danube. 10.3~The Falcoln. '. 11.00-Locnl and Prov. News. 11.01-Natlonal News. 11.15-,.Sports Final. 11.30-Houseparty, News. ·1.00-Queen. and Sign ort.

VOCM . ·WEDNESDAY, September 19

6.28-0n the Air, Dawn Patrol. 7.30-Breakfast Club and Newt 11.00-A Date with Denys. 9.15-The Valley and the HID. 9.30-A Uate with Denya.

10.00-News. · ·; • 10.05-A Dale with Deny1. .

'10.55-News. · 1 11.00-Burtons of 'Banner· Street. 11.15-Blg 1\lountaln Show. 12.00-News. . 12.05-Rumblln' With Regan. 12.30-News. 12.45-Fishermen•s Fori'Cast. }.15-SporlaeasL · 1.30-News, 145-Ramblin' With Re1111. 2.55-Ncws. 3.00-Dollau on Parade. 4.00...:.Ncws. · 4,05-Sam's Corral. 4.55--Ncws. 5.00-Bob's Bandwagon. 11.30-Melody Man, 6.00-News and WeathH'. 6.15-Sportcast. 8.25-Lost and Found. 6.45--Ncws. 7.00-Slmon. Mystery. 7.15--Dr. Paul. 7.3o....:nemlezvous with Records. 8.00-Back to the Bible. 8.30-Big City; 9.00-Hcadquartcrs Man. 11.30-Songs the People Sing. 0,45--News.

10,00-Music for 1\loderns. 10,30-Snmmy Kaye, 10.4~News. 11. 00-S portsca st. 11.15-Sandnian Serenade,, News. 1.00-Clowdown.

. vous WEDNESDAY, September 19

6:00-Sundlal and New1. 8.00-Breakfast Club.

. 8.30-Make: up your Mind. B.4~Rcx Koury, 9.00-lt Happened last Night.

10.00-Coffcc Time. 1l.O~Turn back· .the Clock. 11.30-Pcpperrell. J11ke Club. 12.30-Hlllbllly Matinee. 1.00-Beh!nd the ·Story, 1.15--Masters of Melody. 1.30-1\Iuslcal Express. 2.00-Matlnce.

-·-:-... .------·-,.··-- '

,_ __ , ____ ~- ·--

Capitol . . ' Pa1~~~ Th.~· Long· N'

'f d .I THE 'sTORY. 'A flrestorm Is 1 rlccne became a l?ale . ·To-da'y . 0 a y breWiJig ) 'following the ·Sneak 1 and flnalJy a brt~eze' atom bomb attack on Harring·! land descended Into' .

, RICHARD WlONIARIC, . , "RUNNING WILD" WITH ton. Civil ,Oefe~r!e officials are I wind r.eboundett ar.d IN "BLACICl./lSH" . WILLIAM CAMPBELL. doing ever.ythlng tbry can to fthe fingers. of blast

--·- • 1 MAMIE VAN DOREN make the c1ty_ survive. . :.last bur~t o. - r · XT . 1 the slop111g . Richard W1dmnrk, ;,and Dcrnn~ -.--. . 'BUYERS was t>verwhelmcd by' distant from th~ oi Reed co·star m Blncklash, The new screen offering show·\ the tragedy he was forced: to; the fireball as~e 1d"d n~ Technlcolor out~oor adventure cases tl.1ree bright. ~ew screen : reap by his owr .hand; he was \·ens, the finger~ ~f 0

drama from Umversat,,Internat· stars prospects, Wllham Camp·: c.haken, not 50 mur)l by the dam·; aut the ·g!a~.; e1c; of 1

lonal. ' , bell, !\Iamie VJin Doren and nation of those who were aban· and disap.penr ·, r Elements .?r n~ystcr~ and ~Us· 1 I~athlcen Case ~In co·starring as·j doncd, for thcil· rteatl!s could nDt: last cxhausle~l·~.s~. tcr lh~

pense take Bln•klash far flom 1 s1gnments with recognized com: be avoided ,and the e1•acuaiion! After plott!m the the beaten path of tales of t11c: cdy star Keenan Wynn who tac I could not be delayed, as by the; ;·endings from hi, old West. The story concerns the Ides. nn off;beat cllnracterlzntlon realization that r.o marc tljan 3 . \canis and Ci\'in~ · relentless quest ur a youth, play. In lns first free lance role since "Cant few wl·o cnuld flee ,(~ith the: the map • fix" r · db 'vldm k I th p d 19'~ · - ·'I • · · ·• · 01 zero c Y . a; ... or . c su pose . ~~. . retreating disaster forces would; tcr. walkeri out 1t the ' murderer~ u. h.s missing father. '\ ynn Is. seen &s the ex-convict ! ever live. · . 'room. lie clin!hed lh ·

Chief supporll~g roles in•.the i and mastcrmincl behind a _gang 1 Col. 1,\J(rcd B•Jycrs also knew; Walking stoliilly to th.e pictures arc played by Wilham . or youthful automobile th~eves 1 that never agah• would he know the building ,.. h ·e Cllmpbell, John Mcintire, Barton~ ivho as a sideline, also deal In : a ni ~ht 's sound slumber ; , nd l"aned ' 0 • ~"c ester '·1 'L led d C Pl tt d • ·· f • a h m · ' " · · ' a • aoau,s\ the "ac ane, .• wa1 . a an ' vn11ous orms 0 • m Y . c · .. He sat up In h's chair sudden·; Winchester gr· pcd in Harry Morgan. Based on a novel! Young William Campbell, re· •v as Gcildblum's voice reached 1 'lo"ket for a . b F k G b 'h I tl I "!\' 'VItl .. t A •. ' · · • • ct umpled Y ran ru CJ • c sercenp ay I cen ,r seen .. n ' 3~ 1011 across his thoughts. "Colonel, i c:igarels, pulleo one is by Bordc:n Chase and was ~ro· i Star a,?d Th~ lhg'h and t~e this mcssag:, just came in [~om 1 drop])ed it fron, his duccd by Aaron ,Rosenberg, 11ith: l\llghty, tackll'o his most cxc1t· state Headquarters;" Goldblum 1 shaking finger•

, John ~turgcs di. t'cting. i lng screen. role tc date, eas.t as 8 said, handing h1m a white mes·: fl!!ng cigarets ar.d , young pollee oft1cer who 15 cal· sage form with ari att3c..'led type- i his hand and 11'1>

- led upo.n by his aupcriors to pose written sheet. Puycrs read: • His wife Gait ,,.a

Star as. a mnetc~~·Yl'ar·old hoodlum, ATO:IIIC BOl\1t\lNG ATTACKS I nurse, assi ned lh' 5 a · jom the nefmou, gang and bring HAVE BEEN l\IA DE ON Nl·ll\lonroc H~s ita ls ,. about the downfall of Its leader. AG 'RA FAll s BUFL" 'LO h. t k P. . Ru.,IJ

I •'> '• I r" ' C CS Cr •ne\1' lrlilll3(ej I

---- . A t.l]rcad of romance s woven SCHE:\ECTADY. NEW YORK, . f 11 . y l:t

---~~-... Into the mclorlrama .when Camp· r ,. , . ''1\cr 0 le atom. lle wi1 To-moJ'TOtV b 11 f 11 I 1 'th K thf NE)\ ARK, LIIJ.,ADELPIIlA, I aware that ne\'el' aoatn Ce all s lntt ove ~.' t l a teic·n PITTSBURGH, BALTI!\IORE, I sec his wife. •

· ase, lC a er F >If ua cap >c WASlllNGTON. CHICAGO, DE· • • • of a gang lea.der Keenan Wynn. TROI, NORFOLK, 1\IARIETTA,

VICTOR MATURE IN Director At1ner Biberman and OAK RIDGE S-\N FRANCISCO "CRY OF THE: CITY" l Producer Howard Pine are gDing CLEVELAN•D· DAYTON AK: le~t praye~ nf_.'l·anks. Hi!

-- to be on the r~ceivlng end of RON• . 'TOLE, TJO SEA,TTLE cluldrcn, Ius \\lie, and · · •t• 1 1 · f th 1 h · ' ~.. ' ' mother were al 11ome "Cry of the City," the achon·/ cn .1.ca ace Dim . or e r 5 OW· BOSTON, BRIDGEPORT, DAL· 'j 1 s nearlv twc · ·

packed melodrarna gave Debra , casmg of th~:; . fmc youn~ cast, LAS, 'HOUSTON. REPORTS 1 t~~ c~\ tirnlt .. mtles Paget one of Hollywood's young· plus the excitmg unfoldmg of S'l'II L CO"I~T IN · · 1 YC . ·'·

' f'l t • "' " ' • · · VIc h!tlcndon a cr stars, her first chance in pic· the 1 m s ory. He stared at the message frDm II' , d with hi . eld rl lures. In tills Twentieth Century- "Running Wild" virtually rocks 1e state contro• center, visual· · ,~\f three Jii'C!l on ~i !' Fox encore t.rlu'llph. 1\llss Paget t?c screen wlth.lts Intense emo· !zing the millions who must al·. as a warchoun c 1

shares femmlrc honot·s with tiona! Impact. ready be dead, the millions more I home was oo· but Shelley Winters. and Victor 1\lat- " Ask ~~d~s)tel, 11dcvote~ t~f1 who would dil' i1cforc the fires'f general squ~lo; ,,f ure and Rlc.har,l Conte arc file Roc n ° r ly 1m g~ ~ raging in so many cities were mother ke ! il co-stars. Debra, who. comes from unus~al1 th;ou~~tou_t ~he :~eture, either brought under control or· fortable. cbittcoulen a show business familY, was born cspcc a Y 1 n e ~u ~ ox us~ Je{t to burn until they harl noth· I the hundredth tlnlc a• In Denver, Colorado and went to mndc of lle 1\f!,~ua P onograp,! ing more on whicJ!Io feed. i and its glarin" biark' ere• Holly.wood in HIU, After her recording of ~azzle Dazzle With a weary voice he spoke ! • Jfi, h " start i'n "Cry of the City" she bas made by Bill Haley and .his Co· •oftly to hi · airie · 'They really i notmg zero · ~me ib

t T1 d. ccup·1ed tl1e No • " · · longer clean. I: 1\'3>-lul progressed until today sbe rates me s. le ISC 0 ' clohbcrcd us goCid this time" he 1 •• 1 , ~00 star billing. 1 spot. nationally for several! said. ' , -~pproxlma\r > · weeks i d · tl ' zer 0 · . -- . ti 1 I th . The men an women m le . And "II it wenr "IHtU!t.l:~:

SPECIAL ADDED ATTRACTI0:-1 Suppor M P ayers n e l Harrington cont:·ol ·center were '1 .. .• • ..

"The Ac~ventures of Sadie" large cast include Jan l\lcrlin, ~ assailed with nr· unspoken fear, control rei •. er . .When ·a cynl,al ·journalist, a John Saxon, Chris Randall, \Val· i shared equally b~ all in the un-1' Hcnrv Thotnp .. Jn had

ship's stoker, and an economics tcr Coy. · . j dergraund rooms far frQm the more 'stres, lhis nig.1t · professor arc stranded on a de· I city's heart. Th~ fear of anxiety! through all tlu• pwious sert island wit~ a sultry, sulky I for families within the city. Wl!o i tiona! and pllys••·al female, you can be assure~ of; SJ.I2 Jydu vhyl Espy NFLD 18b ! had survived? 1 of his entire !if~ many amusing situations,. espec·' SCO'IT AIR FOR~E BASE, 1!1. i. ~OT until Russell Winchester 1 feet of shock ra;t it~ ially wl1cn thesr four people arc I (AP}-A team from Pepperell a1r! traced the red tines across the over him. Sinl'r the the only lnhabltants of tlle is· force base, Newfoundland, lost: acetate:rovered map was there when Goldbiu 111 had land. The cyeLrow-raislng, pro· Monday to England's Upper Hey-: any division in the black fe3r. about .Janet and lhe · . vocative situation is the basi~ of ford 8·~ in the first rou~d of- the [ Anxious eyes w::ited for. the lines !·TI)(lmpson's c·t m!c·ieJI:e·s!f~ a new motion plc:ure called "The U.S. A1r Force world W1dc base.

1. to intersect, for the tracmg of the mind screamed

Adventures of ~adil'." ball tom·~ament. ,. . black cir.cle whi.ch would tell'!· The thought tl·at his Joan Collins, a stricklngly cur- Ol~er f1rst round llmners w.erc I whence the shoe~ wave had crup· pidity had sent l.is wife

vaceous beauty, plays the title Tach1kawa, Japan, Keesler, Mls~.. ted Qutward as a massive stecl1 alan~ the street> naked role as the objPct or the thr.ec and Travis, Calif. I ran:' of. racing, mc.an?escer-t air II searing J1cat thn1 would men's arrcctlons. Most of !111ss wh1ch punched hmtdmgs u\to a her body in flaire, · Collin's screen ~redits have been flying spray ot bricks, mortar,

1 pursued hin rclc~tJ,•;;ir.

derived from British films. Hol· CANUCKS ON ·TV wood, glass, and bodies. 1 • • ,

lywood however, has discovered LONDON (CP) - The RCAF But the ram of steel lost Its i H1s mmrl rcbdled I he

Wekon1e Wagon Hostess

7.()0-Nfld. News and Sparta. · '1.05-Local Weather. ,,15-Canadlan News and S!lllrtl 7.30-Round the World New1. 7.35-Weathcr Roundup, '7.45-Ncws Summary. 8.00-Nlld. News. 8.20-Shlpplng Report. 8.25-Kid~les Corner. 8.30-Nfld, New1. 8.35-Camplcle Weatner RouDd·

2.Dl-Second .Fiddle, 2.15-0ut or the Dark. 2.30-lmprlsoncd Heart. 2.45-Invitation to Music •. 3.Dl-Housewlves Club. 4.00-Gen. Provinclai N en

. 4.01-Caslno. 4.30-News.

2.30-VOUS Record Room. 3.30-Douglns of the World Or

Parade of Sports. 3.:15-News . 4.00-Lunchcon at Sardl's. 4,30-Army Hour. 5.00-Ncws.

her tal~nts and sl!e Is next slated~ band from No .. 1 flghter,wing at patency rapidly. Within one mile; !'u}i .acceptan~c 0~ h · to appear In ihP Twentieth Cen·! 1\larville, France, came here to it had diminished to ll"' fraction,: :d10t1c hcha~·wr tn .' e

tury-Fox CtnemnScope produc: I appear on. a B~C televisiol) pro·.j al~:it a powerful fraction, of' its j and the sch·act usa~IO~ lion of "Sir Walter Raleigh," I gram dealing \\'lth the North .A'.- lmtml self. Af'.t>r two miles It. !Jad · caus.ecl hi~ 111!e wlth Bette Da1·ls and Richard llantic Treaty Organization, was no more than the equal of a I 'You Don. t knm1 she l

. .

,. ·, .

.,

Will Kncck on Your Door with Gifts and Greetings

from Foiendly Bl•siness Neighbors aneo Your

Civic and 'Social ~> We!fore leaders .

up, . 8.45-Mornlng Merry.Go Round. 9.00-Nfld. News. 0.05-Duke Box Review .. 9.25-lt Takes a Woman. 0.30-Ncws.

The Birth of c Baby, On the o~cusion ol:

!1.31-Duke Box Review. !1.40-Juke Box Review. 9.45-Woman's News.

10.00-Ncws, Courtship and Mar rlage.

Arrivals of Newcomers to City •

10.15-Duke Box Review. 10.30-Ncws, Who Am 1? 10.40-J oan Blanchard. 10.45-Hclpfu.I_ .. Harry. 'Phone 3031

TO-MORROW.

EVENING_;_"CRY OF THE CITY". ' O'CLOCK-9.30

"THE ADVENTURES. OF. SADIE"-8.20, MATINEE 2 P;M. . · · · ...

=._!· ~

'· ·~· ~~--:---___;_-.....,..._;..~-...:..2,.:.

·'? .... LAST TIMES TO~DAY ·· .. ·.' ''

. ---···+-··-·-. ······:.

r ·~

·.

4.45-Saddlc Scremide. 5.00-News, Bob Lockhart Show. 11.00-News In a Minute and J>e. 5.15-World of SportJ.

5:30-Curtain Time. tailed Weath,r. 6.05-Bulletln Board. 6.10-Natlonat News. 6.1&-Sports Pararle. 11.25-Provincial Newr. 6.45--Lorne Greene Shaw.

6.00-Ncws. · 6.15-,Patterns. n Progression. 7.011-News. 7,05-Jack CarsDn. 7.30-Flnal Ed!Hon (News ar.d

Features). 6.50-Show~ase of Star•. 7.00-News, Courtship and Mar> 8.00-Sports Tmlay.

TO-MORROW A GREAT PLACE ••• A.GREAT GUY .• I.

A GREAT PICTURE!

e TYRONE 'POWER e . MAUREEN. O'HARA

In JOHN FORD'S

''THE LONG . . . '

GRAY. ·tiNE'' . .

COLOR BY TECHNICOLOR

A/so-NOVELTY

EVENING SHOWS: '7.15-9.15 . . . ' MATINEESi UO .... ·I!!ATuBDAY Z O'CLOCK

LAST. TIMEs·· TO-DAY . ~ ., ..

1'THE: ~AINE MUTINY"

Todd. ' hur;lcane, a wi~d puny by com~ 11 argued w1th him;el!.

panson with thn· spawned by the · · (To Be Conlinuedl B,l5-Pepperrell Today. HURT INSIDE BOX atom. Beyond two miles the bur· 8.20-Holel for Pets. TORONTO (CP)-Woolfram Von

. 8.30-Makc Way for Youth. Kalben, 10, playing inside a.card· 9.00-Grucho Marx. I board box in a Janeway, was 9.30-Dragnet. severely injured Monday night

10.00-News and Wc.ather. ! when 3 tn1ck ran over it. Edward 10.30-1\lemorics In Music. I Rogachky, 30, t11e driver, drai'C 11.00-llusic 'till Midnight. J over the box be!ieing It empty 1.2.00-Sign Off. and stopped when he felt a bump.

• •' , • , • ' , ,• ol,' 1 •' ~;

"1.0-DAY -------··----·········--------

••• '""' laa Mt~il • loba SaJGII • A UHIVERSAL·INTERHATIOHAL PICllJRE ·

A/so-NOVELTY ' EVENING SHOWS: 7 P.nt.-9 P.M.'

MATINEE Z O'CLOCK

NEXT ATT~ACTION ANNE BAXTER - JEFF CllANDLER hi "THE SPOILERS" - ACTION - THRILLS - . SUSPENSE.

PIIDI NIWfOUNDtAND'S FRJEHDLY THfATU

------.. ·--· .. -- ·-·· ....... . ···-·---1

------.... --·--·- .. - .......

SUS~ENSE}H.AT CUTS LIKE A WHIP

PAST APACHE

AMBUSH •••

PAST. TREACH-.

ERY'S SILKEN

NET ••• FIVE

I

Richard Widmar~

DEAD MEN LED

JIM SLATER

DOWN A TRAIL

OF NO RETURN !

'• Donna Reed

IN

''B.AC'K .LASH" With 'WJLLIAM CAMPBELL .in TECHNICOLOR

-Also-TRf!VEL ·TAL,K--CARTOON

TIMES . or· SHOWS, ·EVENING SHOWS 7.00 p.m.-9 p.m.

ntATINEE 2 p,m.

NEXT ATTRACTION GREGORY . PECK - LEO GENN In "MOBY [)lei'

.. I -TilE ~IIGIITIEST PICTURE OF TilE YEAR.

POLAR BARS ·54VE . ' ,BAGS

. . FOR SWE[L FREE GIFTS.--· ~-' ..

\ ,. .. .. ..

.D.-1 Shea ..••... 151 Walsh .•• , •• 176 Shea ....... 226

• Hart

Wilson .... 212 , O'Dea · . ." .... ; 227

Hrnes ...... 206 Rich a ..:!son. 224

869

.R. · Account.;~3 \\'adden •••• 199 Taylor .... 181

'English ·• ; .. 2i0 ·Nugent , ;.. 145

. · · ·-: · 79S .Fl. Stor~-ll . Ronarne · :. • 125 . Mackey . , . • 140 Kennedy ...... 247 ~eddie .. · .-.·.177

" ·• '··' 689 ··.·;

Reed

~ ' .. . -· - ........ .

• ~fD ... ILY NEWS, 'VEDNESDAY, SE.PT._19, 195~ ---- ----~----~------~------~--~~------------------~--~----~-------------------~~~--------------~------------~--~-

Braves Win: To.· Jr.i-··,··D~d.ger Lead TO One .• Slilft. P~.int . .

It ., . ·,

\~U:Ril'.\~ u;,\GUE . Milwaukee.. ..sa. 58 .603 8 whlc~ -put them· ahead . .f.3, lout,. Jim ;Hcglin .. foublcd to . ce'n· . "'\'or~ 3. t:hicaso 2. · t Tha\'s \he way thlnas sto<id trc, sccrlng' Pope. · 'II ~t\ l 1·1,. ti lloslcn li. The Cardinals, beaten fil'e in a when Harik Aaron.· ·opened the Score's 14 strikeouts ran his )iaO!,S ' ' ' ' la~d ti Washington O. row by 1hc.worJd champions,· had Braves' eighth \l·iUI a single; Ed .season's total to 242, only three l_ltiCJa~d 1: \l'a$hlnglon 0, only three hils Until the fdnlh aft~r 1\lattheWS promptly, came throUgh ·sbart' of bfs total last year, When llt1~~it 6, llaltlmorc 2. , a ~car-pcrfccl twin relic[ job by wllb another slngl&-hls' 'third ·or he set a record for a rookie.

11l1 S \'IIUS,\L LE.\GUE · Ed Roebuck and Carl Erskine. , the night-sending Aaron to sec-

ad~lphia 4, Clndnnatl 3.. But Stan Musl.~l, whose . 23th ond. · . . · · . . . ' . · PHI~ADELPIDA . (AP) - Tile . Pk~ delphi~ 7. Cincinnati 4. borne run ·had made It 4-0 In the Bobby Thom~n advanced both Philadelphia Phillis,· rapidly earn· I'll. a;

0 4. Sell' Ycrk 2. third, singled to open the ninth runners with a\ sacrifice and.. 'set lng .a r_eputatlon as "spllers" .In .

c.h~ \·ork a, Chicago 2. and trotted borne on Boyer's 26th the stage for Logan's · single the tense •National League, pen· !it i 6 Brooklyn 5. home run after Wally Moon and tllrou!!h centre as· the Pirate In· nant race, virtually blew Cincln-5:: ~La~~k!e 6 Plllsburgh 4. Rip Republskl had flied out. ' field 'f&S drawn In for a ,play at .IJatl out of contention Tlle.sda~ )Ill .:_.__ The Dodgers bad rallied .with the plate. Relief pitcher Roy Face night with a twl-nlght double-

CAGO - AP - Mickey two In the third . against starter l!ot Jack Dittmer. to. fly out and header victory over the Re,dlegs, CHI rtt'ng ena to the Wllm~r Vln'cgar Bend Mizell with Jon~ with »inch·hltter Joe Ad· +3 behind .lefty Curl Cimmolll In

lllnde 11rJte a 1 1 • 1 , a , the, opener and 7·4 Jn back. of

11!6

American League pennant Jac~le Rob nson s two-run, two-out co•'c to end Jhe lnniM. . · Robin Roberts In the nightcap. :,

1 Tue;rla)' ni~ht b)' blasting his slnDle breaking a string ol 20 con· T~e Braves threw .five pitchers Manager Birdie Tebbetts' power·

I• h home run which carried the secutl\'e scoreless _Innings by the In the battle with Warren ~palm laden 'Redleg.s ·ran their foslng !?~ \'ork \'ankrcs to a 3·2 \'lct~r)' young scuthpaw. · coming on In the ninth when the streak. to [our straight games as ~c . the Chica~o \\'hlfc Sox In Brooklyn got one more in the l'trntes-wlm outhit the Braves they faileil to hit In the clutch, o•r: nin~· and their sel'cnth title sixth on a pinch sln~lc .by Sand)' 13 to 11-threatened. Pillsbuuh played loosely In the field 'and !' 1 ~·ht ;em. 1,\moros and then to1lc the lea11 mM 1!oi1r pitchers· with -the ·de· were &:ullty or several mental ~~ 11 ' · ·-- , in the se1·cnth on Gil Hodge&' fetal being charged to Face. lapses unbecoming i pennant con·· K \~qs err\' - .\P - Lou I 28th borne run, a two-out poke l)'it)l -. . tender.

1,, ·; 'h•t , homr run with twu

1 one en against rellefcr I!erm Web· · cr;!']Vr.f,A 1\ln - AI' - Stellar

• .:ain the ninth innin~ Tuesday meier. · · t~ltchln~ b~· Mike Garcia And H~rb STANDING!! ~\1 and 1\:m;as Cill' took a , Scnr~ aal'e the Clevc]Rn•l· lnrllan• lly THE ASSOCIATED PRESS _.jd rrror·studded ~arne from the · PITTSBURGH ~ AP -Johnny a doubln sbutnnt. cl''er. the Wash·

' I'VE GOT :VOU NOW-~ays rfex MacKenzie as he ·effectively .applies the leg scissors to Dick Hutton .. Unfortunataly for MacKenzie he didn't have Hutton as the thousand dollar kid came back to take two fallJ

J>••t'Jn Red Snx; 6·3. Logan belted a two·run slnr.le In lnnton Nationals, 1.0 and 6·0, In a National· Leagut. .. - the ein~th Tucsda\' night, enab:Vn~ tw'·nilrht twin bill Tuesday night. .. W L Pet. GBL BP.OOKL \';\-.\P - Brooklyn'~ the :Milwaukee · Braves to , come Garda held the Nationals to Broo)dyn 87 57 ,604 -

x,u;n.I League lead was trimmed from behind and cmer,l!e with a thre~ hit~ In th,e second l!'ame wbllP 1\lllwaukee 88 S8 · .603 -io cnc

1!im percentage point o1•er 6-4 \'lctory over· the Pittsburgh the Jndlnn~ were coll~ctlnl! 10 off Cincinnati 1 83 62 ,572' 41h

~il111ukcc Tuesday night as the Pirates. The l'ictory put the Chuck ~tobhs, who lost his l!lth St. Louis 73 7.0 ,501 131,~ (, Louil Cardinals. after •blowing B"tal'es Into a l'lrtual tic with the l!~me H,. has 1~ l'lctor!es. The Philadelp~la 68 if> .m 18~ • Hl lead. hu>tlcd back to beal Broo';!)·n Dodgers ·who lost 6·~ to win was Garcia's 11th against ·12 Pittsburgh · · 62 83\ .428 25~ ~ir ()NI~cr1 6·5 on Ken Boyer'& the St. Louis Cardinals. ]o~~es. · . · New York 60' 85 .414 27

1/J

;,D-Oul, iw"'run homer In the 9th B'll~· Brutcn, !Ia shy .centre flel<l· Score SIRI;e u:o four ill_ls Rnd Chicago • 57 8? .396 30 ::r.in;. • • cr for the Braves, mP•le a thriiJ· s!Tuck out 1.f batters In the open· American League

The Bmc!, nm1 ju~t one game In~ onr.lland cPtch of Dick Groat~ er. . 1 .~·New York 93 52 .&II -~~c~ ol BM'kl' ~ in the lost col· fl)' in the .ninth ·with two on and The Indian~ ,brcke t~e scoreless Cleveland 82 · 63 ,566 11 t":~ ~ilb citht' tr, pin~·. also blew two out to ~(I'C relief pitcher Lou cleadloek In the . eighth lnnlnl(, or -Chicago 80 63 .550 12 ,; uri" lead before coming back Slr•ter the l'ictor)··· 1 • the first J!am~. ·Vic Wertz doubled Boston 79 66 .545 14

10 br;l. Pimhurdt 6·4-whlch left The Pirates, who spotted the to· centrefield to open the frame Dctr_oit· 76 68 .528 161,':

II'! mr Ji:,c thi~: Rra1·c~ a three-run lead In the and Dal'c · Pope was sent In to Balhmore 62 82 ,431 30lf.: (irst two Innings, k11oeked stnrt~r run for him. ·~tm Busby 'beat out Washington M 87 ,400 34',~

\I' 1. Pet. GBL Lew Burdet\P out of the. box with a bunt. sending Pooe to third. Kansas City 47 9!i .329 45 .. Ri 57 .604 10 a twc-run uprising in the sixth After Chico Carrsquel· bad struck .x·Cllnched pennant..

llen'~ ChifService' Manti e Clinches .p ennanfF red~ricto~ Boy Bowlmg League • · · · · · To Play Wtt~l :"o;;~' .. , .. '" '" '"' With 50th. Home ~un Quebec Aces L w.,it\rn .... 1R2 :!07 173 562 CHICAGO (AP)-Mickey M~plle and a 'walk Bob Grini came. in to tO'Stlll ..... m ~59 284 755 h 956 A ut out the' fire •· QUEBEC (CP)-The chances of r. \\'1l!h ..••.. 266 230 271 767 wrote a f(tUng end to 1 e 1 m· P Thft "'bite So. x score' d both. of BlU O'Rcc, F r e 'd e r l c to n

B30 876 883 ~621 erl:an League pennant race Tues· ~ n , • da,• night by blasting his 50th their runs on ·homers by. Larry hookey star,. or ho-lding a perm a· HJr~·.n.-r home run which carried the New Doby In the first Inning and Wa~t nimt forward line berth with' the 1. S~ti ....... m 253 162 566 York Yankees to a 3·2 vlcton· over Dropo In the eighth; It was Doby s Quebec Aces. thiS yea.r are ''very. I 1\'al!h .. , .. li6 240 231 647 the Chlc.ago White Sox in 11 Inn· 20th r..l the. season' and'· slxth go,od," eoash Conrad .flke) Parent Uhtl ....... 22R 21,8374 2204 ~39 in~5 and their seventh tlUe lD a:~alnst the Yanks, 'Dropo's drive "aid Tuesday. . :· . '

f~om the big T~xan . ..:...(Daaly -News. Photo). ,

MacKen~ie Bows .To Hutton . · In Spiritless ~at Con~~st

Filtecn hundred ardent wrestling menl h1s ma_te was recelvtng_ ell· cnthusiastics braved the elements tered the rmg and left D!lloa last night to see main eventors strangling on the ropes. Whi.l• Dick Hutton and Tex l\lackcnzie the rc!cree cleared Caul the VIto mix it up in a spiritless mat con- ious circle contin~ed as Bi~ Fo,. test.. The fans were a study o! ~~·ell showed ''01te what Jt fe.L mix emotions with no strong fa- hke to .be h~ngmg on the rop~l. • \'ourite; half the crowd ,shouted Arter five mmutcs o! such anllct "ride him cowboy" and the other~ Jackson once more re~tored order yelled "kill him Hutton." and narrowed the rmg to two

Mackenzie failed to capitalize g~applcr~. . . on the thousand dollar side bel D1llon pmncd Wh1te for the three that Hutton place; with every count ~vith an arm bar at the forty match, Hutton claims that no one mmute ~ark. ll wa.s an un· 1i•rcsller in Canada can pin him p~p_ular but 'JUSt c_all because, tht for the first fall within twenly v1lhans hod won \11th a legal hold. minutes. True to form last night Hutton forced Mackenzie into his T S . d d submissi_?n bold: the abdominal wo . uspen e stretch m 20 mmutes and seven . seconds. 1 N " }

The big smiling Texan refused ew 1 Or { to leave the ring after this fall and stayed in to plan his \'CO·

gence when Hutton returned. With the bell to start the second round

Racin$! Probe c,,

l. Hlrt • • • • • · lnB 18 " ei~ht years. , was his sixth and gave the Sox · The Aces, the cap!~~~ city s en· 711 914 797 2432 Mantle's towering upper deck a temporary 2·1 lead. . . , ,try In the .professional. Quebec

blRSt, which made him the second Ne1~ York's ·first run 'II' as Hoc~ey teague, start.ed workou!s Yankee In history to hit 50 borne unearned and came In the· fourth M.onday. In preparatl!'n !or their runs, eame with two out In the Inning on a Mantle single·, the.flrst op~nin~: ·exhibition g~me a~ainHl

Mt:h~"-;C,<-2 C. Wil!on .... 21:! 200 146 5~8 I O'Dc1 .. .. .. 227 256 167 650 I. H)O!I •••.•• 206 246 216 668 t R:ch•~bon. 2~4 229 223 676

11tll and Prevented lcrtllander of£ Pierce. Billy Marlin reached the National. Hockey Lea~ue Mont.. • · · · d b I C ~1 S I 23 NAVAL ARMS-Fi~htin• for the quarterbackinl! post left Bill" Pierce from ~alnlng· his 21st second when secon aseman rea ana" ens ep ·, , . " h W I h l ft ' - d h :11 b 11 I O'R dl 30 th hop vacant at Navy by the graduation of, George e s are, e trtu'mph o! the season. Nellie· Fox ropped is Y a n · ee pnoz,me · 0 er e· to right, Tom Forrestal, Gu~ Prahahs a. n_d Pat Flood. The .

short right.· 1\lartln scored on fuls' :took: part in the first drill. 1 b fill d

Hutton was handed some or his NEW YORK CAP) - '111e New own medicine. Mackenzie lashed York stale racing commissioll out with a prOfusion of lefts and Tucsdav continued suspension· or rights to soflcn Hutton up and trainer· Jerome Hirsch until' tht

. the!! closed in ~or the kill with a end ol the racing season hcrt ser1~s .of knee hits and body press i Nol', 16, and recommended that to fm1~h th~ thousand dolla_r boy .. Theodore Georgakopoulos be bar All th1~ achon'.lo,ok _place 1~ lb~ I red from all trar.ks in the ~tate. ihorl lime of t,wo mmulcs f1ftccn · The action followed an investi seconds. · ~alion into the alleged stilt:ulatior

Hu~ton once more had to :ct~· of the horse Blue and Gnl<l, wlt[cr. on h1s _P~t hold the abdomm~lllini.<hed second in th 2 first racr ~!retch. m ordc; to tame the b1g: at .Jamaica trark .July 16, . ~exan m ~he !mal £~11. Mnrkcn· 'I Hirs~h said hr allow~d Geor::a zt~ effeclll'cly applied the Jc_g konoulos to administer what thP sc1ssors to Hutton throu:;boul tlus. latter termed a "toni~·· to tht bo!lt hut Huttcn wormed clear 1:f j' horse.' It was rrom a formula he !he hold nnd Wlppc~ Ma1:hn1or said his rather, a pharmacist.

The drive also gave t.'te Yank· Mickey's slnRie, - . Pnrent, ,who this ye~r SJlCcee,ded ~~~~--i:.:-:llson Whltmor~, .. ~~~~--P~:~Iom mus---e .. e : ees 182 home runs for the season, 1\lartln kept Yankee hope~ alive Gebrge (Punch) Imlach in the ' tying their American League re~· In the n.lnth. He tripled to start coaching slot, reported the Fred· E }' } S' · W1'DO'S Lose ·

869 931 732 2~52 ~P.O.-I F. CrilCker .. .. m lll5 259 631 L But!er ...... 296 141 237 674 I. R!ln .. , , • . 164 245 153 562 ll!HdU! , , , , 185 200 244 629

Ol'd set In 1936, The only other the Inning and scored the tying erlcton player is In "perfect" COO· ng IS 1 ~ccer. . ~ Yankee e\'er to hit 50 or more run on Yogi Berra's bl~op single ditlon .. Two pra'ctice sessions will · • • R 1 •· home runs was the highly Babe to left. It was the 17th stral:tht be held dally before the game Star Honour.e. d Promtslil!! 00 ne 822 781 893 2496 Ruth who did It four times and game in which Berra· bas hit with .the 1\lontrealers this week· . , u

V!/trcc-3 set the all·tlme record of 60. safely and left him. three short en~;- . . . KEN METfiERA.L SAULT STE. MARIE, Mich. (CP) H: COl\nor ..•• 131 138 184 453 FAR BEHIND BABE of 1 4100 cateer .RBis. . . 0 Ree, 20, f1rst Negro to ·play . Canadinn Pres.~ · starr Writer' -Detroit Red Wings said Tuesday

Br~~er .... 15~ 225 ~71. 546· 1\lantle now Is eight games be· Y~nkee manager Casey Stengel, In the QHL since. it became pro· LONDON (CP) _ Exactly 25 they have lost the services o( r. Ro.e : . .•••• ~Sa 172 ~03 560 hind Ruth's record· setting paee. ~~ who has led the New Yorkers to fcsslonal league, is a high-scoring years ago Tuesday a shy, skinny rookie left-winger Tom McCarthy lllartm • • · · .13 173 287 673 1927 · and has little chance to ·their last seven flags, Is now one left-winger. The property oi Mont· youngster- of 16 made his debut .for at least one month. F. 679 708 845 2232 catch· or pass the Babe. shy o£ Joe ·McCarthy's. record as real Capadlens, he played last 'in big time socc~r with _Stoke ··The Natioqal Hockey League r.hh-:-0 Whitey Ford gained his 19th tri· the ·all·time wlnnlngest, Yankee season lbr, Kltchener Canucks In City. Wings announced Umt 1\lcCarthy i Go1er ..... 1~4 164 162 480 umph of the ~eason against Ilve leader. · ·· the. Ontario Hockey Association In the intervening years he de- has undergone an append~ctomy Cha.r\""" 1~3 101 157 501 !oms but needed help In the nth Stengel's Yapkee~ flnlsbe'd sec· junior A league •. He scored .30 veloped Into ~he greatest fo~l· and will be sidelined for 2

1h weeks.

D. 11:1U.n .... I 16 165 141

8 .fa9 Inning a!Ler giving up a single and to Clevrland ·ln 1~5~. ·. _goals despite the !act that he. ~~.as baller In his country's history-;-~ It was expected he ).YOuld need 1 A!h ........ \64 179 1~0 463· •sidelined ,for several games 11 1th man wliose football feats were to another to days to skate himself

647 699 ~87 1933 E. Noel ..... '.' 248' 266 101 61~ B. Fitzgerald • :·.: 67 137 llil _355 an eye Injury, For a time It was make him a legend in his own back into shape. c. Clarke .... 177 217 228 622 M.- Spearns .... 188 1110 163 5~1 feared he -would }ose the sight of lifetime. His name: Stanley Mal· McCarthy, a six foot two native

U.R, Mrntmt:-.1 841 988 884 271~ H. Bartlett ...... 1114 191 171 M6 the eye, thews. . of Toronto who pla)·cd· for ·Van· 1 Wadd!n .. , . 19~ ~Ol 21!2 ~02 Worl:s-1 . 814 684 648 194fi 1\latthcws, now 41, but still puin· cauver and Saskatoon In the West· D Tl)lor .... 181 242 :!34 657 E. Moaklcr .... 238 240 211 _1187 fully shy, was honored at a tcsti· ern Hockey Lcag\\e last year, had t, En;li!h , , , . 2i0 279 256 805 E. Nortall , , , , • ·169 220 148 537 , · N. : · 00· Le' d monial dinner in London Tuesday ~een,. the, mo?l. impressive rookie i XU!tnt .... 14~ 229 235 609 J. Newhook ; :; 191 215_ 164 570 Nl ,. Civil. I • Se': I ew· com . a s· nJ'ght markin" the sill'er J'Ubilee m. v. mgs trammg camp. He w~s

~g· 9.1 M7 1 c A d 289 18 198 672 en' .s' 1 . '"'-71Ce ., . . ' " 11 t h t r ,. ' ~ .. a" 26 3 • n rews . . . ., ., J. ,. .L of the "ll!atthew era." Attending g1ven an cxce en c ancc o wm -· R. SloreJ-0 · , : 1183 860 721 ~466 . • .. !·thl t · Of Th the dinner, sponsored by th~ Na·. a place on the parent. team. ~.c

!. n"nl)r.e ... 125 174 150 4~9 B . li . s· h. d' I' tl e e. e tlonal Spr.rting Club, were leaders had s~ored one goal m De trOll 5 Utacke)' .••. HO 223 270 633 Genera! Hospita!-3 . ow ng. . c e ~ e ' I .. • •• : . • ..... in' all fields Ul British: ·sport. 4-3 wm. Saturday ov~~ Edmonton l Ktnnedy ... 247 :!12 254 713 H. Buckingham 215 242 231 888 y p II STILL A 'fAlNSTt\" Flyers m an exhib1hon game. I. Peddle .... 177 230 2~1 658 R. Andrews .... 298 174 188 658 . . .. '. _:_ '. , ear' • 0 At an ~~e when 'most players Wings said they expect McCar-

689 839 925 2453 L. Baker . : .. • 236 204 236 676 Tuesday, Sept. 25th! ' have retired from. active play,. thr may be ready by the team's -- B. 1\lurphy ••• 220 404 230 834 1·2-Defenc-/'~~. ~~~ks. ;' • . 'NEW. YORK· . (AP)-Big Don Matthews remains olle of the most! third or fourth league game. t\0111rt-.i · 967 1024 885 2876 3.4-Finance vs. Mechanics~· . ·Newcombe, who ·bas· been having feared right winge1's in the game

1 trm .... 158 135 171 464 C.N.R, Audit-0 · · 5~Aecounls vs. Healtn. · · a. tremendous· )'ear with Brooklyn .and is a mainstny 'or his p1esent'

r Go~tr ..••. 182 190 179 551 C. Locke •••••• 165 ,262 201 628 7.&-Siores'· vs. u.r.c.. . • Dodgers, Tuesuay was named win· club, lllackponl, I~ his 25 years ,: ~-o~er .... ~59 175 185 619 E. 'NO!ieworlhy_. 200 156 142. 498 1 ~ ner of the Augu~t award In the or fuolball stardom ·he has played

ufur•l ... IB4 1911 187 lltl7 A. Slockley , .. 153 198 139 49jl U-Post olft~: t~~·. LJibou~. S; Rue JlickOk··pr·o alhlele of the for Jo:ngland 77 limes in inll'l'na· ,, 7H:I llllll-7:-12 2:!01 W. -Hurrun .••• 220 180 213 613 ,.~31 .. pull. ' Hun:• I match!.',, 'J'hree timl!~ he

~faratlton To' Be Held On·. "lvr-O •738 796 695 22:!9 5·8-Docks 1 'iS, 'l'rrasury, ' . . . ~ ll'tlh.ms . , :!:li HY lll!l 7-8-Post Office 2 _vs, Welfa{e.. 'l'he huskY, l'igbth~nder pitcher -has led his chill to't.he ~'out bull A~·

X. Pirker .... 114 77 49

~~ Laborutor·u-l! 9,30 p.m: received 102. points from a panel socialion · Challeng«:: Cup Jlnal, at Th } . . D . Rennie ..... 216 1~.· 118 4"7 E. LeGrol" , •• 199 192 '179 570 3+-Mental· vs. Genml. of sports_, w~iters and .sportcast· Wembley.. . . . . " . all {SglVIDg ay ~ M " " ' 11-8-C p o Sh ers to nose .. out Yankee · slugger :Matthews called the dmner a · · •;· ...... 149 196 192 537 \', HCKider .... loll 183 1112· 456 , ' ' ' vs. · ops. · · 1\lickey ':Mantle, who bad 99 points wonderful 'tjuill but a little fright· · The once 'cancelled Dnil11 Ncwl

116 547 550 1813 c. Rose ••••••• 167 201 161 529 7·~Audlt vs. Laboratory. and jockey Jobn'riy Longden, who ening."· marathon road race will now be l'lC.-? - 'o. Wheeler • • • -1!11 190-257 598 . ' .. had 95 •. Longden did· not break tbe rJ!e truth is-that Matthews ha~ held on Thanksgiving Day. This. T. llurph

1 •. , •••

250 •oo •

62 712 Car Shops-l ~38 746 749 21~3 ·A 'I .....

8 . . . li · · world .riding· ·record until . Sep·' nc1·er got ol'er the embarrassmen~ r.\·enl has been sponsored by the

" " teniber., . . . of being famous. ., · 1 News since 19:/J when Georl{e ~r~r.t ..... 201 172 2411 622 R. Gray ...... 145 235 143 525 va 00 . OW ng · :Ne'1vcombe jolm)d previous ,qual· - "I'm 'don't mind j[ I'm with the Crane, running under -the colours E~ ine .... :!fiB 221 222 711 E. Pittman .. " 190 260 170 820 · . if\crs .. '.Bob ', l'ettlj;- .Ed'die Arcaro; tr.am, but on my own it is tc~ri- of the C.L.B. lead the pack to the f~rd · .... 221 231 222 6H G. Kcllowa(; ... 129 130 147 :: Club -~feetin 0' · Paul. 'Arlzin,' Ja~kie ·Burke, .Tr., blc. My face hurns and I feel like finish)ng line. .

r1,c~''-l P40 824 1153 2719 M. Ryall • · • • • 188 153 127, ... , . , . -b ' Dale Lonl( and ·Mantle as·c~ntcnd· a cornered .rabbit." , . ·Since th~n _Newfoundland's t ~urt . , , 652 778 ~89 2019 The annual, g~neral me~tinl(. or. ers· r~r. t~e .. annu,l. prize. i!REATEST OF' AL,L 11M!J' champion long. distance .runn.er

'ltGr~lh. · · •· 243 2411 IH 636 , · ~ • · the A1•alon Bowling. · C!ub · took · . . ·. Guests' at the dmner mclude ,,·on· the gruelling !l~cnty-stx ~ule I. Rtlrm · · · · 211 211 202 1124 c.r.~.-2 . · . · place 1, in the Guards . Alleys ; on · . · . · · . . Tom Mather, manager .. of Stoke race for three years an· succession. I. Ralph ...... 199 213 253 !i65 'E, Kennedy_ .... 195 266 123. 384 Wednesday, .September ·l.i, mo. Cltur' c'lt' Servt"'cos City when ~latthews joined the William Canning; Secretary ~!

...... 207 162 174 MJ J. Ecott ...... 160 202 185 1547 anil.was largely attended,'· Thll' . . h. ch\h in .1930. the local branch of the· AAU w1ll 860 835 803 2468 B. LO\'eY.B .... 134. 78. 185 397 aniJUal reports' ,of. the. year' a'spt•e. . . 'li Le "He is the greatest player of all accept entries until medical check·

lllcb-i - E •. Hall ..... " 149 211 1M. 5l.f in\nted, by! the Secreta'ry .and' th,llo Bow rtg ague time," says Mather. "And he is up time on_ the day of. the race. '-'·IID\\o~ . • · 638.757 1147 2042 Treasurer.were adopted •and !how~ , • . .. . still as good as ever."·. C. Burl . 1~ " 183 303 280 768 We!farl-1 · . ed ·that the Club h•d .yet, anothC!r M . • . . Matthews remained with Stoke p • N · .

m .the stretch, and 11 was the I used in Greece. Th~ tonk cor showers !or Tex. taincd morphine, a chemical anal

THE PRELIMINARIES 1 ysi' showed. A t~g tea~ .match. p_ut local I The commis!'ion, in continuini'

11-resthng fans m a frghtmg mood I the suspension o[ Hirsch as ] to sl.art the, wrc~tling shQW at the traiQer and owner, declared him ~tadmm last mght.. Once mure "guilt\' of culpable negli~rnce in Jt .. wns t.~e t11o nutai'IOUS bar! men permitting an. unllcenced person '\·1ld B1.l Fo~:wcll and Bad Boy access to his barn and to the !llike Dillon who teamed up against horses under his care." l(en White and Bill Caul.

Baseball Tonight Bill Jackson the fifth man in

the ring had his hands full kcr.p· ing the required number of g1·ap· piers in the ring. Sometimes all four slugged it out in the ring and at other limes two of the boys 1 The Fcil[lians and Holy Cross stayed in the ring while the other Junior baseball teams will clash two continued lhc fued ·outside 4hc tonight in the second game of the ropes much to the enjoyment of Cinals. A win for the Feildians the fans. will gii·e them the ·championship

.Mike Dillon started a. fad when whereas a win for the Crus ad era he applied a rope strangiP to will force .; lhird •nd final ~:am~ Caul. White annoyed at the treat· to decide !he hun.mrs. ·------

_viCEROY Cigarett.es· · give you BOTH ...

FLAVOUR 1fv&.. FILTER

ft~t!) !'!"~"~2~31~2~0~2 ~27~5~708~~C-~T~uc~k~er~. ~ .. ~. ~1~75~1~96~1~63~M4 suc~e~ful' ·year :t'! .Jts.' eredl~. Tht! eetmg · elty until 1947, when ~e was traps· faCtlCC OteS' . . election of offl~ers fo,d~e -COII)In~ . ·, . . , . ·. ·:__::__ . . . !erred· to Blackpool for a £,11,500 Th'e Gm"'ds·lll&cpherson ~;lined yeftr ro.,ulted 1 as .. follows: . · · · · · fee. · · tl "I 'II be b Jd t 1 ht"

Presldent:....Mrs,'·H. G. Grant. ' · Members of thi~. League ·are re-· His greatest memory ofter 25 out pra~ ce WI e on ll · Vlcc·Pr'eslilcnt:...;ltfrs: · .·w-. ""G'uz: ·mincjed of t11e. 1Jlcetlng. which will years of soccer? .. at six o clock ·on t~e upper pltcb

well. · ,. ·. · .' · , ~ . •: : be Jlel~.O'\' FRID~Y •. mght oqhls "The 1953 cup final when Black· of tl1c Ayre Athletic Grounds ·All J.·.:il~ Po'i!ll~~-: ·~ :sAYS-:

our D~minlo~ Secilrlt~ Pian, means lm · • .. ; •ined.~at·e and substantial protection for . ·

,ones when· they need .. lt~ •.a~d-:-if: ' you live-It mean! a retirement fund for

, Seeretary-W •. H.\G .. ~:\'r~htJ : w~ek,·. a_)\d,,not on. Wed~eSI;fay as pnol beat. Bolton 4-3. I will never players a~e asked to be on tl:nc. Treasurer..:..Mrs: ;o,; GrbU~!hY· mejlt,loned · ·,-Y,es:terday l p~ornlnhg · forget ·those closing scenes of a hard match· ean be found play·

: AeVSe'cretary..:..Mrs:1r;: ThQmas.: Teams ·are· again · rem nded :t ~t drama· · ·the crowd screaming ing a corne,r-lilt game with his 'nle. Ltaaue) will' l,llaln I consist: th~)'l s~oul~·· ha~e 'represenlatlvc' themselves hoarse as we fought nine-year-old' son Stawey and his

Or tw~llie teamS' wl~n: prat:tleally, at..this m_eet,ln~. as t.he.~businoss fo b~ck ,to victory after . being be· young pals. . • ill !lnast ye~r's b!>wle~ .. a~aJniln th~!P~ -Y:P.r ~viii be .tabled ~nd hind ... the congratulahon~ 0,~ the Matthews has no financial war the~Cl!lb,'and ,the bq~lers. a~~lo~~:. elte~on, ~!. ~l~i:-~rs.'fo~ ~ht conung pia~~~ and t~e Queen 5 • Well ries. He is In consta!ll demand lng 'forwar.d wlth)keen .lriterest:to yeal. ,will:~' e;e~tc_d. : · · , .done· H. for coaching duties ~urmg the off-the ~iii-rent sefles. ~ ·.•, .. ·' 1'· '.''. ··,_:·.·.-:-:---. -. •. • . ,. • · ·' THREE AGAINST CZEC S season is •the author of several

me about. 11DomlnloD Security." : . ' ·r~~• (series' "aeia 'und~r. WdyJk Tni'n' ··.;L·t's' 'Fo'' o' t" ball In ·1937 ,Matthews scor~d . three books 'on soccer and owns consid: ,. Dial Z135 · the .Gu~rds 'Alleys ;tONIGHT ..,at: ·~ . ~~~. ', , , goals ogalnst Czechoslovakia, ·to erable property, Including a hotel

•- 'l:!iO &Jicr· all teams: are. requested; · .. Tli'rn·ainecf'.otit' soi:ce~ ·game. be! lead· _England to a tense ~ vi~· •In Blackpool. ·· . . · .. · · . .,J.t..· to keep, well poeted pn'the.ac~ed~el tween·;~!. -Pat's ~nd st. B.Sn's will tory.·· Many observers call 11 his Eadh ye~r spec~labon starts

iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliij!iiiiiiii~~ and be'·ln the' alleys wben-requlro be':plaY~··toliiiht~· Ga'me·tlme Is greatest game. , · obout poss1ble rehrement, but

~~~~~~~r~·- 1 - •• • • ed to .. roll, .ln. this respect, thr,. six·· o'clocli':,sharp .in· order that ,1\lal!bews, who doesn't smoke Stanley only laughs. "Reti;e? . I· L DEW$.1Nt;a • i . E:.Pcutlve·.' (s•'loo~ing. foliYard ·to the 1game! 1ffia)'' be completed wllh ?r drmk, make~ almo~t a relish Goodness no .. I bope to be pl~ymg

lit ttiw =~~~~al:,t .JOMH'I' :'. aba!l!llte'.: co-Operation •. _ · .. : · .•. ·-·; a.' fair:·,nj~rghi'· ol' daylight. · · ·. of. kreplng phys1call; f1L and af~r when :(m 45." . I · I· •, ~,.:; : ' · · ·

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FILTERED SMOKING 'AT IT'S FINEST

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The Great Eastern· Oil CompaRy~ Limited. , ' t·. . .. - .

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GETTYSBURG, Pa.-Presldent Eisenhower applauds as Vice-President 'Richard Nixqn acknowledges cheers of the crowd a.t the GOP rally on the chief executive's Gett)' sburg farin recently. Fi\ e-hund1 ed GOP leaders attended the rally that officially kicked-of£ the President's re election campaign. · ~n a speech before the group, Nixon lashed out at ·democratic presiClential ca!'didate Adlai Stevenson.,-(I.N. Photo).

Jacoby On Bridge NO·TRUMP PLAY IS ILLUSIVF.

WEST • 9674 • J 10 9 3 .. AH. ... 8~

EAST 1110 52 . .7852 +·Q6

, +AQJll SOUTH 1~1 ofiAK'J! ¥AK . • J 102 +lOHZ

:North·$oulh vul. · Seuth Wttl NDrth East I N.T. Pus 3N.T. FIISI Pau P~ ·

O~nlni leid-11! '.

ly OSWALD JACOIY PUT ·~'tlurself In the East.stat

In ordtr to defe•1d against three no·trump-ln today's band. The correct defensive play may sur· prise ·you. ·

South wins tlJc opening lead with the king-of hearts and leads the Jack or diamonds. West,

• your· partner' plays low, •and dummy lli<ewlsc plays low. 'fhls permits you to win Ute second trick wllh the q•.:ren or diamonds What do y011' return? ,

If you rcturu your partner's suit, you will gel no\\11erc. Your best chance Is to switch to clubs.

Tlt• •'·eragc pla~·tr would rc· turn the queen o: clubs, and this would allow South to make his l!ontract. Dummy wins with the kin I of clubs, a~d ·the defenders . can l~ter ~tet the ace o£ diamonds and two club tricks. South's ten of clubs Is good tnough to wln the rourtl1 rounrl of that suit.

Ia!t ca11 defeat ~he con\ra~l bY returning his low club Instead of ant of the hont~rs. East should rialbe that hl! partner has. the ac!• of diamonds. Thli will &L\'e west a cllance ta l•~d · t~olf'h the ldnl of club~ later op.

When East returns hll lowest , , . club, declarer c4n with. the trick · • . . , 1 · ln either· hand and force out the WATERVILJ,F,, 1\fame-Gov. and· Mrs. Edmund S. MusJtte are shown at the polls ace o£ diamonds Wes~now lea~ in the nation'~ Ilrst important eleclion of the yem'. Having j~1st cast his vote, Gov. another club t!lroug d d~m~k: Muskie. is striving to b'e~ome the only Democrat elected to. a second ~onsecutive ~~~:~ ~~~bE:;1~k:. rd:fe~t!~l the 2-year ~erm i!l the s.ta~e sine~ the civil wa1·. In early returns he holds a lead over his 1

contract. Repubhcan nval W1lham A. Trafton, Jr.- (I.N. Photo). • . · ;

Skl"n AI"ds pregnant women .and women in Babv · menopaus~. - ) ' ·' · Dirt and pcrsph·atlon, sa· m c-

ln the tiny Baby, most rcaur"l· BY ALICIA HART times emotional tension,. contrib· taUon Is not vomiting. The mil~ The tremendous wave o! licat ute. to thl~ annoying eon!llt!un. just comes up with the air. Th~ that oftencomes lifter Labor Day, Trying to 'stay cool and reason·

New foods should be given to cl\ildl'en In small amounts-one food at a time.

doctor may recommend. that • tl 1 1 0 b ably dry can be an aid. Sonic burpy Baby. lie on his sto~ach some mcs carY n eta cr, Is womcA find that Ute. abso1·ptivc

after me.ls ·lo prcvcn. t the mU~ generally ~ummer's disagreeable qualities .of a lon.,"·sleeved cutlon Dri'cd prunes. nnd raisins arc a d farewell. It causes a rush to , good snack Cor belil'cen meals on

from &olnl up hjs nose or own beaches 'and picnic ,spots and . a shir~ compensate Cor tile heat of a camping trip. Since boxes take his .wjn4plpe. few moans over ·stored colton Its c~vcragc. Itchy clothes should up too much space, Utey can be

· ell- { diUon cloU1cs, · · ~ tf~0f1de~ •. as ld!houlcl 1,,31 ny syn. re_p,ackcd In plastic bags secured

Colle is ~ atress ng con ·It also may ca4se skin trouble~ 0 c . 18 cou ~055 u Y CMI~Il at the topo with rubber bands. an4 larJe, otJierwlse heaiUly Ba~· for some women: . " allergy, . . , -· , . . . . les seem to be particularly pron~. Because of warm weather ind i\n .extra balh a day, ~volilance ' Wlicn tinting garmsnts In the I

It Baby's ci'Ying seems excessive lots of moisture In the air, soinc ·of rush or. running where possible washing machine, wrap Ule wring· .or ht dOI!bles up af~er"eatinJ, tell women !lnd that their. tempera. can also help, Anything'. that PI'C• e~• rolls with aluminum fall to keep ·

the doctor abol!t ·II. lie m~y ·re· mental skins behave bette~ In the vents the locr\lon ;of the rash, them from becoming discolored, · · commend a forl!tul~ change whl~b sum'mer. Bill tills l~st wave of general!~ · clbo.ws, backs of knc~s

sometime, works won~tr,.. .. · blazing wcaU1er, with Its appalling and underarms, from being chai· •roo hqt on Iron <in silk~ not only . · -- , , humidity, t·evrrses· the procedure. ed. or sqturated with. heavy per· yellows while silk, but dulls ~olor· · ·

. , h new product· which deaerves • Women whose aklns peel or flake splratlon may also be bonellclal.. ed sQk and ~U!!ens nil silks. · , an award for Ingenuity Is mixed off 'In winter find that they are , 1

-fruit juices put up In Baby .and getting' minor rnslrcs dnring this '' ------JuniD!·slze boltles. 'fbc .lillie bot· ~eason. 'fhey 11 ro liable to scratch .' 'ATTRAC'l' A'rTENION tlr.~ t:~kc a convention~! nipple the rash· and prclty soon they're HAtiNG, England'. (C?)-Munl· perfertly. 'rhr junior bottles are about as nncomfot·table as 'tt'i pos· clpal officials plan pa.tlng trash dear! rln~erN for P,np bottles and slble to be.' This I~ pRrllcularly can~ in this London subilrh-. in ~np:al m!~hlily to toddlers who h,le of ·women who~c illanrls are brll!hta·lclfJO a to attract more ~1ke to m1mle, adjustlnl to. elunu-adole~~~nb, users. · /·

··-r A broken· bull1 can he removed

frmn ~ socltct by using n larRe cork. Turn off the current, press the cork over the broken ~dgcs and turn'the cork UJitll the bulb screws out~ t

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THE DAILY NEWS,WErNESDAY, SEPT. 19, 1956-••

LUei<Y WE HA:l oJUGI-IEAD 1-1~

IT OH THERE,:, !VERY Cli'HER ~E 1!1 TAI<Er-l f

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PEPPERRELL AIR FORCE BASE, Ncwfoundland-Tlie new'p~esident of the Pepperrell Officers Wives Club, Mrs. J.ac~ Obringer, third from right, receives the gavel of office from the outgoing president ,Mrs. Nicolaus Gaynos, •t a recent meeting of the club during which the new officers were elected. The other new officers are, left to right, Mrs, ·H. S. Christensen, second vice-president; Mrs. Ross· R. Bryant, assistant treasurer; Mrs. D. A. Krause, record-· ing ~ecretary, Ml'S, Gaynos, Mrs. Obringer, Mrs. A.M. Bobbitt, first vite-president, and Mrs. J. L. Hurn, correspond·. ing secretary. -Not present for the picture was Mrs. Benjamin, treasurer.~Official USAF-NEAC Photo.

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SOUTH GATE, Cali£.-16-y~ar-olcl Southpaw Jim "Blae kle" Derrington. signed (or a reported SGO.Oill) by the Chicago Vlhite Sox, gets an assist from his parents as he ,paeks his bagn for the trip tu the Wiml~ City.· 'flit!.' 1.W.i1. who also plays first base, was the n;ost sought after player in the country. with all lG major league club~ btdding foe his services. Fl'lur of them, incltJding the White Sox end the Yankees, offered to make him· a bonus player. In ~igh s~h(IH!)i cmnpetition this year he pitched 88 innings 'in 13. games, permitting 31 hits and nine runs, three of which

. ,were e~eq..:.for an era of 0.23.-(I.N. Photo). · ·

No Weak Air Force In Red ..

Cbina Now ' PEIPING (Reuters) - Defence Minister P11ng Teh·huai said Tues­day Communist China ·is . "no IODJer I country .With a weak· air tor~."

Speaking. to Ule< eightlt Commu­nist p~rty cong~ess, 0 Peng also said the country's armed forces now have 2,700,000 ~fewe-r~ men tltan Its Ingest foi'ce at the time ok the "llberaUon" in 1949.

PenJ, who Is a member of the Chinese politburo, 11 I'd China Is not up to the standard of coun­tries with big air forces, "we arfl no llfllger a country with a weak air fore~.'' NO AGGRESSION

He. added: ''We have never eon-· ,sidered fDd will never consider aggresslot;~ against other conn· tries "

Bni, b' ,~il~. 'al\hDUih ~her~ is a t~ndency toward lnternatlona.l relaxation ol tension, "Ute impe. riallsis are not willing to 'give up their policy of hostility toward llhe

·Chinese people." · Pcng ~lated that the pul'}lose f)f

th~ army Is to defend China and its ."iociallst construction" and to bt prJplred to liberate Taiwan (Formosa l •t any Ume.'' . ·

China needs an environment of ' . prolonged ,peace and a modern revolutionary army, ~esaid.

Peng u r i' e d Chinas armed lori:es tO study, the work of the Sl)vlet Union and ctlter Commu­nt,t ccuntrles. "B~t we should ~~o atudy the· mllttary problems Of upi!alht l!ountriest-ao that" not only 'WJU w• have an understand· In&. fl/. oUr$elves but .also of the otJ\er party." . . ;

Blind Mother's .· Sight lmproVi~.~'

TORONTO' (CP) - Barbara L'ange, locked in a ~age of shad· ows since her son's birth, Is ging. erly awaiting visitors. . . , I .

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The 25-year-old Brilisll immi- ,NEW YORI{--:-Model·Doris ·Abbott of Phi !adelphia, Fa; poses witp her trophy after . grant today hopes .to •.greet ~er her "bouffantas.ie" coiffure.won the grand prize award over entries from throughout . .. :,;· mother, ' Mrs. Doris Bcllcrby of Wolverhamptoit~ England, .for the the United Sta~es and,Canada recently at. the nati,onal beauty trades :show of the . :;•. fir1t time hi --u months. Sunday National Hairdressers apd Cosmetologists Associ~tion. Bernard Bohle, of Philadel- . ::. ~he will welcome hc.r 3¥.1-montft. phia, Pa., was the stylist.-(I.N. Photo), · ~;, old son, Mark, back mto her two· _;____:~· _:_--=--'---=------_:_---------,-----------

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room apartment on the norUtcrn ,. UAD FARE PAID · . !\lark here,'l Mrs, Lange. said. vice-station attendant. ' ' rim of Tor!lnlo, · · "They paid ·her return fare here, Mark has been staying for two As vision rapidly ebbed she .... ,

She will ,see bo!JI as 'form1es~' you know. Fol' a .long ·time we months wi!JI English friends In grew ·anxious and told her ·bus.:. ·' sfta~ows. · ' didn't know whether 'she could stratford,; Ont. '. band. A" do"ctor disclosed she had ~;;

Tuesday' tlte ·tiny, sort • spoken come." · . i SIGUT FAILED, suffered a brain tuiiior. mother 'edJed nervously about her . "They' ·arc a group of British , Mrs. Lante found her sight slip­rented living-room In a red-brick benevolent societies, which helped ping away 1Yhen she awoke follow· bupgalow, . . Mrs. Bellerby buy passage to Can· ing Mark's birth. She told n~ one;

. "I hope mother will stay for n ada afler si)e appealed to 1· Lon· , not even her husband, Lothar, 36, while. But she hu my·· younl(er don newspaper, The Dail~· ~litTor. 1 alvctcran or .lhe· German cam·

. A~ emergency operation 'Yas i~- ·:·:~~

mediately scheduled. Durmg 1t.os ··:;" co u r s c Mrs. Lan1e's· heart ob slopped. ;fhc surgeon opened hbr.',':., che!l wall and massaged life back, ,;.: ~Isler' 1vilh her at home In New "With mother's htlp, I think ~paign in Nol'th AfriCa· durin~ the

·Hampton. . 1 /w~'IJ be able · to lake care of I Second World War and now a ser· \ . . '

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',' RUN A DEPARl MI!NT STORE r-----...,..-----....------.....-.,t £rom your· uwn hi>\nc .. Yes!~.

1·. "' We'll put you Into your own ·

buslneijS absolutely 'FRE~! Now you can sell to entire

, Q family, clothing shoes, shirts, ··slacks, 'sportdwear, work

clothes, jewelltry, etc. Amaz·

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~~·. TO

· INSURE YOUR

AUTO· MOBILE

YOUR

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'· . ~ ' . ' . . .. :· _.1HE.'-DAiLY NEWS, ~EDNESDA r:· SEPT. .19 · < ~· ~-·' -~ :. . .. ·. >, • ; • • \ • ..

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Wanted l1111nediately FILING. CLERK (FEMALE)

General office experience preferred. Apply in person

FRml

R. J. Coleman Limited

Duckworth St. Dial II!! '

·a· ERA1 Ll . . GUARDS· . ,'

HARVEST MOON SALE

NOW AT

· lng morey making plan.' No ex~erlenct> nccessary,ltfull or part time. FREE clothing• for persona\· use as extra bonus. Write . for powerful sample outrlt and full Instructions absolutely FREE. Dept. 228, Blake·Wa:ker Co., P.O. Box 657, 1\Iont;~al, Que ..

··~ .PLEASURE '• . BOAT ' .. ,

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~Nfld .. Tractor & ·Equipment Co., Ltd. O'CEDAR, DUSTBANE .HOME WAX CLEANING MATERIALS 1

LeMA \. '· I

Ali Ladies and Gr REG , T. MORGAN . · · ADMIRALTY BUILDING W~ER ST.

I quested to attend INSURANCE •

P.O. Box 168, 'Phone 8-0370·775l

Baird Motors Ltd -·-·--·· .... - .... iiiili .....,.,. I Salesman·. Wanted DIAL 80378·9

MERRYMEETING ROAD ~---------------

FOR SALE . · USED LUMBER

. COORS, ·WINDOWS, WALLBOARD and BRICK

Apply to GEORGE SUMMERS

& SONS Water !>tree! tast

'Phone 2838 or 5446F scpt18,3l

.OPPORTUNITY OF THE· YEAR. -.. . High School Students and Young ·Men from

16 to 19 would you like to start on .. a training. course to develop your self-confidence and. leadership abilities; a course tha? will give Y,OU wonderful 'training, . including a well balanced sports and recreatio/1 program.

You may take advantqge of this ·opportunity by becoming a member of the newly. or. ganized

, Canadian Army Militia Unit · \

.. IAii. ! . A. triple A r'AA~) inter.natlonal· l(y known company. has· a digni!ied position for a successful salesman presently employed, wl10 in addi· tion to satisfactory Jmmediatc earnings is interested in his future

. .

WANTED. By young businessman,

1 advancement. Our. company has the I following to offer: · Jl. Exclusive territor)'. ·

2. Established businc'ss in the area 3, You can receive excellent field

training. t. Compensation-high rate of

commission-salary. 5. Insurance benefits. 6. Paid vacations. 7. Products broadly ad1•ertised.

Room and Board This is crtativc industrial sell·

ing. Our products used by most cif !.he natio1s blue chipped indus: tries. Age •reruirements 26 to 45. At least three years sales experl· encc essential, 'some knowledge of metals. helpful but manual apt!· tude .necessary. Ca~ required, and best of reference mus~ be sub-

in private home. Centra I location preferre~.

Please write

BOX 46 c/o DAILY NEWS . . ,,

Published by

Authority Under authorlly o[ Section 35

of The Election Act, 1054, His Honour lhc LieutenAnt-Governor hns been pleased to issue 'a writ

mitted. Call: ·

MR. 1\[, J. DOODY, . Ncwfoundhind Hotel,

. St .. John's Monday through · Friday betw~cn; 2.00 p.m. and 7.00 p.m. for appomt· mCIIl. Scpt18,19

· ~ For fu~l information apply to , of Election to:

JEDDY KILOWATT It

LIVE ELECTRICALLY·

And E~jcy the

DIFFERENCE

·u•~if.i· fo,.P.a,..v , ..... rto

Cheap, Reliable El~ctr1ci~ In and Awu:.d. St. lohn ~

Uussiam;. Make ..

Amazing Progress In Basketball

ROME, (CT'l-fl (OJ'Iller Amr.rl· rnn collc:iatc dirc~ldr ~aid Tuc~­rla\' Russia's basketball pla)'cr~ hai•c ·malic 10 ~·eRrs pro::ress ·in I he last year and, wiU endanger Unit~d State; supremacy,

Jim "cGre~or. former rllrector of athletic~ at Wlthworth College Spokane, Wash., and now coach af the !'allan national basketball team, 'said: '

"(£ the'' (the Russlnnsl continue to lmpro\'e at the present rate they can knock lhe, United States off In 19\iO Olympic basketball the way they .knocked Canada oiC in Olymolcict' hockey this year.'' · McGregor ret u r n c d ~londay ni:lht from Bologna, w)lere. the n us s i n n s swept 'undefeated th:ou~h the six • nation Jllalrano Cup iournr mcnt.

He said the Russians have )1oocl ll'ell-rounded players but still lack the exceptional stars the U.S. has. Jle rjlTP«fiCted th~~· Will be scr.oni! ()r Utlrd in Olympic. basetball at

, M rllmurne. ·

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BUILDING 3 BUCKMASTER'~ FiELD,

THIS · EVENING AT 7.30 ·

'CLOTHES make' the man If CHAFE ·makes 'the c;lothes

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· ··.VIM. · L. ·CHAFE, -Tailor. . '

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REUBEN A. RUSSELL, Esq., who shall, pursuant thereto, act as Returning Officer' (or the Elee· toral' District qf Carbonear·Bay de Verde,

J. G. CIIANNJNG, Deputy 1\llnistcr.

SPECIAL · 1955 HUDSON Rambler,

2-0oor Sedan,.·· · . Heater ai1a Radio

. ,$1625.00

CERTIFIED · BUYS 1955 LAND . ROVER . · .

.. STATION WAGON 4·Whcel Drive . · . Excellent- Condition.'

· Heatl'r and Defroster. · $1950.00

1951' CHEVROLET 4-boor. Sedan .. : ......... $925.00

1953 MONARCH 4-Door llentel' and' Hadio.

. . $950.00

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9'53 STUDEBAKER 2-Door Heater and Radio.

. $1300.00

AS IS.ERS

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M!E·w.·s. DRY.: CLEANE_RS Same· d~y :i~ou-~t_er Service

:by; request. ~ · ·

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T.O~RENT ,' . ,.... '. ..... ···.·"' :· ' . P~rtl~; ·F~~niih~d _'}•:·.

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tlew ,; 2;B ,cfr_iuim; · t-!ame. '' . 'j/: ·; ' •.•• · ..

· BIRCJ-r AVENUE, .. ' ·

·Miiun~PearJ;P.~rk; ·. . . . -~ . . . . . . For iurUtcr particulars

.'Phc)~(t 6o1-o:~ · ··

. •

. 'l!LECTRICAL. SERVIC:ES ·

as· Hoyles.

AYI.

Electrical

Cantr•ctor

Statutory Notice· ' .. \ . ' . . . . .

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H.M.C.S. CABOT

Drills Commence on THURSDAY1 20 September ·at 2000.

Recruits are now being accepted for en.rolment , . ' .

lept18J9

·WANTED DIESEL ENGINEERS

Must have first or second class Board of Trade • certificate 'o·r equivalent. \

For further particulars apply to ·

Canadian .. Marconi· Cmnpany · P.O .. BOX '994 ST. JO_~N'S,: NFlD.

WANTED

STENOGRAPHER '· :

.sept18,19 ·

· .. With some experience.

Apply by. lett~r to

P.O. BOX E5197 •

Business: Fo•

.'JOIN 9.00 o'clo~ A ·GREAT TEAM s.eptel

Enjoy· three ye' r~ of aurer.l~•riii ) VOT.E Ll~ and comradc;hip in the co~~~:~I~~Ji~-----­negimcnt of Cenadian ~ the youngest yet mcnt In our Tn'''"'"-·

challenge and "'''"""urun young men in The Guards ....

Churc Bow

• T R A v E 1. . The annual meeting CANADA- PER~HA~~P~s~" ~~riUIFRIDAY, September· SEAS

• L'EARN TO HANDLE Clubs entering team LEAD MEN

• DEVELOF' STRENGTH ,., •. ,,,..Following the meeti SELF~CONFirJENCE

• SERVE t.ND MAKE an Invitation is exte WITH MEN FROM Clubs (inclu_ding. non

'CANADA • FINEST MF.DlCAL

DENTAL rARe • 30 DAYS PA 1D HOLIDAY

YEAR • OUTSTANDING

PLANS

• NEW INCRE:ASED Fema.le RATES OF PAY.

Arter these 3 ~n!at years. t~IOOllt};l a lifetime Army career. or turn tu civilian hfc a bctttr

You arc eligible if you art tween 17 anc; 4u years old. at least Grad·: t cduc·atioo, sept19,wed,frl,rrlnn,tf can meet Arm~ reqt.11~r-:------· mcnts.

.Mail the coup1•n below, or visit your n~arcst Army cruiting Station. sell industrial ARMY RECRUITING '"n''"·'•'"u with a bright

431 Waier Street, and full St. John's, Nfld. insurance and

Please send m~ without tion, full inforn:ation on careers. NAME ..................... .. ADDRESS .............. . CITY/TOWN .......... . PROV. TELEPHONE ..........

FUEL Oil

STOVE Oil

HARD COAL

SOFT COAL

PROMPT DELIVERY

COURTEOUS SERVICE PHONES:

6077 - 5586 - 5863 - lin

Nfld. Coal & 0~ ·Co. Ltd.

441 WATER :,TREET .

shoul_d apply in to experience, to

.. MODERN BUJ':.IGA . . bedrooms and m

· linoleum floors, o sulated, 220 wirin two acres of tree

· back and front. L . Road Extension. p

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St. · · . ·' · . · · INSURANCE' .• •. :eers AGENCIES . ·Public Notce

A permanent p~ ced and . capal:l Typing inustbe, Annual Bonus 5 and Health Scht Apply by type\'

.. \)\~\;SQO£\ AJIJI!Ic~tlons a•·e inl'ited lor

~ost of Officer Grade \'I in the Newfoundland Development Off1ce, of Economic salary for this post at 53900 o;1 the !alar)' $3900·100-4200. .

experience fidential. . .

BOX 3

FOR ALL ·vouR

2 .• The doli c.< or thr rc:~ those or ·a Puolic netaiiO fic~1·. Canrliclatef .~lmuld tnoroug.h .. krrolncd2C of foundland and its particular· emphasis rlevclo)Jmcnt. TheY tlic ability tiJ mrct prepare and ·

.-SALES A. young aggr to sell food Tril'lity Bays. T

tlon relatim :n the and policies ot the should aiso hare newsp rpe~ and' -""'"·11~ and the ability 'IS and to US•.; a tvnc•wrne·r. ·•

3. The wilf be requlrect to

: names of previous ""'nlol'f'' : two other II undergo ntedi.ca · .

4. Appllcatwn~ 1" ., stating age. ·~iurational

tlons, exper!Pnce etc;•

I addressed •'l the"""'··fc 1ur.o;:: Cllminlsslon .of Newfoundland

· · Building, Duekworth Jolins so a• to reach :511

. mlssi~n or: o• be tore the . · . , •Jf September. 1!156;

. , Env•lapes conta~nlng .. · tions• sho•Jid: be cle~rlf

'D·E·D·1D3''. N. . ' CHAIRM.A •

.... I. ,CIVIL .St:RVICE -=:;::::::::;..;:;;;;:.;;.;...;,.::;..;:;:..;.;:;:~~:;;:.;.:;-;, ..::;::....::.--~· . sc pll7 ,19

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/ -~: ., ' ' ~- . . ' .~. ' .• · ..... r. ~ . • ' ' . ~ . . '• ·., \

opportu~it ........ _,~ a· satisf salary plus con

sickness b · .. Pleas•

. _,

• • j •

.' .' ·. Fe>r . further .

~-lladian · .}·~i ~ox.~

r --•.,..

:·.·

ES: - 5163- 5171

al & Oil Ltd.

Y NEWS, WEDNESDAY, SEP'r. 19, 1956. 'liE oAIL • •

LIBERAL MEETING GUARDS CLUB 'ROOMS_

LeMARCHANT ROAD

All Ladies and Ge,ntlemen supporters are r•· uested to cottend. ·

q t

. Businass: Forma.tion of Committees,

T• 9 00 o'clock TO-NIGHT, 1 WEDNESDAY, mte: · · · September 19th, 1956 ·

VOTE LIBERAL- VOTE GIBBS

Church Service Clubs Bowling League·

The annual meeling will be held at Canon Wood Hall fRIDAY, September ·21st, at 8.30 p.m. Will all Servlc.e Clubs entering teams please. make sure a Delegate IS

P'esent. · • following the meeting a card party Will be held a.nd

Invitation is extended to membr rs of all the Servtte a~ d Clubs (including non-bowlers) to atten •

WANTED female Office Assistant

Apply. by Jetter to

BOX 18 c/o DAILY NEWS 11 ;tt9.~ pd.fri.mrm. t{

SALESMAN WANTED to sell industrial equipment, Excellent position with a briRht future. Attractive starting salary and full ~mployee benefits including, health, insurance and pension plan, Interested parties should apply in writing, giving full detai-ls as to experience, if any, and ot.her qualifications to

HARVEY & CO.,-LTD.· INDUSTRIAL DIVISION

260 LeMARCHANT ROAD, ST. JOH~'S

MUST BE ·soLD MODERN BUNGALOW • · ,, , living room, kitchen, 3 bedrooms and modern bathroom. Hardwood aM ' linoleum lloors, open fireplace, Gyproc interior, in· sulaled, 220 wiring, concr.~t basement. Situated on lwo acres of freehold land, all cleared, landscaped back and trent, Located near busl:n~r. on Long .Pond Road Extemion, Pric& on inspection,

'PHONE 90672F

H'ANTED SENIOR SECR:ETA·RY A permanent position is open for an experien· ced and capable Secretary. Shorthand and · Typing must be superior. Good starting salary. Annual Bonus Scheme. Contributory Insurance 11nd Health Scheme. Five day week. Apply by typewritten leiter, giving referencH lind experience. ·All applications strictly con· lidential.

BOX 3 c/o THE DAILY NEWS llPII9,20

· SALES OPPORTUNITY A young aggressive .SALESMAN is required to. ~ell food products in Con~eptlon and 111nrly Bays, This position provides an excel· l~nt opportunity fo~ ~ young man to. build himself a satisfvinR carter. The position offers salary plus commission anCJ the usual hosJ)ita' and slckness benefits. •

,· . . Please apply st~ting .qualifications,. Xper~ence and reference to: .

1

BOX 9, c/o DAILY NEWS.

DIESEL HELPERS Fo f h . . . r urt ~~ particulars apply to

Canadian · Marc~ni Comp-ny P.o. Box 994 ·

~Ptl7,18,22 . ~. ST.·· JOH't~'S .

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(!)lt) \!. olonq (flub THERE OUGHTA BE A LAW!

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CLUB OPEN· S P.M. TO·DAY.

TO-NIGHT Evan Johnson's

Orchestra. DIAL 90069

Junior B~seball

Finals To~night 6,4,

HOLY CROSS

vs.

FEILOIANS

BINGO at

GAIETY 8. 3 0

TO-NIGHT sept19,20,22

WA NT·E D • by experienced TYPIST

Work To Do At Home.·

or a part-time 'job. Write to

BOX ~6 c:/o. DAILY NEWS

WANTED TO BUY - Baby's · clothes, children's coats, clo9Jes, bed clothing, cur· talns1 men's clothes, boots, shoes, comics, tockct books.­,Tohn D. Snow, 9 Now Gower St. aept18,1m

. ·tnsuranc.

DRIVI! WITH THE SUN BE• HIND YOU Protect your property. Insure with the oldest Compan~ In the world ·-w. F. Cllldwell, Insurance ·Agent, 'Phone 2465, Tepmle Building, Duckworth Street, St. John's

INSURANCE-Iawrinl Broth· er Limited lnlluance Depart· ment-Fire, AUtomobile, Mar· tne and all Caaualty llnea. Telephone 3131.

OEPENDABLI FIRE INSUR.· ANCI-Don•t risk your valu· abies to "save" 1 few dollan. Our fair-rate, reliable policy lives tmmedlat11 protection. iJlhone. 11921 or write I. J. Lacey, P.O. Box 506. repl.tf _

,ruRNISS WITHY INSUR· •;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiii;;;;iiMiii-, ANCI! Department oUerlna ;; dependable insurance-Auto­;

FOOTBALL ... ' ..

·TO-NIGHT 6.~ p.m.

ST. BON'S vs. ST. PAT1S

lft,erllr

C. leMessurler

moblle. Fire, Bur11lary, Plate Transportation, Travel· Acci· \ 4ent. LiabllltJ, Phone 2073. Gll!J, Tourlsl Bag~age,

: Centact ·sTAN POWLIR, R• nouf bulldin11 for Fire Auto­mobile and Plate Glass Insur· anee. Claims promptly aeltl· ed. 'Phone ~531-P.O. Bos 13.

ROBERT D~WE & SON, Fire and Automobile lnsu.ran~. Be sale. be sure, Insure. Tele­phone 21182, P.O. Box ~ Royal Bank Chambers, St. John's.

ONLY COMPLETE1 BLIND Service. Manufacture, Laun- · dry Repair Worlr guaranteed. One day service. FrcP quota· Uons. Keamcys Umlted, Manufacturers. 454 Water St. ---·

GIBSO~ tJUITARS - Horner . Button Stdp Accord eons and Harmonicas, Richmond Saxo­phones, Boosey · Clarinets.­Charles Hutton & Sons, ~.Q. feb3,eod ••

ALL WOOL MATTRi:SSES ~re picked, re·covered: springs day beds rewired; inner sprlllg mattresses reconditiOn· ed. Write, Phone 3801, wire H. J; Keats, 16 Mount Royl:l Avenue. ·

THE CENTRAL BARBER SHOP We are now operating six chairs. You cnn be assure~!, of the best possible sen.icl?' ·plus the lens~ possible walt· lng. 24 Nrw Gower St. opp. Adelaide Motors qd. ag31,lm

Wall Washing WALL WASHING-Walls clean·

ed by new marhlne.1 Results perfect; save~ paint.-NeW· Method Rug and Wal1 Clean· ers, Freshwater Road, 'Phone 91033. ag25,lm

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KEEP foot·happy with lc•· Mint. Relieve aching, burn· Jng feet. soc 11nd $1.00 at an . druggists. · ' , _ _;__ __ , _______ _

DAVIS ASTHMA R'EMEDY tnJdJill{ UilAOJd ~Ul{ ,!169£ 'ON to hundred~ Clf Asthma suf fercrs-whv not try it to· day-$3.00 for week's sup­ply-At McMurdo's and all druggists.

Help Wanted ~ Female ' $23 WEEKLY for wearing lov., i

ly dresses gh•P.n you as bon· i us. Just show North Amerl· ·\ can Fashion Frocks to friends. No canvassing, investment or exper'ence necessary. North American Fo1~hion Procks Ltd., 2163 Partbenais St., Dept. W. 3895, Montreat. --

WHEN YOUR HOUSE NEEDS a renair job done, small or larg~· or It-needs to be paint· ed at low cost anc! efficient senlce kindly call J. Strat· ton 42 Cashin Avenue. Dial 750il.F. ']ne12,lmth

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FOR SALE 1954 ·VANGUARD SEDAN

In perfect condition. ·

Valued at $1250.00. SELLING AT $1050,00.

Terms arranged'

·Dial 91268

I . THIS FRIDAY NIGHT ..

-...,..- . SUPERIOR· FURNITURE

FRIGIDAIRI R~FRIGIRATOR, ~

1 ENTERPRISE OIL RANIJI, "THOR" WASHIR, ltc., ltc, · At the residence of • 1 MRS. ARTHUR B. KENNEDY i No. 72 LeMarchant Road I

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Friday, Sept. 21st i lnlt., at 1UD a.m. ,

:run particular& Thursday's ! TeleJl'lM and Frt~ay's News. ;

InspecUon D 1.m. mornlnl of · sale. . I

J~hn D. Q'Driscoll; Auctleneer

sept19,20 ' ... ,

Newfoundland j .

. Se..Vices ·~

PASSENGER 'NOTICES .,1

.• CONNiiCT;ON. IT. JOHN'S.' I 'LEWISPORTE SERVIC:~

·Train "The Caribou" leavl~g st. John's .l5 p.m To-day\ Wednes· 1 day, · wl11 make connection at i Lewlsporte with !\t.V. Bonavlsta · 'fe~r the !!lt. John's·Lewbpe~rtc Service: · CONNICTION .. LEWISPORTI!·

· ,CORNER IROOK SI!RVICI! Train "The · Carlbe~u" leaving

St. Jolul's II p.m ·Friday, Septem· ber•21st, will make connection at Corner Brook with S.S. Sprint dale for reaula~· ports Lewisport!! Corner Broolr. Service.

F.REIG!iT ACCEPTANCES PRIIGHT FOR PORTS

MAKKOYIIt TO.HEBRON · Frellht for regular ports Mak· r

kovik to Hebro11 per M.V. Tre· 1 pauey will be : aecepted · at the 1

ooek coa•talShell To-day, ·Wr· , ~ . nesday, ~~om II ~"'II·, :t~ s. p.m~ I

SEPTEMBER 21st

under the auspices Amateur Athletic Union of Canada · (Newfoundland Bra,chJ 1.

S2,SOO.OO\ IN CASH PR,IZES

I .

s1 ,500.00 for . 30th,· GAME AND

BEGINNING WITH 1sti,GAME $150.00 f 0 ' I

$100.00 for 15th and 16th Games; $50.00 for 5th; . ' .

10th,. 20th and 25th Games. I -

Rest of Ga~es $25.00 - $20~00 I •', ' t ~

As Cards 'cue .limited would advis~ P.ati'Ons to come early. . . . . ..

Games to.start 9-o.'cl.o~k ~~arp. .

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!:VERY DO.LLAR COUNTS •.. . . .

KEEP ONE FOR . THE "Y" ...

FINANCIAL CAMPAIGN

SEPTEMBER 5th to 29th

Help the '1Y' lo answer the needs of the Young Women and Girls ~tho crowd its. ever-open· doors. Y.W.C.A,· individual services include Baby-sitting, Employment,

• Travellers Aid and Counselling.

HELP THE "Y" HELP YOIJTH

GIVE TO-DAY TO THE COLLECTOR WHO HAS THE I .

DUPLICATED RECEIPT BOOK. .-'

Youth Wants Community·

Assistance

THERE WILL BE .A ME~TING OF ALL

Liberal Supporters IN ST. JOHN 1S SOUTH DISTRICT TO-NIGHT

at 8.30 p.m. Plac:e of Meeting: GUARDS CLUB ROOMS.

Business: TO FORM COMMITTEES . VOTE LIBERAL . . . VOTE KELLY '

FOR SALE ' ..

139 GOWER ST .• KNOWN AS ..

LAWRENCE'S CARRIAGE FA,CTORY

Interested parties may inspect the premises at any time. For further particulars apply on the premi~es or

PHONE 2705 septl9,3i

l~beral Headquarters . I .

(ST. JOHN'S SOUTH} ·

LOCATED

590 Water Street TELEPHONE No. 7324, 6414, 5940

....... ·-·--·-·- .... ·-·-·-··- ------Change ·Of .Number 91627F J. S. KELSEY

KENMOUNT FARM 1Cptl9,3i

WANTED 1.· e 4 EXPERIENCED WAITRESSES

· . e 2 ASSISTANT COOKS . e ·4 KITCHEN ATTENDANTS

Excellent working conditions. - .

Apply in person !o BARNEY'·S. R~STAURANT

TOPSAIL ROAD

1951 DODGE 4 DOOR SEDAN . '

Air conditioned . heater and de-

froster; g~od tires; good .battery.. A" reqj··bargain ..

' REGULAR PRlc;E

$850.00

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THE DAILY NEWS,.WEUNESDAY •• ~!:_l9, 1 9~ . --....

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.· .. AT THE MACDONALD lliiiiJ?d~ SIGN - . I . , . . . ' '

,----~..:...----------·..:.-.7"':-·-:--.~.--~-,. I l·oa· ·ITUAR. vI . . ' '. . '. .. I .... , .. ·. ·: .... , .... . ' . .

''Wt enjoy many new camlarfl, lhan~l lo • Ptrlonal loan"

/·. . . . , . .. I You can d~. scfmuch· 1

, ··.,·:'~ith. the· help~~ a··:,: :, , ~,.PERSONAL I

LOAN.· ·~ I

Getting in winter fuel early •• : buying a new oil furnace ••• new home - 1

MRS. ALBERl MICHA!=LS ~&h!

;~~~,,::~~.~~,~Fir!:L D~ ;i:~:z· . ... O.IL SPACE ·.HEATERS· 1\!~chaels of thl:; Clty. It ca. me as ~ND C OK .. · · . I a iteep shock L the IJlRny friends· '-•~~'~IT CD 1' PROVIDE MORE HEAT 'w11o· knew he1. · · · ' l - ~

Her advice anc' motherly know· 1 · · ; ledse was sought constanlly, and those that came· went away com· ,., d C bb rortcd both In heart and mind. ...omman er ra .

· i Marshall Pugh · ..... : .. 2.50;

$ $ $ ·fOR. LESS $ $

'I Geoffrey Keyes, v.c; .·. furnishings ••• a new car, or refrigerator ••• payment bf C:ducatiorl!li"fces

• • ; these arc among the many \vorthwhile objcc~ivcs you can reach more easily I . with a Personal Loan. Fordctails, see our nearest branch- w,c have more than . I

OF THE ROMMEL RAID ,j Elizabeth Keyes .......... 4.25,

. !: :·

725 t~ ser'v~ you. . ' I THE CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE 1·

• . • • • I N·l76 I

----~-------------------~--· . . Main Branch ..................... :.: .......... .......... : ............ E. E. EWING, Manager Hamilton Avenue and Cashin Branch ................... J. E~ JOUDREY, Manoglll!' . . ' .

103 YEARS OLD . USEFUL FIND

Ark Ro'yal · Kenneth Poolman ... ..... 3.7 5 •

The Long Walk , S. Rawicz . . ............. : 3.00!

The Epic Voyage of the 1

Seven Little Sisters · !

William Willis ............ 3.25 .

Spring On An ! ' I

: .SELKIRK, Man, (CP) - Mrs. JERUSALEM .(AP) - Drillers :!llargrjet Olafson, believed to be working. near ancient Sodom In :!he oldest Icelandic person living the hit.lterto arid area near the

Winners Scholarship

Arctic Island ! Katharine Scherman .. 5.50 :

1~ c;anada, mark.ed her 103rd Red Sea have struck water at 215 :.btrthday Monday In t.ltis town 23 ·feet depth and report. substantial

miles north of Winnipeg. Mrs. flow with ·low salt content.· The . Olfason, who ~un can attend Ill well will supply t.ltc potash plant .most or her own needs, has I at Sodom which formerly crew .::oorl memory, wa~r from Jordan territory.

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IMAIT ANSWIRI JOI,,,,

Whafs New for ~all ( IN GENTS' SHOES

These <:'ent's footwear erections .for Fo,ll.are ~xpert!. ly styled in top grained leathers to give a comfort~ able, mor'e perfect fit. They're obt~inable: iri colors' ot Black, Brcwn or Tan iri sizes 6 tci.12. · · . . TOP: Smart two eyelet tie Oxfords . ··

$7.50 to 12·50 ··. · · BOHOM: Neatly styled Brogu~ Oxf~~ds

$7.50 tu $8.75 · ..

,__,.· •·

• OTHER STYLES .PRICED FROM .. ;: .... :: .. ·.::.: .. $5._25 u~ ' '.!fll

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TraCiic Safari i WHY MORE HEAT ? ? ? BECAUSE

Albert Mahuzier ........ 3,50 : AT ST. THERESA'S ACADEMY IUCHANS ' . I

She was boru In Hadcth El. 'ntroducin~ Portugal ·1 .Joulee, Hepuo.k of Lebanon, 64 , Cedr,·c Sa./ter 3 75 i

MACO·ONALD ago, whc re she married ! .. ........... •

.Albert Mll•hael t.nd both she .and 1 Basic British her husband at 1, very young age J y · R .· 2 1 0

IS FITTED WITH A PATENTED JET ACTION

.. BURNER WHICH STABILIZES THE FLAME TO left t11elr natlv.: !and and' travel· 1cfor oss ................. · to vai'lous.rm'ls of t.hc world Greyfriars Bobby GIVE QUIET AND EFFICIENT COMBUSTION

~~~vr~~~~fnnd~~~~ ~a~:· ,to{;~ft: Eleanor Atkinson ....... 3.00 perm!lnent hor,le. 'fhey were A· Thing of Beauty · ' blessed with 9 l•hildrcn. A very A ) C · 4. 50 .

WITH LESS FUEL CONSUMPTION.

!Ucccssful busiolrss was carried , · • rontn ............. · · : on· for. 46 years. Finally they Beyond The Black Stump !

decided to retin·. which they did N 'I SL t 4 50 I Trade .supplied bv UNITED NAIL & FOUNDRY . .

. Congratulations to · Marlon · Quirk, a Grad~ XI PUP.Il of St. Theresa's .Academy, Buchans, and winner of a '"Reipimsiblc Govern· ment Centenary'' scholarship or $600.00. Marlo .. !.as been ·a yearly ·scholarship' wlr.rer all through 'her ·High ·School years, having won the "Royal Stores" scholar· ship ; In 1954, t.'le "MacoDnald Scholarship" lu 1955; ·and ~he 'Buchans Dram~tlc ·Sc11olarshlp" In 1956. She has·.entered New· foutidland liiPmor,al Unh·erslty

. to further her e~ucatlon; . Her parents, ·Mr. and Mrs. James Quh:k ·of Jackson Street, Buchans and' hllr teachers. the Presetila· lion · Sisters "' . St. ·. Theresa's Academy a~e to be ~one~atillated.

Thomas · Beresford,

a short w.hile ago.. • i ev1 rlU e ................ • :

Her Ulness ot 4 months kept I The Blue Sky of Spring : ' Available at:

her lnactl\'e to the extent of be· /' d 11 ·1 7' i lng hospltallzca Her condition

1 E IZGJbeth Ca e .......... · ~ : BOWRING BROS. L TO .

did not Improve cven'though tllC The Day After To-morrow I

best of medica• care and allen· 2 25 : GREAT EASTERN OIL & IMPORT. CO. l TO. lion was admlmtercd, she did Rc Y Ferrcrn ................. · • : not rally, bu~ with patience and fortitude she bore .Iter suffering and resigned llerself to God's holy will.

WM. CI.OUSTON L. TD. ·

The numerou:. telegrams, mcs· sages of sympaW.~ and 1\lass cards received by thr relatives or t11e deceased lady, tc'stifying to the esteem In whlc~. she was held by all who had the ?rlvilege to know her. ' ·• -•.. -.:..-="---"----

w·eek's: ' ,. l

. Sew~ Tlrrifty ,_. •.' ...

Dicks & Co., Ltd. ! INs AiTRAcnve MoDeLs

The. Booksellers I . --- - Fool's sug;;cstion.

'PHONES 2008 · 3,191 - 4425 \ T • tl F .. CI· ·1 He. wants the authoritiu

1 e Or lal" ·eS mark 1960-thc tcrccntary of ----·--· --- ' . ·restoration of the mronarchr

.~~11~:-;';,L~-~. Causes C Olll'~ .. OVe .. rs· y·. . ~J~~t~~~.:u;u!~-;-;i~ ~~~~c:~e . :(Pf/{(.l/17 ..U. . . . . the prccmts of the Palate ~ ~ ·l . · - . Westminster."

· .,...-- p/,1 · . . ·. . ; · . · , A statue of Cromwell·

8 - u · /,I By KEN METm:Rt\L \ ter calhng Foot s suggestion a · ncar·. the House of Comn:m

. en ulll'J'O~Ig 11. . Canadian Press Staff Writer "preposterous proposal" and'.othcr· ', ·· . ··---LONDON (CPj .,...- A distin; I writers charged. that· Cromwell ·. ::. EAGER HELPERS

"TH,ROUG KINDNESS'' 11 you saarch for happiness

, • , as I am sure you do .•• lfhave a. magic formula • , ~ that tnakes for skies of blue , • , one which requires just a bit ••. of forethought on your part .• , mixed with a little tender· ness .• , !rom deep inside your heart , . • my doctrine deals with spreading cheer . , • by · word or kindly deed . . . and doing something every day .•. to rill an urgent need • . not with the usc of gold alone , .. but mainly through good will • . • a pleasant smile works miracles , .. and sometimes cures an ill ..• o[ course if you arc fortunate •.• to own a wealth of gold .. , help those less for· lunate than you .•. and untold joy yo,u'll hold , , • yes, if you search for happiness , .• you'll gain your share and more .•. by opening your heart to those •.• who stand at trouble's door.

guishe~ British solicitor has .sctj "slau~htered· ' ~~.ome·n an,d· chi!: ··'TORONTO . ( CP )-)lanninz off a ftrst-class row over the Litle dren, was a murderer. and a pumps at ·a West Toronto seven • year • old Prince Charles "tyrant.' · ·. . · . . ~·:sta.tion: for two days wert should adopt when he eventually. Seve~al le\ters compared ·crom· 'girls' work committee of a succeeds his mother to the throne. well wttlt Httler, Stalin and Pres· 1 ice club: The ~iris also

The controversy is being fougllt !dent Nasser or Egypt, but· Rev.[ washin~· ··and grcasin• oot by indignant letters to. editors Arthur. Morley joined.· the battle ! ·a novel way of raisi;g mo~!l · of London newspapers. I.t has ri- to say "it is not fai: to c~ll Crom, !.youth charity work. · valled in lnlcrest the Suez canal well a murderer ltke Hiller and:.· . · - ' dispute, the nation's econo'!lic I Stalin.' ' . . ·. :' i . ClliLDREX'S nonnr crl.sis and the cnuntry'_s r a 1 n- NOT C:\.LI.ED KIXG OLI\'ER .. ·I': .1\tONTREAL. (CP).-rumed ·harvest. i , woll be a spcmll)' on

Isaac Fool,· a ·member of the 1 }Ierbert .Morrison, former La·- the ·.recreation crntres Privy Council and president of the, bor forei~n secretary wrote say-· fall .Programs. A trarclling Cromwell Association, touched off ing: "' ' · . . . theatre will be introduced the controversy Sept. 3 by sug. "Whatever part ·cromwell may mer playground; next gesting the Duke of Cornwall . have played in . the. history of this! a.veragc of 2.10 ·children should be styled King Olivcr·U country he is certainly not rc.~.made puppets a~d !earned when he becomes king: membered as King Oliver.'' · I operale them m ;elected

"We do not want Charles lll," "Kms Oliver" he could recall was I g~ounds this summrr. said Foot, a former lord mayor ol the late Joe (King) Oliver, a jazz . · -·--Plymouth and , United Kingdom cornet player from Nell' Orleans .. secretary of mines in the 1930s. To date none of the disputants "Perhaps I might suggest Oliver has noted that Prin.ce Charles 11 as being more preferable.'' full list of Christian names is EXPERT 'ON CRO~lWELL Chat·!cs Philip Arthur ·George,

Foot ha~ made an intensive which gives a wide choice. Nor study of U1c Puritan protector have they mentioned that Queen

: who ruled England in the 17th Elizabeth is only 30 and appar-GRANNIES 0:-.1 .JOB 'I century after his Roundhcads had ently in splendid health.

pupil, St .. Thett>sa's Academy, Buchans ; and winner of an "Eiectorlai Dlst!·tct" •cholarshlp,

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AUCKLAND, N, z. (CP)-' beheaded Charles I. J:Ic is thc.au· IU~Gil'iS COUNTER·A~ACK Grandmothers arc the domestic thor of a book enlltled: . Oltl·cr A. It· Boucher of Bmtol, ll'!tosc servants of New Zealand said Cromwell and Abraham Lmcoln: royalist forefathers were b1tlcr

·delegates at a National 'Party A Comparison. . . . enemies of C r o m we II, has convention. Speakers said il wns W. J. Burls-Hunt ftred m a let· launched a counter· attack In useless importing · women !or do· mcstic duties b e c a u s e men grabbed U1em for brides as soon as tl)ey arrived, so distracted! housewives had to appeal to 1

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granny in time of need.

I .. BIRTH '. Dtll stDP

CEDAR . CLAPBOARD

WALLBOARDS

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, ·TH.E· BEST··· • • • ,. I

., 'Photo· '. . .

.. Fillishing ··-you'VE EVER, S'EEN, .AND IN. JUST: ..

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-&Hours-In By .. 10~30: Jout By.4.3D, ,

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COOK-To 1\Inrie (nee Walsh), wife of Arthur M., a son, on Sep­tember 18th, at St. Clare's Mercy Hospital.

Keep her smartly dressed all winter-sow· this adorable jumper for busy days. at· school! It has fashion's new long·walsted look (cinched by' perky'J>ows)-her !av- DEATH

,orite flare.sklrt below! "Have Ute ----~----"---­blouse in. pretty contrl\St! . PERCIVAL--Passed away sud·

Pattern· 4564: Chllaren's Sizes den!~· on Tuesday, September 18th, 2 • 6 s 10 Slz 6 jumpe 1" Lilliam Gertrude, aged 75 years, , •, , , , e r, ·• yards 35·lnch nap; blouse requires beloved wife of· Wllliam tdward 1 yard ·35·lnch fabric. ·· Percival; leaving to mourn hus·

This pattern easy to. use, sim· band, 2 sons, Dr. Ralph and H. pie to sew. is tested .for fit. Has Warren residing in Montreal; 2

·complete lllu'stralc·d lnsfruct!ons. daughters,· lllilliccnt and Una of .Send THIRTY·FIVE CENTS (35 this city. The funeral will take

cents) In coins (stamps cannot be place Thursday at 2.30 p.m. by accepted) for UliS'Jlntlern .. Print motor hearse· from her late rcsi· plainly SIZE; N A Ill E; 'ADDRESS dence 11 Whiteway Street to the · STYLE NUIIIBER. Anglican. Cathedral. ~Sepd order to.ANNE. AD i\.111 S, NOTE Of THANKS

care of ST. JOHN'S DAILY NEWS Pattern Dep't, 60 FRONT STREET WEST, T.ORONO, ONT,

.·Manners Make· · . Friends · · . ' .

When .ta*ipg op · the telephone, remember that your voice ·1s re" presenting you, Never Is your I voice so Important as when It stands alone, . ~o keep.IL pleasant,- speak . dis·

tinctly' apd see th,at Jt speaks well you:

.• rtPH_(JO_...,.N.-11-IT-~-. P-11.,..-.IL-1-PPIN,ES .MANILA {AP) - A · powerful

PacUlc. typhoon packing l20·mlle lin·hour winds '4truck· a suddcr. blow ·at !he; .. east·central Philip phies Tuesday; Tliere were no lm

·.mediate reports of any casualtlc; or dlimag~.

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Mrs. Anna Lush wlshe1 to thank the Doctor& and Nurses of 1

General Hospital, and Mr. and , !\Irs. Pretty at the · Red Cross House.

iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii BOYS' DENIM

. DUNGAREES · Si~es 8 . to 16.

Reg. 2.49 .

NOW ,10UT' THEY GO AT ~·REAL BARGAIN

FOP OULY

. ~ 1.49 . pair .. At !hi!'

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Becoming· . ~·ith light ram }Ugh todaY 55 • .

ecoild egrot

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