nova ltd. la', n ie~ena er n' elver...

16
, S's, la', n to ,BOlt) , and 5's .N STREET lTUEns ANY. Ltd, 1m SUHI ,.:5.,' - I-4US ltd. MOST POPULAR CAR ACROSS CANADA 1963 ,',.,. t ··-·,' .j , . , . ' i P' JL. ,-'- _ ....... , j'E-l\_ i.. ..... ...... .... THEDAIL Y NEWS / ST. JOHN'S NEWFOUNDLAND THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1963 All forms 01 Insurance Nova Motors Ltd. I Water S1. Elizabeth A vc. 9·4171 : :;: ____ -==-____ er n' II Filld No nUll 011 Sy ALAN DONNELLY OlTAWA (CPJ-George Hees said Wednes- "as a rnan of honor" he had to resign de nlinister last Saturday because Prime Ira d d . Diefenbaker i not carry out a pro- , 10 modify the government's policy on weapons. , said in an interview that at the Conserva- cauCUS meetinq last Wednesday Mr. Die- had :,romised they could "meet on ground" and work out policies which ,llr. Hees, could support. elver • I II UI Police Round Up' Killers, Rioters Br JOIlX LeBLANC " . ":" K.\PUSKASING, Onl. (CP) Wbolesale surrenders among 19 men with triple' nor.· capital murder and 237 charged with rioting Wednesday turned a Northem Ontario bush man·· hunt jnto a welt mannered roundup but provided police with an embarrassment 01 pris' \ oners. All hut one of the men accused of murder either had' tUl'Ued themselves in or were reportcd en route to surrender point. ami those under riol charges were gh'ing themselves up in job lots, facing Crown I authorities with a problem 01 . housing and feeding them with limited rietenti{)n f[,cilities. . I Prol'incial police initially an· I nOllnced that 400 would be i char)led with rioting· liS the : rcsult of a fatal gunfirc-J'iddcn I in a hushll'orkcrs' ,ncar here cal'''' :'londa v . hut by .. ___ .... , 'I\'edncsday night the' issuanc/ W C d A e 'filiI COUNTRY PARSON 'of warrants had haltcrl at 21i. OTTAWA, Ont., Canada-Canadian Prime Minister John Dicfenbaker announced February 11th the appointment of one new Cabinet Minister, and a change of portfolio for two HOllse Speaker Marcel Lambert (left), was named Veterans Af· fairs ;\1inister: Minister-without-Portfolio, Wallace McCutcheon (center)), was named Trade Minister; and Veterans Affairs Min- ister, Gordon Churchill I right), was named Minister of Deren se. (tiPI Telephoto) m ru g t IPolicc said they did nol knOll' o an sa es ains •• ,',' h, ":,,: City Fir e-Trap Tenerne nts II , he,d ':'''\''11 f .. r I waS til ll Ihe samc aus Qt:I':BI-:C ICI'I- WIlen :'11'5. lall Rue 51: ,Jcall huildin!: with! Ihere hal'e becn more than 40 'Ircnll Y is clamol'ing for a full 1 Tuesday, Plans we r e heing :', n: I : 'II : II ", 111' ICIOlI'e Ie caucus mce mg We· Bergel'on.Blallke l\'I'itcs only a wOOllclI ladder at the I tll'o.all(l tllI·ee.alarm blazes this report 011 the situation [rom fire I made to transport them 10 the I ,l, ,"n.H.;\ , 11l,I I <1\'. I tt t th d't b t 'I . hi" p['ison farm at l\Iontel'th 100 ,',.. '" C' i "0' S t I . leers 0 e C I or a ou rear fill' a (Ire cscape. An cl· winlcr and city councit cur· inspeclors. 1, ..t .. :" ,"J("II 1''' "l1a.! .. Illtl • a n.n ay . I' stingy landlords and Iheir fil'c, dcrly couple dicd ill the blaze. I miles south of here, the site of I::;,: :" ,lri p . I'IT;I'IW I Ie pl'llnc 1.1111115 cr!f liS lI'ap' tenements, she docs so Another woman died in a Ruc I' I 0 d a wartime detention camp. rom a enan 5 pom 0 vIew St, Jean building \I'hcn fire! . . a :s ;;;'r3r III Ilcared to me Yes it was-no II I tt h't d't 'I . tId 'th h t k'11 .... l.m.lI1.1 hold to up· I 1105111011 was as firm as It ap'l f t t' . If' a aya e rs Of those aecused of non C'PI' . l' . I . er e ers I e I onn pages raced through it last month. I a mur er III e guns 0 I • l.ial 11 11"l1ld Ie change. So there was no aller. h' th'l h k b ing of three men at nearby c !:I:.,\mrriran ;Iand in '[ II 't t d th t h a wlllter fIre tol1 of hH FOUGI T FOR ESCAPE B ./ cesor s I Illg "on ay. 14 a .' Ihl' pan), 10 native-I had to resign." ele. as CI Y was s .a, en y I I A dR' S'd' 1\' d h d " ees rCl e . a e and more than $7000000 In rm)' u z Up %.%1 surrendered by nightfal1 lind won t he a candldale In the damages " Mrs. Bergerin' Blanke Jived police said they understood an· tl h,d I"l'! Ihe cau. ,April 8 federal election de. I . I . I h in a similar building on Ruc St. ".If we judge them ,by their other four Ivere on the \I'ay to •. ., .. I , 'n one case cr mllla c arges J f th ddt I d b t ;:J. :, Nmnl POIICICS: spIte expol'ls of a "draft Hecs" I'd g" t I dl d •. ean or 18 mono s an ha to KUALA LUMPUR (APl- Ma· ment will spend substantial I ac I,ons. we a ou an undisclosed rendezvous west I h 'd I' I I ' wcre aJ a allls a an or f ht th I h II I I h t d t th t th ,,' no t'ltlll'e \lIt mOl'cment among some party (t d' d . Ig rOl1g I clly a to gcl taya ordered a military buildup sums "in the ncxt few "ears" e 0 a ml a e same of this town 100 miles soulh or '. ff' . 'h' a er a young nurse IC In a II d t h I 't ttl ' I kInd of I pI t b I " IS Toronto Broad. three-stOl'ey building having no Ie oc or II' 0 ownel I 0 pu Wednesday. It said Indoncsia to buy planes, ships and new Jeo e seem 0 e on" the foot of James Bay. ""' ["1I,,well Ilew constJtuency. fire escape up n fire escape. The escape with its g I' 0 win g military equipment for the nation's tiny to all the churches," 't:'I,'! \\.11'/ o[ l'llllltilln. "I'm flattcred by it, bul I' tlll'11cd out to he typical of strength threatened the pro· armcd forccs. He said military \ VANCOUVER (CP) - The [Ill' party iust can't do it. that's all. You Firemen used nets and lad. on downtown bllildings- iectcd fedcration of Malaysi3- manpower wi!1 be inc.reased. (CP) -Twenty I B.C. Conservatives' federal ex· cHhcr support your government del'S in below.zel'o weather to a SImple wooden ladder tacked I planned as a hulwark against Due for 1I13uguratlOn Aug. school chIldren suffered cuts I eeutil'c is backing Prime 1\[in· mini''''!' 01' you don't." get about 60 persons out o( a to the \Vull. I communism in Southeast Asia. 31. 1.l'iIl be composed I n,nd bruises Tucsday in a colI!· ,ister Diefenbaker as party )I;:de nl" III' I(,ancd ,.____ _ ..... ___ . T k \1" IRk d t f 'I I I b 'Q "Yol,'d llal'e to be " 1IIImall . un u ./. !uu aza " epu y 0 .1 a aya. Smgapore and the 'l slOn let ween a us operated by 'Ieadcr, Chairman William Me· 'If \\111 not, uell' T<nan.skez· .. t 1" [ B 1'(' [ h 'I I C I I I fly to dcscend them," said :III'S. mullS cr ane ue .cnce omeo crn nnes 0 Brunei, t e ;.ontrea at 10 ic School Lennan said Tuesdav. "We are Bergeron.Blanke in an inter., mUlls cr, bUIldup Sarawak and North Borneo. IlII Commission and anothcr on: 100 pcr ('cnt behfnd Diefcn· "iew Wednesdav. "The SCJre T: aftci' n. c.lhmet called the dream of Prime Prm:indal Transport Company! baker and full), support his l ' · b IF· h gol in that 'lac made me I tn a .from In· 1unl\u Abdul R'lhman of serl'1ce. All were treatcd in hos· ! stand on nuclear weapons," he : rl a 19 t,·ng mlll'e Ollt." pel r\onesl.an ForeIgn l\!mlstcr Su· lap, I pita I and rcicased. I said, ", t!:r trrnwn.: I I ----------- . ' lall( no. :n Ihr \\I'rlel ,'llft' ' . Ph B c In her leiters. she wonders: Suballlirio saId :\Ionday thai t b C •• 1I':1111' 10 110' why lanrliords can hlat.mlll.' dis· "physical contact·· hclwcen In· anD mom au s e s "',h;,\ "ilil Y"\l1' 1\;\1'1.1' " .. ,., S n u h . Africa 'I'ranskei terrilorial authority, I . . l'nlllCI s\ 1IIIlai fl"htlllg as 1'5 expncted to l)ccomc Ille rcr,ard firc safcty ,lnws and es· (oneSIn lInrl was 111· .• ,. .,lh rahinrl. !" '-;- '. , w. , . • , qllnllCl1 II e(llleS(lay In tile fl'an al'ea's fl'rsl pl'eml·cl'. Some Ne. cape prosecution while such cl'llahlc if ,Talaya conlinued l: hr pl'imr 1111·III".'lrl·', '. . . 1. ltd lliings as minor thelts h.v un· whal he called n hostile alli· :" me [ frll conI" S';CI rescrl'c. an a.rca s n e 10 grocs have dllhhed him a go\,· II S th Af (. t N el'llnlent slooge. employed persons mean i<lil. tudc t 0 IV a r d Indoncsia. He U I W h · ,! i I' , " , ; 'i I; , , t. II Ii 1 'I ;j II , ·1 I: , , 'I !i i I' I ; i II I;t 'I· : I , : I .: I ! ,! '.\ :! :11 " " ) , I I t I I ! I, f II , ' , I I I . . Thrrr \\;\' a Ire· I ou I'Ica sIrs The lalest and most costly threalened 10 give full assist· pro a' r 'n a sin gto n -.i 11\1' I gro R 5 ate. . I tl I ' SAYS POLICE ALOOF fire is slill smouldering in thc alice to rchels in British·con., ., '" nwl elllotion. I epm: s Sail lel'e was on y Gen. R. ,T. van den altilUnc 1'011 could une serwus casually. head of thc criminal invcstiga. larllest rreight shed on Quebec trolled !lorneo 10 kcep that . The battle with spears and tion department in Pretoria, Harbor, the Champlain Occan arca oul of the federation, "He's sick; he needs help," said Mrs .• Joan Wise, his wife. [ , I' I, axcs began Tuesday night when said Mnntanzima's g u a r d s 'rerminlls, Firemen arc keeping Ihe local headmen o( a town. searched the area in thc morn. a close watch in burning ncws, him hy Ihe hand, I told 40 !ribesmen to move ing while South Ardcan police print but the blaze is under con· Razak said this Indonesian line was a "threat 10 the secu· rity of the country," the gov· ernment, he said, would spare no cost 10 defend Malaya. STRENGTHEN FORCES WASHINGTON (APl- Penu· sylvania A venuc was thrown into an uproar during the noon hour Wednesday by a man who drove his automobile up the U.S. justice department stcps and tbrcatened to blow up the building, FBI Director ,J. Edgar Hoover, Nathan Wise, 33, was taken to a psychiatric ward for observa· tion. He had no bomb. " ' ir' '1 han gircn me the huts. 'I he 40 angry war· stood by. He said police loolt no trol. reHel'cd me' rlOrs attacked the headman's part in the operation. Relatives in Phoenix, Ariz., where he was connected with a department store, said Wise cracked up about· a year ago after his fathcr's death and had been under psychiatric treat· ment. The building he chose. for the lunch· hour drama is one of the big stone government edifices that line the south side of Pennsylvania Avenue, midway between the Capitol buiiding and the White House. II ,! I , to I' gum'd, but later fled into the After finding no trace or the WIS Mlhing police reinforce· attackers, the chief's men and !.lid thai on the the callCllS rouline pl.ms for campaign. On Fri· therr a cabi· . !:iii OI:C3;lol1al r;lin tho r. changing to 15 allcrni1lln. Coolcr IM.!r lR, Oa, M!U ....... l:i 23 ....... lR 23 Ii 32 ........ 24 46 ........ 2t 43 ...... IS 33 Skies FER. 14 ', ... 5:21 p.m. , .. 7;08 a.m. ments arrJ\·cd. the police withdrew. The reinforcements - three truckloads of warriors accom· panied by about 30 South Afri· can policemen-were sent by Chief Kaizer :ltanlanzima. 1Iiantanzima, chairman of the "Lolor" is the Latin name for the raccoon and means "washer." The animal is noted for washing its food before eating It. SOUTH POLE-Two of the Army's new UI-I-IB helicopters. are shown as they make the first heli- copter landings at the South Pole Feb. 4. The tur- bine powered helicopters flew 182 miles from 9900· foot Mt. Weaver to the U:S. Camp at the Pole. Tem· perature was 29 below zero. , ." -(UPI Telephoto from U,S, Navy) I LAUNCH PROBE 'fhe fire department Razak announced the govern· IRAQ New Govt. In Full Control Routed by tear gas after a two· hour siege, during wbich he dcmanded an audience with The n contains the offices of Attorney.General Robert Ken· nedy and the national headquar- ters and crime detecting labor· atories of the Federal Bureall of Investigation. L e h · ···lg ter · 1 e. BAGHDAD (APl- A govern·: Working virtually around the i led by young and rela· I clock, the new men were busy unknown social: gathering the, rp.ins of power Ists was reported 10' full control from the shamhles of over. SUPERIOR 'SCOTCH of Iraq Wednesday against fad. thrown Premier Abdel Karim LONDON (Reuters)-Treasury chief Reginald The attorney·general was. Ollt of town, but Hoover was In his fifth·floor office when a sedan with Arizona Iiccnce plates sud· denly vecred across the' side· walk and came to rest halfwaY up the steps of the building's main entrance. . CRAWLS UNDER CAR ing Communist resistance. Kassem's regime. Kassem was told the House of Commons Tuesday of his faith in the executed Saturday. superior merits of Scotch whiskey, but refused to let foreign Wise got out from behind::lhe wheel and crawled under:,fue car. trailing a pair of wires' and' Anger In Pentagon By HAROLD MORRISON WASHlNG'fON (CPl - The U.S. Strategic Air Command aslted permission to make some 640 flights with nucleal' weapons over Canada during the Cuban crisis of last fall and the Dief· cnbaker government w 0111 d grant only eight, says U.S. newspaper columnist Marquis Childs. "It would be hard to exagger· ale' the anger in the Pentagon at this outcome, It writes the SI. Louis Post Dispatch con·es· pondent, whose column also ap· pears in the Washington Post and other newspapers, 'He gil'cs "military sources" as the hasis for information. At 8 time when the U.S. and Russin appeal'cd at the hrink of wm' in the Carihbcan. it look P ri m e Ministel' Diefenhukel' (our days to make up mind on the U.S. Air Force request, he says. Stildents of the Iraqi scene embassies in Britain have it duty free. a sman metal valise. In the 'car ; , pictured them 115 socialists, Conservative Rogel' Freshman Cook said the embassies idealists and fervent believers could get foreign liquor such as Canadian rye ami U.S. bour· in Arab unity-but trying to more cheaply than scotch and this is damaging the export were several five· gallon cans ' which appcared to be connected I: to the othcr end of the wires.. , kcep a neutral course, to be trade • friendly but not subservient to Maudling said 'diplomatic privilege has never Included President Nasser of the United freedom from excise duty and to extend It to scotch would not Arab Repuhlic and 'to get along be justified • with the West, "r have sufficient confidence in the quality of, the' scotch Nominally, the revolutionary product that to taste the alternative would confirm people's regime which overthrew Kas· preference for scotch," lUI'. Maudling added. ' sem last weekend is led by President Abdel Salam Moham· REPAIR J\IAN med Aref, a 42·year·old ex·colo· TORONTO (CP)-Robert Pearson, 30. pleaded not guilty nel who teamed with Kassem to destroy the Iraqi monarchy Tuesday to a charge of forcible entry into a home because he Police and lire qepartment emergency equipment quickly surrounded the area and an traffic alon/! the, avenue was halted at both ends of !lie build:n/!. A call went out to the army for a, bomb demolition squad. An ambulance slid into "iew and halted.', Shoppers' and gO\'· erument workers in stores' and restaurants. 'across the 5trei>t were warned to stay 'away from glass windows' and doors. ' in 1958 and later broke with saill he intended to marry the complainant, Sheila Kierstead. He him. said he had broken the lock on her door several times But the belief here is that his "but r always fixed it." powers may be largely ceremo.' lie was sentenced to three months in jail. Police tried for more than' im nial. Behind him are younger hour to talk Wise into comitig' members of the Ba'ath :.... the ADDICT out from under the auto., He Arabic designation of the Arab VANCOUVER CCPl-lIlatilda Boynton plans to celebrale was quoted as saying he ,had S . I R' t h' I "evidence" that would result in OCH! emnssance par y II' IC I her lOath bil'thllay' Imlay with a quiet cigar. , : I , I d d' I'd' the impeachment of President ,assem Innne urll1g liS IC' norn a slave on a firm in Tennessee, l\Iatiida says she pick· , rator o lll'p 'n(1 til 31 not Kennedy and. the whole cabinet. ., ," ey, 'e ell liP the tobacco habit at the age DC five bccause "r was sick ' identified. Finally a small group Of'Tiot ",. KNOWN AS BA'ATIIS Iy ancl the doctor told me tli." I police we a ri n Ii gas masks;, i.l ;;!. TI ., h 'fhc "cars have passed quickl),. she says, "just fooling lobbed seven tear gas grenades I:; ','! Ie ncw. premlCr. Bl'lg. - med AI Bakr. Interior Minister around from one fool-thing to anl/ther •.•• Don't g1 out mucb under the car and Wise crawled I':: Sayid Ali Alsaleh and Foreign no more •••. Ne\'er was much or /a rUIl·around." out, in a hurry. He was takell [, y Minister D a t i b Shabib are "r ain't mucb for sweets and cakes no more. Bllt I Is first to police headquarters, :: + : known as leading' Ba, 'aths. sllre going to have a cigar." then to hospitaL "': 'i, ;": \ '.'.\' ,! II' , .: ' :'; ..> ,.' ,', I l , ), ,. " ,; 1 , 'J " IJ 't ! " I ! , , , I , , I I I !

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Page 1: Nova Ltd. la', n ie~ena er n' elver UIcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · Elizabeth A vc. 9·4171 : :;: ... (left), was named Veterans Af· fairs ... ma~y on downtown

, S's, la',

n to ,BOlt)

, and 5's

. N STREET

lTUEns ANY. Ltd, 1m SUHI ,.:5.,' - I-4US

ltd.

MOST POPULAR CAR ACROSS CANADA PONTI~~T:~~R 1963

~.' ,',.,.

t··-·,' .j ~ , . , . '

i P' ,I~". JL. ,-'- _ ....... , j'E-l\_ i.. ..... 4~ ...... ~,~ ....

THEDAIL Y NEWS /

ST. JOHN'S NEWFOUNDLAND THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1963

All forms 01 Insurance

Nova Motors Ltd. I Water S1.

Elizabeth A vc. 9·4171 : :;:

~~~====~P===~IV~O~L~'~70~.~N~O~.~38~~~~;-~=-____ -==-____ ~----------~S~EV~E~N~C=E~NT~S~~~;;======;;==;;==;;~

ie~ena er n' • II

Filld No Ground~ nUll 011

Sy ALAN DONNELLY OlTAWA (CPJ-George Hees said Wednes­

"as a rnan of honor" he had to resign

de nlinister last Saturday because Prime Ira d d . Diefenbaker i not carry out a pro-, 10 modify the government's policy on

weapons. , said in an interview that at the Conserva-

cauCUS meetinq last Wednesday Mr. Die­had :,romised they could "meet on

ground" and work out policies which ,llr. Hees, could support.

elver • I II UI Police Round Up' Killers, Rioters

Br JOIlX LeBLANC

" . ":"

K.\PUSKASING, Onl. (CP) Wbolesale surrenders among 19 men cll~rged with triple' nor.· capital murder and 237 charged with rioting Wednesday turned a Northem Ontario bush man·· hunt jnto a welt • mannered roundup but provided police with an embarrassment 01 pris'

\ oners.

All hut one of the men accused of murder either had' tUl'Ued themselves in or were reportcd en route to surrender point. ami those under riol charges were gh'ing themselves up in job lots, facing Crown

I authorities with a problem 01 . housing and feeding them with limited rietenti{)n f[,cilities. . I Prol'incial police initially an·

I nOllnced that 400 would be i char)led with rioting· liS the : rcsult of a fatal gunfirc-J'iddcn I c1a~h in a hushll'orkcrs' stri~;c ,ncar here cal'''' :'londav. hut by

.. ___ .... , 'I\'edncsday night the' issuanc/

W C d A e 'filiI COUNTRY PARSON 'of warrants had haltcrl at 21i.

OTTAWA, Ont., Canada-Canadian Prime Minister John Dicfenbaker announced February 11th the appointment of one new Cabinet Minister, and a change of portfolio for two other~. HOllse Speaker Marcel Lambert (left), was named Veterans Af· fairs ;\1inister: Minister-without-Portfolio, Wallace McCutcheon (center)), was named Trade Minister; and Veterans Affairs Min­ister, Gordon Churchill I right), was named Minister of Deren se. (tiPI Telephoto)

m ru g t IPolicc said they did nol knOll'

o an sa es ains :::;r~~:: :::·I:c~l.o:;nr::in:::~

~ •• ,',' h, ":,,: ;:;::~,,:,~~:~::;:,~~:;E;:~Ii~~; City Fir e-Trap Ten erne n ts II ~~~rr~!~i~t~i:;:~~ , ~t he,d ':'''\''11 f .. r I waS tilll Ihe samc p~~iliol1 aus Qt:I':BI-:C ICI'I- WIlen :'11'5. lall Rue 51: ,Jcall huildin!: with! Ihere hal'e becn more than 40 'IrcnllY is clamol'ing for a full 1 Tuesday, Plans we r e heing r..~;- :', n:I:'II

:II", 111' ~'I{}'I! ICIOlI'e Ie caucus mce mg We· ~Iildred Bergel'on.Blallke l\'I'itcs only a wOOllclI ladder at the I tll'o.all(l tllI·ee.alarm blazes this report 011 the situation [rom fire I made to transport them 10 the I ,l, ,"n.H.;\ , 11l,I I lIe~1 <1\'. I tt t th d't b t 'I . hi" p['ison farm at l\Iontel'th 100

,',.. '" C' i "0' S t I . leers 0 e C I or a ou rear fill' a (Ire cscape. An cl· winlcr and city councit cur· inspeclors. ~ 1,

.. t .. :" ,"J("II 1''' "l1a.! .. Illtl • a n.n ay . ~Otl'l\11I.g, I' stingy landlords and Iheir fil'c, dcrly couple dicd ill the blaze. I miles south of here, the site of I::;,: :" ,lrip . I'IT;I'IW I as~.c~ Ie pl'llnc 1.1111115 cr!f liS lI'ap' tenements, she docs so Another woman died in a Ruc I' ~ I 0 d a wartime detention camp.

rom a enan 5 pom 0 vIew St, Jean building \I'hcn fire! . . a •

:s ;;;'r3r o!,J:~.1tll1ll' III Ilcared to me Yes it was-no II I tt h't d't 'I . tId 'th h t k'11 .... l.m.lI1.1 hold to up· I 1105111011 was as firm as It ap'l f t t' . If' a aya ~ e rs Of those aecused of non C'PI'

. l' . I . er e ers I e I onn pages raced through it last month. I a mur er III e guns 0 • I • l.ial 11 11"l1ld Ie change. So there was no aller. h' th'l h k b ing of three men at nearby

c !:I:.,\mrriran ;Iand in '[ II 't t d th t h a wlllter fIre tol1 of hH de~d FOUGI T FOR ESCAPE B ./ cesor s I Illg "on ay. 14 a .' !~r Ihl' pan), 10 native-I had to resign." ele. as ~ CI Y was s .a, en y I I A dR' S'd' 1\' d h d " ~. ees rCl er~ e . a e and more than $7000000 In rm)' u z Up %.%1 surrendered by nightfal1 lind

won t he a candldale In the damages " Mrs. Bergerin' Blanke Jived police said they understood an· ~~ tl h,d I"l'! Ihe cau. ,April 8 federal election de. I . I . I h in a similar building on Ruc St. ".If we judge them ,by their other four Ivere on the \I'ay to •. ., .. I , 'n one case cr mllla c arges J f th ddt I d b t ;:J. :, Nmnl POIICICS: spIte expol'ls of a "draft Hecs" I'd g" t I dl d •. ean or 18 mono s an ha to KUALA LUMPUR (APl- Ma· ment will spend substantial I ac I,ons. ~uess we a ou an undisclosed rendezvous west

I h'd I' I I ' wcre aJ a allls a an or f ht th I h II I I h t d t th t th ,,' no t'ltlll'e \lIt mOl'cment among some party (t d' d . Ig rOl1g I clly a to gcl taya ordered a military buildup sums "in the ncxt few "ears" ~\ e 0 a ml a e same of this town 100 miles soulh or

'. ff' . 'h' a er a young nurse IC In a II d t h I 't ttl ' I kInd of I pI t b I " ~. Icwls)~ IS Toronto Broad. three-stOl'ey building having no Ie oc or II' 0 ownel I 0 pu Wednesday. It said Indoncsia to buy planes, ships and new Jeo e seem 0 e on" the foot of James Bay. ~1~1::1!r.t ""' ["1I,,well Ilew constJtuency. fire escape up n fire escape. The escape with its g I' 0 win g military equipment for the nation's tiny to all the churches,"

't:'I,'! \\.11'/ o[ l'llllltilln. "I'm flattcred by it, bul I' tlll'11cd out to he typical of strength threatened the pro· armcd forccs. He said military \ VANCOUVER (CP) - The ;'~;/r~r.\l; [Ill' party iust can't do it. that's all. You Firemen used nets and lad. ma~y on downtown bllildings- iectcd fedcration of Malaysi3- manpower wi!1 be inc.reased. :lION'fR~AL (CP) -Twenty I B.C. Conservatives' federal ex·

cHhcr support your government del'S in below.zel'o weather to a SImple wooden ladder tacked I planned as a hulwark against Due for 1I13uguratlOn Aug. school chIldren suffered cuts I eeutil'c is backing Prime 1\[in· 1~:-:! mini''''!' \\:\~ ~it. 01' you don't." get about 60 persons out o( a to the \Vull. I communism in Southeast Asia. 31. ~[alaysni 1.l'iIl be composed I n,nd bruises Tucsday in a colI!· ,ister Diefenbaker as party

)I;:de nl" III' I(,ancd ,.____ _ ..... ___ . T k \1" IRk d t f 'I I I b 'Q "Yol,'d llal'e to be " 1IIImall . un u ./. !uu aza " epu y 0 .1 a aya. Smgapore and the 'lslOn let ween a us operated by 'Ieadcr, Chairman William Me·

;::~:,:d' 'If ~"n \\111 not, uell' T<nan.skez· .. t 1" [ B 1'(' [ h 'I I C I I I fly to dcscend them," said :III'S. pr.lI1~et mullS cr ane ue .cnce omeo crn nnes 0 Brunei, t e ;.ontrea at 10 ic School Lennan said Tuesdav. "We are Bergeron.Blanke in an inter., mUlls cr, an~ounced t~e bUIldup Sarawak and North Borneo. IlII Commission and anothcr on: 100 pcr ('cnt behfnd Diefcn· "iew Wednesdav. "The SCJre T: aftci' n. c.lhmet m?elm~ called i~ the dream of Prime ~Iinisler Prm:indal Transport Company! baker and full), support his

l' · b IF· h gol in that 'lac made me I tn co~slder a .warmn~ .from In· 1unl\u Abdul R'lhman of ~Ia·, serl'1ce. All were treatcd in hos· ! stand on nuclear weapons," he : rl a 19 t,·ng mlll'e Ollt." pel r\onesl.an ForeIgn l\!mlstcr Su· lap, I pita I and rcicased. I said,

", t!:r n~o'l trrnwn.: I I -----------. ' lall( no.

~,t :n Ihr \\I'rlel ,'llft' ' . Ph B c In her leiters. she wonders: Suballlirio saId :\Ionday thai t b C 1~\'nl1 •• 1I':1111' 10 110' why lanrliords can hlat.mlll.' dis· "physical contact·· hclwcen In· anD mom au s e s "',h;,\ "ilil Y"\l1' 1\;\1'1.1' " 1':~(;,·(.;OIlO .. ,., S n u ~ h . Africa 'I'ranskei terrilorial authority, I . . ~ l'nlllCI s\ 1IIIlai fl"htlllg as 1'5 expncted to l)ccomc Ille rcr,ard firc safcty ,lnws and es· (oneSIn lInrl ~Ialaysia was 111· .• ,. .,lh ~OI1: rahinrl. !" '-;- '. ~ , w. , . • , qllnllCl1 II e(llleS(lay In tile fl'an al'ea's fl'rsl pl'eml·cl'. Some Ne. cape prosecution while such cl'llahlc if ,Talaya conlinued • l: hr pl'imr 1111·III".'lrl·', '. . . 1. ltd lliings as minor thelts h.v un· whal he called n hostile alli· ~l' :" me [ frll conI" S';CI rescrl'c. an a.rca s n e 10 grocs have dllhhed him a go\,·

II S th Af • (. t N el'llnlent slooge. employed persons mean i<lil. tudc t 0 IV a r d Indoncsia. He U I W h ·

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5 ate. . I tl I ' SAYS POLICE ALOOF fire is slill smouldering in thc alice to rchels in British·con., ., '" t~r nwl elllotion. I epm: s Sail lel'e was on y Gen. R. ,T. van den RCI'~h, altilUnc 1'011 could une serwus casually. head of thc criminal invcstiga. larllest rreight shed on Quebec trolled !lorneo 10 kcep that

. The battle with spears and tion department in Pretoria, Harbor, the Champlain Occan arca oul of the federation, "He's sick; he needs help," said Mrs .• Joan Wise, his wife.

[ , I' I,

axcs began Tuesday night when said Mnntanzima's g u a r d s 'rerminlls, Firemen arc keeping Ihe local headmen o( a town. searched the area in thc morn. a close watch in burning ncws,

him hy Ihe hand, I shi~ told 40 !ribesmen to move ing while South Ardcan police print but the blaze is under con·

Razak said this Indonesian line was a "threat 10 the secu· rity of the country," the gov· ernment, he said, would spare no cost 10 defend Malaya. STRENGTHEN FORCES

WASHINGTON (APl- Penu· sylvania A venuc was thrown into an uproar during the noon hour Wednesday by a man who drove his automobile up the U.S. justice department stcps and tbrcatened to blow up the building,

FBI Director ,J. Edgar Hoover, Nathan Wise, 33, was taken to a psychiatric ward for observa· tion. He had no bomb.

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han gircn me the t~lClr huts. 'I he 40 angry war· stood by. He said police loolt no trol. ~hich reHel'cd me' rlOrs attacked the headman's part in the operation.

Relatives in Phoenix, Ariz., where he was connected with a department store, said Wise cracked up about· a year ago after his fathcr's death and had been under psychiatric treat· ment.

The building he chose. for the lunch· hour drama is one of the big stone government edifices that line the south side of Pennsylvania Avenue, midway between the Capitol buiiding and the White House.

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, to I'e~ign I' gum'd, but later fled into the After finding no trace or the WIS Mlhing heiw~en \\'oo~s a(~er police reinforce· attackers, the chief's men and

!.lid thai on the Thur!da~·. the callCllS

rouline pl.ms for campaign. On Fri· therr I\'a~ a cabi·

~ . !:iii OI:C3;lol1al r;lin tho r. changing to

15 allcrni1lln. Coolcr IM.!r lR,

Itm~eratures NI~ht Oa,

M!U M~; ....... l:i 23 ....... lR 23

Ii 32 ........ 24 46 ........ 2t 43

...... IS 33

Skies FER. 14

', ... 5:21 p.m.

, .. 7;08 a.m.

ments arrJ\·cd. the police withdrew. The reinforcements - three

truckloads of warriors accom· panied by about 30 South Afri· can policemen-were sent by Chief Kaizer :ltanlanzima.

1Iiantanzima, chairman of the

"Lolor" is the Latin name for the raccoon and means "washer." The animal is noted for washing its food before eating It.

SOUTH POLE-Two of the Army's new UI-I-IB helicopters. are shown as they make the first heli­copter landings at the South Pole Feb. 4. The tur­bine powered helicopters flew 182 miles from 9900· foot Mt. Weaver to the U:S. Camp at the Pole. Tem· perature was 29 below zero.

, ." -(UPI Telephoto from U,S, Navy)

I

LAUNCH PROBE

'fhe fire department ~ays Razak announced the govern·

IRAQ

New Govt. In Full Control

Routed by tear gas after a two· hour siege, during wbich he dcmanded an audience with

The I· n contains the offices of

Attorney.General Robert Ken· nedy and the national headquar­ters and crime detecting labor· atories of the Federal Bureall of Investigation.

Le h .i'~sed · ···lg ter · 1 e. BAGHDAD (APl- A govern·: Working virtually around the i

~ent led by young and rela· I clock, the new men were busy ~Ively unknown ~a'ath social: gathering the, rp.ins of power Ists was reported 10' full control from the shamhles of over. SUPERIOR 'SCOTCH of Iraq Wednesday against fad. thrown Premier Abdel Karim LONDON (Reuters)-Treasury chief Reginald ~Iaudling

The attorney·general was. Ollt of town, but Hoover was In his fifth·floor office when a sedan with Arizona Iiccnce plates sud· denly vecred across the' side· walk and came to rest halfwaY up the steps of the building's main entrance. . CRAWLS UNDER CAR :."~

ing Communist resistance. Kassem's regime. Kassem was told the House of Commons Tuesday of his faith in the executed Saturday. superior merits of Scotch whiskey, but refused to let foreign

Wise got out from behind::lhe wheel and crawled under:,fue car. trailing a pair of wires' and'

Anger In Pentagon

By HAROLD MORRISON WASHlNG'fON (CPl - The

U.S. Strategic Air Command aslted permission to make some 640 flights with nucleal' weapons over Canada during the Cuban crisis of last fall and the Dief· cnbaker government w 0111 d grant only eight, says U.S. newspaper columnist Marquis Childs.

"It would be hard to exagger· ale' the anger in the Pentagon at this outcome, It writes the SI. Louis Post • Dispatch con·es· pondent, whose column also ap· pears in the Washington Post and other newspapers, 'He gil'cs "military sources" as the hasis for hi~ information.

At 8 time when the U.S. and Russin appeal'cd at the hrink of wm' in the Carihbcan. it look P ri m e Ministel' Diefenhukel' (our days to make up hi~ mind on the U.S. Air Force request, he says.

Stildents of the Iraqi scene embassies in Britain have it duty free. a sman metal valise. In the 'car ; ,

pictured them 115 socialists, Conservative ~IP Rogel' Freshman Cook said the embassies idealists and fervent believers could get foreign liquor such as Canadian rye ami U.S. bour· in Arab unity-but trying to ~on more cheaply than scotch and this is damaging the export

were several five· gallon cans ' which appcared to be connected I: to the othcr end of the wires.. ,

kcep a neutral course, to be trade • friendly but not subservient to Maudling said 'diplomatic privilege has never Included President Nasser of the United freedom from excise duty and to extend It to scotch would not Arab Repuhlic and 'to get along be justified • with the West, "r have sufficient confidence in the quality of, the' scotch

Nominally, the revolutionary product that to taste the alternative would confirm people's regime which overthrew Kas· preference for scotch," lUI'. Maudling added. ' sem last weekend is led by • • • President Abdel Salam Moham· REPAIR J\IAN med Aref, a 42·year·old ex·colo· TORONTO (CP)-Robert Pearson, 30. pleaded not guilty nel who teamed with Kassem to destroy the Iraqi monarchy Tuesday to a charge of forcible entry into a home because he

Police and lire qepartment emergency equipment quickly surrounded the area and an traffic alon/! the, avenue was halted at both ends of !lie build:n/!. ~

A call went out to the army for a, bomb demolition squad. An ambulance slid into "iew and halted.', Shoppers' and gO\'· erument workers in stores' and restaurants. 'across the 5trei>t were warned to stay 'away from glass windows' and doors. ' in 1958 and later broke with saill he intended to marry the complainant, Sheila Kierstead. He

him. said he had broken the lock on her door several times be~ore But the belief here is that his "but r always fixed it."

powers may be largely ceremo.' lie was sentenced to three months in jail. Police tried for more than' im nial. Behind him are younger • • • hour to talk Wise into comitig' members of the Ba'ath :.... the ADDICT out from under the auto., He Arabic designation of the Arab VANCOUVER CCPl-lIlatilda Boynton plans to celebrale was quoted as saying he ,had S

. I R' t h' I "evidence" that would result in OCH! emnssance par y II' IC I her lOath bil'thllay' Imlay with a quiet cigar. ,

:

I, I d d' I'd' the impeachment of President ,assem Innne urll1g liS IC' norn a slave on a firm in Tennessee, l\Iatiida says she pick· , ratoro

lll'p 'n(1 til 31 not Kennedy and. the whole cabinet. ., ," ey, 'e ell liP the tobacco habit at the age DC five bccause "r was sick ' cI(~arly identified. Finally a small group Of'Tiot ",.

KNOWN AS BA'ATIIS Iy ancl the doctor told me tli." I police we a ri n Ii gas masks;, i.l ;;!. TI

., h 'fhc "cars have passed quickl),. she says, "just fooling lobbed seven tear gas grenades I:; ','! Ie ncw. premlCr. Bl'lg. A· • - • med AI Bakr. Interior Minister around from one fool-thing to anl/ther •.•• Don't g1 out mucb under the car and Wise crawled I'::

Sayid Ali Alsaleh and Foreign no more •••. Ne\'er was much or /a rUIl·around." out, in a hurry. He was takell [, y Minister D a t i b Shabib are "r ain't mucb for sweets and cakes no more. Bllt I Is first to police headquarters, ~I!d. :: + : known as leading' Ba, 'aths. sllre going to have a cigar." then to hospitaL "': 'i, ;": \ '.'.\'

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;:Aswan Dam Crowning Symbol Uf Nasser's Revoluti

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By GEORGE ~lcARTIiUR 'NEW LAND ' thousands of boxlike air·condi· ASWAN, Egypt (AP) -The I The dam will give Egypt vast tioned apartments. Officials

morning "alarlll clock' In As· I electric power plus almost I" spcak ambitiously of a new in· wan is the roar of ,5000 pounds, 000,000 acres of new farmland. dustrlal complex-textiles, fer· oC dynamite, I Much of this can be plowed UHzer, aluminum and even

DO-IT- YOURSELF CORNER~

Check Be Far Beh' . At 6 a.m. each day some 16" ,back Into the economy without steel. For the present the dam II 000 tOilS of granite erupt, mov· being offset by hungry new .absorbs allllost all effort. There ing that much closer to reality people. Egypt hopes the effect arc 16,000 men working there-the giant Aswan high dam _ will snowball, making her the soon to be 25,000. by IUR. FIX Clean this with emery clot}! 01 I taken apart and Eg)'pt's dream and Russia's lar. first industrial power in the ,Work now is concentrated on Written for I"" SHAPE a very fine file. Reset the ~all screens and foil . gest foreign aid vcnture. Arab world. a milc.long diversion channel- Newspaper Enterprise Assn, ",. • • -the'space between the metal Soak the filter el In I

Grass Comes" Can Mower

. "We are right on schedule," Aswan has the beginning of a two _ thirds completed _ electrodes-using a gauge you oil, drain and ree~enl says Osman Ahmed Osman, spirit which could transform through which the river will If YOllr power mower was Clean and can pick up at any h:lrdwan' If your mo'.': itl .contractor who is a key man Egypt i( it spreads to the lei. flow while the actual dam is stored properly last fall, ~II Reset Gap. ' or auto accessories storc. c filter, clean the I hil in the project which may lar. surely delta. Visitors note a constructed. you h~vc to do this spring is on Spark Plug If the electrode is badly line and allow t P~rts:: gcl~' decide Egypt's place in the quickened pace even among or. The schedule calls for com· uncover it, get it down off the burned, or if porcelain is crack· • 0 ij'.

20til century and Presiclent dinary laborers. pletion of the diversion canal blocks and fill the tank. ed, buy a new plug. • • , .Gamal Abdel Nasser's role in The site ·itself is impressive. in 1963, beginning of coffer. • • • LubricatIon a ;history. The timeless Nile has carved a dams early in 1964, n start on But, if you simply parked it, Clean l\lower Thoroughly lubric' '; Nasser sees the dam as the gently curving channel through the power station in 1965, to better plan to spend some tIme Clcan the mOW/)f itself. mower according ~ I~ C!rownlng symbol of his socialist 'desert sands and stone cliffs, have the first one· third of the checking it over before that Gas, Scrape away the accumu!al.inn turer's instruclio icl'olulion. widening to embrace eroded Is. electric power aVllilable by first grass'cutting. Rinse of grass clippings, dirt and car· all body and engi~; ':: To back Nasser the Russians lads reminiscent of Japanese 1967 and completion of the • • • Witl: CLEAt-{ ALWAYS WORK bon that you'll iind on the • • • hal'e lent $200,000,000 and rock gardens. Blistering in mid. whole project by 1970. First, and foremost, always Fresh AIR FILTER OUTDOORS; ALWAYS underside of ail rotary mowers. Always_ pledgeel as much again. This Slimmer, it is balmy in'the win. The Egyptians must resettle work oullloors in a well·venti· and DISCONNECT SPARK PLUG Cut away the strands of grass connect tbe followed U.S. refusal to finance ter and was long a retreat for some 50,000 NubiaTs who will later area. Refill that get wound around the r~el and keep it ""(QIlI"".; the dam. such sophisticated bon vivants be displaced by the 367.mile * • • of a reel· type mower. working on the

as the late Aga Khnn, whose lake the dam will form. Villages I If there is gasoline in the Taking a carburetor apart is gasoline·oil mixture, be sure Dust and dirt ca', wreck the attempt adjllstll1tnl The well.being of Egypt's into domed tomb overlooks the already are rebuilding on re'l tank, drain it. Watcr may have no job for an amateur; better to mix up a fresh batCh before motor, Dismantle and clean the I while mower i; ru:l1 ..

pOl'crished millions could well river. claimed land. i condensed in it or it may have take it into a trained service· refueling. air filtcr before putting thc • • ~ ~epend on the outcome. The Fifty years ago the British I evaporated, leaving behind a man. Check the spark plug next. mower back into service. If 'I Once the mOWer' ~lIm Is Egypt's chance to case built a darn here. It stili stands The sun loses four million gummy residue. Rinse out the • • • If tile plug is dirty, cleaning your mower has an oil·bath to usc, make celta~

"the relentless pressure of an ex. but, it Is soon to be a pygmy tons of mass per sceoud, but tank with fresh fuel and rdill, Fresh Fuel with a wire brush is in order. ,filter, discard the old oil and is safe to mo'~ plod!ng population _ 27,000,. beside its younger brother. is so enormous its fuel should If the line to the carburetor If your mower has a sepa- Be careful that you don't dam· fill with .fresh. \yash the filter thoroughly with a ;U ,QOO people, a to.,!al which will I CITY RISING last for several billion more wasn't closed; that vital part: rate crankcase, drain and fill age the electrode-the metal clement III gasoline. mower will not pi ,t

.' be dl>ubled in 25 years. A new city is risiDll with ylear. may be clogged. i with fresh oil, If you usc a piece at the base of the plug. Metal foil filters are simply hurl stones, metal 0: ------ --~-----------.:..----~----------------------=~

Falcon

I

It's love J And it's inevitable the minute you meet Falcon-the compact that'l big in everything but price! From the Thunderbird inspired roofline to the b~ round taillights, Falcon is ev.ery inch a Ford. Drive it! Feel how quickly it re­sponds-how beautifully it ~andles-how easily it parks. In ride and roominess it rivals the big ones. Cost it out! ... Falcon costs less to buy, less to drii~ less to maintain than any big car and most of the compacts. Yet, what happens when you trade iUn? •• You get more! Choose from 15 models in all-ever~hi~ from convertibles to wagons to sedans. Get the lowdown from your Ford Dealer, Ask him about the FORD Service Convenience features that make Falcon an even better buy-and t~e outstanding Total FORD Warranty for 24,000 miles or 24 months. Meet the heart stealer. And don't say we didn't warn yo~

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Elizabeth Avenue ,Phone 9·5071

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ST. Jot

James J. Hussey of Buildings for the !

(left), At1{ntic Canada. Also sho'

Pr • ISpt

orli BROOK ((

president of a unio was fired Wednesl

Newfoundlanc Mills Limite dispute wit'

outside the Sl

pot~

F Street

• • • ACCIDENTS

Avenue .. . . . two-car co

slight damage . injuries.

ICrirl,o .... " for Feb

arrests given in ch~~

drunk and I

in the home driving with(

.• I) •

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11.1t happens -- C\,Pr}1hing F l'r d Dealer, 1.1ke Falcon for 241000

n't warn you.

The Daily News RAIN

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1963 ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND

• a e-u ee e In

• uca Ion --'

'n".1 1It1,,,'Y "r .1. .J. Husscy Lid .• has been na~lcd t.oP d~aler in C.anada for. Al'mC~ . _ ...... _, i,':' lI:c >1'\'011(1 consecutil'c ycar. Presentmg Inm With a specml plaque IS .1. \\. :':''':;;;'~ .\11,1l11"- branch manager of Armco. ~_Ir. lIusse) was top dealer among 40

\1", ,lwII'n is L. J. ~loorcs. sales engIDcer for Newfoundland, - . (:'oIews Staff Photo)

• urrlCU um

* * * * School Principal Outlines Methods

The curriculum of the Department of Education in New­foundland was criticized Wednesday night by G. B. 1I1arch, principal of United Collegiate -here.

1111'. I\!arch said the curriculum is "nothing more than a single, almost uniform, academic program, university orient· ed, which has changcd little since 1949."

He said it fails completely I education in Newfoundland, to recognize that 15 years ago "recognizing the overwhelm· only a "highlY selective and in· ing need for diversity in our tcUectually able group" can· secondary education prcgram." tinued in school to grade have developed their own eleven, "whereas today high courses of study in such fields schools arc greatly diversified as domestic science. business and 'secondary education is reo education and industrial arts, quired to serve a great variety ["but since the puhlic examin­of intercsts, aptitudes and in ations of the Department of tellectual capacities." " Education do not include exam·

1\lr. ~Iarch Jr.9de the ~om· inations in these subject areas. ment in his report at the i students who tal;e these sub· spccch day and graduation l.iects arc short·changed, since exercises of the high schoo\. they are unable to ohtain II

He said the educational I provincial grade elel'en certifi-system in this prov!Ju'p is cate." . "highly centralized" with al· He said another prohlem most complete control of all which confronts "fofll'ard-Iook facels of edllcation vestrd In boards of education" is prOl·id·

Aillii/I/ln~ Pres'ldent thc Department of Education. ing staff to implement thesc U Surcly. in sucb a bureaul'ratic specia\i7.Cd programs of second· arrangement the responsihility ary education.

Valeric Robinson. winner o[ the S600 gl'adeclcvcn Centenary of Responsible Government Scholarship, receivcs certificate from )Irs. ~Iacpherson. wife of Newfoundland's Lieutenant Governor. Valerie, now a student at ?llcll1orial Univer~it)". was nlcdictory at United Coli .. giate speech day and graduation exercises here Wedncsday night. (NeIl'S Staff Photo)

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O t · d rests squarely with the Depart· Mr. 1I1arch said the regu· · t U S I e ment of Education to pro\'ide lations of the Department of

ISpU e the initiative and leadership in I Edncation, ~ontroUing the every phase of educational de·' staffing of regional high I'elopment." I scltools, stipulate that the num·

United -Collegiate Holds Speech Night Ie

I

k. A "And yct," he added. "in thc bel' of salary IInits availahle

culum development, to judge of students enrolled. : or lng gr eement all important field of curri· is determlncd by the nllmber

by results, there appeal'S to be "These regulations ha\'e not a complete abdication of lead· been receh'ed since the ad"ent

Prizes and dipllll1las wcre The Lieutenant GOI'ernor ad. presentcd to the graduating 1 dresscd the students. )Irs_ ~\Iac· class of United Collcgiatc high' pherson presented scholar!hips school here Wednesday night. ! and prizes_

,,_ BRtlOI\ (CP)­i~;:d1nt of ~ union local II; f:rrd \\'elinc,da), by · ~ewfl'uIHllallil Pulp

fliH ~lilll Limiled sa)'s I:;,:', cli)pllir wilh Bo·

:! CUBicle the "'opc of . ' .. a,rremcnl and dnes u, for !cHlcmcnt by

News Spots

grienllLcc procedure. 1 show up. crship responsibility." of regional and central high John Tobin of Local 242, Ullwatcr's, In a buJleUn Mr. March said at thc high schools in Newfoundland. They

United Papernmkers amI Pa. hoard announcement, said in· school level the present cur· will forel'er circumscribe peo· pcr Workers CLCI., in a structlons with regard to work riculum offers exactly the ~ress until they pcrmit an statement Wednesday denied procedures arc to be carried samc course of study In Eng· allocation of staff. hased on II Bowater's ~hargc of "ob. out by the employces, evcn IIsh to thc stUdent who plans program offered rathcr than on structlng managemcnt", and I under protest. to attend university as it' the total numbcr of ~tudcnts said he was acting. as the II said the union contract docs tn the stndcnt who in· enrolled." electcd rcpresentath'e oC his obligated the nnlon to settle tends til terminate his ·formal * * lin ion. dlHerences through grlev· education with grade eleven

Lewis H. )1. Ayrc. chairman Speciat guests atlendin~ lhe ,of the United Church school

annual specch nighl and ;:rad-: board. also spoke. :'Irs. Ayrc nation cxercises included Han. I presented diplomas. Campbell L. )Iacpherson. Licll' ReI'. Vcrnon A. Smith con-tenant GUl'ernor of :'\cwfound-' duded the inl'ocation. land,and ~Jrs. ~Iacpherson.! The Cnitcd Cotlegiatc Glee Edul'alion ~1il1i"ler Dr. G. A.: Club, under the dircction of Frecker. and Mrs. l"reeker;; illl's. Eilecn T. Stanbury. rcn· Charles Roherts. \;nilcrl Church; dcred several selections, which supcrintcnrlcnt of education. won enthusiastic applause from and )Irs. Roberls. ! the targe audience. Mr. Tobin dcnied he had anee procedure, and failure to and cnter Industry, commerce Low Pay

I cOllntermlLnded an order by follow this was a breach of or tlIc trades. -! paper mill superintendent Ger· agreement. He said exactly the same ap 7 ------- ----- -. -- m ! aid ~Icrccr thai four papcr 1 Mr. Tobin said the tenders plics to mathematics and there' T h Old U ome ee "',[1 : machine lenders report to his' had been suspended and he is little in the way of suitable e ac ers 1.~ I It I office for disciplinary action. had beel! fircd carrying out a alternatives to the forei~n Ian· , The tenders, who were said decision made by union memo guages. B R · d to hal'e failed to arril'e on the bel'S, and it is now up to the The principal said thcre is L · 7Ilfay e eVl ve

I job an hour early Tuesday members to decide what furth· I also a complete absence in the e aVlng 1 r 1 ~ ! morning for a checkout of cr action would be taken. It' curriculum of subjects or sub· ~ machines, wcre placed on in· would be discusscd at a union ject mattcr which could "~l'l'n An Old Home Week. which athletic organizations. press and ,definite suspension Wednesday. meeting today he said. remotely be classified as vo· Newfoundland is losing lts \l'as held in 51. John's in J90~,: radio, and interested citizens.

Mr. Tobin said II1r. Mercer cntional or even pre.vocational." highest qualified teachers "at may hc revived. i "With proper organization wanlcd to meet the four i1K t G · He said the structure and a frightening rate" and the ~Iavor H G. R. ~Ic\\', said there could be opportunitie'

FIRES madIlne tcnders 11IIllvidually 1'1 e' ers IVe operation oC the curriculum predominant reason IS lhat , \\'~dnesdlL)"' the till' c(,uncil has! for intcrtown golf, bowling. with one union representative division, which is a section of salaries of highly qualified hecn rCI-iewing the mailer for: lnlck and ficld events, base-l,resent. lIut the union mem. Probleln the Department oC Education, teachers in the province are G. B. March 1 some timc. and is satisfird t1~at: ball. baskctball. tennis "and I bers wanted tlIe four Dlen reflect the thinking and atti· "hopelessly inadcquat~" in COIll- ---- ---.. ' -- .. - -~-- ,such an cI'cn! has posslh:htlCs, I-anet)' of other sports. I I

together with the union rJl C -l tude of the department to· parison with those of other Ok Plans for tradc_ . The mayor's \cIteI' said the executive committee on hand, .1 0 OUIICI wards curriculum and all that p.rol'inccs 'and in othCl: pro!es. ay - . I Thc council agrecd to inl'itc' {,I'cnt could possibly be ceo. I !

for Febru- ~Ir. Tobin said. He had given curriculum involvcs. Slons, G. B. March saId "ed· B -Id- I d d I the <;t John' memhcrs of th .. ' trcd around thc annual 51'. '. ~l no I)" • II this union drdslon to Mr. CORNER BROOK - (CP)- "It Is difflclIlt to comprc· nesday night. I b ~~ 111-1 p- a~~ r~cOl~m~n :n I Ncwfo~n'dland Board of Trade John's Regat!a as in 1904, but '.!

· '" t el~ona I I\lercer, he said. City council, detcrmined to bal· Ilen!! why Ihls all.important The principal of United Col· \. et cli Y'lcn"I~\~1300 e re to participate and orgauize an' this would be a matter Io: the 1\ was learned the four men ance its budget without in· IUvislon continues to be legiate high school here, in his i es lm~ ~ va ue ?J \V d ~vc '1 Old Home Wcek commiltee I committee to decide.

I had arril'cd carlyon three suc. creasing taxes, held its third staffed by one man. his sccre· annual report, said the undcrly· pa¥: y ~nuncI e ~c~ aih Thc mayor scnt a lelt~r to; "If a committce were organ. ccssil'e Tuesdays until last mceting Tuesday night but tary and an office clerk, ing principle embodied in the tese t' p an~ w~re dOli\, gel A G Ayr~ exccutil'e manarlcr i iZCd the council promises all

· . Iweek when the union, aftcr a couldn't find anything to reo whereas the division of audio· salary scale, which is now CtlOllS ruc. Ion 0 SIX t· we W sd' I of the NB1" which outli~e~ I possible assistance," the mayor I

· A\,ellue ... 1.10 ,'meeting, informed Bowater's duce the $30,000 deficit fore· 'I' visual education, whose func- d 'd . r b th Iree slgns, rcnol'a Ions an -'d I u~ ~rlconsl Cia Ion t y . e Pdro. alterations 10 a dwelling on I the possihilitics for buslness o[ ,sal. '1 -d '" d d it " . tI\'O.C~" ('ollision . they would no longer be report· cast for 1963. . tion Is purely to provide VIDCla governmen, IS e· . E . A t' t the event Counn sal "e ncs av ":'ht d " ! ing. This week they didn't At the lwo previous mcet· alldio and vlsual aids for the I'ising of a salary arrangement mtr~)' ~enue, ~~?:.I;a ~Oq~~reO The leitcr said "apart from: would contribute $1,000 t,iward .• , amage. _ no' ings the city fathers narrowed power Implementation or the which will hold teachers in the a dwelt W"'t' on f lC "t rt the sentimental aspect there is I the el·ent. ' I .

inj-uries. the gap between expenditure curriculum, has a director, p . an a era IOns or 11'0 apa • '.,

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T S d M f rOVInce. ments on Craigmillar avenue. a I'cry pracl'H;al SIde t~. the .! I

. for F b 0 tu y eans' and revenue to $28,276 rom and assistant director, sev· "There is little likelihood In the metropoil'tan area pro.posal-, an Influx of. vlSltors, WRITERS CHOOSE CHIEF , , . e mary: $120,000 but Tuesday had to in· eral staff personnel and a th t h II I t h 'th D I " a we s a ose eac ers Wl plans were passed for the con. whIch a IVcll·orgamzed Old OTTAWA (CP)- r. James .,,-" I

: .. nine personal in- crease It by $1,300 after learn· substantially higher budge!." one, two or even three years struction of a bungalow and a Home Week would ~nsure, A. Gibson, dean of arts and sci- .. , .' I Of Co' ntroll"ng ing from acting city manager He submitted that the provo training," Mr. :lIareh said. private two-car garage on POI" would create a substantIal vol· ences at Carleton University ';1 :. . . . I E. C. Reid that $2.00 wasn't ince cannot "presu!"e to cJa.i~" "It Is inevitable, however", tugal Cove road. ume of trade." here, \~as re·elected Tues~ay .!

enough for parking meter reo that It has a CUrrIculum dIVIS· he eontlnued, "that we will Plans were also passed for It also suggested that other I as ,Pres:dent of .the Ca~adlan .:

W II A h'"d pairs. ion" worthy of the name" until lose Our university graduates an extension to an apartment groups which could serve 1I'0uid ,Wnters Foundallon at Its 10- • I

arrests . . • . one gil'en in charge for drunk and disor­

.in the home, one Qlil'ing without a

~ Years BROOK _ G~or~e

~hile. 27. of St, al senlcnced in

I~;ourl h~re Wedncs. ltarl In the peni.

Ind had h' . IS drLl'er's lillpended for seven

~II convicted on a • tri ' Itllh II/unal negligence

a~l NOl'ember of Ehas Sonny Falle

I!ro jur~' deliberated an re bnng' .

IUiltl'. Ing 111 a vel" ~il nesses Were call.

the C1iDdu one·day trIal. nl~led his own dc.

-., Carter LL B the C ' ,., rown's case.

to the eVidence be . in Itself for tOndi~rlving a car in

1101 ha~on. The car kblit st e been driven , CUel rp;t i.n its con.

Llid. ushee R. S.

• on Torbay road. e serl'lce c u s, e varIOUS ". III I 00 Y P I Damage to parking meters it has more personnel. and teachers who have com b - I b th - I nual meetl'n" '1 I

In January alone was $1,000, He felt the personnel sllould plcted substantial post.gradu· Mr. Reid said, and council include: ate stUdies, as long as they II ,1

OTTAWA-(CP) - A special agreed to increase the alloca· (1) a director of elementary can Increase their Income federal·prtiviclal study will tion to $1,500. education; from $3,000 to $4,000 a year be launched this year to find An earlier meeting saw $87,· (2) a dire.ctor of secondary by moving to other provo ways of . controlling the balsam 724 slashed from expenditures education; inces." woolly aphid, an insect which and revenue increased by $4,. (3) a research officer whose The principal. ~aid the met· has become a major problem in 000 with an increase in the duty it is to organize and con· hods used by the Newfound­Newfoundland's balsam fir for· cost of building permits. duct research projects in the land Teachers' Association in ests. Before it started paring, coun· interest of curriculum del'elop· seeking salary revision may not

A team oI officials from the eil approached both the pro- mcnt; have met with the approval of Ncwfoundland Forest Protec· vineia! government and Bo- (4) an educational and vo- a1\ parties concerned. tion Association and the provo waters Newfoundland Pulp and eational guidance officer. ("It "This contingency is not, inre's .department of resources Paper Mills Limited-the town's is true we may be far from the howel'er, germane to the baslc met wlth federal experts here main industry-but was turned point when all. schools or school issue. The overwhelming im­carly. this week to discuss a I down at both sources. systems can have its own guid- peratil'e is that, in the intcr· massive attack on the prob-I Bowaters did off~r to pay ance counsellor. Yet a ~rcat ests of the educational welf,lre lem. for an investigltion into the dcal can he done on a re~iol!al of the youth of this province, . The program cal1? for tcs~· I city's administration. and cOlin· basis, if it is organi7.ed and di- no human' effort be spared to Ing the effec.t on vanous che~m. cil has tentatively accepted the reeled at the department hall the egress of quaJiCied cals on the Insect and studYIng offer . level.") "teachers from Newfoundland tD methods of biological eontrol . (5) a director of physical central Canada and the west-~thc introduction of' other in· education; ern provinces," Mr, March con· sects to feed on the aphid.' Cons·truet Fence (6) a director of I'ocationalcluded. . Investigations into control of and pre·vocational education -----,--------

the woolly aphid 'have been go· City' council win-- construct whosc duty it will be to de· Ove'f-Crowded ing on for 10 years but the fences of steel pipe posts and vclop programs in industrial new project will intensify these galvanized chains along the arts, home economics, business efforts. sidewalks at the intersection education and others.

An estimated 3,600 square of Elizabeth avenue and Portu. (7) an officer whose respon· miles of Ne"Coundland forests gal Cove road at a cost of slbility is the education JJf ex· arc infested. approximately $1,200. eeptional children-slow learn·

Cubans . Defect Two Cubans, ,a man and hls

wife in their 30s, stepped off a Cubana Airlines plane In Gander Tuesday nisht and ask· ed for polltlcal asylum In the United ,States.

The plane stopped ror fuel while on a f1igh t from Havana to Prague, Cz~choslovakia.

Names of the couple were be; Ing withheld by the immigra· tion department.

This was decided Wednesday ers, mentally retarded, physic· when they received a report ally handicapped and gifted from the -city engineer on the children who require enriched

courses of study or aceeler· matter. ~ The report staled that the ated programs.

views of the various property Mr. March contended that owners involved with the fenc· there can be little progress In Ing had been obtained and all currIculum development with· but one had. no objection to the out some such arrangement. fence. "No single individual can br

expected to perform of all these functions and there Is not one of them which wc can afford to neglect,!' the prin

The idca of the fence Is 1'0 control traffic across tbe side­walks "whlch," said ~Iayor H. G. R. Mews, "is very badly needed."

cipal stated. He said certain boartis of

Acting on a- report from City Engineer Duncan Sharpe, the Council meeting Wednesday or· dered that one of two families residing at 13 Eric street bp forced to move.

The report. stated that the house should be condemned, "but, because it is occupied by two families, one a man, his wife and three children, and the second, a man his wife and IIlght children, it Is overcrowd· ed."

~Ir.' Sharpe recommended that the owner of the house. John Dooling of Blackmarsh rOlid, be directed to' have one family removed from the dwelling,

RID OF THEM •• THEY'RE WOOL TWEED ••• IDEAL FOR ON THE JOB WORK COAT ••

TROUTING OR

TRUCKING I

- 20 ONLY-

HOW COULD I MISS

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Men's' Overcoats SIZES 36 - 40 ONLY

OUT THEY GO!-A $20.0 VALUE FOR ............................... .

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$4·95 . EACH

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Page 4: Nova Ltd. la', n ie~ena er n' elver UIcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · Elizabeth A vc. 9·4171 : :;: ... (left), was named Veterans Af· fairs ... ma~y on downtown

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l-'l'Hl:: DMLY NBWS, S'l'. JOHN'S, NI!:W~'OUNl)LANl), ~'BBJlUAHY 14,lUtia

THE DAILY NEWS Newfoundland's ,On'y Morning Pap.r

Canad~ .......... " ...... ". Slll.OO per annum

U lilted Klnlld!lm _nil IIU IQrel~n c!l\tn'rle~ , SlUO P\lf annlllll

AUt~Qflzed ~.' ~e~on~ cla~_ mall by Ihe I'vsl Olri~o Ilcppr\mcnl, ottawa IlIId Cor PR~mllnl or pp~IRQe In mho

The PAIL\, N~WI! I, a m~rnllli pap .. estRbliRhed In lila. anll publl8hed a\ Ihu New$ I!lllldllll, S!!~·a~9 Duckworth Slr~el, SI, J Dhn'$, N~wruundlond, by Robln~Qn &I Compan~, Llmll~~,

MEMII~R Oil

THt; CANAPl4N ,liftERS

Th~ C~nftdlan Prllu I. eKcl\lRlvel~ ,ntilled 10 tho IIlp for relmbllcallon, 01 .11 new, do,pllichoa In thl' pappr oredl!' ~~ 10 II or III the A.aochlte~ Pretil Clf ftplllerM and ~I.o Ih~ Illeal new. plltt\l~!)' ea thoreln, ,

All Prm Servl~e~ and rll.hlre article. In Ihl. pftp~r are copYriUhtCld Mnd their r~produellQn IJ prolllblled,

Melllb~r Au611 purea.

D, ClrculMlion

-'l'HURSDA V, FEB, 14, 1903

The Immunity Of The Press

. The Inside Story? ._-- Letters To "YOUIIH Jlon Tim i\Sl\ING"

Editor Daily NclVs. It has occurred to me fruquonUy that

wo have in aliI' city a very fine illul "alnable institution that ollly rarely rcceivt'R romnlCndation. There lVas a time when I. pcrhaps like Ill~ny others, did nol reall~c the weftllh of infol'l1m, lion antI rrinl'alion we h~d in 0111' verY mid 51. hilt since availing 01 its scrvice, I fi nel the I'aluc reccived so great that I am loath to keep it to myself. anrl thcrc[ore wish to rccommcnd it to those of lilY fellolV citizens who, in this somewhat hectic. rnshing busin'css of Jidnf:. h:l\'(~ not yet explored its won· (Ierful possihiliticR.

I refer 10 our public Library where, through ils muititude of cxcellent hooks, oue can enter inl0 a fascillaling world of knowledge and cnlertain~1Cnt nnl ellsill' obtaim·d from any other source.

TIle' Editor calls or direct threats to ' , family? ~lIn Itj

II is very sickening II) evell when these Plinks ar~ knQ) and convicted one n~,cr !

. ~ f 't k gels ~J1do '~f seeun Y

f 'nowing thlt

In I, erCllce 0 tllcsc Punk, lael, of respect for aUlhorh',l1/ CI\SY WRI' they are handl d) 2\l "ililion they will I'crv I' Ike 1 . eq at the same raelcet as so . t free. Certninly thc mcreo~a:t$ ret lit'll til Ineir lifc uf trim citlentally has ju~t ,tarted: 'cate to evcry respcetahl. ~:t'i

th O • I - !IU~l sainI' mg 10 t le punishm

t·, f I ent en Icmg or t lem,

I Cecl that man)' of these h0 ••• ~ll of them hare rcry liltl ,"

p I;~lt, They ,are le~s than hali led ' Iwal allcl COl1lfOiI in Iheir h lel I . . -II \I IImate milrolltP tor a trim

h'd hy t helll i~ fu r 1110 in,ili:1 Immv lhat whcn 11\(')' an' ,

will he sent 10 thO' "I.ake Side, thn proper nanlL' IIII' flU' prl,,! liwy will rreeirc 3 11111 meal, "onple of pad,s !If tobdCCO I

warm ,lmi dean hed to lie 0111

and IIl1lhing to (10, In .Ulll~in.~" wl);)t tiwy .i1l;1 lelt tllpre is M

the cOIll'icls refer to the pris,! "Lake Side Hotel."

TIIC ansll'er In this p:ohlem Ell the "Canadian ('riminal Code.' that the lack of effrctire

When Britain's Lpl'd Chief Justice sentil11ced to pl'ison a jOl\rl1ulilit who had refusijd to divulge the source of certain in­fOl'lluilioll to the ~I'ibul1ul invep­ligating II n1l1ttel' relating to nationlll security, he left a loop­hole. If the person whom the journalist WIIS protecting would come forward and nweal himself. the sentence would be revoked. The pen;pn in 9uestion, an Ad­miralty officilll, volllnteered the necessary information and it turned out that the journalist had asked a quite proper ques­tion and had been given an eQually propel' and guarded re­pl~·. So in a way, the whole thing was a tempest in a teapot except for the principle that was Im·oh'ed. That, of course, re­lates to the question of the de­gree to which a newspaperman may be privileged with l'~gal'd to his sources of information.

inllCcUl'ate in content.-, malicious in pUl'pose, ancl harmful to the reputations of those ag<lin~t whom it has been directed. It ma>' be said thllt newspllpers should npt print such informa­tion or ll!tters, But they mllY be misled into believing that the sources !ire acting in good faith. When that belief is upset by the fa(!ts, the newspaper tllkes the blame but it is probElbly over­doing th~ concept of safeguard­ing its informants 01' COl'l'espOll­dents if it still insisi~ on con­cealing their names during a public inquiry or court hearing.

- Strellgth For The Day

Mil'! IIf liS ~flcr Icuving sdHlol. (':II'nc~lly dCHin' to (urther ollr educa· tion, bnt too fl'equPllth' (01' ,llle I'ca:;on or ullotlwr, or huund hy Ihe 3haekles Df a limited blltlget, are unable to ar· range for spccial courses or instl'lIc' tion, B\lt Ihere is a way. ancl it is al'uilable to all who seek and ~sl(. Whatcver your rnCjllirelllcnts, a vast sturchouse of real Ireilsure is "~'o4rs for the asldng" al the Gosling J\leOlorial Lihrary. The cost'! Only the time you take 10 visit its cheerful, rCHlful and cfIIllforlahle Imolcwu),s, where Ilrompt and court eons nttention from the staff is aEsur~d. You may request informa· tion nr advice or help iu Your selectiolls for homc or Library study, and he eel" tain of a fl·icntlly. efficient scn'ice at all time~.

is 10 a l~rgc degree refipomitl! desire lu he in iaiL II's l hIlI

that cerlain ('olllkted pemtl asked for long sentences, Thls l11e 10 believe that it must be I to them to even ~o through the' in alHI get ruu~I1t" ritual. The; ralller get a long selltrnce fGr' crime anti not hal e to bother te to commit another crime a; ,

thcy were freed tn order to ;Hi

~:

These are things that can hap­pen <\ny day in the week in the ordinary processes of society. But in this inquiry in Britain, where national security is at .

It is generally I'er;ognized that the private source is one of the most valuable contributors to the full presentation of the news. But while it would be undesir­able that journalists should be required generally in court to rli\'tllge the sources of their in­formation, this immunity mllst have limits. There are inform­ants "'hose information is unre­liable and malicious in intent. Should they be protected? If an informant reveals material that may be construed as libellous, ~hould he be protected? Has the writer of a lettel' to which he puts a nom de plume the right \U immunity when his letter is

stake and parliament a~ the su­preme h'jbunal of the nation and acting in the nalne of the people has instituted the investigation, there is a very nice Q4estion about a journalist's right to re­gard information from anony­mous sources as privileged com­munications, Nobody wants to interfere with the freedom (If the press but neither must press freedom be regarded as liberty to do hllrm to individuals or to 'withhold inforlUation of vital national interest. And what is clearly needed is a straightfor­ward d~finition of whel'!~ the right of immunity for unnam~d informants begins and ends. Per­haps this case in England, and more of the same may emerge from the present inquiry, will help to clarify the law in the matier.

Case For The Fisheries With admirable tact having

regard to the political situation into which he had to intrude with his fishery policy, Premier Smallwood has' presented his brief for a massive development programme to representatives of both major parties. But filihery development is not 'a political issue in Newfoundland. 80th parties favour it. Whether both the Conservative and Liberal parties will pledge full s"pport in their election platforms at the fedel'al level remains to be seen,

The principle, however, IS onll they can hardly reject, The analogy to an(lther great prl. mary industry, agric~lture,' iii sound. AgricultUre has be~n th~ favourite daught!'!r of Canadhm politics for m1my generations. 'l'he fi~hery hall been cast in thll! role of Cindet'ella. Yet Call1idll':1 easterll 8hor~s are w!\shed by

water~ that contain the greatest fishing resOUrces of the western world and the harvest is one that could be immensely increased in volume and value with a wcll­designed plan of constructIVe assistance.

The ,mpney ,that would be in­vested in a policy of this kind would be an investment that, efficiently utilized, ought to bring substantial dividends in terms of productivity and em­pipyment, Cllpital t!sed to pro­duce new wealth is employed in the best possible way. Provided that increased pr{)duc;tion and improved processing and mar­keting will lead to new outlets, the Newfoundhll1d economy would derive benefits far in ex­ce!l/i of the amountreqllired to achieve them, The hope must be that :WPlltaver th~ olltcome of tht! election, a n~w era Qf n~hlll'Y development may be in si~ht,

A Victim Of Intolerance The Cubap. doctor wh(l hAl!! fl!l~t thllmllelve!i, thClY hllVfl an

been compelled to It!Fl.ve the uJllln~1I8 thllt iii dilltA~ttlM Ilnd nurllin~ stlltion At Port Saunder~ clMurbing, )las been the victim of an into1· Many doctors from - foreign erllnce thAt ill none the iess cOlJntl'ill~ hl\va come to New~ shocking because it takes a form 'foundllinq. We hllve been gl.ac:l that is far from unknown in to receive them and aU'but a lew )ltra'f countfi~ thRn Newfound" hBV@ fgund B (lQfdiol W(!lCgIDtl in 1.nd and It!1I11 t'mllt~d c::omlTl\lflt. 'th(t' c()mmu~lti'li ,tho)' AAV~. tlflrV~ tillll Utlm tlHllle on ttl@ 0Il~ ~@I'f) od, ;B\,1t if • min hi Ii fOf@i"mn' aide (If thl) Straltll of !ollo Ish!!. and Jipeaj(Jj. with II. brgluUl ftgg@n~, CI~nnllihpep' and ap Inward lind it is' PPsJjiblo BU, thQ Plore el\~Uy narrgw char.cter, arf.! ,not \In.: fQr ml\U~mmt6 with a ~@miCl at common on thll North Amerj!:lln /lrIClv.nc, to wQrk up h08tUlty, continent Imel iii' the! Irltllh t9wlrdM him; II h~ happlmfi' tQ 11111. I~t whlr,v,r.therm'"J .. ',1,avl a public office and hi.lemse

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By gARL L. DOUGLASS

DO llEALINGS CON'l'INUE? Does God continue to heal disf'a~c

today'! Has not m()[lcrn scienci! as.UIII' cd lhis responliibiJity'! Doctors 11'(,uld he the first ones 10 declare that neither they not' thoir science can heal any· one, They are accustomed to sa.. th~t they can only assist nature, by II'hich' they mean that they can only help Pllt into operation the laws of Gcd (·9n· eerning physical restoration.

All heuling, whelher it Cll;r"'s from medicul llradic() Ill' pruyer IS wonder· ful to Ill'huld and bcyond our lIndu· );tanding. We ;holiid nCI·I't· [I)rl',(:l that lhe Jlrogr~ssil'e discu\,cry of npw Illl'di· cal lruth by Jlhysicians and It,,,;pr.r~h IVllrilCrs is a rel'dation from God pre, cisely 3' rel'clatiolls which apparcntly occur in the realm of religion. God h •• , rel'caled llimself through thc physi· cians and scient isIs and IIc conlin'tCs to rio so. But we mllsl 'Ibo admit lha' influences beyond science, surgl'ry, Ill'

any scientific knowledge of man oliell takcs Illacr and heals to lhe amazclllPnt of the medieal world.

I do 1101 wi~h to t;lke up 100 much ,pare but would ll11'ntinn thaI a film service is also "\'ailahh', and that the Children's scction is \\'1'11 patronilcd. in again.

Encouragement L, a big fattar' III dosing. m~y I again express my

appreciation of the "aluable and ex cdlcnt contrihution by the U:Jr:t1·y anti ils sluff. If yon hal'(' not been inter· c:;tcd liP to now. cull and cnjov r. real treul. It is "Yours for the Askin~,"

performance, In the ease ~I

)Iany a time whcn doctol', have thrown up their hands in dosp4ir, some· thing has happened to the patient which everyone is compelled 10 admit is utl­side the circle (If human under~tanding. Such miracles still 'occur. We du well to believe in Ihem, to accept th~llI, and tu beseech God to grant them.

If miracles cver (Jc(~IlI'l'ed Ihey ,lill ocellr. As Christians we belief tl,al they did occur. We should ha\'c faith in medicine-and faith also in poil'ers far beyonrl present medical l;nowJedgl!,

What Others Are Saying INNINGS AND OUTINGS Christian Science Monit"r

A friend in SO\lthern Rhodesia sends us a elipJling which We hereby add to our cricket lore. It recounts the adven­l!lres 67 years ago of a group of Rhollt!­sian enthusiasts who walked 250 miles to play a game in neighboring Mozam· bique. When they got tbere they found they numbered only scven-a softer group scl1eduled 10 'ride down on horses having failed to get there in lime.

"Luckily," Ihe story continues, "a train h~d just arrived ... and (our o( the passengers were c~llcd up to tnakr up a full team."

Obl'lously Ihe f!lur decA(lent tram riders were ill·matched 10 the 250·mile hillers, for the visiting 11 wet'e soundly beaten.

But one oC the loscrs, presumably after walking home ~gain, spoke witl1 Ihe taetiturnity o( a true cricketer. "We thoroughly enjoyed our jaunl," he reo ported.

What modern jet·delivered crickcter even after winning. can say more than that?

• • • CALLED IDIOT

Owen Sound Sun·Times A Toronto magistrate reporledly reo

ferred to a person appearing before him tbe other day as an "idiot." While Ihe accused q\lite apparently acted most foollshly, it is doubtful if he is "so deficient in mind ~s to be perman· ently inCIiPIlllic !lr rational conduct, an utter fool." Thai, 01 coursc, is the definition of an idiot. It would s~em quite possible this particular man, fool· ish as he may have been in his actions, has groufills for a slander aetian. There have been several cases in recent l)1onths where th~ court has heen most con, demnatory of those ~ppoQring before it, so milch 60 that the magistrates have "made the news." It is, of course, the duly of those who sit in judgment tn advise 8S well as to senlenee. Yet there 16 l'e~Soll. to doubt that their rigMs in' elude that of rOllndly h~rating, cel't~in' Iy not in such extraVRgant 18ngu~ge.

The value of such language is also to Ile doubted,

• • • GOon EATING

(Brockville Recordel' and Times) Toronto is rapidly cOllsohd"ting its

reputation as a city of gOJd rating places thaI also feature good·looldng and attractively·garhed wallrC3Scs. One dOWntown supper cluh has [t.' g,r!s clad in medieval costumes, hostess,,~ in long vclvet gowns and waift'~S'fS in short linen smocks and red leolards.

Another pleasant spot has waitresses who are modeJ~ and actresses whll have taken on the job of wailing at tJhle in between engagemenls, This IVai thc)' can keep buW all the lime.

And this week will see the opening of a new restuurant that fcatllt'e~ south sea islands and other exotic dishes. Here the waiters will be in Hawaiian garb and the waitresses will wear chic Chinese dresses.

Almost as important as the food that is served in a re~taurant is good ~l'oom·

ing among members of the st;lff Tor· onto is one city that is not ncglcding this importOlnt f~ctor.

• • • 'SINf'UL' LOOT

A l\fontr~al store detective stopperi a man who was leaving the store aftcr slipping sDmething from the pe':ftlllle counter in his overcoat pocket. The loot was two bottles of "My Sin."

SEX EPUCATION (Toronto Financial Post)

The Torollto Board of Education reo cently discussed; not for the first time, the teaching of sex to children. '1'he debate was touched off by a iearnefl professor's suggestion Ihat they ought to be told sex is "heyond compilrc" a Jlle~sure.

How and when lhe faels of life shUtllri he Imparted 10 thc YOUI1;: may nOI'er be, deeicled to everyone's salis· faction. Certainiy they ought nel'cr be laught. thnt scx is disagreeablc. Wheth· el' thcy sitoulrl be taught that sex is (,m i~ 31l0thor matter.

GIW

• • • "WlIAT'S wnO~G WITII OUR

I'El'.'AL COilE?"

Editor DailY Nell's, llear Sir-EI'ery clay I read in the

papers, and hear on the radio. aho\lt the ever increasing crime in our citr, I also note with awe that a large number of thesc crimes are done by roung punks betwcen the ages uf 15 and 17 years. I have had (in the past 111'0 years) to appeat' as witness against 6 ur 7 of these young punks. I hal'e watched wilh dismay the indifferent altitude of these boys. as they are sit· ting in lhe court. Without exception they sit with daring smugness, cbal· lenging lhe ('ourt's authority to break lhclll. This expression of contempt lIlust surely he noticed by a :llagistrale or .Judge. What is heing done 10 curb this incliffermlee? Whut gives thcse youngsters such confidence in them· selves.

A rc~pcctcd citizen who is tlnfor, ltumlc enough 10 ha,'c to appear as a wilness against one of these punks ha>; 10 sit' for hours. as I have, on a hard· hack wood bench in an over healed an· tiroom. wasting ,wy I'aluable lime and sometimes muncy. just to have his namc and the address of his home subjeded 10 these punks, with the fear of repel" cussions from lhem. What diffcrence whcther a witness lives in Torbay or Lance au Loup. as long as he can tcsti· fy for or aguinst an acclIsed? Why divulge a witness's address and leave him wide open for threatening phone

offenders. they arc being hy the I'ery people who ,lto'lld ~ ishing them, The law wilh these youn;:: ofiender; sho~:d I'ised, Conrict them then pur,;;: The attitude of the mused thl! guiding factur wilh rc;p,ct ~I

lypc of punishmenl he rmilt!, is repentant for his action; he be gil'en real guidance caurJ!! anotiler cham'e to redeem ; he sln'ugs with conlempL in court with his h~ad on his a sll1ile on his indifferent fit!,! walks with a "one shoulder after being fOllnd guilt)'. he thoroughly punished,

Regretfully I slate cally the law has bern bad. we get wisc'!

W C pay taxes to keep our economy health,', Paying til!! sore spot with most people. b~t them. It becomes eren sorer realize that a large portion 01 . is us cd to rondone and put "I this lerrihlc state of affairs,

Instead of \I'a"ling our make things 1'0IllfOrl:lb'e for t~;1 mies of socirt,', lIe should h! properly using it 10 make our dying a little more comfort,:l they ar(', :llan,. of lIur poor a~ ed citizens. who Ital'c good but suff~r had luck, should hI more attention, Last year (196!1 approximately SIOOO,OO income don't want any of thai mor.E: make comfort for people uM ' llllcomfortable for me and mf respected citizcns,

Respcdfnlll' your;.

DISGUSTED

Interpreting the News By CAR~!AN CUMMING

(Canadian Press Slaff Writer) There has been little mourning

over the gory passing of Abdel Karim Kasser. The Iraqui dictator·premier. gunned down hy many of the same men who put him in power 4th years ago, had few allies and fower friends, . Nevertbcless the revolt in ancient

Baghdad-a city well experienced in intrigue and violence-has given good cause for nervousncss to several of lrartu's neighhors.

It is ~till too early to say with cer· t'linly what political direction the revo· lul!unary command will take. But its first statcments promise a sociaJi~t, anti,COlllmunlst government, non·align· er! but against "imperialism" ~nd strongly in favor of a return to friend· ship with President Nasser of Iho United Arab Republic.

'I'he rel'olt bas delighted Na~ticr, re­mQving a potent rivpl for Arab lead· orship at " time when his prestige al· ready had been strenglhened by the. U.A.R.'~ sllccessful backing of the reo publicpn revolution in Yemen.

pact-now the Central Trealf zation-and lumen to ~lo!CO~ and financial assistance, i

Relations with the U,S. I~I' 'n the ~ were particularly tense I

, as he of the Kassem regime , . the two countries of ;Iirnn! " lion against him, 'rtlf

Ironically. the I'clollIuon . little regret ercn ill Ihe ~I world. Kassem had banned

s It. ornalllzcd CnltlllliJ Illsl groUP "n ". ' I tl ir ntem~ and Impnsonc[ Ir : 1M

while courting falor \lllh

lin, ,'rlo' As for the Iraqlll! !111m.

. out tral observers conllng

counlry say most of Ihe lation has greelerl the

relief. . err,lr,1 In the end Nas~cr mal hia

big winner in the upsel, ;\ I certain to fan his hopes 0

A"ab world directed front, - . W Kasselll's own revolulton

t· to be I peared at the Ime d 0011 the Egyptian leader. an will tell whelher the . ne" will also go sour on hint, ----

Bible ~

o! {luty (!ompels him to refuse declared by the Public Health pome ullr~a/ionable req\lept, it is Dep!lrtment to be completely easy enough for a maJicioQs per- without foundation and he is to lion to stir up antagonism, ThUll b~ reassigned to a district that the unfort\lnat~ I)trangel' can will offer him a more cordial find himfinlf caught in Ii web of welcome. In the meanwhile, irrational Buspioion that makes tholie who litirred up the trouble his position unh!lPPY and intol. in the Port Saunders area and ~ral:M and leRve.1i him no Ellicape ' their dupes, willing or unwilling, ~~{Cept depllrtur~ frolU his un. will be the ~hief victims of their p~eiu;ant environment. own stupidity. Theirs i:> not an

Thll aotual ~aUIiIlIi of the hO:1' !lraa in which the physical and tile campaign directed a~llinsl social environment ill particu~ Dr, A.uc;l~ in Port, SElYnd~r~ hav~ larly attractive to a physician not be.tln litatlld. It ifl passi1:ll~ and they 1lll:lY have to wait a to Infer sheer mischief and lUal, long time, before they will bEl Ice on the pllrt gf itli in~tlgqtgr~, abh~ ,to fill the vaC\lum left by Their chl'lrglls I'Igainllt hhTl on their hoatile trelltmel1t of Dr.

'professiollal ~roun.ds, h&ve been Aude.

nut it hps been less pleasallt news for several other Middle Easlern coun. tries: Syria, which split with thft U.A.R. and has been named in Cairo propaganda as the next candidate for revolution; Jordan and Salldl Arabia, monarcbies which clashed with Nasser in haCking Ihe ousted monarch of Yeo meni Israel, which had felt less pres· sure 85 the Arab natlon~ qq~rreUed lmong themselves,

Western countries have' cautioll~ly welcomed the end of Ka&~~m'S rille. 'l'hcy have had little use for him ~ince he pulled Iraq ,out of the Ba~lldad

Not that I speak in re?~ .. !11 . \\',!."'" for I have learned, In J 81\1, tbereln 10 be

pl"n~ 4:U- ot jl Success j5 Illea~urcd,. n filed

might do under cer~l~oel it stances but whal on d t!f,

. , h' h surroun . cumstances W IC . sele(l\~ ot them not of hiS own

,

N.S. (CP) lense waiting

fusalage or 8n . ~ from the c

shivertn" f of de tant car in cons I of the price a

Par k' was Ctcchoslova Ian freedom. ." .

f~r frst interView 51 hiS ~uban airline~ pi

a Nfld., Dec. 21, Navratil told of

front hl~ ho the noses of C

police. authorities

The Spo1 * * Iy Onl

JEROME, we. (CP signalling a nucl,

wailed for about a I

Ihe weekend near t 25 miles northwest

before the nc • resident and :

Ihe police. 51. Jerome police d!c what Ihe loud rl~

falling sound of the ~I: eilher. The resld

• .. h",rhOn Ville LaConia

WA (cp)-The Court of Canada the capital mur

of two Edm scheduled to

June 1 for Ihe slay iEdnlont,on golf profess

Willey. court unanimollsly an appeal by Rayll1' Workman, 44, aga

conviction oC th,) mur lhe 48·year·ohl go

body has never b

(CP)-Dr. Di Wilson, 68, world·C~m

i" the preventior fever and olher tr

diseases. died Mondal General Has!

, long illness. Me~ of heal1h (or &ubur

Thomas. under,! of state at Ihe foreigl

told Parliament ~

is true that the atlen lIoyal Highness w h~ve been draw

contenls of Ihe propl before publication. I

that dlle 10 an oversight

mgnnes. was not 51 In advance in

~,nd an apology has I

caplured archives a report, appare

the Duke of Cob Hiller in 1036 that

of Windsor, then I

Onl. (CP) _ foap econe

cultural fiche: 15 made

wh~t Q"eb~c's desires are," Even deputy Olll1trjo minister, said i

ean We hope for i calm and peace I to live 'up t

of inc ... ~gplnudl'" h told a

, Biggs, who hal I

trips to Qllebec iT l110nlhs 10 eUi

tQ vrobleT!J~ he "~~\t IWQ provi

~, b' Is well R Qf Quslbng prejudici

5 "0" _u . " gge~ted Illere (

Par.

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'11trmlll. hr~,t nn hi! ,iilf,'rrnt far!

·t "It' Ihat \'\'l'n h:Hi.

\\"t' ;lwlIld llf t t.1 1l13kl' (lIlr nH'r(' "'lIIforlJble "f "ur I"','r ~nd

, hall' ~tlod :\\,'k. ,h"uld be I.:;~t ~rH ,\%11 H'1~\'(l\1 In,'011l1 "f that ,none),

,'I' rfllplr who ,'I" Illr and nlj'

,'Ifully ~'ll1rt.

DlSGCSTED

eWS

THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND. FEDr.lJ.\nY 14. \H63-5

BoY Carefully Planned Escape Sun Life Sales In 1962 Over A BilliOT' Dollars ,n!. ;\~. ,('1'1 -:-' Ot.tnwa released T.uesday that going. H~ kopt note 01 where

I un'" II"JitillA Ill' Milos has been given a hOllle "On Dec. 10," he said, "I t~'1 '>" iw' .'1 ,til .lil'·1 here by Mr. and Mrs. Jaroslav found O\lt a Cuban ~Ir\lner

;1.rr.'~'.~' ;~.'1II tIll' "0111. Tichy. The immlllrpUQn. d~Pllrt- was going to land in Prag\le. · ,"(':";, i."lr "I Mtl'l" i mcnt said "arrangements to I I checked lin airline ma"a~lnc .... " .. 1,., 1\1,' I'nl'~ a 15-: prol'idc for his woHare, a home and learned that the plane was 'it 1':" .~,,"\\;\k\ai\ hO~'1 and education satisfactory to bound for Havana with 1\ stop · \ :"': :,;' immigration authorities have in Canada." :~ :~'tMI'I'h'lI It'''' >!lII·e! hecn made with Mr, Tichy for DOORS I.1~FT OPEN

··,'1 I · ... ~ :"", .1lriin,'; lllallr! as ong as necessan'. He aald hI! went tp the air-'1,' .. ' \1;;1. II,','. 21. ~I.i. i. With Mr. TI.ehy acting as an port and watched the plAne :~:;:., \l\ r.1111In1.1 ol illS IIlt~rpreter, Milos told how he land. The baggal:e anll pllo~'s r·. : .• " fn'lII 1\1; h,:me. s11ent n~any days going to ~he compartment doors wcre left

I:""",r 11t';\" l,f l om· ~Irport III Prague and watching open lifter passengers and crew .'<. .. i the variolls aircraft coming and left the plane, "":'.f ~lIll1,'ntil" in I each aircraft was beaded. Miles said the ail'craft woR ;:1 ... ~ ----- sWllrmlng with ~rmcd pollee, 'T} NEWS but the plane was not hedvil)' Ie guarded. However, there was

130 yards of open space be· tWllen him and the ail'cl'nft,

Ie h Hill chance came as another

S t t aircraft prepared to talw off, : P 0 I g S While everybody was walchil1g the plane prepare for take·of{, Milos bolted toward the plane and scrambled into the baggage

* * * * Ollir Olle Complaint? •

• !£RO)It:. rur. IeI'l­l! • 'I'nlllin~ 0 1I111'lral' ,-(J • ~

.. 'I::(,i f,'r al"lnt a d~)' :~t "f"kend IIrar IllIs !l :11111' Iwr!illl"r,1 .of

~(f,'n' thl nnlSC I ;f5idrnt aud she

thl ""lin'

was adviscd to lelephone the Air Warning Sen'lce Tactical Hcadquarters in St. Jerome.

compartment. lie $sid he hid betIVecl1 a

bank of cables Bnd the outer skin of the plane. "! stayed there not daring to move for fear that a sound would ath'act the guards."

His wait for the plane to leaVe was a long cold one. Wearing only light summer clothes and carrying with him a bit o£ food Bnd bottle of water, he spent two days an!! night in the tail of the plane befor~ it left the airport.

CHRISTOPHER PRATT

Sun Life Assurance Company The discount dollar at 921/2 of acquisitions by government of Cannda sold mor~ than one cents U.S. seems appropriate to and non· resident corporations. billion dollars of life insurance current circumstances, \lut he "Since our economy is baseil in 11lB2 for the fourth consecu· warfled that the benefits heing and has prospered on adher· live year and will increpse derived from the discount dol· enee to the principles of pri· policy dividends in 11103 for the I~r Are tempornry ,+'d will dis' vate enterprise," he ~aid, 14th consecutive yenr, T. Fred appear if costs arc allowed to "tljere are obvipusly limitatIons Homer, Sun Life manager in rise further, thlls eliminating on the extcnt to Which the actio Newfoundland announced fol· the competitive advantage vity of privately oW!1e4 \'lIlsiness lowing the company's O~nd an· gaincd. may be eroded by public QW!1" " nual m~eting. "Our flnancial and trade pro ership without disruption of the

Forward slrides by the Sl1n \ blems are becoming betler de· economic principles on which Life during the past year also fined and adequately delineated the smooth working of the included the mutualization of by facts and figures b(it there economy depends." the company. which was com· Is still as great a neoil as ever He said publicity owned en· menced in 1058 and completed to find long·term solutions to terprise, being relatively free in Pecember, 196~. them Rnd aelion should not be from the disciplines of the mar·

The Newfoundland Branch dclayed. A repetition of last ket.place, are sometimes gov· reported that Sun Life sales summcr's crisis could result in erned by other than economic last year of $1,128,440.000 Were permanent and more serious. considerations. Yet the highest larger. than. those of any olher effects on our financial struc·· degree of economic efficiency Canadian life company, and ture." is essential to the achievement b~ought tolal insurance in force The life insl'rance industry in of high levels of employment With the .company to $10,840.· 1962 submitteil a brief to the and livinn standards in Canada. 72~,000. This i~ an increase of Royal Commission on Health It is alsoo necessary t"O maintair 6.4 pcr cent over 1061. Of the Services to which :\11'. Campbell! the confidence of investors ir totill, $4,205.659,000 is in Group rcfcrred. In this bricf the (:om· i the future of investment ir. life insurance aml the balance panics said that an adequate! Canada. in individual contracts. plan of health care must be Mr. Campbell said the othel

During thc year the company made available 10 all Canadians, aspect of the problem involve! paid $199 million in policy regardless of their age, thc the transfer of control of Cana· bcnclits, of which two.thirds state of Ihcir health, their oc· dian companies to non·residenl Was paid to living policyhold· cupation or whcre they live. I hands, and recommended thaI ers and annuitants and one· Toward this end the companies I Canadian law ar ... j lax proce· third to the beneficiaries of de· presented a plan of comprchen· dures be changed to give mOff ceascd policyholders. Dividends sive health care which Mr.' cncouragement to Canadian til be paid to Sun Life policy' Campbell said is an extcnsion ownership if industrY. He said holders in 1963 will be S46.B of the voluntary health insur· that while no·one qucstion~ the million-five per cent more ance COl'erage now available to contribution which external

;. Jrr,';r.r p"h,r di,ln'l ';~I: Ihr hind I'i;ing

'1::;~.~ ~\~~md l,j Iht' 5irrn . r::':tr. TI1,' rr,idt'nt ~~;:rlr. I'ilk l.Jionlaine

Capt. A. H. Barcelo, duty officer at the Can~dian Army's air warning service in ~Iontreal was adl'ised in turn and a Bell Telephone Com· pany service truck was sent to fix the ·siren. The Ville Lafonlaine woman

was the only person to com· plain about the noise.

"I was shivering from the freezing temperatures and ter· rified thllt ! would be discov­ered by the crew p£ the plane." He said It was SO cold in the plane Qt night thaI the bpttle of water he had with hilll

I than the 1962 policy dividends. Canadians and already owned capital has made to the <!evelop· Christophel' Pratt, noted slides of the Madonna and i Sun Life assets, investcd in by half the population. Under mCl\t Of Canada, the trend has

Newfo\lndl~ml artist, Tuespay Child theme of Raphael and go\'crnment and muni~ipal \ this plan government funds unfavourable long· term Impli· presented a panoramic view of point~d out the monument,1l bonds, corporate sccurities, would not be required except cations, notably from a balance

,Art Lecture Gives art through the ages in a Icc- interpretation by Miehelangplo mortgages ad real estatc, in· for people who cannot afford of payments point of view •

froze. . 11 liang for Murder

ture to honor students of of the salvation of mank.ind creasel\ $102 million in 1962 to the premium and thcrefore the Sun Life l{eport Brother Rice High School through the (leath of Christ as $2,563,03~.OOO. Of this amollnt, cost tl;rough taxes would be New Life' Insurance sohl in here. illustrated in the frescoes of $690 millipn is in mOl'tgagrs, very much less tban for any 196;! by Sun Life-$1,1~a,440,-

The leclure was the first in the Sistinc Chapel in 51. mostly on residcntial proper· general comprehensive govern· 558. m.\ln ,("PI--TI\(· Suo

l.'J[( of (Jnada has :~.r f31'iIJI mUl'dcr

'.0",\"( l1r IWCl Edmon· ';;:,' ilr,"rllli,'d to hI'

J;~e I fnr Ihr ~laying ~()lf prl)fr::sion·

[:r.l \\"Illry. (c.::t un3n:l1Iou;ly re· Ir, ipP"JI hy Haymond . \\'arlm.n. H. against

:::,,;I:on of Ihr murdcr :!! ~S.~rar·nld golfer

~,Jy has nner been

fOllnd. It also IIlrncd down an ap·

peal br 29·year.old William IIl1cIILak bllt Mr. ,l\lstice no· land Ritchie and Mr. Jllstice Emmett Hall dissented. The dissented judges WOllld have $et aside Huculak's conviction and dircctcd a new trial. Workman and Huculak wcre

conl'ieled of capital murder last September by an Edmon· ton jur)' which reeommcnded clemency.

Only after tile plane had taken off did he dare com~ Ol1t of his hiding place.

"The plane was in the air a very sllorl time when it started La land. By this time I was nearly out of mY mind with the cold so I moved from behind Lhe cables and snuggled up 10 some boxes to kecp warm. ORDERED OUT

a series of five to be gil'en as Peter's, Rome. ties. ment health' insurance scheme, Life Insurance in force at part of the honors enrichment "His explanation, too, of tpc At the company's annual I he said. Dec. 31, 1962-$10.840,722,996. program at thc schOOl. background La Picasso's mllnl meeting in Monlreal, President "Th.e insurance com~anies, Benefit Payments durin~ 1962

The remaining lectures will painting, Guarnica, helped can. Alistair M. Campbell SPoke on e~peflenccd as they are III the -$199.8B4,799. feature talks in the fields of siderably to clear the fog usn. general economic mailers and field of health insurance, feci Assets at Dec. ~1, 196~-$2,. ar1s and science by men pl'Om. ally associated with the ahstract said lon".term so1t!tions should that their skills and thcir tradi· ' 583,033,757. inent in the profe.sional and \90rks of this famous artist." be found to Canada's financial tion of service to the public can Income in 1962-$412,745,480. artistic lifc of St. John's, a the spokesman said. and trade problems. He said: make an effective contribution Net Interest Rale Earned in spokcsman said. Mr. Pratt told of the scnse. the country's reputation in fin· to an earll' ~nd universal axtcn· 1962-4.87 per cent.

"Using a sct of beautifully less bombing of the Spanish ancial markels suffered from i sian of health jnsurance in a Policy Dividends \"0 be paid colored slides, lIlr. Pratt gave town of Guernica during the the events leadin~ up to the II form suited to Canadians." in 1963-$46,894,249. a simple yet lucid and compre- Spanish Civil War and showed exchange crisis last summer but lIlr. Campbell, spcaking on

Pioneer Dies

"Shortly after the plane landed someone making a rou­tine check opened tht! door and shone a I1ashlight in my eyes. I was ordered out of the plane."

Milos said he found out he was in Shannon. Ireland when he got out of the plane.

hcnsive sketch of art and archi. how Picasso's painting was a was gratified to observe the \ the state of the economy. refer· Fish have been kept in cap· tecture from prc.Christian timcs deeply stirring indictment (If steady improvement in Can· red to the "umlSually large tivity since about 2500 B.C., Lo the moden era," the spokes- sickening horror of modern war- ada's foreign exchange balance number of corporatiofls" which when the Summcrians main· man added. farc, he adqed. since then. I hal'e changed hands by means tained them in ponds for food.

ICI'I-J)r. !lal'iel i;iIln. 68, world·famous

in Ihe prcl"l'nlion of !!If: anrl olhcr Irolli·

·tillSli. rlierl ~lnnda)' in 1i!l1ml lIo;pilal

I lon~ iIInps> ~ledical If hrallh fOT sl1h11rb111

",ent 1.\P 1-Thr Bri·

IMrnmrnl has apologiz· U It! Dulie of Winnsor Il: informing him in ad·

llooul rontrol'mial rc· I" him in l'rrrntly captured German

Tlonm. IIn<lcr;ecrc. !f Itll! allhe foreign or. ":d Parliam!'nt ~lon.

3,:Ut'lhallhr altrntion tt ROlli IIigI1lll';S would

'hm been drawn 10 01 Ihe propos cd

ItfD:e publicalioll. It is thai due tn an ad·

I orer;ight l/is was not so in·

.draner in Ihis In apolo~y has bccn

nplured ard;II'cS con. I reporl, apparcntly

I\e Duke of Cobllr~ I in 1036 Ihat tl~~

~ Windsor, then King

Swansea for the last 10 years, Dr. Wilson served as a field orricer for ttoe Rockefeller Foundation for 23 years In the United Slates southwest, British Honduras, Colombia, Brazil and the Middle East.

Apologizes Edward VIII, strongly favor· cd a British alliance with Nazi Germany. The king was said to be ready to meet Hit. ler personally in Britain or Germany-regardless of what Lhe British government of the day, led by Stanley Baldwin, might think.

In anothr document, Leo­pold von Hoesche, the Ger­man ambassador to Britain at that timc, reported King Edward's "fricndly attitude toward Germany might in time come 10 cxereise a cer· tain amount of influence on th shaping of British foreign policy."

l'he Duke of Windsor said immediately after p\lblication of the document in December that thcy gave "a generally false impression."

Thomas revealed the gov· vernmcnt ilPology when qucs· tioned by members of Parlia· ment.

He said he wps given a choice by the Irish police offi­cer of staying in Ireland or con· tinuing to Havana. He said he chose to slay aboard the plane and take his chances on get­ting off In Canada.

"When the plane landed at Gander, immigration authori· ties found I did not have a passport and the Cuban's had to admit I was a stowaway. The immigration officer asked me If I wanted to remain In Canada or go on to Havana.

"When I chOSe to remain, the Cubans became very angry. I could sec the anger flashing in the pilot's eyes." .

The boy stayed in Gander for two weeks wh~re he had ChrISt· mas dinner with an RCMP offl· cer. He was later trqnsferred to Immigration heaqquarters In Halifax. LEAVES FAMILY

Milos said he left his mother and father and three youn~er brothers in Cz~choslovakia, He said he didn't tell anybody about his plan to es~ape.

He said his father had owned a small chemical factory but It was nationali~ed by the Com­munists and his father was now employed as II spray painter in all automobile factor),.

1I1r. Pratt, spccialist in paint-ing with the extension depart· ment of Memorial University, • traced the trend6 in art from prehistoric painting of cave art to the sometimes controver· sial work of the moderns, such as Pica~so.

"He particularly emphasized the glowing brilliance of Ren­aissance art, typificd in the crealed genills of Raphael and Mi~helangelo," the spokes· mall added.

He showed the students

Seeks TV Survey W. II," Davis, organiZing seere·

tary of the National Associa· \"ion Jor the Advancement of TelevisiQn, said WednesdaY he lUll made tho sug~cstion to Ihe Cpnpdp Council that- they OJ{­

plare the feasi\lility of invit­ing Sir Harry Pilkington, dis· Iin~\llsl1ed British television cl'pert, to Canada, to make a survey of television .program· ing both on the national and private stations.

Mr. Dqvis said there is sneed !If an ellpansion in educationill televl~lon on all fronts.

"There is ~Iso a grea t need of a survey to determine the in­fluences of television on the mental health of Canada's chil­dren," he said.

'8 Follow tile French

Th\! Immigration department in Ottawa said Milos was free to communicate wi~h his par­ents "an~ no IIcllon is to be taken whIch might prejlldlce him rejoining his . parents should he wish to do so volun­tarily."

"These suggestions," Mr. DRVis stated, "will be aired more fully at the public lJleet­ing ~t Memorinl University Thentre Friday night."

,Ont. (el') - All reap cconomic

lultural riches "if is made soon

II.Whlt Quchec's hop. iUlr!1 are," El'erclt ~1 !epulj' Ontario agri. lIIinisler, said Mon.

~'I hope for inter. !11m ~nd peacc if we II IlI"e lip 10 a

or increas· h laId a ser·

Bii'l h iii \. ". n hal made Pl10 Q(lchrc in 11le ilion' I , ,I! 10 eumine Ih prohlems com·

'"nt. ~ 1\\'0 provinces I~~t a~ wcll go n~

If Qubtlbng prejudiced in

e- rC.'1 I~" I,tlted more Cana.

dlans should learn to speak French. The current metbods of studYing French In On· tario schools was "time wast­ed." If Ontario residents were to

change places with the people of Quebec they wpuld become aware of a lack of under· stqmlinll lind appreciation, a slight' Interiority complex, a feeling of rebellion and pride, of being apart In a country . supposedly together since 1667 and of determination for .'~ place 111 the sun."

l\Ir. niggs said Ontario hu heen regprded ft& tht! "have" province, with tremendous adv~ncement ·in .grleulture, h~'dl'o elp~trle PQwor ano highways devplpllment, bllt Ihe cducaU~nal rev(!lut!on i& laking place Ifl Qlleb.e wllere the "minds of Quebec are on the mar~h."

Party. New Ideas

fred Reiner, IU~~r pf Ih~ and North

.ald

North York constructlon suo Pllrll1ttlndenl, aald the party Will fllrmed too late to enter . canalllnl'" In the April B fed ' IIrlil ,eneral election.

other policies Include aboll· lipn Dr fl!l!ml ehlcllon~ Rn~ the Senate, prllYlnclal DavIla· m!!IlU wQul1! continue 10 fun ction In t~* present formf but the federal House would be ma4e up of elected provln' eial 1f·.i~lators. The fe~'ral' prQvlll~I" 1_,I,111orn "ollld also represent Canada In the North American body.

The party would natlona· 11" .11 PlIQllr"., Qlliinp, and iDdustry.

. I

. The department sftid IIPer­mit has been Granted for him to remain In Canada for ~ix months. At the end of that period-July al-his car,e will be reviewetl with reRard to what dpcision is to be mnde for his permanellt admission In aceordanc~ with his wishe •.

Mr. Pil~inglon re~e!1t1y made Q survey of Britis\) television.

Mr. DRVis will be in Halifax feb. lP when lje starts his coa~t.tQ'CQa6t tour of Canada. He viii I be travelling to 14 major cities.

Managing Director Honored at Dinner

'fIIB standard Manufllcturing Comilliny l..hnlted, cllmallcd Its _l1nllal JIIiel m~~tlng wi\J1 a [jlnner and dlll1pe Rt the Old ColonY CluQ Tlllliday.

FIlIIQwina th~' dinper, II pres­ent.UIIIl of a lIold watch was m~d. to mllnllJllnll dirllPtor John C. McCarthy, for hi. 25 years service WIth the company. The prllBentllUlln Will fIl~de by G, ,.. Wint~r, pr~~I"lIn~,

Mr, Wipter .po~e brillfly at the !\innl!f, ,~yln. Ihlll thll Dl1m· llllnY hllQ 'lUCItIlM~fUI ),lIar, and he thanked the manager. shiD lind @mDI!lyee~ fllf t\)elr 1I4l_.Qperatll.lll IInti IOYlilty,

T1I@ fIllletjpg, whic\) b~"ftn 011 SlIllIrllllYIWOllnd up TueHday wlnl' tll. dinner ana dan~~, IIn~ hlill r~llre~'!ltRtlm IItt!l1l4lnc from .arp.~ tha prllvll1~. IIn~ from Uti m,lnl~nd, .

In town for the llIe~lIn~ were: Mr. Ind M.a. George T, Graham, Halifax; Mr. Ind Mra.

Jphn C. M(!Cftl'thy ...,.as Yllllra fierVlll1l

R. A. Manery, Pentz, N.B.; Mr. and Mrs. S. W. BIlIlworthy, Ml1ntreAIi A, J, fIlIll, CQrper Jlr!lo~1 Mr. IIP~ Mrs. Ches U~tt, Harbor Grace; An«! Mr, lind Mrs. George Lake, Fortune.

At4 INVENTORY

OF PUBLIC

SERVICE

co Sln~e 1811 SUN LIFE

OF CA~ADA h~5 beltll active

In the publl~ lervice.

1862 w~a "not her year

01 jlchiivemenl.

~:

SUN LIFE

I

ASSURANCE COMPANY

OF CANADA A Mulu.1 Company with Its liead Offic, In Monlrq~1

~un life's representatIves, for the fourth consecutive year, sold over $1 billion of life insurance, thus casting the mantle of protec1ion over countless thou­sands of men, women and children,

V:un life paid out $200 million In benefits 10 policyholders and their bene­ficiaries. Two-thirds of this amount waa paid to living policyholders ..

~sun Life's three million policies and group certificates provide protection of more than $10X billion,

~un Lire announces new divIdend scales whlcn, for Ihe 14th consecutive year, will result In an Increase In the total amount to be paid In divIdends to its participatIng pDlicyholders. In 1963, divI­dends will amount to $47 million.

IN 1962

Paid to Policyholders and II.llneficiaries.. •• $ 199,884111G1

New ~ife InsurancQ •• It.t.t ••• t.t It It.t It It U $ 1,128,440,000

Total Life Inlurance in Fo·rcll".... .......... $10,140,722,000

Assetl at Decllmber 31,1962........... ...... $ 2,513,033,000

/From 200 ~ranch officlls, Sun Life men and women have IIlen privileged i!nd happy to serve an ever grawing body of policyholders.

A copy o( the Annu.I Reporf (or '962 Is being stnl to pol/cy~old.(~. Copl.~ may .Iso b. obllfned from .nyo/lIl. C;pm~nts br~nch DOI'u, COfd10 CG.UI.

T. FRED HOMER, W, G. PAWE, l1rllnch Manager, . Branch Secretary ~oyal Bank Cbllmb(lTS, St, JOhIl\ N(lwfouudland

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Page 6: Nova Ltd. la', n ie~ena er n' elver UIcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · Elizabeth A vc. 9·4171 : :;: ... (left), was named Veterans Af· fairs ... ma~y on downtown

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~TIIE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, FEBRUARY 14, 1963

THE DOCTOR SAYS'

Inactive Thyroi~

Causes Body Swellin~

rl "I"""'III"IIIII'IIIIIIIIIIIII'''''IIIIIIIIIIIIIIII''''"11I11II1I1''''IIIIIII111111111111"1"11111,11,1,""111111l1li11'

I Social-Personall 1 Column ; ;

AIlJ penollS wishing to pllce social notes in the Social Column may. do 80 by tailing 8-2177·8·9, or writing to the DAIL'f NEWS Office, Duckwortb StreeL

NEWl\IAN ALUMNI CLUB The regular monthly meeting

of the Newman Alumni Club will be held this evening at 8.00 p.m. in the social room of lhe Arls Building at ~Iemorial Unil'ersit~', Professor John Hewson will . rel'iew "The Gut· cnburg Galax~" b~' 1Iiarshall McLuhan, There will be are· port from the sludy grGUp on L ;lI'istianily in mass media.

\\'lmDING ANNIVERSARY

Cyril Butler of Bell Island, will be pleased to hear that he has been . discharged from tlie Grace Hospital and has now reo turned to his bome.

SOUP SUPPER A soup supper and card party

sponsored by the Guild of st. Nicholas, will be held at the church of the Ascension Hall, lilt. Pearl, on February 14th. at 8.30 p.m, Patrons arc pleased asked .to bring their own cards,

ANNUAL lUEETING The annual meeting of the

United Church Orphanage Aide will take place on Monday, Feb. 18Ih., 3 p.m. at the Orphanage.

WI-:EKL Y ~IEETING Tryon hairdo Is the best way to face the shears without tears. This mo.del (left) first cut new hairstyles from magazines. Tllen she had an enlarge,) photostat made, held It to her face (center) to see how she would 10Gk in a short ear.tip hairdo . She models her new shorter style (right) from the try·on coif tbat flattered her most. Anolher approach would be to use a passport.slze photo, cut out several hairdos about same size and try t1\em over photo.

By WAYNE G. BRANDSTADT, M.D.

Q-My husband's thy r 0 i d was Ireated with radioactive iodine. Could this cause him to develop a thyroid deficiency" Can this be corrected'?

A-Radioactive iodine ha~ been successfuJr used to re· duce the actil'itr of an ol'er­activc thyroid. If this activity is completely destroyed. hypo· thyroidism would re~ull. This causes an inelastic swelling of Ihe skin of the entire body. As a rcsult the face may ~e· come expressionless. In gen­ernl movement is sloll'cd and the I'idim becomes less alcrl Ihan [ormerly,

Th is dncs nut mcan, hn'.\'· ereI'. Ihat Ihere is any les-sening 01 the intellecl. The body's temperature. pulse.

and remoral of t' ' be all Ihat is r~~l.e C:'i ~1 sel' I' ,",rtq . . era I'ems are' ' ~.: til" d' . 1il1ol·· .. ! " con lliou ",·t d ·t. •. , en ; the I'e~tum ~ :~:!r~ . operation i, necc· . . ~~al1'.

Q-:-\\"h<Jl is the pul)W In Ihe '0" \\.h ' .1-'[ . at foods ,!;null .' . r r flp '" . !, yo~ hale them" . ··I~

'\-A pol\'P i, , , f I·k t • .. < .r'I I·C umor which i, .

10 the \\'all oi th~· , rectum by a ~~11Ji1 .

st:llk.

Thc call':' i, ,',,' 'I . n" ,'" .l ost ul these fJnn_-'~"~~ hi:ll'll1!t'~s Imt ~f)Ill~ L,! . ~'e : nant. Fill' Oli; re·.,: .: polyps :<IHllllfl he ~;~ , .. . . •. u~ ... rd c:'\nmJI~cl! m;cm~~·r,.\:'.,:

Comp1t.; l e renw~·~'~·\(;'::· curc. Thcre are."h~li'e': dl'u"e f,l' 'I ( .. II .e" ,~'"1 '. ) 'ew! a:ets t~~, \ cnl the formatirJll ;~". polyps. The rrO:" ,.r" . rl . ~~."

Congralulations arc being ex. tended 10 ~Ir. and ~Irs, Albert \\'. Christopher of the cily on the occasion of Iheir wellding anniversary which they cele· br,llc loday. Greetings come from all Iheil' friends.

Weekly Club meeting was . held last night at the home of ~Ir_ Harry Williams, 49 Cabot Street. Members in attendance were Kevin Connolly, Ronald Noftall, Howard Moore, Wil­liam Hussey and Ernest Gol· lop, and Ihe meeting next week will be held at the home of Mr. Kevin Connolly, 73 Living· slone Street_

Alicra Hart's Soul Searching

and I;asal metabolic rate fall below normal. The condition can be corrected by ~il"inl( Ihyroid exlract. The amount required is usuaHy determincd by making pcriodic checks of the mctabolic rate.

ure alkr Ihe\' h3ve •. mn\'cd is 10 ho',e scopic r~:lin;l1ati"n once a YC(lr.

J1(mE FROM HOSPITAL The man~' friends of :III'.

'The Clothes Poll

BY IIELEN HEXNESSY

11 seems to me that hats and hairdos can claim Ihe lion's sharc of innol'ation for spl·ing.

raised in colonies, who knows what savings may be passed on to the hopeful woman7.

ellle ellA T:

Q_:'Ily husband and Ire· cenlly adopted two girls.· ages 4 and 6. I belicI'e I dress smartly myself, but find I've made many mislakes in choos­ing clothes for my new daughlers, bolh in style and practically. Can you give me some adl'ice about buying clothes for children? - Mrs. R. L.

A-Dear Mrs. R. L.:I took your problem to Ruth Combs, . designet· of children'oS c1olhes, and a mother and grandmother herself. She sayS:

Try Change of Pace Hairdo BY ALICIA HART

Tired oC looking in the mil" ror and saying, "That isn't the me I want to see"7 It is time to take stock and work toward the image you want to creale. !llosl often a new hair­dG wiIJ do the trick.

During our busy schedules, many of uS stick to a single hair style that has been our Cavorite fGr years, Be honest. Admit it has been your favor· itc hccause YGU feci YGU are 100 hUsy to try 8 new hair slyle.

hair react diffcrently, For ex­ample, in wintcr hair tends 10 be more flat. In' warmer weather, your hair gets' nuf· flicr and your haircut should take advanlage of this fact. Now is a good time tG seteCt a new hairdo for spring and dG something about it.

Incidentally, Ihe fashion predictiGn is 10 shorter hair Icngths with more than a hint of car. In addition. if you have been wearing your hair long, YGU may discGver that you have not heen playing up your features to advantage.

dolls, sJggested by the Lilt Reference! Sen'ice and worked out b~' .Iulius Caruso, hail' stylisl,' itt consists of culting out new i coifs pictured in magazine~ and malching them to your I~cial requirements.

I

ite hcauty salon IG sho\\' your stylist.

Caruso poinls out. 100. that he culs many styles 10 almost chin length and then urges his clicnt 10 use a push butlon· type homc permanent, leaving Ihe wal'ing foam on fOr to minutes. This providcs suf­ficient body for Ihe new loose. casuai styic.

This can be done hy using a pass-poll sizc photo of your· self in ~ bathing cap. Place hairdos cbt-outs on the cap to see how i they might look on you. In !the case of a full· If you feel that longcr hail' page ilIu}tration, cut hairdo is more glamorous for el'e-out and mid it al'cr your head ning affairs, don't back out while Y01 make a comparison on a shorler coiffure, Wilh a in the rror. flattering wig or hairpicce

you can hal'e a second per-

ActUally. "our hair should You can find a new style t. J When . ,.ou Cind a shorter sonaiih· as well as a cover-up not be cut in Ihe same way wilh' an at - home method of ' for all scasons. The changes decision Ihat is literally the slyle you especially like lake Gn days when your hair is nut in temperature make your same as culting out paper the compGsitc to your fal'or- as chic as it shoul(1 he. ~-..:......~~.-:.:..-=--------=--~---------- .. -~.-.-----.--- ... -

Q_I have been hothcred with hemorrhoids for about six months. I usc suppositories every day and thcy don't bothe.. me until mv bowels movc, They do nGt 'bleed but thcy nrc painful at times. What would you advise7

A-HemorrhGids may reprc, sent 3n acutely inflamcd vcin ncar the oullet of the bowel. Suppositories may help 10 rc, duce the inflammation and re· liel'e the pain within two or three days. If the. hemorrhoids persist this usually means that the hlood in thc vein' has be­come clollcd. A simple incision

Fashion Tipl , .:oi~\I' IS 111E non

1 hi.' " a ~flOri time tl In . gl\"C youI' summer . rohe a thol'OU2!t ' Try Oil clothes' " , from last year. and discard .whaler,r )'CJ • ,

YO\I 1I'0n t he ahlc to 'E2; .. '

sll!llm~r. Shrlllen he~; . need !tHing. ~lake an' cd minor reo"ir; ;'.; r('ady for the iirs! ·\\a~·

SPR1:'\G r:\DER FOOl Shoes for ,prin; shEa:l

rat ural foot!i'l!. EEl' sl\Urter. Ill\r!l', more . complelely [cminir.e. ; th~ clo,ed·tor. opcn·~,€!:· is making a com! back

Some hats not only COl'er the hcml-the)' partially hide Ihe face wilh I'eils and filmy scarfs, a big change frim prc\'lolls years. And the lillie Rowcl hat that hlossomed each Sllrin~ nlon~ wilh olhel' peren· nials is on thc wanc, It should br rclresh ing nol to sce one ~n every Ihird woman.

There are ch:lI'Illing lace sailor hals for dressy occas­ions. and Ihe sporly lass will find a widc choice of fedoras.

"Sleeveless or cap·sleel'cd drcsses 10 be 1I'0rn alone or with co·ordinaled sweaters are practical. Mix·and·match unils stretch the life of each gar­ment.

Be Slim, Be Healthy,' BeH appy: 6 ~ Jill! :11.,1', i" I! 'I~II: I', ,-!'I',:I PII: 1'I'l!I~'I':' '" I '',: .. .

ings of apple sauce. Rcmember too that a cupful of slrained orange juice contains liIlle il any roughage. For its natural laxative cffect yuu must pecl and eal the orange.

I1al'in~ determined how : The Doctor .;. milch vegetable and fruit ,"au

[~rcn the hest of \wcome inrolrcd in a cident throll~h no f!~:t own. :\ chi1d ma~ d~i' thp road from behind a ctiasing a h;;IL The s:::!1 cliildrcll pl;tl'itl~ in It! tallce should' ;tlway! be el'l to a careful drirer peet Ihe II"lIr.':'

lIail'(los no\\' pel'mit lhe ~al's to see Ihe Iighl oC day lor Ihe first time since the "houffant" took Ol'el' Ihe girl. ,\nel from newly barcd lobes big hO(lp~ will swing. in ~o\!1. silver and pink corat.

: .\~ a footnote to. all Ihis !'Iol' interes\." hcre's the news In sh~rs 101' spl'ing. Thr. ~turdiest. most lit'mly planled fect will look delicale and pretty in the ncw airy, open lootwear. Sandals, T'5trap5 nnd sling-back pumps wilJ be pn Ihe scene in a myriad of &pring colors in palent leather. ,

; For the gal who dreams of ~oppin!l her spring finery with a mink she can't afford, Ihings may he hrighter soon. Ex· \lerimenls in the use of a tran· qullizer on mink may reduce 'the cost of raising them. Right .l10W the Iiltle darlings arc so ~an they must be isolated from each other in indil'idunl cages. If Ihey can be made companionable enough 10 be

"Don'l succumb to Ihe templalion to buy prelly party dresscs wilhout first deter­minin!!' their practicality.

"Does Ille' h~ng tag list lahric, fiber content and clean· ing instructions? Can the ~ar­

'mcnt he washed? If it mn~l be dry cleaned, this is an addcd expense to be considered.

"Fit is anolher importanl point. An uncomfortable child is fidgety, There must be ample room for mGvement.

"Look lor deep hems that can be let out as the girls grow. And cheek to see that decorative accents are color last and washable SG that you 1I'0n't ruin the garment the first lime it goes Into the washing machine,

"Preshrunk, color - 'fast . collon is a wise choice even

for a party dress, It looks crisn and dainty and requires minimum . care." .-----_._-------.. _-----

Special Clearance

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, I , , ,

HAND BAGS

. " ~

i ftANDBAGS IN A LARGE RANGE OF STYLES

Values up to $2,98

49c EACH AVAILABLE 'ATALL' 3 STORES

Says ;;

• necd daily in order 10 have a firm bowel mOI'emcnt, it is

: important to take as nearly as How to Live With Emotional i EAT ROUGHAGE ACCORDIXG

Possible Ihe samc amount of roughage every d~y Only in

.-._- -- _._---

Stress Witllont Overeating TO YOUR J'ERSO!'iAL !'iEED By WAYNE G. BRANDSTAIlT,

~I.D.

Ihis way ran you eslablish reg· ular bowel habits.

][ you lind the ~tools becom­ing too hard you must make a small incrca>e in the amount of roughage in YOlll' diet, not just for loday but lor erel', dav. If the stools arc a little loose you must cut Ihe amount of roughage.

OMPO :R,EADY TO

IN 1 MO ILast ,r Six :\r!lclu)

. RY GAYNOR MADDOX Newspaper Enterprise

ood and Markets Editor

Many teen· agel's worry themselves into over·weight. They live in a slate of emotion· al strain. They worry abGut the difficulty of getting into the college of their choice, about the military service ahead of them, about getting a job when they are through school. They know their parents are tense, too, \lvlng in the shadow of nuclear war. This tension af· fects the children.

Such emotional stress makes many of you teen-agers leel Irustrated. You see no sense in making an effort to live a more active life. You accept the ph ilosophy of do· nothing and just sit around.

One result of Ihis wide­spread inertia is a sleady in· Cl'ease in over· weight among young people.

Medical men and nutrition· ists warn that this is a threat to our natiGnal health. They are striving to combat it with scientific knowledge and nn· trition education,

Dr. H. W.Sebrell Jr., dl· rector of the Institute of Nu· trition Sciences at New York's Columbia University. urges nonactive tecn-agers to realize that exercise relieves tensions and helps weight down.

"Routine exercise, nol neces­sarily strenuous, i$ very im·. portant in ymlr adolescent years," he slates, "It im­prove. circulation. makes you sleep better, tones your muscles, helps stabilize you emotionally. Certainly, it is vitally important to you if you are ~etting Cat because 01 in· activity and a gloomy outlook on life." .

Stressing the basic rule for weight control in young peo­ple-more exercise and few· er calories-Dr. Sebrell com· ments on snacks this way: ,

"A~ adolescents in a period of . structural development. il is natural·lhat you should be hungry most of the time. But why, ,when· you are alreadY overweight, do you continue

. to eat snacks that are mainly fat and carbohydrates and very mile else?

"r wish I could persuade your parents to give you a larger allowance to spend on shacks. 'Then you .. might se­lect hamburgers, grinders or milk drinks, snacks that con­tain protein as well as carbo· h)·drales. Or sandwiches made

/

11 YOU have Irur constip,,· tion you may need rclicl not because conslipalion cau,cs headache, sluggishness. or any other general symploms, as was once beliel'cd, but be­cause it makes it difficult .. ' painlul for you 10 pass yo III' stool.

You may choose IG use a small enema. If so it is best not to use more than one CliP' ful (8 ounces) of plain warm waleI'. Some people can leam to give slich an enema to them­selves. All that it needed is a colon tUbe and a funnel rather than the clums~ enema bag. The impGrtl!nt pa~t of Ihis treatment is to hold the enema after the tube has been rc­moved for at least five min· utes.

It is commonly believed ehat ceria in foods such as milk, cheese, and toast are consti­pating and that they should be avoided if you are bothered wilh constipation. This is a fallacy Ihat has caused man~' people tG limil their selection of (oods unnecessarily_

What I have said about con· stipation sounds so simple, many persons probably will not believe it. But it has been shown to work for hundreds of patients I have known.

Gillett's Lve baslen.!tbe of compo;t materiel

i izer within one I bow it's done: Pile . i refuRe material such i weeds and corn cobs

I frame until il is depth. Saturale them!wiJl1

I lye solution made by I the contenL. of one

ench buckft 01 . Piaee a ,,-inch layer saturated materia~

I another 2-foot tayer of material, lind saturate solution. Continue layers oC soil and etanceH until used month oC ripening, may be u.<£<1 as fertililll.

SOUND F:AMILY breakfast Is a good way til start the day.

If it is passed immedialelY after it is introduced, it may be returned without emptying the rectum. On the other hand, 100 large an enema wili empty part of the colon as weJ1 and, like a laxative, bring away material not yet due for el'ac­ualiGn.

oC Ihinly buttered enriched bread filled with cheese or meat or tuna. This is real food"';good lood - food you

like, too. . But, it does cost more than candy bars and sweet pop,

, "That's why it makes nutrl tional sense for your parents to give you more money (or for you tG earn it) to spend on snacks that satisfy your hody needs Instead of those cheaper ones that add lillie more than unneeded calo­ries,"

The doctor believes that well.planned family meals that are not overloaded wilh

. sweets contribute 10 emo· tional stability oC adolescents and also make it easier for Ihem 10 cGntrol their weight.

"Eating with your family gives you a sense of security.

"If you are very fat, sliU cat with them. But limit your­self to one sel'l'ing of meat and vegetables, skip the pie in favor of an apple or or· ange, and drink nonfat milk Instead of whole milk which has many more cal Gries. Then go out and take a walk or attend· sime pleasant· school activity. You won't feel, so pessimistic about the state of the world· or your' own future. You may even decide· that life can be worth living and that it is time you got on your feet and started living It. "

by the School oC Public Health at the University DI California also revealed that mnny girls and boys feel in­

. secure and frightened by world events. Many of them said that life seems too Iran· tic, that there is no time to eat a leisurely meal anymore, either in. the school cafeteria or at home.

"I think I could face the day feeling less tense if my mother would prepare break­fast and sit dGwn and share it with me. The school dietitians

-tell us that a good breakfast of fruit juice, cereal, bread, and milk is important to any­onc trying to lose II'cight," a junior high school girl re­ported.

"But in our house. every­one is in a rush in the morn· ing, acting a.s il this was to be thcir last day on earth. So I skip breakfast and during the first recess, go across the street and have a jelly dough­nut and cola."

Plain glycerin suppositories can be bought in inlant or adult sizes. They must be kept in a cool place. They arc easy to introduce into the rectum and should be held there for at least 12 minutes. With proper regulation of the diet, it should be necessary to use an enema or suppisitory only very rarely. Dependency on either oC these measures as a routine is to be avoided.

This brings us to the matler of roughage. the indigestible cellulose found in fruit and vegetables. It is well 10 re­member that these loods should not be ealen according to your appelite but accord­ing 10 your personal need. The amount you need you must learn yourself.. Some persons can eat eighl or nine helpings of fruit and vegetables daily. For others" one skimpy help­ing in 24 hours may be 100 much.

In general, ounce for ounce, II helping of raw fruit or vcge­table has the' natural laxative

.. effective of two helpings of cooked foods. Thus one raw apple equals roughlY,.lwo belp-

BACKACHE "T~E'BEST IN THE·H When kidney. fail . . RN 87 LANDS to remo\'C eleeea adds and wtt!tcI.

h •• koohe. tired ~ ~%I f't!iiDR.disturbed ~ rt'at often follow. • Dodd'. Kidney rUls atimui&te . rI'

A recenl ·survey of over· 'weight ieen - agel's conducted

In reports of disastrous home firer., it is often sug­gested that "the fire was caused by children playing with matches" _ Matches are

'treated with too little respect, from the lighted· match thrown away by a camper to the malches that a child has picked up in his home and experi· mented with later,. matches can be a hazard that should . never bc left where children can find Ihem ..

kidney! to normal rtntl'. You I.d better-,Iet'p hrt­ter. work b,.tt .. ,.

(Not inserted by The BDard Df Liquor eont~ll

ThE e women

Is WE EXCEL 10'1 111 .

Vfll MILLETI' BY R.

Women are af i""''''lIDel'~a"bOr_saving dev

bUY their husbands ftar 're lazY," sayl

they gement COl mana k' has been wor 1111

b·t of news ought I American woman

the in pride, ArneI' be~re always being

erior European WO ::PAmerican women.

[IS been . a lo~g, <ince the Amencan i bOred under the h al . n that in orde

de USIO h her worth to er she bad to work m

sigh about stan hOt stove all day Ihe lord of the m:

• woman's work is n

a long time Amer ha l 'e frankly and re

on lo e device they

to ease the drudger a house and fal

and well fed.

the leisure time t' sal'ing devices I them, American

have looked for and , new ways of ma

livcS count for sometl

hold £lawn full or I Iherby helping move up the -and reliel'ing ,

of Ihe p1'eS5Uri Ihe only wage earnl

family.

have laken Ol'el communily jobs

to be done.

others have found c oullets for Ihdr ene are certainly more

Ihan doing h the hard way. jus to their husbands

aren't lazy.

it would seem that i~ respect. at least, the A

woman is at least ahead of her

sister_

accidenls may I m unbelievably

especially in the I contribute greati·

ca5ualilies. Poor' the basement s

leU in unlighted p' nai! Ihat has come

catches a slipper, 0

of a handrail an that could be '

By MTLLETT

FIX U THIS NTEI

Skilled I

able· imlT building, ll1odellin5

Let's . , .If you I ' . .'"9 a bal

·the IivinS cabinets, . room,or'l

ed. trad ..

It is ali . wQl\s~ g,

'. :}~r~itu ... , :;·)~~J!ain~··,

l.R ': 'is: tI ... :.- ,:

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Page 7: Nova Ltd. la', n ie~ena er n' elver UIcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · Elizabeth A vc. 9·4171 : :;: ... (left), was named Veterans Af· fairs ... ma~y on downtown

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TlIE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDL~ND, FEBRUARY 14, 1963-'

"ASTRO-GUIDE" For Thursday, February 14

Present-For You and Yours .•. ]t's beller to work solo than, io waste time trying· to get othCI> to c!Hlperatc. Tcm­pers tend to be short under cur­rent ~onfig\lrations, Business problems need undivided. allen~ tion, SO don't try to mix pleasure with work during office hours_ Social aclivities arc favorably aspect~d during, evening hours.

,By Ceean

, _.,

,:

'.'

Past _ .. The Great Wail of Future ' •. More and more China was completed during the automobile repairestablishments second century B,C, by Emperor will offer night service as it is

.... I

Shih Huang Ti, Ch'in rulcr who , . had deposed the old sovereign. meon~ement for many people. to He unified the country', ami had get their cars taken care of dur­tne wall built to keep out aggrcs- ing the day. sivc nomads.

The. Day Under Your Sign .·.f

!111',r have

:\~' \ ::~l': :~'.m wo­\ .. " ~t',~ ~\':. ;::~I.i l)rh~n

.!"~: " ',I.;\~ I':' m:lkillg ::. ;'~ :: ,'.:' :.':" :-8nl'thing.

"" >,':" ~.::' tl:' p;;I't· .~, :",t'.>' l·,l':;<n:.: t~H~il'

.': ~. 7"" '\( ~:r :!l(' N'P~'

. ',::." .;~} :"'::C\:n~ thl'lr • < ••• I .1.. '\" .' ..... ·Tt' of '.!" .•. ,.\ :' ..• , •

~: :_: '~.~ ',I.i:" l.::':l+..'t' 111 llelicious hmncmnde Anll!lama Dread Is an easy and quIck recIpe to make, particularly since no kneR(Ung Is requIred. It ItDS an Interestlng opcn texture; while COllll1le:tl and molasses gil'c it a robust, unique flavor,

"'("~ ~.~\C ~J~l'~: ll\\'!' :111 .:' :: ::~~' :~::y .'-'\.; that Delectably Different Batter Bread

··c~ ... ,il t' !\'~U1d crC'nt· ::C~ :::- !~:t'::. t'r.t'rgi(l:O; '.,' ,'" :":'\' ·"11f't.' "'out .'t \:.~'~' ",:.\:::., , h\;\I"'~' ~ ,.\,. . '''.. .

", '."" W;" hl,t to t :. "(:~ ;,::~:\l:hls thnt n::::,;)

\,.,.,': I~C:11 t:l:1l In this '<:":: ,1: 'C.1.: t!l~ Amer­,: .. ~: :~ ;'!~ ~(,.1st two

.. \ },'''1,~ d h~r Eur-

Onc thing that's bound to ~P:lI"k liP :U1y meal is a home­b3kNI loaf of bread. But many houscwi\'es hesitate to bake their own brC:ld becanse they don't ha\'c the time to spend lon~ hours in preparation, es­pccially if they arc unsnre of thc cnd result. However, no\\,­nthys haking with yeast is not nearl~' as complicated as some peoplc think, Many recipes arc so simplified that the time involvcd is no morc than that required [01' ordinary baking. And rigid testing of rccipes be­[ore their publication ensurcs C\'cn the novicc baker of suc­cessful resnlts,

Typical of the many yeast products that can be made in in double quick time is this rccipe for Anadama Bread_ Families who enjoy the unusual will love this robustly flavored bread made with cornmeal and molasses. And there's no nced to knead the dough. The ingrcdients arc mixed in one bowl, tUL'llcd into the baking pan and allowed to rise just once before baking. After the bread has baked the top is brushcd with buttet· or mar­garine and sprinklcd with corn­meal. For a special treat, serve Anarlama Bread with buttcr and jelly, while It is

s,.::,~c:b :l'.Jy n'sult ;:;~<'~:t'\ J~'ly 5nwl1

t>t<,:.::y i~ Ih,' homc. I'::;:~:::" ~:·~3th· to ~l'.::;:.~:t~ P"M 'li~ht­

:-: :..~( ~J~l':lw:H stain~.

, :f:~ ::-: :::":.:;hh'd plact'!'. . :"L. :~:1: ~.1:' ~',',m(' loose ~,::"f~ ., ~!:t1r'C·. or the ~ 1 ~:1::.:~~:: are illl

POllY'S POINTE.RS C~\::.~ h' l':lsily

.lfcm 1l e 1'8

Make a Ladder Stay Put

~) IIIlU:1T

~ ~

'Ili~ \

\",1 biters, knuckle .. pity on

Sreok the

BY POLLY CRAMER DEAH POLLY-To prevent

yuur stepladdcr from slipping whilc doing repair jobs around the house put the ladder's legs in old gym shoes, ~ms, C, T.

DEAR POLLY - The next t iene hubby changes wiper blades save an old one to use when 'vour windhsield fogs on the INSIDE. You can wipe the fog nway without streaking or smearing the glass,

L, W.

DEAR POLLY-When you find it necessary to put tll'O

--,---~=

FIX UP THIS NTER! !

Skilled and unskilled labour is avail­ab!e immediately to help in home bUilding, repairing, redecorating, re­modelling, so •••

Lef's Do It NOW!

card tables together for extra company, hold the tables to­bands on adjoining legs. This together with strong rubbcr eliminates danger of spills be· cause the tables can't slip part.

;l1HS. J, E. L.

DEAR POLLY-Since many of the sweaters we teen-agel's wear are made of animal hairs, I experimented while laundering my fur blend sweatcrs. To the rinse water, I added one bottlecap of cream hair rinse for each sweater and was thrilled with the soft, new looking rcsults.

KRIS

DEAR POLLY-I love con­tour sheets but sheet sorling and bedmaking days were making two nightmare days a' week, since the manufact­urer's elusive Iiltle corner tape had to be folded out. Wilh youth... beds, twin beds and a double bed in the house, Ihe problem became horrendous. I had some lubes of textile

stili warm from the oven.

ANADAMA BREAD Yleld-l loaf

1,2 cup yellow' cornmeal 2 teaspoons salt 3 tablespoons shortening ~~ cup molasses 1,-2 cup boiling water Ih cup lukewarm water 1 teaspoon granulated sugar 1 envelope fast-rising active

dry yeast 1 egg 21/, cups (about> once-silted

all-purpose flour

Measure cornmeal, s a I t,

shortening, molasses and the I,', cup boiling water into a large boil; slir until weli blended. Keep at room temperature.

Measure the I,~ cup luke­warm water, Stir ill the sugar. Sprinkle with yeast. Let stand 10 minutcs, then stir well. Stir dissolved yeast, egg and 1'.'j cups of the flour into luke­warm cornmcal mixture, Beat until smooth and elastic. Stir in remaining 1% ('ups flour and blend well, Turn out the rather sticky batter into a greased loaf pan (4\-2 x 81" inches, top inside measure) and spread evenly, Cover. Let rise in a

Green Salads Provide

Pleaslrre, BY GAYNOR MADDOX

Health ,/, cup Tarragon Frencn

Dressing 1 bunch green onions or

scailions

warm place, frec. from draft, until doubled in bulk-about 1'" hours. Bake in a modcr­ately hot oven (375 deg. F.l 45 to 50 minutes, covering ioaf with a double thickness of brown paper after the first 20 minutes, To test loaf: tap the top crust (which becomes quite brown) with the knuckles; when bread is baked, the sound should be hollow. Turn out immediately and place on a wire rack. Brush top with meltcd buttcr or margarine and sprinkle with a i1tUc corn meal. Allow the ioaf to cool complctely before stor· ing,

1M PRAYfR . o~Al flOIll

:'.1an looketh on the outward appearance, but the Lord look­eth on the heart. (l Samuei 16:7),

PRAYER: Our Father, teach us to treat no man as common. Help us to search for beauty in people, as we do in nature, aud recognize their potential good, May we with patience and love strive to win the un­lovely person to Thee. In the !lame of Christ, who loved us ,and gave Himself for us. Amen,

Homemakers PERSAUDEllS

If you are doing some re­modeling indoors while the weather is still inclement, you may have trouble coaxing screws and bolts to loosen. Those that grip wood are es­specially difficult. Loosen their grip with a few drops of peroxide or vinegar.

WAX INGENIOUS

Green salads make impor­, tant contributions to the wen­I, balanced meal. Thl!y add

crispness, flavor and eye-ap­peal plus valuable amounts of essential vitamins and min­erals, That is why they are an economy buy in health in­surance for all the family and should be included at least once in each day's meals.

Wash and thoroughly dry salad greens. Tear into bit~­size pieces and place in a salad bowl tnat has been rubbed with a clove of fresh garlic. Toss lightly, making sure each piece of the sarad

A bit of indoor greenery helps keeps spirits up. If you like to shift your potted plants around the house, don't bc afraid of putting them on finished tablcs. You can avoid scratching by ap­plying a coating of paraffin to the vase bottom,

'greens is coated with dress­ing. Arrange over the top peeled onions or scallions,

TARRAGON FRENCH DRESSING

(1 cup)

ARIES (B.,. Mlr<n 2t 10 A"il 19) LIBRA (S.pl. 23 10 001. 2Z) Don't forrd, 10 taio:e .J. token of your ar· ]}o~'t .try to c,xert prc!!nre (I~ t~cse in ftetion to your loved. ones today. authOrity. You Il get wh:lt ycu r,e after.

TAURUS (Ap,iI 20 10 MIY 201, SC9RPIO' {Ocl: 23 10 .~ov. 211. ' Turn a deaf el1' to any friends who try Do!'! t make :a. 1u.sty dec1lnon. You re in (0 involve yOU in a Jpeeul:aH,c: venture. polilio~ to playa waiting (;ame~ GEMINi IMIY 21 10 Jun, 211 ~AGmARIUS INov, 22 to D,c. 211 Be ~ little more htaIthoconsc;oU!. Cut Dring your work tl) the attention (If JU' down on food, drink and long lloun. verion during this b~die period.

CANCER (ju •• 22 to July 211 CAPRICORN (0 .. , 22 to J.n, 20) You may have (.luse for celebration, ~ut Don't antac;cnire others as you m:ay need don't go overboard. Retire tarly.' 1hdr good will .!:ooner than you think.

lEO (July 22 10 AU9. 2 II AOUARIUS (Jon. 21 10 F.b. 191 _ You hive what it take! to gtt whlt YOU (;00<1 a~Ptct! for traTeI suunt takia1r ",oant but you hue to apply yQ~melf. a short jlunt to a ncuby ci~y.

.VIRGO (Auq, 22 to S •• t. 22) PISCES ,(Feb. 20 I. March 201 Tal.:e it U"'Y If you don't feel up to fU.\. 'Fortune smiles on yon. Sha!'e ,our· rood ilti around. Tomerr,",', another dar.! luck with those around you.

01963, FI.ld Enlerprl'e!, 1 ...

TO-MORROW THESE MADCAP MUSICIA~S BLOW UP A

, STORM IN THE MERRIEST COMEDY IN YEARS!

iTNI","D In Eootman COLOR -

JAMES ADBlRISDN JUSTICE

LUliE PHILLIPS PAUUUSSIE

kENNETH WILLIAM' LIZ fUSER

ERIC IIRlER JENNIfER JIYNE

JINMUHOMPSDN .... SID HE! JIM is

Also - UP-TO-THE-~IINUTE NEWS

TIMES OF SHOWS

EVENING SHOWS 7 O'CLOCK - 9.00 MATINEE: 2 P.M.

LAST TiMES TO-DAY "CONCRETE JUNGLE" -

Also "FLAME IN THE STREETS"

NEWFOUNDLAND'S FRIENDLY THEATRE

NOW PLAYING

"Words Are completely Insufficient l~ bprdss lhe lrue quality An btent O~ tloquence I" "ot\nto lhis Picture. \l 'IIu". 'I,)lll

I,mHUJrIU" u

Winnor Best Performance Award Cannes Film Fust!va11962 - Murray Melvin '

Winner 8est Performance Award Cannu Film F8.lIva11962

Winner of 4 Brttllh Academy Awards

,I

. If you have been planning on add­Ing a basement room, redecorating the .living room, getting new kitchen cabinets, building ,a sewing or game room, or an extra bathroom, the skill­ed tradesmen are available.

It is also a good time to paint, paper

paint (available at dime stores) ballpoint tubes in all, and fast colors which I had been using to name-tag personal belong­ings. I now mark all four sheet corners with neat, one­fourlh inch high Initials-YB for youth botlom-DT for double top and so on, using a dif­ferent color for each size.

I lettered paper strips-' twin bcd, double bcd, etc.­and taped these strips to the front of the linen closet shelves. No more chugging to the master bedroom only to dis­cover I 'have a youth bed bot­tom sheet and a twin topper.

Shapes of the' foods com­bined should be varied and interesting. For instance, cut some food into long pieces, some round, etc. Avoid cut­ting them in pieces too small, in order to prevent the hashed look. Add the dressing to leafy green saluds and some fruit salads' ,ust before using. This prevents limp, wat~ry salads. Also, always serve on chilled plates.

v, cup tarragon wine vinegar 0/, cup salad or olive oil 1 tablespoon fresh lemon juice 1 taspoon ,sugar

Heart disease has increased during the past half ceutury un­til it is today's chief killer, due, mainly to the stress and tension of modern living, Re­gular medical checkups are advisable procedure for those over forty and the advice of the doctor as to diet, exercise and work should be followed strictly. Older people should be guided by their doctor in taking up sports.

Much advise is directed to people who are nearing retire­ment, in regard to the best way of spending the new lei­sure. Leaving a busy career is sometimes too much of a shock aftet being active and responsible, It is beller to study various hobbies and crafts unli! one is found that will prove a satisfactory sub-

TIMES Of SHOWS EVENING SHOWS: - 7 O'CLOCK - 9.00

MATINEE: 2 P,M.

~all~, get new drapes, recover the urnJtur., dryclean the' rug and

CVrtains, and g.t your car tuned up. T E R is the time' for action.· So...

yOur contrador, service man etc. or put In a call to the NATIONAL EM- ' Co OF.FI~ of the, Unemployment In-

tnmlilion. '

S. K.

DEAR POLLY-To make a 'party-size relish tray, a good : idea is to secure a small bowl ,with. florists' clay In the mid­dle of a large chop dish, Place dip or spread in the bowl and arrange your other appetizers around the edge of the platter.

ANN

I

TOSSED SPRING SALAD-(8 servings)

Ih medium-head lettuce V. head curley endive V, head· escarole lAo ,medium-head romaine ~ head Belgain endive,

optional 2 cups raw' spinach Salt to taste ' Ground black pepper to taste

1h taspoon powdred mustard 0/, teaspoon salt 'I. teaspoon ground black

pepper 1'h teaspoons finely chopped

.fresh Dillon, 1/, teaspoon crumbled tarragon

leaves, '

Combine aU ingredients and beat well with a rotary beater.' Store In a' covered jar or bDttle in the refrigerator.

, stitute for the old job and that may, -If necessary prove gain­ful.

--------------------------------------- : . NEXT AnRACTION

KIRK DOUGLAS - LAURENCE OLIVIER - ~ JEAN SIMMONS..,.. CHARLES LAUGHTON 1 - TONY CURTIS, in IfSPARTACUSII

- •

SPECTACLE - THRILLS - COLOR.

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Page 8: Nova Ltd. la', n ie~ena er n' elver UIcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · Elizabeth A vc. 9·4171 : :;: ... (left), was named Veterans Af· fairs ... ma~y on downtown

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ia- THr: DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, FEBRUARY 14, 1963

"

SUPPORT THE

ST. JOHN AMBULANCE

GIVE GENERO~SL Y ,

GERAL S. DOYLE LIMITED

SUPPORT THE ST. JOHN

i\MBULANCE Servicing the Public of Newfoundland for

over 52 years.

GIVE GENEROUSLY

HARVEY & CO., LTD. WATER STREET ST. JOHN'S

.. . , , ,

. .. . --_.

FOR STOVE OIL

AND FUEL OIL PHONE 8-3007 - 8-7469 - 8-3001

SUPPORT THE

ST. JOHN AMBULANCE

The Great Eastern Oil COMPANY, LIMITED

FOR OVER 52 YEARS

THE ST. JOHN AMBULANcE HAVE SERVED THE PUBLIC OF

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Give Your Support

Ic/lild rO~i;Hllij

itA Dream of Fruit and' Cre<lm"

THE MANAGEMENT AND STAFF

of "

ST. JOHN'S MEMORIAL STA:D'IUM

I WISH TO THANK

The· ST. JOHN , /

AMBUL.ANCE '\

for their ~ervice, which they, gfve freely

at the ·Stadium •.

l

,PUBliC DUTY

TRAINING TR",p./ING

SERVICE TO ALL

SUPPORT

February 1st to 28th

GIVE GENEROUSLY

,

ST. JOI-IN AMBULANCE

SERVING THE PUBLIC OF

NEWFOUNDLAND FOR OVER 52 YEARS

Give Generously

Help The St. John Ambulance Association

FURTHER THEIR WORK IN NEWFOUNDLAND

GIVE GENEROUSLY

Browning .. Harvey L~MITED

WATER STREET

For a few cents a day you can have the

BEST protection money can buy. , •

A MERIT Insurance Policy Contact your Merit Insurance Man today,

SUPPORT THE ST. JOHN AMBULANCE

GIVE GENEROUSL.Y

The ST. JOlIN AMBU'LANCE

SERVING NEWFOUNDLANDERS

fOR OVER 52 YEARS

, THE fiNEST' IN

Hardware and Sporting Goods

SUPPORT THE

81 JOI-l~ AMBULANCE

HARRIS & HISCOCK .. UR' WATER STREET

. (

KEl"SEDY _ Hip·1I:

(CPI nation coats, a 'h

booming s I on d the res . an h gin earcl e

of jaz-the~ m n n I i c images'Jventure, thai "itb in Ihe UI era

It behind. . Ie . I prohibition years 0 in a, gimc bathed the scars of hidingl t the poli

buies. d th \\'idcsprea

thee lalV thatl

ini~1 respectable 0 c

. the U.S. in the 1~92OS was by no. "tl

d '2 pel' cen an .•. nOI'elist Andrew

in a penelr rereals Prohibition _ called It is the

of Exces~ine closely to ~~ and decay 0\ gro and sho\!

tragic than CI more tt '3 massive a eml

co~lrO!~me to viol I often little to cl

\\'3~he prohibition a gangster bootleggl TO DRINKERS I members 0

Christian Tempe d the powerful

ateague declared no punishment

lor drinkers­the longue, bra! and el'en execut

said that \\' . law into the .C~I

a "crownin~ sllh~ it had to cor:e. since \Rj\ a wale 01 sentiment had SIl'C[

growing stronger

it took the Firs~ hring country,wHIt The drys \ln~sha

wartime em prejudices to thei r

summarizes

brewers lVere Gc beer was unp~1

stopped Americal from firing sll

liquor was a tol. in g used up 11.

AU

DAYS By WARD CAl'iNEI

YORK (NEAl -. happiest days in

lire are (a) the' boat and (b' II

it.

loday, III yean biggesl aqua mal

since Helen of TI' boaling craze shu of cure. display at the boa

the products 01 500 bUilders II'orking

an 8·foot (0 a 60.[0 suburban

Page 9: Nova Ltd. la', n ie~ena er n' elver UIcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · Elizabeth A vc. 9·4171 : :;: ... (left), was named Veterans Af· fairs ... ma~y on downtown

:2 YEARS I

~sly I ,

ohn

tion N

ey T. JOHN'S

usly

and ds

SECTION II THE DAILY NEWS SECTION II ST. ,JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, FEBRUARY 14, 1963-9

. ,

ROHIBIT/ON. • • the era excess I\r~~Ellr ! lual'cs of barlcy a dar. which

flRI!!;" :~ llil'.fla~ks. ciuld have fed the starving al· .\, I' .\ nalion rid·' lies: thercfore thc consumption

" ,\,,\ .. ' f I I " :~"\,; ~''l,"lm~ shares, 0 a co 101 was treason, !<\ ,n 1 ;111' !'l'stless LASTED 13 YEARS

at ,;:0 :;'c an' 11ll' pop· The \.:,S, went officially dry

'I. ;JI-t ~ 111';1 II lie allll at midnight on Jan. 16, 1920.

Speaks Lions'Meet

:Jir~. r'!Il11 rr, Ihal Ihe Thirteen years, 10 months and ",:i :l'- I\n Ih(' l'niled 120 days later. prohibition endcd PLACENTIA- Pcrry Wcst, .", ~~jl1d. ,in as bli~d a surge of scnti· managcr Royal Bank of Canada "',~ ('! 1,wlllllllilln nlll

kl' i m~.\l~ as ,t had btfgun, , I' at Argentin, was guest spcaker

~1," I in ~ "illll'1"ac'! liS. says au 101' Smc !1Il', at the Placentia Lions regular

,Pinball Fun • In Old Nippon ~'~,~"~,, th' •• :,'ar~ of rna·: was inevitahle from the begin· h • ' monthly meeting February 6.

It'R callell "Pachinko," the playing homl stands on end, bul the little ball goes down and

""~';lili~. Ihr p,,!ilkal; lIing,. :'~'h: rC.nl Iragedy of the The tcxt of his speech was around JURt like in plain, old pinball. And some 20 million Japanese feed the little I.teel hr 1Iirl<';I'"r;,,! COil' I proluhlhol11st ](l('ology was that "banking". He stilted that the ~ 1111 Ihat 1II.1,·ded, it left 110 room fOI' tempcl'ance, " I:;t :I~bk "f "lliz~ns i "The dl'Y crusade slipped purpose of thc Royal Bank was

balls to the machines, to the tune of a hal(·billion·dollar·a,yeal· business, In 1919 Takl!lchi

~.I\, :n the rip. I slowl~' from a moderate remed)' sCI'I'icc to the people, In Can·' ". ,:.r \~; Iw III' mcans fnr obl'ious evils into a total ada, h~ said, .there, are :ight !,~~ ".. I' Ir ""I'e "II f(ll' SOCI'ct".. chal tel ed banks WIth . :J20no

i ,,' 1'('" ... ·n .1 .' '.. J' b I h 04 !~\ .'~ 'I'" Sin.: The roots of l>I'ohibition hc ranc ICS ownd y some 1 ,000 . cI',rli,1 .\IllI,1I , • 1'113' holl I' Th " h t

,', !11' ,1 1":1l'lratin~: finds .. went deep i!lto the basic S ,IC e e s, e~ \\e~e c ar· :t'~'i' rfl'lll\'lti"" _ Ihe! Amel'lcnn con f II c t between cred by the Federal gO\ erument [I/i.~" II i; Ihr first I cOI!nl1'y and city that came to and rerulatcd by thc Bank Act.

lIas3mura revived the ganlc, which frizzled III the late '30s-,and the craze was on. Over on-e'

million m,lchines IVcre in OlleratiOn at height oC the frellzy. While the number has slipped to

ulllier one mllllon, the "hard core" players arc loyal, faithCul-and ever hOlIefui of making .It

big 8nfl taking home many prizes.

,~ • I, ;~linr ,'h.-iy Ihe' a heild in the late Igth ccntury. Mr, ,~est statcd that ba~ks ~[,~'~od d,',ay 11f lhe' The old America of the frontier dealt In. money, and thc thm,g I r~;~'i~1 ;111,1 ,I,"", the' flu'mers distrusted the spread of ut!"os~ 111 a bank manager,s \~~";I;~:I" Ih,lll cilmic. I 1~I:han anel industrial Americ~, mmd IS the care of thc ~eopl~ 5

Upshle.elown attcntion,getting sign marks a Tokyo Paehlnko __________________________________ _

parlor. The Ilinball game is playell on a vertical board and

". m),,11 r ~:trml't at· \ Illa~e saloons wcre sordId moncy they had dep?slt~d !n ,~ •• ;;'" I ennul!h places, hul in the gen. the bank Another sen'ree IS aId

~~:" rlmr h' li"lenee, i cl'al rerolt against the loss of a to people to travcl all over the . "':';n lill!e 11' cilll11SC, nntigc rural culture, alcoholic wor~d.., • It:,~" ~r~hlblli"11 :l~rnts. \'Icc became associated with a\1 Dlggmg mto t~e h}story of

::'''Icr 1""IIh'~~l'rs, ! the othcr halcd aspects of the the Royal ~ank 111 Newfou,nd. "'''''RI''''L'II~ I wickcd cit" land he said that the first Til ~ .,.,r, ' , ,. b h d t st J 1 ' 'If 01 h rr, of thc, PIIOFITS TO CASADA .ranc was opcne a . 010 S ;'::;;11.0 T,'I!lI"'r;lI1l'e "On the rOCk. of thc I~th m 1895, then the Royal Bank •• , ~"''''''fnl \nti. .\mcndmcnt \'ll1age Amcrlca was known as the Merchants

~ I;;,;',;' ·o,':.!;;rr,1 ·pllb .• ~lnde its \;;51 stand." Bank . .• ,' ';~:' ntl11l,hllll'111 \l'as! Canada profited from the ex. He. stated that. the C~nadian

·"-.:.~.t r,.i o,·j,;hl':·,-hang· : pcriment in thc United States, bankmg s),stem IS the Cmest in · -,. 1"1'''(- \l1"llIrlill": nl' l'l"i she was o!!ician .. ex· thc world • • \ t~r \ . .... . I ~. • .... .~ •

· ,', J Mil <,\ .. cution. : porting m?I:~ than 1.000,O~0 gal.. A question and answer period ; .rr'.:< ;.,Ii Ih;,1 IITlt!"!! !ons of SPllits a, year to Ame~'1 followed :'Ill', West's s eech and

:"., :~Iil Ihe l"11l,t11U' Ica. to say nothlllg of less offl' InallY L'on 1,'1 d P f th . . ...... It' d th t. I s a at c 0 e '1' .... ~"'I1I11·· ,111111(';5, ('In en erpl'lses an e no 01' h t k th

I,. ~" '1(\ ''<'~l\r Thr!',,: iOIl, r'!11HUnncl's. c at~cel or s~c' :nsw~rscon I c I~,:";'i; " II;1\<' (If ;lIl1i. ;iot untit H130 diet the Cnna. me 101 0 an IIlg III anal a, ';':':::r:1I !,,,d ,lIrpl the dian gOl'crnment attempt to: Other business at thc Lions

,:1',,:n. ,I:'''':~('I' ('ach >Iem thc flood of whisky acrosS meeting wcre lettcrs of thanks the bordel'. received the CNIB and the

: '.'" n,,' "1:,1 WMtd I KiI~g, ,George' \'. who thoug~t Newfoundland Tuberculosis As· :' \.:~, [10:1111,,)',\\ IIlr prn·, prnlllhilion out\'a~e~us, was sanl sociation for the collcctions

1'::,' ~;~, 1I1l:l,h;1Il1l'dly ,to hal'e been delighted by a carried out in the arca for these · w,:::nu' !'millions nursery·rhyme parody of the I organizations.

;:I;;.i:.'t' In II:ril' own time: r The Pyrenees ;o,lollntal'n5 ~;1I11m.'·!lr; Iheir: "FOllr and twenty Yan·

! kees, feeling mighty <il'y, I form a natural barrier hctween

has Japan in a half·billion.dollar topsy.turvy tizzy.

':flf;; lIerr (;rr~w.n; i Touk a trip to Canada and France and Spain. according to I '. ~'r \\a; unpall'llillr. . hought a casc of rye, - the Encyclopedia Britannica, , ,:.m'en .\m('m'an ~1I1·1 When the case was opened.

;11';)ighl:' the Yanks began to sing. . The Indonesian archipelago I Steel balls for playing Pachlnko 'To lIeU II'ith the Ill'esident IS pockmarkAd by '00 \'01

I ""., coCfee grirlllcrlikc machine.

-God Save the King!'" canoes, rents a ball. Customers take

arc doled out through this Two yen (less than half a cent) trars full.

You Pllt the steel ball in-It drops from top to bottom of the pinball·on·end boan1. If it drops in tile I,roper hole, you get 15 steel balls back for one played.

Winners trade baUs for candy, cigarette,;, tinned foods. IIIone, pay.oHs are lIlegal.

AOUAMANIA EPIDEMIC

DAYS OF HELEN OF TROY

sa~'s, It was the technical de· .velopment in boat trailers, fih· erglass hulls, larger outboard motors and marine engines that always start ••. well, almost always.

New Idea May Aid .Heart Disease Diagnosis' I Equally large, howcver, has KINGSTON, Ont. (CP) - An 'I brainchild of Dr, Graham At least two more years uf! The first of its type. the ap· sistance and direction oC Orsel bcen the development of the idca born in the mimi of a Schuler. 3n, now a research Iel· testing will be needed hefore paratus measures the electrical Roy of the NRC medical re·

d I Quecn's Unil'ersity medical stu'llolV at Queen·s. the nlachine will be ready for· aelil'it)' associated with h~art I search laboratory.

camera an co or printing proe· I t f' . Th . I' k I contract I' on and shOll'·. tll n <e I '.Ir, RD.", a graduate. of the ess, Boating looks great. Even (en Ile yars ago may un·' e mac une- 'no\\,n as an genera lise. ., -- ., •

1, 1I'.\Rll 1".\\. '\. '1'.1, i prol'e knowlcdgc of the hcart's area display electro • cardio· It has becn brought to full impulse, on a series of small: University of Manitoba. has rage, an estimated 35,000 small I n t.he dead of winter when the action and speed diagnosis of graph-is dcsigned to pinpoint development through far:ilities television screens. i been granted his master's de·

. YORK ,\L\I _ :\o\\'. craft for local salc, ~ruls~r stands oozing idle status heart disease. heart damagc and develop a of the medical electronics sec· The machine picks up the im· gl'ee from ~!cGill University. "1~,ppi1,\ da)s in a hllat. At the hest sholl' (or its In drtvc~~y and ~ackyard, The idea has resuited in a sure and fast met1lOd of evalu· lion of the National Research I I I I ~ I

::!c m I. I IiiI' d31. he trade.onl\.' previcw) are the na In addition, a It.fe on the sea pn 51'S t Iroug I a lout ,n e ec· . ' t d h h f new electronic device; the I ating the heart·s condiJion, Council in Ottawa, . trodes placed on the chest ,>'"1 and I h' Ihe day tion's 1,500 major marine deal. 0 a~ .as som~t 1Il~ or el'er~· -----. -.. --- . ' .. ers who sell an avcraged of one 111 the fa~tlY. F or dad: Ius i (;JVI':S TOTAl, PICTUIIE

" Ihr \alional' $500,OO'lI'orth of boats and ac· own radar, shlp,to·shore phone, N Z I d L b D t I Pre"iollsly the only wa;- of ,cessories cach year, depth sonnder, fog !lorn, t'or ew ea a n a or s. a r y! rear\ill~ these implllses was , In the crowds. too, arc a mom: porthole clIJ't,alllS a~d he·" 'I: wilh Ihe cOIl\'entional r.1edro·

'I:lmd 10 till' la,tl' of handsome represent:ttioll oC the low·decks decor I~ ,mlx.and. r4 1 cal'llin~l'~m, This ~ho\\'rd only .: '. bO"III1~ A!1H'l'kans: olher 15,000 deaiers who dis. match colors. for JunIOr: n~w I il parti~1 pirturc of the heart's . I!~ I'''~, fn"" flo,lon! play for s~le flnc or two boats pOl·tahle TV, portable radIO" ! Intal electrical aclivity and it

lid (\rlrlan,IIO Seat· ; in their '::HS stations, hardware portable l'ecol'd player. IF. ' L d h · ( · · I took years of Iraining before a

,.. '. I SIOI'CS, parking lots or - in a 1"01' ,the out.of.town, f,riends, : a C I ~ g "e' a e r SIp : (Judor could accurately read I ~I). 10 ~ri'I" aftrr fl'\\' cases _ haberdashery there IS also actual snlltn~. I rlSIS I its graph,

. ,il;,eH Iqll:1I11aniil rpi. : shops. The last element, but eqnally I ~;~,tf 1l~1~1I pr '[rny, the: Added togcther, boating in large \vi.th the others, is thl! I The new machine is ricsigned I'

'.i','1C crm ,hll',\'s no lhe nation today rests quite fact of hfe about ownership. A " . ' to take the totai picture, Wr. . comrortable at about $2,5 bit. man who owns a, craft _ any. lIy .r. C. GRAHAM cr'1I1 W~llter !\a~h. a SelllfJl La' l l11cyer !lamed a repllta~lOn. !0l'1 'rite inca came to Dr. Schuler 1

~I Ihr h";;1 show, lion fcq) in retail salcs. craft, canoe or dinghy _ can Cllnadlan Press Concs]londcnl hoI' cahl11et nUlIIslel' as long, ngo I i1l1stel'lt~' as un IIllcomplOmlS1I1g, whcn he was in second year .. r ~ilil major: But, as Ihe other kind DC hardly wait to trade himself up J~UCKLAND !CP)-~hc ,New as 103:',. He wa~ prime ml~lstCl' \' taxer. I mcdicine, With encouragement!

\\nrklll~ al full : boating-what you hUI'e to do the.ladde~ from knockabout to IZeuland,Lahor: rartr IS f'lCmg a h'orn.I!la7 to 1UUO and now.ls op· .. r' ",' ,from Dr. J, D, Hatcher now' ,,' all 8f" .. 1 ('ollar" aftcr you buy the boat-is not cabm crulscr. Crom outboard to leadership CI'!SIS, rhe solullon pOSitIOn lead~l', lie retams a • t he 1.I"n hudMc~! saul tn" 11311' I head DC the univarsit "s ' h 'si·1 ,I .. ~'!: 10 a !ill.fotll Hie.' for cverybody there is also a Inboard, from leisure time fun may bear on Its hopes of hecom· complete gnp· on the labor hold a lot to do II It It Labol 5 de· I d t t J D P ~ H

suhurhan com. : second.hand b'oat bus'lness to. to deadly earnest investment. ing the gnvernment latcl' this i mo\'cment to this day, feat in 1960, is also th.ought to oogy epal' men. an 1', ' , I I I t ~ rd G. Kell)" associate professor da)' that probably adds anothcr And so, reports Boating year. But Nash .now is 81. He lavc p a~ce a par III ,0 • and cardiologist in the depart·

• hu, 0\'idcllt in half.billion dollars to the total. magazine, the average reader For 13 years the party has p~anned to retire la~t year. but, meye~ bemg passed ovC!: last ment of medicine, the young I,p Ihe producls of an. Now, what ever got us to this today Is 38 years old and earns been led by the rcdoubtable ve.t· 1115 dcput~ and" h~lr apparent, year III favor of Hackett m the students began three summers 1M b031 bllililel's 1\'110". h d f? abollt $10000' C F Skmncl' dwd suddenly contcst for deputy leader of the ~ . .. c .rome.an .canvas renzy. ' . " , . tOT t h' of research and planning. lin hasemcilt and gao i In large part, the industry "We are vitally interested," aftcr a short Il!~ess. par, y, PPOSI I.on 0 1m reo

says an advertising man, "in Keen competition ensued for maills substanltal. Working with grants from the Ontario Heart Foundation and aided by the departments of physiology, medicine and elec· trical engineering at the univer· sity. he produced a working model.

what the boat.owncr drinks the post of deputy leader. carrr· drives wears eats reads. He i~ ing the assul'ance of early suc· a co~munilY' lender. He influ. cession to the leadcl'ship" ,The ences opinion." party was so Dcutely diVided

In l\Iinnesota. not IIsually mnong several cO,ntenders that considered a seacoast state, a eveutuall~ the ch.OIce went to a

Some Labor SllPPOl'ters favor 1\1, 1\Ioohun. a genial Irishman aged [;3. fal'ther to the right in the party than Nordmeyer and a formel' national party secretary and minister for railways from

Both men acknowlcdge their indebtedness to American engi· nccl' Dr. Standford Goldman 01 Syracusc University. who in 194B pultlishcd thc principle 01 <I ~imilal' machine.

In Canada more people buy

Scngtnnrs V.O. than g;gy

other quality

whisky.

" ,1

' I

I t , . . 1

,. I "

"I " I,

! '

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! i wildlife observer. reports: COlJ1lll'ol11lse candl~lute, F: Ila,ck. "Boats on OUI' lakes nowadays e!t. , But even .oilS solulloll 1m· range from cano~s til 40.[00t medlatcly ran mlo trouble.

1!157 to IHoU. He would be pop· But the intensc young man: ulur witli Irade unionists and who grew up in Galt, Ont., i ' has friends in ail political par· gives credit for final construc'l (Not Inserted by the Board of

; I L I

It Klnllda, Cedar Rap[41s, and John Rie. 0,. :111.1, model new. uniforms approved for "I!tt~ II1lJtrR, In Am rs. Linda wears a two·ple~e "'it lie ~~ ~ltlte cot ton cord, John I white shirt,

Qat tro". er.. .

cruisers and houseboats," In Florida, a housing and reo

tirement·village developcr says: "Today you'vc got to give them houseboats or they won·t come."

Says a boat dcaler in Detroit with a quarter·million.dollar business: "Wonderful folks, these boat owners. Always thinking about their boats, buy· ins things to make them better, more comfortable, safer."

Says a Coast Guard cuttcr skipper in Truro, Mass., "They don't knolV the first thing about boating, most of them. There ought to be a law."

Says a boatyard man in Stan· ford, Conn., surveying his eli· ents' cruisers, yachts and sloops: "You want til buy a boat? Well, pick the one you want and come back In six or seven months. I've been in busi. ness here 10 years and I never yet saw a boat that wasn't for sale by August."

MORE DEPTH

TAXES ON: 0 IHCOME

• CAPIT~L ~ COHSUMPTION

B NewStharf I

WON'T STAND Hackett entered hospital Cor ri

serious and unforcsecn brain operation. He now is back in harness after a long convales· cencc. He says he intcnds to re· main in politics, but will not be a candidate for leadcrship of the party when Nash retires.

Faced with these successive emergencies, :-.lash has con· tinued to calTy the hUl'den of lcadership. But he has an· noun~d his intention' to rctil'c as Icader of the party imme· diatelv after the New Zcaland tour by the Queen this month.

That throws the whole situa· tion open once more. The ob· vious Jeader. long recognized as the ablest man in the party. ;s A. H. Nordmeyer, 61. But many Labor supporters maintain that he would be a political lia'Jiiity in the post.

A 'one-time Presbyterian min· istcr, Nordmeyer has been 28 years in politics and held cab· inet posts in the last two Labor governments, But he has never been popular with the trade lin· ion movement ami as minister of finance he earned intensc na· tional dislike Cor the "black bud· get" of 1958, in which he mct an economic crisis with saval!c tax inrrcases ovel' a widc field.

INTERNAL REVENUE...:.. When the tax system of the United States is compared with that of other nations, its most outstanding feature is its heavy reliance on in· come taxes. (Taxes on capital include property, estate, in· heritance and gi'ft taxes; taxes on consumption ara all other taxes.) As chart shows, in 1960, U.S, government obtained about 83 per cent of total tax revenues f~om taxes on income-highest per·

a 13.inch tail. It's CUI' is or great ccntage for . any country, NU'!' Io'OIlGOTl'F.N value. It lives usually in the Data is from First National This budget has nel'el' heen

The fisber,'a Canadian ani· mal of the marten family, does not eat flsb. It is. a bold and voracious hunter of small ani· mals, frogs and birds, thc Book DC Knowledge tells us.- 'Iihe fishcr; or pekan, runs to a body length oC 24 inches with

most remote woodlands. I City Bank. I forgotten or forgiven and Nurd· '. '

ties. tion of the apparatus to the as· Liquor Control) . ----------_ .. -----_._-----------_._--- ---

., BIRCH • OAK

• WESTERN HEMLOCK •. B.C. FIR

CONSTRUCTION & STRUCTURAL GRADES

Select Structural Grades from the tlnesl Mills In British Columbia.

TIMII!RS:- up to lj\" 1116-lengths to 40'

PlANJC..- up to 16" wta len9ths to 40'

OUR RUSH SHIPMENTS ARE WITHOUT PAIIAllfl

LC,L.. - CARLOADS - TRUCKLOADS

Buy NewfoUDd1a114 - .'

, Keep·. N.wfoundlan~· .:

'\'!o.-kill:

COMPLETE RES,t.WING AND DRES5INGfACIUTIII:, ~ TO MEET -EVERY RRlUIREMENT

IIIIOIIOIAII 8A80l011S ASPHALT 'AND cAl· MlI-· ..... - J CLARENVILLE .

CRW50TE Dt'JISION r~~~ NlWfOUNDWil ,

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Page 10: Nova Ltd. la', n ie~ena er n' elver UIcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · Elizabeth A vc. 9·4171 : :;: ... (left), was named Veterans Af· fairs ... ma~y on downtown

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,.to-THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, FEBRUARY 14, 1963

Leafs Are Second, Handle

0,

Big "M" TOI\O:-;TO (CPI- Frank Ma·

hOl'lich, the high·scoring left ,,;iriger who hadn't been able 10

bli)'; 0 goal of late. scorcd two Wednesday night and lcd Tor­onlo Maple Leafs to a 6·2 vic· tory O\'cr Delroit Red Wings.

The win. bdorc 13,914 fans, one of the smallest crowds of the season. put Leafs into sec· ond place. one point ahead of Montreat Cunadiens, and left the Wings in fourth placc, Ihree poInts behind ~Iontreal.

,

Wings 6-2 Has Two Tallies

four guals. ~Iuhol'lich sCOl'cd his second on anothcr Kelly pass, cutting in front of the net und outmunneuvring, Bassen at 6:07. pulford drew him out o[ position at 7:40 and shot into the net while falling.

B'ak~ Fineo

111O:mIE.\L ((PI

dent Clarence ran '-:­National Hockey ILP%l1 ~ fin d 'I ' ea!~ Ie .. (,Ii.real CO'th

I ~~O.o. for r~m"rl~ ~ne i 0!~lCW:1l1g :Iltel' C::n1d:J. I ~')'~ ,0 Tm'onto ~[~, ~ I nere Jlin, :il P,! I Call1pue!:', a I d I BI~I\c's ren.u!ks imnl' i o[flclal, hJd het on 'J>tt I of the ~am~ ',':cre e : unwarranted and

Hc ~dded in a stalem Blake', remark "'s ,tnt

II . . a ' re eellOn on the inte' '

[f' , I ,r,~ 0, ICIa S and is cleart, II '

Maho\'lich. who had been un· able 10 score for thc last four games. regained sale posses· sion of the National Hockey I,eague's ~oal • scoring lemlcl" ership with 29. two in front of Dctroil's Gordie Howe.

Armstrong raccd up the side while Horton was in the penalty box, got by Val Fontcyne and Delvecchio nnd Bassen went out to mcet him. The goal· tender steered the Lcaf l'ight winger to the sidc, but not so far that hc couldn't push thc puck into the net at 9:01.

Bassen II vent ,outd

ttOI mcckt I INTER-CLUB Bowling executi\·c elected last night at the annual meeting were (left to right) Kelly, 100, luI mlsse IC puc J' T b' E " b J .' which kept sliding right into thc' 1m 0 111, • xecutlve mem er; ack Cranshaw Vlce-Pres1dent; Ed Kearsey, President: Alf Smith, Sec-net at 19:~2. 1 \etary-Treasurer. And~ Samuelson and Alex )!~nglish are the other Executive members. The League

lio~ o[ the league rules" ' F"ddic Powers refer

,Rlormy game. in I\hit~ dre\~' a hench pellaltt [ tcstln~ a Toronto goal ~ CITEs PIlESS QtOTE The Wmgs had whal, ap' 1 has three new teams thIS year for a total of 29 and will start next Wednesday ni(jht at St. Pat's Alleys.

Ilcared to be al1othcl' goal III ,the ,b, '. third period. Bower came up __ .. __ • _______ ._ __________ ___ ______ _____ ( Stat[ Photo) Camphell ,aid in hi,

ment: "B1akc was . ;\Iontreal·jlatin (a ~ua~e ((ail, in )Iontrei)' ha\,ln~ said:

Tim 1I0l'tnll. Dab I'ulfol'd. G~rgc Al'lnstrong llnd Rcd, Kelll' al~o look mt\'al\ta~c of I ~Imky p'altendinl! by Ihc Wings' Hank Basscn to score for Lcafs. Kelly' assisted on both or Ma· IllWlich's goals. ,~Iex Dell'ccchio tmll Lam' .Ieffrey were the Detroi, marksmen.

with thc puck in his glove altcr ' -------.. -

~utshfJ~e h~Vi~~rk~::g,~(fc~~~~I(li I IN THE DUGOUT .... No. 9 FRASK :lIAIIO\'LlCIl

'Powcrs gave Bassen a miscon· duct on Ihe piny for arguing 100

strenuously.

had gone in nnd the Leaf goal· I '

~:~~~tedU~~~~h i~heOl~;)aIPj:(~~~\ I{e n S 'G t Th A' .. 'The !ea~ue

i talking about the

Bhlore Wednesday night, ~In· hOl'ltch had been able 10 score I1nl~' six goals in 21 games, far (lff the pace he set in the Lea[s' first 33 games whcn he had 22 ~oRls.

TIES IT UI' Del\'echio lied it al 17:02 on

a picture passing play that went from Howe 10 Parker Mac· Donald. thc Sydney, N,S. 11a· til'c. to Dell'ecchio. Leafs Ivent ahead again with the only goal of the second period. Mahol'lich look n pass from Kelly and went in alone, drawing the goaltendcr far from his net before shooting ..

::: :~'::d~th' l,u"'''''''1 a ~ ee s roa, e ce NB~~'E!!!~~~~~E~s'Stacklng Cards In Shuffle

am! start talking a\.:" officials, whose Work '~ J.!amc gave the hnpre~''''

i hact wagcred on the '-",

I Blake later denied rcmark aboul the bet. b;j

I sequently modified rJI

.Horton storted the rush that ~:\\'e hinl his goal and Leafs a 1.0 lend at 13:01 o[ the first period. carrying the nllck alone through most of thc Detroit tell\lI and finishing off the pia), front a scramble in front of the Rcd Wing nel. Referee Eddie

Jeffrey tied it ~gain at 2:25 of the third pcriod.

Then Leafs cxploded for their

Chicago Toronto Montreal Detroit New York Boston

W L T F A 1'1 2614 14 155126 66 (Ninth of 20 dispatches by 26 19 19 172 144 61 major leaguc managers

21 14 18 IG8 135 no 22 Ii 13 136 13857 t5 28 10 154 182 @

1129 14 16522536

For

St. Louis Card:llals' ;Ualluger As told to HARRY GRAYSON

By JOHNNY KEAN

Struightcning out thc Car· dinals for 1963, Gcncral Man· agel' Bing Del'ine made the grealest trades since the palm· icst days of David Harum.

I

Record Entry Construction Spiel

32 Tea~s Start Action Today

Shortstop had long been a trouble spot for the SI. Louis

I club, so we got Dick Groat, I i a k110wing b:lllplayer, from pittsburgh. In addition 10 be· ill gone of the truly great play· makers, Groat gives us Ihe lcadership we lacked on the field.

1'he third annual Newfoundland Construction Bonspiel opens at the St. I The Cardinals rcquired marc

J I ' C I' R' k tl' . ,,,. tl d h r I 1 power, so the Cubs were kind oms ur mg m us mornmg. ,1 1 n ret!or nurn er o· cur ers entl'rc( enough to fork over George

this ~'car the official opening cerelllon ies will take place at 11.00 a.m, ",:hen I Altman, the No.6 hittcr in the Sir Leonard Outerhddge will throw the first stone. ' Natio~al ~eagu~ la~t sea.son, ., .., • who fIts Dlcely mto right field.

Actual acbon m the spIel wIll he gm at 9: 9.15 a.lll, Tlus year members To obtain these two .300 hit· Or the Construction trades from Montreal, Halifax, Mondon as well as Cor- tel'S, we had to give up pitch· her Brook and Grand Falls will join with those of St. John's to have 32 ers La~ry Jackson and .Lindy . ' ..' ~!cDaDlel, shorlstop Julio Go· teams tnkmg Ilart III the double ellllllnatlOn affair. tay and catcher Jimmy Schaf·

The 'slliel will be a two days I 1. Fisber, B" Skip, Case, W, fer. To be frank, we figure to aUair wilh sessions set for this 71late, Cull, .JAR" 2nd" Zaho· ·lIInte, Winsor, G.C" 2nd" But· ,miss only .Jackson and Mc· lIlorning. afternoon and night, rski, V" Lend. IeI', RS" Lead, Cox, A., Skip. Daniel, who left us a little and Fritln~' morning and nfter. • • • Burke, Hank, Mate, Whelan, T. short in pitching, despite the noon, The affair will end with C-3 1.00 G., 2nd., Fowler, Rolaml, Lead, fact that Diomedes Olivo, a 5U'

a banquet at tile :-:ewfoundland 2, lIiel,man, E.L., Skip, Per. • • • , pcrior relief worker, also came lIotel on Fl'iday night. ley, A,I.., ~Iate, Higgins, B,E" D-3 2.45 in the deal with thc Pirates.

The listing of teams in Ihe 2nd, Fishel', J. G" Lead; Ayre, 2, Jackson, E., Sldp; Burdock, • • " r\'e"l: S., Skip; Grant, F. D" Matc; L.H" Mate, Vivian, F" 2nd" Thereforc we traded with

.\-1 9.15 Noseworthy, E., 2nd; Burnell Bal'fett, Edward, Lead; Tiller, I Clel'eland for Ron Taylor, a D" Lcad. D" Skip, Angel, J.B., lIIale, right.bander who last year had

i and said he had not i publication,

Carver, \Vh? hit the long ball I I CamoheH said lllake til and drove m runs ,ror Atlanta, notified of the fine 1:1 a~d Carl Sawatskl, who also I ~ay immediately, Will sce use as a left.hand coach \\',15 fined pinch.hit.ter. ., 1 punching a refer'~e in t~

Our flrst·line pltchcrs are ley Cup finals lwo !lal"

Bob Gibson, Ernie Broglio, Ray I' ,J

Washburn, Curt Simmons and Ray Sadecki. Relief help is to 1 M ercan come from Ed Bauta, Olivo and " Bob Duliba,

Sadecki will be in the Army H k until mid·April, which no doubt OC eV will call on one of several J others, perhaps recruit Ron The first place in Taylor, to fill his spot for a ~Iercantilc hoeker spell. I line tonight at 'the

In conclusion I want to ex· when AlTe's prcss the opinion that each one IE. F. B~rne; tangle at lUI of our trades added something Ayre's lead the to ~he Car~inals. I 12 points, while Bar'6

BlDg Devme couldn't have' tied with Xcws·Telv in l:e done belter. h~d he written his land slOl' with 11 'poi::! own prescrsptlOn. Referees for the

NEXT: Bobby Bragan on be Ron Harward an1 ' lIIi1waukee Draves. ler.·

Liston And ( In Verbal B

MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - From all the noise around Wami Beach, a tourist might get the idea. that Sonny Liston is going to fight Cassius Clay in Con· vention Hall April 4 rather than Floyd Patterson.

and get read)' for Li;:~ wiII fall befor,! me in rounds,"

Clay. the ;';0, 2 contender. will fight Madison Square

1, Ik1'l'Ick, I.F" Skip, Wall· ac~; Mark, ~Int~, Glos, C., 2nd, I'c~'rs F., Le~d; I\cll)', H. W., Skill, Roson. W, A .. ~Iatc, Pille, .1. r" 2nd. Stockle\·. G., Lead.

• " " Bastow, G. H" 2nd; Gossc, C, M. the secoml lowest earned·run C-4 1.00 Lead. avcrage in the International / DICK GROAT The heavywcight champion

arrived Friday to start training and the town was quict until Clay came in later in the day to move inlo a new Miami Beach home,

13, The unbeaten been calling the rOl1lld he disposes of his and predicls he'll stop

" . . . '\-2 9.15

3. Goodyear, K., Skip, Boolle, I • " • League. In that cxchangc we E.C" ~late, Snook, C.H., 2nd.,' D-4 2.45 gave up first baseman Fred

"A knowing ballplayer"

Dawe, V .. Lead; Angel, H., Skip, 3, Pennell, \V" Skip, Salsman, Whitfield, who figured in our Brown, JAG., IIIatc, Vey, \V.J. Dean, W., ~!ate, Butt, A.:lL, 2nd, plans mainly as a pinch·hitter, vel' and Julian Javier. How A., 2nd., Thomas, G.H., Lead. Bowden, F., Lead; Andcrson, since we open and close at first Altman, Boyer and illusial are

• • " J.G., Skip, Oke, Alex, Mate, basc with Bill White. moved will depend on who is D-1 1.00 Irving, D.H., 2nd., Pluss, W" The end result of the three, the hottest hittcr at the time,

4. Stoneman, J,A., Skip, Wil. Lcad. swaps is that we can put eight Groat solidified our infield, lett, G.E., Malc, Russell, P.P., men in OUr lineup this spring wherc White is the slickest dc· 2nd" Martin, T., Lcad; Winters, NON.PLAYING IlIEllBEltS . who as a group had a ,297 bat· fensivc first bascman in the

fielder Flood is without a peer going after a fly bll. Charley Jamcs, a belter than average outfielder making strides as a hitter, will spell !IIusial.

"I won't be here all Ihe time," Clay said. "I've got a home here now, but a man like me is in great demand every· where. I'll be popping in and out.

six. OFFER S 10 .\ ROr~m

In[ormed li13t 03, lown Liston',; adriw, Nilo~, told Ihe cham/Ie;: get him (Ol' you for a partner, \,;,~'ll gin hi:t round."

I'. i

'\ ::: I \ " : ' I .'\! 1

~ Corkulll, D.W .. Skip, Wal· Irf;. Doug, )Iatc. :llartin, R.F. R.~ .• 2nd .. Scllars, R,R., Lead; I'i'etc~)', W.F,. Skip, Fry, C.E., )tl~c, Han\inA. F., 2nd, EI· liott. C .R., Lead,

• • • :: ,\-3 9.15

G. R., Skip; Lalrellle, G., ting average last season. No league, Javier a really slick Mate; Goosney, R. J., 2nd; Sir Leonard Outcl'bridge, L. manager would fault a batting second baseman and an out· Bradbrook, F., Lead, R. Tucker, A, G. MacKay, T. order like this: Curt Flood, standing baserunner, and Boycr

• ~ • Coley, Ewen Kennedy, Frcd Groat, White, Altman, Ken the finest defensive third base·

Catcher Oliver came strong the last half of 1962, including hitting the home run that beat the Dodgers on the season's final day to forcc them into the playoff with the Giants Oliver is backed by Tim Mc:

"First, I've got to go to New York to carry out my predic· tion 011 Doug Jones. Thcn, I'd like to come back to Miami

":\ w "irc him Ill; res~ondc;l, "lie cso'l seconds, "

As e x P e ct e d, thl touched off a bUlst cl from the fast·talking

"This town is not 'I" \ " I ,i! i ! l' ~.

'II I 1 '.1 "

, l' i '

: I ~\I' " 1 'I I' ;lll I. I' ~·t.':\·'

• ., '1" ',' \;:: ... ~ , ,< , r "" ... t •• r .... t~ ... ' .' , \ '~

:3, LcGrow, R .• Skip, Phlllips, F~d, Mate, Butlel', G.W .. 2nd" Bone. J. T., Lead, I\night, G.E., Skip. Sharpe, D" Mate, Smith, ('.;: H., 2nd, Ploughman, B.,

• • • L~d. ~: ',' A-4 9.15 •. Templelon, RL., Skip, Hop­

kinS, J.M., :II ale, Armitage, A., 2nd.. Willlams, A.E., Lead; Templeton, D.S., Skip. Mac­Donald, K.A., Male, Hubley, R. G., 2nd., Allan, James, Lead.

• • • • <. D-1 9.15 ~i. l\IcCarthy, J.e., Skip, Hor­

wOOd, R.F" Mate, Burden, Joe, 2nd., Noah, R.J., Lead; Butler, .1Ji:;, Skip, Burnell, D.G., Mate, lAitcr, W., 2nd., MacDonald, G. L'Iid.

• • • _ B-2 11,15 ,to Reid, V., Skip, Cook, Peter;

)Iate, Lovelace, W., 2nd, Bas· tedo, D.E" Lead; Mills, A.P., Skip, Conroy, C. H., Mate, Lono S., 2nd., Bursey, Lad., Lead,

- . ... '

B-3 11.15 2. Pratt,' J:K., Skip, Swllt, J.,

Mate, Hann, W,' 2nd, Barrett, B. G., Lead; Howse, C. K., SklJl' Phllllps, Geo" Mate, Kle· I-:.ii: R.A., 2nd., Moore, W.J., ~d. . r~'· • • • !~:} '~11.15 i~,; Dearln, C. C., SkIp: Me·

E~ lid, C;L., Mate, Cranlford,

.j' 2nd., Whitten, R.E" Lead: enderson, J.P., Skip, ,Jack·

IiII,n, T.G., Mate, Labelle, J., ~:, Wilaon, J.D., Lead. ' .: ~", . . . ::- .: ~ <:-1 1115 . . . ::&. Hood, N., Skip; Goosney, .':~K., Mate; Fahey, J. D., 2nd, ~.eil, D., Lead; French, R,M:, _, Matheson, Joel E., Mate, ~plon, 'G., 2nd., O'Leary, F. J:;:~ead," .:

~.. . . .. . . c...:2 1.00

'1: Templeton,' P., Skip, For· lies, C. R., Mile; Pike, Jos, P., 2nd;, leSage, W,A., Lead: Hay· nes, A.R., Skip, Newton, T.P.

D-2 2,45 Thistle, Cyril Horwood. Boyer, SIan Musial, Gene Oli· man in the business. Center

, BILLIARDS~Theannual- K.' of C" Spot and :r:>lain Billiards Tournament opened last night. Tak­ing part in the opening ceremonies were (left to right): Gus O'Brien, Plain; W. J. Ashley,' Grand

Knight; Mike O'Keefe, Spot. (Staff Photo)

Plante Expected To Play Tonight MONTREAL (CP) - Coach

Toe Blake of Montreal Canadiens said Wednesday ailing goalie Jacques Plante will "in all prob· ability" play in the nets when Canadiens meet Boston here tonight.

Blake made the statement­and did not elaborate-after a Canadiens' practice attended by the veteran goalie.

Plnnte has been bothered by sore muscles in the hip and groin in the last two weeks, and missed three games wilh the ailment last week.

Blake didn't say who would replace Plante if the veteran goalie is unable to play. But a club spokesman said the most likely can did ate is Charlie Hodge, Quebec Aces' goalie who worked out with Canadiens Wed· nesday.

Canadiens said Tuesday spare goalie Cesare Maniago, who filled In for plante in the three games last week, has been loaned temporarily to Aces. Ca­nadlens said the move was being made to give the 29·year­Qld Hodge a rest. lCEEPS FIT IN PRACTICE

The club said Hodge could return to his home in the Mont­real suburb of Lachine and keep in shape by practising with ClInadlens.

Maniago's recent play has left room for criticism. He al­lowed 11 goals In the three games he replaced Plante, and then was beaten on five of the 18 shots on him in his' first

game Tuesday with Aces, a 5-3 loss to Hershey.

Meanwhile Bill Head, Cana· diens' physiotherapist, says he thinks Plante's persistent sore­ness may be caused by a new pair of skates.

Head explained he has no· ticed the soreness has tended to change its location in the area of Plante's hip and groin, He also noticed Plante's new skates don't seem to fit his feet com· fortably.

MIGHT TILT PELVIS

"So it could well be thal his new skates have. caused an un· batanced pelvis position and the muscular troubles which result from it," he said. Plante dates the beginning of his muscle pains from shorUy after he be· gan using the new skates last fall.

Head likened the case to a mysterious muscle ailment that plngued (ormer Canadiens star Maurice Richard in the 1957-58 season. Richard. eventually was ordered to take a long rest in Florida in the latter part o[ the senson, and came back to lead Canadiens to the Stanley Cup in the playo[£s.

Hend says he believed Rich· ard's leg injury was caused by unbalanced muscle strain result· ing from trying out scveral new pairs o[ skates.

for both of us." i "r have predicted ,

knock Liston out in " keeps popping off, 1m cut it to six,"

Liston, t(oO, has ' phel. He for~casts flatten both Patters03

in the first round. , "If he hool.s me In

-or any round," Cia), "I will get do~n o~ is the rain, kiss iii! tell the world he's tI:! Then I will catch Ihe out of Ihe count!')'." (b:;\

Some observer;; isn't ready :or Llsto;l.

"Not react)'?" bOlII!ll "I'm ranked ;10, I,

prophccies have ~nlI ~I the big"est talk 10 I.f world. I[ I'm not reI., ready?" ---MIAMI, (AP)-Th~ says Cassium CI~Y 10 Liston came close pbysicallY saturdar change of

Herald sports Putnam repO~\S weight cha~PiO~,U! to defend ~IS. Irlori against ex·htlIS.t to I son, dropped 1~I!b Beach gym to W be I by Clay, who PlaY Liston opponent.

putnam said him out of h~e, spying on me.

Liston roared got to sPY on no fighter," d to $100 a roun mate. . Ihat

"You ,get In frt' we'll fight ford Cilt putnam quote sent but others pre that. .

The fighters re~ched f'Jf'

CORNER BROOK for Corner Brl

were: (left to rig Clobie Collins,

rusad~ feat'

Pierson

H _____ :., win would hi a special playoff for

po~ition as they trai , CroSs by two points bu

second half for and only 11 by ~II

gave the Crusadcrs ,·ictory.

"west.enders" came : within having a perf game victory in the sch Their only loss was , in the second rOl

the Varsity squad won t a last minute basket them a one point win.

Pierson although be his pace still led

to I'ietor!' with The "big fclla" usu;

closer to 30 points but latcly he isn't ur

but still his 14 points was enough to give I

title edging out Brian Maloney.

Russell and CiaI' H the Varsity's scm with 10 pOints el

Husk's points came first half.

Baird and George K of the Crusaders share(

with Kirkland hill

o[ \\'ales, made ~ I debut ill I~irls I

hasketball ycstci . at Bishops J!ym '

\'Ie tory ol'er first n

Holy Hcart. " Heart held a 9·6

the first hal[ with 51 and Beth Ami scoring three pc

M,ay neddytwo Simms one. Wendy dumped (OUr point~

Bett in the first Y Smith tw('

Ihir~ quarter . was pomt of the game

of Wales notching s f and Holy Heart In:1 quarter saw the

ump another field Heart hit On one

Heart got a shot, in

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THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, FEBRUARY 14, 1963..!.11

Royals Lose Sixth, 1 CeeBees I n Lead Tie~·

HARBOR GRACE (SPECIAL)-The Conceptio n Bay CeeBecs pulled into a first place tie in the Selli'or NAHA playdowlls last night as they handed Corner Brook Royals their sixth straight defeat in a 6-3 contest at the S. W. Moores Memorial Sladi um here. .' ':

Jim Penny was lhe sparkvlug for the CeeBc2s, scoring three times and s~tting up another tw~:! goals. Jack Faulkner, Mike Fitzpatricl, and Jim Kl'l1nedy added a tally each for the winners, with., Ed O'Quinn getting hvo for the Royals and Willis French notching the other marker. :.,,,,'1/ ,'t. -,

With the top lour tcams in I ncr miss the open lIet on a! I.lNEUPS., the fiVe center playdowns get. I. rink length shot in th~ dying' CEEBEI~S: Goal: Sullivan; ting semi.finals berths, the . seconds of the middle. ,,1"l.a .. defence: Kennedy, Stanley, PaJ;·. standings have 'Buchans and The Royals pulled their :~o1llie' sons, r'itzgcl',lld: forwards: .\'.: Conception Bay both with ten for an extra nttaclm' in the: Penny. C. Penny. )1. Fitzpal· points from eight games while last seconds of thc .>(·(")ilrl rick, B. Fitzpatrick. J. Fauik: Grand Falls has ninc points i framc hut the movc nearly, lie)'. 1'. Fleming. J. (oudy. ,'. and has also played eight: • hackfired. I ROY A LS: Goal: Carter; .. dc. games. I I Referee Peter Duffy of St.: fNlre: ['rench, :lIcDonald, 1:.:)\'!:

After losing their last ~ix .John·s c,llled five minor p(n·: rente. Pollett; forwards: Hill·,

1

outings the defending champion . alties in the game with thr~e man, ])orl'in~tol1. Cd!r.!!. Col·. Royals have 5ix ppints but . II going to the Royal, aud no: lins. u·Quinll. B Sfl1'th. ')1,

: have pla~'ed tcn times while St. . goals heing scored while pla;'-: Walsh, F. \\''':,i:. Broth.cr.' Juhn's after six encounters : ers were ofr. : Seaward. .,' ~ owns five points. I Referee: Peter Duff,\'. SA ,,1-:') ,

I Last night's fixture ended the I' Linesmcn: Jack Reai'di;;an Sl'l.L1\·A~ . Ij (i R--~O

lEast Coast tour for the Royals and Don Crocker. i CARTER . 17 13 11--11 . whkh they started last Satur. I --.-------- .-----:-:

--------. i day night. In four games in I I

C,~~~ER BROOK ROYALS were guests at a dinner given by Hon. Charlie Ballam, Provincial it'!' (l':'nCI' Brook. at the Newfoundland Ho lei yesterday afternoon, Among those at the dinner

'1 II':'" ,ll'f: :p right \ Phonse Tavernor, Danky Dorrington, Mike Brothers, Doug Hillman, Mr. : ,:" C:I,blC ~\'ilill~. Francis Walsh and Willis French. (Staff Photo)

rusaders First, efeat Memorials

Pierson Paces Win '_." ,'''llt' liP with I for nine.

.'. ::-"::1 1:1 I 11 >t'l'In PIli· , ~Icmorial led 24·21 going in­-.':>.:1 Tlll·"b)· at thc . to the second half bllt Hoh' .: :'~1 I,' I.lkr Iirst I Cross set up a tight zone de·

.. ,' '(l'~ J ;11 r into thc I fence and slowed them down · ',.; 'H~:; ; 1<101'), O\'cr i considerably while playing

." smart offensil'e ball them·sel· • :,,: DON PIERCE \ ~:~·::.1: \\ In \\ ()\Ild ha\'e I \'es. · i ,:.:,:.1: pLll,'f! ftll' the I (Scorers) I RCMP ::.:.:: .' Ihl')' trailed· Holy Cross:-Pierson 14, Kirk-I . : .. ;. ~) Ill" POll1ts but a . land 9, Batl'd 8, Rumsey 5,

';:: ,(1o\nj ~Jlf for the i Healey 4. Fitzpatrick 4. · . ,:,; Nih t 1 by ~lel1l" ~Iemorial-Russell 10. Husk

.( l!h" L'ro'Olllrrs a' 10, Healey 6, Doheny 4, Griff·

Columb"lan Club I ~i;:e n;g~~~n:.hcy failed to sal-I \ Silver liD" . Playing coach· Danky Dor.,! •

Darts League 1~~nhg;O~a~~rthb~c~~~~~th~O::t~! ml PENNY i Gr'and Falls Mak' e' for last night and Carter came 1 • ~ up with I top display. Tested I score and Penny was back with . S

,. . . 47 times by the CeeBees he I the lone tally. of the second "Ilham Brown came up WIth I robbed the Conception Bay· frame as he lIpped a blueline It Seven Straight. the fir~t "possible" in the four i squad nf several sure marker~. i shot from .John Fitzgerald into'

year hIstory of the Columbian :~t the. other end of the rink I the ~opls' mesh at 19.03 to:. Club Darts League on ~Ionday Blli Sulhvan, between the Cee-' have It 3-1. : night when' be studded triple Bees pilles, played his besl hoc-II The CeeBees opened a 5·1 ad· i twenty three times for the 180 key of the year.' vantage before Corner Brook i • • score. The CceBecs took a qllick 1 could score again. Penny got! GRAND FALLS (SPECIAL)-The VI Pike

The results of Monday night's lead in the game scoring after \ his third. of the night at 0.46 skillped Grand Falls rink made it seven straight action:- 30 seconds of play when Jack I of. the fmal frame ~hen he wins in the Silvcr "D" at the Grand Falls Curling

Cubs 3. Bruins 0 E. Pearce 1's, Ron Ronayne

1's, K. O'Brien 18·s-Cubs.

Pirates 2, Hawks 1 E. O'Ncill 15'5, A. Molloy

7's-Piratcs . C. Kavanagh 15's-Hawks.

Leafs 2, Red Sox 1

Faulkner was the marksman drIlled Jack Faulkner s center-· . with Jim Penny setting him up. ling passont home for what: Rmk here yesterday to take a strangle hold on the Willis French got the Royals I proved to be the winning goal. i Bonspiel. even at 1-1 at 4.43 whcn his i ~like Fitzpatrick was the goal: Ycstcrday mornill'" Grand Falls entry stopped bllleline shot deflected off a! scorcr at 12.50 for the four goal: -. d" d' f . CeeBee skate to go behind Sulli. I CeeBee hllige with Jim Penny I Bcll !sl.and 12-7 .an yestcr a~ a ternoon ra~ :up van. I getting his fifth point of the: a thrIlhng 9-8 Will over Bally Haly. The Tml(er

Jim Penny got the cecEeesj night. i Rockwell skipped St. John's rink jumped into sec-out fr~nt to stay at 16.15 as, Ed O'Qu.inn, Royals' ~peed- lond place by also winning twice yesterday. They he fInIshed off a play with' stet·, got hiS club back In the 'I d " C B k d I George Faulkner, for I 2-1 game with a pair of scores in ha a 13-9 Vlctor~ over orner roo an t len ______ ._____ 20 seconds. He drilled a Clobie i won over Bally Haly 10-8.

· .' I n'lory. in, Butler 2, Erliberley 1. J " !

"··J~~t·CI~n.~r:' ~amc sec· ! 7.::.::, ~alln; .1 perfrct ;i~r" ,:,1ry III Ih(' 'l'herl· ;\.: .)nl) IM.- \\',IS to

Tie Island

All-Stars BELL ISLAND (staff! - Des·

pite the five goal performance of Don Pierce the RC~IP of the SI. John's Civil SeTl'ice League could only manage a 9-9 exhibition hockey tie with the Bell Island AlI·stars at the Bartlett Memor· ial Arena here last night.

J. Wadden 5's, J. Kennedy l's-Leafs.

Stan Tizzard 3's-Red Sox. Rovers 3, Giants 0

B. Everard 1'5, C. Connors l's, J. Whelan 2's-Rovers.

11ets 3, Tigers 0

Memorials Delayed

Collins' pass over Sullivan's· Other action saw Bell Island stop Gander 8-6 sho~lder at 15.41 after Bob and Corner Brook had a 12-7 win over Gander. :::. SmIth started the play and hIt ••• •• f" from Dorrington for a.5.3 COUllt ,The spIel wIll contmue today and IS expected to m- : i at 16.01. I ish on Friday. . .

· :, lh,' ;('l'olld round It was Jim Kennedy with the The standings: E. O'Neill l's and 6'5, P. P · .. 1'::;:1), ;qnOl;! \\'on that

I >: ~Iinutc hOlikN' to ~;~ , onr pOint win. ~Ianning 16's-Mets.

Royals 2, Maroons 1

Bad nylng wealher delayed the departure of the Memorial contingent for Ihe Mount AtIl­son Winter earnh'al yesterday afternoon.

clinching goal for the CeeBees as he fired a high shot home at 18.27 to break the hearts of Grand Falls ........ .......... ............ ......... ......... 7 the Royals and have it end I' St. John's C. C ................ -.......................... 6 '. :,,:,,';1 althollgh being

· :., race still led the :,1 victor:' wilh 14

n,1 "bi~ felli' u,uall)' I>,r to 30 points pel'

K. O'Neill 1'5, J. Stowe 5's­Royals. 6·3.' Bally Haly .................................................. -. 7

Tt hchceeJ~eesChadd a goal drUbledt Corner Brook .............................................. 6 While Pierce was having his

second fh'e g~al night in a row George Green, Jim VanWart, Ken McAdams and Ron Sweeney were adding single Mountie

D. Kirby l's-Maroons. Dodgers 2, Hurricanes 1

The swimming, baskelbnll and hockey learns from the University will now leave by EPA charter Ihis morning at 8:40.

011 W en 1m oa y score u was in the crease in the th~rd Bell Island .................................................... 7

:~: iJtrly hr im'I' up to · ;lill hi; l-l points last '« Inoll,h 10 give him

J. ~Iaddigan I's, T. Oldford l's-Dodgers.

period and had George Faulk· Gander ..................................... .......... ........... 7

· ... litle edgll\g out Sl. : lla\{1llry. · ",,,Ii .l1l1 ('Inr lh:sk :~r \'mil)"; ,cot'ing .ith 10 pnints each.

, H:I;k', p~int' ('ame in · half.

• r,d George Kirk· · :~! ('rmadN, sharrd 17

,,:h Kirkland hilting CEC PIERSON .. _-------------

Debut Successful, C Stop Holy Heart

i arlll with four minutes remain· , inl! in the game when they lost

scores. Gordie Skanes paced Ihe home

town club with three goals and George Sheppard and Bern Fitz· patrick both added two. Gerry Lnhel' and Pat Fitzpatrick had a score each.

Bell Island held n 3·2 first per­iod edge with the score tied 6-6 after two frames and both clubs go\ three third period tallies. Two of the game's three penal· ties went to Bell Island.

The Brother Rice senior cham· pionship High School team of SI. .Tohn's will play an exhihition game at the Arena on Sunday.

H. Martin l's-Hurricanes, Canadiens 2, Jays 1

C. Keels 1'5, R. McCarthy 16's-Canadiens.

S. Curtis 1t's-Jays. Wings 2, Indians 1

,l .Tohin 14's, F. Kane 9's­Wings.

A. Fahey 1 's-Indians . Rangers 2, Bisons 1

J. Brennan 1'5, C. 1I101loy' 4's-Rangers.

W. Dawson l's-Bisons. Wm. Browne (Possible) .. 180

J. Barron .......... (174)-100 Jim Tobin.. .. ,,126 Wm. Fleet " .... 132·100 Leo Baird .. .. .. ..103 Bob Rodden .. .. .. ..100 '1'. Colford .... .. 113 R. McCarthy •• •• • .108 G. Duff " .... ..100

No Game There will be no hockey

game lit the Stadium I.onight. Fclldians and Holy Cross wen to have played in a junior con· test but for the third time Feltdians requested a post· ponement because of II short· age of players. .

Hockey President Jim \'ini· eombe told the NEWS la!!t night that the whole situation will be reviewed by the execu· tlve Rnd thai Holy Cross may be awarded the two points.

Spot Leads I · . ~f Wok, madr ~ ,\1('. ~ the talents' of tall, hi~h sCl)rin~

~~';:I in ~irJ~ lli~h I center, Edwina Kal'anagh due ~~'krlh;dl )r'ICrda~': 10 illness.

Curling Notes

':.11 BI,h"p, CI'1ll with' . ':Iory Olrr li~,l ~ome: Wcndr Andrews of Pl'ince of, BAU.Y IIALY CURJ.lNG : H)ly 11m\. I Wales was top scorer of the: TO·NIGHT'S GMIES · IIr<:1 hdd a n.r; hrll game with six points while -7.30-

fast half 11':'11 Shrlia I Shelia Dwyer potted four for J. Burgess, G. McNamara, C. I:d Belh ,\nn )Ic. I the losers. . Tobin, D. O'Driscoll \'s A. Hay· !torin~ !lli·"t. points I nes, G. Smith, B. Devine, J.

.1. Maddigan ........ 119 A. Ahee .......... 100 B. Byrne .. •• •• • .125 B. Fagan .......... 120 C. Mallard ".. ..lUO J. Birmingham ., •• • .140 B. Everard .. .. .. ..133 S. Tizzard.. .. .. .. .. 100 Tom Ring;. •• •• . .100_103 A. Molloy ........ 100 K. O'Brien .. .. .. ..100 K. Campbell .• •• •• • .120

Spot opened a 17 point lead in the annual K. of C. Billiard

'I' Tournament laRt night with two close games being featured on

1 the opening session. Grand Knight W. J. Ashley ad Bil­liards Chairman A. E. Andrews

I were' on. hand for the opening

~I)' Reddl' t",\'o and I The defensive stars for the Cooper. l:~.:n! on~. ,,'pndv An. winners were Bonnie ~Iarshall D. S. Ayre, G. McGrory, C, Il~P~d fOll 1 po:ni~ for and Allison Simms while Barb Baird, E. Murphy vs E, Hick·

I in '!'c first half Rideout and Ann Cahill were man, E. 1I1cMahon, J. Grieve, \. Smilh t\IP. tops defensively for Holy G. Winter. H I C

Lud quart~r was the Heart. N. Hood, A. E. Hickman, J. 0 Y ross ~I~t of the ~ame with BOX SCORES Hopkins, D. Landrigan vs Dr, .

c: \\31~l nntching sel'en Stentnford, R. Gallagher, J. An· ,.l:.d Holr HClrt two. Prince of Wales derson, N. Weedmark. Basketball ~:I qU3rlrr sa\\' the Col. FG FT PF Pts. H. Angel, D. Bell, B. Dobbin,

l:tlp .nothcl' ficld ;;oa1 W. Andrews .. 3 0 3 6 S. Dwyer vs A. Boyd, T. . 1l~3rt ht . 4 5 B' J C M P The Holy Cross Inter·Asso-

I on one free B. SmIth .. .. .. 2 1 yrne, . asey, . ower.

HR. Randell .... 1 0 0 2 Spares:-D. Sharpe, C. Heck- ciation basketball league swings

firt got 1 Ih~t in the 111. Wilansky .. 1 0 0 2 man, J. Gushue, J. Laws, J. Nes· into action tonight at the Cru-B. Marshall .. 0 0 1 0 bitt. . I sader gym with team games on J. Driscoll .... 0 0 1 0 The entry list for the Inter· tap .the first starting at 7 J. Jacobs .. .. .. 0 0 3 0 town playoff will close at 6.00 o'clock.

Totals ..... 7 1 12 15 p.m. to· day. Each team is ask· There are six teams in the

Holy Heart FG S. Dwyer ...... 2 n. lIIcAllister .. 1 M. Reddy ........ 1 C. Bailey .... 1 B, Simms ........ 0 D. Knight ..... 0 A. Cahill ...... 0

Totals ...... 4

FT 2 1 o

.0 1 o o 4

PF Pt~. 1 4 o 3

,0 2 o 2 1 1 2 0 2 0 II 12

Pee Wee' Hockey

Hurricanes and Liberators battled to a 3·3 tie in the first game of Pee Wee hockey act· ion at the Stadium yesterday while the second saw Snipers edge Gunners 1·0. .

ed to have a representative league and all will see thei:­pre~ent at the club at 7 o'clock I first action tonight with Reds for the draw. I and Yanks meting in the Cllr·

tain raiser. All players arc to'

Table Tenn"ls bring tl~eil' own sneakers ~nd be on time fot· all games.

TONIGHT'S GA1I1ES

'Annual Meet"lng i.~~~~S v:~· ir~~~:: D .00-1 ndians vs. Dodgers.

The annuai meeting of the St: .John's Table Tennis AssocIation is scheduled for tonight. It will be held at Room G 121 at the Physical Education Building at Memorial University.

All teams wishing to take part in the series this year must have a delegate present at the meel· ing,

Practice Corner

Reds-R. Short, B. Bennett, M.· Power. R. LeGrow, H. En­nis, G. Jackman, W. Noitall, M. Murphy.

Sox-B. Maunder, J. Ashley, L. Tobin, J. Peddle, K. Dun· phy, F. Crocker, A. Jackman. R. Wickens.

Dodgers-C. Pierson, J. Rum· sey, L. Baker, C. Mallard, G. Penny, A. Thompson" M. Hearn, Jas. Carey.

Pat Byrne, Pat Allgel and . I\ndy Collins were the Hurrl· HOLY CROSS canes snipers with Robert Do- Holy Cross junior hockey

,Indians-G. Sorenllen, L. Llil· lon, J. Carey, K. Hawco, B. Wilson, R. Woods, E. Flem· ing, B. Jackman.

herty hitting pay dirt for all squad wlll hold a very import· three Liberators goals: David. ant practice at the Stadium to·

Braves-G. Kirkland, J. Fitz· patrick, H. Aylward, J. Phel· an, K. Taylor, B. Ronayne, P. Hearn, P. O'Keefe. .

ceremomes. In the first game Mike

O'Keefe of Spot took a 226-208 win over Gus O'Brien of Plain. O'Keefe had 147 in breaks with 58, 27, 26, 16, 10 and 10, while O'Brien had 87 in breaks with 36, 15, 13, 12 and 11.

Mike Ryall of Plain edged Kev Dunphy of Spot 167-166 in tbe second outing. Ryall got 55 in breaks with 23 11, 11 and 10, while Dunphy had 41 in breaks with 18. 13 and 10.

To.Nlght's Games 7.30-K. O'Neill (S) \'s

K. Kearney (P). 8.30-G. Kirkland (S) VB

W. Beer (P).

Brigus Pla~, Bay Roberts HARnon GnACE (Staffl-The

Conception Bay seniol' hockey quarter finals will continUl! at the S. W. Moores Memorial Sta­dium here tonight with Brigus meeting Bay Roberts.

Brigus finished in third place In the regular schedule while Bay Roberts won 8 special play· off game with Holyrood for sixth spot. Tonight the game will start at 8:30 p.m .• ----Civil Service Finance, winless in the Civil

Service "B" hockey schedule meet first place Teachers in the Iirst game of ti twin·bill at the Arena tonight starting at 3 o'clock.

The nig-htcap will have

The best in darts!

The best in beer

oI~1 light! satisfying!

, FREE HOME D'ELlVERY

ST. JOHN'S: Phone 8·0251 (5 Lines) . GANDER: K. J; Griffin Ltd., Phone. 8·2387 GRAND FALl,S: Bond Beverages. Ltd., Phone 2146 BELL ISLAND: Tom Murphy, Phone 2186 .

W ··L :1' 7 .:;:0 4 .;.2 3 4 2 4 2 2

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· Innes scored the lone SnipErS night starting at 6.30 sharp. goal to give them the victory. Coach Myles Furlong has call·

TODAY'S' GAMES cd this workout and wants all Yanks-R. Baird, M. Healey, F. Furlong, S. Crichard, B. Downey, B. Noflall, B. Finney, W. Jackman.

Treasury going against the Bank of. Nova Scotia. A win for the Teachers will giVe them first place as they lead Nova Scotia by three points and the Bakers have just one game reo maining after tonight.

THE BENNETT. BREWING CO., LTD. NOi INSERJED BY BOARD OF LlQUOl CIIHlIOl

'4.30-Sappers vs. Infantry members of the team to be 1 5.10-Hawks VB. Eagles, - dressed and ready to go on the

(Bantam). ice. at the given time.

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Page 12: Nova Ltd. la', n ie~ena er n' elver UIcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · Elizabeth A vc. 9·4171 : :;: ... (left), was named Veterans Af· fairs ... ma~y on downtown

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1%-THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, FEBRUARY 14, 1963

Toronto 1'OIIOSTO CLOSISO STCOKS

• a, Tbe CIDadlan Prut T ..... t. *.e\ Eull •• r ..... F.b. 13

Compltj. tabulaUon 01 Wedneoday lran.lclion., Quotation. In .~.1s unl ... markd •• .-Odd 10.. .d-E.·dlvtdnd. xr-E •• rl.hta. xw - Ex·w.rr.nt.. Net cba1\le is from previoul board·lot dOltnl Jlle. .

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MoWat 1000 21 2J ZI + I Mentor 5100 36 35 33 Morrlll lOG 60 60 60 Mldrlm BODO 31 29 29"-3 Mul1l.M 1000 19 19 II + \10 Murray M 6500 120 117 120 +! Nlma . Cr UlOG 111'.1 16 1& - \0\ Noalon 158363 231'1 16 10 +6 Nello lOG 17 17 17 New Aleer 3267 5 ! 5 New Alhl 6312 3Z :I:! 32 + 1'.1 N.w Rid 4000 6 6 6 No.. Cal 2000 28 2~1'.I 26 + 1'.1 Newton.. 200 415 400 480 -5 Nconex wls 200 115 lIS 115 N Goldvu. 2600 5 41'.1 5 + 1'1 New 110... 13176 I2l II' I~ + I N K,lor. 3X11) 10 9\0\ 81'.1 Newlund moo 1811. 18 I&~ N Myllma 10000 111'.1 17 11 -1 Newnor 197100 19 15 11 +3 !'lew lIouyn moo IB 17 171'0 - 1\ N Sen.lor 293U.'1i B\\ "" + 1'.1 NI.k.1 MS 1090 34 ~I 34 -I NIck RInI 4310 20 20 20 + m Sorbeau 2DOO 21 21 21 Sort.rUe ]500 16 16 16 Norm,.al BIO:99 293 :!t3 Norpa. 2168 12 11 II N Coldstrm 2225 4S 4S U Norlhlate Ul6 ~ID XII) SO~ -5 N Goldert 3100 21 20 . 2tl -I N nank 2jooo 37 35 35 -I Norlh Can 1200 245 110 III Nudul 1000 131'.1 1m 13\, +I O'Brlon 4S3O 51 49 It +2 Opeml.ka 4135 710 700 70~ Or.hon 7010 228 221 225 Orenlda 18000 121> '12 12 Orm.by 2:00 2311 1311 231, - I; O,l.ko 9000 41\\ II 441. + 2 Paramaq 62100 20\1 161'.1 18 + I Patino H20 730 735 730 + 10 Pa. Int lOO IB IB 18 -Z Paym .. 1 130) 131'0 13 13\0; + 1 Pccrl... 13000]61,; 151'0 151'.1-t\i Porron :300 101; 101'.1 \01" Pick Crow .740 16 SO 56 Pilch Or. 10000 91, BI'.1 a',,-I Placrr 200 $2M. 28~i 28" - ~. Pow nou 1800 44 42 12 -I Pre.lon 817 lIS U II! + l rro, AIr 4~00 116 112 115 + 3 Purde. moo II 101~ 11 Que Aornt 4000 ~'" 9 9'~ + I Que Chlb 40oo!!1 ~t 21 Quo I,ab ;S85M 7~1 ~ 7 + 1'.1 Que ~Ion II)()~!I 11 1\ Q Molal non 5.\ !l ~I Qunllon 1216 11 II H Quomonl .2.\ ,,01, 10'., 10'.\ n.dlo" 51\00 41 4n 10 -1 naglan 2500:1/1:1/1 10 -I na)'rock JOO 114 Hoi A~ nln .\I;om l;o.1 Sl:!;~, 1::!\~ t~:I';' +'4 nl, Ath.b 7100 30 2~ 30 -" not'hc- 360M 7 f; 7 _II, noc~wln IMn Wi II', \11\ + \\ Rowlln Con 2200 gl~ A 1I1~ -f- ~1 nyanor fJlOO UI" H',; HI.'J Sberrlll mo 291 2nl 29.1 H ~Icn,. ,.fiO "~ 3U 545 SU"maQ ~54j()~!t ~7 21l1":~" i SII Mllier ~1320 l6 "",\ 31 -I SI,coo 910~ \9.i 163 101 + I Siorr.n )00 7 7 7 SI.ep n ]99~ 1M 4B~ m Su~ Con. 11000 10 9'.. 0'; -I Sulll,..n 900 112 171 112 -2 Sunburlt 10300 11 11 II Taulean 2100 31 34 33 +1 Teck.1I I~OO 161 163 1~5 T.ma, :000 73 70 70 -! Thom L 1000 73 73 73 .. I Tomblll 7lI30 7P 7! 7~ .. 3 T orblll 300~ 38 31 ]8 + I Tarmont 1000 2!\I,; 231,J~ ljl.' + 1.; Tran. lin 1006 12 12 12 - H 'rrlbl" 1200!~'0 10 Un Rulld 1:00 62 62 62 Un Keno 1022 m 800 100 -16 Un ror! 1300 12 12 12 + \, \lp~ Con IIl20 tIl I!! \.\3 -I Urban Q lOO 25 :J :.'i t 3 I'lndoo 600 5 .1 ~ ~ \; "auze 1000 ~ !3 ~ + 3 "topar IIiOlI U', I~II .. 13"./- Ii \'Iolrlln 4:75 1St 17G 180 -1 Weedon :1000 4' 4 4 .. 1. Worner 2000 14 13 II + I W M.lar IZOOO \O!; P', ~'.;-I 11' •• 1 Min .. moo 310 Zt3 310 +I! II' Min. rt. 2l!06 lA 1.1 17 H'h W Be .... r 1000 13 13 13 \\'lllIoy :!32.1 161 1~1 161 -I Wllt.oy 460110 21 19 20 + I. Wr liar, z2tID 02 92 Il n Btlr 966 III 114 114 -1 Youn« HG 11000 9 7 9 H Zonma. 19000 25 2.1 2.1 -I Iulap. 1010 17 17 17

OILS Almlnox 4373 24! 235 211 +8 Anl Leduc :1000 61,~ 51,~ 51,; - 1f~ An, U DOl' 1500 33 321.. 32' .• - 'I. A.am". 4473 116 III llfi -% lIanoy 5 A 230 930 95" 930 Illne,. S pr 100 S23 2: 23 Ban m pr 17~ 12m 25V. Zll~ Ranll lOG 95 96 95 -3 Calall. 3000 121, 121, 121i + v.. C.l E4 110 101' 201'0 201\ C all Ld. 1100 121 115 lIS -6 CS Poll 13681 425 315 3911 +5 C DeIhl 7116 310 315 320 Cdn Dev 3100 3n 3n 313 -! C Ex 0.. 11000 lIlT 107 107 C Hllh Cr SOlO 111'.1 11\, 111'.1":11'. C Homilld 1000 1M 9t 99 -I C.n' DIll 4071 ItO W B70 +S Chlrl.r 011 1000 ua Il8 III U Ea.1 Ct 1000 42 4Z 12 C Mle lola. 2900 310 380 '3ItI C We.1 r looo:JlO 2:111 236 /lome Pol. UO .m~ 1210 1m - \I Flrl. 11041 212 210 262 +7 GI •• ler DODO 13\0\ 13 n - It Or Plain. IOS2! "m 12\\ 12v.. Hom. A * m.. 1211 1m + '4 1Iomo 11 2415 11m 12\. 1m + '4 K B 011 G 878 '1m 15% 1M. + \'> Millran. 111100 IZ 81'.1 U + 2 MediI 2125 215' 241 24Z + I Nal r.1t 200 213 21l 213 -2 N Davl.. ZOOO 11 12 IZ Norekn ZII2 340 llO '10 + 10 Northeal 171375 22 18 ZO +2 NC OU. lOG 11& 13& 138 NCO pr 1l& to 30 30 P.. F.I. ..! ,12 IIf. 12 Pae Pili W ISO 820 . $SO 820 -25 P.mon 1100 IB II 48 - 'AI 'truv 011 1000 77 72 77 t3 Plaee 2000 51 53 51 PIO"O aa. 8800 lSI 156 I~T -2 Qu.nlo eooo . 2' :lO '" non,.r 5120 107 1111 101 -t Sa,e.. "I, 118 m lie -2 Stour. "ll ~ 1155 BlS III

'50ul_ \l 7000 131" 121'.1 ISI'.1 + ......

Toronto 1lI08T ACTIVB TORONTO STOCKS

BI The C.nadllD Pre .. Nol

Ilook Sol.. KI,b Low Clo .. Cb·,. INDustRIALS

MI., 'Fer All •• Alumlnl

ZiW3 $1311 111'0 121'.1 371, 12629 $371, 371,

6757 $241, :!J C Brow 7503 '10\'0 1011

21 + 1\ 101, + It

· OILS Norlheal 171375 2l II Malt,n. 121300 13 91\ W 0 •• 011. 51217 IlO 120 Cdn NW :0333 81, 7 \lnl.ph" 11833 41 31

MINE8 5!8800 711 8 431000 71 ~fi 1977110 19 13 m3.3 2)\\. IS 10000 II 17

Que L.b Dr Hor~ Newnor N .. lon C A.torla

20 +2 12 +2 "

UD + 10 B + 1

10 ,2

7 +1 71 II +3 29 +8 17\\ + 1\

Mutual Fun s MUT\JAL .·IJNDS

I, Th. C •• adll. rrtll Did A.k 1.91 9.77 6.30 6.91

11.12 8,85 32.77 l5,M 1.79 5,23

10.23 n,ll 4.61 l.W

12.37 44.49 3.7! 6.35 R.ll 9.59 j .30 8.no

In.l7 11.11 20.50

All Cdn com All Cdft DI. Amerlean Growlh Bflaubran Canada Growth canldlln Inve.hl1ent C.nadlen Tru.lee4 Inl Cona/und Champion Muluol Commonwealth Inter Commonwealth lnt Le\'er Corporate Investors OIve"llIod Inc, /I D1"erolliod Ine. B Domlnlo~ EquUy Dreyful Inc, Y..uropt!Rn Growlh Flderated Olowlh FlfOl 011 and Go, Fond. CDlI«1II .. A .. Fonds Collectif "n 01

t,'onds ColieclU "C" Group Ine. Growth 011 and 011 In\'tstor.~ Growlh In\'e!lon Inti. tn\·C'.loFl MUIUIII Mulu.1 A,cumulat.d Mutual Income Norlh Amcr or Co •• ~. On. William Slrc,1 Pl'rt et nl\'nu (Mutu!) rrovld.nl Putman Growth Rat1lllion B,enl Research In\tt.tlnl Sui"::!! In\'fslm~nt 1962 Elfc. Fun,l Cdl TV Eltctronlcs TlmC"d In"tstment \lnll.d Aceumulllh·.

l.24 U6 18.7n 19.1' 1:..B7 17.2) Il.Im 7.2] I.i'\ 5.14 ~,61 5.0\ ~.'H 6.78 3.1n j.S:1 •. n! ~.60 :t.!\:t 3,119 9.11 9.87 fi,61 7,'!2 \.Z, 4.R3

!l.32 lun :UiZ ;1.06 .\.20 l.sn

lO.n 11.72 1;.30 11.3 I ~.frl t;,~9 Ul 3.23 8.29 9.01 4,62 3.0t! 3.S2 6.36

In 15 1:.03 ..07 ".M l,27 3.52 7.22 7.87 fi.2~ fI.ES

14.11 15.11

Montreal MO/fTREAL CLOSING STOCKS

111 Tb. Canodlan rrm TIf.nt. sllc" E,dlanl'e-t'ell, 13

Complete tabulation or Wf'dne,tl.y tranaat:Uonl. Quotatlon, In tents unlcs.!i marked $ .• -Odd 10' .d-Ex dis'ldend, xr-l:x.rl,hll, xw - E,.warnill •. N.I chance III rrom pre"lODJ board·lot elOI"', .. I ••

Set Slork S.I.. RI,h Lo.· CI ... Ch·,.

Abllihl 1M 141'.; 41'.1 11'" + 1i ,\J:::oma 123D St61,~ 45 ,16\~ Alumlnl 2037 521 23 21 + I AlUm 2 pr 21S 111'.1 481ft An, 4\, pr lO $IZ 4Z 42 - h M ... a 100 SIO 10 IB +', Ar, 260pr 100 Il2 :;2 32 + II A.be.too lOIS 127 26'. 2610 + I, Atl 'Su, ZOO 5181/4 111114 lal/~;- I,~ AUa. S\.el 2471 sml J71.i 37" Bank lt onl 2007 S64'h 61 6~1"~ + 1'1 Bank NS i7 Si2~ 72!~ 72',-i - ~. Blnq CN 9S2 $72 7fr11 72 + 1 Blnq PC 41)2 .SOIO 4911 19" - '. Banq CN rl 10735 m 5(1; 52l + 25 Boll Phon. 3182 ssm sm mi + '" BcwaLer 3151 U\'A S1f~ 51,".:1: + ~~ lIral.... 100 filS 615 611 -15 IlC Fore.t 106S $Im 14 1m BC Pow 411 1201'1 201; 201'.. + '.' 8C Ph 4\Jp 70 '81\~ I2V, D2'4 +2'/0 Bruck Il 300 $1 6 & +~, Bulin Prod 310 $211', 7lI~ 2tv. - :v. Duloln 200 130 B2J !21 -5 c.1 row 200 m %1 21 C.ft Cem 260 nm 33\1 331io + 1'1 CI rnd!')' 100 t21'" 2tV. 2tV. + 1\ CSL 125 .ll II $1 -I CAE 300 $8% !I~ B\I Cdn Brow SlID $10\'0 101'1 1010 - ',. cdn Brew pr 25 til 52 52 C C.I m pr '200 um 3m 3641- '.' C Ch.m 100 Sill. 0'» ~i + ',\ C HUlky 1110 liMI 6\io m + '" C Hydro 100 II!I, 1m 18\1 - '.' e Imp Bk C 361 f(13 61h 13 + I'" CI Pow 411.\ 1131'a 13\\ n!l. Hi CI Pow pr 100 III 431', m. - I. e M.rconl 1800 446 130 110 CPR 1030 U8V. 2811 2SI\ +', CdR Pet pr lOG SII Inl mi"' I> e.nt D,' 1~ 170 lilO 170 +! Col Cell 200 U.. 5\~ 5\0\ + I. Con liS 1150 S23\1 2m 13\10 C Gill. 200 112 IZ 42 Coronation 5SO' 171'. m 711- '\ Cru.h Inl 100 st31i U\o\ 131'.1 + II DI,' S.l, 720 1491> I!\< m. Hi D Brld,. 490 tlDll IBIJ 11l1. Ii DC •• lpr 621.T 7 7 ~'" D 'ndry 110 sm. 8m 6m ~ 1. D 01&1. 210 $86 18 II .. 1'1 D stote x4 3201\ 11m 13~ 1m Dom Tar 2115 SlI IT,.. 16 - ", Dom Tul 4SO lIB" 1m IB1. + I'< DO~dhu. ld 200 12m 23 23 + '4 Uu .oft! 23! 112 111'0 4l1'.1 Do 'o.t pr 60 sal\l 111'. 1m + 4'4

LOIlnlln S030C 51>' ! .' LL L,. lOO 170 IS! \IS -5 lpoontr JODI) \I 1\ 11

IIllowln 2111 14 31 31 + I EI.elrolux xd 25 Ulli 511i sm-I\i ralcon %71 ssm SIVa 5111

LorldO 10200 11ft 116 1\1 -I L.,"d~.t I~ II 16 17\1-1 M.d •• n 2110 2ll US 23.1 Ma",.1 7100! I I ~I.~ Bar 1000 11\, 11\1 Ill, + I. ~lanDka loiS 2DOO 20 20 :10 llara',& 1000 II II II + II'J !IIatboJ 2200 131\ 13\. UI'o - \1 Mlreen 7100 10 10 10 + II MatlUm. '1900 4T 41 17 + 1'1 Mirth! 17000~! 3.1 'I -I )\11.lc_ 1(111' 9 t MeM,r '11111 11\ I', m - u ,

WHY NOT I I in

COMFORT . INSTEAD

(r:~ ~ "I rr ' ;: ))) ,

G.

Tran. Cift IlIOIt .0 66 80 -1 Triad 011 MD 167 IN III -I Union Oil 1110 IIM\ lOll 10" + % Unl'~Mr 1'&3.1 41 It 40 +1 \l c.... vI. lOG IZI UB 12.1 Un 011. 3878 Ill! UT IlT -I W D.utt. 51217 110 120 130 H Y.~ C.. 8201 SI, m J\\ -I

Monl NS

UNIIR . 762 11m 13 1m + Iv. ttl .m, 72 n~ +. ~I

Ik C 1631 SOl 61'1', 13 + 2l> C Imp Royal Tor·l!om

AI~ml.1 e Brow Inla.d Inv ~ynd P,mblna Slmp.OII. Stedman W.lnw,11 W.lke" . WIIIO. J

1240 171% 711.\ 7414 -+ \\ 719 SBI 8I1i 82'4 + \0\

I/fDIlITBI"LR 1757 12m 23 21 + Ii

7!9J $10\'0 101\ 101t + 10 m 411 415

A IS! UBI'.I as &1\0\ 220 87 m 7~- I~

161 S31\o\, ~m 31 + Ii II II? IT IT

: I~:: : !'~' 1512 ,10\1 20 20\,; '4.

Tol.1 .. les: 1,311,000,

Montreal

Y.m Play 125 "71'.1 171'0 1m - ~ FI •• lwOOd 300 S211'.1 2411 211'.1 + ,. 'r~ .. t 300 121 21 26 n.llnOlu 2.1 1131. 331'0 33" - V. G.I 5 pr 17$10011, lOW, 1001, - Ii Or IIr C Inv 4400 1I0~~ I~I IfrlO + OL P.per 1460 116~ 1m 1&1'0 + I\, H.w. Sid 3SO.m 51'.1 511 + ~. HDllin,.~ 100 '12\~ 221. 2m Hom. II lIOO 112'4 12\< 121'< lIud lIay m 811 !l 5] + ''':. Imp 011 1187 11m 4111 'W. Imp Tob 1200 a1Sl'.1 Illi 151, Imp 'rOb pr 60D $IV, !'4 BVo - "\ Ind A ... ~ B70 S26 2111 28 .• % • Ac 225 PI lJD IIBlt 481'0 IW .. + I 1.\ Nlchl 1370 lAm sm 8m + Ii In Plr IlII 1311'.1 311-< 3111 + II Int ·Utl IDC) 846 46\\ 41 till Inl \Jill pr 3TI no so 50 Inlor PL 117 110 7911 110 + '.' ~I rr 100 IUV. 11V. 111\ + 1'4 ... blt 1130 ,11" "1'.1 lSl'.I + 'Ii !AUr rln.' 17& '1111 16" IAII - \, Laur F 2eO pr 26'11 .1 II Ma.toren A lot 122 :12 It MI rll 1730 12m ml 211\ - '.1 Marlllm. T 134 S:ll 21 21 - II Mal. F 31M 1121'1 IZlI 1m - 'l,i M... F ll'.lp 15 1106 106 106 Mel Storel 100 sm m m - % M .... y rl 11530 26 23 26 +2 . Mol.on A ZIO '29\" 29'" 291i - 1\ Mol •• 1I R 245 130'1< 30 30 - It Monl T .. t 12.1 190 88 B9 -I

MONTAIIi"L CLOIIIIO Iroclll' Moore Corp 410 mv. 111\ 52';' + 1'0 A~lllbl II~ IlGIII Tlr II Noranda xd 1320 133 m. 33 A,"'1I0' 2111 "' .. or ,21 ,,- 1-' 100 m II '2 - \I IIMUI C Nit 72 OT tiki, Iall ·O,l1vl.' 363 .,21\ 1m im - II '.nk Mont II.... Hu4 Dlr Min 13 Onl SI,.' . ton t151'.1 11'.... !51'1 + \i 8. k N5 12'L I 01 ~ .. Pl~ Pell_ US tl2 11'1l 12 .n::Ul PC ~"I~' NI._ ~~" .Pow Corp 2200 III. mm - I~ 11.11 5J~ Inl P.p 1m Prleo Br . 1791 Ilm 17 37 - II Bral1l 119 M .... F.r 12\1 QN 0.. 490,7 61-1 filO BId, Prod 211\ Norand. 33 QN Gal pt 10 sm. 8711 B71'.. + \10 CI. I nd "L P d h 'L Que 'ow III $.15';" 3SIi 311'.1 - "

'110111 v.a u,...u U 7" Ronand, A xd 610 $90/. gIl 911 ..

I C Cemenl L 33" Prt~o 31 .' 10r..1 lIank 16' $74", 74". 741'. +". . C Stoamsh,p II QIIt I'ow . 3S1'.1 • '" ...

C Imp B" C •• ft. lB. m S. Id. r 3SO $10 10 ·10 ;: ,', A .. nv~' an. 7.... Shawln 1711 129<L "_9'\ 291'

EPA For Reservations , ,

. I HARVEY'S 9.~nlor mVEL AlIN~Y

. . i I a-3Ubl EPA:" SERVING ';1 m IIL,NlllANU all:ll~~I{AUU~

,.

Cdn IInr 101'1 Shaw In 291> 5h ~, • Cdn Brew pr ~ steel It awln A 100 IZM. 29\. 29\1 Cd. Clla. 481'.1 Tt C.. rL 241\\ lilt... I p. pr 15 144'1\ 44l, 4H, - I'< C Inl!'ow.. m~ \IN ~., • 8hen 011 4DO 111'/, 14 II C I I P 13" W Sbell I. pI 200 $28 Z8 :Ill

n wr,r "lIklr "Shall 1ft Irl 400 51111 580 590 +40 cpn hit CANAl>IAN' Sher W pr 10"2.1 12.1 I2S S.o".ml ·m~· All, A Molyb 240 Simpson. ld 200 SlIl1 31'1.1 31',,-1 D Brldll IIIi COM Pap 31 SMltbam 7S 531 35 35

New York " TIl. A ... ,I.tl.· ..... '"

B.lh 51.01 31'4 . Kll1lleolt . 71 Bor, Warnr 4~ MD.\)'. W 3 C .nd 0 561, NY Cenl 17\~ enn. Edl.on IS,.. 'Radlo Corp &ai'. F.I Auto EI 52',~ SMllh Pacm. 30'\ G.n EI.~ 79 IW 011 Jjl 111. OllQdytlt 31~1 Uld. Alretln 48,.. Gt Nor 11, 48\0 V.nadlUm 14\< I.' T T IP.' Wealn... 34\1

SIe.1 Ce. 3100 fl9l< 19 19 - II illtnb, A 100 II~' 19'\ 19,1 T..... C.. 150 145 45 41 Tor Dom 42.5 $62 61'11 61 T FIJi A 100 $:m 13\\ m. - ',~

· Tr C Corp tIlS III 10~ II. + 'I.. Tt C.n PI. ItO 12m ZIII 2114

UTr Mt r, L 30.\ '141'.1 14\~ 111'.1 + '.' ~ Sleel 100"! .. 6 - ql

Walk.O W lOG· 1St .. SI +1'.1 \I'.bb Knp 10011 200 200 200 . WCofi11 vt lOll $13'11 131. Ill. + '" W ra.Ulc 100 $1711 11\. m. - ',I W.,lon A 4DO ~lI.'l 181i m\ + u

Ala. AI.QI

· Alph. Ii

· C.\NAIlIAN . ~31t(\.14 11 3190t 78 71 · 100' 15 . 5

11 n !. - It

Am.ran 1000 3 .3 3-1 An Am Mol j200 260 Z35 210 -15 Ang PIp SO $33F: l3Lf~ lJ~2 All.. 1500 4\'0 41'" m - l'.o All.. Tel 5100 275 270 27l AUJl\l.lu. 1023 34 31 31 ~ 1'.1 Aul Fllr II :;00 I4l 145 III -J) Dateman tOOt) .5 ~ S lI,nechi' 3500 21 21 21 Blue Don 825 S16~~ 16~ :6~' Bornile SSOO Illi 131; \I -I Druncau 1500 2SV" 250 25'/" + 11.1 Cemp Chlb 900 II, 410 m -10 e Floor II BS6 SI8 In lB C S rot, 100 415 II, 115 + 20 C ColIl .. le. 1100 $111 7'1. 71'.1 CG Inv 7! $12\\ 42Y.. U';, C Ilodiak 3700 ~ 54 S4 -I ; Power HId $10 10 10 :l1lalilsk 6000 4 31h;" + ','2 .\110Tam 1000 16 16 11; ,,"'and 711 2lS 220 22! 311uba 10000 2 ~ 2

':arbtc '!iOO a ,Ih: R ~cnl ~I.n 2000 7 7 7 Chlb Cop 500 81,'" 8~"~ lM - ~J Clv.lond 2&000 ti\1 S 6',' + 2 ComOlJore 400 450 4SO 450 Cmdo," wi 4100 150 150 150 C Mogador 1000 IB 1B 18·-1 C Paper 221 $38 .31 38 -~. Cop.lrm 1000 17 17 17 -I Della' 3100 160 111 175 -5 o E.plor 1000 32 31 31 + I D Lo •• e 5300 62 60 61 Dumagaml 2500 4.l 39 3~ -6 Dumont. 2000 21 23 23 -I Equity Ex. 6{)00 10 W, 10 -- '{~ F.b 1000 II II II - ~ Fontana' 1000 41,), 411 411 FI nellance 5000 19 19 19 -I Fox Lake 7500 21 20 21 G ,\ulotroll 1410 395 373 39) + 5 GI.n I.ak. 2100 IB3 IBI It3 Gold ,,~, IGOOO 25 22 2! "2 GI'I"ol IO} 1130 100 IBO In'[liratn 207 21S :U:' :21S -l j tnt lIeHum 600 I!lO IGR 1M -I Inl PI. A 6,0 SIO 10 10 ,I Jubilee 1331 J(J;' 2&11 305 "f 20 ItI,na . 2150 m III ~21) Lambl A 40 $101, 17 IB1. Loblaw A 600 $;::'4 R\:' 8~" _ I, Loblo".' n 800 $s:a 8lh Bh - I ...

Matachwn 1500 2:i 2{) 2,i -I ., Majtrans 3£'500 12 10 12 't" J Malnrllc \I 1900 ti3 :;9 60 Marehanl 1000 71 7B 76 MaSival ~OO 9 9 9"~;, Mldepsa 1900 1M 171 171 -9 Morrill ~O 61 61 61 • I Mid Chlb :;00 17 17 17 Monprc 6000 21 2.1 23! ~ -1 ~~ MI Ple •• t 6200]16 Il2 m -3 Mn nalrlc> 110 $7'.. 7\1 m - ',I Nol Au Ven 100 165 16S 165 ,5 MI.I"n, 222000 65 SJ 6S + 8 ~eedcu 700 2.50 24~ 2~5 -5 N Forma nOll 4. JUJ 31.1 -l McKinney 1000 30 29 29 -I Nfld IA,hl 3; SRI al r,l -1\1 NW Amult 3000 II!, 14Y.. II', Nocanll 300 ~ 4 "-2 ~,\ Asb :iOA 7 7 7 +1 :0;;\ n,l'. 113110 43 j~ U ; j

Openl l-;,p 10110 In 13 IR " Opcmlska Ij() 70.\ iO.'i 'iO", I ;)

f'a In\' tor') 33.; J:\.i 3.n T:.!S J'8I Sill' noo Ii 40 10 -I rauda~h 10,100 7~1 7~, 7~~ + L~ r('~ct' nh' 1.123 1:10 173 1M .,-]1) PitL Gold :.?oon .\11 4'~ ~I'i Porcul'ine ~SOOO 4'.1 4 ~L; + '1 I

QUe Cohnlt fiOO :!i.' 2i5 ~7.i I Que SmtlL :,(l[) UI:1 1~1 t 11ltl '" 1" Que Ph j1 pr n:; n01,i 201 3 20h ned Cut 13jl)O ~ 11 l.") .

Robtnal l!olj,lJ lR 1 \ 17 11 I

Stl. Colulll 1100 .,.0 HI 13~ -10 SI LRw D" II){) 110 110 110 SlIv Sum 30800 9' 1.9 91 -3 Sauc DeY 2300 HI 1!1 19 , SU n.g 8000 6' 6~ fi2 S DufAult ~OO 1\ 1\ A - 11 SpI""n 1200 60 6. .9 -j Sullivan 900 11.1 172 112 -3 Surllcst Ord 100 SIP. li~4. 17::. - '., l'ih Expl al~OIJ nil 9 !l - 'tl TUan 1000. 6 fi TIC Fr.... 100 300 300 300 Un Obalskl 23800 70 6t 70 + 5 U Prln :~OO t) ·n 4j .. ! "II ~Iar 200 Sj'" 31• ~\. J.. t. "an [) lIout JD2j J~(1 33j 34:i + .1' Yancarrl 8500 'I;~ 61.~ 71:2 ... 1 Weslern lIet 1500 II 15 IS -I

CI •• lnt. ..lei' Indu.lrlill mint! ilnd OUI 857.600.

New York· "'ElV YORK CLOSINO ftTOCKS By The AIIGel.ted PreIS

StW York Stork E:u~hanle-Ftb. 13 ,d - Ex·dlvldond. '" - E.·rIAhl.,

xw-Ex·warranl5. Net chanle I. from pre\'lous diY'S close.

Stork ACJ" Ind Addrc'll Allegany Alii. Ch Amerada hm Can

N.I Sl1e. HI,h Low Cleat Ch',e

1900 83 B2 aJ + 1'/\ 2000 SZfriJ ~ll 5:!~i + HR 400D 11',., 11 H',. - ~a 5100 161\ 16\\ 16'" 4600 11611 ml'l 1Il'l' - Ii 3200 1714. "6~i 47 + '.11 1]00 52~ 52 52'. + 1,~ Am Cyan

Am Mut ;\m Sid Anl Sugar Am Tcl

1I02DO 2m 2~ 22'. + li

Am Tob Amlled Ancnd. Armco SII Armllg Ck nabcDck Ball Ohio Belh 51.el BoelnJiC Borden Bor. War Dos Edllon Ilrun.wk Bucy ErIe Durrahl Calum.1 Can Dry Cdn Brew cpn Case JI Cal.r Tr Celanese Ch" OhIo Chry.lr Cille. Sve Cle,·Il. Coca Cola CBS Coml Solv Con EdLo Coni liner Con Can Con 011 Copw SII Corn Ptod Crane CQ Cr Zell Curtis. Wt Deer Dom. M Dill S .. , Dauatu Dow Chern Du Ponl Eaat Kod Ealon MIg EI Auln I. El Paso Flre.tn Ford Frueh Tn Ocn Dyn Otn E111e Gen Fila Gon MIIII GMC

4000 13\, 131-1, lJ!I.'a 8EOO 5m 50,. "v. + '.

35000 12t-. 121h 12218 - ~ .. 11000 291. 2911 2911

1&00 321. JIli 32 0900 1m m. 16\. + ~. 6000 1311 m, m. + H, 1100 7H. 72 72;< + 1\ 1000 49 IBl> 48'>'0 - Ii

.110 30 29\1 30 - ". 17300 31\< 3011 31'4 + Ii 3GOO 39\1 39 39 1900 50''; 1911 60\1 - 'k 2800 411'1 1111 41% + '.'

400:} :l8~~ 38\1 33\-. + ~ .• 17000 18;, tn 111/, - ~i 1600 18 15~, 1m - v.

10900 29'.'4. 28\. 29\. 1000 12'. 12';" 12\\ + 1; 600 22'/1 22~ 2H4 :00 lMl 91~ 9~4

4JQO 241i 241> 21'. + '\ 25000 814 8 8; ~ .... ~'B

3~00 3B'" 35 3611 6900 391, 39 39 - V.

4300 57 56''; 16,.. • 101800 9SI, 91l> 911, + m

4600 60Ii 6oY. 6011 + 1, '1000 3811 3811 38\1 + 1'1 2100 9311 1210 93 + ~i

12900 501\ 19,. 4911 - t, 2400 2m 26 28 - \1 4400 sty. 8B~l 881, + '.j 4000 241. 2~~ 2·U. + ;t. 1900 41V. 44\i .m - '4 !900 56';" SSI'< 55~\-1

800 3t;4 3~1A 34~t + 1,1 6700 1m sm 13~, + 1. 100 471. 471'1 171'.1 + 1'.

1100 m~ 47 47 +~ 8900 19V. 19\1 191\ + Ii I 4900 Sill 59 59). + \I 1400 2n. 26~'4 26~1 - 1,",1

3011 Ill. 1!\It 151, - " 3!00 28 270/, 2m - '. 2300 59 ~81\ 58!. +;. 2.100 2~2 2101' .. ZII

12600 11511 llJl'.o lIW .. + 2V. 900 383m 3l1. + II 400 5~ 52l'.. 52';" 5500 19 18~~ 18~~ - I.a 1400 3~~~ :u~~ 35;'\ + ~ ~

39900 ~W~ 43:\~ 04.4;" + ~~ 10300 21 27\1 21 + 1\

11300 2ni ~11A 27~1 199{)O 191\ 71V. 19 + ~I 4000 113~1 82'!.1 &3~i + Hh 4200 3m m, 33 +~. 3J600 6lV. 6211 62'. + LI

Gen Tlr Glidden Gondrlch Goodyear Grand Un GI A I'

xd 4900 m. 111'.1 211-2 + I. 200 39\i 391'1 39".. "

R9D11 t7 m ... 461\ +I~\ 4800 3t~i 33~4 3H~ + If~

2100 1m 17'.. 171i + '"

Gt Nor R Gull 011 nom"k lIud B !It Interlake Inl Bus Inl naIf I Nick 1d Inl Pap Joh.... II{ Inl Tel Kenne-col Kotv,lt_ Jlmg. Kroohlcr Lib MeN L Lillon Loow'.'

3900 1I11 4H1 45V, + ,. 3100 411> 47 m. + v.

moo IZ~I 1m m. + ~i 2000 601, 10V, 491i-l 100 491\ 19'.. 49\'0

1400 25,. m. 2S';" -I- I,

· ~l~ 4;~11 4~;~ 4im -:;:IIK 8600 D2 Il\< a11l + ,I 7900 2DY. 29 291-2 + I, 5600 4611 m. 46\1 + m

IMOO 46Yo 4A\, 46'1\ + I 8000 71 71V. 71 • W,' 1500 2!\, 2111 281. + F. 1100 1m 21 2111 + v.

200 IIV. II 141'. + 1'. 2200 1m 111'.1 12\1 + I>

18000 841i 63\i 84"1. + 1'1 32100 1911 111\ 101,

MAd 5 Oar ,Moralh 011 Marsh Fld Morlln McKoe Merck

21110 1\1 2 II> H. 5100 441. 141. 4m

800 361h 36\i 3SllJ - l\ 13100 2m 211\ m.

100 1411 14% 1I~1 - \0 1Joo 84".. 83 83~ + J,:4 4200 911'0 02l' 93 -lilt Mpl. Roo

Mlnll MM Mlnn Ont MoM.eo Mon.anlo ~Ionl Ward Nat Avlat Nal Cub Nal DI.I N.I Gyp. NV C.nl NY Nil NOT Pao Oulb Mor Parka D. Pep.1 Cola PII •• r Philp. D Phlloo. rhlllp Mor PII Plale Pro Glm PUllm.n BCA n.lIton B.pub 511 lIey TOb noyal Du~ SUfi n 8~en Oil Sheratnn 5ln.lllr

3800 5M\ 59 am + I MO 191. 19\. 191'.1- '" 2300 11»1 101~ 10V. 6OD0 SJlI 51\'0 SZ'4 - " 5900 31' 3)'4 34 + II

400 2710 2m 2711 2600 74 721-2 74 + tv. 4200 2ni :41,-2 24~ + 't1 1400 44\'0 II\< 1111 - V.

121110 1m 1m 1711t +11 800 1\'0 m 1\1

1900 111'.1 43\\ 431'.1 + 11 · 1100 1411 1m lWa + I. · SlOO 2m 2611 27" + Ii

100 49 "'" 49 6500 SO\\ 4&!\ 101'< + ~ 1100 sm Inl 511\ + V,

1100II m. 3614 31 - v. 1000 70'" 71\< 761'.1- I,

I XII) ~6'!':;. 6m + I't \l1AI 7411 71 1m HI 700 271'1 17', 271'1 + 1'1

·473011 11\0\ 81~ 81'h +21> 300 38\\ 38~1 30'10 + '.~

17011 3f'.i lm 37~i + 1\ 21000 401'0 31;\ 411 - 0;, IInOil 48\\ IWo 1m + \. 2!IM m. 751.• 7lI1 + I, Inoo ~811 nil 311. + II

$!Ill 11 12 12 1108 311t I!I' ~II'<:'; ~I

SDcony 6000 GH1 62% 62;~ + 1 ~ Soulh Pac MOO 3011 291. 30), + '" Sperry R 26(00 H~l ]3:Y~ 13% _ J,~ Sid Bran~ 600 67 66% 61 +~. Sid Cal 1400 6H\ Bm 611i + lI, Sid Ind 4900 33\1 5m m. • ',I Sid NJ 26100 60 S9'tI 19,. + '" Slu,1 rack 8!900 m 7 71i + " Sun Oil 500 47 461i 47 + '/' Texaco 9ClOO 6\ 60 6O:j.i + ~, Tex G Sui 9000 14V. U~. IH4 - ~~ To.lron 4000 32Y.. 3H1 321'. + 1. Thlokol 4700 2N 2m 201. + '.' T~nk," 1400 571\ sm S6l'o + m Twenl C 1603 26','. 251'0 25Y. - "' Un Carh 2400 1081h IDn~ 108 + I,"J Uld Alrc 2000 49 48~" 43l. + I I~ Utd Corp l~OO 8~'t. S\, Mil + ~. US G)'II" 2900 17\, 76~1 77\1 + I US IIUbb 4000 45~', m. 1m., ~. US 51001, 19000 4611 45 1m • 1\, V.nod Cp HOO 111'0 II 1m + ',\ Walk'" 200 sm SHI SlIO - '.' Westh. ~I 9000 3l1', 34 311. + " W Un Tel 7600 30',~ 29\\ 30 + \1 Woolwlh 2700 63110 63\\ 6m - 1'.

Tolal '01,,, 1.960.0CO.

AMERICA,N AMERICAN CLOSINO STOCKS

B, The Allocl:aled PrtU Amerlcln Stock E!cllan,e-Feb. 13 xd - Ex dIvIdend. " - Ex·rIRhl.,

:<w-Ex.warrllntl. Net change is from

Market Stocks Rise St th MONTREAL (CP) - Slocks reng ens. rose. smartly Wednesday after­

TORONTO (CPl-The stock noon to snap the downward market slrengthened Wednes· trend that dominated Ihe Mint­

day for Ihe first time this week, real and Canadian cXchBnges as all seetion5 pulled to the up· for, the lirst hal! or the week. side, Aluminium was a promi~ent

Industrials gained more Ihan gniner. rising a point to 24 in

two poinls on index. while golds. act/"e trlldin!! on announcement base metals and western oils all 01 a marked increase in enrn·

showed fractional rises, ings in 1962. Banks led Ihe main list higher Canodlan Celanese. rose % to

with Monlreal liP i •• Nova SCIl' 46%, Algoma galned 114 to 461h. tin ahead ~~. Royal ahead l.~, Brazilian Traction gained 15 'I\Jronto.Dominion up '!4 and Co· eenls to $4.20 and Induslrial <I.e·

nudian Imperial Bank 01 Com· cenlance rose % 10 26. merce up l'!1. Banks were sharply higher.

Aiumillium. gained 7. Inter. Banque Canadienne Natlonijle

u.s. Doll 'MONTREAL ar

lng bid on the U terms 01 Canadl .S. . $1.07 25·32 ihe al~n Tuesday the I' ed $107111 CUllng' • • G, Ihe i Pound s t e r I l n 8, ed asked $3.02. TUi':d 13.1l

" lng bid was s' 11 thl asked $3.02 1-18.1.01 II-II.

C~n~11 NEW YORK ICPI 0 i

dollar down 1·32 al ~ lerms 01 U.S. llindl 92 45·04. Pound 5t il 01 $2.110".. er al

provincial Pipe Line and Moore rose n point to 72. Bank of Mon· Corporutlon 'i, each. Consoli· trcal added % 10 R4'h. Cann·

dnted Paper and Consumers' dian Imperial Bank 01 Com· SEEKS GENE Gas both ~. nnd Canada Cemellt mcrce rose \'" to 63 and Royal SANTIAGO rn' R.IL ',. Bllilding Products was weak· Bank added % to 7411. 'newsoaper :\o~i~:!rll cst, dropping Iwo polnls to 21. Amon~ Insers, CSL drooped a cas Graphic N~ws a~I' .

N.I On the exchange index, indus· point to 5\ and Price dropped man Israeli' conlma d !t I st.rk S.I .. IIIlh LOlf elo" Ch'" I' 1 I d 4 t 2 ld I' to 3- n Boll I'hone 400 19'1 19\', 191> ,." \'in 5 ga ne 2. 5 0 50 .24, ~o s,' • '. had arrired in Chile 1

0•

pl'evlou. day', elole.

Brazil 21200 I ". 4 +" ,12 tn 92,10, base metals .so to The cnmposile index rose 0.4 the Chilean .iudgem 0

~~\nkOI~1Il zlgg ii" ;~;: ;{Ii : i: 197.75 and western oils .25 to to 113.0. Industrials rose 0.5 to sary" in the eal cs Pclc 11600 J'\ 39·16 Pi 114.21 C I a 5 i n g volume was Iln.5. utilities llaillcd 0.2 10 . t I ~~~ ,~~~~~In 121~ I::~ ;:,. I:'" ~;: 4.314,000 sImes compared with 113.5. hanlls rnse 0,(' 10 122 n a~allls ormcr :';ali Ss Con MS oao 21', ~I'.' 21". 13,9.10.000 Tuesday. and pupel's Icll 0.5 to 101.9. Walter Herillan Raul Creole I""" '7' .. , .. , ,. . . arrrs.ted in ,outh·rn· '11 Dome Prt 200 12 '8 iii," I"I'~ R"!" .A I Among base metals. Falcon· I !,; " • , b 'd D' d' l' D" d ' 4. \\'cst Germani'

Goldlitld 3100 Iii m 1';- '. l' s I' It· I' I ". I I • ,;;'=,"~ i liS extradition on Ford Can 511 169 16m 163 -1"'1'1'1 gc, em~on an RIO A ~Im! .VI' ", .. "'S ' 1 . . lIollin~er 100 21 21 21 'a I ro e .4. n clnn lona •• IC<C the rna rl ' Imp Oil GOO 3B~' 3B',; 39;; .' .• gained I,. while Noranda, de· Canada Permanent ).[ortcage I in~ Il ~~ mnr ~r of Jr.,

:~,P NTot c ~:~g ~:i,: ~~,.I JlI, - ',I spite lrading ex • dil'idend 30 Corp.. common 50 cents, April: lecisi~~ 'h~eol~d World lit Jupilor 1:00 I'" I'.. I" + ';' cents, advanced I i. Lake DU'II. record MArch I,;. , a, ~en mad!

~Ia~~~;' F : I~:~ Iii' I~:~ !aull paced speculatives, gain· Canada Chemical Co. Ltd., Mead John 5900 19'~ ,si! 19 ' Illg 50 cents to SG.jO. I common 7'~ cents, :I!arch 14. ~NIOIIYb C 200 9·16 9·16 9·16 + 1-16\ record Feh 2' rUt·,.· .() G'··ILll· • a P~t 600 2 1 15,lR 2 -t 1·16 .... . "'. • ., \, NJ Zinc 100 29 29 29 I holhn~er Consohdated Gold CORXER BROOK, ~ni Pac rei. Ill)() II'.; 11 11 Ma rkets I :llines Ltd common I;; rents Geor~e Kennetn' "'h' II! . Pac Pete w 600 6 :;'.. 51" .• " u .,

rani, pee 400 Ii I, '.2 -1.16 :I!arch 29. record March 1. St.. GC?l'ge> :-IUd" ~~I Pow C 100 713·10 Z 13.16! 13·1. -·3·16 By TilE C,\:"IADlA:'\' PRESS 'I gUlit.\· III Suprl·me COlln Pre,ton 1000 7 ,·16 ,', i~, - '. T t '! k t h' I 1'1 Sher \I'm. 9110 76'. 7.1 16", •. Ii. oron 0-.. ar'e Igler; lrae·: Dow"'t"'rs Tuesda,' nf a char' I So Pen () .200 3~'. 31'.; 31', _ '. in~ modct'ately heavy. g ~ 0;; n I I' ,~ ~ Teebndr JIOO 9'. 9'. ~'. _ " " "k 'I k l II ' " neg Igenrr The Trn. Lu, 200 lj 1:;" new .. or '-., ar e gencr,' y LONDON f API-Bowater Pit· laid after thr l:affie Tr.Conl "t !fiOO 31'. ~3'i ]1', ,. ~. higher; lradill~ active. i pCI' Corp. Ltel. dos.cd at ~7s. last );lIIrlllhrr 01 I\'r liar, ,Oil 13·1'; 13'1~ 13·16 :Y[ontl'c<~1 _ 1\ •. T". I'k"t II'Nllel \1' I I Ih LIE n c I,,': I . ce nest ay 011 e m! on slock' .lias Faile. While is

'rotal III", 1.:lo,noo. __ • _____ ~I_·"_d_it_I~_a_cti\'e:____ : exc.ha_n_gc_. ___ .. __ . ____ ~_~p~rar for senltrnl~in~'.;.

'THE DAILY NEWS 15

A FAMILY AFFAIR!

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TO ENJOY ,IN YOUR MO'RN,ING

FOR DAD there's up-to-the-minute world, national and local news -

views nnd on-the-spot reports ot major ~porting events - business

and financial stories - hints on home repairs, etc.!

FOR MOM there arc reports of local social activities - club news -

ideas on food, homemaking and child care - and, of course, there

are dozens of advertisements to help her $hop better for less!

FOR YOUNGSTERS there's a wealth of information on current events

- school news - the popular cartoon strips - entertainment guides I

Where else

(or such a

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can you find so much, entertainment and education

small price' - to plca~e every member of the family I

THE DAILY NEWS PHONE 8 .. 2177 FOR HOME DELIVERY

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riel's Clock

I:l-I.UU'" Your Ble5si IInCl W

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Clock

M-.Jlrn~ram PNvi~w Devotion

School BI'Oi

1:l-~1U5i1C 1n the mor New!

Market with ~ School Bra

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Choll "L .• · •• .,. Broadcast

day Sercnadl

Bulletin Album

~1-r>lP'" and Wealhl h)...!Sllil·lov Harmcr ~

011 Tapp In lhe I

I9-IIDminion Ubs T

Prel'le,

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Today Iil-DOvl. BUlletiD

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Sports Seo. Off-O Can

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~1dorniAl:n;len Sbo'll Medilat

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Page 13: Nova Ltd. la', n ie~ena er n' elver UIcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · Elizabeth A vc. 9·4171 : :;: ... (left), was named Veterans Af· fairs ... ma~y on downtown

PER!

FOR TEXACO . .

Fuel Chief stOVE OIL AND FUEL 011

DIAL 8·300.1 8·3007

THE GREAT EASTERN OIL CO. LTD. ST. JOHN'S WINDSOR or CORNER BROOK

I

• nnlllg 'R A DID 011

-'.- -- -- ----.. ,) '. (.' . . .

\

JACOBY! ON '

BRIDGE

! SI'ECIAL lUDS

I Song Quiz 111.41-The Ru&s Clarke Show

I" AI

12.UO-New. Highlights I USED BY TEMI 12.01-Paul Hershon's Muslc In

the Night By OSWALD .1ACOBY

. THE DAII,Y NEWS. ST. JOHN;S, NEWFOUNDLAND, FEBRUARY 14 •. 1!11l3-U·; .:J

PRTSCTLLA'S POP

__ '''I."t01-,!'' 1."' .. It,. 1,:'- h< 1",t.

,~I.'.f.;y.~..z"'a::.

Bv AL VERMEER SWEETI E PIE

"Am 1 borin, you?" .. p..... ..... ... -- .•..• -._---

CAPTAIN EASY

I

Bv NADINE SELTZEII

... ~ By LESLIE TURNEB:":~i'

1,1

d. I;

"

II Ii

'. rrhrum Hlh. 1 12.00-The Russ Clarke Show

I t:!.~O-News L-_----- 12 35-TheRu5! Clarke Show

12.30- -National N~ws 12.3~-Paul Hershon'. Music in

Writtcn lor NCII'spltper Encl'prisc Assn.

,I

I ~rWI I 12.4Ii-Flshermen's Fllree,1I. t.:lo,k ! 12.5Ii-New!

Your B1m:n~~ !l.UO-B1ue Star News ~ews ana \\ e,lber i 1 15- Wllrld of Spurt

Ii,'pon I 1.25-The Russ Clarke Show ~~om Il~port 1 UO-News Headlines

Clill'k , 1.31-The Russ Clarke Show

R!r~rt 1/\\ COlnil1cntal'Y Frrsu50n Show J.nr~

I' :toO-News Headlines

2.01-Prilc. and Problem. 2.:JO-News HeadUnes

II :!.31-Prizes and Problem.

2.55-News 3.00-'1"le Bob Cole Show :l.aO-News Headlines. 3.31-Th. Bob Cole Show 3.55-NeW5 tOO-Bob Cole Show UU-News Headlines '.M-New. and Weather 5.DO-Bob Cole Show

l!:-JO .llIlr.Cl with ~11l~ie II :lD-News Headllnc. hool Broadcast 5.4lt-Flsherman'. Foreeaa'

limt Program 1I.II5-Newa ~e\\'5 tWO-bulletin BOiro

!~":nOU1'rrr! L'hoice UO-Movle Guide Broadcast 6.15-SporU Report

dlY Serenade 6.25- Travel Guide Ie Bullclln 6.30-EarlJ Eveninl New.

Album Roundup Ind Wcather 7.00-Fleichmann's Riddle

" Il.rmrr Sholl' & 7.IS-Shillelagh ShowUml IIhl!'! On Tapp 7.aD-News He,dUn,.

III th~ Act 7.31-Back to the Bible IJ-~lmml,on ubs Time 1.55-i~e"l

RendezI'ous Schonl Broad·

8.00-Cre:lm of the Crop UO-News Eeadline. B.31-Cream of the Crop

10.00-Nlaht Show A 1O.30-New. Headllnll

lO,31-NI.hl Show s IO.45-World or Sport

IO.55-New. 1l.OIl-Turba, Weather R .... n.Ol-Blg Top Ten. ll.:tu-Newl Headlina 1l.31-Night Show 12.00-Newl. l2.31-N,ght Show

5 12.55-Newa Summa,.." Weath" Sporu and W.atner Reo Repllrl Ind Tim.

I D5-Sliln Off

CJON

.-the NillM

CJON·TV THURSDAY, February 14th. !:

\ lU5-Pastor's Study lO.50-Women's News ll.OO-Carloons lUS-Bomper Room 12.l5-News and Weather 12.30-5lgo orf 2.30-Chez Helene US-Nursery Schllol Time 3.DO-Natlonal Schools 3.30-Loretta Young Show UO-Take Thirty U0-5earlett Hill S.DO-Yogi Bear 5.3G-Rlzzle Dazde G.OO-CJ Jamboree G.30-The World of Sport UO-News Cavalcade 7.00-Douglas Fairbanks 7.30-Lucy Show 8.00-Polltlcal Telecast B.lS-National New. B.SO-Hennessey S.OG-Mlckey Spillane 9.30-The Defenders

10.30-Playdate 1l.SO-Gunsmoke 12.30-News and Wealher 12.35-Plstor'. Sind)' 12.40-51110 Off.

Paramount Today

• • • "CONCRETE JUNGLE" WITH STANLEY BAKER

• • •

.

The toughest picture ever made In Britain explodes onto the sCI'een today where "The Criminal" Is now playing at the Paramount Theatre. This Anglo Amalgamated release starring

WEST 41075 If J9 84 • A 7 64 '" 103

NORTII ,84 If 6 32 • QJ5 "'AK876

EAST 496

14

" QI05 + 10982 ,,,"QJ95

SOUTH (D) "'AKQJ32 ¥AK7 + K3 ",42

North and South vulnerable South Wesl North East 2 '" Pass 3 '" Pass 4 • Pass 0 '" Pass 6 '" Pass Pass Pass

Opening lead-+ A

Except for tlie fact that ali members of the 1963 Ameri· can team usc the 4·3·2.1 point count, as do practically all bridgil players in the world, there is slight resemblllncc be· tween thcil' systems and stand· ard American. Leventritt and Schenken use an artificial club convention bsed somewhat on the early Vanderbilt Club which is 8 trifle too compli· cated for description in thesl!' columns.

One of the bids used by Bobby Nail and my son, Jim, is the ACOL two bid as used by most British players. In this system two clubs is a force to game and other two bids are forces for only one round, but still show pretty good hands.

Jim's opening two spades is a example. He is a Irifle too weak to force to Ilame, but ccr· tainly has a fine hand. Bobby's three clubs was a positive reo sponse and Jim jumped to game to show that his spade suit could walk by itself.

THURSDAY, February Uth. Stanley Baker, Margit Saad and Sam Wanamaker tells for the

One test of a good partner is ability 10 make the right bid at the right time and Bobby believed he had enough to in· vlte a slam. He chose five spades rather than four no­trump because if Jim should show two aces Bobby would not know whether to bid six.

, Ftbruary Wh.

'0, Alien Show

Meditation IDd Weatner of Sport

Show, Ilrst time the Inside story of the criminal underground which works inside as well as outside prison walls, of how men's !lves are played with in k etiminal aame of chess. '

6.30- -The Hob Lew!. pora

S.05-Muslc for MUllaD. 9.30-Austln Willis 9 35-Weather Forecut. S.4(}.-Wln 37. 9.45-Doctors House calli 9.5G-Nfid. Klatter

10.0B-New. In a Minute.

The five spade bid was. just what Jim needed. With solid spades and first or 8econd round control of each unbid suit Jim went to' the lay down slam.

Stanley Baker has the hard· est hitting role of his career as the released prisoner who, hav· Ing spent the yean of his sen· tence planning a forty thousand pound racecourse robbery, exe- CARD SENSE

Hou.. cutes It with the help of his friend Sam Wanamaker and his

10.1~ -J erry Wiggin! Hous. wive. ClIaic.

10.30-NaU"n.1 New. IO.33-JerrY Wlnlns

wives cbolce 11.00-News Hillhllghta ll.1I5-Llfe can be Beautiful 11.35-Town and CountrJ 1l.45-Town and Countr, 12.00-Who's That 8IDIIID' '2.05-New5 H\ihll&tlU aDd

Weather Bob Lewis Town and Country Show

gang-then double.crosse. them Q-The bidding has been: o South West North East

by absconding with the money Pass Pass

1 + 2 "

and hiding It. From then on, 1 + the ganll Is Qut for venaeance. 1 ¥ They betray Baker to the police You, South, hold: and once more he finds him·

PaSs Pass

self in· prison. He engineers an escape, aid·

ed by Margil' Saad, and races

4A Q 7 6 ¥A Q '7 6 .K J II 2

for the hidden money just one What.do you do? tOO-Weather Forecast 1.15-NIIWI US-Don Jamieson'.

stop ahead of the gang. As he Edl. digs feverishly In a field, the A-IUd three hearts. You _re

gang cloles In on him • . .. willing to try for the major Stanley Biker excels as the I suit game. If you feel like

tough criminal whose prison gambling, four Itearts would sentence is only bearable be. ,Jlot be a re~\Iy ba.II overbid.

torlal , UO-Spcrts 1.45-Art Baker'a Notebook 2.03-Jerry Wiggins Mahnee 3.00-News Highlights 3.0l-John Nolan's Western t.OO-N ews Hijlbllptl: Ull-John Nolin'. Ranu

Party:' .

cause of the money lind the girl TODAY S QUESTION waiting "outside." Lovely Mar. Your partner bids two no-glt Sud Is bewltchinll In the I trump over your ono heart. part of the wild girl who Is un. What do you .do? wittingly the downfall of Baker. Answer Tomorrow

lUG-National Nlw •• U3-John. Nolin'. lioct.

Party. '

Sam Wanamaker gives a pow· erful performance 8S the gang bali who Iwears vengeance on BARBS the double-crossing Baker. Also • •

MeditatlOb 8bow

Hetdlllies Allen Show

Club fttlasll Clarke Show

tldllnea ~llJll Clarke Show

t!' Contest

allli Cllrke Show .lUlln N .WI

Hetdhnfl Clarke Show Nnt roll1.

II.OO-Newl Hlibll,btL tI.OO-New •. Rla\'IllIbtl IIJ111

, featured In "The Criminal" are' -Grerolre A8lan, Jill Bennett By HAL COCHRAN

W.ather. 1I.03-NatiDnal New. 8.10-..sport' 6.SO-Dlck Earl' , 7.00-News HI,bll,btL 7.III-Dloll Earl 'l.SO-New.. , I.OO-Jambore. '.15- .Jlmboree 8.aO-NaUo.at New. &.it • Jambore •. 1I.lIO-oN tws Hllhllptt 9.4D-Nfld !'airel'.

IO.OO-National News ' JO.III-Pick of the Pops IO.~Spor~ .. 10.:i5-Letters ana Messagel ll.OI-Paul Herslllin' •. Muslc In

, .. the ."llbt , , \

,'. , I'

and Laurence Nailmlth. In the good old days young "T~e Criminal" II notable for girl, use,d to leave home, tem·

Its powerful scenes of life in· , Dr rlly so' they could sneak side prison and pulls no pun· \ p ~ok~ ches in depicting every tough as. • • • and seamy side of the exIstence It's the fast stepper Who of men who .HV: I: shadow. has; the hardest time keeping

up with running expenses. SPEciAL' ADDED

ATTRACTION "FLAME IN THE,STREETS"

With John Mills Drama-Suspense -EltcilelJlenl

In This wonderful Drama . , We don't lik. the old friends

who slap you' on the back and knock a five·bUck loan righl out of your wallet.

. ~ .

About the -only thing going down these days is winter constlnl.

BEN CASEY By NEAL ADAMS -

BY DICK CAVALLJ' \IORTY MEEKLE -r;;..--....----'-I .. ---------.. -------..., ,...------..---. ...

A~T THING r'M OOINOION6EO II? MtY;?J;~.

I'M.GOING lO6UILDA

I?NONMAN ~ ~lDRf~ . HlGH':

f\LLEY OOP

BUGS BUNNY

~ ~!,.!;!;:====:=:,==~= !!'!=====!..,...!!!!:! FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS

ll-llo-T cune NEEDS HEL.P CARRYINc;, He~

1-lO~, LAI'!.D.!

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....

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By LEON SCHLESINGER

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Page 14: Nova Ltd. la', n ie~ena er n' elver UIcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · Elizabeth A vc. 9·4171 : :;: ... (left), was named Veterans Af· fairs ... ma~y on downtown

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At-THE DAILY NEWS, ST, JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, FEBRUARY h,

March' Of Dimes Wholesale Ltd., Goulds, W. W.

XXV horses sounded loud to Rafe $250.00 - Nfld. Margarine Wareham & Sons Ltd. Browl\water nod d e d his as the clash of cymbllls. But Co. Ltd, $15.00 each - Nfld. Minerals

head. "Half a mile." He spat no one hailed. The tangle of $200.00-A. H. Murray & Co. Ltd., J. M. Devine, The Big Six, out his tobacco. "Shouldn't pens showed bars down and Ltd. J. C. Hamlyn & Son Ltd. be no trouble unless somebody empty. $100.00 each - Imperial Oil $10.00 each-Peters & Sons rl'Cognizcs ~'ou. Duke left two Brownwater Bill, with his hat Ltd., Benevolent Order oC Elks, Ltd., Roverts Medical Group, o[ Spangler's gunnies on tap cuffed back, rode bold as you St. John's. Read, Son Watson & Leith, in case the 01' Man or Luce please to the great open gate $75.00-Dominion Steel & Basil Fearn Ltd., Crane Canada got minded to hunt greener and sat there, Impassive, walt. Coal Corp. Ltd., H. C. Brown & Sons Ltd .• past('rs." lie tugged his hal ing for Rafe to come up, In. $50.00 each - Purity Fac· F. W. Woolworth Ltd., G. E. lower ol'er his eyes. "I'll lead side he might be tore up as a tories Ltd., General Bakeries Barbour Co. LId., Chalker & the way." stomping pen but his face any. Ltd., Ayres Supermarket Ltd., Co. Ltd., West Atlantic Pro·

Rafe's jaws· tightened. That way, in this leaden light, Brooke Bond of Canada Ltd. ducts Ltd., Delphis Cote Ltd., whole business back yonder- looked calm as a millpond. No $30,0O-H, B.' Clyde Lake Dr. Stafford & Sori Ltd., Gen· ,crery last lucky part of it, matter which way he swung. Ltd. eral Motors Acceptance Corp. could hal'e been play·acted ror Ihe guy had guts. You had to $25.00 each -Import Molars of Canada Ltd" P. C. O'Driscoll Rare Bender's special benefit. give him tha\. Ll'd., Furness Withy Co. Ltd., Ltd., United Brotherhood of

Was thaI hlg Brownwater Rafe wished he could feel as Campbelts LId., Johnson Insur· Carpenters & .Joiners of ArneI'· 'I

gal'e to his hat a signal? sure of his own. ance Co. Ltd., T, & M. Winter ica, Winsor Agencies Ltd., Rare dropped back and let As he stopped his horse just Ltd., City Radio & Music (lo. Canada Packers Ltd., . Chas.

him haYe his way. Like Brown· back oC the other a gun.hung Ltd., Canadian General Electric Hutton &: Sons Ltd., Mifflin & water had said, a felier had to hardcase packing a rifle step. Co. Ltd., National Cash Register O'Neill. trust someone. When things ped out of the room to the CD. of Canada Ltd .• Nfld. Poul· $5.00 each - Browne Renouf started coming apart at the right of the gate and, with a try Producers Ltd., Browning· I & Mercer, Carl Wins;r Insur· srams it was easy to imar.ine careless flap of thC' hand, was Harvey Ltd., East End Bakery ance Ltd., Kenmounl ~!otel CI'N)' ~ent and his uncie had about to wave them on in When Ltd., WllIiam's Service Station Snow White Laundry Ltd.: I a knife out for you. somelhlng about Rare's look Ltd., Trade Printers and Pub· Harold Snow & Son Ltd., Mol"

He rubbed some warmth into suddenl~' stiffened him. Hshers Ltd., Nfld. Brewery Ltd., gan Printing Co., Cornen )Iac· his fist and took hold of his lIe. sucked a lungful of air, C. A. Hubley Ltd .• Charles R. GillivrR)' Ltd .. Reg. T. 1\Iorgan pislol. Mterminccl if this was his whole face springing open. Beil Ltd., Canadian Army (Re· Insurance LId., Cheivers Foods a trap to make it cost some· i Before he could yeil ur get gular) Headquarters,!. F. Per· Ltd., Ayaion Credit Jewellers bl'dy dear. With the other, his rifle fully up Brownwaler lin & Co. Ltd. Ian J. Reid & Co. Ltd., O'De~ stifrer hand he got the chin· diving from his saddle, came $20.00 each-Imperial Tobac· I & Coady, Thompsons Jewellery, strapped hat back into his down on the feller like a ton of co Co. Ltd., Mark Gosse & Son W. W. Lesler Ltd., W. J. Mur· head. haulin!: down the brim dropped mea\. When Luce's Ltd., Spaniard's Bay, United phy Ltd.. Lawrence Nfld. Co. to Pllt his cheeks in deeper beau, panting, got up off the Nail & Foulldary Co. Ltd., J. C. Ltd., P. F. Collins, Colbourne & shadow. Therc wasn't milch man, Spangler's hardcase was Pratt & Co. Ltd., Bidgoods, Noseworthy, S. O. Steele & Sons else hc could do but keep his I trussed hand and foot with . kl d . I' Ltd. eyes peeled. twists of pigging string snatched tic e ,trymg awkwardly. to $2.00 _ D. W. Cuff Ltd.

, .. from Bill's belt, mouth stuffed pat her as he would a fright· Bonavista . Raf~ s ~l1lde. \':Ithout tllfn· with shirttail, eyes looking ened filly. "Nothin' to git your I _. ____ _ 109 Ins head. said abruptly: wilder than a pulque·drunk wind up over ... " I "Dukc's had the rllnnin' oC this squaw's. ~he cried Indign~ntly: "You BUI"ld Scale ~pr~ad for two years. He's mIght have been killed!" , ai111in' to ha\'e it lock. stock an' "Inside - quick!" Brown· Rafe, starting toward his barrel. Ain't nothin' he won't I water wheezed, pawing around father, never heard another ' do except mebbe kill the Old I for his pistol. word. One [oat up and one foot Model Of :l13n outright and if, thing~ gits A crack from Rafe's heel down, he stopped In midstrirle, I rough. he could do that, too." propelled his . mount throug'n ali the breath knocked out of

Worst oC it was, this guy was the gale. Brownwater, drag· him probably right. Duke, in the ging his horse, was quick' to Fiabbergast~d, jaw flopping, Colurnbl"an RI"Ver past. had nel'er let anything foliow. As Rafe swung down Rafe stared like a snake had stand in the wal' when it came the fat man, whacking his ani· suddenly reared in his path. He to something h'e figured he mal out of the way, hurried let the lifted foot down with wanted. He was anligodiin, back to catch hold of the gate. a "Good gosh almighty!" VANCOUVER (CPl-A mile mcan and rel'engeflil. He might A gun went off, that slug strlk· A delicious, humorously in· and a half of the I11rbulent dO a heap of backing and fill· ing the wood not an inch from fectious laugh tumbled out of Columbia River north of Revel· ing bllt there was also, deep his hanG. Bunny Pike as she watched his stoke, B.C., has been repro. in the hateful twisted core of Rafe, spinning, felt a tug at scandalized star etake in her duced to scale in a 95·foot him. a frightening persistence his hat as the gun spoke again. man's hlcktory shirt and the working model by a U.S. hy· Ol\Ce he'd made up his mind, Thcn Rafe's own pistol belted, wash· faded, brush draulic engineer for the B.C, He hadn·t no more scruples coughed. Across the patio a snagged trousers that so fondly Hydro Authority.

• the 'Black Box'? What's In

Two major points in nuciear test. ban talks whicb resume ill Geneva yesterday concern International inspection on Soviet lioil to check for underground tests, and monitor· Ing for explosions with the much·dlscussed "black boxes." . How' to make a monitoring system foolproof against tampering Is one principal problem. Set up In the U niled States, Britain and Russia, each ,of the so· called "black boxes" would be an underground laboratory for recording earth tremors. Sketch, above, combines known facts with artist's conception as to how sucb an Installa· tion could be made foolproof. Time·locked door to the l'aultJIke station would remain

Antenna Picks Up Three Separate Signals ' Which Operate The Elevator

sealed until lime for periodic Inspection. this version, elevator in armored shaft would operate only on receipt of three different slg· nals. Presumably, international Inspection team would place coded device In a transmit· ter located on an inspection truck (at left), to provide the "Open sesame!" for elevator's operation. Any attempt to tamper with mec· hanlsms could be recorded and broadcast au· tomatically. Operation of eartb tremor reo corders (seismometers) could be by ballery, generator or power line. Visiting inspector, shown In vault, would remove tapes, Install fresh ones, and take recordings to agency beadquarters for analysis.

REDDY IaLOWAtu

E,LECTRICIl'Y IS CHEAP in ST. JOHNI~

CO!"iSECTJOX WEST PLACEXTJA

Train "The CaribJu" SI. John's 12:01 p.m. Feb. 15tt will make via Placentia Junction

thall a cocked pistol. I hlack·bearded sile·footer wheel· clung to her lithe, shapely legs, The $40,000 model, product of Before he did an)·thin:! else. ing out of a door hole jerked "Is that a1l you can dig up to two ycars of survey work, was

Rafe ~lIessed, he had better halC around, flung out a fist Bnd say. Rafe?" built by James W. Ball at West. get 'Lure and his dad away I went down. Rafe gulped, red·faced. and ern Canada Hydraulic Labora·

NOt~a Scotia Prospectors Learn Methods in School i gentia with :11.\'.

West Run. Placentia province's second most impor. 1 COSSECTIOX rrom hCI·e. Brownwater. slamming shut his eyes swiveled away; and tories in nearby Coquitlam. HALIFAX (CP)-Nova Sco· diplomas.

Whcn he looked up again I the massive gate, skreaked a old Bender said in patient per· Plans for the Columbia power tians are going to school to I The first course attracted 25 tant industry after manuCac· SERnCE VIA thr),'lI'el'e coming into the bare bar through the slots and let plexity: "Is that you, Duke? development call for one of the learn how to swing a prospec· men who sat through a dozen open of the yard, if you could out a gusty "Whew·" as old What is Luce laughing at?" world's largest cartMill dams toar's pick and stake out a min· lectures on subjects ranging cilll this one. Thc grim . fortress· i Bender appeared, and Luce - Rafe didn't know if he were across the river at :lIica Creek. ing claim. from history of mining to rock like house. with its windowles3' white·cheeked and frantic - more upset by her brazen ap· The engineers hope the model The schOOl came about mostly formations and use of explo. outside walls. its parapets and I came flying to fling herself Into pearance or the gall of her I will help them overcome con. because residents complained sives. Seventeen others were ramparts, loomed dark and I Bill's arms, presence. He was mad clear, strucHon problems in advance. they were unable to participate turned away bccause oC lack oC deserted. "There, there," Brownwatel' through. The S350,000.000 dam, more in the devlopmnt of Nova spacc . ..::~T.::.he~\~\·a.::.lk:::·i.:.:n.:.g~h::.:o:..::o.::.f5-=.0::...f ...:t...:h_ci_r._m_um_bl_e_d':..1_0_ok_i_ng=-sl_le_e,:.p_is_h_3_n_d ___ <_To_B_e_C_o_n_tl_nl_le_II_)__ than 600 feet high and 3,400 Scotia mining. It proved so popular that this

turing and Nova Scotia is the country's leading producer of gypsum, barite and anhydrite. Feb. 15th wili make

"The next decade should see via Placentia Junction tremendous strides in base met· I gentia with S.S. Bar als," said IIIr. Nowlan, pointing I South Coast Service. to a mineral specimen on his I CON1IiECTlOX SOrTO office shelf as "an example of I SERVICE ,,1.\

feet long. would generate 2,. A revised interest in pros· year room has been made for 500,000 horsepower. peeting today rivals the days five extra students. A similar

The scale model, latest stage more than ~ cen~ury ago when course will be oCfered in Sydney in $6,000.000 worth of engineer. ,go!,d was ~Irst .d~scovered.. iC demand warrants. ing studies b)' B.C. Hydro will When big numng compames Lectures are given in th~

H . -I test water flow and er~sion outside Nova Scotia moved into :-Iova Scotia Technical Conege a P P I Y characteristics of two diversion the province in search of min· here by members of the mining

I tunnels. ' erals, residents often sent let· society who offer their time . ters to their newspapers com· free of charge. Stu dents pay

WON WINNIPEG SEAT plaining that individuals were SID to meet costs of notes, text·

Cannel at Large:

Translators Bask

what a prospector can do." SASQrES The mineral was spondumene, I Train "The Caribou"

an ore oC the light metal lith· I St. John's 1~:01 p.m. ium which is useful for the high I Feb. 15th 11'11i make heat resistance or its com· at Port aux Basques pounds. In Canada it is pro·, Nania for South COlst duced only in Quebec but an amateur prospector had found the specimen' covered only by moss in western Nova Scotia.

In Bull Market of Words WINNIPEG (cP) _ Funeral placed at an unfair disadvant· books and rock and mineral

service wilt be held today for age in ability ttl profit from the specimens. Wiitiam Waiker Kennedy news. activity," says Deputy Mines Last year ·the government is· paper man .. lawyer d;corated Minister J. P. Nowlan. "others sued 1,962 prospecting licences, war I'eleran and fo~mer memo complained directly to the a 2(}per.cent increase over 1961 her of Parliament who died mines department." and an all·time high. The gov·

Other discoveries made by pick and shovel during the last three years include high.grade antimony in central Nova SC~ tia, gold in the south and man· ganese and barite in Cape Breton Island. They are still to be deve loped. can't get a word or phrase, I\e Sunday. He won a Winnipeg To meet the complaints and ernment estimates that more

takes a bath and waits for it to sent for the Progressil'e Con· satisfy the demands the llining than 60 per cnt of a total of come to him. sel'vatives in 1925 and 1930 clec· Society of Nova Scotia, a group 114,000,000 acres in the province

Some translators require the lions. He won the' Militarv of geologisL~ and engineers and warrants prospecting. POLARIS SUCCESS noise of a radio or traffic. Some Cross as an olficer with the C~· the mines department came up, "We don't expect anybody to CAP E CANAVERAL. Fla.

nadian F,xpediliona"" Force I'n with the cour~e in prospecting. stumble upon a big gold field," (APl - Tbe long· range Poiaris demand absolute silence. One ., A b . "1 ed I the First World War. ~.Ir. Ken. 11 provides a cross·section of Mr. Nowlan said. "The ex. ·3 5U marine mlSSl e rac 0 man who works in Gcrman 't d t • ht ned.' was once night editor or residents with fundamental posed rich veins already have ISS e can s ralg success needs a quiet room and a fast ' H d d US" offl' the old Winnipeg Telegram. knowledge of minerals and how ben depleted-at least near ,,~on ny. an a .. ,,?yy . secretary as he dictates his .to work with them. But. ~ays the surface-and while a pros. clal. said the weapon s early translations at the breakneck b bl a arenlly speed of 40 pages per da)'. If TIle Virgin Islands once were the deputy minister, il will also pector can pick up the occa· aSle pro ems PP. I

known as the Dutch W('st show "it takes big money and sional nugget. gold has become i ~ave been solved. The pro1eC'

1 he' had to slow down, he says, Indies. advanced technology to develop hard to get at without the ex. \JI~ darted more th~n 1,800 the quality DC his work would and mine successfully." penditure of large sums of !1l1les down the Alla~hc track· suffer. Only one in 13 persons livcd NO DIPLOMAS money or intensive digging." mg range. The A:3 s planned I

TRANSLATOR GILEAD:

By WARD CANNEl, NEW YORK- (NEAl­

While cI'erybody else has been watching the Cold War, Cape Canaveral and the Common 111 arket, the real reins of our destiny have been passing unob· served into the hands of an un· likek little cadre-the free· lance' intcrnational translator.

Not counting the fcarful mountain of wordage moved daini from language to language at; the U.N. or in commercial firms who employ their own in· terpreters, an stimated 3 mil· lion words per month are turn· ed, over to freelaneers In New York' alone.

/.rid the same is true In al· most every major city In the wqrld from Hong Kong to Chi·. cago, from London to Moscow. ~hese words range from

vi"l technical bulletins and crucial business correspon· dence to press information, nles promotion and even the subtitles on movies, which, in tU long run, reach more peo· pI, than all tlie world's foreign aid. .

Jll!,t how well do. these words lutvlVe the translation? .

In Paris, for example, a com· petition among the city's trans· lafPr, for leveral Itaff jobs

• , • '.

Adv8,ntages to Iree·lanclng.

with an intergovernmental agency brought out 526 appli· cants and weeded out only six as likely possibilities.

A similar search in Geneva, the world's Interlanguage cap· ital, turned up only three out of 126 applicants.

In the British film "Sa tUf' day Night and Sunday Morn· ing," a character explains thal he. spends Sunday mornings with the bookies. But with sub· titles In French, It appears that he spends Sunday reading good books.

• • • Wlth the world shrinking,

facts .like these have boosted ·the fee for· a good translator to $50 per ·day. The $1,000 which a translator used to ask for a four·month job on a novel, he now sets as his monthly wage -if he will design to take a steady job.

"More likely," says Philip Gilead, head of· a European translation network, "the trans· lator prefers to remain Ii free· lancer. On tOOay's International stage he Is a virtuoso."

And he lives the part. One Italian translator ·says he works best'if . he works 'through tlie night. Another says he works best near: the bathroom: if:h'e:

. ,

Virtuosi ?f this skill, how· on farms when the 1960 U. S. Students need no special LEADS IN GYPSUIII ra~ge of 2 ~75 miles f I.S 1,000 ever, comprise about 5 per cent census was )taken qualifications and receive no However, mining remains the mdes greater than earlier Po, of the translators in the market I' . laris models.

today. The demand is so great V - I- elf V D ,-----that people like Gilead arc ISUa IZeS 'ontr' 0 0 _. REDUCE CONGO FORCE looking for translators in, of UNITED NATIONS (AP) -all places, the tongue·tied U.S.' The United Nations announced

What makes the job so diC· WINNIPEG (CP)-A drop in aimed at gonorrhoea. It has an phone guide has been issued to Tuesday the first major reduc· fleult when bellboys, waiters the ineidence of venereal dis· incubation period Of only two health authorities and doctors tion in its Congo military force and taxi drivers the world over ease and new weapons to com· to five days but contacts of vic· in Canad.. and the United since the end oC Katanga provo have little trouble In transla· bat it are lending hope in Mani· tims could travel thousands of States. ince's secession. It said the en· tion? toba that the problem may be miles during the period. Dr. Snell is optimistic about tire '5,626 - man Indian conbn·

A spokesman for the Eur~ beaten within 10 years, To help save· time in notify· the future. "1 don't think it Is gent will begin withdrawing in pean free·lance agency, Trans· Dr. Emanuel Snell, provincial ins health authorities else- expecting too much to say it is March. The Indian troops make post, Inc., put'S it this way. director of venereal disease where so thev can track down hoped VD will have been reo up more than a quarter of the

"A translator must know his control, says that 1.926 cases a person suspected to be duced another 15 per cent by total UN force of 19,378 mcn own language the way a violin· were reported last year com· spreading the disease,. a tele· the end of this year .•. .', from 21 countries. 1st knows the violin. He must pared with 2,249 in 1961, a drop be a good writer. He. must of 15 per cent. understand the Ioreign Ian· He emphasizes, however, that

A WELCOME

HOSTESS Will Knock at your . with Gifts and . from Friendly Civic and Social On the occasion 01:

The Birth of a New comer to the PHONE

guage from which he works the battle cannot be won here down to the last idiom. alone. Unless it was effectively'

• • • com balted throughout the rest "But he must not be so good of North America and Europe,

in the foreign language that victory in Manitoba would be he forgets his own. This is a only temporary.

ATTENTION BOYS! very real danger. 1\ jeopar· A method called cluster test· dizes even Americans who work ing is being employed in' the for long per/Ods of time in oth· province. Associates of victims er lands. are sought for tests in a pal'tern . "We cannot keep a trans· corresponding to a series of lator who never goes home to concentric circles. his mother country for visits. At the centre is the person Without this revitalization, he or persons with' whom the vic· forgets." tim has bad sexual relations.

Just as Important a factor In In the next elrcle are people keeping the cadre of expert the victim believes .may have translators tiny, however, is the disease. And in a still wider the havoc brougiit to language circle are the victim's acquain· by the American tongue in its tances or the group he gener, more delirious moments. ally associates with.

One mammoth U.S. firm with TRIED IN U.S. 'branches, almost everywhere reo Dr. Snell says' this method, cently brought out a new wall used successfully in the United covering, described in its inter· States, has been more success· national correspondence as "eK· ful in finding VD than: spot citing and dramatic." tests of the general public. '

"For the average, adequate He says that in' comparison translator, this phrase is intol· with the' U.S. and other Cana· erable," says a translator fluent dian provinces, "Manitoba's In French, Italian and German. venereal disease record is quite

"For an Italian, a woman Is good," but adds this may be exciting. For a Frenchman, partly due to its distance from a play is dramatic, And the seaports. German can't understand It at Another anti·VD· measure to all."· be introduced here this year is

If you are interested in making money as a Daily News Carrier, please fill in the Applica­tion Form and mail to our office. If' no route available in your area immediately, your application will be placed on file. Then should an' opening occur, we will get in touch with you.

~-----~-------------. I THE DAILY NEWS . l I p, O. BOX 520, ST, JOHN'S I I ROUTE APPLICATION I I 'NAME .............. ~................................... ! I PHONE No, ......................................... ;

~ ADDRESS' ................ ~.-.-......................... ·1 I . J -_ ... _-------------._-FOR HOME DELIVERY . . . . • • • • t • ........ PHONE 8-2171

,.(

" , '

SELL

KIN BOY~

Newspa SER

I 19 30 22 16 18 27 28 25 20 23 24

29

CONSOLA1

20 Consolati

claim Bingo on thl

SERVICE

AVALON WATER AT

59th. (Nfld.)

will be h1 at 8 p.m. i

Royal Canadi Refreshment

feb9,16

W~ Severa'

includir

PhYSical

John Burke

Duties to com ~pplications 51 e addressed I

IN ROBI

. SCOT SCOTCH Tii

, SILVER! GOLDEN

GING

Page 15: Nova Ltd. la', n ie~ena er n' elver UIcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · Elizabeth A vc. 9·4171 : :;: ... (left), was named Veterans Af· fairs ... ma~y on downtown

~lOW"TT'

, RICITY EAP in OHN'S

8-2171

KINSMEN BOYS' CLUB

Newspaper BINGO SERIES NO. 72

I

29

N 37 41 39 ·15 40 33 ·1·! ·13 36

G 57 55 60 51

46

o 69 G5 70

62 73 75 (;4 71 68 72 61

CO:\50LA nON PRIZES HAVE BEEN CLAI~IED.

-10 Consolation Prizes for Letter H.

claim Bingo Phone 8·7269 by 10 p.m. on the day published.

~elp Kin .- Help Kiddies

R~pel't Watch Repairs

SERVICE WITH A SMILE AT

AVAlON CREDIT JEWEllERS IUTER AT ADELAIDE, PHONE 8·7829

- ..

Annual Meeting 59th. (Nfld.) Heavy Regiment R.A.

Association will be held FEBRUARY 18th,

at 8 p.m, in the upstairs lounge loyal Canadian Legion, Henry Street Refreshments will be served FREE

111/,16

WANTED Several Subject Teachers

including Science Teacher and

PhYSical Education Teacher for

John Burke Hegional High School, Grand Bank

~li~s t? commence September, 1963. ~phcatlOlIs statincr qualifications should

addressed to: t'l

F. M. TESSIER, Secretary.

IN STOCK ROBERTSON'S'

SCOTCH MARMALADE ~OTCH THICK CUT MARMALADE

SILVER SHRED MARMALADE . GoLDEN SHRED MARMALADE

GINGER MARMALADE

P,o II", '. AGENTS • !lUX 938 DIAL 92128

OPEN HOUSE The University will be holding its annual Open House on Monday, February 18th, 1963.

Tours of the University buildings will be conducted as follows: MORNING: ........... " ................. 9.30 a.m. to 1.00 p.m. AFTERNOON: , ....................... 2.00 p.m. to 5.30 p.m. EVENING. .. ........................ 7.30 p.m. to 10.30 p.m.

The morning and afternoon tours will be for Grade XI and Grade XII pupils of schools in and around the City. These pupils will assemblc in the lobby of the Physical Education Building.

Principals of schools and Teachcrs of French arc invited to a special session of the Frcnch Language Laboratory at 4:30 p.m. Faculty members will be on hand to discuss the facilities of the Laboratory with thcse \'isitors.

The General Puhlic is cordially invited to allend in the evening. Parking space is u\'ailable on the Student Parking Lot to the west of lhe Physical Education Building, Visitors in the evening will asscmhle ill thc !llain Entrance of the Administra !ion Building where gllides will be assigned to can· duct them 011 a tOllr of the University. feb14,15

Valentine Dance Bishop Feild College Auditorium

THUHSDAY 9 p.m., Febmary 14, 1963

Chris Andrews Orchestra

Refreshments served $2.50 Double Come and Bring a Friend

[cbl3,H

TEACHERS REQUIRED A Principal and Teachers are required for the Roman Catholic Primary Schools and High School at Labrador City and Wabush. Applications are in· vited from qualified, experienced teachers.

Apply to:

P. O. BOX 359,

LABRADOR CITY, NFLD. [eb12,14,16

WA,HEHOUSE SPAC't TO RENT

2500,3500,5500, OJ; 7000 SQUARE FEET

Space is dry-available with or without heat. With or without office facilities. Located close to downtown st. J aIm's in a fully sprinklered building. Easy load­ing and unloading. For further informa­tion contact:

GR,AH'AM W. MiERC'ER The Mercer Building,

139 GOWER STREET PHONE 8-7386 feb12,14

TIRES REPAIRS. VULCANIZING

for FAST SERV1CE PHONE8.7191 or 8·7192

Nfld. Armature Works Limited

BAMBRICK STREET

THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, FEBRUARY 14, 1963-I:>

THE FOUR PREPS appearing at

MEMORIAL UNIVERSITY GYM

FEBRUARY 18 and 19 AT 8:30 P.M.

Tickets: Reserved, $2.50; General, $2.00

Available from: Ash's Drug Store, LeMarchant Drugs, Elizabeth Drugs, Kenmuunt Drugs, Charles Hutton & Sons. CALL 9-5510 between 2:30 - 5:30 Mon­day. Friday and tickets will be delivered to )'our door, ,

WANTED An additional 3 million feet of rough lumber. Will accept truck, car and schooner loads. Also interested in large quantity of round logs.

Contact

MR. HERBD'AWE at 9-1171,

CHESTER DAWE LTD., TOPSAIL ROAD, ST. JOHN'S

[eb7,9,12,14

WANTED OFFICE ASSISTANT (Male)

/ Some' experience h, office routine, handling of funds and banking desir· ed. Knowledge of typing helpful.

Apply, stating qualifications to:­

OFFICE MAINAGER,

P. O. BOX 5026 ST. JOHN'S. NFLD. [eb13,14,14

Wm. L. CHAFE TAILOR

4 HOLDSWORTH ST. ST. JOHN'S CLOTHES MAKE THE MAN

IF CHAFE MAKES THE CLOTHES.

\

~ . 'OOD HELP' j • '. • t. i :.

CASH PAID FOR Comics, magazines, pocket novels, and books. .John b. Snow, 9 New Gower Street.

REP AmS-Rallgettes, sewlDg and washing maehines, pol· ishers, steam irons toasters, food mixers, electric razors, kettles, radion, etc., expertly repaired. RON CHAFE, 116 Bond st. Telephone 849073. Free pickup and delivery.

THE CENTRAL BARBER SHOP-We are now operat­ing 10 chairs, you can be assured of prumpt, effici' ent, sanitary service No waiting problem, 24 New Gower Street OPPOSite Ad~· laide Motors Ltd. R

!>. ': ~f " ".-~ .

. , ... ,

OPEN NIGUTLY-

DINING AND DANCING .,

rop Ent.rt.I.: ,. ment ~

Floor Shows

Alovle.

For Information C;:a11 g·7l81 or !;t.OIJ26

Brookfield Road

M. C. L.I. • . c. :.

Pitts Memorial Hall TO-NIGHT, Feb. 15th

at 8: 15 o'clock NOW IN STOCK and reason· ably priced, W Ilollop, Re· versible, All Wool and Question: Springfilled Mattresses. AU Should Canacla Accept, locally made Mattresses for N udear Arms? ., . Bunk Bedil a specialty. Springs and Daybeds re·wir· Panelists: cd. All Wool and Spring. ~[r. Garfield Tizzard, fmed Mattresses re·condi· D (' \" B 1 tioned. Terms arranged. r.,.. art ett, Buy now-Pay later. Keats ~I.A. Mattress F<lctory, 16 Mt. ~[r. A. B. Butt Royal Avenue, Phone 92753· ~[r. A. C. Wornell 8·2656. 'lIt dly,tf ,v oc era or:

____ • _____ I ~Ir. Berafonl Plouahman :. I "

WANTED Reliable woman as

Hous;ekeeper for an elderly lady. 1lust 1\

supply references.

Must be Roman Catholic I For interview: .

DIAL 8·2707 feb13,14

FEBRUAItY SPECIAL

Cold Wave Reg. $12.50. ~V'\. NOW $8.00 "

LCIRETTA'S BEAUTY SALON

DIAL 8·2302

THE OLD MILL

Valentine's Dance with Twilighters Orchestra

Featuring: IIlary·Lou Brooking and

Dianne Richards Don't miss this wonderful

show. COVER ............ $3.00 Double'

Call 8·7581 or 90026 for Reservations.

SKATING SCHEDULE

TONIGHT

8:30 - 10:30

FRIDAY. FEB. 15 8:30 - 10:30

SATURDAY. FEB. 16 10:30 a.m.-CIIlLDREN 2:00 p.m.-GENERAL 8:00 p.m.-GENERAL

Hats by Yvonne Elect. Applicances Carpenter Shop .

feb2,2mths.

HEAP & PARTNERS (NFL D.) Ltd. Wiring Materials, Wire and

Cables. Motors, Starters, Lamps. Switches. r.igbting

Fixtures. ,Ie WAREHOUSE: PRINCE'S ST.

VIAL 8·5088

Drug Stores

Made to Order

Bridesmaid's Hats

Flowers and Veilings tinted to any desired color dec24,lmth

Specialties . • WINDOWS • DOORS . • WINDOW BOXES • DOOR FRAMES , Finest Workmanship

and Prices.

, ~

" .1

.,

; .

'. '.

'1 '1

;1

Ii , I

I .

I! I, '. ': .,

'I ;

I! ,

).

.' 1 I'·

I I I

.' ' ! ,

M. (;ONNORS Ltd. Telephone 91635 :iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-

W. M. Chisholm , '. Prescriptions Plck1lp and

delivery service. PHONE 8·2206

tue.yed·thur.

Hamilton Hotel RADIO.TV REPAIRS 123· 125 Hamilton Ave.

GREAT EASTERN OIL Catering to Permanent COMPANY, Ltc" and Transients. For re­REP AIRS TO RADIO!:, TV

AND ALL ELECTRICAL servations Please dial APPJ.) A "IrE.';

DIAL 8·3001 to 8·3005 8.5636 Rentals aug15,lmth

F'loor Sanders, Belt Sanders, Power Saws, Electrical Drills etc. Reasonable Rates. Call 8-ll~16. 8-7352.

U·RENT 169 Water Street. St. John'.

Div. Harris & Hiscock Lid.

Insurance

.J. J. LACEY. INSURANCE Ltd,

Dependable Fire [nsurance, Prompt Claim Settlements.

DIAL 8·7035

CROSBIE & CO., Ltd. Agents for

UNDERWRITERS AT LLOYDS.

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

Public Notice Applications are invited for

the position of Officer, Grade VI (Accountant). West Coast Sanatorium, Corner Brook. The salary commences at $4390 on the scale $4390·100-4720.

Dealer S. W. SHORT, 8 ADELAIDE ST.,

ST. JOHN'S. PII. 8·2637

LIMITED MANUELS, C.B.

Dial 7·2072 jan16,lmth (daily)

jan25,lmth.

~~~~~ WELLS DRILLED:' GRE.cU EASTERN

OIL & IMPORT CO., LTD.

Radio, Television, Washers. Refrigerators, Deep Freezers

Electric Ranges. Flllor Polishers.

Gramophones Public Address Systems

Tape Recorders

REPAIItS AND SERVICE 5 LINES

DIAL 8·3001 to 8·3005

WA'fER STRE,ET Jan2B,ly M·3

By

Deep Well Drilling Co.· .. ,·

Dial 9·4246 Terms arranged .;

m,w,f,1mth

• I to, 'I'" , [(j. :I' .

LOW RATES DIAL 8·5031

JOB BROTHER~ & COMPANY, Ltd.

2. The duties include respon· sibility for all procedures of the accounting office; supervision of accounting office staff; en· suring that all income and ex·

penditure, accollntsreceivable ~~~~~~~~~~ and payable, cash and inventory data are properly entered in

I Ifj,,, TIRES

Water Stred DIAL 8·2658 - 84123

the appropriate accounts; the preparation.of monthly, annual and other reports and state· ments as required. Applicants

, should have extensive exper!· REG. T. MURGAN ence in double·entry accounting,

lNSURANCE Ltd. with a knowledge of hospital ac· counting being desirable.

Temple Bldg" P. O. Box 168, 3. Applications in writing, 341 Duckworth fit. stating age, educational quail·

DIAL 80370 or 8-7756 fications, experience, etc., -------1--- should be addressed to the Civil

Prompt Delivery On • STOVlE OIL

.'FURNACE OIL

• mON FlREl\lAN HEATING EQUIPi\IENT

.$1.00 WEEKLY. Up to 30 months

Free Insurance i ,v

All sizei CAR BATTERIES .. ~ $1.00 WEEKLY . ;~

ii,

. ~ I

I I

I .

~ • ~ I· : .

:,,/>,, .• I

I , I .1 ;;

i i

i i

Ii Ii' ,,' .. " fl

':1 I" II

,II

f ! '

I" ; ! ' • . .'

Beauty· Par ours . Service Commission,. Confedera· tion Building,. St. John's,. 50 as to reach the Commission on or before the 26th day of Febru. ary, 1963. Envelopes' contain. Ing applications should be dearly marked "D·H·271".

GLADY'S BEAUTY, 8HOPPE cor. Bond and Prescott Sts. Phone 8-4951-8·789B. Specl· allzing III cold waving, hair styling, cutting and tinting, manicuring, facials etc., 14 operators, no waiting.

Hq"dllA,,4 Ir ':.

I CHAIRMAN, CIVIL SERVICE COM&IISSION.

FLOWER BILL PHONE' 8·6 J 27

" ~.,~ . .• .

I' ! ,

I, ,

i' I· I !

, ;

Page 16: Nova Ltd. la', n ie~ena er n' elver UIcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · Elizabeth A vc. 9·4171 : :;: ... (left), was named Veterans Af· fairs ... ma~y on downtown

II , i I II I; , I

I, II , \

\

.'-TIIE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, FEBRUARY 14, Ip63 . .

"

, "

, , I '

I , 1 , , , t'

, , , .

I: . I ~

i " r ! ~

1 I I " ,I: '

JUST ARRIVED

TRIMMED NAVEL BEEF BARREL and

RIBLETS Bartel and

TINNED SEAL 24 and l's

Grand Falls' News 1111A:'>D FAI.I.S-Dr, E, J, )Irs, ~llIrl'ay, 16th Avenue,

r.i~ ldt t'n Friday pas I 10 al.1 "'hubOl'. and ~Ir. KCI'in Cant· The Grand Falls executive of ~nd a three da)' t'Olmr III phy· well of Grand Falls, were mar· ~:~a.v:r,o~:~':t t~eO~~m~~~ MI~ 1

.dliatr\' at thr ':irIClria C;rn·: ricd nn Feb, 4th at nine a.m. -r.l ilo>\)it;l!. Hahla:.. :,>,~, 1 al 51. .Joseph·s Church. ~. Chapman, Circu!ar R~ad, on !

rh,' ~, ' . -. I I r\ rcception Cor a lar"e Feb. 5th. The service thls year , ~ \.vU1$(, 1!' ",pnll."H(,( )\' • h. t' 'tl *h \V Id 1

he Dcpartment tlf 1':'''('\liatr;' numbcr of rclatil'es and fl'ientis In .connee Ion WI. I • e ,or , ,no Clr~anizrd II\' Ihe D·alhou'i~ took plnre later in the evening I Da~ ,o~ Prayer, WIll take place I

FOR INDOOR 'PLANTING

GLOXINIAS BEGONIAS (Top size)

GIANT HYBRID AMARYLLIS WE AI.SO STOCK PLASTIC PLANTERS • POTTING SOIL •

FOR YOUR INDOOR GROWING SEE

SEED CO., LTD. 410 WATER STREET

DIAL 8·4328

For complete

COVERAGE and

Prompt Adjustment of Claims

CALL

THE SHA~m AND THE GLORY Terence Robertson , .. , ..... ,$ 6.50

IRENOIR, MY FATHER Jean Renoir ........ 11.00

THE EDEN MEMOIRS i Anthony Eden .. , 9.50 I

GREENLAND JOURNAL Hockwell Kent, 9.50

WILDLIFE SKETCHES NEAR AND FAR Bruce S. Wright 5.95

ASK HENRY Henrv Makow.... 3.50

SICILY Hugh Pond ...... 6.50

BEHIND THE CHEERING I Frank J. Selke,... 4.95

HARMS WAY

I James Bassett .... 7.50

THE STREET

\' WHERE THE

HEART LIES I Ludwig I Bemclmans i THE HIDDEN I ~[oUNTAIN

4.95

Gabrielle Rov.... 4.95 : THE BLACK JOKE

Farlev ~Io\\'aL, 3.95 THE n'OTI-ISCHILDS

SPECIAL OFFER A Handsome Styrene

FRAME plus a

CUSTOM 5 X 7 BJACK & WHITE ENLARGEM[~l of your favourite

Snap-Shot Negative

ONLY 79c ea~ 2 for only $1.3~

Fro~n same negative.

Stands verticallv or horizontallv. , '

TOOTON'S LIMITED DISTRIBUTOR FOR KODAK IN NEWFOUNDLAND

The Award Winning Camera Dealer of The Year

I d I d:"" f t'} '11 Ihe K of C Hall Grand Ion I'rlday, March 1st. at 3,30 ~OS. '~r,~ un ~ .1.'::1011 0 IC , ~'alls.· . , ' p,m, at llemorial United a. ult. o[ ,11lCnll mr, . Church. The program for this Jt 1~ I",hrn'ct thai Dr, Rlx vea has been re ared b a

• thr Clull' ~curral pr<1rtilion.: At tll'O p,m, on Sunday, .Jan .•. r. ' ~ p. ~

REG T, MORGAN INSURANCE LIMITED Frederic Morton 7.25

I FLYING BOAT 1·---------------· i Kenneth Poolman 6.50: !THE FOOTPRINTS C:apitol

TODAl OF ELEPHANT HILL

tt r( [ :'> I ! ?7th the quiet of thc afternoon missionary committee In KotCH. 'al'n} T~nl Ing d 1'0

111\ '( CII' OUISI~ . , ~'as . disturbcd by Ihe sound of The service will be under

u, Irec nt' ,lrs I'om t. ' . th d' t' f tl S l' ' I },".~ 1'1 I I" t ' : the fire siren, Firemen l'espond· e )rec Ion 0 Ie a lallon o . I 10 arc ~ ul) IIIg a 110 I " • d' Army ladies headed by ~Irs'

Temple Bltlg., Duckworth St.

THE PASSING SCENE car course in p,l'chialn' at I cd llllmedlately to [ID the II j Ch • • 'I JallHlmir l'nivcr~i'ty wiJi also! home of ~Ir. and Mrs. Jesse • ~c;~r ·I~p~an., d ~ allendin;: I Ralph, 7th Al'cnue, Windsor, • e WI e asslste by Mrs. . I ablazc. R. S. Sheppard. ~Irs, A .• J. Bar·

.. • n' In spite of the very cold relt, lIlrs. T. H. Anderson" and

DIAL 8,0370, 8·7556 , I" i Susan Williams 5 50 I' By ERIC A. SEYMOUR

ITHE ~IAN \VHO . '=~==~~~~~~. 'E" i "A TASTE OF HO~ET' jan19,lmth,dly.

The h to~11Icn ~onc mcclm o I weat.her prevailing fil'emen ladies [rom the Anglican, --n-E-ATll PLAY; D COD ,----------------------', ' The Prize \\'inning

Rohert St. '[ohn .. , 6.95 I d h f Comedy Drama . Debt Bur en opes or any immediate tax " • • :or Kil1snll'n dubs in xew'l confined the firc to the In. ynitcd Churc~ and Presbyter· (\und~and and ('~I'I' BrrtQn was I terior of the building, which Ian congr~gatlon5:, PENNELL-Passed away al lcld to Grand F~lls orer thc \ was almost completely gutted. A c?mbmed ladles chOIr fro~ the Fever Hospital, Boyd. aged \.tekcnd, The dclet:atcs wcre It was a serious blow to Mr. the CllUrches concerned Will 2 months, bcloved son o[ Har· akrn on an extl'l1sivc tOllr of and Mrs. Ralph, who only reo also be present. old and Helen Pennell. oC 38 h~ ~('\I' Cel1tr~l ;o\ewfoundland cenlly completed the complete Baird Place. Funeral [rom ~(\spllal Salurday afternonn, At reno"ation of the interior of lIlr., Gordon Maidment. a Barrett's Funeral !lome on he conrll1$ion of the tour, the the home. Some insurance was worker in the A.N.D, Co. paper i Friday 2,30 p,m. to St. Thomas' ,rand Fall~ Kinsmen present· I carried. ~hed, narrowly escaped death Church. Interment at the !d a bronze plaque to )Ir. Ralph _ Il1 the early morning hours Anglican Cemetery, Forest ltd. ), ~~nnre .. administrator ?f the Mrs. Mary Basha accompan- Tuesda~, when fifteen rolls of (tel). IMpltal. In conll~emOl'atlon. of I ied by her- sister De. visited paper m t~e shed tumbled ----.-----:--;:--hc ~1 1.000 donation the KlIIS', their r ~Ier over the weekend down. Jumpmg from the truck FUNERAL NOTICE uen made ovcr thc past few I ~Ir. Dominic Boulas, who i~ I which he was operating on the CONSTANTINE _ The fu· 'cars. ' ! ill at Comer Brook. 12.~0-8,00 a.m. tour, ~Ir, C

Thr plaquc was presented b\' I _ Maldment was caught by the neral. or t:'lel Ital'ke Jam 1 es tOh~IS' . . d f f \h 'f I stantme WI a'e pace

Ilr. Dou;: I.andon. preSident of :llr, and lIlrs, Jnnior Braye. en a one 0 e fl tecn JUn· morn in from his laic rcsi· I he Grand Falls Club. 1 13th Menne, Windsor, cele· dred pou~d 1'0115. dence i01 51 Clare Avenue, 10 I

brated their fourth wctldin" an· Immediately removed to Lady .} . Ch h 'I I ION th I'ff H 't I 'I' 'I'd 51. T leresa's urc. II nn< Y i ~liss :,\ila :lllirray, d,llIghler I nh'ersary on Tuesday January • or c I e OSpl a II I, 11 al . I R . M t ' , . ' '_ ment was late found to be Pond, for eqlllem. ass n !

,[ :lit'. I atnck and the lnte 29th. ' '1111111 f" r 1030 Interment at Holy Sepul· , __________ .. ____ . _____ ., su fel'lng from a fractured " . pel vis and slomac h ini u l'i es. ICihirie'iiiiiiiiiiiiii_iiiiiiiiiiiiii~ :llr. )Iaidment is now resting Ii ;­

Birthday Party ACROSS ~j Cuckoo

1 Todoy Is _.. blackbird birthday 4a He - the

• He wu U.s. nation In pmldent perllolls limes during the ~9l)ancc otep _ War 52 Anctent Irlsb

13 'l'rIDsferee capUal 14 Filion 54 Olherwls\!' 15 Oriental coin 58 Penetrate 18 Bitten-etch 60 Pewtcrtotn 17 CODceals of Thailand 18 Fly Ilolt 62 Greek leiter 8 DiS-gl~lsed

9 Anger

comfortably at the hospital. Gordon is the son of ~Ir. and Mrs, Jack Maidment of, Secnnd , Avenue, and resides on East i Street with his wife and three ' chlldren,'

Mr. Frank Beson of Windsor, died suddenly at his home I Main Street, around 5 a.m. ~Ion· day, Feb. 4th at the age of \ eighty·one years.

IN MEMORIAM

ADAMS In memory of my molhel',

ltlARY CATHERINE ADAMS

who departed this life Feb. 13, 1959.

"~Iay she rest in peace,"

THAT SUMMER reductions." . . Local aucli!'nccs will IN PARIS The Quebec Chronicle.Telc· In a!1 pl'ob~blhty some . of i see England's mosl Morley Callaghan. graph carried a very interest· Canada s top·fllght ,economistS! ed newcomer, Rita

ing editorial the other day arc not ~oo ~appy ahout the: ham. when Ihe film "A

Dicks & Co., Ltd. The Booksellers PHONE 8-5001

MClCORMAC'S GEAR STREET

RECEIVING OFFICE, I ADELAIDE STREET

DIAL 8·5181 • 2 . 3,

which will shock many people present sltuahon. Jus~, h.ow i of Honey" noll' playingtOilIJI into checking their financial long. can tbe present situahon, the Capitol Thealre, status and whether or not their contInue? Bankers, too. who I The \'oung actrm. who borrowings are becoming too must be holding many bags at ! brated • her 19th burdensome. the mome~t, .would welcome a day shooting hegan on "A

"Canadians owe a lot oi I morc stabilIZIng economy. a of Honc)," was just onl money. Each year, Wood, Gundy' redu.ced debt (or an .attempt .to later an and Company Limited publish I cut It back) and a lIttle san~ty claimcd ,Iar, with an es an interesting booklet en. I by the masses, to ease up on In' from the Briti;h Film titled Canadian Financial Sta, I stalment buymg" em)", a citation for lop tistics. This booklet makes I Instalment hUYlng has been honors from Ihe jury II

I available in concise form the' one of the greatest. shots, in, cent Canne~ Film Festirll, I annual financial stati~lIc~ of the arm fo~ the r~taJl business: several offer! of plum i the federal government. the tcn wherel'cr It apphes. II has I roles being dangled 'provinces and eighteen of the b,e~ome part and parcel of our: saurer,blue err.', All of ' larger cities, 11l:lI1g, , .It does m fact help I her portrayal of "Jo·' Ii!

"HoI\' much do Canarl;ans raIse 11I'lng standards because: beroine of HA Taste of owe? If We add it all up. it so ~UCiI C'Ir. be oblained for: -her first IlIlItion picturt.

i comes to a staggerjn,~ tot:;], ,0 httl~. llo\I'cI'er, 1112 dar of! Produccil and rlirecled Canada's net debt. for installcr. reckollln.g usuallr comes and, brillianl Y[)lIn~ filITI·malill j~ totals $13,228.137,045. But this one of tM fmt p~oblem5-and I Richardson. "A Tasle is a figure that is not neees. a hravr nne-faCing !he new', is based on young sarily a net one, for it includes ferlera I go\'ernme~t WIll con i laney's prol'oratire 5la;e deductions for loans to an in. cern the ~ebt b~ll den. . ,; the same name and wa! vestments in crown corporations Big ~~Isllless IS getllng big· i Cor the screen by for loans to other national 1:0\" gel'. ,\ Itness the sell,out h~re! with ~liss Delanc),. ernments, advances to exchange last year of all our hrewel'l~S, ! the cast I11clllde Dorl fund account. There is no Our econ~my often makes it' who l'cccipcri the Bril~h guarantee that these lo~n< ~~r1 mol'~ feaslhle Cor a successful, AcadeOl\"s best ,eire!! advances will be repaid. True, : bUSIness venture to. expand )lurra)' ·.\Iekn who they are as saCe as any il1l'cs[, : and gobble up c~mpehlor~, Ap· ing honor; wilh

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I ,I 20 SIOUIn indian 63 Aromatic herb .22or,pe of boat 64l1e "aubo! In 23 Consume .·ord's-

10 Bribe '11 Ailments

He has been confined to his home since suffering a severe II

stroke about eight years ago.

-Always remembered by berson, Wi11iam, To, ronto.

nIRTH ment is these days, but there I parently CanadI,an bUSiness· ham at (anne,.

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25 Golf uacher 66 Pithy 27 Shakespeare 67 Dispatchers

Illd others DOWN 30 Withdrew 5 I I h I H Chevalier', 1 co Ism as

IUIIID1cr 2 lleurn 35 Hlmmer held (comb. form) :17 Enllee 3 Ship 01 :18 Pier« wllb a Columbul

• Symbol for cerium

5lndll'ldiial 6

12 For fear that 19 Color 21 Uncloses 24 Cleopatra's

re~tIIe 26I.ubrtcant 27 Finest 28 Aleutian iSland 29 Erect 30 Scoltlsh

sheeprolds 310xldallon 32 Assam

;P~~_---t~,:;:;::,:,;rr~-,Sllkwor;.;;m~~~ .. .,..~ ....

, . '. , . ,

l'\lln 'Now for Summer Pleasure Afloat ... e:;:=;;,...... _ .. __ .. ..' Boats,

Outboard Motors Trailers, and Accessories

Cnarles: R. 8ell limited, : ~VATEl\,ST, WEST. . PHONE 8~2131 , ,

· " .' · • i ) ~\

I

Born at Joe BaU's Arm, Mr. ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~1 CLOONEY - Born to Mar· Beson came to Grand Falls in ~ ~" tin and Maureen Clooney (nee the twenties, and went to work with the A.N.D. Company, IN MEMORIAM King), at st. Clare's ~Iercy where /Ie remained until his reo Hospital on Feb. 13, a baby !irement. However, he' had ADAMS girl. been in good bodily health, ----apart frqm a partial paralysis, In memory of ENGAGEMENT a'nd his sudden passing on 1\lon.. l\lARY CATHERINE ------------day morning came as a shock ADAMS, )(r. and lI[rs, Stan J. Lynch,

Bell's Turn, 51. John's, wish to announce the engagement of their only daughter, Barbara Jean, to Lloyd Stanley Cookc, elder son of Mr. and Mrs, Ern· est J. Cooke of Moncton, N.B, Formerly of Winnipeg, Mani· toba. Wedding to take place April 20th, 1963.

to his family and friends. who' departed this life Left to mourn his passing is Feb. 13, 1959.

bis wife, who watched over him with loving care for the past -Ever remembered by 8 years, and by whom he will ber husband, John, and be greatly missed. They had daughter, .Jean (~Irs. no children. other relatives in. Robert ~lurray) and clude one brother Leo, of Lin. family. coin Road, Grand Falls. five step brothers, Lambers, Leon· ard, AI, Walter, Thibault and Jim, all of Windsor: one sister. Mrs. Harrigan at NOl'l'is Arm; two step sisters. Rita. Mr~, J. Hamilton of .Joe Batt's Am. Esther, 1IIrs. Clifford Lind, quist of Stanford. Conn .• U.S.A .. His stepmother, Mrs. Joe Beson of Windsor is also sur· viving and residing for the winter at Joe Batt's Arm.

The MacMillan arctic expe, dition of 1925 marked the first extensive use of aircraft in polar exploration.

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Full·grown ostriches weigh up to 300 pounds. Alter hours 'Phone 8-7313

J. J. N VILLE PHONE 9·5300

Hamilton Avenue E~tenslon decb,mth,tf

can never be any assurance that : me~ arc no dlf!erent t?all phens last ;('cn on Canada will receive fun rei urn I their counlpl'pal'ts to the Untted : star of Ihe ;\a~e play for investments in crown cor· I States. Some Canadians deplor,e i For Geol'~c Dillon," porations. i the fact. that. a . lot of AI~en.! Danquah. )'olln~ negro

"In addition, the book also' can c~pltal. IS tOvest~d Into! who makes I,i, screen points 10 the seeurities is''llCrI CanadIan mmes and In~u;lr::.: A Contil1!'ntal , by Canadian National Hail. ~ur growth would he Impo;., Inc, releasc. "A Ta;'!j ways and guaranteed hy the Sible without the capital /ro!n ,Honey" wa' phnIOg~ar': government. in the sum of, south ~f the hord~r, ''.Ithm i black and wllite by Ill.l!, $1,637,100,000, ! Canada s . horders bl? bllsmr~s., sail\'.

"When We start adding the : ~s we sHul before. IS noll' try·: . --n.et debt and contingent Ii:.bili. I mg to grow lar~rr., but we; Bobwhite quail prefer. ties of the provinces, the total ~re not so .sure I\C like. the, oren. ('ulti\3Ied or amounts still higher. If we in. Idea of secm~ so many I~de. i land wilh palrhes of elude the municipal debt. plus pend

t ent f bu.slnessl. kest~bhsh. I shelter.

that of school commissions, the men s ?nmng . In S JI1 an, _------:-1', total becomes sta.g~ering, Not evergrowmg cham. ! Onl), onc in 20 ,per'a~t all of these stahshes are co\,. in urban pln"cs Ilhen I, ered in the Wood, Gundy book. StelJrnshl'p L. 5, censuS \\'35 laken

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Nor docs the booklet deal in (I -_.- ----- -terms of total debt. It~ oh;·nt I ,,' I 23 Lcal'ing Bo!tQn is to depict the individual pic. I c j, , : "B .. ture. But the total is strikin_~, Movements fol' Saint .I

0hl,I·:·d -. and St, .1l1hl1',·, :-;fI '

and it may well cause many " f lk t f' I .John. ;\,1\, )I~r .' 51, o 0 gasp, or It approac les , l(all'fax ~(ar n, due f

$25,000,000,OD. And that is the FUllNESS, WITIlY & , ' -r ' vr net debt. CO~IPA~Y. LIMITED ' Nnd, )131' 11. Sat III.

"Canada, the prOl'inces and' "Cairn[orth"-Leal'ing Bas· pool ~Iar 12:, • • most municipalities face 3 long i Ion Fr.b. 12 fOI' Saint .John, til'· I -alinl

d I'f d J I "Cal'rn 11I·- ,- n'l an continuing program of rc- I N,B" Ha I ax an ::it. 0 In's, , I' I ~ur 51 Joh financing, for many of theEc: Nfld. Due Saint John. N,B. Feb. poo ,.\al' ., I:fax ar.d

8 Leavin" for Ila I " governments are operatin~ in a 13. leaving for Halifax Feb. 16,· ~ IIlifal deficit position. This means Leaving Halifax Feb. 20, due ton ~Iar. 9. duc a r' IS an expanding debt, which in St. John's, Nfld. Feb. 22. Sail, Leaving Bosto,n }[a;ntJl view of the amount which Can. ing for Liverpool same day. Saint John. !',B~t Slinl adians now owe, is not a very • • • SI. John's, Nfldi. adng comforting outlook. Looking "Cairngowan"-Leaving Liv· N.B. lilaI'. 16. e JohD'~ t h [ h ·, I F b 13 d St J h' Mar. 25, due .51, o t e uture, t ere IS no 1m· erpoo e. , ue . 0 n 5 'Iar. 27. Saihng for mediate relief in sigbt, and this Feb. 20. Leaving for Halifax u

can have a dampening effect on and Boston Feb. 21, dur Halifax Mar. 28.

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(Not inserted by Board of L"iquor .Conl~ol)

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PRESCRIPTIONS Picked up and delivered, , No eAira charge.

Two-way Radio Equipped Van. DIAL 8.7388 - 9.2697

:1

________ ~ ______________________ • _________ nm .... WR&kw.~~~:~~~oorm~~ .................... 1I1 .... 1I1'12.~(1I1I1I1I1I1I1I1I1I1I1I

1963 BY PO

NOW ON

erra Nova

abor Wils

said he would arms hase!

control of NA' of sOlne I between the

and Britain the agree~ent

Kennedy and ~Iacmillan at

giving missile.. lhl

Skie

"" .. 7:06