!pears,oil .eis~nhowet~,,;, h· ;' . f' .' · move ':::~~....

16
.. ' 7.00 p.m.-Thi Barrelman, 7.15 p.m.-Dr. Paul. o 9,OO,p.m.-The Pimpernel.. AT 10.00 p.m.-The Amazing Oscar Hammerstein, (Price '5 lC;cnts) Hutton .. &: SOnS Save . '" ...... H . \;' ... \ t .- ... .. ' .. " , . .... !Pears,oil Ba(k H · ;' ." F'" .' · In SWift Move ToU' . .·or Ciock I . k ' .' e·' l;:',1 lP:c:ace·Jri Wotld's I B O( . lit ',Far'East . "High Hope,Of PeaCe;! ::l .. Can- more' accurately any device. .;, I ," , now 'known, Coilimbm University GR·' k 01 W .' , .. , adlan concern- phYsicists said Tuesday. rave' IS" -" . 'or" 1 ed over the' "dangerous" .. It 'could usher in "atomic stan· sl 'tuatl'on Formosa dard time',' rather d. lan present slln WASJIINGTON"A I '- " ; . .1' standard time. For It's a far better - P - n 8 sWift and extra. • , yesterday suggested neutral· timepiece than the earth's l'otation,! ordinary riisplay of unity, the: House of Representi. -'. ization' of the the hasis of sun time or present tives voted 409 to 3 Tuesday to empower.President held Chinese island pending standard time, , . I Eisenhowpr to wage war J'f necessary to save For. " . , . , . , The earL.'t's rota lion can vary ,ItS fmal disposItion by mter· about one second every. three mosa. The emphasis, was 'all ·on and heav)'. ;, national negotiation. years, The atomic clock would be I bipartisan backing behind a resolution which memo External Affairs Minister Pear. "o[/!' only about one sccond every I . son, In a Commons statement out. 300 "years, said Prof. Charles H.' bers acknowledged carried both high hopes peace lining.Canadian policY'in the Iig!lt \,lIe inventor and executive I and a grave risk of war. of United· States mov.cs; said the offIcer of Columbia's physics de.: Eisenhower termcd the House :::-------- ___ __ government feels the Formosa is· partment.. ,. action on his urgcnt request a sign. . . Slle might bc dlsc.usscd at a con· . One use foreseen for It .15, to, or "remarkable unity in the inter. bcr sa!d the rIsk lay·1n rcrence on general' Far Eastern how our splnOlng: est of nation's security," I no action at all. .' problems. ." . earth may down! and l ' Now it is up to the Scnate to' TOOK SHORT CUTS,. . But he said Canada wiulld weI· how much It vanes ID thc tlmc-I act The votc may come Thursday The House took leglslahve shollt come' any proposal 'within the 24 for one complete; or ·Friday. cuts to into actiM United Nations or through dip rotation. . I Two Republicans, Representat. hours after EIsenhower hIS re, lomatlc channels which could help AJlIPLIFY,SIGNALS , ! ivcs Eugene Siler of Ke.ntucky and quest to Congress. It didn t 'l!vcn improve prospects. of peace in the deVice . can amphfy Timot!IY Sheehan of Illinois, and a use up the full t.hrce hours !)f·: area off the China coast. "!Icrowave radIO sIgnals, keep single Democrat, Graham Barden debale allotted to the resolution. . CANADA NOT COMMITTED dlo and .TV transmitters on their of North Carolina, refused to go !n Senate, tIH! foreign af· . Just be for e he' spoke, CCF more help 'along with Eisenhower's bid to de. fairS and armed services commit- 'Ieader Coldwell asked him tOI tell navlga!ors, and aid, the study. of, clare American determlnatio'n to .went th:ough another : i!le House whether ·the U. S, has mysterious radio Signals commg fight, if need be, to keep Red of lOlDt heanngs' on Ute Formosa i been Informed· Canada Is· not "en· from Townes said, China from conquering the Chi. defence Senate Republican 1 tangled In any of these Formosan The deVice IS named t.'te Maser, nese Nationalist bastion' of Fpr. leader William Knowland of Cal· , adventures.". . microwal'e aplifica. mosa and the nearby Pescadores ifornia predicted its overwhelming : . Mr. Pearson' repUed: .Presldent tion sbmulated emiSSIOn of islands. acceptance by the perhallS : Eisenhower's proposals to Con· radiation. . Or-iLY ONE VOICE _ Thursday. ., : cOlicem policy of ,the U. The Maser works through a I In the abbreviated but tense de. A formal report fr0I1!' thl! fore}gD which has' "particular .. commlt. stream of ammonia, gas forced un· bate leading up to the vote, only a,ffalrs calling for ae- ments of If:s llwn 'In tllis: area,'! der slight pressure mto one end of the lone voice of Representative .now sal.d pol!cle,s embod, Canada was rlot Involved In these a chamber, .An James Fulton (Rep,.Pa.) cried out m the s resoIu· c,:,mmltments. ," . electrostatic beams the. high· that t.!Ie resolution goes 100 far. In tlOn had the, unammous approval ""We are of course' deeply can· ene:gy ammoma molecules 1010 a the end, Fullon wound up voting Of .. U.S, Joint chiefs sta£!. cerijed over the dangerous sllua. cavIty or small c\lppcr cylinder, f .( Failure 10 act noW agamst Chl- .tIlcre lind we ••.. are In this chamber, rcsolution Ilub almost solid ncse agg.ress.i,M .. •. the . . . ,. anxious that should taken of the theIr cn·, Huusc support bchind Eisenhowcr's said, offers a LI e ve: s" .,.: ·.E· :.,·n· d' S' e: .. a·,r·. c'. h '.' I 10 br!ng. to . an the, fighting. crgy stale. off tmy packe!s, pl:ll1 to Iry 10 halt the Hed Chincsc as great, If not grcatc:, than Protest lloy'a : which now lia.s been taking of energy. ThIS can .makc before thcv strike. by holding ovcr achon ',' The support glycn to .-" for. spme' time along thc allna. ·other radwt.e t,!JCIl'. en· them the threat that the big gunsl the as express,cd In th!5 .' .,.. F L' . '''I' "B ' C'h'ild' . At' .coast. .. ·' , ergy. In a, of anll air POWCI' or the U.S, 71h fieet: resolullon. \\'111 enable 111m 10 act . • '.. ..' or" Itt e, . oy . ren· WATCII:WITIl'lNTEREST . thus. creallng v!bratwn, or oscllla' l will hit an' force whcre. calmly, c1carly .anrl rcsolutely fo POIsoned ·Sallors . . ,.".[ .. If could be by .the i lions, I vcr it lIIar hc massing-even on! "Ihe erosIOn of Ihe frc.e , 'y N,S: (Cn-At sun. Fox. Hunt . , to brmg a fire" 0 thr Chincse mainland. I Ilorld . . d01l'1I Tuesday, RCMP called 0([ lor ". Canada W?, UI 5 1 . I \elcnm_e, It. She was SI' MI' \ It cails. tou. for the 0 . tbe fourlh nlKht an anxious search. LONDON (Reuler:;)-Thc I!alchlng "1\\1 J(reat and _ IIp In { nl'lllada In rc[icploy Chinese Na.IT S _.1. HALIFAX-CP-FOl'ty·s(!\'en sailors, some in' dan'. for a little boy .Iost in tlle Against Cruel' Sporls prntcsted concern 1hr. ,of a tioll"list troop, over nu.1 00 ICK of cleat l \ earlier this we,* aUm' drinking a· poisoncd timberland' and uesday against a visit by the 'refercnce to the UN Sccunty Coon· To Fl'an('c merOUA smali islam's off the main· I , " • I c\ b I II ' (L "M 'f' t I' country· ncar his home· al;Little 'royal fa m Ily inaturling Prince 'c1\; " - ."" ' innd. This cC':lld mcan, for ex·1 S·tan(1 11'lal 're a oare lC alre)'a carrlcr a,glll Icen , no onger River a "few .mlles from·.here. Charles and Anne to foX'. . he adderl, . os· S 800" k f St p' . , ample, el'acuation of the Tadlcn ( r "n consicl"I'cd serl'ously I'll tile Navy announced yes' "h d 1 .b I I'd i 'senhal party to any cease £lrc oL omc Itun rum... 15 1 TO. •.•• , ." - , . - It .was .sc e u ed to n aga n hunt Sunda) at San l' ng,lIam m this kind \V'ould be the Communist have arrived at Gandcr ancl will 1,laml" 2011 nules north of For. I Peler Moscs, charged with 'rrrlay, . at 8:30 a.m. .' Norfolk.. '.' government of which, thoug.h go. by air. to France and Bclgiulll, , .l11al:,slau;:hler in with ninc nf the men were - SIX.ycaroOld'"·, H.o W.R rd . Newell The J(!ague said. . a non.member of the Uniled' Na.l 'fhe islcs buildin!! uII a, ?\ C,! Ihe Ili1lUse :1 grim :the death of his wife, IS not well ',' ted as dangerously .or .serlously not knowing' the mixture's Temperature was expecled to.fall "Neither the' Queen nor)hose tions would have 'to lie invited II husiness in' hundl'eds of i tChcI ,,5ltua R hO;Jd .cfalnlenoUgh at thc moment 10 stand I hIlt Rear Admiral Roger Bid . hasn't been seen since Saturday. whose duty It Is to advise her can ," i. .. ,mcan II aI', I tIC nnese e so·, . . , • .. .'. • tents-it was almost certain t 25'd T d Ight It h tl f Ih I th assume, 10 participalc In the Sec" thousands of dollars ID cxportmg j low on t.'leir repeatedly I tnal. Hil remams a paben, at .. rl!. chlcf or Ihe nR\'Y's Atlanllc some cl!arges would follow. . 0 egrees ues ay' n . . Bve any coneep on 0 e oa . urity Councl! deliberallons if L.'ley II . k ". th G I H 't I command, announced: There ,"as no obvious reason for was below freezing the three nights Ing and contempt whleb at least. h h f Ive mm to Europe, announced aim of e enera o_sp_l_a_. ___ _ ,;:1 am advised by my medical the party which saw .' 'balf the people of Britain have for to ave any c ance a suc· , --- ._--, , ... ._ •. _.- .... _- •.• "'-. e .. lccn that sufficient Improve· men In several messes drinking a For three days about 1.000 men foxhunting which .they consider. a "Whcthpr this particular . govern· I J B b B tlett "'ent has been shown by all hos· polent. punch containing a dupUcat have combed ti!: woods. peering cruel and degradlng.rellc of a bar· men( would accept such an Invlta· .. 0 no U r 0 a r :'Ilalized personnel .•.. that their Ing.machlne fluid. The fluid con. every. bdlh .wlthout. a sign barous age nor of the sorrow which tlon Is -anollicr malter,'" . '. . , . ;.,mcds cgan nrdemsoevel dUSflryolml1 talns methyl alcohol, small quan. of the .lad, . . . Later, he said such a move ' •• ! "an crous y, a . r 0 •. titles of which can cauSe death 'or m s s n , lVould,not necessarily mean imme: . 'IS. permanent blindness. T1ie search began' at noon Sat·. At the foxhunt .at D.ams, dialc seating .of t11e Red China gov. 1 (O:'l.'TINl/E PROBE LOCKER OPENED urday wben Howard's uncle and a a feW miles·' from the royal eminent in tIH! UN . And the admiral, who said ear- Th 10 thl fl Id k I group of other youngslers home at Sandring.ham, six.yearo·ld Mr. said "overn· ';'7 Ihat the men owe their lives a bV:i I :Pd from a walk in:the woods without Prince Charles \Vas put up .on,one ment adheres to its 1951 that . l!Ie hard·working na\'al hospihl "polson," but one oC m.en I\lust Howard. They said 'he had decided' oLthe hunt· horscs and. tned un· final disposition of Formosa should -::,fI. nhce aeain thanked the staff have key to the locker. to take a' shortcut to his home successfully to' blow t.ie hunt mast· be dealt with by international n2go. t "the achIevement of this mosl t!trough a woodlot. . . .er's horn.. ,:.. . '.' . tiation-perllaps a conference'· on .1.,lilyin!: result." . • 1I11XEIl > •. four.year,old .Anne also Far Eastern ·prnblems. -, . The nal'Y, continued 'I'he fluid was reported mlxell ' "Complete' compll.llies . of some put 'on one of tlfe horses, 'but, . "Pi!Dding SUCl.'t a.dee,!sion, 1 think !:, probc Into the surreptilious Wil,!l elder, ginger ale and (ire departments voluntep.red, Thc wrlgglcd off. , 'a strong case can·be. made for.the ,Ir,llking spree belol\' deck's of the water and dlslributed among sev· navy sc·nt· two busloads of sailors \ neutralization of Formosa. both.in :.' fJOO.lon carrier. . , eral messes to: avoid detection from. Cornwallis navy base. Bethel d' hil order to prevent any 'assault upon .\ hoard of inquir)' will report to froin oflicers' on· thclr rounds. Bible College 'In Yarmouth closed ID)'ure W · e .il by 'Communlst 'forces lVld also ! ':e nrlmiral, who thcn will rec· A special supply of antidote was its doors and scnt Its 17 stUdents, so Ihat It wm· not be used as a "ll"nenl( further aeliM. floll'n In from Montreal by com· . 81' h ROd' base for invasion onhe mainland," mcrcial airline and pumped Into Cars lined both .s.ldes of thq elg 1 1 nO'· I b t { M \t.\ r BI-; CHARGES the sailor41 to .combat the alcohol. for hundreds of y,ards ncar the spot t .. n I e even 0 a r The na\'Y takes a (lim I'iew of , ' w!lere Cpl., D. A, Black of the Elght.vear,old Gerald Smith. of. Pearson said; .. his ',' h I I . k' I If RCMP di I hed th h A J lVoulll be thai nCithert!te '11 111 (rm am ngs are . spa c e searc. Signal 11111 sliding all Saturday Isis' nor' thc·. Reds ne"d. be,. askcd , Ollffl only Iradlhonal dail)' ANCIENT n:lm . veteran or many such hunls, Cpl. " '''1 01 rlllll anti. rin a Alfalfa, cultll'aled now In most Biack said It was the largest he accidentallY ran hiS slide through. to gin up claims. on territory 01 herr in'trollieal climate. I parts of Canada, ,has been lI'0wn bid ever organltCd. . ,a fence, splitting open ilis leg, M··the oUler •. They would b of Ihe condilinn .In Europe for more tha.n 2,000 . The Red Cross set up a field He was talien 10 the General Hos· asked to ·give up tile use' of. or III. Illen w!lo parhciPilled-some years., . ·ldlt.ben to serve coffee, ' pltal where was given: to. ... D 1 · S' 'k Add·· I' . 'Nfld .. NQi·:·' up e S SIS e e " S ;.ltI9 n a, '. i\t "''''.y " ... , lho ,,,0.,. ,I .bo"",,", wWob ... "" .• .I .. )" ;.0 .. ,...e..' ; . .' ' ". " .. . '. . '. s .' 'C'" f' .. '.' , Memorial . Univcrslty and many chased by the New{oundland Gov· tion and lI'uuld he praced with ' •. Share Of-Fede ralTaxat i on .. t ::' :::: JEJ.:\;·L,J,:·:·",,·/1, . . O"'""AWA cp·· '" M St 1" t Ja 14 til I . f hl h x ti 'willi officials will be here Friday and sembled in the auditorium of the Lewis Bartlett, brother of tbe is planning to do a major piece Df ,: . u .- -'. .• ih!' to - '1 1 Satu.rd.ay for ,an annex for annual to u.nveil a work' in preserting \V'EATI:.JER ler DupleSSIS . apparently' cut tho - personal Income "Apparently he' (Mr: Duplessis) lI,on of the Canadian .general viSit of HIS Honour the LlCulfnilnt pltcure or captain Dob, wlueh was History and . culture, and he cot!· '" ] preparing n drh'e)o .an. taX' for 'all of tax· Is looking' for. another n I s from nine provinces 9overnor of NeWfoundland •. Sir. presented t? the UniEersit)'. sidered this address a ·maslerpipel •. ' '. I additional $25 000 OOO.a:year II payers by 10 per cent for 1955 aad year," one Iedel'at olf!clal said, (' will start C arriving Wednesday for L, C. Outcrbridge, Kt.. BarUctt. 53111 that he was proud to .be added .. .'illh\\·. this el'ening. IIIgh! of d:i r/ t It. :195G. . ,"Probably Is prcpaflDg a bar." tlie meeting, first ut it, kind to be D,S:O" L.LD., to the that Ihc Govcrnment I has honour· , 1o,;:;), 30: , ,I \\'c "r c' era ax. The cut, ordered'by Mr:St. Lau. gaining posItion for .the federal· I held in Ncw Brunswick. ,At tlic noon thc faeult)· and.: cd the memory of his brother by . "At our.1ast- asscmbly," Dr. Gu.· '. rcvenue 111 Quebe.c, renl In an eflort' to end the pro· provlnc!al tax .. confcrence to be The)' wili 'dlscuss such topics as m'embcrs of the/Boanl of itegents I placing a picturc of him in ·the hue said, ."lVe. paid tribute to Dljr, ' ,1I1,\'(.'lU.II ."NT) .u,1.'i1.llU.II j authorities said .. ; Iionged' tax ,dispute ,with 111:,' Du. thiS ),ca.r. '. I eight..'t ",·orld.janlborce an,d and the. Senate paradep through fha.lls of tile University, and proud lale emeritus, A. '.: n;,I/PERA'l'(}JrI:'S " . " '" , Iplessls, Is la, 19J4 for The provincial tax, Iho :clvil the middle aisie of tlie hall and j to unl'eil the picture. Alter Mr. today lI'e pay tribute to MISS .. ' . ..' 1ltey placed Ihls ,the \Ipper half of s taxpay· here to yield 1111': D)1Picssis about I defenec badge, fmances, nallonai took their. placcs on the piatform. Bartletl unl'cited the picture. Ludlo\v, a, teacher. at st. ,;: •. . Mill. Ma1'. Iha\ Jers subjec1ed· to the pro1lncinl (n· $25,000,000 a ycur, aUolI'S for e)(· i committee arid the 'Iocplion 'of the D; R Gushue dressed in his' which was stallliing on an' easel. I schooi-atid a stu'dental Memoria!ii: i' .. ,,' .. •• 41 . ;coAmcfetadX"lml Jlan l · 1t ast YC8 t f l 50 1 ' p'e'r ccnot higher than Canadian moot .In: robes the "on. the piatfo,:m, Dr .. .call: She' Ivas. at' 'c1asses last t. :. Dlonton . 24 25 . I I" ,era ·prov nc n ax ren a bllose pcrm tied by ttawa. .' >, " t "1 - .J' i hi' '11 th L' t" I t ken III and dicd Hcr fUD·: . ,,,., ......... " . m n ItraUon) \looer federal·provln 'all'eement between' Quebec and Ot- . . " Hcading the list of delegates will.asscmbl¥ opcn 1!nd II'clcomc! t e C( on HIS onour, e ICU enan IVas a . . . ' •. , ...... _"." 'ciul Quebe.c :tawa.would have ,given the provo REDUCE . ·.be 'JacksOn Dobbs of Westmount, guests and speeial visitors 10 the Governor to address the assembly. eral was held on Monday;..:, nit.' ". •• ,. •• •• -'. at Is II!r onl)' province which has: nnl. )nce ail 'payment 'of .. :Mr. St. I;aurenl hlnle.l. In 'hls ,Que" ttlle:-nntion's" deputy chief University •. ,' '. . His Hopour thanked'Dr, C;ushue aDd the faculty :. :. :. ," ,,' .... 17, sil:nell the.IIDcl .with .. " abD'Jt· $120,000,000; officials suld. Jan. 14 lritter Ihut he woullI. like .. scout; .. R, C. Stevenson of Mont· .' ':1'his assemhly today,,' 'Dr, Gus- fOl' the warID welcome" given to In a b()oy.. Dr. Gushue.,'. MIll ".; .," .... :!fI .' . ,Mr. .In· ". ". '.' .to .QilelJec ellcmptions· s('ale.!I· ,re!lI" .. of·. ti)e .. hlle .sahi r : :'i9' to lIo honour 10 a hi!I1"'and l.ac1y Ollterbrldge a.nd 8?e,"!l!ly .10 " . hl3lC .... .... 22 .' ,eluded II) ,his IIr:Ja(l .19 .to I Quebec.s;>odlrect ',taxallon .ylel!l, 1I0wlI Jo the .fedcl'Di I,evel" TiIlSJ.cOl J1 1!lIt1e,e, flOla) of world. Arctic explnl'cr, the Ihen gal'e an allliress on the' hfe for a .. \l1lnute of .sllence In. ;! dnry •• •.• ," ••. h '25 ···211 " :Prlme :MlnbteI: lIlt rough 'on.'corporati.ons .WOtI1d. double In executive. ·com11)I •• , late'· CapCain Bob Bartlett and to o{ th'! lale B.arUell.. '.' Dry, o[ .. MISs Ludlow,·,' ..... : ,.!. John's'" " ,'" •• 18" f.' In the l personallnco.1fe Quebec,'and .atill glve, Mr •. DuPles:.\' . . \ ' . n' II 'p rti-ali ' the:wo;k o[ n'n Thanking; Sir Lcnnard 'for his:: The" 'Assembly was ·then· 01 ... ·10/':'['··:-",,: :,'" I,he .Quebe.l!, lellislature, , .. ...... tax.,..amounthlll.to about 15 :perl sl5.lhe revenue. he wants-or ·per·.. Ne\yfollnclland· will be' the u vc '" a.o '. . . d .• h d I 'd, b ,th' Iden!.·. " >: ,>.:: .. ,: . / ,'It'. was· IIi ·.reply. tel;· a, cent' of the· but allow. haps a ·lIttle :more •. ··, . AmerIcan. Jdarl!ant·. a drcss, .Dr. Gushue said tee c ose y e pres.. . f. '. .., , .. ,I, ... ... ... (," '. . '. . ..' . . , .'. '.' '. I' .' , . . I" t . ': ' '" .. .' \ " : ,"

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Page 1: !Pears,oil .Eis~nhowet~,,;, H· ;' . F' .' · Move ':::~~. litcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · ,mcan II aI', I tIC nnese e so·, . . • tents-it was almost

.. '

7.00 p.m.-Thi Barrelman,

7.15 p.m.-Dr. Paul. o

9,OO,p.m.-The ~arlet Pimpernel.. AVAJ~LE AT

10.00 p.m.-The Amazing Oscar Hammerstein,

(Price '5 lC;cnts) ~harles Hutton .. &: SOnS

Save

. '"

...... H

. \;' 1· ... \ t .- ... .. ' .. " ~~~, , ;!:~ .

.... !Pears,oil Ba(k .Eis~nhowet~,,;, H· ;' ." F'" .' · In SWift Move ToU' . 'ope~·.· .·or ~tomic Ciock I . k ' .' e·' ':::~~. l;:',1

lP:c:ace·Jri ~Is Wotld's I B O( . Communlst~ lit ',Far'East . .:~ J.i:K:::Al'~! J!~ "High Hope,Of PeaCe;! ::l .. OTTAWA-CP~The. Can- more' accurately tha~ any device. .;, I ,"

, now 'known, Coilimbm University GR·' k 01 W .' , .. ,adlan gover~ment, concern- phYsicists said Tuesday. rave' IS" -" . 'or" ~ 1 ed over the' "dangerous" .. It 'could usher in "atomic stan· sl'tuatl'on aro~nd Formosa dard time',' rather d.lan present slln WASJIINGTON"A I '- " ;

. .1' standard time. For It's a far better - P - n 8 sWift and extra. • , yesterday suggested neutral· timepiece than the earth's l'otation,! ordinary riisplay of unity, the: House of Representi. -'. ization' of the Nationali~t- the hasis of sun time or present tives voted 409 to 3 Tuesday to empower.President held Chinese island pending standard time, , . I Eisenhowpr to wage war J'f necessary to save For. " . , . , . , The earL.'t's rota lion can vary ,ItS fmal disposItion by mter· about one second every. three mosa. The emphasis, was 'all ·on spe~d' and heav)'. ;, national negotiation. years, The atomic clock would be I bipartisan backing behind a resolution which memo

External Affairs Minister Pear. "o[/!' only about one sccond every I . son, In a Commons statement out. 300 "years, said Prof. Charles H.' bers acknowledged carried both high hopes o~ peace lining.Canadian policY'in the Iig!lt To~\'nes, \,lIe inventor and executive I and a grave risk of war. of United· States mov.cs; said the offIcer of Columbia's physics de.: Eisenhower termcd the House :::--------___ __ government feels the Formosa is· partment.. ,. action on his urgcnt request a sign. . . Slle might bc dlsc.usscd at a con· . One use foreseen for It .15, to, or "remarkable unity in the inter. bcr sa!d the gr~atcr rIsk lay·1n rcrence on general' Far Eastern mea~urc how mucl~ our splnOlng: est of th~ nation's security," I no action at all. .' problems. ." . earth may .~ sl?wl~g down! and l ' Now it is up to the Scnate to' TOOK SHORT CUTS,. .

But he said Canada wiulld weI· how much It vanes ID thc tlmc-I act The votc may come Thursday The House took leglslahve shollt come' any proposal 'within the 24 h~urs-necd~d for one complete; or ·Friday. cuts to swin~ into actiM ju~t 2~ United Nations or through dip rotation. . I Two Republicans, Representat. hours after EIsenhower s~nt, hIS re, lomatlc channels which could help AJlIPLIFY,SIGNALS , ! ivcs Eugene Siler of Ke.ntucky and quest to Congress. It didn t 'l!vcn improve prospects. of peace in the ~he deVice . als~ can amphfy Timot!IY Sheehan of Illinois, and a use up the full t.hrce hours !)f·: area off the China coast. "!Icrowave radIO sIgnals, keep r~· single Democrat, Graham Barden debale allotted to the resolution. . CANADA NOT COMMITTED dlo and .TV transmitters on their of North Carolina, refused to go !n t~£ Senate, tIH! foreign af· . Just be for e he' spoke, CCF fre~uencles more ~ccuratcly, help 'along with Eisenhower's bid to de. fairS and armed services commit­

'Ieader Coldwell asked him tOI tell navlga!ors, and aid, the study. of, clare American determlnatio'n to tec~ .went th:ough another roun~ : i!le House whether ·the U. S, has mysterious radio Signals commg fight, if need be, to keep Red of lOlDt heanngs' on Ute Formosa i been Informed· Canada Is· not "en· from oute~ s~ace, Townes said, China from conquering the Chi. defence ~I~n. Senate Republican

1 tangled In any of these Formosan The deVice IS named t.'te Maser, nese Nationalist bastion' of Fpr. leader William Knowland of Cal· , adventures.". . ,\~hich mea~s microwal'e aplifica. mosa and the nearby Pescadores ifornia predicted its overwhelming : . Mr. Pearson' repUed: .Presldent tion ~y sbmulated emiSSIOn of islands. acceptance by the .senat~, perhallS : Eisenhower's proposals to Con· radiation. . Or-iLY ONE VOICE _ Thursday. ., : gr~ss cOlicem policy of ,the U. ~" The Maser works through a I In the abbreviated but tense de. A formal report fr0I1!' thl! fore}gD

which has' "particular .. commlt. stream of ammonia, gas forced un· bate leading up to the vote, only a,ffalrs c,~m"!lttee calling for ~ ae­ments of If:s llwn 'In tllis: area,'! der slight pressure mto one end of the lone voice of Representative ~lOn .now sal.d th~ pol!cle,s embod, Canada was rlot Involved In these a seal~d va~uum chamber, .An James Fulton (Rep,.Pa.) cried out I~? m the admims~ation s resoIu· c,:,mmltments. ," . electrostatic fl~ld beams the. high· that t.!Ie resolution goes 100 far. In tlOn had the, unammous approval ""We are of course' deeply can· ene:gy ammoma molecules 1010 a the end, Fullon wound up voting Of .. th~ U.S, Joint chiefs ~f sta£!. cerijed over the dangerous sllua. cavIty or small c\lppcr cylinder, f .( Failure 10 act noW agamst Chl­)JQm.exi~Ullg .tIlcre lind we ••.. are In this resonal~t chamber, ,~omc o~h~· rcsolution Ilub almost solid ncse Commu~ist agg.ress.i,M .. •. the

. . . ,. anxious that ~teps should b~ taken of the molee!tl~s chan~e theIr cn·, Huusc support bchind Eisenhowcr's ~ousc commll~ec said, offers a

LIe ve: s" .,.: .Al~l· '.~. ·.E· :.,·n· d' S' e: .. a·,r·. c'. h '.' I 10 br!ng. to . an .~nd the, fighting. crgy stale. gl~'mg off tmy packe!s, pl:ll1 to Iry 10 halt the Hed Chincsc m~ as great, If not grcatc:, than Protest lloy'a : which now lia.s been taking pl~ce of energy. ThIS proc~ss can .makc before thcv strike. by holding ovcr achon ',' • The support glycn to .-" for. spme' time along thc allna. ·other molcc~les radwt.e t,!JCIl'. en· them the threat that the big gunsl the pr~sldcnt: as express,cd In th!5 .' .,.. F L' . '''I' "B ' C'h'ild' . At' .coast. .. · ' , ergy. In a, klD~. of ~halD I'eact~on, anll air POWCI' or the U.S, 71h fieet: resolullon. \\'111 enable 111m 10 act . • '.. ..' or" Itt e, . oy . ren· WATCII:WITIl'lNTEREST . thus. creallng v!bratwn, or oscllla'

l will hit an' invadin~ force whcre. calmly, c1carly .anrl rcsolutely fo

POIsoned ·Sallors . . ,.".[ .. If actlO~ could be ~aken; by .the i lions, I vcr it lIIar hc massing-even on! ~~em "Ihe erosIOn of Ihe frc.e , 'y ARMOUTH~ N,S: (Cn-At sun. Fox. Hunt . , ~N to brmg ·a~out. a ~easc fire" 0 thr Chincse mainland. I Ilorld . . d01l'1I Tuesday, RCMP called 0([ lor ". Canada W?,UI51.I\elcnm_e, It. She was SI' MI' \ It cails. tou. for the ~mcrican! 0

. tbe fourlh nlKht an anxious search. LONDON (Reuler:;)-Thc ~ea~ue I!alchlng "1\\1 J(reat I~t~r~st and _ IIp In { nl'lllada In rc[icploy Chinese Na.IT S _.1. HALIFAX-CP-FOl'ty·s(!\'en sailors, some in' dan'. for a little boy .Iost in tlle brus~y Against Cruel' Sporls prntcsted ~ome concern 1hr. posslb~hty ,of a tioll"list troop, ~cattcrcd over nu.1 00 ICK

~\'r of cleatl\ earlier this we,* aUm' drinking a· poisoncd timberland' and .tanglc~swamp· uesday against a visit by the 'refercnce to the UN Sccunty Coon· To Fl'an('c ~ merOUA smali islam's off the main· I , " • I c\ b I II ' (L "M 'f' t I' country· ncar his home· al;Little 'royal fa m Ily inaturling Prince 'c1\; " - ."" ' innd. This cC':lld mcan, for ex·1 S·tan(1 11'lal 're a oare lC alre)'a carrlcr a,glll Icen , no onger River a "few .mlles from·.here. Charles and Princ~ss Anne to foX'. . l~cldentnll), he adderl, . ~n os· S 800" k f St p' . , ample, el'acuation of the Tadlcn (

r "n consicl"I'cd serl'ously I'll tile Navy announced yes' "h d 1 .b I I'd i 'senhal party to any cease £lrc oL omc Itun rum... 151 TO. •.•• , ." • - , . - It .was .sc e u ed to ~g n aga n hunt Sunda) at San l' ng,lIam m this kind \V'ould be the Communist have arrived at Gandcr ancl will 1,laml" 2011 nules north of For. I Peler Moscs, charged with 'rrrlay, . at 8:30 a.m. ~ST today~. .' Norfolk.. '.' government of Chi~a which, thoug.h go. by air. to France and Bclgiulll, , mll~~,.. ~'. .l11al:,slau;:hler in conn~ctioll with

~:.rlier ninc nf the men ~ti\l were - SIX.ycaroOld'"·, H.o W.R rd . Newell The J(!ague said. . a non.member of the Uniled' Na.l 'fhe islcs ~re buildin!! uII a, ?\ C,! Ihe Ili1lUse hl~n.. :1 grim :the death of his wife, IS not well ',' ted as dangerously .or .serlously not knowing' the mixture's Temperature was expecled to.fall "Neither the' Queen nor)hose tions would have 'to lie invited II husiness v~hie~ in' hundl'eds of i allnrcn~ss ~flnit tChcI ,,5ltuaRhO;Jd .cfalnlenoUgh at thc moment 10 stand I hIlt Rear Admiral Roger Bid . hasn't been seen since Saturday. whose duty It Is to advise her can '~ ," i. .. ,mcan II aI', I tIC nnese e so·, . . , •

.. . '. • tents-it was almost certain t 25'd T d Ight It h tl f Ih I th assume, 10 participalc In the Sec" thousands of dollars ID cxportmg j low Ulrou~h on t.'leir repeatedly I tnal. Hil remams a paben, at

.. rl!. chlcf or Ihe nR\'Y's Atlanllc some cl!arges would follow. . 0 egrees ues ay' n . . Bve any coneep on 0 e oa . urity Councl! deliberallons if L.'ley II . k ". th G I H 't I command, announced: There ,"as no obvious reason for was below freezing the three nights Ing and contempt whleb at least. h h f Ive mm to Europe, announced aim of "li~ralmg" e enera o_sp_l_a_. ___ _ ,;:1 am advised by my medical the Impr~mptu party which saw prevlous~ .' 'balf the people of Britain have for ~~~~~ to ave any c ance a suc· , ---._--, , ... ._ •. _.- .... _-•.• "'-.

e .. lccn that sufficient Improve· men In several messes drinking a For three days about 1.000 men foxhunting which .they consider. a "Whcthpr this particular . govern· IJ B b B tlett "'ent has been shown by all hos· polent. punch containing a dupUcat have combed ti!: woods. peering cruel and degradlng.rellc of a bar· men( would accept such an Invlta· .. 0 no U r 0 a r :'Ilalized personnel .•.. that their Ing.machlne fluid. The fluid con. ~ehlnt1 every. bdlh .wlthout. a sign barous age nor of the sorrow which tlon Is -anollicr malter,'" . '. . , . ;.,mcds cgan nO\I~ ~ nrdemsoevel dUSflryolml1 talns methyl alcohol, small quan. of the .lad, . . . tfhaeYllyf~elaOsnocrleaatldolngwoiUfltll.'le"royal Later, he said such a move ' •• ! "an crous y, a . r 0 •. titles of which can cauSe death 'or m s s n , lVould,not necessarily mean imme:

. 'IS. permanent blindness. T1ie search began' at noon Sat·. At the foxhunt .at ~arpley D.ams, dialc seating .of t11e Red China gov. 1 (O:'l.'TINl/E PROBE LOCKER OPENED urday wben Howard's uncle and a a feW miles·' from the royal eminent in tIH! UN .

And the admiral, who said ear- Th 10 thl fl Id k I group of other youngslers e1Jlerge~ home at Sandring.ham, six.yearo·ld Mr. P~arson said t~e "overn· ';'7 Ihat the men owe their lives locke~ na~:, sac1earl~ ~ a bV:i I :Pd from a walk in:the woods without Prince Charles \Vas put up .on,one ment adheres to its 1951 vi~w that . l!Ie hard·working na\'al hospihl "polson," but one oC ~he m.en I\lust Howard. They said 'he had decided' oLthe hunt· horscs and. tned un· final disposition of Formosa should -::,fI. nhce aeain thanked the staff have procure~.n key to the locker. to take a' shortcut to his home successfully to' blow t.ie hunt mast· be dealt with by international n2go. t ~ "the achIevement of this mosl t!trough a woodlot. . . .er's horn.. ,:.. . '.' . tiation-perllaps a conference'· on .1.,lilyin!: result." . • 1I11XEIl > •. four.year,old Prlnc~ss .Anne also Far Eastern ·prnblems. -, .

The nal'Y, mean\l'hil~, continued 'I'he fluid was reported mlxell ' "Complete' compll.llies . of some wa~ put 'on one of tlfe horses, 'but, . "Pi!Dding SUCl.'t a.dee,!sion, 1 think !:, probc Into the surreptilious Wil,!l appl~ elder, ginger ale and (ire departments voluntep.red, Thc wrlgglcd off. , 'a strong case can·be. made for.the ,Ir,llking spree belol\' deck's of the water and dlslributed among sev· navy sc·nt· two busloads of sailors \ neutralization of Formosa. both.in :.' fJOO.lon carrier. . , eral messes to: avoid detection from. Cornwallis navy base. Bethel d' hil order to prevent any 'assault upon

.\ hoard of inquir)' will report to froin oflicers' on· thclr rounds. Bible College 'In Yarmouth closed ID)'ure W · e .il by 'Communlst 'forces lVld also ! ':e nrlmiral, who thcn will rec· A special supply of antidote was its doors and scnt Its 17 stUdents, so Ihat It wm· not be used as a "ll"nenl( further aeliM. floll'n In from Montreal by com· . 81' h ROd' base for invasion onhe mainland,"

mcrcial airline and pumped Into Cars lined both .s.ldes of thq r~ad elg 1 1 nO'· I b t { M \t.\ r BI-; CHARGES the sailor41 to .combat the alcohol. for hundreds of y,ards ncar the spot t .. n I e even 0 a r

The na\'Y takes a (lim I'iew of , ' w!lere Cpl., D. A, Black of the Elght.vear,old Gerald Smith. of. Pearson said; .. his u~~~.~r~li~~f.l ',' h I I . k' I If RCMP di I hed th h A J lVoulll be thai nCithert!te

'11111 ~arr (rm I~g. am ~a ngs are . spa c e searc. Signal 11111 sliding all Saturday Isis' nor' thc·. Reds ne"d. be,. askcd , Ollffl only Ih~lr Iradlhonal dail)' ANCIENT n:lm . veteran or many such hunls, Cpl. " • '''1 01 rlllll anti. rin occ3~ion, a Alfalfa, cultll'aled now In most Biack said It was the largest he accidentallY ran hiS slide through. to gin up claims. on territory hel~ hnlll~ 01 herr in'trollieal climate. I parts of Canada, ,has been lI'0wn bid ever organltCd. . ,a fence, splitting open ilis leg, M··the oUler ~lde •. They would b

r.rC~II~e of Ihe ~e~ious condilinn .In Europe for more tha.n 2,000 . The Red Cross set up a field He was talien 10 the General Hos· asked to ·give up tile use' of. or III. Illen w!lo parhciPilled-some years., . ·ldlt.ben to serve coffee, ' pltal where treatme~t was given: to. ach!~.vc. thelr·o~jectives ...

D 1 · S' 'k Add·· I' . 'Nfld .. NQi·:·' up e S SIS e e " S ;.ltI9 n a, '. R~pl'esent~d i\t "''''.y " ... , lho ,,,0.,. ,I .bo"",,", wWob ... "" .• dd,~ .I .. )" ;.0 .. ,...e..' ; . .' ' ". " .. . '. . '. s .' 'C'" f' .. '.' , Memorial . Univcrslty and many chased by the New{oundland Gov· tion and lI'uuld he praced with ~ ' •. Share Of-Fede ralTaxat i on s,;~tg;:~~b:C: .. t fF~:~:;:::~~,;=r~ ::~~~::.P::':::: ::' :::: ~~{'i:~~~~M!,m~ JEJ.:\;·L,J,:·:·",,·/1, . . O"'""AWA cp·· '" M St 1" t Ja 14 til I . f hl h x ti 'willi officials will be here Friday and sembled in the auditorium of the Lewis Bartlett, brother of tbe is planning to do a major piece Df ,:

. u .- -'. PFe~ .• ih!' feder~~':naie:a'l de~~Io: n~ ~~ou~~ to ~b~ute~5~~,ggJ. - '11 Satu.rd.ay for ,an executl~e Un!Vcrsi~ annex for th~ annual I~te CaPtai~. Ba~tlett, to u.nveil a work' in preserting Ne'\I'foundla~~,~',' \V'EATI:.JER ler DupleSSIS . apparently' I~ cut tho fede~ -personal Income "Apparently he' (Mr: Duplessis) lI,on of • the Canadian .general viSit of HIS Honour the LlCulfnilnt pltcure or captain Dob, wlueh was History and . culture, and he cot!· ~'. '" ] preparing n drh'e)o g~t .an. taX' for 'all of Que~~~~,j'50,OOO tax· Is looking' for. another S2~,~OO,ooo, n I Clb~legat s from nine provinces 9overnor of NeWfoundland •. Sir. presented t? the UniEersit)'. ~Ir. sidered this address a ·maslerpipel •. ' '.

I additional $25 000 OOO.a:year II payers by 10 per cent for 1955 aad year," one Iedel'at olf!clal said, (' will startC arriving Wednesday for L, C. Outcrbridge, Kt.. ~l.B'E." BarUctt. 53111 that he was proud to .be added i:I~~T~lIeClio,n .. ~ :,:i.::'~·.· .'illh\\·. rndin~ this el'ening. IIIgh! ~h3 of d:i r/ t 'f~d It. :195G. . ,"Probably ~e. Is prcpaflDg a bar." tlie meeting, first ut it, kind to be D,S:O" L.LD., to the Unil'ersit~'. that Ihc Govcrnment I has honour· , 1o,;:;), 30: , ,I \\'c "r c' era ax. The cut, ordered'by Mr:St. Lau. gaining posItion for .the federal· I held in Ncw Brunswick. ,At tlic noon thc faeult)· and.: cd the memory of his brother by . "At our.1ast- asscmbly," Dr. Gu.·

'. rcvenue 111 Quebe.c, fe~eral.1 renl In an eflort' to end the pro· provlnc!al tax .. confcrence to be The)' wili 'dlscuss such topics as m'embcrs of the/Boanl of itegents I placing a picturc of him in ·the hue said, ."lVe. paid tribute to Dljr, ' ,1I1,\'(.'lU.II ."NT) .u,1.'i1.llU.II j authorities said y.c~te~day .. ; Iionged' tax ,dispute ,with 111:,' Du. hel~ thiS ),ca.r. '. I ,Pl~ eight..'t ",·orld.janlborce an,d 1?1~ and the. Senate paradep through fha.lls of tile University, and proud lale emeritus, ~r. A. G_.,Hatc~~~ '.:

n;,I/PERA'l'(}JrI:'S " . " '" , Iplessls, Is relroacU~e la, 19J4 for The provincial tax, e~tim~tcdllDternat!onal ~on~crcnce, Iho :clvil the middle aisie of tlie hall and j to unl'eil the picture. Alter Mr. today lI'e pay tribute to MISS Edit~, .. ' . ..' 1ltey placed Ihls Intcrpr~tation ,the \Ipper half of Qu~bec s taxpay· here to yield 1111': D)1Picssis about I defenec badge, fmances, nallonai took their. placcs on the piatform. Bartletl unl'cited the picture. Ludlo\v, a, teacher. at st. Tbo.m~a ,;: •.

. Mill. Ma1'. o~ 'I~S ~tatement' Iha\ -~uetb!!c Jers subjec1ed· to the pro1lncinl (n· $25,000,000 a ycur, aUolI'S for e)(· i committee arid the 'Iocplion 'of the D; R Gushue dressed in his' which was stallliing on an' easel. I schooi-atid a stu'dental Memoria!ii: i'

t;\:d~l1roll\'rr .. ,,' .. •• 41 . 4~' :h~~e Jfer:r~~u~~e C~~~:raf a~~ ;coAmcfetadX"lml p~sedl Jlanl· 1t ast YC8tfl• 'emptl~ns 501' p'e'r ccnot higher than i~~~nd Canadian r~v~r moot .In: \:ice.~h3~cclJor robes decla'~ClI' the "on. the piatfo,:m, Dr .. G~sillle .call: She' Ivas. at' 'c1asses last wee~' a.~d t. :.

Dlonton . 24 25 . I I" ,era ·prov nc n ax ren a bllose pcrm tied by ttawa. .' >, • " t "1 - .J' i hi' '11 th L' t" I t ken III and dicd Hcr fUD·: . ,,,., ......... " . m n ItraUon) \looer federal·provln 'all'eement between' Quebec and Ot- . . " ~ Hcading the list of delegates will.asscmbl¥ opcn 1!nd II'clcomc! t e C( on HIS onour, e ICU enan IVas a . . . ' •. , l::~~IPell ...... _"." ~Ob ~. 'ciul ~a!,.rental'~tlrel!ments. Quebe.c :tawa.would have ,given the provo REDUCE E~EMPTI~' . ·.be 'JacksOn Dobbs of Westmount, guests and speeial visitors 10 the Governor to address the assembly. eral scrvl~e was held on Monday;..:, 'I'~ nit.' ". •• ,. •• •• -'. at Is II!r onl)' province which has: nnl. )nce ail ~lU1ual..federal 'payment 'of .. :Mr. St. I;aurenl hlnle.l. In 'hls ,Que" ttlle:-nntion's" deputy chief University •. ,' '. . His Hopour thanked'Dr, C;ushue aDd the st~dents !~d faculty ,a~;: :. :. lltrl'~1 :. ," ,,' .... 17, 2~ sil:nell the.IIDcl .with ~!tawa! .. " abD'Jt· $120,000,000; officials suld. Jan. 14 lritter Ihut he woullI. like .. scout; .. R, C. Stevenson of Mont· .' ':1'his assemhly today,,' 'Dr, Gus- fOl' the warID welcome" given to am~e(1 In a b()oy.. Dr. Gushue.,'. i·;~"~t MIll ".; ~ .," .... :!fI .' '~:.' . ,Mr. ~ullle~~ls·. Ital~l!ienf~l!s .In· .I.00J(.'1·.~'!R.·MOKE. ~ ". ". '.' .to -~e~ .QilelJec ellcmptions· s('ale.!I· ,re!lI" .. ,.cllal~1Il3.11, of·. ti)e .. e~ec)l!ive hlle .sahir: :'i9' to lIo honour 10 a hi!I1"'and l.ac1y Ollterbrldge a.nd Il~en' ask~d.lI,e 8?e,"!l!ly .10 Itsnd~. " . • hl3lC .... ~ .... ~." 22 .' ~l;: ,eluded II) ,his 1~!le~ IIr:Ja(l • .19 .to I Quebec.s;>odlrect ',taxallon .ylel!l, 1I0wlI Jo the .fedcl'Di I,evel" TiIlSJ.cOlJ1 1!lIt1e,e, allILFr~c1:J.. flOla) of world. f~mfllls Arctic explnl'cr, the Ihen gal'e an allliress on the' hfe for a .. \l1lnute of .sllence In. ;! dnry •• • •.• ," ••. h '25 ···211 " :Prlme :MlnbteI: St.'La~ren~;. tabl~ lIlt rough ~er :I;l:'vle~ 'on.'corporati.ons .WOtI1d. re~uce' double taxa!t~n In o.t~nwa,. c~i~! executive. ·com11)I •• , late'· CapCain Bob Bartlett and to o{ th'! lale Cap~ain B.arUell.. '.' Dry, o[ .. MISs Ludlow,·,' ..... : ,.!. John's'" " ,'" •• ~'. 18" f.' T~ca~ay, In the l ~omm~n~ .and..1~ anjfber'provl~clal personallnco.1fe Quebec,'and .atill glve, Mr •. DuPles:.\' ~Ioli~r.·· . . \ ' . n' II 'p rti-ali ' the:wo;k o[ n'n Thanking; Sir Lcnnard 'for his:: The" 'Assembly was ·then· 01 ... ·10/':'['··:-",,:

~ :,'" I,he .Quebe.l!, lellislature, ,.. ...... tax.,..amounthlll.to about 15 :perl sl5.lhe revenue. he wants-or ·per·.. Ne\yfollnclland· will be' the unl~ u vc '" a.o '. . . d .• h d I 'd, b ,th' Iden!.·. " >: ,>.:: .. ,: . / ,'It'. was· IIi ·.reply. tel;· a, lett~r'~by cent' of the· I~eraHevy, but allow. haps a ·lIttle :more •. ··, prol'lri~ no[,rep~.seJ1t~d.,' . AmerIcan. P~illt~~, Jdarl!ant·. Eh~· a drcss, .Dr. Gushue said t~at tee c ose y e pres.. . f. '. .., • • • , .. ,I, ~ ... ... ... (," '. . '. . ..' . .

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THE' DAIL.Y NEWS, . .' .to.

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Ottawa J~ep.ort· r. .' .' I .'

W, n' .. t' es' H' "0'. ',\ m' " '~ By RUTH CAMPBELL ,,' prescnt, need lor, ratification,' or: Ottawa, Jnllliary" 21st-The' the Paris' pam. Canada would

, .' , Throne Speecl~ debate,' devoted j be sbor'tslgbterl and, unwise 'to , '\ ,,' .' ,., , for the most 'part to members' I play the Russl~n game and yield

• Iy VICENT FORREST sand iti' !/lie hundred years' cuuld review 0[' th~ merits and needs to the USSR methods of InUmi, it Is Interestllll', to note that be he!d' relpi)l'slbl~'for:,.t1,le ", .. t of, their own ronslltucneles, has dallon, the mlillatcr declared. He

In' the NO\'ember '22 Issue of the chanls In our Atlantlcr.'weather, ' been supersedcn during the past did not bellev .. that'ratifieatllln \vinnlpec Tribune there appear. But let ui It'iidi this subJeet of two days by rliHcusslon on the would prov~kl" "Wllr·llke retail· rd a'lelter dealln, wllh changing 'carbon diOXide a little" and see most vital Issut' uf InterimUonaY atlon" and he reiterated his' can· wClther", but lrom a ,universal from the evidclicil I( such an In, Importance-thr. ratiJlcation of vlctlon that Ihe likelihood of "iewpolnt. ,It orglnated' In, Fort cr'la'se 'could~, h~ve such a sreal the London and Paris agrecments 5uch retallatiun-with ''consequ, \\'Ullam. Ontlll'lo, and was ,.1111' cUeot. ' .' - .for the rearmament of West Ger· cnt o war was IC5s now than six rd:' _~ Posteriori. J shall' quote. Befor~ we proceed. 'roay I ven, many, and the admission of that months ago nIter, the rejection

There Is abundant e\'ldencl' ture the' remalkthat It Is quite country Inlo NATO membprshlp, of EDC.' , lliat the world's weather Is un, posslble'that the Illcl'ease ot car. This Is' the must momentu)ls Following the Secretary of dtraolng a 10l1li term chanse." bon dioxide' is the rcsult ra\her debate to take place In the House State for Exte·-nal Affairs, Joh'n

}As a maller of fact. It has bcen than Gause' of our hlghe)' teln' of Co'mmons sInce WOI'ld War 11, Diefenbaker, ~peakll!g for th.e undergoing ch~nges for the past peralures. -Indeed nne vr the most Import· Official Oppn~IUon, pledged the se\'eral mll1iOll )'ears according WHAT IS IT? ant.ln parJlam"ntary history from support of the Conservatives in t oour scientists.) This gas, which. ,we shall call the time 01 confederation. A full a brilliant and well·balanced, ad-,~"The percentlge; of carbon CD; to sare the trouble of look. House 'and packed galleries dress, He w~s followed by CCF

dioxide In the air Is Increasing, Ing up a ChemIstry book, Is pro, heard the Sc'~retary of Slate for leader Coldwell and Social Cre-dpe to Increa~ed industries. Dc· dueed both' naturally and by External Affairs on Thursday dltor Solon Lol'I, who also staled

• fOrestation-has reduced the num, manufacture.' First extracted by aj'ternoon, when he made . his their Intention of votil',g for the ber of trees absorbing It for the plants from the air, It Is again Little Bruce DuggRn, " or ScnltIe.-Wash.,' Is mlgMy \ oud of his plea for unanimous endorsation 'protocol.' , manufacture of carbohydrates by released, when decay sets In. In pel duck and pet dog. The ~laJlard duck; namcd George, and Smokey. of the agreemcnts, and the ensu- MANY ANGLES COVERED photo-synthesiS. ' 'deforested arl:a;;; wbere tree tbe pooch, 'r08m Seattle -'suburbs ehaslng' cats and running after Ing sPC'eches by representatives The party leaders having plac· T. M.lttC. v, I. '11 o.

• Cr".1tU $t""', In. "Add to this the fact that no branches arc Irft, to rot, the In. ' automobiles. • of all parties have been follow· ed themselves on record, Thurl!-$Ignl!lcant ":llcanlc eruptions crease may be admitted. Every , ed with absorbed attention and day evening's rlebate brought the

, ha"e occurred in the Northern year, vegtatiot\ undergoes deeom· It is used on aerated ,drinks; It may rise to 0.034 pereeent. Ex. without the customary Interrup· divers views of the rank and file \ "Do you think we should have hamburger so oftpn, Pat? Junior won't be I,ble to enjoy it w~en·hl" a teen.agerl',

Hemisphere since 1912." position and Ildds to the soil of sugar factorie,> make use of it to cept 'In congested residential tio}ls or IntCl·jrctions. of the commoners." , "rrhat was thl' year 1. WJS born) I'eglon as ,well as' releaSing this clarlf.. ,ythe, ')nne jJulce after areas such as cities, ',therefore, No member of the Commons ' First to rise was the represent- , ---~----~. , Nil seems thnt the arsence_ of gas inlo the atr. It is, genertted treatment with lime. Its effects would not be so great. the gravIty of the declslon to be alive for Trinity-Conception. her distressed reelhigs" werd not for what was lIut In it, supportcd "olclnle ash lind the presence by fermentatlon,It emtrges from When you ouen a bottle of pop In crowded areas of clties It has made, and alt, agree that they whose emphn~lc e?dorsntlon of alone the refll'ctlon of the, ter· It for whE:t WHo, He would not b~ or heat-relalnli'g ~arbon dlxolde the combusUor of fuel and takes the "pop Is cuuse dby It. been known to rise 0.03 percent. approach with g~ave misgivings tbe protocol has already .been rlble sufIcrJngs of his ethnic absent from the House when th! would at lea~t hell) 10 make the place In crowded places from re· Its crillal temperature Is about Over 1arge maufacturlng cit. a declslon'so fraught with paten· reported by this correspon~ent. group, but DC his ,own pet'sonol vote was tnken, as SOme memhpI" Artie Ice retreat and the ,tem· splrallon, henre the closeness or I' 88 degreec Fnrenhelt. It' Ie not les, the effect of fuel corobust- tlal danger, bul with the sole ,ex, He was foilowed ,by the Conser- eXpt)rience Ilf Nazi cruetlY. might' concluded \\Jr. Stewart h; perlture rise." .' a crowded hall, ~4 likely, therefore, taht subject to Ion may Ineaease the amount of ceptlon of II ~mal1 group of dis· vative party's military authority, ' His own uncles, aunts and cou· would' 'be In his place but~! Z

, . Sclentlsts hn\'c II that the pro- It comes, frum Ihe ground in our North Temperature elimute CD deposUed In the air; over senters .in the CCF group there Major General Pearkes, ve, who sins, a family of over 60 persons: matter of' del berate 'policy hI portion of carbon. dlxolde I~ tM varying localities and quantities, It 1I(0uid become liquidized after large dcfrostell areas It may be., Is reJuctant. agreement that rear. discussed the agreements from had been tortured and put to would refrain from voting. atmosphere has In creased Crom cspecially wheru II)lneralsprlngs'somc lime? ' ' come more prevelant, In the mament of the enemy of so few the viewpoint of a soldier, con .. death In that Hitler holocaust. NO 'ALTERNATIVE :10 parts per thousant In 1850 to and weils abolmd. ITS DISTRIBUTION warmest season. But these are short years ago Is preferable to cerned with the additional Mr. Crestohl told the Commons, "We have no alternatll'e" rar 3~ parts pe~ thousand in 11154. It can be marle by heating lime IN NATURE , designated lo.eaUUes, as against the aJternativ'l. " . s~ngth for western EurQllCI simllly,'~ witho!l: elaboration. Yet,the refrain of members from "hlle relahl'e figures arc nol stone to redness In closed reo Ove the ocean at mountain top the great streches of unlnhabit: On the part of the Opposition which tile p~oposed German dlvi- to him the I~sue was resolved I cast and west, regardless of party ~rallable. It Is doubtful If an In· I torts and blowing,ln steam at the 'height It exlst~ to around 0,010 cd, thinly populated or barren -and the view Is shared, unof- slons would casure. • Into 'a choice ot the lesser of t\Vo!Unes. Hcre and there a dissl'I,1 cruse of three parts, pcr thou.! bottom. percent, while at the shore line areas and the great oceans; their n~allY, by lIleans Llber~ls- As \\II', Coldwell had Indicated evils. Paraphrasing tile CnmouF ~ Ing voice, which Included that

. '

TRADE SUPPLIED BY ,I a

percentage of area, though in- there Is the strongly-voiced op· earlier In ,th? day, Stanley Know lines from SlIakespear's "Julius' of a native r-,'cwrounillandcl', creased much in 'one hundred Inion that parliament should, not les of Wlnmpeg was the spokes· Caesar" he wf.uld role for the; Joseph Nosewl,rthy,' CCF mem, years, • would not seem great have been pre,sented with a fait man fO,r th~ small dissenting resol,uUon only hecause it was i ber from Toronto, who recorM,1 enough to cause this three part accompli, that it should have been CCF group. Speaking with the a case 'of "Not that J dislike Bel'l his inlentlon of voting ngainH l\lcrease. , summoned last fall and granted sometimes alm'ost impassioned lin less,.But b.causc I fear Mos· 1 the measure. And was ably an,

If, however, rlse~ In tempera' the opportunity to give careful sincerity of strong conviction. cow more," swered by the Minister of :"at, ture brLng 'about more decay in study t~ ,BlI lI&pects of the pro· lIlr, Knowles outlined to 'me In- DEBATE CONTINED TODAY ,Ionlll Health ,md Welfare, who vegetation, because or the long. posed protoco\' This, they con- (enlly listening House his rea· All through this lonlf Friday I ral\ied ·to the ~upport of his cahi, er periOd of warmth extending tend, would h&ve been fulfilment sons' for belle"lng that the rear- afternoon, "Mike" Pearson fol, net colleague and the govern, Into the lIutumn, thcn as prevlolls of the rightful processes of do. mlng of westr.rn Germany was lowed care,lully the speeches, I ment's polley. ' Iy stggestcd the Increase may in moerlltie gO\'ernment, rather a step which snould not be taken some longer, some sh'orter, of Coilsensus o[ Ihe opinion could part be an effect rather than a thl!n that they should now be ask· at this time, He 'expressed the l\1Ps who, In Ihe main, \'olcel\ be concisely ~umi11ed l!P In the cause. ed "t~' deliver arms on a sliver' view of "thousands' of good solid their, deep apprehension-and words of Ray Thonias, a Social

Congratulations to the "Old platter" '0' an erstwhile bitler patriotic Canadians" across the their conslde'rclI decision 'that 'ill Crcdlt membei from Albem Colony", upon having attained II enemy, as Margaret Aitken, a country who were of the same was neccssary to "grasp thc net· I and a'Vcrteral) of five years' SCI',

population of '100,000, and to the COl\servlltll'e member~ .from Tor: mind. But while the Winnipeg- tie, dllnger." I vice in Gcrmar.l' in the last war, parents 0 of the first Canadian ol}to, phrased .It, without more er's crtllclsms of the protocol There was Margaret Aitken of! "I support till' motion, not be, baby In 1955. ,extensive conslde!atlon. were forthright lind logical-In· Toronto, scoril'll the government cause I want,war. I do 1I0t. I hate ,The big, 112 pa~ year-end fa- 'But whatever ~mlnor dlfferen- deed, many MPs must have shar· for Irresponsibility In failing to it. But I hate 'sla\'ery more."

sue of the Dally ,News WI\S once ces might eXI~t, whatever ment" ed them-he offered no work· educate and guide the people In more 'welcom~ and wlll provide al reserv.otioru;, It ,was Increas·, able alternative. , the complex problem of Wl'~t I '. ' much lnt~restlng reading for ~hls Ingly: apP!,rent, I!s one member , It was a solemn day of debate, Ge;.man rearmnment, per;.nlttlng TraIn Wreck writer'II5 he absorbs eagerly Ithe after another spoke, briefly, that d I a vacuum of Ignorance from '

there would be afmost II i an one at t mes charged with ' mass of Information concerning , nan mous, controlled emotiol)s. Perha 5 its October to .January, a vneuum D h T II Hi hl~ home, Island that Is 50 well support,f?r the protocol.' high point came with the ctnClud which tbe communists had fiI,l' eat' 0 ses presented.' ,THE EXPERTS SPEAK Ing speech of the evening, when ed with the Cears and natural ap' ,

'Newfoundland's advance is. be- Mr_ Pearson, handicapped by 'the Liberal member Cor: Cartier, prehensions of the ?cople, but, SUTTON COLD FIELD, England

G ' Ing watched lividly by rolmons, a severe .laryngitis, nevertheless L. D. Crestohl, told a tense concludln~ th~r the 1I1eluslon of I (Reuters) -, The death toll ro;'.'

E RA L 0 '5 D OVL E In Canada ar,d elsewhere, and overcame his huarseness to make Commons why he of all foes of Germany 111 NATO was tile saf· to 17 todar 'in the dcrailm~llt 01 , '. Ii , her brilliant Cuture hon become a somewhat over lenthly spech Nazism, would voie Cor ratlfleat. cst for peace ... th~ practical rat, 1I Y?rk-Bristol express train in lhe , so vividly apparent that she is .-,an hour and 20 minutes-set. Ion. Born In Poland and educat, her than thp. senliment~I, step statIon here Su~da~'_

i , ' '9 i "'; 'i i f ii'; iii ii" ii' , iii Ii' ii' iii' , i III , i , , , II "i i i ;, , ,

__ ' , ' " c son 0 a ew· I world" 43 persons cnllca)lv mJured ,her! III 'Iii 'III' II Iii " W,IIP] " 1111,11 '1111,'11 liT};,: ~.~~d I,' rapidly acquIring a brighter ting forth succinc:tly the entire ed in Canada Ih f J toward a sane and CIVilized lone of th~. \lom~n _ amon~ 1'~"

place In the slIn. At long last! chain of events leading to the Ish rabbi, Leon Crestohl'~ "rat·' , hospital this afterooon Three b I _______ ,-___________ . ____ ~ ___ _"_,'_, _____ ...... __.____ • __ , ___ There was the eloquent denun, , , " '" , , elation of Alistair Stewarl, cer', I~S. Inciudmg Ihose of two err"

, "

ALL. ARO'UND N'E\N, O'L:DSMOBI LE FOR , '

END'DESIGN'! NEVV I NE\N FR'ONT • "

FLYI'N~G 'BOLD C'OLOR S'TVLING I NEV\l , • . '

"GO -AH'EAD" LOOK! LONG. LO'''/. - LEVEL LI NES, PANORA'MIC

FRONT

TU~:lEL,. JR,ES' '~. "'N E\N ":1 NTE:R I , , ,

,'N E\N , ..' , . .' ~ . '

,B.,5-TO',-I, OOMPR'ESS'ibN, N'E\N 202 . ~. .,.. " . . I' " \ . . . . '. :, .•.. " ',r ~ '.:: \ . f ','. .'

1M ,L

H.P. . ' AND·IB5 ,H.'P.'''ROCK·E'T'~'':,ENGol,NES.' .. A:LL'TH'E

. ; . "\' . I ~., "', . . '. .:;1. ,':.:." .. " .

Pb\NER' 'FEATUA,ES~C'!' C.O'ME' IN.' S,EE, IT NO\N:! .f • " , •• ... , " #.... •

:," ' '.. '.:" ," " .. . . fl': .' t,

. Ab.~I;kt 5""i, .. ,. .. Ho'iday Covp'- '_ .,,,,,., f .. ,,, ••• ,."a&,",,1 1I',a cost.

I,

:,,:

• , "

" , '

cr of Winnlpell of tile "package I members, ,were dra~ged fro~l tllf

deal" which ,i:e resolution off· I heap~d wreckage tllls morning,

ered -and emphatic in his sUP'/ Keep broken glas-,. sharp.c"~foi reme susplcio!, of package deals, tin cans and other dangerous tra-h Th,is course W.:l~ putting the cart I in co\'ered contain~rs; prlltrcl before Ihe horse, 1\1r: Stewart n~ighbollrhood c~iidren and p~I" maintained. 'Vh~ should not the _ ... __ ._-----calculated risk be takeil first by making' Germany eCOliomleaJl~, strong beCore I,rmlng her? EcOl om Ie cooperilti'.n with pulitlro intcgration mu~1 come berore th: other step, lli'/lug hope and ,lead ershlp to thosl! who needed it s< desperately. ,Yet parliament was fllced wil'"

the IIccomplished fact. The Win n1peg MP oppused the resolutlol1

KING COlr COFFEE "

Be~1 because iI's always freshl, ''J·n

Reddy for Better Living,

REDDY KILOWATT, YOUR ELECTRIC SERVANT, IS WAITING BEHIND YOUR NEAREST CONVENIENCE

I '

,OUTLET TO 'SPRING INTO A~TION AT" YOUR coMMAND.

REDDY WORKS 'ROUND THE CLOCK AND CAlEN-' DAR TO BRING yOU- THE, COMFORTS AND CON-. "

VENIENCES OF lOW·COST ElECTRI~ LIVING.

'.' -=-'lt~4I1Ul:~ 'LIGHT.:POWER ',: ','co;;. """ v L''':''Ti:i' '

Monday nighl the 40th Alln

Ki~

Serv Onl\londa

Club in Ncwf< of the foltndinl

Here in SI. .101 tions were conclur Dance at the 0 which was all end galherin~ of mem and friends,

Re"icwing the 1

ganization in X. Eric G. Pillman, NIUined [or the r: work of the Cluh objects.

DETAILS OF 1\1\\',\:\,1

club formed in through Ihe effor N.S" Club. Past·] Holtzman anr! Pa Jack. with thc International Or~ anls Inlernationa Chica~o.

Presidents 10 Earl V, Holtzman pherson, L~onlrc Pittman anrl Ge~

Since 1950 olh, l'rganizerl in n~

ear, Whilboumc Since that till

Club has carried first, the headin the [olin wing ac and Girls Wor~ leged Child; 131 ance. Under th zcnship we ha,'c follows: (1) Pu Affairs; (2) Ag serl'alion; (3) S! in their Spirilm towards achic"il and projects ha, under each hcad these are as fol

:lIUSIC The Ihird am

Festlral was I l1954, with aile

sessions beinl: 22nd and 23rd , sessions apprOK cipanls wcre sl tho benefit of t guished adj ud Mainland and 1954 28 scholar with a lolal ' Each )'car has tcrcst in the I example. Ihc II 1953 was appn than the prj Kiwanis Cluh il even bigger th the idca has ancc, cspcciaJi~' generation in ~chool~,

,\In

In 1951 the: cd rcsponsibiii of the 515 Alia air cadet 010\'(

that time \'cr strength. Sin gradually built

• supplied the sq instruments al ~ays_ At the I garded as one rons in Newf,

• •

Page 3: !Pears,oil .Eis~nhowet~,,;, H· ;' . F' .' · Move ':::~~. litcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · ,mcan II aI', I tIC nnese e so·, . . • tents-it was almost

hI

rar. from

;; against abb' an·

• n£ :\.t·

lion could l!l' In the . a Social

.... Iberla,

...

• • ..

'. THE DAilY NEWS, JAN. )955 3

.' :

.- .. .. Anniversa~y 'Kiwanis Dance

Destructive FI·re!Dr. Roberts.:. . ,Passes

, I

nWater Business Premises Gutted In

Yesf'erday's Early Morning 81aze Starting in the early, ings. hours aftcr the fire had first start· , t . f' At first, thc City Service build· ed, It became apparent that they

wm ry mormng, Ire yes· ing sent forth' great flames, shoot. were winning their fight. terday caused what may be ing hikh into the air. Then as the They conquered the blaze in a quarter million dollars fire ate its way through 10 the the Arcade's top stories and then worth of damage as it'swept premises of A: J. Dunne, smoke ventured inside the City Service part of a business block in billowed out in clouds, It is re· building. By now, slate from the one of the worst fires W!lter ported that drug supplies, alcohol roofs was falling onlo the sidewalk

, . and other highly inflammable rna·' below and several liremen narrow· Street has seen In recent hls- terials added to the fires fury and Iy missed being hit by these falling

Monday Ilij!ht the Sl. Jolm's Kiwanis ,Club joined with all other clubs of Kiwanis International in celebrating tory. at least one distinct explosion was squares, It was with regret that the the 41lth Auniversary of the Club. A dance was held. at the Old Colony Club to mark the event. The picture Gutted was the City Service I heard. Inside, heavy equipment and of· news came on Monday of ~e

I, '. showroom, top flonrs of t~e Ar· The lire burned savagely in the fice safes threatened at any mom· passing at his home in Top-shows some of the Kiwanians and their partners having a grand tIme on Monday evening. ca~e department store, offices of I waterfront si~e of the premises I ent to come . through the fire· sail of Doctor William B.

A, J. Dunne, manufacturers agent as well and It \\'as here that weakcned Uoor but undaunted R b t . h' 76th' ' I '\'1 k d t d . 1 '.' 0 er s m IS year. f : K I-wa n I-See I'e b r' ate 1\ lIt I Cd stmoth

e acn Wb~ erb .ald~age red' flamcs first threatened the Ar'l the men lVent In, And they sub· The late Doctor Roberts WI. I su e 0 eros Ie UI mg an cade stores, dued' the last stubborn patches of b t B . . 1879 d

I damage was also done to offices of Evenlual!)', the fire did work fire, By noon some of the fire I' °drn ta d rtlguthS IDU 't danCh' wahl , N IvI dl dE' . Ltd" . " . e uca e a e m e urc I e oun an 'ngmecrlng' , lis way Into thc Arcade BlIIlthng. cqUlpment lVas on Its way back to 1 A d th F II' hi

Th r' rtf h t· h' ,,' ea emy ere. 0 oWing ~ ~' eels no es Ima e 0 w a Flrcmcn, W 0 did one of the best lhe respechve fire halis. But the, graduntion he tau"ht school It •

I' I'alue of stocks anti goods were jobs of firefighting el'er seen Fire Chief and his top officers! b'! c-r d th'

F t· 'th A - destroyed In the fire, Two fire· here kept to the roofs and [ought, didn't leavc the sccne until two! numt clr 0 Tcommt umUles. In't et"

t· 0 r 1 e' n n Ive rsa ry men Len Clarke anti James Coffey the blaze under diredtion of Fire I' o'clock and even thcn. watch crews I Ilt'end 0 d' ~ron 0° h·mversdl y t· 0 i d ". Th bl ' " . . . s u y me Icme. n IS gra ua 101\

~ , rece ve inJuries, e azc ora· Supermtendcnt Vll"\an and As· were aSSIgned 10 keep a watch ol'er f th U" 't h t ed I ,. glnated in the basement o[ the sistant Fire Superintendent Cadi. the buildings, from whose gulled /0; f e d~n~rst ~ e ~~ ~!nh' ~ City Service but cause of the fire' interiors steam was still nsmg o! ell'. oun taBn an BPrac IGC."U II !. h h . gan:. •. pro esslon a onne ar. reen,. f • A C N T b W'I . . ' . pon am . 0 n s, • 0 n. S .. R . d as 1I0t as yet een tletermmcd, SIX bnes of huse. shot stcady The f]tc tug [rom the nal'al d I SI J h' At st J h ' I" erVICe ec 0 r T T B I' ,'\~h' 'I messengher ,0hY' h·I ' slreams of water on thc flames, dockyard Jomed an the fight fr?m he and his brolher the lale DOc· r . oa' st . 0, Slam ee er on t e mg t s 1ft Dlle to the danger, firemen kept, thc waterfront The 5al\'ahon t Ch I Rbi t d 1~ urn 'noticcd the fire and sent in thc'l an ambulance stationed ncarby in, Arml' was on ha~d to suppl" weary COL:" ~s et~h' °b :Ird~ opcra e I I r ' , I,: . " IDIC ID e UI mg now oc, i On ~Ionday, January 24, the branches of the Kiwanis ' a arm, casc any Iremen was lllJured. I flrefaghters With refreshmcnts cupied hy the Imperial Optical

"

I ':"lub in Ne\\,foundlJnd celebrated the 40th anniversar\' This w~s somewherc around 5.30 I When the fire started to send i while other agencies sllch as the; Compan\' J a,m, By SIX n,m, a crowd had start· ! !lames shooting into the lop stor" Red Cross, 51. John Ambulance I . '

, d the founding of thcir ol·ganization. cd logathcr at Ihe scene nml it' ies of the Arcade building, fire· II' anti Cil'il defence hatl crews or· He laler went to Edinburgh ! i IIrre in 51 .• 10hn·s the celebra., became evillent the blaze would j men fought it from ahol'c and in., officinls on hantl, i tlniversity lor a post graduate (I :,r,lls were condudcd with a Grand Fortune Fish be a dcstructive on~" I side the structure, Thc~' took ulle! It is, not lokely that any full! course in surgery and was made a [,' i'.nce at the Old Colon~' Club Firemcn, who had h,een off.duty: linc of hose, went insille the' estimate o[ damace will come un.: Fellow of the Royal Colleg" II

',I hich was aHended by a capacity PI R were roused frum thell' slcep and' smokc filled store anll succeeded; til later todny when prop crt)' ! Surgcons and a member of Th@ I \ ",;Ihcrin~ M mcmhers, their wil'cs ant esumes 11',ent inlo' the battIe. Six fi~e en· I in gc!ti!1g til the top storiEs, : owners get an opportunity to sur.: Royal College of'. Physicians' in

,,,I friends. glnes and sOllie other apPllallcesl Il was then they be; n to con.; rcy the widespread damage to the: 1913.

! , ,

i ~

ne\'iewin~ the hislO1,' of the or· Operatl'OnS rushed to thc threatencd build· fine the blaze ami hy liJ.~o, !ive: parl·bloek. I. ~, .. , • f dl d ~I I --- - . --.--- '" 011 hiS return to ~t. John s Doc·

~~;lagonpi:tnma~,cl~~~t P~:sid~n~: Visitors to the city from For· Step Up Probe --':-I--ahou}t .·B---oal:d----- 1----,---·' 1,· :~:e ~~~~r~l~sr:;~~~~~rr.~~;'a~~. ~~:~i ,utlined for the DAILY NEWS the tunc, that progressive town on the cJ I Third Nflder. i surgeon at the General Hospital, "ork of the Cluh and its aims and South West Coast, report that the I D I Of "hjects, Fortune Bay Products Fish plant nto eat l' I ~Ieets Today ,:Is POiSOIl Victim I' When the, move to const~uet th.e

nI::TAlI.~ 0.' ST, JOHN'S that wit; shut down because of the tf'1 WI 'ff I " ,Grace Hospital was taken m 192J, KIWANIS CLUB disastrous fire last fall, went into \}:enevieve u en I '1'1 :'II 'f dill I I' b R! Thc Nal-Y has rcleased Ihe: Doctor Roberts immediately in,

Club furmed in ~ovembcr. 1950, operation again on December 13th : I . IC • CII oun nr ,,( our ~', name o[ a third Newfoundlander! terested himself in the project and '!lrnll~h the efforts of the Sydney, and Is now on 24 hour production. 'l'Ile pOlice prohe into the death: allan,S "Board m,eets here tln~! tal;en to hospital in Halifax aftcr 1 made a large contribution towards X~,. Club. Past·President Earl V. Though the lVeather has been of GcncI'iel'e Whlffcn, part.timc, mo:mnc, to co~s.lde~ two ap~h.! drinldng methyl alcohol aboard ~ the establishment o[ that instilu. H"hzman and Past Lt· GOI', Grant stormy durIng the past month the wftllress of Corncr Brook, 'is pro- II catlOn.s ,for cerllflcatlO~ ns umon; the aircraft carrier "Magnificent." I lion as it is known today. In later .I,'ck. with thc af,islance o[ an fishing boats Rrc bringing In suf· ceeding and being inlensificd. ,bargamm!! agents: Umtcd Ste~I.-, He was itlentificd as Able Seaman: ycars he became medical super. In~rrn~tional Organizer from Klw· ficicnt fish to keep ''{he play on .~\ is understood that ,the case, II'o~kers of America seck certl[l· :,Tames Mitchell of St. Theresa.! intendent of the hospital and held ; 1is Internalional. lIead Office In [our days full operation each is not closcd and that the autopsy i caho.n ,for a group of employces, Hc is still in hospital but is nol ~ that position until his retirement. rh:ra~o. week., report is receiving special aUen.! 1.0:C,c. ~Itl Knokb Lakt~f" At' local: seriously ill. , . d

I're~idcnt~ to date ha\'c bcen he new extension to the fish tloll of law authorities, ,unIOn 11'1 sec ccr I Ica IOn as I In rccogmlion oI hiS oustan ing Llrl \', lIollzman. Douglas W, :\Iac., plant, measuring 180 fect long is No details on thc cause of death: bar;lainin;l age'nt for employees: E 'c contribution to medicine in New· :'!Icr;on. L~onard J. Bretl. Eric G, nearly finished. The new machine have, howel'er, hcen reportetl, It' of Supel'ior Rubber, Holyrood. I xtelld. oal ' foundland, Doctor Roberts was hon. Patman and Grorgc C. Chaiker. plant measuring 40 ft. x 40 ft, and seems pretty evident by now,;', i oured' hy King George VI in 1949,

Since 1950 olher clubs hal'e been the new Icc plant which is built to howe\'er, that the girl did nol rlir Cfllltini Se I ' Suh,'entl'O)1 when he was named a C.B.E. "'~"niIcd in Bell 1~land. Carbon. produce approximately 40 tons of from drowning, thuogh her bod~' . u ,. Ie.. arc 1 ' , He was, also honoured by the '"r. Whitbourne and Bay Rnllcr15. Icc per day are almost completed, was found floating in the watcrs, F If K II Honourahle r" R, Curti; Q.C'.. c" d' ~! d' I • C t·

I [.fltl b A ' i 01' 'aI'ltv e V ' .' una mn ,e Ica onven IOn Since that timc the St. John's and the company expects to put 0 m cr rm, • : .. _ , I Attorney General, has berl~ ad~'ls, threc years ago, whcn they ap.

'lilh has rarried out projcets under both of these into operation with· . • I cd by Ihe Honourable J. \\. Pick., pointed him a senior member o[ ::r;t, the headin~ Youth Services, in a month, Coastal ~hin Has ~ The ;carch [or 54')'C01·.olrl lIarry ; crsgill. Newfoundland llinister at; that urgani1.3tion, : ;!C Inllnwin~ actil'ilics:-(1) Boys The Brookfield plant at Fortune ' ", Krill'. I'c;ident Ilf WII Brid~c; Ottawa, that Ihe Fetlcral Govcrn·' ,nrt Girls Work: (2) Undcrprivj. Is also kept busy and the bakcr)' S V· floar!. and ailin;: at tho tilllc ~f: ment had n Friday extended to Ihe: An ardcnt Waltonian, Doctor ":crl Child; 13) Vorational Guld· Is going at full prodUction. "tOttmv ,()Va~C :,is disanpearancc, ~till conHnllc .• ,: rcsl o[ :-lewfnllndland thc suh., noher~s also looked forwa~d with ;·:1cr. l1nder thc hcading o[ CIIl· These various industries, and • , • But police. who Iml"e c1l'a1ord' I'CntiOlI 01 52.40 already pair! on' keen ante rest to the openang oC "':\~hip wc hal'c other actil'ities as extension on the present plant 1 he ~.s, Northern nang~1' rame ,harbour 1\'al~rs ila\' aftcr day with, I S)"dncy coal shipped to SI. .Iohn's: the shooting season, when he was ; "III)IIS: (I) Public and Business create extra jobs for about 100 Ihroll~h Ihe hlu(f harbour hea!I.: out· rcsnlt will not g~ on I':ith! and Lewisporte. Thc subl'ention: one of the first "on the' barrens," .\!fairs: (2) Agriculture and Con. new people In' the town, and the lans enlrance at 2 a,lO. Satllrrla)' i dl·~~~il1a. I ivill be paid on coal shipped from I . '

and reported it look her thirtv i . . I ; He was a hfe·long member of ,en'alion: (3) Support of Churches housing shortage, caused by the rl""s 'n' t .1 f tl 1ft" The man IVa, last srcn I\'alkin~ ,Sydney betwecn Janllary 151h and I tile c'ltv club and a membcr of the'

I II f I f b .- I S cau 0 lr. lI~lJn our r~n , I I b k .' 1'1 h 31 t 'h th b t" J, :~ their Spirilual Aim~. Actil'lties n ux 0 peop e rom near y Members and rrlends of the SI. "There \' I d 'I b' to comnl te I r r l' f tl ,cast on lIe suull ,an' of thc III'er, "arc s " II en C ,su \'en Ion! :\[asonic Lod-c Taskcr ' : "wards achiel'ing these obJectives places Is acute in Fortune, .. ~as a . a II \0 was orn an 1 e . Ie. ana I un 0 1e 'fm' from his home. A shoe was' expires for the whole Province. ! c •

:-nr! projecls ha\'c bcen carried out Last year several neW homes ~~r~e~:sll S~~~~~a~~a~~;~~d t:t o~~: Kyle, t and \hlS brought the pro·; sea~on ~t. ,101;n s to ~orncr ~roo~ ! fuund but it was not his. ami thcre: Dctails will be announced short· 1 His first wife. the former Bel· un~cr each heading. Largcst among were erected hy a private concern; again celelirate thc birthday of the cran: 0: t I~se. A program of! ~nrSt r~ u;n, rom orncr roo I hasn't been a clue to his where. I)' by the Dominion Coal Board, 'sie Lake of Fortune died several lhrsc arc as follows:- hut to date, your'reporter Is In. musIc an 0 songs was later pre· I 0 • 0 n s. , ahouts.· 'years ago. They had four children,

~IU~IC fESTI\',\L formed, nothing has been settled Immortal Scottish bard, Robert scnted. Capt. J.ames "heelcr sal's the III Trouble Christine (Mrs. E. J. CampbelJ). The third annual Kiwanis ~!uslc about a housing project for the Burns. . oldest resldenls eallnot recall su~h S I I P ] Georgc at Oshawa Ontario. Clar-

~ L·".<tl'\'al I\'as hcld durl'n" J\pril community. Instead of the banquet usually S Sh" ·A-· Iheal'Y seas, such continuous ram C 100 atro S cllce and Doctor 'James at St-e,.. held at the Newfoundland Holel or un Illes ~aln as has plagued the northeast· The little fishin/! ~chooner J h '5

\ :nii~. with aftcrnoon and evening the Old Culony Club, the Society U coasts, lie ~ald that many seals Three schools nrc now pJrlicl- I "Santly Point" reporledly hroke 0 n ,

I 'tisions hcin~ hcld on 20th, 21st, Nomination, Day held a dinner at the Kirk Hall For the firsl time this year, Ule i wcrc 5i~htcd .in· the Straits of paling inUu; Kiwanis·Lions SChonl l' down .in Placentia Bay on Satur· In 1943 he marricd' Brigadier :~nd and 23rd April. During thcse which was tendered by t~e Ladies sun was In sight all day Saturday. 'Belle 1~le, Safcly Patrols. 'They are 51. day when her engincs failed, Two, Fagner, 'former Nursing Supcrin. 'e"inns approximately 2750 partl· F M P I Auxll~ary, and at which Mr, James Only twice, both times briefly! Thomas's, first school to adopt lother craft in the immediate l'ic'l tendent at the Grace' MaternilJ dpanls wcre stagcd and receIved or ount ear MacIntyre was' the guest speaker, was the SUn in cvidence this year! T D' t' the sys.tem, St: Bon's and SI. Pat's. I inity towed her into port. l~ospital, who survives him. :h~ benefit Ilf the advice,of dlstln· who proposed the toast to the Im·l as January is hcadlng for Ii pre. I 0 ISCOn lllUe

, h d d' I' t f th To-day I~ Nomination Day for rial f I \1 . I d I h U K D' the Mount Pearl ward of the town· • ~ '", e a Jur Ica ors rom e mo memory 0 Burns, elpitalion rec.ord set in ,Januar" B S . , ;,m an am t e ,. urmg After the age.old custom of 1042, when eight jnches fell. US erVlCe 19.14 28 scholar5hips were awarded ship of Mount PearJ.Glendalc,

t,J ',Iilh • total value of $1,350,00. On Wednesda!( o[ last week only "pipln' lri the haggis" had been The Weather Office at SI.' The Carbon car hus service, run , EdCh year has shown' renewed In. one candidlcatc was nominated duly P9rformed and dinncr had ,Tohn's says that so far this month for the CNR by ~e\\'fountlland

l~re3t in thc Festil'al, nnd as an whereas the ward must elect four been served Chairman BohMac· 7.8 Inches of precipitation [ell as Transportation Company. will come rxample. the total participating In councillors, Leod called upon Mr. _ MacIntyre the province spent most 0[, thc to a close on February 14th 1!l:i3 was approximately 700 'more . ~o)11lnation to·rlay will he reo to propose the toast. The sp,caker month under a, blanltet of fog and Reports inaicate that not enough than the prcvious year, The I cclved at thc home 01 ·Mrs. gave a very informa~ive and I~. drizzle, people availed o[ the' scrvicc to Kiwanis Club is looking forward 10 Squires. thc retUrning officer" ter,estlng talk on the hfe and writ· ivarrant its continuation, CI'rn hh:J:er things during 1955 as from <I to 10 p.m, . ings of Burns and explained why P I --------Ihr idea has found wide accept· successful In' 1951 in winning the It is that the poet is held in such , ersona I R bb A'· t .ncr c<pcciaUr among the younger Mnc<tlllivray Plaque lor 'the most high regard by both, those who CCF PI' I tEl '0 ery -<ne'raiinn in' the st John's' .. speak ,the Scottish and the Engllsh I Rus e'll hro\' nClta tscdere ary , ;ltglal' • , • proficient unit. ' tongu' ' , 5 as 5 ar e orgal1Jza on HIlS' I I !chool,. Dllring 1954 plans were laid to ' e. going [or ~ CCF branch on Bell 0 oway ... C 100,

AIR CADU!; hal'c this squadron equipped with lie estimated the hard's worth Island, He visited there ~Ionday, Latest in the' City's growing list In 1!l51 thc /;Ciwanis CYlth assu,", a Scottish Pipe Band. and before as a man, poet and patriot. Burns

t~ rrsponsibility lor Ihe operating 1955 is oulit is hoped that the city was a 10vcrof'1iber,ty, a champion J. R, Courage; M,lI,A, (Fortune· £If robberies was rcportcrl from 01 thc 515 Atlantic Squadron of the o[ St. John's wlll hear the old of jusllee and believed sincerely Hermitage) and Deputy Speaker o[ the Holloway School on Monday lIir cadet mo\'ement, which was at familiar sound of the pipe band In In 'the equallty' of man. The poet Newfoundland House of J\ssem· when a thief look' nearly $500 from th,1 time \'ery low In squdaron its city streets. At thc present time criticised sharply those who would NblYt' is i[n d?tlaw~ onh bjUsihncjsds. an' office in .the building, t h S' Ih h ' , " a ure 0 ISCUSSlons C so· The usual, investigation is under

~ renst. IRce en we ave boys ,of the squadron are learning oppress or try to stamp out those I h t bId graduallr huilt up in strength, and to play the pipes and' the club' ideals and did not fall to praise ng ave no een revea e • way.,. 5upplied the squadron with musIcal hopes In, the very near future to a commendable deed. Nor did he I instruments and support In many ask those of Scottish Ancestry to hesitate to critleise hi\; own faults lI'~ys. At the present time It Is reo help In defrayIng the cost, which 'aM failures. garded as one of the finest squad. will be approximately $3,000. rons in Newfoundland. and was (Contlnued' on page 5)

", ..

DUE "TO HOLIDAY, MID·WEEK '; .

, .

BELL ISLAND. PAGE WILL ,BE PUBLISHED

Burns was essentially I roman· tie' or nature poet and turned ror InspIration to such themes as the common man, the beauty of nature. He displayed In his poetry a deep Insight Into human nature and a healthy pbllosophy of life. Some ot his poems brought, out· the Patriot In ~Burns and showed his deep loyalty to his native .Iand • Scotsmen 'honour BUrns, said the 'speaker, becausetheyapprechite .Ienlus, especially native genius. OiN Y.HURSDA'Y

F~llowl~g Mr. Mac I n t y r e 's speech, Dr. Horace Rosenberg sang INSTEAD OF WEDNESDAY to the delielit, ,of the audience '-_____________________ .J

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KRINKLE·CREPE NIGHTGOWNS FLANNEL NIGHTGOWNS

LADIES' SLIPS, . All REG. 1.69 .......... NOW $1.45

GARTER BELTS-Reg., 97c ............................. 75c

PLAID BANDANNAS-Reg. ·75c .................. 49c

BRUSHED WOOL BERETS-Reg. 89c ............. 75c

CHENILLE·TYPE ,~LOUSES-Reg. 75c ..... ; ...... 59c

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Page 4: !Pears,oil .Eis~nhowet~,,;, H· ;' . F' .' · Move ':::~~. litcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · ,mcan II aI', I tIC nnese e so·, . . • tents-it was almost

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, t· . I , ;

THE DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JAN. 26,1955

D.IAL·, NO,RTH SOUTH PICK UP

-·EAST and

DELIVERY AND

SERVICE WEST

N R AND

SAVE·YOUR DRY CLEANING SLIPS

WIN THIS BEAUTIFUL NEW CONSOLE MODEL

EMERSON

..

TELEVISIO'N SET

,

FREE 1955 MODEL •

~; ,

, , ....

21" screen-built-in

Antenna - 18 tubes.

FREE Size 24¥S" wide.

38" high, :22;1 deep.

FREE Walnut finish

EVERY CRAFT CLEANER Delivery Slip has· a. a number. All numbers on Slips dated. between MONDAY, January' 24th, and tl e date our fir~t Television Station opens, will b. eligible for this lovely prize. The winner will be announced on the day following the opening of the Statfon. The winner will only be required to answer a Simple

Question.

REMEMBER , • . .

EVERY SLIP COUNTS CALL EARLY AND' OFTEN

SUNDAY'S HOLIDAYS

1~ HAMILTON ST.

.. :

6985 - \

\

ANY HOUR......; DAY or NIGHT

Receiving Office: LAUNDER mE, 'QUEEN'S ROAD

Of 'Interest.

To ,War . Veterans

the Legion ' Corner

• ~ No East-West Football Sked F or So~e Years

iSearch For \ Missing Boy

YAHl\IOUTH, N. S. (CP) - A thousand m~n probed fool·h;'·('Jut

Bv WILF GRUSON through a treacherous swamp In. Canadian Press Starr 'Vritcr day in {he hunt for a six.year.old

TORONTO (CP )~An intedocking bov missing for two days. , schedulc between East and 'Vest Harold Newell, 50n of jlr. 211rl

\ pro football leagucs is closer to Mrs. Harold N~\\'cll, rlisappeared

,realization but still appears to be Saturday after leaving his uncle i some years away. and several'companlons in a lI'ood.

Too many difficulties stand in lot and telling them he was tal:ing the way of such a step in the near a short·cut home. future in the view of a number of Wh2n his uncle reached the ~Iub executives polled on the sub· I woods road little H~rold could not Ject by The Canadian Press. \ lie found. An ImmedIate search \\,.5

They believe it will come eventu· I start~d and 500 men combed tile

By l.C.M., __ -' ally. But [or the present it i5ll't \ mile·,qllPI·e s,ramp Sllnd~y. practical because of high costs, 'fhey found no clues and 1,0ilI) uncertainty of air travel and the, men responded today to police ca!h necessity for player~ to !told othel', [01' voll1ntcer~, 1S';u2d o\,er the loe,,!

LEGION CON'PACTS BRING I is heing taken tn see Ihat Sergt. jobs. . ' I'adio stntion. t"rnm:!I chur~h SPLENDID AID FOR BADLY Christopher is litted properly by I GROUND WORK LAID group, ~n" f' ·rtment.'. DISABLED "BLUE PUTTEE" the County Surgical Appliance The ground work ior such a SO CLUES FOmm '

Freshly etched In our memories Cumpany. About a fortnight a£o, schedule has been laid In the prac· A private ~.1 - also 3'list-'i of tho early days of the G.W.V.A., he was measured for the two lice .of western and eastern ~e~~s bul liP to nooll. today-just 4~ \I'~S the case 'of Reg. No. 529, artilicial appliances and he will play tog , pre - season e,xhlbltlon I,hours after he d~sap~earcd - 11f1 . . . ' games to the East and \~est. . clues to the boy·" dl:aplle'ii'OnC'~ Jamcs W. Moore, one of "The Blue bL l1.amed and flttcd. An interlocking schedule between i ilad been uncovere.!. Puttees," who was wounded at Thl~ whole, report is an ~xccl· ihe Big Four and Western Intcr· i Searchers descrihed the area ~s

; Snvla, in Novcmber, 1915, during lent IllustratIOn of the co·oper· provincial Football Union has been I mainly .swamp and bog, co\'rre~1 i thl! operations at the Dardanelles, p,lion and assistance between the i talked about ill. recent year; but \ by scrubgroll'th. !lut who went back to Alcxandria, Disabled ,American Vcterans and! no actinn has been taken. i' The Little riv~r ellts throu~h th .. :oml pl'oc~eded to Frallce with the Canadian Legion and our local! Al Ander on, m~nager of tllC I area and \\'"l' also being 5earc.!leu the tst. natlalion, Newfoundland I Legionaries. 'ro quote from the I Grey cu~. ch"lllp~on ~dmo.nton: thoro~"ghl~·,. ,. ." I'"i I t k" '1' th h'.: Chief Service O[[icCL"'s leltcr to' Esklm~)S, b the mo.t opl1.mlslle of, A ~Ibht snail !eli (,urmg ~hc m~ht

I .c,;,.men, a 109 pal 10 e IS i .' '. " "' • \ eXCC\lI!I',;. He says tlIP mterlock,', h:n It 'was conSiderably milder and

tonc altllek at GucudeCollrt, on! pr~dnclal seCle~r) \\. R. ~l".rtm. in;! ,('bedule will come about, if ~ U\'crcast toda)'. I October 12th, 1016. when he lI'a5: 00\\ e hal'e IImn .• ed thv Nahonal nol this ),e"r. the \'car after. i Police who organized thc s~ar~h ! I'er)' scverely di~abled. We rcmcm'l Service O£ficer for his efforts on I "I lI:ould prefer 'the inlerlocking' said it would continll~ through thr : her lhe long days he spent in the! Comrade Christopher's hehalf, and: schedulc to the present system of: day if necessary. : 3rt! London General Hospital, the I wc know that t~e~ will check ~are. i exhi~ition g,m1C~ which ~ I~ink arc: d The scarchers .. wcre Silli! ill\!; i wceks goillg around in a wheel. fully on Ihe bltmg of the limbs I lea~!ng 10 an IIIlcrlock},n<;. sche~., ~roups. cach ta?mg ~ s~ellOn o.

\

1 air h vin" .sllffered a douhle, and Ihe necessary Irainlng. Wc sin· I 111e. Ande.rson S?I~. . \\ Ilh all' the area and gOIng over It alm~,<t c J. , a " , L GJ N CORNER TWO i transportahon as It IS, It would be: fOGt·by·foo\. h~~ a~plltat~on, an? the mnny THE. E 0 .- \ [ea,ible. It would be of particular I Little River Harbor. where t1,(

I 1,1[[lcullles With which he met cere,l~ Irust t~e kno.lllcdge .t~at benefit to tclevision as different I Ncwells live, i.:; about 10 Illil~' ~,ftcr repatriation and final dis· I he IS til be flttcd WIth artlflcml tcams would be playing more of· from this town on the soutimeslcrn eLarge in Jul)" 1918. Seriously \limhS will help to make Scrgcant's ! len. The TV lould also benefit the t tip of No\'a Scotia. handicapped, doing whatcver was ChriW,phcr's Chrislmas a happicr i West as I coulll cut in on some: l1!lssihle with the limited facilities nnc." I of the r~vem.le." : US LlVISG COS1'S 110\\':>;

Ithcn a\'ailable, "Jim" felt the And ratheI'. a bricht and more Bert \\ af\\'Ick, a member of the i :. . " , • . • , t d N Y f At i Winnipcg Blue Bomber. mana"c" \\ ASHINGT01", (AP)-The ~O,'

I wind in his face, and took the reo conten e ew ear" or our I· 1 ment committee said such a sch:d.! ernment reported Fridav IhJI 'I b'I'1 t' d" ftermath <ent "Blue pulice" 10 Brooklyn . , ' ., . I~ I I a Ion an ..• var sa', , . ' i ule would add more interest. An I lower food prices in Decembel

wllh great stOICIsm _and courage. \ New York, U.S.A. . examination of the proposal from I brought United States living cu,\" Today, we arc glad to know, he I!;. Could we dra.w the scrcens I a financial angle should first be, to their lowest le\'cl since ~!")', slill "on deck!" around the LegIOn Corn~r at a under~aken, hc added. .. 11953. The report showed prices 01

Little over a fortnight ago. we more opportune momcnt. ,Anms, Stu~u , coa~h o~, Brltl,~h I living cost items at the enel "I Wlre ward.mates with Greg, Columbia LIOns, said: [t, II'I}I , th' 19-4' ·1 ][ f , , . . f' " come about eventually but It IS i C) car ;) II ere onc 13 0 nile

: Slane)" a fmc specImen 0 l\ew· InteI'eS.tl"llgP . I i difficult to sa\' just when. It will' per cent below the ICI'c! at ill{ ! fnundland manhood, from St. u aIlS 1 I come about il'hen air ·travel be.f year's start. 11 was thc first lilll~ I Lawrence. He also went overseas ' \ comcs more common and cheaper. I since 1948 that the gOl'crnmrnl

II with ,~ ~cwfoundlan~, contincent- 111 0 N T REA L (CP) _ ReI'.' It, will be the .salvation ~( t~e living cost index .had showed a~ ,the Wmdsor Draft . to be more Georges Brodeur has one of !.he \\,IFU and the Big Four a~ It. \I'~lI O\'er·the·)'ear decline. I cXllllclt,-and was lime wounded. mast interesting parishes in North gl\'e ~l,e fan more \'arlety In -

~ In the first Instance, at Beaumont America. teams.. . . , ' ., . i Hamel, and then later in the hcavy It has an internatiinal navor, ex- Dr. Bathe )!artlll •. preslde~t of I OR;\:'IOGES I· O~ BR~Dl, : fighting in Belgium. He, too, has tending from the nearby Indian ?askatche~v~n Roullhrlders: sa.ld,hel ISTA~BUL (CP)-rur~ls,11 n:~\' , . I II I f b th I g reservation of Cauchnawaga to IS all for It If pOSSIble but bellel cd, papers report that IbrahIm Ono·,n i ~1I,tall1e( Ie. OflS.O 0 C s, Detroit Buffalo, Rochester and it would be morc difficult to ar·1 110 years old and a widower inr l and to see him ~acmg eve.ry da.y Brooklyn _ a distance o[ 1,600 range noll' that thcre arc ~ teams \ 40 years, is looking for anothcl

courageously, patIently takmg hIS miles in the WIFU. wife. The reports sa~' O.I~3n h~! Iimltcd tour in the chair,. and par- Father Brodeur, pastor of the' Jim McCaffer» vice·president I promj.sed a lI'ag~nload. o[ oran.gc.· ticlpating in such pleasant· relax· Roman Catholic mission of St. ?f Ottaw~ Houghnders, thought an Ito anyone who fmds hIm a bride alion as the D.V.A. Ward affords, Francis Xavier in Caughnawaga, mte~locklOg schedule would not ~ • . Is an inspiring sight. Soon, very really travels when he makes :bis feaSIble for a numbcr o~ years,.11 LONDO~ (APJ:-!\Irs. Na~ ~hlls.

h pe he will be in the annual parochial visits. at all, because o.f the dIstance I~'I "Bobbie" 10 a variety act With hel SOO~t' we to,. t [Iy He has spent most o[ his priest- volved and the hIgh costs. He saId I' husband that had toured man, POSI Ion 0 naviga e more :~d. hood administering' the' spiritual it would take a lot awar from the parts of the world, dicd Thursda, and comfortably" thanks to needs of the Iroquois nation's lIto- Grey Cup game a.nd .bellev~d llJere I ni"ht in Chelsea H05pital. She I\"a;

ern science-surgical and mechan hawk tribe and has more than 600 would he no po It In ha\'mg the \ " ical. . parishioners. Grey Cup final "the way We know 1

5(). -.-

In our columns, from time to Like theIr Nomadicforefat hers, it now.". i timc, we have made various ref· who wintered in warmer. climatc ARGO~AUT lIEW, ' e cnces 10 former Sergeant Thom· and spent their summers hunting PreSident Bill Ross 0[ :roronlo i KlDN EY a.ICIDS r Ch' t h R g No 121 of and fishing near Caughnawaga the Argonauts commented that It would 1 R

as rls op cr, ~, . . , tribesmen of today ~ork in' the not be practical for a few years. R' the "Blue puttecs: In ,fact, we United States and holiday in the He said if the clubs operated on ROL y'our est ac~nowledged .greetmgs \Ie had .re· Indian reservation. I ~n ~Il.out professi?nal basis, eHm- D·· celved from hIm ol'er the Yuletide They maintain two homes. This, mallng the .necessllY for the pla),- MIn, poople nem mm I, Jd a".,! ~eaSon. "Tom" was an active ath· is possible becau.se they pay no 1 ers to hold Jobs, it could be worked I nilhl'. mL The, 'urn and 10Sl-bla",. il lete and R keen football player property, school or water taxes OU\. , on 'n.ne.:-"htn it ml,.be Iheir kid",~" h f nd after World War 1 and no immigration bars impede I La Dandurand or ~Iontreal AInu.: 1I!"lthy kidne,l 611el po",n. and ~mll e ore a . 'th t th C d USb d cites said an interlocking schedule I a<ld. from the Mood. If Ihe, flU .nd

having taken part \\'Ith ~evcral em a e ana a· .. or cr. I h b' . , 1 f tl ht b'l in,pu,ilie •• I.,.in the 'rllcm-<li.lurb<~ . h' It b as een gl\ en a ot 0 lOug ) t I III If d 'I I II champIons Ip team!. may ere· However their sojourn in Ihe I the Big Four and likcly will bc m 0 len 0 0"'. _.'ou o~ r .. "f,

II d th t h I· t d n Sept US·' . . . . I let and ••• Dodd'. Kidne, Pill •• Dod ••

ca cae en IS co. .. IS more. expensIve because dl·SCllssed at an Informal meetmg I h.lp ,he kidne, •• 0 1b,I fOU (an ".1 4th, 1914, and was promoted to they ar e subject to the same I of union executil'os. I b.urr-and f,,1 beuer. Il'

Lance.Corporal just bcfore leav- !inancial. obligations as the white Dandurand said the schedule Do.J ... s Kidneltl Pills' Ing for the Dardanelles, where he man. ThiS Is offset by. t..lte $3:25 provides a. problem bce:lIlse tlJe gg: '. served for sevcral months' being an hour they earn as bndgc bmld· West has fIVe clubs and mterlock·

I ers . . ht b • ld sent to hospital [rom the trenches . 109 mig ecome unwle ),.

and latcr evacuated to England, receiving promotion to Corporal and anerwards to Sergeant, whllst '11' was attached to the Pay and Record Office in London. Demob· ilizcd In 1919, he spent some time in the clty and then went to the Untied States, where he was working. Recent years, however, were trying for Ihis member of the First Five Hundred, and consider-3ble time was spent under medi· cal care, and III hospital. First, we had the news n[ the Rmputation of one leg; Tom's footer days were over; but that was not the worse, his condition did not improve, and there was more than one occasion when he barely averted the final crisis. His sister went to New York to visit him, and the last tidings received showed that the double amputation had taken place. , Here, Indeed, was a sad and serious predicament, and it 15. particularly gratifying \0 find that th~ highest standards of the Leg·. Ion have been maintained by the contacts made and established.

Last fall, while tile Convention of the Dominion Command was being held, representations were made on Sergi. Christopher's be· half to the Newfoundland provin­cial delegates by Comrade Ches· ley Samuelson, who Is the secre­tary of the Newfoundland War, Veterans Association of New York, although· the Newfoundland Com· mand had expressed a wllllngness to contribute part of the cost of artificial lambs, maintenance, etc. Without delay, the Natlonal Ser· \'lce Officer of the American Dis· abled Veterans dellvered' an illu·. mine wheel. chair for the s~rgeant, and informed. the Chief Service Officer of the Legion at Ottawa. This was a gift-and a timely one, too, with Christmas in the c,[flngl

: The latest development is the, receipt, last week, 01 a communi· cation by our Provincial Secre·: tary informing hl1l1 that 'every care

.'

The Savings .

That Bloom in the Spring •

Prices on SYDNE.Y COAL go DOWN •••••• and up goes your opportunity to SAVE on domestic requirements.

\.

A Cargo Sydney Coal .Jus.t Arrived

The new price is $20.00 d~livered •• Tax paid.

per Tc •.

lET HARVEY'S BE YOUR BUY~WORD FOR COAl.

If \' •

Ki~

(Continued f:

GIRLS

Each year the have a number « Heights in the Po the past summer were accommodal bencfit of a week

CALF P

During the pal the Club has : thoroughbred c

~'he Wc!corr

H(J Will Knock

wilh Gifts from F ricl

NcighbOl Civic I

We1far On tl,~ oera

Change of Al·ri\·nls (

CitJ

MRS. CAn

'Phol

MRS. R'

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I i·

Kiwanis - . Celebrate . . . R'ell-Buder Wedding

Fortieth 'Anniversary

THE DAilY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JAN. 26! 1955 ~.='"

Wants To Become ITo Test New A Paratrooper Racing Car

QUEBEC (CP)-Madelelne Thi, bault, who nearly cracked up hcr By JOliN FARROW ; plane on her (irst solo fllght Ijlst LONDON (AP ) - Millionalrf July, says her ambition (or 1955 TOllY Vandcrvell will give his nelf is to become a paratrooper, British racing car lts first competJ;.

(Continued from page 3)

But army authorities think. that tive test In Ihe Grand Prix de Pau; at 100 pounds she'll blow away on France, April 16. and on that t9S~ :

farmers In the Immediate vlclnlly unable to give details of,lor fear spot dance. a parachute jump. So, o( all things, hinges Britain's hopes o( breakin. or St. John's, In order that they that Individuals, might ba reo Mr, T. Dalton, President of' the Madeline now is trying to gain the continental autO racing monO.

weight. poly. . • may take more Interest In the cognized, st. John's Rotary Club, and Mrs. '. UAnyone 'who flies should be Vandervell hopes 10 end Britain's

Each year the Club arranges 10 (arming vocation. Un'd e r this Providing blood donors for the Dalton, were special guests, and familiar wilh parachute jumping," lean years in Grand Prix raein.

GIRLS CMIP

hln' a number of girls 10 Burry arrangement the young farmer Is Blood Bank. , pastllteutenant governor of Kiw· says the tiny, 30.year.old brunetl~ with his 2.5.litre Vanwall Special. Ilei~hts in the Pouch Cove. During given a thoroughbred cali free of BrInging tD st. John's' for the anls, Grant Jack and Mrs. Jack, who is a nurse when away (rom He has signed Mike HawlJ;lortr, ~ thc past summer a tolal of 60 giris charge, with a stipulation that the benefit of the Public the Sydney also attended. t..ic airlield, year.old aCe who turned out with • ere accommodated and gll'cn the Kiwanis Club Is entitled to the first Girls Pipe Band. During the supper Interval Mr. FLEW HELICOPTEn ,., ... ... the italian Ferrari team last yea~, ~cncfit of a week in the opcn. offspring .• This calf Is then dlstrl· Providing Christmas Presents Gus Coultas led the party with She is Quebec City's only woman and Peter Collins, 22.year-old Brit.

pilot and in seven months has ish slar. : buled in the same manner. This for 140 underprlvJleged children at singing old and popular songs, and completed 85 hours o( £lying. She Vanden'ell is no publicity seckcL " C,\LF PROJECT

During the past couple oC years the Club has been dJstributing thoroughbred call·os to young

project has a two.foldpurpose- Christmas. as this was the eve or st. An'drew's became the first woman to land a He empioys no press agent at hI; C first In Inducing young men to slay Provlding ceiling projects to San· Day, many of the songs were helicopter at La Guardia Airport west London works and keeps th. r: ' on the land and secondly to 1m· atorlum and Infirmary for those Scotch. in New York last autumn. technical performances of his car i': provc the quality of cattle. people, who are unable to read She took flying lessons at nearby strictly to himself. .. :i .

books in the regular way. Ancicnne Lorette Airport and after He refuses 10 be drawn on his ,,> scnOOL PATROL We are at present accumulating W V 'm" 18 hours in the air she took her chances in thi/; year's Grand Prix ., ============~ omen- a first solo flight. racing'. ' ,. -' During 1954 the Club in con· a library of books whIch are being She had beclI fiying 10 minules Vandervell looks on Grand Prix

..... - junction with the St. John's Lions used now In the Sanatorium, In· 0 R 'd when she sudd~nly noticed her gas racing as a "private affair," He II

I.'he

Welcome Wagon Hostess

Will Knock on Xour Door with Gifts & Greetings from Friendly HusincSi

Neighbors nnd Your: . Ch'ic and Socinl ',"cHare LecI1cl'S

0" '!ll' occasion 0/:

Chan~c of residence

Ihrh'nls u[ ~c\\'col11cn to Cil1

Club spent long hours organizing a flrmary and the Orthopedic Has· r ugge supply was almost llone. Madcleine I wildly enthusiastic about t..ie sport school patrol for city schools. One pltat. made a beeline back to (,oie airport I and wants to see Britain with II. of the difflcultles which took con· Also arranged visits to local TORONTO (CPl-The question and manage(\ to glide saMy· into' chance or victory. . siderable time to iron out, was Plants for boys from various cIty come' up In eve"" cold spell: Arc the air strip, "probably on my last WII,L BE GOOD TEST . h J th A G I' D hi' ., drop of fue!." Desmond Sc~nell, sccrelary of av ng e ttorney' enera s e· sc 00 S. Northern Ontario women just vain The exp~rience didn't frighten the Briti~h Ral'ing Drivers ClUb. partment enact legislation, mak· .Provlding swings for chlldren or really rugged? her to'!> much. Sh~ refueled, look commented: "There is no doubt, ing school crossing safely zones. in four foster homes, In towns far north of Toronto the off and completed the I:mding once that Ihe Pau circuit will be air,. LegIslation has been provIding maie, bundled In long underwear marc and won her pilot's licence mcndous lesl of Ihe Vanwall Sp~. that school patrols, using flags duly THE DANCE and heavy clothing, II' 0 n d'l r s for the flight. cia!, The circuit is small anrl. twist-

I marked, are authorIzed to stop In the absence of Mr. Georgc silellUy as he wnlches nyloned legs "But many thh)gs went through ing. The race duration is thr~ traffic and let school children pass. Chalker, President of the St, flashing by whllc the mercury my head when' I saw my fuel hours," : At Ihe prescn! time St. 'fhomas's John's Club, Mr. Harvey Dawe, cr~J:s~:I~~s~~~' is nylon stock. supply drol)ping," she said. Commented The Times' motor School in the east end, and St. Pat· lst Vlee·president, welcomed the lngs, So she broached L!1c subject of racing correspondent in a review

parachute jumps to Maj. Guy oE the 1954 season: "The mo,t rick's lInll nre In operation, and guests to the party and told some· WARM ENOUGH D'artois .who trains paratroopers at promising British car Ihis year bu during 1955 St. John's will see this thing or the purpose of the tele- At Cobalt Mr.s, Ce~el!a Smilher· nearby Valcartier military camp. been the Vanwall Special, which system operating In most city braUons. The Clubs have grown, man, a stenograpber, was walking U Madeleine reaches 120 pounds.bc. was still in'the course of deve!o!i-schools. Mr. Dawe said and today over near the main street when ,Inter' fore the cnd o[ the year she'll ment and to whose constructor.

200,000 men are members of viewed. It was a nice day, Just a Mr. and Mrs, Arthur A, Bell photographed after their probably have a chance to jump. Mr. A. G. Vandervell. every Bri,-SUPPORT OF CHURCHES Kiwanis Clubs In several coun· nlP.WhylO, sblelllyO',.v~YIOn stockings are marriage yesterday morning at The Newfoundland FLYING ENTlIUSIAST ish follower of the sport! s iDdeb

hte)!.D1

C th d I Th 1 t I d f h " , • . ror a courageous erIort to up 0 'l'he Klwalls have obtained the tries. warm," S.!Hl said, "Not so warm a e ra, ey a er enp ane or a oneymoon I ~ c;,azy about flymg, flying national prestige." ; permission o[ the heads of the Kiwanis International &ent as the sllk ones used 10 be but trip to Bermuda and the mainland, anythmg, she says. Vandervull plans to enter about I'arious religious bodies to erect In along to the St. John's Club the warm ellough." ------______________ -,-__ . Last ~ctober s~e flew delegates nine Grand Prix during the year, hotels, etc., a Directory outlining most popular dance music since Once, she said, she had taken a. ,NO lIUnRY 10 the AIr Industnes and Transport . '"" " details of Sunday Church Services. 1915, one piece for each year, and long walk at 52 below zero. Her H' to l"e Moment Association in an RCAF air rescue FISE PRODUcrS "~I ; .••.• ' •

d f th d nose and eara were frozen but her IS r :"ENDLEBURY, .England (CP)-:- Piasecki helicopter from Anci~nnc The Kashmir territory, in dis-Kiwanis International urges that this music was use or e ances nylon.clad lc"s came through un. Nme.ty.year.oid WIll. l\Iatthews !,S Lo tt A' t I tl Q b C't ' ,', '" re e Irpor 0 Ie ue ec I a· pllte "~\I'een India and Pakbta.n, I Kiwanis Clubs give full support to on Monday night. scalhed -- hopmg to marry agalO soon, At hIS d I Th h I' t .. Itl' u ' .• '

10 T e . e e ICOp er !' .. u 109 ser· is celebrated for handmade woollen all churches In their spiritual aims, Mr. Eric Pittman, past·president, At No~th Bay, Adrienne Baler, a By BRU CE B SSA • birthday parly he said !Ie had "a vice was a highlight of the can· and silk products. I, also during 1955 the citizens of St. was in charge of the dance com· secretary agreed with lIlrs. Smith., The road ahead for the Pans little lady in mind" who caught his vention, " ;) . Jolm's will be urged to attend and mittee and arc to be congratulated erman, l\!iss Bater's mittenedragrcements on German reanna· fancy 24 years ago. In August shc piloled the Duke::; '\ support their churches regular)". on their fine arrangements.' fingers once were frozen as shelment and admission to NATO is o[ Edinburgh's crew over Quebec airlines company or even work .. a' ,.;, III' ~l ~~" .. m.

, England and \"al h d 1 600 C·t h n A h a slel\'ardess aboard an airliner. ' .. " II,. Several novelty dances were walked down the streel at 35 below, still a rocky one, and it undoubt· • '. Cs a , I)' in I e C F C·S t at 'was " :1 ,; .1 1I11SCt:LLAr;EOUS ITEMS held during the evening. Mr. Edgar but her legs seemed impcrvious to edly wlll be mlny months berore women police in 1952; Scotland bad used on his lour. This made her But her immediate ambiUoa III , I' L' ,

. the cold G ' 1 t d 12 di . I 162. think she would like to pilot for an "A parachute dive in '55." ,,': : j ... ~~~~ Pro"lding visits to St. John's House and Mrs. Victor Calvert won' emany s pro ec e VIS ons --------______ ~_....::...:....:::..:.:~....::.._..::...__ 'i ,I. f' i MRS. CATHERINE FOSTER homes for the olficers and rallngs the prize for the balloon dance. Mr. gar:s~~~d ~r:v~u~o~~~f spl~~~t~ begin to take ·sihape'f th ~ . ':";;'.' .,.,; .... :"I':.!.

of H.M.S. "Sheffield". Eric Bartlett and Mrs, Robert Bar· Patricia Foster of Nort.i Bay said But no stres~ ng 0 e narrow 'Phone 80364 Providing assistance to Under. rett won the prizes for the rirst she wore nylons under the slacks. vote by which the French Assem· .. Ii f jl~

MRS. RUBY CRANE privileged and Handicapped Chll· spot dance, and Mr. and Mrs. D. It was the stockings, not the slacks, bly app.roved the pacts can real· . JiANUiA~Y . : II : . drcn which un[ortunately we are Wlllett the prlzes lor the second which keep out the cold, she said. ly mimmlze the importance of

that action. France at last has 'j. moved, howevl;r reluctantly. She i ,; I'

, . Still thousands of pairs to choose from this

Good News •• if You're mightiest Shoe Sale of them all - See thest·

Wonderful Values In this after slock.taking

Looking for a Bargain clearance.

, "~I

'.75

. . NOT ALL SIZES IN EVERY· STYLE-BUT ALL SIZES REPRESENTED.

Black, Brown, Red, low heel Slings. Palent leather and Suede Wedge

Sa~daI5. Grey, Brown, Black, Red Suedine

Wedgies, Brown Calf m.edium heel Oxfords, '

Sizes 6*-8

2.75 Red Calf medium heels and hi

cuban heels, Slue Calf medium heels. Brown Calf medium heeis.

Black Patent medium heels. Win~ strap Shoes and Brown low . heel strap Shoes, .

Red Suede Wedgies 'with alligator trim,

3.75 ..... 3.95 , .

• REDS

• BLUES

• BROWNS

• BLACKS

• GREENS

ALL HEELS ALL COL:ORS

. /

SUE.DES OR ·CALF ..

, .

" ,

~:~ ~:re~n!~:nth:~~n!~cision to :': '! .': ;WJ!"".' The NATO alliance, whIch '. ..

\It!rilcd by French refusal to' ae'j

would have been seriously im· .• ; .. ,::',I'·'t:;.·,'". ":::':'l..,. cept the agreements, Is preserv· .. (. :

~~' t1~n~e~~sT~nJsA~:ri~:~~:o;:, ., ~.}/ 1 ,':,)'.''-''';;1 fenslve structure.

When German rryannament materializes, NATO will ofJe stron·

,ger than ever. It will still be far Cram '1.113tchirg SOl'iet ground (orces in Europe, but It will be powerrul cnough to block IIny quick, nushing invasion sweep.

I That fact alon\\ may prove II big I deterrcnt tD Russia's agrcssive

I design5 on Europe.

Nato is an International age'ney but it Js not a super,government. It docs not call for quite the same close, detailed cooperation that EDC wouid bnve required, for EDC invoh'ed a plan looking to· ward political union o[ the parti· cipating naUons.

Consequently, some observers make' what seems a wist poInt when they declare that France's reluctant approval of the Paris agreements is probably not near· ly 50 damaging potentially as would have been narow endorse· ment of EDC. There the chnnces for dally 'obstruction of the ag· ency's purposes would have been multiplied many times.

There appenrs little doubt that one factor which drove Fr· ance to take the hard step was French knowll!dge that failure to do so meant that Britain and 'the United States would act alone lo restore arms and sovereignty to the West Germans. Yel the !m· portant thing IS not that the pre· sure existed ,but that it worked.

One must not assume, that no other pressur~s were felt by Fr· ance. The Frl!nch fear a 'rearm' ed Germany. Bu t they also fear a Germany which might some day on its own, outside the West· ern orbit of Jree powers. pro­ceed to negotiate a settlement with Moscow over the problem of Germany unity.

The French know it Is better to have West Germany drawn into the Western orbit. That way. any negotiations with Moscow over Germany unity will be dis· cussions among all tile great PDW~ cr5, nDt just .Berlin· and Krem· lin, That way. there is Borne hope of' controlling the t!lrection. If not always the sl~e and subst· ance, of Germany's growth .. ' . Whatever the effective pres.

sures, men 'of the free world should rejoice they could be brought to bear. Many great de­cisions have been taken narrow· ly, and there should be no long dwelling upon that aspect of Fr. unce's action. For. no mistake abo out it, the moment was trilly historic. '

FERTILE AREA Opg township in Victoria county,

Ontario, was named from the Latin

BLOUSES CREPE, NYLON, COTTONS

Long, short and ~~ sloeve,

Sim 12.10 20

OFF

NlGHTI~S

LADIES' DRESSES

SHIRTS

CREPES, TAFFETAS,

WOOL JERSEY,

MEN'S WEAR TWEEDS"

Sizes-12 • 44

OFF

SOCKS Men's Striped and

Part Wocl-;-White Broadcloth Crepe and Jersey

Dress Shirts. All Wool - Cotton Sizes 14 to 16 Sizes 10* to 11~

REG. $3.50 - $3.98 NOW 39c 49c

'h Price 8Se

VALUE $3,95

NOW

51.29

CHILDREN'S COATS and S·NOW SUITS

HANDBAGS Genuine Leather.

Attractive in Styl ••

OFF 59c

5 P EC IAL BOYS' ALL WOOL HOCKEY· SWEATERS

RouAd neck, long sleave. Colors Skippe'r Blue and Red with Maior league. Crest. Sizes 26 to 32 ............................... ~ ............................. $2.98

,.

...

, i J word meaning . "abundance." L.. _______ ~----_--_---..... ------------.~'!"~

'.

:\' ~ ~ : .' .,'!.

I., :, I ' . r. " , 'I' '

~~ ~ ,

I

Page 6: !Pears,oil .Eis~nhowet~,,;, H· ;' . F' .' · Move ':::~~. litcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · ,mcan II aI', I tIC nnese e so·, . . • tents-it was almost

TIiE DAilY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JAN. 26, 1954.

The Daily News The DAILY NEWS Is a morning paper'

cs~bllshed in 1894, and publlsbed at the llinrs Building, 355-359 Duckwortb Street, S!. John's. Newfoundland, by' Robinson " Com~n)·. Limited. .

'·£o'IIEI OF THE CANADIAN PRESS The Canadian Press Is exclusively en­

tiUed to the usc (or repUblication o( all news dispatches in this paper credited to it or 10 The Associated Press or Reuters and also the local news pUblished therein,

All I'ress service and (eature articles In this-paper are copyrigbt. and tbelr repro­duction Is prohibited.

Authorized as second class mall Post Office Department, Ottawa.

• Member Audit Bureau of Circulations

• lmem ab.outresponsibility for the ,cost..o! ' this Important service. .' :

I If it were the case that the city wa!i . IN·TH'E NEWS simply trying to economize imd thought it could save the $100,000 a year provid~d BY WAYFARER for the upkeep of the civildef~nse organiza- ..'- . I tion, nobody said so. The Chairman of HOW MANY pEOPLE? foundland 10. support 260.000 peo·1 Montreal's Executive Committee, Mr. ., . pIe. The· economy had collapsed. I

We heard It said Ihe other 'day People lI;ere 'eaving the Island by DesMarais, said the present appropriation that Newfoundland lias too many thousands, Bilt ·the. popUlation reprp.5ented a useless expenditure. If, he people. This was said In the 'Ceo- !:ept on rising because Ihe natural adde~, the organiz.ation was to be. effective, nomic scnse. That Is, .we have !ncr~as~. was alU;!Iysgreater than Ii bigger buqget would be needed and the more people than ·:thc eombln'ed the'loss by emigration, . cost should' fall on Ottawa.' resources of our Island can' sup- . -' -

h b b t t' t pori .. 1t·ls an \nteresUng obse.rva: ;'Twenty )'ear',~ ago. however, we , This I.ast argument as een su 5 an 1a - tlon .about which we have nothing seemed to be plumbing the very

ed by a statement . attributed . to Mr. very profound to say except that I !!epths of despair, . Mr .. Thomas Martin, the Federal Health Minister, that we don't believe It Is true, '.' i.odge: had :reduced the e.nrnlngs as much as $20 million could be spent -- of fishermen by somewhat fal· annually for civil deferrce in the Montreal It Is possible that If we were I~cious mathematics to' the equ[v.

10 apply the MalthuslilO criteria alent 'o'f nine cents a day anil was area. on a rcglonal basis, It might be llslng his. Influence as Commis-

It is quite obvious that $100,000 cannot ~ald that our population' may 'tend sinner' for' Public' Utilities to es­do what $20 million cO}Jld ach¥ave but to Increase faster than the means tabilsh SUbsistence farming in what is important is that cities which of subsistence. But the: capacity land colonies a~, the sole founda-

DAIU SUBSCRIPTION R,\TES: would be prime targets in time of war 10 be self supporting In foodstuffs tion of a national existence. At Canada ......... , ...... $ 8.00 per annum should indicate their official interest if! is no longer the test o~ howl)1any the Jime'~c 'had 290,000'peopl~ Un'll-d "I'ngdom and all . 'f "1 people a particular region may and about,' 70,000 of these were

• n. the maintenance of a nucleus 0 CIVI . . I h :,; Foreil:n ClrJ:Jtfies .... $12.00 per annum Id b ~ usefully support. If a reg on as on relle£.. ii was ·the. saddesi per-c" j defense organization. It wou e serIOUS, resources that allow Ifs people lod hI. our recorded, history but

.. ",',"." .L. ________________ 1 if a city of such importance as Montreal to earn the means 'of exchange what the Cassandras of the time i . were to disclaim responsibility ~or. civil I'equlred from other regions In old 'not appreciate was that the \ ;" WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 26, 1955 defence or help to create'the impression which surpluses arc prad!1eed. t:-uiy vital 'statistic was not 'how .' . h that it ill. unnecessary. ". -- many' people were on relief but

F· S "d f' d t As a sidcli(iht, It may b; said h.,,\\, m.any. ,\~ere able to maintain '. air ares Ju:;t as 10n" as Ca. na a must In wo ., • _ to that one o( the strangest para' an independent existence in a :~ billion dollars a year for military defence, doxe~ in respect o( the relallon time . I\'h~n the" economy was

, '.

-Cur.1.menling on the expcdient employ- the protection of l,ey cities and their of the means of subsistence to tuuchlng bottom .... cd b\' Prime Minister St. Laurent to solve populations is a vital element in ~ational the size of population is to be '----' temPorarily the problem of double security plans. Whether the cost should found by comparing France and' We had begun to' come out o(

taxaiioll in Quebec, the Montreal Star be sha;ed or fall upon the national defense Britain at the time of the Napol. th'is depression' by 1937, The. war . . I b k . tl d conic wars Rnd today. In 1810, 11eriod rc\'0Iutioni1cd the economy sa_,-s that 1.11', Duplessis 'ms 1'0 en 1e bud".""t m"y be a question for is.cussi,on. h d h 3 Ill' h '''- " France a more t an 0 m Ion hut .. by 19.45 .many dismal soot -

Federal lax monopoly. It adds: "Mr. St. The Montreal decision may provoke . 1m- people and the British Isles about r.lyers we~e -predicting thatter· Laurent's changes probably mean that mediatc. reconsideration of civil dcfensc 12 million.' Today France has l'ihle things lI'ere going to happen the orincipal of lax rental, which has been policy. • ~hout 52 million. But : France ,is wilen the war ended, Some of Ihe kc\'slone of (ederal-provincial financi- one 9f the most fertile countrle~ those d~sponden't 'prophecies were al re~ation5 since 1941, will now be subject in the world, capable fully of voiced in' the National'Convention

H· I Q t"': . ~!Jpportlng in food" much larger in .1946 and 1947 but now, ten to sharp revision. 'Ihis too has b.een one ote ues Ion population. Britain, on the oIlier·. .._- .... " . thc' cnrl of the war, o! 1tr. Duplessis' aims." .hand, is not capable of'producing \'Ie flndthat our. population has

What has happencd, of course, is that The question of modern hot,el- accommo- ncarly a, much food- as her. peo . \ 'l00 mark and that the Premier of Quebec has scored a dation for some. of Hie principal towns in pie. need. - , .' i people, on the averag:e; are living notable \,iclor\' (or 'the extremely na- Newfoundland was first mooted by Tourist -- Letter than ever they .did before.

, . " ; 1 .

tionalistic opin'ions which he has always Director Vardy about two years ago. RCI'erting . ,10 the situation in -Ncwfoundland, it is' interesting to . That' does noi mean that. we championed. Quebec, the sole. diss~nter There has' since occurred some' discussions ~o. back .Inlo our history and. note hal·c. insured economic stability. from an agreement to which even Ontario with a number of il11Portant hqtcl pro- tht .number. of occasions lin which We haven'!. If Sir WilCred Woods

, now subscribcs, has ne\'el,thcless been prie~')rs. on the mainland, the latest taking the voice· of blue ruin was. heard ha'd allowed us 'to' make our own able to make its minority \'oiceheard in a place in Miami during the Premier's brief In the land Things were not very IlI)stwar deal Ivilb. the Americans, resounding fashion and without' regard to visit to that city., No satsifactory . decisions bright In, 1880. when .the railway the future would be safer. As It

~ h . , d t "olley was £i.rst moote. d,' .Advo- 'is,' even i[\oo' many' people, stili the interests of the ot er nine provinces _have yet resulted . an. in the mo. st r_ecen. ,.

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caleS 01 that' polocy were. said. to depend on.' casual' labour.. there It must. of course, be borne in mind instance, it \vas 'hardly possible to expect he . mad. But. their· forthright are prospects In oilr'economie

that one major purpose of the tax rental the,'Tl in so short a time. advocacy, of this visionary, idea ~Ista. thilt. suggestth_af we have agreement was 10 provide fairer shares What is surprising, however, is that hns had a large .part .. to play. In good' cause to . look. hopefully to for the poore\' provinces. These receive therl'! has been no move on the' part of the'doubllng of the Newfoundland the future, At our p~esent r~t~ mor!! from thc a"reements than they could local enter,prise _ to establish "ood, small population 'In the' past' .70 years,' 1)( progres~, ;we' should have 500,.

b b '_ . ~,' 000 people -b~·. "1960' an~' if we de-obtai'l from imposing their own income hotels in some of the larger towns.' At In 1908, agricultural. develop. \'eiop our, public services,. pRrtic' taxc.;. It is not, therefore, to their ad Grand Falls, the Staff House was 'never ment· s~emcd ,to, pr~sent. ,the ularlycomillunications, on an or· "antage to accept the Prime Minister's designed to serve as a public hostelry. ':£'he greatest .promlse· of maintaining derlypasis with due and ap· offer to do for thcm what he has under- acco!lmlodation of th~ Glyn Mill Inn',vas L1e ,population, on .1, subsistene,e 'propriate ~ttentioll to Ihe order taken to do for Quebec. . not 'mtended to'supply:' aU' the~, modern level but tWI! years-\ater we, were 01' economl.cpriorities, we ought

bl h b tt t . th d' lurnlng··the ; first, benefits of I.n. to' be. 'sup' porth,' g: these 500.,000 It :5 IV'\ssi e t at a e er sys cm an hotel space· required in. a growing· in us- . . t'- duslrializa~lon 'from the operat~~s people on as high a living standard

Ule pre\'ailing agreement can be worked trial' centre. But without invidious' dis-. of the newsprln\ plan~ ~\ . G"nd. in.1960 as we are supporting 400,­(lut but the sharp re\'ision to which the cussfon, it is simpiy a fact that Newfoun'd- 1"al1s:ln·1921, the 'prophets ,of 000 noll'~ This is a theme that Montrcal Star refcrs will be useless unless land is sadly deficient not merelY,in doom wl're loud .In theirasserUolI' needs 'devclopment and will be it gh'cs the fringe provinces· in the cast up· tn· date hotel. rooms but also in . first· Illat ·.it :was Imp~sslble for New' consider.cd 'here' In . oUler. articles.

"'But'lhe P9ptilatlon .shift Involves greater security than the present arrange- class' boarding, houses. . . ment provides. There. is r90m here for It might'be thought that 'privatc enter­close liaison between the four Atlantic prise and initiative in: soin~' of th.e places premiers and a thorough exchange of whiCh need more cir better accommodation "iew; befor~ the next federal~provincjal would long ago' h$ve: movedto supply the conferencc on taxation is called together need In most •. mainland towns, hotels

represent. the investments. of local' bus­

Uneasiness In Asia inessmen and are usually not. only a great asset to. the community but· a profitable venture to boot. ' This may have to be the

An increase in aggressive military action ultimate solution to the local. hotel by REd China against outlying Nationalist problem. . territor~' has been marked by the capture o[ one of the islands in the Tachen group, :!OO miles north of Formosa, and a sharp Dr. Wiiliam :. Roberts rise in fighting activity.

This has led to a growing uncasiness '. The name of Dr. William Rt?berts will because this little ,,'ar is closing in on an always ~ honoured in the medical area in which the Unit«:d States has under- I history of Newfoundland for the 'contribu­takcn specific strategic commitments. . tion he made . to the improvement of

The United States has set up a line hospital facilities' in the' many years that across which the Reds cannot move with- he was Medical Superintendent of Grace out running the risk of prqvoking a major Hospital. He assumed· .this post at the war. It is not conceivable that the Chinese opening of that institution and, i~ was wnnt such a war, particularly since the largely under his guidance and direction usc or nuclear weapons would certainly that the scope of the Grace was enlarged occur, And c\'cn if the Russians would and the extent of. its services and accom­like to provoke a major outbreak in the modation steadily increased; In addition Far East that would preoccupy the 'Ameri- to these administrative duties, he was one cans to the dctriment of the defence of of the country's most distinguished' sur.' Wcstern Europe .. it is.still highly improb- geons and a man in whom., were to be able that the Chinese . leaders are willing found those deep humanitarian' instincts to ~ome Russian stooges to that degree that are . characteristic ., of the dedicated

But with Russian aircraft manouevring physician. Despite his d~votion to his in the neighbourhood and Chinese waters profession, .Dr. Roberts found time' also possibly teeming with Soviet submarines, to take some interest i1\ public affairs and inCidents o[ a "ery scrious nature could was a member of the: executive coun<;:il occur with Or without Chinese sanction. for a brief period in .1924. To his family In short, a dangerous situation cxists the News extends its dcepest sympathy. which has to be handled with extreme . . --:0:-

Ma' s's' 'ShI'ft' ',' deeper issues t!Jan,straight-forward , slum clearance.' Th~ Strijdom gov·

. ,. ..' ernment '1i·l1i. wit h d r a IV the A. ·fr .. l.· .. C.a,B. ·.·.Neo'roe: ·S. Negroes'right to own property and n land outside. th2ir' own specialll'-

Bv ARTHUR GA VSHON . allotted reserves .. In the new town-JOHANNESBURG; South ,Africa ships 'of Meadowlands· and Dieplk­

(AP) _ .Prlme Minisler Johannes .I~f!; tliey ,wlll' be allowed only to Strijdom!s .. go\,ern'!I)ent . begins ' . a relit· hOllses. OUler non-White slum mass . shift of 60,000 Joliannesburg towns 'b,ordering' the' western· areas Negroes .next month In .tbe 'fa~e of are" bi!lng left untouched because possible' strike actli¥J:. they. are' owoc'd by. the Johannes-. The transfer will be the greatest burg clty:councll and so carry no I practical *5t ",yet underlaken, to property; rights. put Into effect a program of racial PILOT PROJECT apartheid (separation)' 1~lddown :To resettle the.N2groes at Mead· b)' . South. Afrlea~s Nationalist ·rul. owland$.and .. Dicplkloof wili take ers. As ·to'e Negroes are mov,ed to fOlli'to'f1ve,years. TlJe government their new' homes their 'old'l;1omes see.slt as the pilot 'project .ina wlll be flattened by bulidozers.The drh'e toward complete scparate ra· cleared ground evcntuallywlll'be cial compartments· for her 2,500.­turned Into' Industrial ~Ite!: for 000.· li-hltes. 8,000,000 Bantu Ne­white Inl'estors. :' .. groes, 1,000,000 colored or mixed

The South African' National Con. blood folk and· 350.000 Asians. gress, :.I'hlch Is about the· only, art!- The· resettlement .board says no -culate Negro body claiming. mass troubles' are expccted:when' the memoershlp, ,.bas.' vowed. "to op. first. felV hundred. families are pos~'. the removal at· ~very .. 5tage shifted Feb. '12," These families, regardless' cif . the consequences." n'o'iv living In . burrer, zoncs between Its statement warn'ed tlial the gov- the western areas and whlte"area,;, erriment. action 'will' prtldu~' "an liave received· removal notices. extremely !\angerous and explo.sive . Gavel-nment :·trueks will carry situation," . . , , ,. t~em. to new· homes, which are IF APPEALS.FAIL ... :,.. ....... s~rvlced with: water, 'scwcra~c, . The congress, claiming. nllarly trl!llsportation,; shops and soooois.

100;000 members,' Is tinder mixed ; As ·the Negroes'leave, bulldozers left wing 'and Nationalist leader. will erush,thclj-' homes oUt of ex­&blp,' The leaders hive' wrapped Istence to prevent sqiJatting. Thou­the resistance' :plan5 In ey " '. &aoos :of these homes arc' crude the resistance. plallsm' secrecy •. bilt sh~iters .. Thousands' of others-a If .court app~a)s!fall' th~y propose J'oliannesburg· ·eity councll survey a. ,strike of sympllthctie' I:lcgrO valued them: at more"tha~$3,oop .. worke.rs !n,JC?~al)nesburg, the c.oun- ~are ..• brlck stru~tures which try's Industrial and' commercial wO)lld be' prized anywhere. Almost nerve·centre. . ", .'" . • all are: 'hopelessly' over,crowded.

Most lI'hlte Sout)JAfricans' sup- WtlJole families often'11ve in 'single liort 'Ihe Strijdom government's r~oms.: Disease infcstS the -are~; broad aim ;,cif' separating' whltA!, Crime .stalks· even' in.' daylig~t, black, '-'brown '. and '.mlxed' blood ~~stN~groes carry loaded ,sticks; groups from direct~ial and're$i~ knIves concea1~d'in canes or d~g' dential -con,taet., But churchmen, gerS for theIr own protection sociologists and ,opposition. polltl- against gangs of· hoodlums_ Inform: clans and newspapers have erlti, ants I3Y these hOodlums have re-

care. W' h' Oth AS·' clteil'the' Johannesburg: scheme as sorted to banditry often b'ecausc President Eisenhower has refused to be at ers re aYlng too harsh. They 'ha~ complained they lacked the. government man's

influencef,i by the "get tough w'ith China" It wlll destroy the' right of non- permission to seek work .or to live group and has counseUed restraint in the whites to own 'property,: and' de- in cities. ,.

stroy goon homes together with ~ad face of such serious provocation as the HOLDING BACK NEWS ones. 'The critics: also have .at-imprisonment of the American fliers. That . (Wlnn!peg Free. Press) . tack~d the government' for re!us- 'HELPFUL HOQSEWIFE dOes nofalter the fact that the'Fom1o'san '. Because a newspaper photograpber took a pic- lJ?g·t~ con~1t ~'.lt~ the. peopl~ »e. HPAGoENHAr.t', Englan,d (C1;')-

ture (If two Jioldl1p'luspecls after pollee told him. InK moved .. , : . " . ot 5 up was given to . tradesmen . region haS' become a danger spot· w}l.ere not 'to' Vancouver's chief of police' Nr W'alter . Tilt!' NegrOes are being shilled LeW~o. cHallekdl a~ dthrle home Old! Mrsn, t - • h' h d' id tId' '. . ". f' f l' I I th .. 't na op ns u ng a co spe ens10n 15 19 an mc en s ea mg to Mulligan has threatened that in future the police. 'roUl o~r 5 um ,owns n . ewes - I th'- E dl tit . th Id 11 t ,. . ern'area of Johannesburg; where n; '" ssex. s r c. , e gravest consequences cou co a 00 will tell, the pap~rs less about. crime n~ws. Mr. they have'llved' for 50 years,. to easily occur. ' ... , Mulligan 8 attitude Is shared by not a few men two new ·townshlps, mushrooming .: " BUSY TEA-POURER •

In public ofClce today-that the general publ,c 12 miles outside the .whlte· popu- LO,NDON (CPl-Mrs. C. J~ck­

Civil Defence In' Montreal should ,know only -wbat t~ey want It to know. 'A~ lated city .. : . ': :. :, : . son, a widow. has' poure~ 7,200 the major'source of' news for. the 'public is the· .The ; government , case" as. olit- cups of tea for the women s sec­dilly rlewBPaper" tliey try· ,to; achieve, tJlelr obj~t: lin~d. bY. the' native '~ffalrs mlnls- tlon. of the Waltha~stow district by cl3mlllng down on the information they give ter, ·H.: F •. Verwoerd, '5 ';that the ConservatlveassoclatJon .. ~ember~

Wben last week the city gov~rnment '~f the presi' 'rl1I8' Ia\~'a tecJinique that -InvariablY sblfts are'ln" the Interests of J0-1 now bave presentA!d her with' a

M· al d 'd d . d i' backfires: 'NeWIP' apers wllIcoiltinue' to hunt down' hannesb.urg, white :and black alike. shopping basket.. . .

,,i • ..

ontre eel e to put an en to ts h . The Negroes, he said, wl\1 be get· .' . finan('jal.sup~rtof civil. defenge. in, its t e news they feel Is of Interest tD their r~aders. tlng better homes ,and services at , BEAUT YPARLORS ..

. ,". ~~ ,~~ r:e~d~~ wl11:pay,suc~.11 story ~ueh. more, lower, . controlled. rentals. besides }Jeauty 'Parlors' .In Canada de­metropolitan ~ea,:'s~!!thi.ng ,was:.·d0!le atlentio,,' tbaJl·I( lt~d -come' througbnornti} 'greater recreational· and transport- creased (rom '5,619 to 517S'blwn that may bring'to a head' the lana arau- chlDliell. : .• " :' ." " ... "..!loll facUlties;, .. _ .• ; .' .. ,' ". J~. ind19.'il: . , .... -, . -"'"... . ~ .. ".'. ", '.

( "1,

AT AYRE'S ALL

CURTAIN LACE

MARQUISETTE

CRETONNE

TAPESTRY

MONKS CLOTH

LINING AND

CARPET

REMNANTS' PRICE· 5 YARDS AND UNDER

CLEARANCE SALE

.

MEN'.S

SOCKS .• RAYON and COTTON

• PLAINS and FANCIES

'.' SIZES 10-11 Yz

• VALUES' TO 60c

• COTTON • REINFORCED HEEL AND

TOE • FANCY PATTERNS • A WIDE SELECTION

COLOURS • SIZES 10-11 Y2 •. REG. 1.00, 1.25

c

Pr.

c

Pr.

MEN" , , Did you get a

SPORT SHIRT from our Bargain collection? .98

, ,

VALUES TO 4.95

sr. JOljN'S, . AlE'WT()(JNDLA~D.

I. ..' '\0" .', •• " ~ --,; , • ~ _. •

'.

: \: .

'. PRESENTAT

. BANK MAl .. At the Legion 11

8th, !llr. Andtpw tendered a farcwe!

. low members oC Legion. Pres~nt which took tho: Co were the \vives c of the m/!mbers n Ing President Win sented' the gUI'~l I

an electric ralor the Legion's appl splendid ser\'iees times and partieu! lclly oC Trcas:lrc zation, a posit iun filled for the pas behalC oC all men Snow expressed at .Ur. Taylor'~ d, feL'ed best wi. he! ~npplness In hi, !Ilr. Taylor carll! town in 1951 as. Buchans branril Montreal which It:; fourth a 1Il\'

uary 1st: He !u appointed man II

.-or branch and hll new asslgnm rival or 1I!r, GOI

from TillsonhUl'1 ceeds him, Till pressed by the are shared bv : who will grerltl congenial and I from future (un' In the commull

ANNUAL At the Canal

ual meeting, wJ cst attendance i tion of oHicer, year was COJld

chah'll1anship ul Donald and f':

lowing taking son, ·Honorary Coil'er, I;residc D.s.M., Past n!we. 1st Pre! chell. 2011 Vi".') 1I!acDonald. -31' J_ R, Flynn; Sc TI'easul'el'; E, Arms; Ite\'. T,

. Executil'c' !II Pike. Allan W:

ENT :'Ilr_ and :'Ilrs

hosts at a II House on Satu A program 0

ranged and II' joyed by the who attended

4 '.r4

Page 7: !Pears,oil .Eis~nhowet~,,;, H· ;' . F' .' · Move ':::~~. litcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · ,mcan II aI', I tIC nnese e so·, . . • tents-it was almost

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• . , ....... WEDNESDAY, JAN .

BuchansN"ews ' .... , .~-;.

; ... "J

; . IC"E " •. C'OlD>1'.-·· .. Eisenl!oWel' On' Formosa

I QUehfc's Winte(. 'Can~i"al' .. . '.' . '~:':'::'. " . . .

I \ . , . - QUEBEC (CPl-Somc 700

WASHINGTON (APl-Presldent Icrs sat down Sunday' Eisenhower today ~,~ked Congres~' \\'honplmi' hig French - Cm~adlan' -----------------.;...--.... ---~,---~,~ .... -,---.;. . ...;....:.- for authorlty to UEC "the armed l meal, tcn('~red by. the

PR.ESINTATIO,.. TO ments. wero IIv.pUable throughQut aecompanfe!i hilt to st. Jolin's reo forces of th~ United State~ if ncces-I Chamber of Commerce in en,';",,;,. lANK MANAGER the.:~venlng and'adellclous tur·turned to' work at ·the"D.O:T., s~ry to assure the se~urit;v of For-/ tlon 'with t'~le winter carnival .

:\1 the Legloll lIa11 on January key' supper, w.th all the trlmm· Buchans on Jnlluary 16th. ... mosa and the Pescadores" against Items on the menu included c:h. ~Ir. And1'l'w L. Taylor was hgs, was servl'c! burIet style after ,Mrs. Paul Echols who had been . Communist attnck. soup, pi~.;' feet, pork 211d b~an,s,.

I In a spccial message, the pres. meat pies and "plchounc'" ple;.- . l,'nl!erl'd a farewell party by, fel.jmldnlght .. WInners of R novelty vltlng her danghter and son·ln- Iden! said thaI redeployment of rain. and molasses. '., I,,\\, members of the Canadian dance Were Dr. A. M. Guy and law,' Mri and Mrs.' C .. E: Nelson'C~inc,se Nationalist. Corces from The dinner was presided ovel 1.,·;:lon. Present at the party, Mt~ W. I!. Maher, the judlles ,slncc t!ecembcr 17ih has return· other islands "would be Impractical by seven beautiful candidates loi . Ilhlch took. th: form.oC a dance, j being. Mrs. Alan :Andrews, G, ed to her'home In Chicago,'. ',. wilhoutthe assistance oUhe armed the title of queen of the carnival., ".'. llrre the wl"\1s or ladY frlenHs Wasl and ·C. l Courage., ' Mr. and' M:"'f Frank Butt: ·re. '. forces of the United States.". After.the m~al there was' (olk-s!11l/ • ::~~': (If the memb~rs During the cven·· lItr. and lTrl J. n. 'Hart enter turned to Campbellton' after' He sahl this is "because of the ing and squarc.dancing. ;. 'r' l'l~ President Winston SnllW pre- talned"at a buffet dinner on Sat· spe'ltllng a week as-guest olthelr . ai~esi~~r~i03;~ Uniled Stales mustll .The carnival,. now entering ~ ~?;i -,'nted the gul·~t oC honour with urady evenIng for sIxteen friends I son Clarence 'and family. , , . he ready (0 Jlelp the Chinese Na. third. week, wI~ds up .Feb, '!!. .h., ~n electric ralor as a token of In honour·oC, Mt Andrey L. Tay . Mrs. Charles Greenlnianli he . t10nalfsts rcdeploy theIr Iorces. !I!ardl Gras da). '. '1' " t Ihe Le;:loll's IIf

1preciatioil oC the ,lor. . ',' , . brother; Roland Plnsent, wbo 'had . LEAVE NO DOUBTS .' I '. _ . . . .. -:,\cndld services rcndered at nil . A surprIse party In Jionour. of been atten11,11I the funeral:. of . Adams lake In the. Kamloops dis 'Imrs and particularly In his cap· Larl'y Barnes' fifteenth blrtha~y their stepCuthl'l, Richard Gosse, Ei~cnhower added: I [rict of British Columbia was . . '

"In the interest or peaCe . . .! named altcr an Indian chriatened ,.<.':.! .dly or Treasarcr or the organ I was gh'cn by a group oC friends lat DIldo, T.B: returned Thurs. :.~:ion. 11 posilhll1 \l'hl.cll he had and cia!lSmatr.s oC the lPuhlll' day. . The United States must remov~11 t,\dam there in 18~9. • ~I ,.' ~ II

I any doubt regardIng our rcadiness ;, :t1 i .' filled for the pnst ·two years. On School all Friday evelling at the I\Il!lS Maudn .Stacey of Badger, to fight, if ncccssary, 10' prcserve: . ~' t \' , ;'~h31£ of all members. Preslde11t C"of E. hall... . I accompanied by Miss Margo.ret .•.. . the vital stake of .llie {rec world I .'. i~:: f :-'llOW expressed sincere regret' ,Bruce Payne, son [If IIlr, and I Butt, spcn~ l, holiday as guests :. In a free Formosa, and to engag~ I . ::~' '" :.r \tr. T:1ylur'< departure and or· lITrs. Leslie Pa~ne, celebrated hIs I of 1\11'. R. C. Yetman, Other .vlsl- . in w!iatel'er operations may be re- 'l'i~ !:

""Ilpincss In his new 10catlon'lwlth a party al his home Cor n Bignall' and J. Lush who werc - ___ -'-_ _ I".. . : ,· .. ~rl b~st wi.hcs for sucess and, fourih blt·thdav on Janunry 7th tors from Badcer were Miss Jenn qulrcd to carry out th.at purpose.", . r: 11

. 'tr. Ta~'lor came to the mining numbel' oC young friends. 1\Ir. guest's of Mr.' and Mrs.'·Erllcst CORNWALL, Ont. (CP) _ RaY-I i;. ; ,! . 'awn in 1!l51 as manager or the, and I\lrs. George Butt entertaln-' Pollett al(d :\11'. and Mrs. Ralph .. And .I\'s nol th~ watermelons adv~rtlscd . an' Icc' house not Indc: mond Caro~, 34, of nearby Moulin., ( '~I . !' .'

:;uchans brnnrh or the Bank of ed at a party for their daughter.' Pardy. ' '.' pendenae, Ran. The real tTeRt for' KansaS. farmer~ .s ,Ie snow. . o~s'o Ie ~ d' W \1 d a~ three months on a charge or scI!; ji .': A I "!lInlre~1 which wlll celebrate Patricia who reached her elshl l\!lss' A:ngela HarrIngton. Df fallen. durIn, recent stllrms, ate expected to provide mnch·needed mo stur2 10 an spare eYing liquor illegally. Police said two i:', , C .

. I 'I T f II luff bl I II e ette, was fmed $1,000 and costs 01'11 , "1 ,,:' '

;:~ fourth a lll\'Crsary on Febr mlleslone on .TDnuary. 5tll. Carbonear Is' iii present vlsJtlng . I~st s,\1mmer's druu:lhl. \' . youths' il'erc apprc..'1ended after ;;'! I' .. j l:ar~' 151. lie has recently been On Janunry 13th LInda TllIey. her sister Jack Furlong. purchasing four bottles of bc~r a,! ,L .. : ';. ': .qlpolnled mnnlgcr of the Wind, dnughter of Tilt. and !\Irs. Herb IIlrs.·NeIl Mdssae left for Syd. ;. '. --=- d' . .' d O' f' T' d' orthO(tux. Mr. A.·B. Perlin, asa Caron's restaurant";iJ! P:':' ·ur branch nnd CXllccls to beghi Tilley, wns guc~t 'oC honour at 8 ncy, N.S. last week to vblt her Th· .. Nfl' .:. B ~. ' ra e' Joul'l1ai!st, historian and business- --- ';'1 :: f; . ':iIo new a~sI!:nl11e1\t u~on the ar· party. (or thirty little boys ami mother, .Mrs. MacDonald,. who .15. '" e . O'g r '. 'man ·ean tell an Interesting stciry if' 'l'~ ':.'. ,'I"al of ::Ilr. Gurdon E. Ilammcr,· girls given by· her parents, the serlously III at her home In §outh ..' . . . .' . . . .... of what credit has meant in New- '.'.".: .. ! 1,1.1 'rom TlIIsonhUl'Il, Ont., who sue- ·oecaslon being her seventh birth· Sydney. . .. .. '. A' . ,,' I '. D· . ,', M t.-', foundland enterprise in the past. "l'l'd5 him, TIll' sentiments cx- dny. On the samc day her cousin S/Sgt, JameR Delancy spent a nnua 'Inn,er ee Ing He wll! address the Annual Meet- ". ! fl: :>rl""cd b~' the LCillon President Elllnbeth Ann celebrated her week's leave visiting his parents, .,'., , ing of the Board on this. subject • ,:.! J 'lit.

, .,re 5harcd bv a host of friends fourth blrthady with a party at 1I1r. and Mrs. A. J Delaney alld.' ,. .' . '., .... . , on February 8th. . ; ; . I" I\bo will SWllly I11I~s Andrew's the horne of hrr parenls, !IIr. and returned' on January 18th to 'hls' Retlrhig PresIdent, Mr. T, S. A. poratlon;. of Canada. Mr. Fors~th Mr. Perlin's paper wIll be fol- [D) DOOR lASE IL ' ;. ,I. ,·"n~eninl and happy personality l\lrs .. Ken TlIJey, to which 21 station at' Fort Pepperrell. . F'r~eman. wlll 'be In the Chair at Is a.lawyer, but ~Iso a ma~ or Wide lowed by an address from Mr. P. lur"1 H D ICPJ~·.~~1Rl . .' , " : rom future functions of all kinds young friends Were Invited. 1I11ss "Marie Beresford St. the Annual Dinner Meeting of t.he busmcss con~eclions. H~ IS a well D. Bowring, Managing.Dlrector of t:~ g JI.I InI 1.1 ;;1 the comml1nll~·. Keith Coutage, son of Mr. and John's recently visited her fain· ~ew£oundland .. Board of Trade known and .glfted publtc speaker. Bowring Brotbers Ltd. Mr. BOIIT- . i

ANNUAL MEETtNG Mrs. C. O. Courage, l'tllcbratecl Ily at Buchnns. She was aecom. whIch takes place In the Newfound· 1I1r. Forsylh has. been heard on the lng's altitude towards credit is .\1 Ihe C.~n11l1lnn Legion ann-! his second birthday on Jnnuary panled b)' hul' 8Ister Theresa, land. Hotel on Tuesday, February Trans·Canada net~ork of the C~n. entirely scIentific. He believes that

,,;II meeting. which had the Inrg· 11th. nurse.ln.tralnl,,!; at St.' Clare's Bt~, 1113. Mr. Freeman wi!' make adlan. Broadcastmg Corporat~on Newfoundland buslnessl!1en should I-l auendnnce in ~'ears, the clec· TEENAGER DANCES lIterey Hospital. .. ~ his last 'speeph as President oC the debatmg labour problem.s wllh change their ways in the matters : :II!I oi officers fol' the cnsurlng A teenage dance, with canteen Anthony Walsh and Jack Coo. Board on this ..ilccaslon.Pr~slden! Icn~ers in the labour movem~nt. of extending credit, and thnt they ) .. al· was cOl1tlueted under the sel'vlce was 11~ld at the parish per who I!lid been attending VOl Freeman will deal brIefly with the NewCoundlantl And The t. should be guIded by sound mod-1':,nirmanshiJl uf :'Ilr. J. E .. A. :lIne hali under the auspices of the callanal 'frnlnlng school at ~t. Board of Trade's place In Ihe com· L,awrence Seawny I ern principles. ~Ir. Bowring has llo!lnhl and r,:sultcd In ti!e fol· Girls' Auxiliary of the Church John's sInce September are now munlty and make some general Db· The ,,n0nourablc P.~. Lew s: ?on~ an. ou~stn.ndi~g merchaniliz. ;I\win::; taking ortlcc: C. E. :-leI· 1 oC England nnl! was greatly en· employed wit:, the Buchans I\1ln'l aervntlons on the year past, and Q.C. \\111 presnt a ten mmute pap 'mg Job for hlS (lrm m recent years, . ')11. 1I00!Orar)' President: Ralph I joyed, A Girls' Auxiliary pal'ty Ing Co. Cyril Carter has resum· the principal economic Iactor.~ at er on Newfoundland and the St. and is largely res~onslble for o~­l·"I~'er. Preslde.,t; \\,inston Snow also took plnci' a[ the C. oC E cd hIs course at tile Vocational work afCecllng tile future; Law~cnce Seaway. The lion. Mr. ganiling the SI. John's Retail 11 .. ".:\1.. Past President; Ronald hall during which a prescn~aUoll center after spending a ,holiday I . The special speaker wIll. be ·Mr. Lew!s Is not only one of NeWfou~d- Credit Bureau. He will tell the

')~\\'e, lsI I're.~lrlenl; Bryan i\lit· was made to ~Irs. U. G. Hiscock, with hIs parents. Lionel Forsyth, Q.C.,· PreSident of land s mo~t prom.lncn! lawyers, . ut Board of Trade how credit ought '~ldl. 2nd Vi,~'l President; J. E. A Past President, In appreciation !\Iiss M. PY>l rccently returned the Dominion Steel and Coal Cor- Is a spcclalist m transporia~lO: to be, in his opinion. \larDonald •• 3m "h'e President; of the Interest whIch she has from Montreal where she spent - m~tters. He I:I~~Je~na ~~~atI~t~~e !lloilei'n Developments In Retailing .1. H. fh'nn, Secretary; J. J. Bell, always tal,en 11 the giL'ls and her her holidays with "her parents, gonlsh to resume their stu,dies for NewIo~n h f thO In the service trades the most 1':'casurcl'; E. Pollett, Sgt. at asslstnnee In holding meetingR'I\Ir and Mrs Charles Pye of Cur- at St. FX. UnIversity. tra,nspor~alt~n sc eme't d IIDSSi important dcvClopmcnt' in recent \rms; ltcv. T. Short, Chaplain; at her home during the past yeaT Ul1g' and 'fl:.c brothers and sis· Wm. Dixon Hnd ~!Isscs Gel,1c, He spea s romt·hlB grbC~ tela .0" vears has been the opening 'of • " '[ b . J' rbert 11 It' , , d knowled"e on s su lec laVID" , , Lx~cu1i\'C ., Lm ers. Ie when other fac! t es were no ters who are lesldlng In Mont-, vleve Hereford, Flo Soper an " . II P .' the Supermarket This modern

!'ikc. Allnn W:JcllX. J. n. Watson. avalJGble. real Irene Ev'ans who are stydlng represented tiS Brovmdcc f sTucess. method of merch~ndising based ENTERTAIN • lh C rEI II d ncc or'· I 'T I I' t Mil fully before the oar 0 rans· ,

. A. e . 0, '. la. a a . I\llss Nici N~lson' has resumed Teae Icrs ra n og a emor a, ort Commissioners and the Royal upon large and frequent turnover, ~tr. and :llrs. C. E. rielson were ganlzed by ". J. Young and Jac~ her sttidIC'J lit King's Mall, Com. visited their parents during the ~ommlsslon on Transportation on is an important factor to the aver-ll(lsts at a party at the Staff Shnron took place on January pton P.Q., after spel'ldlng the boJlays. Bruce T~rone and Lloyd a number of- occasions. age householder. This develop-Huuse on Saturdar, January 15th l?th and w,lslargely attended. holidays with her. parents, Mr. Catlin have. plso resumed their,.., '.. Fisheries ment Is also of concern to the .\ program of dmlclng was ar-' Prizes Cor.a sl)ol dance were won and Mrs. C. E. Nelson. Also home studies at MemoriaL . ". . .'. umber ramil¥. grocer, and of considerable r.1nged anr! WI\~ thoroughly 15th by Glynn Barnes and Maude Har· for the hollda~'s were Ted Cour. Miss Mary Carr01l, daughter From t~eangl~ If ~e f~ h 'es Interest to the wholesale' supply joyed by the seventy·two guests rls, whIle the lucky couple in the age, sttldent at RIdley College, of Mr. and Mrs. Stan Carrol, has of pe~pI.c emplo~~ , ( en IS. e~~s. trade. Mr. Hartley St. J. Ayro, . \l Ito attendcd Liquid rcrresh· statue dance was Glynn Barnes St Catllerlne' .• Ont lind Miss resumed her Grade XII stUdies arc shU the most mportfnt HID ~!anager of Ayrc's Supermarkets'

c\ J CVI k . " . " t St B ld •. College Llttlcdale try in Newfoundland. 11 r, azen' , an oyee ar e. . Dawn Couragp. who Is attending ~ • res , ' A Russell' President of .the Fish. will /live a ten minute. paper on I A dance rol' teenagers alsD was Sir Geo WlIlams School at Mont 'Mount Allison students Rex '.. C "1 f Can da is one of this subject. Ur. Ayre has made held at the Girl Guide Hut on' reai They were acocmpanled by Pretty, Tom Simms and Silas emsr oudnlcl d~ . a, I'n the a careful study of the supermarket Is t . d J ry 15th and was • k 1JI f Newoun an s pIOneers . h II d f' I a ur ay anua I their sIster Doreen a graduate Clarke retllrned to Sac v 0 a . t h f h b .' . nd Iso has techntque, and as unequa e Irs

. votet! one oC the most enjoyable Df the same 1>uslnes~ school who ter spending the holidays with rc~ r IS t tln~S~g a of (~e prob. hand experience with the working affairs In many months. Hostess· will shortly lrave for LJndoD their famlllcs at Buchans..· . a

l n n Im

f ath· e noltw C df~ h t de 'He of this modern merchandising de.

·v re I\llss I\\argiterlte Ember· • . . . I f ems 0 e sa co 15 rn. . os e d England to take a posItion there, Miss Julia Morgan p81d a br e win spcak to the meeting Dn fish. vice. Icy and I\tls~ l\Ia~~e A~ r~;:. A.lan Andrew~ Jr. spent part ·buslness vlsl~ I to Buchans last cry matters In a ten minute paper. CChaoPercones. wern

e I r. tal

n n' oC his vacatlDllwlth his . parents, week wllere shr wns guest of her The CredIt Factor in Newfoundland

. ourage. ur ng Ie eve . A A Add I t I'vlr (Rev) Short I~g the girls served sandwiches Mr. and !\frs. . • n rows, lln ISS er,. 5.· •• . BusIness-Old antI New and cotree and (he 'party con· visited friends In Hr. Grace be· J. n. Flynn who had bcen re.. It has often been said thai New. cluded. at 1 a,m. ' • \ Cor ereturninll . to Dalhousie e~lvlng medIcal treatment at foundland merchants to~k credit

F'I:RSONALS . where he Is ~tudlng englnecrlng. Buchans Hospital since January risks which no r,cspons\blc bus-. . Alan Cooper Jr. has also return· 6th returned to work at the Coni. Inessman would take anywhere T~~I m~ny. flle~d~ oC t .I\I~~. ed ·to Halifax to continue his pany's office last week. Wllllam else in the world. Undoubtedly,

Lee . H' w 10

Wins a lIe till 10

• studies at DalhousIe. . Warren who was hospitalized many oi Ncwfoundland'5 primary Clare S osp tll! 11 a cr ea COli' 'h 1 I d t Jr' commenced or ditlon on Jalli1al·Y.fith, arc glad Peler O'Brlell and David Bere· during th!l samt period, as a so n uS.r es :ve e . ~r~dit to know she \, now on the road ford who spent the holidays with resum~d hIs duties wJthJhe Bue· kept m belDg, by. speCial .

_a . A I I h R II department arrangements winch were to say to recovery •. Her husband,. who their families returned to nt . ans a wa~ , .

,

T·!!e Globe theatre, cradle of Eng. Iish drama, was built on the Thames bank at London In'1594 and burned down in 1613.

LONDON (AP)-Thieves Friday stole several !iundred pounds worth of jewelry from the horne of Chief Superintendent Rob crt Stevens, head of Scotland Yard's fraud squad.

S::.lve Money on Fuel Bills

• • Aids Air Conditioning

Pate~ted"Lifl-up" action clears carpets up to onc-in'ch .:lick. Fits standard 36' door ·-easily cut to smaller sizes with Ilack saw. Installs on eithcr sidc of any door!

STOCK'TAKI'NG . SPECIAL - 50 ONLY 'MEN'S SUITS 'Sizes 36 to 44 -. Brown, Blue, 'Grey Worsted - some with EXTRA PANTS if desireei'. , Make ,your ~election now as sizes are limited.

'. REG. VAL,UE $49.50 SPECIAL

': SPECIAL sO Only 'Men's RAGLANS "-Grey a~d yawn only - S.B. and D.~. styles - si~es 34 to 44.

REG. VALUE $24.50 . r . SPECIAL FOR THIS. SALE $1.6.50 , .

. . 500 FAMO'US NAME SHIRTS.-Blu~, 'Whit~, Grey, Tan, Striped. Sizes 14 to 17. REG. : VALUE .$6.95.

. . See this/'Genuine \ Value I .

. ALL 'SALES" FINAL .NO APPROBATION' :',' /

CLEARING . $2~25 . ,

NO' CHARGING . ,

. ' , .......

AND' CO:, ,1 TO." ·321WAT~RST~ .....

" '.

Page 8: !Pears,oil .Eis~nhowet~,,;, H· ;' . F' .' · Move ':::~~. litcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · ,mcan II aI', I tIC nnese e so·, . . • tents-it was almost

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••• TIII1 .... y GREETINGS '.~ Birthday creellngs 10 Faith Car· -. Mount Pearl Park who Is cele· bnting her birthday January 26. -:- /'"

LEFT FOil HOME .' 111'. and Mrs. George Siockley and their infant son, who was born at tbe Grace Malernity hospital. left here by the express on Sunday ui return 10 lheir home at Corner Brook.

"Rln'ED HOME

1954

CHIT·CHAT Paris and New York and' Is en route to his home at St. Pierre. .

FROM KING'S COVE / Mr. and Mrs, Raymond Rideout

of King's Cove arrIved In the city on Sunday to bring their Infant daughter to the General Hospital for treatment. '

ON BUSINESS Caplaln Edward Vardy of IIIck·

Mr. Hardy Small, ma~al:cr for man's Harbour is at present visit. 05mond Brotbers busmes5 at in' thc cit on business, llorelon's Harbour, arrived In the g y. CIt)· by the exprcss ~'csterday ON 1l0LlDAY-- . after spendinG sel'eral weeks at Mr. and Mrs. Fred Maidment or Moreton's Harbour on buslncss. Catalina are at present spending a

NEW OFFICERS Tbe Y·Tcens club o( Ihe YWCA

beld their election of officers [or the year at lhelr meeting last weck. The followins were clected: presid~nt, Carolyn Fraser;'" Vice· Presidellt. ~Iargaret Gallatel!)'; Sect'y·trcas. Rosalind While.

holiday in St. John's and are re· gistcred at the Brownsdale Hot~1.

BUSINESS TRIP Mr. Ronal~ Green, business man

at Harry's Harbour is at present visiting the city In the Intcrest of his firm.

FROl\l SPRINDALE lIon~. !IIr. P. Young of Springdale ar·

Tonight Ihe Co·etl club oC Ihe I d ith ell on Sunday on a YWCA will have a movie as pari r v~ n e y .. of their weekly mceling. Thc bUSlDess trip:

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Y our:Child' s

HEALTH' ,BVEDWIN P; JORDAN, 11,1. ,D.

RHEUMATIC FEVER IS ONE OF CHILDREN'S WORST ENEMIES

Rheumatic fever is one of thc most potcnt enemies of children and young people; grownups can get It but t!!is Is' fess common. While the disease is di~abling Our· Ing an attack', tbe great danger from it .is not the attack itself but . the fact Ulat this !1isefse may in· jure the heart and its 'valves, thus producing trouble in lat~r life.

It u~ualJy produces swelling. pain and redness of the joints, skipping from one joint to another. ' The joints recover enUrely, butpcrma' nentdamage to the heart ali too often results. Sometimes its pre· ' senrc ,is less obviously typical.

BOTH TilE HEART m usc 1 c which causes this .organ to ~n· tract and expand, thus producing its pump.like action, and tbe innlr 'valves o.~ the heart may be in· jured. .

The valves which lie between the • heart cbambers serve an impor· tant purpOSe In the circulation of the blood. If they arc damaged in such a way as to allow the blood to flow backward into a chamber

Jiffy Wl'aproll!

which it is supposed t~ hav~ . left, Sew a jiffy wrnprol\' triiwhml t!!e heart, of course, IS subjected I Sew a. jiffy wraJ1ron-trim wilh to extra strain. . gay embroid~rY. Flower.baskr'

THE ~REATES:r dan~er from pocket-nothing prettier! M;:ke rheumahc heart disease IS the r-:!' two stvles-long and sbort! . suit of repeated attacks. It is. Pattern 7022: tissue pattern. mo. known, however,. that most at· tils, directions for wrapron. 517,(; tacks of rheumatic fever. are p~e· Small (10, 12)) Medium (14. 161: ced~d tw.o or t~ree wc~ks .earher Large (18, 20). State site.

mc~tins begins at 8,30 p.m. by Infectlo~s With. certam kmds of . Sl!nd TWENTY.FIVE CENTS"

ARRIVED SATURDAY streptococcI (wInch a :e. ,germ.s) coins for this pattern (stamp., can, Mr. AJlan Farrell, business man such as sore.throa.t, tonsllhhs, ~car. not bc accepted) to ST .. JOIIN·S

fRO~1 MDGER al St. La\'rrence, arrived in the cily Th' d I k I b h' I r' . f II II ' .. ' Fabric has .elegan1. Spa'nlsh.·cmbroldery In black on eha-agne. let feve~ or Inf:ct!ons of the ml~d!e DAILY NEWS, (lIoU"~hold Arls , llrs. O. Connol!)' 01 Badger ar.' e CO\'ere ·up 00 n eae wear (e t) Is n y acbleve ,In. ...,. car .. Since thiS 15 Ihe case. It IS Dept.) 6] FRO~T ST., WEST. "\'cd in Ihe cily by Ihe cxpress b\' S.S. Bacealleu on Saturday on a this white. rotlon twill box jacket w:·~h· turtle· neck and, knit This • ycar'~' much-1oved. pink showl IlP (rlgbt) in brillianlly readil~ appare!'t that If these str~p· TORONTO, ONT. Print plainll'

I b~lslncss trip. foreslccI'cs In black, U's worn with black shorts In ilne plnwale flowered colton Ihlrt done in o·range. shocking anll white, It's tocoCCIC mf,cchons could bc attack· N' A '.1 E, ADDRESS, l'ATfE·I','.' o~ Sunday on a holiday Ir p. . d h th \ " " " corduro)'. Pol~shcd cilltqn swimsuit (cenler) has long.torso look, ··\\,orn .wlth· the I'eryshort length shorts in shocking pink cordu· e I\' en t,lCY oecu~ C c mnces NUMBEH and SIZE, ";SlTI:'G ClIT 'mo~1 MARYSTOWN. I Is worn hele with m:,lchlng skirt. for patio or poolslde dining. . roy.·AIl three designs ire by, Reel Poise. of bouts of rheumatic fever I\'ouldl WONDERI.'UL is the \\'onl-fnr

• . ~!r. John Brenton, bUSiness man ..' .'. ." . - be lessened. . I Ollr NEW Alice Brooks Nccdlecrall L- ~Ir. and ~Ir.~. E;l1

lc;t

l 1~1::!:~ of I aL ~laryslown alsu arrived by S.S. By GAILE DUGAS. I cnhancb~ by Spanish cmbrold?r. PI~wale corduroy in . a V e r y Even cord.liroy get.s .clI!broidery THIS HAS B~EN . proved cor'l CatalJig for 19j5. Exciting. rn,

corlunc accnmpamcI I \Clr )oun;: Ii b I ! r his firm NEW YORK, (NEA)-!'nbrlcs Ic., in hlgh.fashion color eombln· light waight Is used ineombioa· an? pea.rl trIDI for afl~r.flVe.wear. rcet. A .sho~t, Inte!,~lv.e c?u~se of cbanting-our ncw designs arc all ~on 10 -th~ cil)' carly this weck Bacea eu on us ncss . 0 • for resort beach fashions are cle. aUons;, Shocking' on w~tc, black lion wilh colto~s; Of~cn, a pl~in Gh~ter IS' add.ed sometimes In "!e. tre~t~enl WIth p.eDlcllhn, If It canl that-and el'en more! Send 2:, f{lr medical attenlion. ~Ir. Riggs ' - gant this year,.lI'ilh a marked tend· M champagne, white: on green. corduroy Is paired With a pn~t. t!!lllc form, Silver or gold. White I bc gIven. c,arl~ In ~ny dangerous cents for your COllY of this lcrrific' ~'as rcecnLly-.iolcctcd ~Iayor o( For. IN 1I0SPITAL c~ey ~o show elaborat~ cmbro!d· ;Embroiderles arc use~ for swim· A predominant color in the prmt corduroy, stres~ed for lateda~ reo streptococcIc . mfecllon, helps to catalog-NOW! Yeu'li \\'anl to (lr, lunc. Thry a1e registcred al lhe Mrs. huslin. Maddock of Car· CIY el en for pooside 1\ car. suits as well as for daytime dresses usually is picked, up.in the cor.' sort wear, particularly lends Itself pre~ent the first attack, of r~e~. der cvery 1I'0ndprfui d~sign in il: :\cwfoundland lIotel bunear is at present a patient at Bealltiful poli~hed cottons arc ani! separales. duroy. to the glamor treatment. malic fever. Furlhermore, peOlclI,

. t~Gmcc Ho~~l rewpcrallq ~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- ~ cu ~ g~~ ~tb ~~r a~ -- I ti H many . ' tacks of streptococcic infection, or C.\RO P,\RTY from a recent opera on. I er Beauty BrI'efs Sweet Potato with buller or margadne.· , Dress 'Up DesI'gn even monthly for prctection. Such

The 51. Thomas' Men's Scn'icc I friends wishcr a speel y r.ecoy·, . • Over top pour about 1 tablespoon ..• measures cause II definite lessen. Club is sponsoring a card parly al cry. " . ' pllre maple or maple·navored S)'· ing of the numbers of YOUllgsters

Today's Redpe 0

P dd· M I rup. Cover dis,!! and bake in mo· ' . Calion Wood H.1l loni;:hl. Good "' Unless )'ou reaily know how to U I mg a. {eS derate oven (350 degrees F.) for who later come down' WIth rheu· priles arc offered and the parly G.\RDEN CLUB massage creams inlo your rac~, one hour. As pudding bakes, poke matic fever. CIIEESE DIP begins a~ 8 p.m. Tonight at 8.15 p,m. tbe SI. you'll do a belter ·job (less likely A DI'fferent DI·slt with fork, occasionally to' permit ticAlf~.?eUrrhqaUveeStin·oontsb~benOU~:s~~eu:neda.,

John's Gardening Association will to stretch the skin) if you pat the - th~ melted huttcr,or margarine_ to • FRO)I ST. PIERr.E hold ils January meeting at the creams in. using a gcnlle, upward get about .. Serve very' hot. but in I~arning to prevent dan-

EDITORS NOTE: Fo. holida) entertaining try this dip. It lI'a, one or the prize winn'ers in U,C Ncw York newspaper contcst men· tiMed before.

I B i g P k Short pressing at the Gnme time. . • gel' a u s streptococcic infections •'\". '.Iarcel GI'rl'adl'n, well knoll'n Bungn ow, owr n ar . B G 'YNOR 'IADDOX . k ••. • bibill I . y l\ .. • SOUTIIERN'.SWEET POTATO PIE from lighting up altac s of r.heu·

business e"~cull'l'e of St. Pierre ar. talks will be given on ex ng t' flt'd f d A' I d II Brush Y(){lr hair to be.aut)· In nn A large basket of Nelv Jerse'" (Yield: G servings) rna IC ever, a ong s rl e orwar ril'ed In Ihe c'II" b" T.C.A, Oil '.Ion. HalVers and vegetnb es an ower hi h dl t TI I J h b e ade

~'. lb. cream cheese I" lb. cottage chce~e , ," d 101 J K every·w c .wa~ rec Ion. .Ien sweet potatoes was sent to us yes. Three·quarter.cup sugar, ;~ ,as e n m .

day from ~e\\' York. llr. Giriadin arrangemenls, an rs. f h . comb Into the .hnes· of the coiffure terday. They nol only laste good lea spoon' snit. 1 teaspoon ground 1 graled large or 2 medium has bccn ~n :I husiness trip 10 I Clouslon will show . slides a er and smoot.!! Wllh the brush. but are also a rich' sourc~ of ,:1. cinnamon, 1 teaspoon ground gin'

--. . - ~- -- : garden. tamin A. We baked some and ger, \, teaspoon ground cloves; 2 , 'ro wear with Iweeds anrl tar. served them,.V:'lth roast· ioin of cups' mashed hot· cooked sweet I cos",\(.l-:SCING ; , • ~fans, try Ii 'heather scented' per· pork., ¥alr&. :a' fhie' dinner, . potatoes, 2 ta~lespoons,"argarine

Mr, J. Yourig, who hall the mls· fume. Olten,we·make .sweet potato pud. or butter, 3 eggs" unlleateri, 1 tea. forlune to break his hip in Dec· - ding and servc'it with roast chick. spoon. grated lem~n 'rind, H'. eups ember, 15 progressing favourably Those litlle packages ~f hand en or turkey. It's a rich and spc~ milk, ni·nch unuaked pastry shell. at the home or his daughler,·lIlrs. lotion pillows (one piildw enough cialdish and easy to make .. Usc '1I1i)( the first' five' ingredients;

for one application) are grand to boiled slVeet potatoes (or canned Add slVeel'potatoes, and margarine L. W. Pelley, who with Mrs. V. R. have in' your purse, for' use when 'ones), 'lols '.of butler Dr margarine, or butter. Mix well. Cool. 'Bcat Butler went to Corner Brook and away from· hOl)1e. b,rown sugar, and chopped al. in· eggs. Stjr, in crated ,lemon accompanied, Mr. Young to St .. r '--~~--- monds.· . . rinel, and milk. Pour' into 'a' 9·inch John's is. a few days ago. His many gentleman will he ablr. to get Bulter . a, round casscrolc dish pic 'shell, Bake 40 to' 50 minutcs, friends bope thai this 'grand old around ngain by early spring; and place. a layer of sliced boiled or until done in ;i·preheated· bot .

sweets on' tbe bottom. Sprinkle 0.v~n (400degreh ~'.)

II WHO .SAYSBRIDES CAN'~ BAKE BREADI"

with. broWl!' 5ugar aop chopped ':. '-', .' ... nuts ,and.dot liberally ·wlth butter Scems.·on·' .well, dressed men: a or maf[(aririe. Repeal layers uQ •. ch,areoal. ,tic,' pinstripped with pink til' dis'J!'ls 'filled, belnl( very,:liber'al . tbe shirtpink: Very smart! . ----..:...-.-:=-.::.., -.. -' ',;... . .,...,......:.._---.,.-

/tS'SO ta.s'tf:·', . ... :SO e~.fr to In/k with

FIVE \

RDSES THE AU.'UIIPOS; ,FLOUR

17'S OVENTES7ED , ;~tthe"~~~~~" Yes, these days even the tiniest ih .. D.lI",!. ewe.' :. 'famo,' u!>III_II~"'Q (\-nbo·tn, .. : ~.~ ..

. of breakfast· nooks are :being VI \iflq t. O~ filled with the wonderful fra. TI'6 'd '... ..

. Je mngm cent main ining room of Ottawa's Ch!ilealL grance of home-made bread. L~urier .Hqtcl is the scene of notable state functions;';"

, ;~. With famous· Five Roses all· . hrilli,allt dinner partles. :rhe coffce ~ust he ofsliperh a.; r_. ~~ purpose Dour, baking.your own quahty - to . match . the 'Chateau s famed . cuisine ~~ : bread is much easier than, you tho~ght -the That colfee i!-Cliase & 5anhoni.. .'

Easy 10 make a' cl1i11.chasing shrug - only two main pattern

. parts! Embroidery or bead the scroll design ~ on sweaters too.!

Pattern 7144: 'fissue paltern, .transfer, directions' for shrug. SiZe small (10,12); Medium (14, '161; Large (J8,20). State size.

Send .'t'\V.ENTY~·tVI' CENTS in coil~ fur thl~ pattern (stanps cannut be accepted) to ST. JOIIN'S

:Uepl., GO ~'llONT STIlEgT WEST, 'ronO~'1'O . ON'!'

· 'Print plai~IY NAIIlE, ADDRESS, PATTERN NUMBER nnd SIZE. . .Wonderful is the word- for our

'. New' Alice Brooks Nedlecraft Cat: :alog' for 1055. 'Exciting enchanting

l' ,irrcsistable - our new designes I 'arc. all that - an,d' evcn more! · 'Send 25 cenls for your' copy of, · lilis terrific catalog -~ rig~l NOW:

.' You'll want to order el'cry wonder- : :ful dcsign in it! .

• t~ . result 'more delicious than yo~ ever dreamed I . , Andth~tleinpti?g true.colf~e aroma. _ ~~~.i .• ~,·,' ,;;' But insist on vitamin·enriched Five Roses, . . ... that mellow T1chlless ... Will add . , Rea u ty .. B,. ~ riefs .'" : . . distinction tn !lour meals 100. Serve' :_ ; Chase & Sanborn tOliigbt and enjoy IT your hair is looking limp and

carrots ~t cup 'evaporated milk

. '.' tsp. paprika 1 sprig-parsley

Walking Is, Beautv Aid

01 Leave cheese at room t~I11PC'"

I nturc . ab(){lt 30 minutes. Gr:;t', Ry ALICA HART I carrot, mix with cheese and mill:

One marvelous benifit of hav.· till .a nice sm~oth consist~nc~ i; ing graduated the kids Ollt of the attamed. RefTlgCl:ate unt!1 11m·' house and Into their mvn h~mc.s is to serve. Scn'c sprmkled 1~'lth par, that at last thcre's :I lillIe time. seley. Makes 12 to 14 servm~s. Nolloo mUc}I, what wiith meetings . and householrl duties, but there New in lip malle-up is to me " is something left over for )'011 that dec per shuI\e un Ihe upper lill th", there wasn't formerly.. yOII do on the 101l'el' lip. This ;:il"-

Few women have to Sit and 1I'''l', the illusion' of rt roundcd morr ~er What t? do with tqc :imc, for, youlhful mouth. ' It goes eaSily. But one thing most !"atur& Iyomen should budget right _ For evening tirama, J1lace a tin:' mto thel.r schedules ~nce thpy dot of liquid rouge at the nostrils reacb thiS happy area IS a dally to give them a slighU)' flared· look. walk.

This kind of exerei,se won't be Ihe shock to the sys tem that it would be for you suddenly' to take .up hockey. But it will.im. prOVe your circula tiM, k~ep your appetite and gct ·you outdoors.

for you must get baek'too. A qual­er of a mile is a good starter, You migo.it increase this to a mile a day by slow degrees.

Don't be a stoic. If you get ton tired, hop a bus or caU your )lIIS­band to come get you.

But you will find the health ben, fits ·you derive from your walk; will show in your a ppearancr , Plus lhe Iact it's goorl for you t' get out and sec a bit of \he 1I'0rl,1 you've been so bus)' in for 11",

Dut don't just vall out of lie house one day. Keep in' mind aJew sensible dos and dont's. Don't wear your1lood clothes, high heels, heavy coat and big hat. Wear Y(){lf comfortable shoes with broad heers travcl light. Walk briskly at a snwrt pace. Holtl ),011 your head hreathc decply. . ,. last 10 or 20 yea_rs_'.~ __ _

\)UII't stop tu lI'illlloll' shuI' or:- ._._-, .. -chat, kcep going right along at a i good pace. If you reach a hill,: let your bolly lead your feel. i _ D~~'t try to go too far at first. '

ADDs ZEST toaD' sorts

cliol sIIes

. Keep

up to

date , 'LIS'EN '0

'Muriel McKay WOMEN'S NEWS !::': D'aily Raciio QuIz Prizes/' , nllthe flavor your cup can hold. tirerl, there is a new· repair oil

.• ~.; A l3.PIECE' BAKING SET with wa·II'br'a.Lat ' _. whic.h .1Iill be foun,l a wonderfUI/@ ...... "SOrellbY \ ;!~' III' help in putting. new sheen and new . '$7 r-':~ . GIY1N AWAY IV T 'I I ' ,., Marc fine ilOtel~ and rcslRurnnls througho!i't': life into it, .Robin Hood .Flour Mills Limited . ::!: . II DAY MON.·'RI. ON HOMIIl.IRS QUIZ serve Chase & Sanho.m Colfees than any othe~ brand.- . -'-' . 1

~.:: CJO.N "t'12.05 P."",,;, YOCM lIt 4:50 P;M. ./ , ' Use your Christmas gift cosmet.,1 . Monday through Friday :.' . " .,. ics for beauty's sake Taey may look . ,

.;'.' *9039-'NelYspapers-2coIs.~75Iinc~_' :pretty,on the dressing table but, Jt\.13 J!- 9.451010.00 a.in;: . ;.~.' i ..... ~. • '!bey, won't belp you unless you use I 'CJ' 0' N,

,. • . ,'them.

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THE IDEAt 'AFT~R"'Sc~o:bL',SNACK . ~ : ( ..... , ,'.:

-;':" , , ....

. '. \ . '.' ' '~:l ,t.: l! • . . .

. ;SAV~THE BAGS .FOR" SWELL::fREE·, 'GIFTS , .'

. , i - . .. ' .' .. Or I :.. ...• . I

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/

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SEC~

-... '-,

... GRAND BANK - 1 noW in its la tier half to experience any su~ of winter conditions. time slill lies ahca'

. 1I0ivers bloom and ~ (u\1' measure 01 fro hclore May.

Tbe lrouting seaso saturday but II'calh bave been so bad II fishing has been e our' most ardent. rO! thusiasts ha\'e not t: ambitiOn to wet a weather. Bowel'er, noW .very little use necessary to cut ~ IcC, : as no ice exi~ necessary is to take to your favorite fisl liP ,your <lear and I Ir~sh worms, dUll U i1y cabbage plot. So like January \\,cath:

The wealhcr has b3dy'~ longlle as : I'ersation d·:lri:1;: Ih so. Easterly sair rain slorms havc most without let. I' ern scction 01 the Ihmage ha\'e been h~al't seas anli tid eral sections hal'c ever 'secn 011 the ~ tunalel" no' scriOl been reported a ion ally higll tides peric.:Iced and ship have been considl VesselS' on tbe rt and' mainland po t~king weeks to. I: arc .usually done da~'s. '

Fishing opera\i, have also fclt t' weather. Tlw SI

and Danish Sci! have heen at an some hal'e nOI 1

hoar:1 sinc~ Glri, Irawlcr, ami dr:! beller 3l!hou~h II sid~rabl~ fi,liin~ Th~ IOIl~lil1er

made a mcrc~' I

tunc 10 Burnellc to· CC!1,"e\' a rna there. I I 'Ihe Gr 1I0~pital ~Ir. G, f~I'c Officer. ac, lIur5C~ from Ih' r.rnnc\le anti pati~nl, ~Ir,. ~I

IIIi"n. La ,I II cell a

hUI1(:rc'( ~lIrl ri rh'cd al forhn rnroute 10. Fran I lkc~1 hy truc\. 11 l;anrlcr hy I, t, ['rance hy r lil'l! IHlndred III I;c:! from St. I this manner in i; reported thai at 5t. Pierre a: r'd of their mil r.l Ib~us:nd 01

TRADE , Ltlltt

9ERAI

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Page 9: !Pears,oil .Eis~nhowet~,,;, H· ;' . F' .' · Move ':::~~. litcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · ,mcan II aI', I tIC nnese e so·, . . • tents-it was almost

:~ml'<'r·

G:-iil~

... quat· ~Iuter.

1n ~ mile

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" -.I SECTION II ' ,

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-(;ll.\ND BANK - Wllb January island In recent ,ycar's and the themselves ever, he Is to lie commended' for' ~,,,,\' in its latter half we have yet ranchers were asslsled by the gov· treat. It as somel.lllng part· of a his courageous and prompt action I' ("(lcrience any sustaIned period ernment In tMs Industry but' hl~'1 seaman's life. Most or lo.'1em wll! whiCh undoubtedly 'prevented' a r! II inter conditions. Yet, a long pro,lllcllon. costs are reported to be be going back to sea again short· . possible fire In the home and pro' I,m' slill lies ahead beCore the the cause of the decision to go out lyon' other ships because tbelr bable lrijury '10 the infant child. '. fl .. ' cr,; bloom and we can gct a of business. With our own provln· . natual instinct leads them In the !~!I mcasurc of frost and snow tlal government Interested In mink paths of the sea. With them and PERSO~ALS • ~d.lr~ ~Ia~'. raising to' the extent of bringing their IamlUes We pray that the Mr. Stanley Miller, District En·

The trouting season opened last farmers 'and their animals from fates will be kinder to' them than gineer, is at present In town' on a ~;.:"rd3y but weather conditions as far away as Brltlsh Columbia when they'w'ere &!1lpmates of the business vlsll, '. ' h.H been so bad that \'ery' Iitlle it Is a wonder that efforts wer~ "Student Prince 11"; Mr. Hall of IrvIng 011 Ltd •. was I;'t.;n~ has been enjoyed. Even not made to· induce some of the TRAGIC ACCIDENT In (OWn recently on business. lor mosl :mlcnl rod and line en. St. Pierre mink farmers to also A tragic accident occured at '~{essrs. Paul and Roy Russell 1 ::I,i3Sls ha\'e not the courage or mOl'e In lock, stock and barrel, Fortune on Sa(urday' afternoon spent the last weekend In town. ;.m!lltion to wei a line In suc-!1 Work on completion of the IC1Cal last a truck went over the p1Jbllc Mr. Bob Hollett arrived from ,. r"lh~r. I!owc\'cr, as It stands wharf has bp.en changed so as to wharf. Twenty.three year old ,Wal· Bonavista last week;: ' " r. ",1 I'er~' little usc oC an axe Is gh'e addltionnl length to the wes· ter Bcnnet! Jr. drlv~r of the veh, Rev. Lloyd Rees Was In town on ,I,'t'S,ar), to cut holes thru the tern pier inside the harbour, leal, and' his twelve year' old com: Sunday for services. \i:. as no icc exists, and a1l Is t~c area in the vicinity of the west· panlon Ell Hillier, werc. both draw· Captain Ha'rry. Thomassen and ,rl'c>sary Is to lake Ihe ear, drive ern pier has been done and In this ned when the truck pl''Dg~d 'I~r seven members of, his crew ar'l !, '.nur (a\'orite fishing spot, hook respect the direction of the old the boltom "r:t~. ~.'" ' rived Ilome from SI.':John's last :;0 ~lllir ~car and Ush away with warf has b~~n chnnged so ans to ' The tragedy occured wben th~ week. . . t:.,·n \\orms. dug that in the fam. ~Ive fill has been added to Increase truck, owned by.' 1.s~·I. , • !IIaglstrate.Eric ;Jones is at pre· ;', .·~bbnge plo\. Sounds very Uttle the width of the w-!1arf and Simms Ltd., and driven by. 'Bcnne\!, W:lS sent condftcting 'court proceedings : ~:, .lalll1ar~' II'cather but it'ls true. I Dock has been piled on the oul· btcking tip around t~e. corncr Wlt'l around the district.' •

T,'r \\cather hts b~cn on c\,cn· •• Ide so that this can now be {lJ!ed a,l(lad of cQal, near the premises Corp, Smlth'n.C.~!'P. ,I~ at .pre· ~, ,!~"'" lon~uc as a topic of cen. In and It Is,. the hope thnl In tlJe of F~rtune Ba)' Products Lld.,.11 sent on the mainland attending a \ "'~lion ,hrin;: the past week or future anol)!{~r right of wa)' to the appenrs that' the vchlcle went too course. .. , Ea,tcrly ::alCs 11'101 heal'Y pl~blic II'har[ can be made. _ far, with its' rear wheelS goIng • SHIPl'fNG

.t

. uWould'YDubelim it? I nev,r took. ,le.Slon in my lifel~~ , :. . ,

, .. '\ ,torm~ ho,'c prevall~d al. STUDENT PnJNCE CREW over· the guard.rall at the ivarf's .,·",t lI;t:lout let. lip. In the cast. RETURNS edge and ·tumbl~d. inlo ,Ihe water, M V Arawana arrived ~ from -,------

Halifax with' a general cargo. " " ,itlSHING BOAT' SSEIZED •. W J '1 d ", ,~ction ,,[ thc prol'lncc hcary The cr,cll'. of thc Student PJincc Onlookcrs· wa.tchc~·, horrified and I. 'na~c ha\'c becr. caused hy thC

II1. (with the exception. of thc' two tma~le ,to do' anyUlIng as t41e v~h·

)", \'~ .• ca~ and tide, which in SCI'. men still at Bermuda)· arrived iele with Its two, occupants sllp!ll1d r-.I .cction, 11al'e been thc 1I'0rsi home last week 10, B hero's wei. beneath the"'surface and sank 10 r' 'r ,~en on the South Coast. for. como, They arri\'~d by bus Irom the bottom in' twenty five . fee'! .iif ': ,l;:tely. no seriol!; damage' hal'el St. ,Tohn's after flying from Ber· \l'ater. Onlookers said that Ben· ), ·tn rcportcd ~lIho\l;:h except. mUda to 1I1ontreai and b.iencc to nett made an unauece'ssCuI attempt 1,·::tll~' hiJ:~ tide5 have bcen ex. SI. John's. to Itet out oJ the vehicle before It r r:~'1red and shipping mOl'cmcnls Whcn they arrived they uere sank, ' ~·.\t' been considerably disrupted, met by Ihe Salvation Army B~nd Immediately efforts were made \ ~"rls on the run between here and several cars and were llien to bring the sunken,vehlcle to the ."'1 mainland points ha\'e been escorled to their homes where surface. The Dragger :'Vlrglnla" ,. ';I~): lI'eck~ to. m~ke trips which their families Were 1I'~IUng. Christ. which was In port got her Irawling :-,' usually done In one and two mas In January eelebrationi werel gear in. operation, and at about 6 ',\ '. the order of the dav in the homes p.m., two hours' alter the fatal

rishing opcrations on the banks of the crew ,i'illl Christmas trees plunge, the truck was located and '::,"P also felt the effect of the still lert liP and gifts being present· broul!ht up. Thp two bo~i~s were 1I,';:lher. Th~ smaller longl!.'lcrs cd t~ t.'·~ rren; All the men show. found In the cab and after being : ~rl Danish Sclner type vesscls r.d evidence of their ordeal and removed were later taken' 10 their :nc hecn at an almost standstill; had a graphic story to relate on homes. "~W IIa\'c not pul a net ol·er. their rescue. Captnln· Thomassen The funeral services were. hel~ c ,~r.: "ine~ C.:lri,tmas, The larger spoke in hDn~st tribute oC his crew on Monday afternoon..!n a double : .... lirr .• 3nd draggers have farcd anll their del'otlon to duty up until ceremony. Rev, A; N. Holmes con· h,l~r although thr~' ha\'c lost con. the end. Th~ men too were. hIgh ducted the funeral services and . ';rJbl~ U,hin;: limc. in Iheir pr.aises of their captain burial was. In the United Church

M V Reo 11 arril'ed' from North nq1llE (APl- Yugoslav patrol , oman al e S)'dney with a cargo. of ,coal. boats Saturda)'. seizcd, four Italian ,M V Pauline C .. Wlnlers'is at fishing boats, prestimab.IOor drop. Fo'. r BI'ga' m'y

Halllax. I" ping b.ieir nefs ,in Yugoslav waters. lit V Joan' Garland sailed 'for ,The',actlon"~rolte:a Iruee that had,

North S)'dney' 10' load coal,: .' ',' prevailed in the ;\drhitic sea sln'ce Dra;:gers Blue Surf and ·Gaul. Italy and Yugoslavia' agreed on:the

lois were In port last ·wcek. " division: 'of' thl Trie'slc' free ter· , . , rl~ory. . . ---------- ~--~~

JOB FOR DlPLmIAT· . TORONTO (CP) -A Iiotel man

"has to be a diplomat 24 hours a day and still retalne nough vitality to Instil! the personal element in hts operations," says Jack J. John· son; who ran the biggest hotel in the Commonwealth for 20 y~ars. He retired Jan. 1 as Manager of Toronto's Royal. York ••

.'

CRUISER 'PULLS 'OUT HON GK9N' G(AP)The' U. S.

cruls~r Helena, lIagship of' Vice Admlrat Alfred ltI. ;Pride, com· mander of· the' 7th fleet, unexpec· tedly sailed Cram Hong Kpng Sat .urday, presumably to Formosa strait, The' cruiser, wllich arrived herc Jan. 18, wa's on J recreational visit until Jan. 25. .,

, TRURO (CP) - Mrs, Harry C, Logan Of. nearby Londonderry was ·senteneed tp six months in jail to· day afler conviction on a charge of . bigamy:

Mrs. Logan pleaded guilty Jan, ·17 to going through a form of mar· 'riage with Charles' MacLean of Londonderry, knowing h~r first husband, Harry Logan of Saint John, N. B., to be alive.

SCO'ITISI~ COLLEGE Oldest of Scottish universities, St.

Andrew's was founded in 1411.

UK. Co~me~t On Formosa

BRoCKVILLE,' Onl. (CPl-Ruth .. Lor, pretty C!)lnese'Canadlan girl;.'

• leaves soon for' Mexico to do weI. . , ., I fare work among the Otoml Indhini , LONDON (Reuters)-Bnhsh of., Cor a church grC'Jp. ' ', .. :.

ficlal .50)lrCeS said h~re .today they Miss Lor 'a 1954' arts graduatE 'I

would be "surprised" 1£ the Uni~d from t~e UnlversilY' oC Toronto, 11", . Statc5 w~re ~o IfJarnntee the ChID· the daughter 0/ Mr,' and Mrs. r..ol : esc Natlcnallst·held Quemoy and Leip, oroprictors of a BrockVllIe.-Matsn islands wit:lin 15 miles ot restaurant. ' the China coast. '

Reports in Washington ha\'e said The girl will: be staying ~l Iii': tliat President' Eisenhower in his quimilpan, a small village, to( m~ssage 10 Congrzf,5 today would miles north of Mexico City. She' . ask for aoproval to extend Am. will work. with the American erica's protection of Fromosa and Friends 5 e r vic c Committee, 3 the Peseadorcs islands to Quemoy Quaker organiz~tion, , .'. and Matsu. ~I', L b ' t 'd '!::"';

This .mld be done before New ,I,,:; ,.?r eeame In ereste ·In' Zealand, support~d b,' tile Unlt~d t~e r~hblous and social. 1~'eHare St&t~s and Britain iniiiated amove field I~hen she went to WaJungton, in the. United Nations Security D:C" la~t sumr,ner.· She worl:c~. Council to stop the fighting be. With an IDter,raclal workshop group . t Ch"" sponsored by the Congress of Ra, ween th~ mesc Nationalists a~dl clal Equality and the Fdllowshi~

Communist. ! of Rcconciliatien, Thc foreign omce spokesman de.! -:---.------­

elined to comlllent on Ihese reports i ~;/is dail~' prcss con~crcncc to.' Getting Up Nights:

. • ' For QuicK. cor.t!ortlol help for B&ckaeJw: But t,~e fact that official sources P.heumatICPala:.aelUn;UpNllhI •• IlfOU, 'd I I . " cloUdr ut1le,lrrltatlD,p&ua;:es.Lt, PallU.,

! 531 t ICY wou d bc ;urprlsed If ond 10" of merif due '0 Kld.e}' aad the reports W~rc ~orrcct. wps in- ~J!~e~~ ;~~:~lcet~~r1r ;~;,E;"c~~;:r ICl'preteu as meamng Bntalll op. 900 million CYSTEX table" u,.d pro"

d A . nitty. IUccest, Darn ,u(ter Ionother d .. ,. pose any ,merlcan guarantcp to '<lth9P' askln; ,our drulel •• for OYIl'I'EZ •

Qllcmoy and Matsli. , .'

MONTREAL TWICE DAILY NORTH STAR. SERVICE' . ..' TDurist flight leaves dally at 2,55 . p,rn: NST.,­and Fiist Class f1i:;ht leaves at 5,40. p.m, NST, See IIARVEY & co., Goneral A(ent~ for· TCA : or 'Phone Te.\ '16G. , ,

/TIIANs-rAKAJlA IN1UHA"OHA' tUIIIS.",,""tlC

UANteG .. ft ......... ~ :\.. .... -._-- -""- .. -- ..... -.

• . ,

T,,~ lon~lincr "FortUne Bay'" anti his handling of the situation. Ce!"ctery. A l~rge number of : .. de a mercy l11i~.ion from For .. Thry were al.o very !1igh In Ih~lr elhzens, attended the f~neral as ',"r In Burnctte bland tast week: remarks as to the treatmcnt which well as. a ,guard of honour from '" '''!1\'~\' a maternily case (rom 1 they rceeil'cll, In, Bermuda, .?tIon· the Gra,nd Bank and Fortune ~oy

[rom Newfoundland to British Columbia~Canada acclaims this ~ig·car value! : ,,'r(' II Ihe Grand Bank Cott3~el treal. Norlll Sldne~' and 51. John's. Scouts' froops. , n"l'ital 'tr. Gcorge Crcwe WeI; The Canadian Red Cross Society The dea!..;· or these two )'oung ! .'" O/lic~r. accrtmpanlcrl h;' 1\\'0: was "Ingled out Cor its provldlns residents under suCh tragic cir· r ,:r,r, (rllm Ih~ hu,pll:,1 wenl to the mcn with completc oulf!~:;, c.umstancts ,has cast a gloom over ::~ :nrltc and aecompanicd thc whleh Chaptain Thoma.ocn estim. both Fortu~e and Grand Bank. ,'<:nt, ~tr., ~lIIlcr, ttl thc instit. ated cost at least a thousand dol. Thc writer, on his. own and also . , "n, lIars. on behalf of' all the citizens' 01

I ;J,t \\ .. rk a ~hill1ncnt of one On 'l"humlay CVCnhlj1 Captain Ihis Community' e:dend ~cep' anrl :,,:rc.t amI ri:hly lil'r mink ar,l Thumassen was t'!IC special gucst slncerll sympat~y. fo the; brcaved

, . r,l at .-nrtllne frnm St. Plerrc speaker at the dinncr mcctln~ of families In. their tragic ,sorrolV, ' "c<)ulr In I,'rance, T.llr. mink \\'ere (he Grand Dank·Fortune Lions Club ',' LION~ q,UB , ',',"~ h .• lrurl; lit C;(J"hie', thence In his addre~s he ~avc a vivid and At the la~1 ,dInner ~ectlng ,01 " f:~Dlkr h)' train. ami from that I'cry intcI·~.ltln~ account of the the Grand Bank Forlune Lions " F"anee h)' !,Ian~, All'ead)' over I'OY~J:C o[ 1)IC "Student PrInce II" Club tll0 special gucst' Was Cap. j ,I:m:rlrrll mink hal'c heen ship. Cl'om I toe hme that s!:c left here taln Harry .Thomassen, Captain of ; ,\ from SI. Pierre 10 FranCe in in early ,December and the III. the lI}.fated M V Student Prince :,,,, manner in r~cent monlll" It Cated Irlp north from the West 11 Captain, Thomassc:n was Ute , . I cported that the mink ranchers Indies which concluded with t.l!e guest speaker at the ·meellng. :' ~it. Pierre are graduall)' getting loss of the ship and the reSCUe op· The speaker was introduced by I '1 o[ Ihelr mink to France. Sevcr. per~tons and subsequent develop. Lion Secretat)' F,M, Tesslcr, and :' Ih~usand of mink wcre on the ment .until the return h~me~·Mem. spoke on hIs recen~ experience in

\x)rs voted the address to be one connection with the loss of thc of. the very best ever heard In ship oC! Bermuda. The address the Club. was well received and a vote of

1'R.\J)E SUrrl.lED BY

At 9 p.m. on the same evening thanks, 'proposed by N.. M. Dun· a public welcome Ilome was held ford, seconded by Ches Dunford, in Frazer lIail, which was alten. wa~ carried e!'thuslastlcaily. ' ded by a large number of citizens. This week tbe Clilb is making a Mcclslrate Eric Jones was C~alr town canvas appeal lor funds to man of the meeting, with the n~v for the purchase of" the VP Sall'allon Al'mr band also present hicle for C.'1arlcs Trimm. In Ibis rendering Ihe muscial part of the respect >!Ilso the Club .is sponsor. progrnmmc, also tcik!ng part In the Ing the movie show "How Green C~I'''nlf)ny were !lev. Dr. J.L. He)', was my Valley" at th,e . Grand u\lltl~ ftnll Mnjor Whel'ler !i.A. Bunk 1'hcatre Cor Ihe ,same .(!PlW~, l'l'~seiltatiun uf cheque:; fllr '$50.00 pu r lng, this month whieh Is l'U('h IIW:' l11:u:e by the Mayur 1·'ollmlers ,Month CUI' Lions lui'r, til L'U!I(. Thomassen and Ihe mcm. national, a sp~cinl dCIII'!. is bClng b~I'S, IIf his l·rell'. C:I!)(. Thtllllusses 1113de to recruittlJew members fur I'l'phed 1111 behulf uf tht, nWII. The' the' Club. ,'. n!~ney was aubscrlbe,f 'by. t,!w PUPILS ~OUNCII, cllizcns anti business CUlleern~ ,in SOIl\~thlng new hns.' been Intro. the COnlm:mHy on Ii vOluntnry dueed at 'L!le United C!lurch Aca· basis.. demy, Recently, at a meeting of

Now with the epic of the "Stud. the pupils 'of- th~ higher grades' oC ~:Jt Prince 11" a part of our Mar. the SChool, it 'was' decided to set ltime !{Istory wi! can thank prol" up a Pllpils Council, " . idellce that We can rcJolc~ in thc Thfs Council w~ich has as rcpre·

::::: .' T a : dclivcrance of th~ crew from a scntaUvcs of Grad~s. 9, ,10 anc! 11 G ERAL'D c.' .. walery gra,'c. 'The men thr.mscl· I~ under the guidance of the Prln. .::J ~,DOYLE I'CS are enjoying' dcla)'ed Christ. clllal, Mr. George M. MatUlcws .. ;,iiiiiiii;i~1iiiii:iaoiii;i~~~."?'§Ji~ l1Ia,\ In. January celebrations with The Exe~uti\·p' consists of 'nine

. . ./..IMIW Iheir families. As far as the' mrn mcmber~ eieete.d by tllethree .. -, --.- .-.. ----- . . grades.' The, Council under t:ll e'

Plywood is one lof the mostver-• sotile of buildil)g 'nlciterii:JI~;' If'"

can be u·sed inside or outside for : • ' . , I'"

o. multitude of" purposes, It is equally ,Jw~1I aciap!~d ~br"panel.

. 'ing, built·ins of all..kinds, table' tops, shelving. or . for structural ,.

See us fcir plyy,:)od, ., , '

guidance' of 'the . Principal will' as· ~15t tn maintaining schoo] "disci. pUne, will., arrange sports, pro· '. IIrams ent~rtalnments. and various other school projects. . ft. Is, be· lieved, that this new 'school organl· zatlon wlll. do'.much to foster pride In. the, school 'and -furlher coopera· tlon between, pupils and ·teaehers; ·and Its ,activities wm be watebed with Interest.: \ .

We ·under&tand·.that, two projccts .1\'l1k,h· will. be . )Indcrta'kcn . b~' I'-.Ie

, ,St':ldent Council shortly Is the 'pro­vision on an Honor Roll of all e;(·' p'upUs oC IthC·· school' who' served in Wodd War'. 11 and also to pro· .vlde a, plaque on which will lie ellscrl.bed _. the namcs of all gra· ,duRle~ from the Academy. . ~ .' ·SUFFERS.PAINFUL INJURY,

'MI', Wilson Crowley received se, vere bUrns· to bls hands on Satur· day, night lasl., ConseCjucnU)' he is at present: a'patient a(' the Cot·

. :tagc~ Hosp!fal., ,

, .Big~car style ... big· car size make, the, all'·new'55 DODGE' J~ebest buy in the low·price,fiel~! , '" .

.... , ahead in -STYLEI . , ' .

Year's' Big. 'Power Choice! ~ .

, New V·8,Jy.'o Big New' 61s r' . . .'

. ahead in SiZEI

"

• Choose from: the new 157·II,p. Hy-Fire V·S' engine or two 'great 6's-the llS·horsepower

. PowerFlow or the 125·horsepowcr PowcrFlow , Special., POII'crFlite automatic trans1)ussioll, . ""ailable at slight. citra cost with HY-Ji"ire 'V~8 or' Power Flow Special.'

f,.

..

,

ahead in VALUE/

.' . Dodga RIDES LIKE A alG CAR, """ h Is belh!r buDI ",iib •• Jra,.lrcng frama .... wider rear springi • .. • Oriflow shock absorbers •• , Sofety.Rim 'Wheels. ;. tub.-: . less tirel. flus many ether quauly fraturesl .

Take your pick of II dozen. nll·new IInti henuHful hody model~ in three lines-the Crusadcr, Rcgdnt, Rnd . Mayfair. For' truly luxuriouS'style, Aize. and performnncc,' sec the 183.h,p. Cuslom Royal V·B-thc c~trn.big, extra.powerful glamout car of the Dodge

. family.

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The accident occurred when Mr. ,Crowley pIcked up i flaming clolh and rushed out doors· with it, Mrs; Crowley; }yaR cleanIng all tbe kit· chen stove,.wlth. a' cloth which was . . .' . .. , ',; '.' ,. ' . ' , '.'

, ~md~il{':Jl;':~;::tll ~~I~h~::,o~~ol!: ': Se~ the '55 Dodgewith,mofioi'J.desirin forrhe fC!rward Look, at ~our D'OPGE-~E'SO!d de·a/e~'s;no.wt .. , It,y' r1roPIIe~ tIL \ near her. infant's' " " , ' . . '. ' ., ,. " \

erib>~eelngJhc.[lOssib]c:danger Tn 'E' 'R' 'AV"il'L ~-"!'R' APE'" 'LIMITE . '" '. " j,1~~:~:1~ut~~J~~i'::::t", __ ~:"lH ' "'bi-\. (, , ,',' ", ',', . "".' '. : .. He'wlll prbbably ~o a patient at I . . ' . " DIAL'

", .. DIAL:,80291', i, the ho~pltal for several days~ How.1 HAMILTON ST • . '''~'.,:''~, :.' :':; '~'I:"~'::,'· .. ' -J' ::. ,'.~ <~"I' .... . I •• ,":. •• ~" :: :.

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Page 10: !Pears,oil .Eis~nhowet~,,;, H· ;' . F' .' · Move ':::~~. litcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · ,mcan II aI', I tIC nnese e so·, . . • tents-it was almost

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10 'THE DAilY NEWS.·WEDNESDAY, JAN: 26, 1955, --------~~~~~~~~~ ,.

To-morrotv - ...,....-.. , .

GEORGE MONTGO~RY

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. To·rriorrot~,

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:, / ,." N ()t~Pl~ying-- . .'. '. IN '!THE LONE GUN" '" --- '.;-

- ,_' _\, "WAR PAINT" . , . . CORNEL .wILeE, ALAN LADe IN "SASKATCHEWAN" Te~as. which has .. provided 10' 'WITtiROBERT STACK' ,- YVONNE DeCARLO

c~les for more westren films tban . ,- -' -- - ' - IN "PASSION" . Among the great North Ameri, bas any other stale. Is the'scttingExCitinC) -"tense',: suspenseful, t."· _', 1~_.,,-.. _·,_-_'_.. ."

an historical adventure legends for "The Loile Gun," and, the 1Ime beautiful. ' \ The apPealing Ingredients of a t1iD~ dealing ... ltb Indian warfare is that lawless era after the Civil 'The~e words' describe "War good story,-' top·grade acting, ex· lind ""ith the Royal Canadian War when the speed of a six·gun l'alnt,'~ the United Artists ,offer., citing" action,. and spectacular ~ortbwest Mounted -Pulice prob. decided most Is~ues. The picture, Ing starring Robert '·Stack; Joan scenery ii)l'tcchnicolor are pleas­ahly' rank at the top. The Uni. mmed In colol by Golor Corp. of Teylor. and Charle~ JIIcGraw whlcli Ingly: ,(ol'lblned . in "Pa~slon" \"ersal • International :rcchnlcolor Aineriea, a United ArtlstR reo opens _tomorrow at "he Cornwa.1l wpich is !1'!.w playing at, tile prOOuetion ,of "Saskatc'hell'an," lease, wll\ open tomorrow at the' Theatre., " , Paramount Theatre to make this lthith opens tomorrow _ at !h'e Star Theatre, " Robert Stack, as a lieutenant In RKO.Benedl~CJ,logeaus production

'C&pitol 'Ihutre, joins both of Four fifths of this 'colorful cow charge.of a delachment of cav· R ~ompl_~teIY -~at~f~ing entertain· these eoloriul story.telling' back. ,cuuntry saga '. was IIImed on loca· nlry, _must reach the eamp of ment. , - ' '- , '

. ~nds. t ion, a fact which adds to the stR' Gray Cloud, tlie Indian chief. with Co.stimed arc Cornel Wilde and ture of ,Raz Nazarra as:' Holly· ~ peace treaty from -Washington Yvonne :OeCarlo aLthe head ,of a

~III Alan Ladd and SheIley \\Ood's topmost, outdoor, director, or war will break out. Although talented cast which Inciudes Ray· "'11Iters, "Saskat~hewan" covers "The Lone Gun" being thP sixth St~~k ;and his men at-first do not mond ,Burr, ·Lon ,Chaney, Rodolfo the' exciting period of Canadian Spectacle of wide open spaces dl· know It, their Indian guide Is the Acosta, Jolin Qualen and Anthony hlSl!"'Y ""hen _the American Sioux reeted by Nazarro in less _than ~on 'of Gray Cloud and determined ·cariiso. Alliin' Owan's direction t:OsSed !he bomer to join with two years. they shall ilOt reach -his fath~rreveals: the ,experience hand of Ihe Cinldlan Crees to challenge with what he believes always- wlll thclnan wlio niade "Sands of Iwo tbe: t\orth,,'est Mounted for the An entire croup of rnnch build· be 'a false peace between" red -Jlina~' and many oiher fine films. ~onlinlUOD of tbe Northwest Can. Ings ,,:as built and '''ngcd;' fo~ loca· man and white. ' -.dian 'ferrltory. 'Ihe picture was lion sequenc~s In the, 'flim. A This deeiaration of a _one.man I!rought these players together lil~ ill ,Its entirety III the Can. ranch house, bard' sheds and WJr against tile United States f(lr "War Pain!." lIIIian- 'Rocky Mounlains. other bulldlngs were aged so Army'. develops 5USpenSe that Is There arc ~o good'plctures with·

~jmost imbenrable. The portrayal ,out good scripts,: so praise Is due r.i the Indlnn's sister by Joan 'ray· I nlchard Allan SImmons and !liar· lor must sUJ'~ly elevate this tal. tm Berkley. The story was excel· entcd aclress to high places. !ently guided _and developed on

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NOW PLAYING.

Early falifomia ••• in those . wild and wicked days you

have read so ~uch' aboutl.

COHNU WilDE 'YVONN~ DeCARlO

. i'A"~i"lil • II~

RAYMOND IURR .. LON cHANEY

Extra - ExIra - SPECIAt fEATURETTE WALT DISNEY'S

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"STORMY THE THOROUGHBRED", EV£,'I;JNG SIIOWS': 7 O'CLOCK-9.00

MATINEE Il P.M,

NEXT ATTRACTION ' ROBERT WAGNER-TERti'f MOORE-GILBERT,

ROLA~D In "BENEATH TliE 12 MILE REEF"­

,\Dl'E!\'TUIlE AND TlIRILLS IN ClNEMASCOPE,

* TO-MORROW

When. The Most Dangerous Gulis, in The West ' ,

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WERE AIMED

AT ONE

BADGEI , '

Also-NOVELTY

TIMES OF SHOWS: ',': \

EVENING:, 7 O'CLOCK-S.OO '- ,

,MATINEE l P.M.

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-~T TIMES',To-DAY . "f!

" WITNESS '. TO' MU·RDER"'. '.

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Not only Stack, Aliss Taylor ,);e screen by Director Les Se· and lIIcGraw are completely con. lander, and camera • work (the villeing, but 50 are ali the otliers: f.lm was shot InPathe color) un· It was inspired casting that der the direction of Gordon Avil _______ .,.--__ ...;- Is truly breathtaking. Why has it realistically that nobody but the talen Hollywood so long' to dis· art director knew that the" struc· (,over'Dcath VrilJet as lhe setting tures were brand new. George for color photography? It Is 1II0ntgomery and Dorothy Malone nby the wodd's most colorful set· nJ'e'starred in the picture. , ling.

PIIII NEWFOUNDLAND'S FRl~NDLY THEA1R,E

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TO~MORROW

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Also-NOVELTY - CARTOON

" TIMES OF ,SHOWS:

EVENING snows: 7 O'CLOCK!...9.00

MATINEE Z p.nt; '~ "

LAST TI'MES TO-DAY'

"SUSAN SLEPT HERE II

'Also--up.io~ THE·MINUTE' NEWS

'. lIM~S OF'SHOWS,

EVENJNG"~HOWS: 1:15-9:15 , " ." .... ';.' .. ,"

MATIJtmES: MOND~' - TUESDA'f - WEDNE8DA'f-. ..' '.' ~ . \

THUJlSDAY-FJtD:)AY:._l.lIO !!ATUJlDA'f J O',CLOCK

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"Passl~n" is 1\ ~tory ~f the ,con· , F-• -h" T" h Wild R'· . itT' , l' ,,-~ T-Il\cts aild passions 0(' the PIOneer "Ig -,t':;:', e,'., ,I", -Iver! ~,;e_ W,' oW.I,St, .,_ 0. C&liiornla seltlers who- ivere Corced I ' to -defend their havilmdas, their ' -- , ' , - - F] S· t ranches arid' their families from - . amI Jar . tal' ,1ttacks by roving bands of ter·. - .' XXXI - ' -The . parson'& face blan~hed I REGINA (CP) - Farmer R ' '\'orlsts.' " The river wind _ whipped ,lYet livid wit~ t.hlttness. ~e was on. Paterson !lrovldr,-, a new twIll ~~ '.The. drama entersup'on the' snow ~gainst h~S .~ace, stimulat· the point of answer~ng and. thenll.:1C familiar stories of young Brit.

and romantic, consequprices Ing hIs blood. 1 he peculiar gen· for th: first time hIS Scriptures ish emig~ants ~ho journeyed over. ~uch ruthless raid 'whrn, an tler-ess "which had come to him had' no sustalulng value. They seas· to. make good. He worked In

ai'oused -young rancher' takes' the was a mood- h~ ,had never before had no bearing In this case for Canada, picked up some Ideas In law unto himself and sets ~ui to known aboard the steamboat.' it came to him Crotch ~Ight' con· fe\1 ~alan~ a~? rturned to En~ seck justice. Starting In_ the s'Olith: He ~hought for the first. time celvably be right. He recognized I a~ tall ~iet m~~ I::~'~~m' I' l'rn section of the territory_ north' Of. marrying Queenie. There was an unbending quallty in Crotch's I Mr, Paterson is a not~d aut~~~:~; qf the Mexican' border, 'the man. thiS bond bet~een them. this gaze as something basic, some·: on silage and dairy equipment. H~ hunt swirls through scene after timeless, mysterious lillking of thing primal that ran back into owns 7,OIlO acres, anrl 3,000 head 01 serne of suspenseful melodrama two beings whose minds -~ere the beginnings of time. And now cattle, a bill farm boldlng In an), to' culminate In the snow.covered attuned to ea~h other. He wlls he turned, m()Vmg slowly away_ countr)'. '., kreas ncar picturesque' Sonora, somewhat older than she.- was. , • •• • He visited Jlere during: the ann\lal where the story reaches its sur. and she had Dreyfus, but years Finally, Crotch became aware _ mC eetldng tOf the Dlfairh

y Farml ers 01 by th 1 It d f G b I I ann a 0 sec e • cou d pick

~rlse denouement. cmse ves . never rna ere ; 0 ross r ng og them up to up some nell' Idca~ In daln'iJ " As Juan Obr~on, the vengeful the wl\1lngnes~ and desire and Castle Dome. He sighted tile HARVEST WORKER • 10

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\'~quero, Cornel'. Wilde has what wisdom were shared between darkening shore, failing: to find He first arrived in Canada in may be rated obis best assignment them. , the Clnrmore. She was Upriver. 1918 and worked In the l\!arltimes ~ince ';The Greatest Show On Dus,k had come down so thick. then, having already arrived and and ODtnrio before coming west on Gartll." - Yvonne DeC~rlo, always, ly he barely, recognized Snod· departed from Castle Dome's for· a, harvest ex cur s Ion. lie lho!n at home in a fiery action rolE! is grass standIng with his back lorn landing strip. Ilorked a year on a Saskatche\\"~n (.xcellent In her dual portrauai of against the railing .. The parson He made out the ghostlike up. IC3httiCe Irancbhl befohre m~vlng to Brit· , h d hi's 0 urn n, were \Ie spent 'our the Spanish beauty killed In the a se?n ~ emerge from per ","orks of tne San Diego, the years. " raid and her younger .sister who ~lIeenle s ,~ahlll and was now Navigation packet that had been Re~urning to England to take up as~\' nes the dead girl's place In watching ,nth a scornful look. beached more thall a year ago, farmmg there and be married be the vaquero's heart. Raymond, He said In his biting condemna· The steamboat slid hef nose found land was being aband~ncil Burr, deserting his v111alnous char. ti~~: gently against t~e mudbank; be~a~se of complalntst hat fa~ming aCterizations for the first time, Is You should be horsewhipped their Indian deckhands rail out didn! pay. No one bad a claim on ~ompletely convincing as the chief for that! But there are other pun· their gangplank. At ·the same in S,O--acre patt of former Carm or the Spanish constabulary. ishments visited upon man that time Jim Melolt's safety value and near Lon on SO he took I'

t Iti " b over. . Especially noteworthy Is the arc even grea er pena es, egan screeching. LEARNED IN CANADA photography of Academy Award Crotch fought down an anger As soon as ,'Goss had climbed lIIr. -PatcrsOll attributes mUch 01 winner John Alton and the fine that was dark bile agaillst his down from thl~ uppen deck ero· his success to wllat he learned in attention to detail by Benedict tongue. "Twlup. you've made a teh said, "Keep our Cocopahs Canada. He didn't adopt Canadian llugeaus' who produced' this fea. mistake," he said In bare whis· from going ashore. It got a hunch farml~g methods but hasn't rc"'" ture fo; RKO Radio distribution. per. "Do It lilaln and' I'll drop about Jamiso'1. Something don't te~ hIS stay here. Th i b B t' A you In the river!" set well with mc." - .1 learned .to get up and g~t It

e scr,een p ay y ea flCC • "If I h d a Job When It needed to be done Dresher and Josef Leytes stems ave ma e an error, Virtually all the fleshy' planes and that Jlas been valuable" he lrom an adaptation by Howard Snodgrass sal~, sharply with ~Is of Goss's face had turned black says. • El-tabrook and was based upon I head lifting, I would 1.lke to from the fight Duey had put up His farming methods are ba,ed slory by Beatrice A. Dresher. knoW;!. What have I saId taht Yet this was the only remaining on ideas pick~d up in New Zealand. Miguel Padilla and Josef Leytes. w~~ng\ - sign of the exhaustion that had . Mr. PatersOll Is known as the In·

Thl! aftemolln you mls· claimed 'him in Yuma. His I'entor of the Paterson buck ral;e judged my mate when he'd had strength had seemingly all com1l a device for picking up mown gra'~ nothing at all to drink. One of back from some undisclosed and du,!!ping it into. ~i1os. He also Jamison's crew, one of hIs hired storehouse. A remarkable man has. achlte,ed 'trhecognltJo~ as an ex·

M A P kill t t f 'G d . ' penmen er WI grass mixtures, An r ap rO"ram ers, se a rap or OSS an as Crotch had often realJzed duro experimenter fir t h . 'k'

Callucks, Yanks . 5 laid hIs head open," Crotch said Ing th!l years they had spent to· to produce bette~' dalrylS a~r d~na~

H I GOd I' breathlessly, and then pused gether. GO'Ss's gaze slid over the purpose cattle. a t n mports while the an~~' subsided against snow·marlted lallding strip, his ----~-, ~ his temples. Tbe other time you mind strangely adrift from this U MO Sh f . By JACK REST were lower than the meanest scene. !\Iany seasons had come se' Ine a ts

Canadian Press Staff Writer t1 I th t I ". ' PHILADELPHIA (CP) _ Cana. 1 ng a crav.- s. and gone for him, along the, F Sko R dian and American football off! Snodg~nss' sobriety never wav· rivers, yet with each It was the: or InnS' cials mapped a program Saturday ered. Appearances, Captain, I same, There were times. regard: I ', . for halting international player speak clearly against you." less of how he willed It, whell HAILEY~URY, On!. (CP):;-Fulk' raids but then had ·to, suspend the He understood the indignation his thoughts played him tricks around HaJle~'bury are skung on agreements because of a di,pute in Snodgrass but be could not • • • I' abandoned mme ~h~!ts. . over whether the pact should ap· accredit Its justness. Queenie The nlleyways of New York's l1hc rorth~~~G S~I dClub W~ldl fPlY thO new imports already signcd had called upon him In he mo· slums had spawned Goss, a rag· ~i:: p:~:erties j~s:nso~thn oct ~~~ orAtt e tl955hseason. I t' ment of lonlincss, of panicky I gedly clother urchin belonging town 70 miles north of North SOl;

a wo· our morn ng mee 109, 'f t fl di h If I b h '. . , . commissioner Bert Bell of the.Na- , car a n ng erse n a ras _, I to a poverty·ridden family. He l~ !la,s four 1,800·foot SkI, runs ,on tlonal Football League and offi. cold world. Iwas remembering one Christmas \lhat once was an actl\'e mIne . I f ta B' F ~ h d h h d het d'f 1 f th property and last slimmer cluh

Cia so" e ,Ill ~ur ~ .ae e He ground out grufily "You're e a e B ow rom e m be b 'It j " , agreement on five major pOints, In. 'meat. stalls running with It in. em rs UI a .unlor lump O\N eluding -a promise to honor con· a rock·souled New England, psal. Id hi h'lrt th h th d k an abandoned Vlme mill on th~ tracts, and options.' msingcr whose fathers prated en· s, e s s rou~ e Ar slope of a 300·foot hill . "However, during two further couragement whlle_ they burned Side stree~. ~he viVIdly remem· The ~.rowin.( ski .centre is fla· hours of bargaining, they were un. good women for witches. Mine bcred ImpreSSion represented the vore~ \\Ith .mmmg ~15tory. A mme ,abl\! to .settle the vita! question of stood there, too, and probably only time. Goss had stolen any" car filled \V~th rock IS used to ~e~p retroactivity on whIch' all tbe t th fl t h b h 11 thing In hiS life, and he had no the long skI tow rope taught 1\ hlle agreements 'hinged The meeting pu e ame, a er rus p. es. regrets Without that fowl their i ~kiers are- hoisted to Ule top of the

. ' But I've come a way since those' , 11"11 broke up WIth the understanding , ' • table would have remained emp'jl I.. -tha~ the two leagues would pursue day. You ~aven t, and you d bet· t • He was thinking noW or that • The ,electrlCally.powered ~Oll' 11-LbeJr efforts to reach agreement ter start looking around the y 1 d 'h I··elf, \I orth about $10,~. II as du, on this matter world." guant. ong.£:tce \yoman w a nnted by P. M. Fleming, a loc.,J

. had hurriedly placed the me:!.t I miner. -

BOX OFFICE OPEN ALL DAY AT FEILD COLLEGE

'PHONE 6221

LESLIE YEO and. OLIVER GORDON f

ane! a millicin laughs!

"Will Any Gentleman?" 'SEATS FOR

TO·NIGHT Z.OO, 1.50, 1.00. 50c.

Door sale from 1 p.m. 'Phone 8221

Advance aale at Bowrlnu

into her potj he was thinking ofl INFANT SKIER -his drunken father lyIng In the Clllb members also boast the other room, of the five younger I ~'ounlle,st skier on record. ll~ i, brothers waiting hungrily beside Bobby Gough, 7, son _of tile c1uh'; the table until the bird was ! f~under, Saslmtchewanborn IPO!

, , ' Gough. cooked. . . i Bobby started to ski when he \l'a<

"Never can be sure of' Jaml· ! 22 months old . son," Crotch was saying to Jim The older -Gough, president of the Melott. The engineer was thrust· local chamber of commerce, c:lm~ ing his arms Into a short Army to this district as a mining mar jacket which he wore over a i~ 19tG. A ~oekey enthu~iast nil hi, checkered wollen shirt. "Jim. hfe, .he deCided it wa~ b~e to qUlI you got a gun handy?" ; p!aymg hockey but dldn t want t,· , I gIve up ,outdoor sports.

The lank engine~r slapped"his, "Slriing was the logical answer,' pocket, grinned tightly. AlII he ,says, "but wbere was I to sk:'~' right. They're not going to wantl Looking over the countryside he us slipping up on Claramore. You settled on a spot on a winding ro.' can count on Jamison's worst." ncar the abandoned mine shall;

(To Be Continued) - where a hill drops sbarply to Ihl

Table Lamps From Driftwood

ORILLIA, Onto (CP) - Hans Fleming turns driftwood into table lamps, some of t1iem with sizable price tags. ' '

He brought his wife an,d four chU. dren from Holland [our years ago and wasn't ~pset when be found the streets aren't paved with gold. lIe found his fortune on nearby Lake Simcoe; ,

"We take I small boat, the whole familY, and go out collecting on Lake Simcoe or Lake Conchiching,"

, -, , . ",

- .'

edge of Cross lake. , Today a large modern chalet ha' been built there for mp.mbers ant visitors.

ANCIENT TOWN Ipswich .near London, Englanil,

was a settled 'slte perhaps 2,OO~ years before the Roman occup~ tion.

OLD INDUSTR Y The linen Industry was introduteo

in Belfast, one of the' world's lug e,st linen centres, in 1633.

he said. He cleans and sands the drih·

wood. When highly polis.iJed il makes ultra·modern table lamr~·

DAL

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- C,N WEDNESD,\Y. Janu --~.M. 51 a 730- gn n.

7'30-TDp of the Mor 'oo-CBC News and

h5-MUsical CI~ck. , 9'oo-Morning Del'ot! lI'I5-PrOgramme Pr( 9'Zo-Organ Stylings. 9'30-Melody Scrapbl 10'00-Triple Treasur( 10'I5-Maud Fergusol IO·2.5-CBC News. IO'3D-TOP of the Bi! 10'45-Breakfast Club 11'I5-Atlantic SchoU U·30-Nfld. School I 1l:45-Parade of Sta p.M. C' 12.00-Announcers 12.15-Dinner Bcll I 123o-Farm Broadca 12' 45-Aunt Luc~·.

,-

1:00-Mid Day. S~f( l.t5-Laura Limite, 13o-CBC News an 1:45-Doyie Bullet! Zoo-Your Good r z" 15_Words and )' 2'30-Atlantic Sclu 2'45-Thc Happy li 3:t5-MlIsic~t Kil~ 3,aD-Trans Canaa --PRIN( MARGI ,"A Girl of

Whal Is Prill rcalh' likc'! ~I~ writtcn ahoul lhl princess, Tn nht ture. the Sl~r. \1 ~ spccial artw.c lhe pen of l}tor Lundon writer : is Intimatel)' acql roval family. 111 Iter Timc".

"\\fa~ Laurcm;r 01' Charl~t~\1" \),. i\lr,l\hcw 1t,,1 pean Crlrr('sl'lllHI

l1oc\;rt \til-hnr of hl'illi~\lr~" f

C~\1a(]icns. shall prcc~(](,llls. Til ,,"eddy h~s a >1 Ilockry r~n~. Itl:: Sccrct f{)1"l1l111r.

This \I-rrk's I Ql!cic' a Co <h ;11"

:~ ACROSS

t Feminine appellatiol

5 Masculine app~llat1o

8Lohengri~ , bride 1~ Sea cagle 13 First wc~ H Largctub 15 Surface,

street 16 Sickness

(mod,) 17l::ncoura~

'18 Greck ICI 119 Ailing 120Mineral ,21 Rat 24 Frighten 27 City In

Nevada '28 Sound 0 ; disapprc . 29 Pedal di

31 Sorrow! 32 Doctrinl 331ndlvldl 34Challen

136 Seize 39 Fondle

': 41 Irritate i 43 Entire '144 Brazili: . maca\\' 46 Go\[ m 47 Pace

: 49 Decay 50Perche 51 Girl's 52 Peer (

mothc! 53 Shield HTo cut 55 Fowl 5SVelet:

Page 11: !Pears,oil .Eis~nhowet~,,;, H· ;' . F' .' · Move ':::~~. litcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · ,mcan II aI', I tIC nnese e so·, . . • tents-it was almost

;on.lla i~ ~1~rilimcF ; wl!~t (\n lll' tMn

hewan Brit· four

" hlch thrl!c Ihi~

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"'. :\ mine <cd 10 keep ,I:hl ,,"hill'

: lOp of Ihe

---

-\n:llS~SJ)A \', Januar)' 26tb ---------

A ". ~ 3L1-Si~n On. ~ 3ll-Top o( the Morning. Slltl-CBC News and Weatbcr. ~17>-~IUsical Clock. Q (Ill-~Iorning Devotions. Q t7>-Programme PrevieW. ~'~LI-or~an St~·lIngs. Q3ll-)!elody Scrapbook.

t;l (III-Triple Treasure. t~ t7>-)taud Ferguson. 111~5-CBC News. 1(l31l-ToP oC the Bill. 1(1 ~;-Break(ast Club. 11: 17>-At1antlc School Broadcast. IPll-Nlid. School Broadcast. IlA~-parade of Stars. r)1. i 1:~~1-Announcers Cho cc. I: 15-Dinner Bell Breakdown. I~ 3G-Farm Broadcast. l=A5-Aunt Lucy. I (\()-~lid Day Serenade. I 15-Laura Limited. l:lO-CBC News and Wcather. 14;-Do\'le Bulletin. "!l\l_Yoilr Good Nel~hbol1r. ~ 1~_Words ami )tusic. ~ :W_,\t\antic School Broadcast.. : .I~_ The lIapp~' Gang. '1;;_~lmical Kitchcn. ~ ;lo-Trans' Canada ~Iatinee.

4.30-CBC News.

US-News. 6.30-Denny·Vauaghan. 6.45-Pat DawHsh .. 7.00-News. , 7.0l-Courtshlp and Marriage. 7.1S-Program Reporl. 7.30-News •.

IJa'coby On Bridge COOPERATION, SKIl.L WIN ,BRIDGE GAMES

US-The Grey Goose. S.OO-News. By OSWAl.D JACOBY S.Ol-Passlng Parade. East didn't \tRite a bad penally S.1S-Hospllallty Time. double oC 'four spades In today;s 8.30-Tarzan. 9.00-News. . hand, but It would have been a 9.0l-Album of Favourites. better double If he had been a 9.1S-Crime Club. . btl it bl tl 9.4S-DOSCO News. e ter payer. To put un y,

10.OO-Hlt Parade. a player who "pnnot put up close

4.3S-Tlmely Tunes. 4.45-Chlldren's Story. . 5.lS-Carnation Entertains. 5.3Q.!-Flsherles Broadcast. 5.4S-Klndergarten of the Air. 6.00-Share the Wealth. 6.1S-Intermezzo. 6.2S-Program Preview. 6.30-Supper Guest. 6.4S-1nterlude for Rhythm. 7.00-CBC News and Weather. 7.1S-Curtaln Calls. 7.30-Tops .Today.

10.I~Crime Fighters. defenses shouldn't make close

\

10.4S-Kenny Baker.' doubles., n.OO-National News. " West opened his singleton 11.15-1 was a Communist for FBI., heart on the vssumptlon tho at he n.4S-Sports Parade. 12.00-N ews. might need to set up a heart trick 12.01-Houseparty. but would either make or not l2.30-;-News., make club hicks without the 7.4S-Doyle Bulletin.

B.1S-A Nt1d. Story. 8.30-Rawhide. 8.45_1ntroduction to Wednesday

Night. 9.00_Corlolamus.

U,30-CBC National News. News Roundup anll Midweek Re· view.

12.00-Close Down. ------CJON

WEDNESDAY, January 26tb - -A.M. 7.00-Wake up and Live. 7.10-NelVs. 7.15-Slrongth for the Day. 7.30-News, 7.3S-13ob Lewis Show. 7.45-News. '7.50-Bob Lewis Show. a.oO-News.

12.35-Houseparty. need for establishment plays, de· 12.M-News. 1 b loOO-Queen and Sign Of!. pending on whe had the c u ace. 'V 0 U· S Dummy played a loW heart, and

WEDNESDAY, January 26th

A.M. 6.30-Slgn On and Sundial. B.30-Today's The Day. B.4S-Curt Massey. ' 9.00-lt Happened Last Night. 9.50-Bob Hope. . ,

lO.OO-Coffec Time. ll.OO-Ronnle Kemper. 'i1.l5-Univcrsity Explorer. 11.30-The D.B. 1l.35-'-Flbber McGec and Molly. 11.4S-John Conte. P.M.

East won with the nlnc. At the second ttlek East could

h'avc returne(\ almost anything except the ace of hearts and would still have deCeated the contract. ,Actually East cashed the hcart acc; and West tried to slngal for a dIamond shift by playing the five oC diamonds.

East failed to take encourage· ment from this signal. Hc plung· ed right ahead wllh another heart, hoping that his partner would develop a trump trick ..

PRINCESS t, MARGARET

B.05-Bob Lewis Show. S.30-News. 8.35-Bob Lcwis Show. !I.00-News, . D.05-Piano Moods. !I.20-Blrthday Party. !l.30-Tudor Princess. 1l.4S-Women's News.

10.OO-News. . 10.01-Time out with Westons. 10.1S-What's on II\f Mind? 1O.3D-Who Am n . 10.45-Memory Hit of the D3)·. IO.50-"X" Marks the Spot. 1l.OO-Ncws.

12.00-Pcpperrell ,luke Box. 1;O()-Hlllbllly Matinee. 1.30-Smlley Burnette. 1.4S-Tennessee Ernie. 2.00-Bud's Bandwagon. 2.30-Johnny Mercer. . 2.45-Instrumentally Yours. 3.00-VOUS Record Room, 5.00-Martln Block. 5.30-Sports Editor Speaks, 5.4S-AFRS News. 6.00-Insidc Track. 6.IS-March or Events. 6.30-Toplcs and Issucs. 7.00~AFRS Ncws. 7.1S-Can You Top This? 7.30-~!eet Corliss Archer. S.OO-Groucho Marx. S.30-Jcffersonian Heritagc. D.OO-Theater Ro~·al. 9.30-Dragnet.

South drew a breath, ruffed with the king uf spades, took out trumps with the queen and ace. and dlscardcd a diamond on the king oC hearts. He then pro·

WORTH (D) ZB . "A Girl of Her Time"

\\,hat Is Princess :\tal'g:!l"ct Inl!" like7 :\lany things arf! ,,,.,ti~n ahllut this lo\,ely younl: rnl1l'\"~' Til ohtain a true pIc· ",,'r. Ihc Slm' \\'eckl~' obtained ;; 'prl'ial artic'ic about her £I'om :1", 1'<'11 nf \)l'rl11ut i\lorrah, a t""clllll writer ant! eelitor whu

i 1_ 1I11il11at<'}\· acquaintcd with the :1 ,.,,·;t\ (al1liiy. Hend "A Girl of

11,:~ Timc". '\\'a~ l.aurcllCl' or Arahin lIel'll

,',' Charlatan" Sre the article ". \1; IIhl'\\' lIaltul1. enc ~ur()'

, 1',-;l'l Cnrr{'~plllldcn1. :1 1;"l"I;rl Hit'h~rd. the "had hoy

.. , hl"i\\ialll'~" (If thc Montreal 1''\''rliclI~. ~haHNS rccllrels and l""I'rrlrnl~. This wcck's Star Leei;!\" ha~ a ,porls f('ntm'c fur ! ""1;1": f~II" Heml "1'hc Hocket's ~frrrt I'ornllllr. ...

n.ol-Bill Ring Show. 1l.15-Aunllllary. 11.30-The DCI'II and the Lady. l1.4S-Dal·ld's Chlldren. P.M.' 12.00-News. 12.05-Homcbakers Quiz. 12.10-Hit of the Dar· 12.15-Recipe for MUSIC. 12.30-News. 12.35-Boh Lewis Show. l.OO-News. 1.01-Premier Pals. 1.15-Blue Star News. l.30-NcW5 Digest. l.40-Bargam Hour. 1.45-Road of Life. 2.00-N 1'\\'5.

Th;, wl'rk·;. l.'",h·\\'llrll PUllle .,~:e;·' .1 l·",1t Ilrizl' (If S600.

2,Ol-Pcrry ~Iason. 2.15-Young Dr. Malone. 2.30-Rcll Skelton. 3.00-News. 3.0l-Houscwlves Club (prilcs).

q,teSTAR WEEKLY

•••••• . ' .

This week's issue

NOW ON SALE

4.00-News. 4.05-Spot t,e Slars. 4.1S-Ranch Party. 4.30-:-SunUght Song Parade. . 4.4S-Rancb Party. .5.00-News. 5.0l-Rancb Party . 5.l5-Kiddie CarnIval. 5.30-Record Shop. n.OO-News. 6,01-CJON Bulletin Board •. 6.0S-Record Shop. 6.lS-Sports Parade.

. - ._ ..... _.. - ,_ ... __ .. _ ... -----~--------

'1..1' _______ ..... --1\ Answer to Prevloui Punli ~, Girls and Boys _

ACROSS

1 Feminine appellation

5 ~!a~culine app~llation

8 Lohengrln's bride

1~ Sca eagle 13 First woman H Large tubs 15 Surface a

street 16 Sickness

(med.) 17 I;ncourage IB Greek letter IP Ailing ~() Mineral rock 21 Rat 24 Fr' bl ~;

Ig encr City in Nevada

2B

: :9 31 . -. . o. 33

L ~4

:i6 ~O 41 43

144

Sound of disapproval Pcdal digit Sorrowlul Doctrine Individual Challenge Seize Fondle Irritate Entire Brazilian m~caw

46 ~i 49 50 51 5~

Gol! mound Pa~e Decay Perches Girl's name Peer Grnt's

DOWN 1 Victim of'

leprosy. 2 Speaker 3 Assail ~ Observe 5 Send payment 6 ElIIpsoidal 7 Shouts 8 Uncle Tom's

friend 30 Type measure i,O Wite of 9 Tolls '31 ThUJ Abraham

10 Cubic mettH '34 The - 41 Communion 11 Fall !lower brllthers pLate 22 All 36 Feminine 42 Set anew 23 Hangman's name U "Able', Irish

knoll 31 Dress -" 2S Alter . 38 Insect· 48 Pastry 26 Helpers 39 Hurls 50 Weep

4 ,3 ,* S & f 18 ~ 10 II

17. 13 !q

15 1& 11

IS ,1'1 1D ZI 71. rz;- !5 fib

Z7

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13'1 ~. )J I~

)9' rp It1.

~3 I[If 1116 ,

If7 m ijf po Shield olearin~ )1. ~ p3 To cut . Fowl 511 ,55 5b Vegelable

CUR BOARDING HOUSE

16

10.OO-News of the Day. 10.lS-UN Stor~·. 1O.30-Hall oC Fantasy. 1l.OO.,....Muslc Till Midnight. 12.00-Sign Of[ and Anthem.

VO'CM WEDN~SDA Y, January 26th

A.M. 7.00-Breakfast Club. 7.30-News. 8.00-Breakfast Club. 8.30-HIt o[ the Day. B.3S-News 8.40-Namo the New!oundlander. 8.55-The Gospel Singer. 0.00-Three Suns. 9.1S-Man From Yestcrday 9.30-Musie .In the Morning. 9.4S-The Dark God.

10.0()-News • 10.0S-Music from Coast to Coast. 10.4S-0rgan Enchores. 10.5S-News. 1l.OO-Rldln' the Range. n.30-Song Time. 1l.4S-Keyboard Capers. P.M. . 12.00-Tops in Pops. 12.15-Bank of, Happiness . 12.30-News. 12.3S-Musleal Menu. 1.30-News. US-Tunes for Today. 2.00-Betty Grable-Harry James

Show. 2.5S-News. 3.00-Dollars on Parade. 4.00-News. 4.05-Ncwfoundland Parade. 4.35--:Bank of Happiness. 4.50~Humebaker's Quiz. 4.5S-News. 5.DO-Junior.Jamboree. 5.30-Aunt Anna's Story time. 5.45-Supper Serenade. 6:00-News aid Weather. G.05-SlIpper Serenade,' 6.25-Lost.and Found. 6.4O-lt's a QlIeer Old World. 6.4S-News. 7.00.-The Barrelman. 7.1S-Doetor Paul.

",AH ¥KI0632 • J7 ",AJ4

WEST' EAST ",102' ",J ,4 ¥AQJ95 • AQ54 • lOS&:>' ",KQ9632 .1085

Norih I¥ Pass q • PafiS

soum "'KQ9865~ • 87 tK83 "'i Both rides ,·ul.

E~ Sl>ulh Wfill Pass J. 2. 3'" 3. •• Double Pass Pass

. O~ening lead-¥ 4

ccedecl to run the rest of his trumps.

When Soutll led his last trllmp Wcst and tile dummy were each down to two diamonds and two clubs. West Jared not discard another club, for thcn dummy'S ace and jack wuuld both be good. Hcnce West had to tlart with the qlleen, oC diamonds. '

South now discarded the jack of clubs Crom dummy and led a diamond. West got his ace of diamonds, but then declarer had the last two tricks with the ace ol clubs and the king DC dia· monds.

It was a very neat squeeze, to bc sure, but South owned as much to East's coopel'allon as he did to his own skillCul play •.

Loses Fight Retain Toilet

CHiSELHURST, Eng I and. (fleuters) - David Millwood to· day admittcd deCeat - at least for the pres~nt, - In a nine.month fight to keep the moder ntoilets he had installed in his home.

The local water board had or­dered him to remi ove the valve· controlled nushing system by to· day or have his water supply cut off.

The board contended the mod·

7.30-Sons of the Pioneers. B.OO-Date In Hollywood. 8.15-Canada At Work. a.30-Penthouse Party. 9.00-The Scarlet Pimpernel. 9.30-Melaehrlno Musicale. 9.4S-News.

10.OO-The Amazing Oscar Ham· ern toilets wasted water.' An inspector today determined

that Millwood had dismantled the valves o[ the system and had reo turned to the old·fashioned cislern method of flushing,

mersteln. • 10.30-0ne Night Stand . 10.4S-News. 1l.OO-Sportscast. ll.1S-Fanstay Bandstand. 12.00-News. 12.01-Fantasy Bandstand .. 12.30-News. . 12.3S-Fantasy Bandstand. 1.00-News In a Minute and

ClosedolVn.

T.hrough Ihe long bottle, Mill­wood had argued that since Buck· vingham Palace had t.,'Je modern

. flush toilets, he felt he had a right • to them. ' .

SOLDIERS RIDE FREE THE HAGUE, The Netherlands

(Reuters)-Defence Minister Cor­nells Star, .who set off a national furore when he banned hitch·hik· Ing by soldiers six weeks ago, now has announced that servicemen will b~ provided with free trans· port whell going home on leave.

lie said he was (orced Lo capitu· laIc becallse "one of my children has mumps and my wife is sick."

"I just couldn't allow the water board to turn off the water at a time like Ihis." ~IAY CONTINUE BATTLE

However, he refused to promisc t.hal he wouldn't again lake up his campaign.

L

, ~~~~~~~

W~enthe inspector asked what his future plumbing intentions were he replied:· "That's my business."

The modern toilets flushed al· most silently by means o[ a water pipe valve. These havc been avail· able In Britain only since 1947 al·' though the~' have been the' ac· cepted equipment in Canada for 30 years or more.

. . " : I

,

The standard fixture in Britain Is the slow·to·fill cisterntype o[ toilet flushed by a. cuain.

REDS GET A.WEAPONS BERLIN (Reuters) The West

Berlin newspaper Der Abend says atomic artlUery and guided ml;;· siles have been distributed to Sov· iet troops throughout East Ger; many. It claims to have rellable reports that the weapons have been sent to units in the Schwerin, Er· furt and Magdeburg:areas.

COPS NAB COPS TORONTO (CP) The occupants

of a certain city policc·erulser,are . shamc.faced: Warned to walch' for a car In which wcre three ".suspi· cious acting" men, 1~le officers in the cruiser spotted the car carly Saturda), aod investigated. The three "~u3picious eharact~rs'" In ,the car were RCMP officers. '.

BUGGS BUNNY

ha:CI(LES AND HIS FRIENDS

11 THE"DAIlY NEWS; WEDNESDAY,"'JAN. 26, ~ :"55 , ._,,--'---

• .. OUI!. GI:!Oc.eRY ~IU. WEtJT ur A 1!lIJO:!) -.-1iJ.l.T PAIl>. 0" SKI5

'!=OR. 'IOU ALI.I05r­WRECKED MY BUt>(,Ef, ,i.t<D [;1!..Tf:NNISCIIS BILl. JUST OM~ IN"-

I CAN 'TELL THESE DAINTY LliTLE FEET ARE

VERONICA'S!

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12 THE DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JAN. 26, 19.5.5 PRINCE OF WALES WIN COlLEGIATE DEBUT st. Bon's Roll

To 10-2 Sweep

Go Six CommeJ

St. Pat's Hold Champs FOl·',Firsl T tVO Periods

St. Bon's built up momentum after- 8 slow start at the Stadium on Monday night to roll to their second impressive win in succes· slon, a 10·2 conquest of St. Pat's, before 3479 St. John's Senior Hoc·

. Prince Of Wales Win 3-2 :: In . Collegiate Hockey

GUARDS MEET ke~h~a~:~ond targcst crowd of the

:-SlolV Ice Surface Hampers Fast-Moving , wits with the champs for the better CRUSADERS IN season watched st. Pat's match

from Ed. Manning shot st. Bon's Into a 4·2 second period lead. In the slight interval between the time the clock ran out Bnd Ihe time the sound of the big bell reached the crowd St. Bon's srored again but the goal was disallowed

The champions didn't need it: how~ver. The Blue and Gold scormg power asserted Itself and resulted in a 6-11 conquest of 5t Pat's in the third period to Pi1~ up a runaway 10·2 score .

¥ ollugsters part of two periods. St. Bon's led

Prillce of Wales made their rrlnce of Wales and three to HOCKEY TONITE 2·1 at the end of the first action debut in the IntercollegIate Hoc. Bishop Feild. packed period and -i·2 after the

lit)' nrifS In important one at the LINEUPS second. S"';,. "'''''' ••• m.'" wh" PRINCE OF WALES _ GMI, G.,"" ...... , C"'" m." ... m. B.,'o .",1. or I"d ,.1" ... , .... d 00' tho """" F"ld n.n G_Il, dof" .. E. WI'Mi, ""',., "" s.,,"" " "" ,_ I". 'h .... , p."", WM 'W. ,,,"

•. ", .. , •• ,. p" • fin' p"" ft. Pot" .,.d., L. Wh"", B. C'''', "~ 'f tho SL ,.hn', """,... ",,'" whU, SL P •• , .'" ,hNt· "ith defending ehamplons 51. forwards, S. Noel, E. pounder, Pat key League series and both for handed through penalties. Buoyed Eon's.' II W G KI their second game of, the .eallln, UJl by the inspiratlona! goaltcnd.

Dickic, D. As ,C. arr, • ng, h f tl B h I I In the opening game of the col. E. Garland, G. Win~or, S. Watson, T e ormer Sec on camp ons, ng of Tim Shea, St. Pat's fought "" ,moo t .. , S"""" 'h. C. P • .,tl Coo,h, "',,,.. .... G .. roo, "",,, • ,. _4 10"' h"k I. U, tho ~.re Iwl" Frildians were nosed out 5-4 In a BISHOP FEILD-Goal, Tolson into tonight's contest. They con. tn what were two of the 'better tilr1l1cr. Yesterda)"s gamc, how. Chapman: defence, F. Vallis, B. quered the Feildlans in their flrlt periods of hockey this season.

Ted Gillies opened third period sroring at 2.50 from his new line mate Noel Sparrow. Cyril Power from Hugh Fardy at 5.07 made it 6·2. Ed. Manning's goal fr.om Mort Ryan at 7.20 made the score 7·2, and Jack neardigan· • second goal at 13.56 from Cyril Greene vaulted the Blue and Gold in front B·2.

e\'cr, lackrd the Ilualities o( the Brien, II. Mews, B. Steele, E. Duf. game, Holy Cross, however, Ire But the traditional third period "'"'' ~"" to ,ho ,h.pp)', wd f.n,'. "",~, S. B .... , J. .". ".ktog thd, fint .... Th.,. !OO, ~I",ht hy St. B .. ',!cl' Ittll' .unaee :f the rink which pre. cell, G. Young, D, IIQllell, D. Bart. 10 st. Pat's in'thetr season debut. doubt that the Blue and Gold jug·

, ... " • "'" h~k 'l.. I,,,, D. K""'" •. Ittoh" E. H'" 0'" oh",~ ",",' ,I"" , .. ,," "id" "'.. ",.dUo.

A pair of goals by Ted Gillie! his second and third of the game', at 15.37 and 16.16, ended Icorinl in the 10.2 contest.

The Collegians lell 2.0 at the lett. coach, Matt Foster. ' lineup will be the addition of Phil penalties. Only one penalty was · "d .f 'h' lint "nod "d h,ld •• ,.--'''' VI""mh, ,,' M.dd" .. to tho C,,,.d,,,. •• h,od,d ,,' "d It h.d " ,ff .. '

on durin!: the second while Feilll 'l'rd Withers. ,will likely centre one of the lIoly on the scoring. · ~"""d !h •• ,.1. ,. Korl., NEXT GAME . C,," "ri'''' Th. Gm. G .. ,d, T., """ " 'h. ,.m. w .. T.d

Eight penalties were called hv referees Jack Connors and Jn~ Smith wUh five goIng to 5t. Pal',.

LINEUPS

1t!'llIcd in the Ihird period. SATURDAY- lineup will lPpear. Gillies with three goals wllile . h;, >I,,,d .. ,,, ",U", I. '" st. B"" ". Pd" •• f W.,... G.m. U~ .... l .. m~l .... n n", "d "" r'" ,I. ,.,,' h"k., I""," .. It look< Iik. a "nga lin. the goal ,f P,in" 01 W.I" .,lmind .. B,,' ' ... ,dtgo. ",It ·~",d tw'". st. 164:! 'jlns filled all the permanent Iner-Club Guzzwell in tbis photo taken at yesterday's 111tercoIlegiate hockey game hut Pat's goalie Tim Shea left the

ST. BON'S-Goal, Merv Greene' defence, Farrly, Hutton, C. Green~' Organ; forwards, Gillies, 5parrQ\; Reardigan, Power, Vinicombe, cor: bett, McNamara, Manning Ryan Coughlan. "

seats ~ the Stadium. Though lhe KEEPING YOUR 't' t TI' tt' b h f ] ,crowd gasping for lhe betler part 1 5.110, ' , ley re a pre y serious WlC 0 P ayers as Stan Breen of Fel']d, 'vl'th f II f' tid ,.ame ,artcd olf slowly it wound T I h ,Ole Irs per 0 as he thwarted up wi h a bang as bolh teams Meeting onig It w ,Ite 1IIUform (left) s,hoots: T~amm~te Doug Squires goes in for the rebound. SI. Bon's on sensational stop after

· mixed Il up in a free (or all which STADIUM NEAT P~ID~e of Wales ~aptalD EriC Wmsor IS ready to assist alternate c:aptain Peter slop. After fourteen minutes of · ... It n. P""" ", .. U"d. Dt<k.. tmd goal.. Guuw.1I ~lear !h. p.,k wht,h ,,,,,Il,d in DO dong... The ',,"orln, "u .. 10· Ih. fin' p"'''

ST. PAT'S-Goal, Tim Shea; d~ fence, Hansford, Vaughan, Slon~,

Be.nnett, D~ffy; forwards, Murphy, WlIhers, FIeld, D. Shea, Whiffen Walsh, Oakley, Fitzgerald, Abholt:

Gm' K\" "'"'" ".rl" f" ~" I"" CI,b B •• U" ....... Porn" .1 WoI" w.n 3.2, I .. , J.h, ."roig" '<ok<. tho I'rlner of Wales aftcr less than d.t D'l N "ill hold lis annual meeting to. spell of Tim Shea.

Sports E lor, al yews, nl'ght at 8.15 p.m. I'n st. Pat's AI. R d" i , three lIIinutes had llone in the Dear Sir,-In Monda~"s DAILY' S 0 So ear Igans goa at 14.45 re·

· :~~: ~:";';i:;I;:.':';i~ • ~:~: ~~.~S w~ h,~:;' p:;,~h~1 S:::~. '''~~''F''U." Ih"" wi[ b. Ih. creammg, lrenS :::!~~;"mG:'::';:~'~ S~":::~; Referees-John Connors ann

,Toe Smith.

ChaplTan lillIe chance as PWC ium?" That question rang a bell flection of offices, reports for the M k 0 ° Of ·PUT THE ORPHANS a 1-11 lead. A pair of Shamrock · ",~i Ih,i' fin' , .. , '0 \h, ",lth m.. , .. , "d pi'" ,,, thlo , .. ,' ar pemng , .. " .. ,d, ""',,' ""n", "

stadil'/11. My nine year old girl had to series. Q he B · I ON \ THEIR SKATES 15.29 when veteran Tommy Ben· Mn'ltrraler Peter Dickll', left stop attending the skating ses. As In former years, teams eur· ue c' OnSple nelt carried the disc to the Blue

NEXT GAME . T9NlGHT-

Guards VI. Holy Cros!. GOAL SCORING SllMMARY

(First Period) Reardigan·Green'e (SB) .... JU~ Duffy·Bennett, (SP) ••••••• IS,2!1 Vinlcombe.Fardy, (SB) ..... 17,51 drfer ce for the Collcgians. made It . b th t h Icntly mem)Jers of the League Gold blue line and slipped to

Slons ecause ey were 00 roug . are re-'pded that the" must ho"o QUEBEC (CP) - Forty Quebec 'VITII YOUR DONATION 2.() It 13.22 whcn he puked in I "'h t h hi d II.. ,. ~ Peter Duffy, defence linemate, who J cre was 00 muc pus ng an a representative at thl- meeting. curlers start play today In the pro.I .... ______________________ 11 '

cio,u. shot from a scrimmage to givc cutting out of line. I did not mind 0 vlnclal preliminary t the 42nd 1 p.anted a hard shot past Merv thl Prince of Wales sextet I 2.0 tbat too much, because she can go New applications for member· Quebec International Bonspiel-an Rot ' D II S t Green to knot the count 1·1.

(Second Period) Murphy·Hansford, (SP) ••• , ~.~l Ryan.Gillies, (SB) ...... , .. M l Ryan·Manning, (SB) ........ 16.01)

(Third Period) 'F'.d. • .. ". tho St.d1", .pm '''''''' 'hlp m'" h' I, "" ~"d' of Ih. ""., ... ,' hl g h " ,h I,d by ary 0 a r s . art SL "", .. " ,borth"d", .Uh J;j~hop Feild fought back quickly "hen things gel a el13nce to be.' secretary for tonight. meeting. screaming sire~s, colorful recep· Frank Vaughan cooling hIs heels, III the second period and centre come organized wblch 1 know they tlon! and hlgh'Jlnks of al! kinds. Orphans "'0 St d · v. d when Noel Vinicomhe backhanded Ernie Duffett narrowed the mar. wm in time Like most people I Today a championship rInk from .I. t alum L' un . I . ' JO Ad' each of 10 districts In Quebec ' a pass from Hugh Fardy to give

Gillies-Sparrow, (SB) ...... :1.50 Power·Fardy, (SB) ......... 5.07 Manning·Ryan, (SB) ....... 7.2Q lleardigan·Greene, (SB) .... 13.58

&In or PWC's ead to 2.1 after rl'cognlze there are many little 1m n erson open a four-day round robin tour. St. Bon's a 2·1 first period edge forty four seconds. DuHett banged things wrong with the Stadium nament to decide the provlnclal The Rotary Club's drive for public donations to at 17.51 of the opening session. la the first Feildlan marker from and I am most sympathetic to the Makin. g Bid For championship. Winner of Ihe meet prov.ide ~he young~ters in City orphanages with Defencemen continued to set up • Icramble in which PWC goalie management and hope It will man. will represent Qucbec in the Cana· skatmg time at the Stadium goes into high St. Pat's when Harry Hansford's flert Guzzwell had iost sIght of the r.ge &0 get things straightened out AHL S • M k dian curling championships at Re· to-day, gear pass was converted past Greene by ti!c. before too long, conn!1 ar gina March 8. . Kev Murphy at 6.52 of the se~ond

Prinee of Wales held the edge However there is one thing 1"1 Sunday, fIre !rucks and pollee ' * • perl'od to tl'e tIle score 2·2. But a cn p ay or t e next ten m nutes management shou not .wa t or. rookie sensation, Jim Anderson, Is Quebec Clly's Paials railway sta. Ie orp lans, many of whom were given boots penalty to Slone at 8.07 cost St.

I f h' i 'ld I! NEW YORK (AP)-Sprlng£leld's paddy wagons WIll scream towards TI]

Gillies, (SB) ......... , .... 15.37 GilIies·Greene, (SB) ....... lUI)

Altendance-3479. PENALTIE~

Fir~t Period: Fardy, (SB), S.4~; Vaughan, (SP), 16.27. Second Period: Organ, (SB), 6.~:I: Stone, (SP), 8.07; Fardy, (SB), 11.03; Oakley, (SP), 12.28; Stone, (SP),

'lI! they pepperred the Felldlan It should not wait beCore taking making a strong bid to set a goal. tlon to meet t~e special trains and skates as Christmas presents this year, have Pat's as Jack Ryan blasted -home 'zone Vo;th

l

shots'

h

Goalie ~hapmainl 6erlous steps to prevent roughness scoring record for a first _ year bringing in some of the estimated found it financialIy impossible to hire the Stadl'um a pass Irom Ted Gillies at 9.03 to was aqua to t e occasIOn unt ~nd vandalism. RIght at the be. player in the American Hockey 6110 curlers and spectators for the return st. Bon's to the lead at Charlie Warr. centering Prince of ginning management should in. League. internatlonal section of the bon· for general sltBting sessions, and as a result the 3,2. Wales second sIring, rlned home sist that ordinary decent behM" The 24.year-014 left winger of the spiel. Out.of·towners coming In for the St. John's Rotary ClUb has deeided to start a

, a pass from Gerry King at 7.33 to lour Is demnnded at the Stadium. Indians has 32 goals, most in the the week.long International tradl· public subscription fund by which community· Eive PWC a 3.1 bulge. Nobody should be permitted to league. The record of 42 was set tlonally get colorful greetings. ,. F lid' eli d . by Wally Hergeshelmer, now with Bonhomme Carnaval, the smll minded citizens can help put the orphalls 011

Centre Jack Ryan's second goal 19.22; Third Period: Han!forn, ot the game at 16.00 on a pass I (SP), 10.31.

. e IIIlS prov a game squa , w&lk over a~d put their feet on New York Rangers, when he was Ing snowman w,,'1o represents the their skates. howc\'er, as they returned the the painted seats. Nobody should a rookie with Cleveland Barons In spirit of Quebec City'S winter car· play into Collegian territory and be allowed to play rough games 195()'51. nlval arid Estelle Cote, 19·year-Old tested loalle Gunwell with some or roughhouse In the corridors and Fred Glover of the Barons holds curlers' queen, will be on hand 61n11ng shots. Ernie Durrett scored rooms. Right frm the beginning a two·point lead over teammate with the black marias and I ire Illain at 13.22 for the Felldlans It should be inslsllng that the Eddie Olson for the seorlng lead trucks for ,tile greeting. The ve

• • • Gunnar Nielson ISets New Mark In Indoor Mile Run

Eight ~eams Entcr Curlin~ Series In

, . til make it close at 3.2 for P.W.C. Stadium Is the place where good with a total of 59 points on 2' goals hlcles will haul curlers to recep· The third peri~d saw both teams citizenship w!ll be fostered, where and 35 assists. Glover also has ~o~~l~t r~~:pbti~nc~~~d~yc1~I~shtanadt

slowed up c~nslderailY by the cleanliness VIii! be practiced and ~~hn l~v~l:ures~ead In penalties the Chateau Frontenac. g choppy, wet Ice surface, Puc~ consideration for others will be Anderson Is third with 52 points carrying was at a minimum and regarded as normal conduct. in the scoring race. cmCAG (A tem'pm flared at the end, A big Destruction and dis figuration of Little GU Mayer of the Pittsburgh 0 P)-Paul S. Douc.1!. scu[£le ensued near the finIsh of the stadium should be treated In Hornets leads jn goaltending with erty, 63, a member of the IIIln.ols Ihe lime in which referees Nocl such a fir-' manner that no one a 268 average harness· rllcing commission, dlCd III .' Monday In Fort Lnuderale, Fla.,

Vinieombe and ,Ted Withers had can fail (0 Ul)derstand that he Is where he was vacationing. th'eir hands full controlling the not going to be allowed to destroy I'INE alCORD He was president of thr. Metal· )'nuthful antagonlsls. my property and yours. Sweden led all reporting nations Coating CorporatlOll. A former pro-

Eight penillie.s wel'e called duro Yurs ·truly, in 1953w Ith an Infant mortallty fessionallightlVel~ht boxer, Dough· In& the lame, 11\'1) o( them to the FAIR PLAY, ratc of 19 per 1,000 birth I,com~ erty owned a stable of trotting and pared wilJ! 35 In Canada, pacing horses.

.' " " ~:

. ,

.' ~ • : .. '. :. .'

Thousands of School Children Stricken! . '

Many Homes Invaded by Coughs, Colds

Now more than ever'the watchful parent looks to

the health of the children. Colds and coughs are in the air. They may get you or your family and perhaps cause l!Ieriou8 illne8s. Take the advice of thousands. Build resistance to' colds now.

Sold by All Druuilts tI"~ III, Gtlltrai DeD/en.

IERlLD'. DOYLE LTD. "DlnRliuTDRI o ST. iOMN'.

Co-operation from the Weatherman hasn't been good this season, so the only sure-fire way of getting in some use of their skates is to go to the Stadium. But it would cost $40.00 an hour to rent the huge

.stadium. .. • * And this is where the publie ean help.

Rotary has started the ball rolling with a dona­tion towards the expenses and the 'Daily News' has followed with the second donation,

• * • ACKNOWLEDGMENTS TO DATE

St. John's Rotary Club .... .... .... .... .... .... $40.00 The Daily News ................ .... ".... ........ 20.00

You can address your contributions to "Put The Orphans On Skates", care Miss Joan Critch, Treasurer, Daily News, Acknowledgments will be

made each day. • * •

YOlJR DONA'fION WILL MEAN A LOT TO AN ORPHAN.

Edd~e Mattbews, Soccer Players Easily Ribbed Are' Censured Says lockey Jacl~ In Hungary

MILWAUKEE (AP)-A top Na. BUDAPEST {AP1-Two H~mga:r. tlonal 1P.ague bench jockey says ian star soccer players Sunday Eddie Mathews, Mil w auk e e "were officially censu red {or "un Braves' slugging third baseman, worthy behavior" and barred from can't take It. ' all sport activities for one year •

"Ho gets hot under the coUar," Charges agaInst goali~s Gyula said JackIe Rnblnson of Brooklyn Grosits and Sandor Geller were not Dodgers, In town for a sp.ries of made known by the Hungarian na· talks before 'high 50.'1001 and civic tional council for sports and phys· groups. ' icat cult.ure which announced the

"1 like hi needle him. He's not disciplinary measures. •

.. , Britisll Consols

WASHINGTON (AP) - Gunnar Nielsen of Denmark ran a spec, Eight teams have entered rink! t~cular 4:09.5 Indoor mile Saturday for the championship of the St. nJg~t to beat Wes Santee ?f the John's Curling Club d II Umted States by 15 yards In the .' ,I? Ie Evening Star games. It was one \\~nn~r will playoff WIth IIll of the Iastest miles ever raced wlDnlDg teams from Comer Brook. over II flat board indoor track. Grand Falls and Bell Island, at

I

NieiSiln evened his score with st. John's during week Februar\" Santee, the former Kansas ace, 7th·12th. Games commence at si who be.at hil!! in ~'1e Inquirer John's on Wednesday, Januar; g~mes !n PhIladelphIa the pre· 26th and continue all through th~ VIOUS mgbt. : The Dane's time was nearly four week, Bcheduie as follows: seconds belter than the old meet WEDNESDAY, JAN. 2/1111 mark set last year by Len True" <4 p.m. of Ohio State, who covered the dis· stoncman Angpl tance in 4:13.4. Hermansoll Norri.

In the pole vault, ReI'. Bob Rich· Rockwell McCarter ardR set a meet mark by leaping Hall Chelvers 15 feet, four inches. It was the 61st time Richards had broken t.lle TIWRSDA 1.', JAN. 27th 1S.foot mark in his career. <4 p.m.

Chris Chataway Has Confidence

stoneman Hermanson Angd Norris,

9 p.lII.

CheinrJ ?I!cCarter Rockwell

Hall

Stoneman Norri~

IOf 4:00 Mile Hermanson Hall Angel McCarter Rockwell ' Cheiverl

L USA K A, Northern Rhodesia, (Reuters) - Chris Chataway Isays he might run a rour.minute mile during the coming track season in England.

He made tile brief prophecy duro ing' a short stop here Saturday on his flight back to London after a series of three races in South Ar· rica.

He said he will do no more run· ning until May.

-------Ladies' ~urling

FRIDAY, JAN. 28th , 4 p.lII.

Stoneman McCarter Hermanson Angel Rockwell Hall Norris Cheivers

9 p.m. Stoneman Angel McCarter Hall

. Norris Rockwell Hermanson Cheivers

SATURDAY, JAN. 29th " p.m.

quite the hitler up there when he The council announcement only ~els hot' and that's fine wilh me. said, Grosits and Geller "used In Thnt's part of baseball and he can ternational matches ior purposes expect that kind of treatment as which are Incompatible \\'ith th~ long as he keeps on resentinll it. laws and morall; of the ~eople's ~[c'lI just have to learn how to take republic and unworthy of mterna· It.'' tional sportsmen." . The points sessions for the

Robinson, woo had been critical However, It is common knowl· Ladies Curling Club will be held of Milwaukee fans in a recent mag· edge in Budapest that bolli were today In the rink. The mornlnl qzlne article WIder his byline, reo aceuse~ last fall on _rge·scalp. Eession begins at 10 a.m. and the Itcra~ed that fans here are the s~ugghng of nylons among other rftetnoon session at 2 p.m.

Ston~man Angel, Hermanson McCart!:r

Rockwell Hall

Norris Chelvers

league's noisiest. thmgs. Lady curlers are asked' to no'te '~N.I~~~Q~ ,.. thosc' MIlwaukee fans," he' said. ROYAL NA!llE thnt OWing to .the rmkbelng reo

"1 can't think o( any fans In base. Ameliasburg township ill Prince q?lred for speClil1 gamcs at 4 p.m.,

, 9 p.m. ~ Stoneman Hall

Hermanson Rockwell Angel Cheivers Norris , McCarter One extra head to be played if

score tied at end of len,

Fil'sl Shu By Gr.

Commercial Hocke~ r/ith I bang over thl holiday with six ga place at the Stadium lirlt shutout game at ~his season.

Honour of scorinl shutout went to Gre! goalie Murphy who I 4.() yesterday mornin

Results o( the garr

loWS: 1I1nndal

Mammy's R: r.. R Tuesda

London 4; BowriI Parkers 4; Royal Terra NOI'3 ~Iot

Neil'l lI • A~'re ond 50ns 4 G. E. Oil 4; Did

o •

Mammy's Bakcry, Ihe Commercial Ie rumped to a big .Georgl) G. R. Par ",in on Monday I

led 3-{) after the fil t!le second period fordmrn break th. third frame.

lIig guns in lhe wcre Hubert Nix Rnd Frank Ryall goal5 II piece while )',Ierrick and Llo~ chipped In with I

Spoiling the 511 Ions snipers Ja George Kelly.

• • London, N.Y. a

no signs of the Tuesday mornin;: ed back BO\l'rin~ a.m. coni It. Lon end of Lte ~rcOl

,coreless first I ~eored the opp' final period.

Mike Monahal for London but it for Bowrln~'! P~ris wrapped i wilh goats by ~ ward Seymour wilite holding t Mllreless.

• Parker and ~II

with. thriller Stores in the n It the stadiun In the first pc Slores squad t Slioemen were the first perlo

The Parkerm 2.1 again in t their game II'

goah h~' ~pal

pa\'ed tbe \1'3)

Baird scored Qsmond ~t~rr

Storp~ with A

teammal. no olher,

TelTa Nova highcst ~coril ",Ith • 9·3 Ci

New~. 'fhe !II Fiingers 4·0 a period and 5 showed !OmE in tIle secor was all Tell pointed the

Three goal the Pontiac tcammate TI pair and Pal man and Sp. singles. Dail from the s ehes Sweet.

A)Te :lnd :!.1 altcr tl fourth goml

CI'en at 2·:

ball who are more loyal to their Euward county, Ont.. was named nIl malches must be completed for boys." . af\s!r Princess Amelia, youngest points at that hour, and Ihose who

daughler of George 111. are able to attend tile morning, . . DOING THEIR SIIARE GREAT MRWOMAN ' mSlon arc asked to do '!l. In IPSWICH, Englanrl (CP) - Civil . CHILDREN'S TEETII

Studies show that four of every Amr Johnson, English distance I (\~del' that the a(te~'noon sC~5lOn defence volunteers in Ihis sullo\l, nyer, was killed in a crash' in l.l1e Illll not be .100 ~rowded to fmlsh I town lotai 609. Of them, 338 arc

!'lOSI I JOl~S :lona I Jack t 10

, \ r , '1,1

.1 '

I'-five Canadian children slartlng in

school sucrer from some tooth de· cay.

Thames estuar¥ in 1941. at the reqUIred tJme. women.

Page 13: !Pears,oil .Eis~nhowet~,,;, H· ;' . F' .' · Move ':::~~. litcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · ,mcan II aI', I tIC nnese e so·, . . • tents-it was almost

· (;~r.t; G~rnf'.

SplrrO'~.

r~r· R~'UI.

••.. 14.411 .••• 15.~ •• " 17.51

•••• fi~ •••• 8.41 •••• 16.00

· •••• :.50 · •••• s.O?

U •• '':0 ••• • 13.511 .... 15.37 •••• 15.111

l. U9: Srcond Stoee,

I, 9.03; n •• (SP). Hln!lnrd.

.Enter In

Is

:cCartl'r Anl:rl

Halt

THE DAilY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JAN. 26, 1955. 13

Six Games P laye·cl In Toronto Sticks, To • .' - Its Import Policy

LOCALS IN "UNICORNS" LINEUp: ·idDER" IS TOP CANDIDATF: FOR . GREENWOOD CONTEST FOR MOST VALUA~LE pLAYER

CommereialHoekeyLoop SaysArgoPrexy NIGHT LEAD Argos new b,t .

, . MONTREAL (CP) ~ Two mem Closest was his teammate Ilia». bers of the Toronto Maple Leafs, .Rlchard of Montreal 'was thin! one from Montreal Canadlens and with 19. a rookie from Chicago Black . For the Lady Byng MllmonaJ Hawk~ led the polls in the ballot· Trophy, Smith received 50 points. .Ing lor National Hockey League In· Red Kelly of Detroit, 'winner 1M dlvidual trophy awards at the half· last two ye~rs, had 34 and Danny way mark of the season. . Lewicki of New York Rangers rr.

First Shlltout In Stadium· SCOJ'ed By Great Eastern Oil Squad

By WILl' GRUSON ,/ Canadian' Prell st.fl Writer

Al\I1ouncement of the leaders WINNERS GET $1,000 .. , : .. ~ ••• ' .was made by the NHL Tuesday As top defenceman, HarVey~"

rllmm~rcial I1ock~y \I'~nt over .. ilh a banG over the Burn~ Day ',olirla~' with sill games taking ,,:~c~ at the Stadium including the ,i,,'1 ~ll\llo\lt game at tile Stadium . ':i~ season.

Honour of ~corin~ the first .:1Utoul went to Great Easlern 011 :o~lie ~Iurphy who blanked Dicks ~.n ~'est('rday morninll.

slon. They blanked Hickman's 2'() In the third period to gain the 4·2 ,·iclory.

Joe Quick led 'the Clolhlers" at· tack with a pair of goals while Oldford and Roy Snelgrove each scored single goals. Top men for the Hickman squad were H. Millre ~nd Kelly who scored early in the [irsl period to give Hickman's their lead, which they eventually Inst.

TORONTO (CP)-Toronto Argo. nauts do not Intend to "back down" from their Import poUey to play NatlOllal Football League players Mxt season even if it means being barred trom the Big Four Football Union. . . Bill Ross, Argonaut president, emphasized Tuesday the elub Is prepared to play Its games under protest from the other Big Four teams and Is ready for the pos· slbllity that Montreal, Hamilton and Ottawa might refuse to meet them unleu Argos ehange their

night. ceived 72 points, more than 'an, Ted Kennedy. Toronto cp.ntre, Is player in the voting for .U, tro­

the leading contender for the Harl phles. A unanimous poll would Trophy, awarded the player ad· have bep.n. 90. Red Kelly was s .. judged most valuable to his team. ond choice with 40 points and F.el'll

Sid Smith,. Leaf leftwinger, top, Flaman 01 Boston Bruins third ped the poll for the Lady Byng with 17. Memorial Trophy, awarded for the Litzenberger, sold by Canadlens best lype of sportsmanship and to C\ticago in early December .... r .. gentlemanly c o' n d u c t combined ceived 54 points as top roold •. with a high standard of playing Goalie Jacques Plante of Monlrul ability. was second with 41 a nd New

Re~l1lts of the Ilame~ arc as fol·

• • • Monday \1amm~"s II: G. R. Parsons 2. Great Easlern 011 scored a brace

Tuesdl)' of goals In each of Ihe rlrst and London 4: BOII'rinl:s 1. third periods while going score. I'ar~cr~ 4: nO~'al StoJ'cs 3. le~s In the middle frame. Only the

stand; . Ross did not indicate what Argos

would do If the league's other leams should take the momentous decisloo to throw the Toronto team out of the league.

"We arc quite prepared to deal with the situation wihen and If it comes up," he said. "We will play

Dou~ Harvey. Montreal defence· York's Larry Pope in third with 22. man, had a wide lead In the vot· Balloting wiil be done again .f· ing for the James Norris Memorial ter the second half 01 ,the sched· Trophy, which goes to the dcfence· ule. Tolal points for t..ic two halv •• man &.iowing greatest all·round decide the season winners. Ell'ch ability. winner gets $1.000 from the NHL.

Eddie Litzenberger, Chicago for The voting is done by a panel

Terra NOI'a Motors II: Daily stellar goaltendlng of Dicks goal· \rw' 3. tender kept them away in the lec·

;\yre ond Son~ 4: Ilickmans 2. ond period. . .

foolbal\." TWO SIGNED

He made the statements .t a club luncheon. where team man· ager Harry Sonshlne announced the signing of Argos first NFL players, tackle Gil Mains of De· trolt Lions and Iluar.d Bill Albright of New York Giants.

ward, was the choice for the rookie of hockey writers, broadcast.n award _ the Calder lIIemorial and telecasters in each of the . .tlt Trophy. NHL cities. The total point value

Kennedy received 40 poiph In for eacJI city is 27. Five points ire the v oting for the Hart Trophy. given for first choice, three._ Harry Lumley, with 23. Maurice second and one for third.

J .1

\1

\ : I

G. E. 011 4: Dicks and Co. O. The G, E. Oilers scoring follow· • • • ed a pattern in which Bill Wilson

"ammy', Baker)" a new entry In scored in Ihe first period and was Ihe Commercial league this year, ~~llo\\'ed by a marker by Karl ~,'mped to a hig \'ictory o\'er Arns. The samc thing happened r.eor~e G. R, Parsons in an 8·2 in the third period with Wilson "'in on ~Ionday nh:ht. Mammy's and Arns contributing again to the Ird :;.{) aftcr the first and 7.1) alter \ Great Eastern Oil shutout, the ,"e second perino but ~alV Ihe !irst in the SIadium. rnrdmrn hr('ak the shutout In the NEXT GAIIIE Ihird frame. TONlGlIT-'

JERRY DOYLE JIM FITZPATRICK PAT McNAMARA

The disclosure tlJat Mains .and F' t' 0 tll RCAF U • J' F'l t' k Billv Kellv Adds

• • YOUNG CAGER; SINKS 93 PTS. Albright had Jumped to Argos fol. ormmg one s rmg n e 'lllconlS are 1m I zpa rIc ,Pal McNamara

lowcd closely 011 the efCorts at the and Jerry Doyle, all of st. John's. Prior to joining the RCAF these players saw Big Fonr to agree on a no.ralding action.with the Feildians, St, Pat's and Holy Cross, respectively. The RCAF pact with the NFL. Officials of the Unicorns meet the Greenwood ItCAF Bombers in an exhibition game at the 'BELFAST (CP)-Bi!1y Kelly. 125 TORONTO (CP) - A 11."eaHM Big Four, including a representat. Belfast, added tile British feather· player scored 73 points Mond'" .•

1

ive . of Argonauts, met In Phlla. Stadium on Thursday night, weight boxing title to hi5 British North Toronto High School trimmed delphia last Saturday with NFL Empire championship Saturday by Oakwood Colleglale 119-40 In • Tor-

Britisll Crown

'.f commissioner Bert Bell in an at. defeating England's Sammy Mc· onlo Secondary School Athletic AI· lempt to work out the problem. H II d T d COLUMBIA VETOED a loan· C d· L· Carthy, 125'li<, in a 15·round bout. sodation basketbal~ game. .

A decision was left In the air 0 ywoo 0 ay out for AIda Ray to play Jett ana Ian eglon Kelly said afterward hc has been Henry Smllh, a ~J)c·foot, two-lnela

Big ~un~ in the ~Iamm)"s attllck Marshall Motors vs. AYalon Tele· ",rre Hubert Nixon. Austin Hill l,hune. ~n~ Frank R~'all with a pair of ;:o~h apicce while teammates Bah 'Irrrick and Lloyd Smith each chipped In wilh a singleton.

!>poilinl: the shutout were Par· ,rn~ 5nifler~ Jack White and (:ror;:e Kellr.

Indians Train For Hocl\eY

when Argonauts refused to go Rink in George Stevens' "Giant." promised a fig.!lt with world cham· guard wbo raps home many poinlJ along with nny move that would HOLLYWOOD TODAY .... .... :rhe reason for Aldo's air of utter B Ii L ' pion Sandy Saddler in the Uilited 011 of[ensive rebounds scored 30 la call upon them to give up any By ERSKINE JOHNSON . OW n~ eague States. the first half. . NFL players t.lJey had signed pr HOLLYWOOD-(N E A)-Un. \'lac ••• Just to prove that she OJ He became the first fi"hter to Smith, a grade 13 swdellt, iJ had offered contracts. At the Big covering Hollywooo: Dick Haymes could liave done It, Dorothy win a BritiEh title held" by his playing his third l'ear of basbt· Foor annual meeting Jan. 15 ~he bees 1955 with at least one of Dunbridge will sing "That's TONIGHT'S GAMES father before him. Kelly's father, ball. Big Four clubs with ~he ehcepllon Ills problems solves-he's out of Love" ami other songs fl'om 7.00-Caen \'s, Falais. Jim (Spiderl Keily, won the Brit· ':Do~'t know what it was," ~. or Argos decided on a new policy I'd "Carmen Jones" in her nelY nit· Mno vs. Calais. ish and Empire !catherweight .sald. Gue~s you get .Ihat terllln • • •

l.ondon. N,\'. allli Parl~, showed ~n 5i~ns 01 the early rising on Tlle,day morning when the>' tllrn· ,01 back Bowrinll's, 4·1 in an B.OO 2 m. COl1t It. London le(1 1·0 at the fnd or tl.e ~econd period, after a 'corelcs5 fir.lt frame, and out· .rorcd the opposilion 3·1 In the linal period.

MOOSE FACTORY, Onto (CP}­A harely, dctermined )'C'Jng hoekc), leam works out hcre every day using brooms for sticks and card· board for goalie pads.

to respect player options and con. I'X,W fo Joanne Drl15 og·house ery act. Her singing voice \l'as B.l5-Monchy vs. Casino. titles in 1938 anti was one of his touch once m a long wbJIe and noth-tracts of NFL teams. alter months of front page hagg· dubbed hy anothcr warbler in Dunkirk I'S. Vimy Hidge. son's seconds Saturday night. ing goes wrong.'!

The Argonaut president said ling over his failure to keep up the movie. n.30-Beaumont Hamel vs G Ii. I He neve!' pr~vJDuslY scor .. d m~l'I Tuesday the league had adopted child support payments., . ' a I t·!"wn 30 pomts In one game a! senIor

Mike !llollahan ollellell ~corlng ror London hut E. Wiseman tied II for Bowring's, Ncw York and r~ris wrapped it up in the finale ..-ilh goals hy Mike O'Brien, lIay· Il'ard Seymour and Len O'Neill 1\'hile holding the Bowring's men "~rcless,

• • • Parker and :llollroe ca:ne through

>rlth • thriller win over the Royal Slores In the third one hour game at the Stadium. Parker's led 1·0 in the first period bllt the RO)'al Slores ~quad tied it up. But the Shoemen "'cre ahead 2·1 after the first period.

The Parkermen outscorcd Royals 2-1 aJ:ain In Ihe second to take their Rame winning lead. Three ~o.b h)' sparkplug Jack Atkins 1'3\'cd the way for PRl'ker's while R~ird ~orcd the other. Doug (l .• mond ~tarrcll lor the Royal Iilorr~ wilh • pair of !:oals and Irammatl Ronayne notched the olher.

• • •

Nearly 100 Cree Indinn boys al the Indian rcsld~ntial ser.'lOol on James bay, 400 miles north of NOl'th Ba),. arc ardent hocke)' fans and players despite the fact they have very little equipment.

Larry Jltarappo, swooping down lelt wing with the puek guided by an old broom, Is a hard boy to stop. Even his opponents admit lie would be a lot tougher If he had a real stick.

Larry saY6 he isn't as badly off as goalie Able Trapper, who doesn't flinch from t..'Je hardest shots al though his lIrotection consists only of cardboard lIadding.

This winter the lIIoose Fort School got its own skating rink and the team celebrated by winning its first lengue game •

Proper equipmcnt may be In the oWng. Mell'nwhile the boys make lIP for the·laek 01 it with' whatever they ean Improvise plus plenty of the courage thai came from their (orcfalr.icr.3.

Women's Field Hockey

its no.ruldlnS polle)' after the Tor. Joanne says he's come throu"h There s a Madame Buttaer~IY poll., basketball. onto club had emharked on Is I',ith some funds already amI t~d ~iot angle to a nel~, Fox mOVIe, \ Morro vs .. Longstop. I FIIl'O'ol To Enter The point total is believed to be campaign 10 sign NFL players. me she expecls "every thin to The Bnmboo House. All team captains ur ropreson· , "'I about 25 more than the highest pre-Argonauts had no alternative bul he settled when he ets b g k I Torrid 10l'e scenes he tween . 1.llives arc remimled of a special i L. •• I 0 viously scored in any TSSAA gam. 10 honor obligations to the players Holl' d i h f ti ~~ S' 0 \ Robert Stack and Shirley Lama· ,I meeting at tne LegIOn Club 7.30 I The Bl'ltI~ 1 pen \' and possibly a Canadia.n record. with whom they had been negot. )WOO

l Un na tS ork'dd~e. D.I;e \ surhi the NIppon doll Friday night 10 discuss lnetr.: "'. Records from prevIOus years iating. c,",n sen ?e r 11'0 I es, IC (, ., •••• Club League team. .' I NEW YORK (AP )-Ed Furgol, were. not avail!lble for comparison

WON'T RACKDOWN Ja., and PIgeon, 10 Lake Tahoe . .... lame·armed U. S. open golf cham· but It was beheved 73 points .was "I want it clearly understood to spend the hoJida)'s with Dick, ~e~~rse t\1:~t slgn

f In the

t dr.e. pion, announce,l Tuesday he plans the highest ever scored In Canada

Illat we wlil not baelt down and rud Rita Hayworth. mo c ng sec lOn 0 a s u ID tn compete in Ihe British open golf in a single game and about· 25 that we will honor our obligations," The ex· Mrs Haymes doubts w3rdrobe department: B b 1 dd W· championship at st. Andrews July points higher than the total by a Ross addcd. "The rcp~tation or reports thai h~'s in ill health. "ALTERATIO~S ,~S USUAL \ 0 seer· InS 4·8.. single player in any TSSAA gamL the club and of football In general "He sounded fine w~en I talked DURING BUSINESS. ..' \ Here to .recelve the Ben Hogan Is at slake.'" • • • SU'ISS Tltl Award gIven annually to th~ B 1 S· 0

Ross said !Ie Is hopeful some tOI

h111d~ over I the .tdelePlJone the Director.at.work 110te' Anlla I n e player' WilD overcame the greatest ur {e 19ns n. I ti b k d t f

(Jt ler ay" 5 Ie SUI • I . 1 h d' t k C so u .on can e wor e ou or a '., ~ ~ Magnani, rehearsing her rolc of ST. MORITZ, Switzerbnu (AP) I P Iysl~a an Icap 0 l!1a e a 511 • • I . PA E I . ~o.r.atdlng .pact that wi.1I nol In. a plump. frustrated widow ill Fritz Feierabend, daring 4i·year· ce,~s In golf, :.ur,gol s~ld: . WIlt 1 • ag es .' \ol~e the cU:h.t NF:L pla>ers A~ .. os Johnny Weiss muller is writing "The Rose TaUaa," struggled in· I old Swi~s bobsledder, flashed tol. I am lookmg fOrllard to ~la~. " planned to sIgn. He said AIgos d magazine story aboul his 23 . ' . 'victory Sunday in the two·man I m~ on the famou, ohl course. which D . Ofr agreed in principle with such a years of playing film scenes with te a too.!JChtli glr~e ~ehJndg a I[ world champion~hips. I I hav~ henr~ about for rea.rs. I espIte ers agreement but would not budge chilnps In jungle flickers. Sug. screen concea ng er rom urt Fcierabcnd outl'ae~d 15 other: am sill! havmg ~rouble \\'Ith a from the stand It should not be gested title: "The 23.Year Itch." Lancaster. - mile: a - minute sleds frol11 nine i muscle m 01)' right arm but PHILADELPHIA (AP )_quarter. retroactil:e. , ,,' • • • Said Director Daniel Mann: "I countries on the icy. twisting mile· I hope t.h~. injury ,is healed bC£orc back Adr!an ~urk. who h~s bee,

The BIg Four go\ernors \\111 . want you to reailze how ludicrous long bobsled run to eaplure the'the BrllI"'1 open. rumored Jumpmg to CanadIan foot meel ,in Toronlo t06 to ~enr An Irma.lll'~med. starlet O\·.el'· you louk. As Dorothy Parker might world title fot· the third lime. \ FUl'gol's len. ar~ i, 10 inches I ball f?r a "f~bulo~s" salary, T\lu, Argos appeal against the deCIsion I.LRrd a IJoil)woodsman descrIbe I 'd '~I II . I I The lankv Feierabend II'ho al<u ,:Jortcr than 1m rIght as the re'l day SIgned :JIS \95, contract to p,laJ adopted at the annual m~ellng to a doli as hoving "elemental ap'lll~v~ sal.' I' e~ se r om J.u~p ,I1I,~r. holds tllc four.man wo~lrI er~w~,: suit of a childho~d ~cci~cnl. He I with Philadelphia 'Engles of the.Na· respect NFL player optJons and pea!." Lutel' the stal'let tnld a I cs or gl; 5 II :0 wear glr cs. I had !Jis countryman. Harry War. del'eloped trouhlc In. Ius ngh.t "~1\1, tional Foot~all LeagUc. . contraels. 'fhe!! overnors cannot friend: i RO~AND. 1 E~IT, th7 llallel. bourlon, as brakeman aboarrl hi,; dUl'in~ all AustralIan el'I1I1IItlon i !lurk completed 123 or 231 pas!e., rel'erEe the rIding but they can "I Ihink he's goin~ with a gi)'lllT,a~, IS ~as!JI1g ~IS lot WIth Jean· I hurtiing. 360 puunrl red aud .ilvel'. tnur In,t fall and had to rcturn iasl season for I,HO yards and Z1 recommenri that the league exeeut. rI Ell M t I" \ man'e, IJ!s iung·tlme flame, no\\' . I home. touchdowns, lIe topped Ule leagur h'e reconsider Its decision. numc' n I en a . that the Ballet de Paree leatured in TD acrials allrl recorded the·lon

. lIA'r~ 1I0L~YWOOIl? Not Lit. \ in "The Glass Slipper" and l:hllLY AUTOS I',\il1E1I ~OrRAN ~rst TO pa~s of :the ~ca~on, an." han Glsh. She 5 been aeculicd .of 1 "Daridy Lon!! Legs" has heen dis.: The lir,t 3utOlllllhilr. ,hUll' in' . Lilli l.rllln~nn .. the f,:ermal1 ?pcra: )'ardr,r a~am~t hl~ fa~?rlte patSIes, It ercr since ~hc rallped the ID' banded. He'll do the chorcog. i :llonU'cill was ~p(lns{)rcrl by the .. qng.rl' 11')10 ,11e-:lln tnn, Ilr:.l \'Isitcd, the II a51I1n~t~n Rcd,klns. Il.ustry lor not h?nnri~!!. pioneer rnphy for Jeanmaire's picture I no),al Automobile Club int nUG. . London 111 1880. I INfANT QUU:N

Terra No";! !llolors rang up the hlfZhc!t ~coring game of Ihe day ,., ilh a 9-3 conquest o( the Daily :"\e\\'~. The Motormen Icd thl' Ink· ~jjngcn 4.1) at the enel 01 Ihe first ,:rriod :md 5·2 after the Pressmen .hnwed some signs of retaliation in Ihe second. The third period \\'as all Terra NO"a as they out. pointed the Nell's 4·\.

Three goals b)' F, Field sparked the Pontiac Chiefs' attack while t~amma1e Tom Manning notched a pdir aud Paul Dickey, Copper Pitt· man and Spanky armslrong scored ~illJ!lcs. Daily Nell's counters tame from the sticks o! lIa1 Butler, Ches Sweetapple and Carl Noltall.

VANcoUVt,n (r;Pl - A C~\1n· dlim women's ficld' hocke), 1eam will compete in a \l'orlll champioll' ship tournament in Australia next year if one or more fairy god. mothers a re found.

IIIrs. Pat ChRpman, pre~ident of the Greater Vancouver Women's Grass Hocke), League, says the group, eomprlsinll pla~'ers from Vancouver and Victoria, Is seek ing between $10,000 and $15,000 for the trip.

Vancouver noW has 500 active women hoel!eY player.s with 44 teams In t~le Inler·hlgh school league and se\'en in the greater Vancouver circuit.

City Inter-Club Bowling League U,C.A.A.-3 G. Breen .... 249 209 329 787 0, Fitzgerald 208 228 201. 637 G., Wadden ... 242 325 250 917 .T. Carey .... 213 273 253 739

912 1035 1133 3080 BANK OF NOVA SCOTIA-O R. Short •.••• 216 252 220 688 H. Alyward ••• 225 225 R, Casey .... 136 191 148.475 E. Power •••. 163 230 259 652 R. Rowsell ••. 131 131

him mailer D. \\. GrIffith before with Bing Crosby "An,thin" I . • ":ORI'I'E I h \I II \\'3 proclaimed Quee. 1'15 death "." \ SPEED YFLlGJlT HUGh ~IET" '. ~a ~ a. S • .. " •. Goes, Umc produce a Broadway Three American !Ja\'v jet planes New York's lhlyden plaoetarlll J11 i of SpaID m 1833 at age thr~e 011 , B~\, hO." I couhl I hate 1I01l~. play for his Fren~h oo.h:la.la. flew from San Dieg-o t~ Nell' York: displays a 3G.~on !J~eteorite found I t~e deatr o( her father, FerdlDand

Ilood, LllI an asked an MGMs Anolher TV cube, L111 ;Cardell, in 1954 in t..iree hours 45 minutes. in Greenland ID 189,. \11. "Cobweb" set. "I came here 13lIded in the movies. The Swed· ----.-.----.-.-..

w?e~ I w~s 12 .y~ars oid and I Ish Import, just signed by U·I, dldn t lea~e unhl 1929. Holly· starred with James Daly in a wood was my life all thrOUg!l couple of "Forei~n Intrigue" the formative years. I gucss it S stanzas filmed in Stockholm ear· just because I" tell the truth. I lier this year. talk too ~reely. ., Tony Dexter, who's in Mae

• • • A)Te and Sons trailed Hlcl:man's

~.l aUcr the first period of the fGurth game of the day but pulled (\'"n at 2·2 after the second ses-

The tournament team bas until the end of January to advise con ference headquarters' whether i will be able to. enter the meet running from May 26 to June 6, 1956.

515 898 758 2171

PATRICIANS-3 BOYAL NAil-IE !If. Barrett ••• 225 293

Cumberland co u n t y in Nova M. Spearns ••• 263 253 Scotia was named after the Duke M. Gladney ••• 197 251 of Cumberlalld, son of King George J. Dillon .... 1711 283 II. . 860 lOBO

JOBS A.A.-O B. Kieley .... 222 275 F. Kirby ...... 190 231 n. Lane ..... 122 180 C. Legrow ••• 227 195

761 881

204 726 305 821 221 669 281 719 991 2931

220 717 21:1 636 219 521 230 652 884 2526

J[ sbe s been crI11cl2ed, says West's act at the Sahara and Lillian, "Il's because .. thin.k the Lillian Molierl, once his' dance motion picture medIUm IS 50 partner arc a constant twosome wonderful that every picture In Las' ·Vegas. Her mother is Hollywood pro~~ees should be along 8S chaperone. honest and fine. • • •

* * * Ann Sheridan, wh. hasn't

made a movie in over a year. faces the cameras ogain as the star of Republic's "Rebel Island." , • • U the censors don't scissor the sequences In the U.S." movie. 'goers will be seeing Rhonda Fleming In the briefest costume yet in her italian·made "Cour· tesan o[ Babylon." Just a few pearls here and there. I'm still :lasplng after a peck at the still

Living It up in Hollywood note (from a press release): "To go !lith his new white Cadillac, Jack Sernas, star of "Jump Into Hell," has purchased six while cashmere 8weaters."

The Item, though, reflects Hol­lywood's new economy. Before hieh taxes, the press agent would have written it:

1 \1

ST. TERESA'S-2 T. Murphy ... 157 'j'. Walsh ••.. 193 E. MUl'phy •.. 191 J, Dooley .... 225

766

266 182 260 257 1165

209 632 IMPERIAL T.C.-l 244 619 ,T. Molloy .. , .221 216 667 J. Gosse " ... 10B 233 715 ,l. Bulgen ... 196 902 2633 D. Meadu5 ... 213

828

293 258 772 213 ~89 600 173 211 580 276 226 715 955 8M 2667

"To go with his new white cashmere sweater, Jack Sernas 1,3S purchased six while Cadil· lacs."

Not many people remember, but before "Oklahoma!" .opened on Broadway it was known In, try· outs. as "Away We Go." Arc you

Statutory Notic~

" . 10, •• ,: •••••

\

USE BEAUTIFUL, EASY-TO-CLEAN

\

1 ~

BATTLE-BI1b Clnl'k of st. Bonuventure Collece i he', liehling·to ti~ve his head ~1'lth three white. clad ; lana plRljers. Ltlt to I'It:ht. LeRoy Scotl, Wally McCarvill and I Juck Trout tussle 101'. the ball. while teammale wnlchcs park t au il alone durlnl Madinn Squirt Garden game. (NEA) ... ~

• I, ,

1~ElLDIANS-1 E. May , .. : .. 189 P. Riche ..... 175 S. Windsor .. 17B O. Wheeler ... 244

786

MAMMY'S T.C.-3

162 159 139 282 742

T. Goode .... 122 11B H. Jeans .... 218 228 L. Gosse .... ,228 24i .', Ryall ..... 206 171

774 758 BAIRD MOTORS-O , G. Critch .... 105 122 R. Barrington 111 60 R. Wiseman •• 90 104 A. 'Burton ... 228 233

534 519

19S 544 166 500 194 511 190 716 743 2271

AVALON T.C.-3 T. O'Keefe ••• 148 G. Ralpb .... 140 W. Hennemy 144 A. HollDway .216

648 110 350 BROOKFIELD-O 211 657 E. Moore .... 203 210 \ 879 C, Peet ..... 198 130 507 R. Burgess ... 173 661 2203 574

227 186 182 242 8S7

206 118 189 493

221 596 218 544 193 519 233 691 865 2350

249 658 126 442 173 515 548 1615

In the m.tte~he .Est.t. of Ann M. Guv of New York In the Stat. of New York, United Stlltll of America, Splnlst.r dlceased. All persons claiming to be

creditors of or who have any claims or demands upon or affect· ing the Estate of Alln M. Guy, late of New York In the State of New York. United states of America, Splnlster, de.::oased, are request· ~d to send particulars of the same in wrlUnl! duly attested, to

160 387 VICS-2 the undersigned Solicitors {or the 120 291 H. Dawe ••• ,259 234 310 803 Executrix of the wl\1 of the said 172 388 A. Dawe ..... 165 202 199 566 deceased. on or before the 18th 157 6\8 E. Churchill .233 172 253 658 day of February A.D: 1955, after which date the said Executrill 609 1662 D. Oldford .••. 214 182 218 614 will proceed to distribute the

871 700 980 2641 said. Estate having. regard only . GREAT EASTERN OIL-I to the claIms of which ·it shall, .

CRESCENTS-2. G. Mercer ... 336. 238 261 833 B. Dawson ••• 193 186 20~ IIB7 fl. Chapter ., .102 186 266 644 ~'. Kennedy .. 220 230 19n 649

941 847. 925 2713

J. Cowan .... 228 276 266 770 thel1 h!lve llad notice. H, Cowan ... 176 230' 21B 624 Dated at St. ,Tohn's this 17th

, . day of January •. 1955." . . 1.. K~els ..... 192 209 210 611 BRONE, RENOUF & MI:RCER. G. HIDdy , •.. 101 234 248 673 Solicitor. fcir. Executrix.

787 949 942 .2778 jan18,25,febl,8

for walls; cou~ter tops and spl"shlJacks

FOR MORE 1NFORMATION, SeE:

DIAL 6911 . WATER ST.·' EAST

. "

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Page 14: !Pears,oil .Eis~nhowet~,,;, H· ;' . F' .' · Move ':::~~. litcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · ,mcan II aI', I tIC nnese e so·, . . • tents-it was almost

, '.

THE DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JAN. 26, 1955 . ' . ..

Stock· 1 Market 'Re l1ort Lu/~, On , r .. Ch,nese

Open 'Defen~e' . ,Of C.a~ada's

Labour, Code

RebUke Palace Workers Who' Sell Secrets

Obituary CATIIERINE O'DONNELL

The recent passing of Catherine Hanrahan O'DQnnell at· the ripe age of 85 years recalls a chapter of soulful personalities who con'

Penetanguishen. Portugal· Cove Road

New Sab·Division BUILDING LOT! FOR

AND TO LEAS~ 75ft. lC 200ft.

SAU'

'IoaONTO CL09L~O srOCKS ., TM Caaa.I.. Pn ••

Sl\e. Stock Hl,h Low Clo.e SOO Acm. Gu 13 15 15

1150 Acad Ura. Il 11\\ II 4700 Ajal '/1 75 15 :100 Akalltho 60 60 60 use Albor 1M \16 " _ AI1>or .. ,. 32 30 32 WS AI,om III, 1m 14

31 Am Lard.. 1071, 1071, 2071i 1'15<11. Am !.<doe JJ3 10\ 110 IllII 11m :iepll. 113 104 110 3100 Ana"", 310 3OS. 310 lG Aftll0 Cd. 513 SOO 501

SOlI Aq RO\Q1\ 46 411 lS IWIG A""eno III, 101'. 11 U01 AqUl. 19 \I II :l Arca. !JOl 1'0 90

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KEARNS & BROMLEY CO~SULTI~(; t;!';(iJNEERS

Mantrul • Wolfville f.ltc!'lJnlC'II, t:h;c,r.cal ADd

Munic!PJt Enlln~lI!rinl Indllttrt:ol PI"nt Oel\l:l'I

FIRST The orif;inal and by far Ihe lar,:ul mutual im'e5lment fund in Canada is

CORNELL, MACGILliVRAY UMlTlO

Iocn1 01 T,"II~.~ SL J,h.',

FURNESS

l~ , Red Cross Lin'e

SAiLINGS TO

ST. JOHN~S FROM NI:W YORK: •. ;. Fort Avalon •••.. Jan. 27

Fort Hamlllon. . .Feb. -4 .t Forl Avalon ••••. Feb. 16 FROM ST. JOHN. N.B.: °t Fort Avalon... . .Jan. 29 Or Fort A\·alon ..... Feb. 18 FROM HAlIFAX:

Fort Hamlltoo ••. Jan. 24 'i' fort Al'alon ..... Feb. 1

Fort Hamilton ••• Feb. 8 Fort Hamilton .•. Feb. 15

.;. Fort 1,l'aloo .•••• Feb. 22

SAILlNGS FROM

ST. JOHN"S TO CORNEtt BROOK: 'T Fort Avalon... •• Feb. 5 •. ; ForI Avalon ..... Feb. 26' TO HALifAX:

Fort Hamilton .•• Jan. 28 Fort HamiJIon ... Feb. 12 Fort Hamilton ••• Feb. 19

TO NEW YORK: , 't Fort Avalon .•••. Jan. 15

Fort Hamilton ••. Jan. 28 ·t Fort Avalon ..... Feb. 5

Fort Hamilton ••. Feb. 19 t· Fort Avalon ..... Feb. 26

Vessell wll\ call Newfound, I.nd Olltportl .1 Indue .. ment oH.r ..

·Calls Corner Brook Ifter . 5t. John'& .

: '.' •• A'cceptli refrigeration . carl(o. -: : . . ........

::: '. GENERAL AGENTS : H,n.y & Co., Ltd. 01.1 2151 ·W.G. Moore 01.1 5190

:~:: ;FURNESS WrmY . ,

\

::;:: & CO., LTD .•. ';flew Yorlt . . ... Mont, •• 1 ·;tt.lif.1I 'Ill.' ~oh.n;'N.'.:

U1T CHome 1100 Cdn 0 and G 77431: P I. Pd. ~IO CaOio Pel.

&S9 Ca»,o OU &00 Carib

In C •• llar 1000 Clotle

400 Ce.1 E.pl 11400 Ce. I.<d ~~ Ce.1 Pat 2IlOO Ce. Pore

SOO Ce. J,ake 1000 Cenlremq 9050 Chambl. 3200 Chart 011 3000 Che.krk 1&011 Cholvle 4100 Chlb E.pl

Imn Chmo 3a:J3~ CII Lar 7186 Coball 2100 Coch Wll I!OO C.I, Lak. 1600 Cldslm 3000 Colom 200 Coni.'

32100 C Alle,b ~&OO Co. A.t 2.10'1 C C Cad

112267 C D.nl. ~Z3 C DI •• mo C Ea.1 . 713 Co.. Fenlm '4Il00 Con Gll

S7l C GArrow !.6112.1 C H,III"

31M CHow 11000 Con Mlbr 77nn C M Mac 8~Z3 C Moth

2!aOO N Northl.nd !',('jJ CORII Que

3GCO t: Ra.wk 121C~ C R""h tOOl C Sannarm 3~O Cop Man

U!2I,' Coulc. I!CO Coumor

r.oo rort 2()('M't C"'Ow~h"r~

17U2.I Dar.,on 10(0 lJ 'lIorn

11too n~ldDna' 3(11\ llp1nlte

12271 Del HI PlOD O'lia 21\(141 OoY I.<d

11.1 Oom, 3!0 Dome t:pl MlI1 nom Alb

1000 Oonold. 13CU DralWn 011 2~Q OU"e

2:m Oyo. 2!10 Yo ~I.I ~lI;o I·: SIIII 1.10n md .. :lOCI Yol Ptn R.)· B<1~O t: Sol 400' F.m ml't'It'r 43.00 Rsttl'a

11n.1 F.u1'ekit ~M F.ufrk Warn

!'i"~1:\ F.,fadlY roM "'areo 12R~ F,o 1'.1' Iltn i'"rant'Ofur

lr.~3:l J~rnh ~n~ Haltw:n fW'I('1C,u Hill 32~~ GrorD MlnfO!I

If'IIl (1f'n Pct'! .,0:'1 c'en r A 2~ 1';""('\'11 33~~O (i("nnn

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llor.o n 1':11.::1 .. ;:100 (1 •• UrAniunl 46:\1 C;o'd !\hn

I l~lnl I:oldhall"k 3300 G(lldnra

1

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10:) Gr Plftlnll Dc"

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4:\00 Gnnnar wtJ "~~3 Gwlllim mOl H Rock ':lOO II .. · Ihh zeo Ha .. ,. IlM II el L

:!2R800 Hd\':a)' 96!03 llralh

1:J1lOO II .. ·• 4000 1\ Cml 2270 Holl m Home on

72~0 110m Yk ~3 Hoyle

1111 11 Bay 400 lIusky

"300 Inlpftn ~'07 I :-I1,k.1 3~(I Int Prtc

ft,Nl1 Jacknlle l&lOO Jle \100 Jasper

1133.' Jell 10000 Job 41,~ Joll.1

:IP21!} Jnn. 43M Jup ~ot1 Kayrand 900Il K.nvlll. 11\01 Kerr Add 4lnn Keyboyoo" non Ke)'m,1 lIlO Kirk lIud

m.1 K 1.1k. IllXl'! Klond:ke

40!1Q) Krl.tlna 4!N11 •• b

lOon I' DlIl 11000 1. 1.ln, 121M I. o.u ~1~ 1, Shere

1000 14 Q:l!Ia l:!U Lamaqut ~oo LanUe ~O Lell,it 100J I.<n

61300 1.<. 1831f I. Pete

soo U. La. Lomf,a

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4000 Macdonald 11600 Maolle 7300 Mac.eno &SOD Mach·oo 6no Mad,e.

2~0 Malllel 21m Mal

4SOO Mln ... t Ur 3000 Marll,o

11000 Morbon.r ISOO Marcu. 1·'8 Mcl.lYre

$(\80 Mcmarmae , 3200 Mcwalter.

1115 Menl'r 16700 ~Ierrlll

200 Merin Pete 1060 Mldcon

!DC MID City 50011 Min 1300 Min S 121 )Inc Cp 1900 M.m Min

6\700 Naco , 2300 Nat E>plor

N PUo 6100 Neill'

8:000 N Alltr :&400 N Bid lSloo N Bnto! 1600 N Cal 500IJ N Cont '600 N Deihl 750 N DIcken

1500 N Hllh 7000 N )./tIrr

290S0 1'1 Myl 2000 Newlund

4OlOO N 1.)1 &OIl Nen. 1I~ 1'1 J .. o.

343100 Ne" North 313100 Newnorth

IMO N Athona 1l!900 N Marlon

12M 1'1 Harrl noo 1'1 .Goldyu. 1150 1'1 Fortun.

V 23000 1'1 ·R ... y. 11000 N Non

11&00 1'1 RYln I. 1000 1'1 Sen W 1'1 SUP

Z\7ZlO NT 'Ihurb 14300 1'1 VeUo 7000 Nickel R ]tOO Nip :nOlI 1'11110 .

· ·1000 Nor Acmo 989 Noranda '

S11l1 Nip n. 36000 1'10'11014 21tl9Narp .. 11m Normel ~ Nudlliam

13000 Not I.e ·500 N C 011

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· 1300 on· 1101 . TOO Okal

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900 Pamour 13400 P We", 11100 PI""" . •

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215 221;215 75 71 71

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Ilft 115 150 22 II 20

1M 100 100 31 M SO. 9 , ,

13 13 13 5 ! 5

171 I7\. 171 :2 II 10 101;. 10 10 6\i 11\ 611

211 28 7:175 . 275 265 270

~n 40 40 m 250 11! 11 1m 13\6 m 25'1. 2m

51 4.\ lO 293 217 267

13 12 U 270 z.w ~3

70 66 66 n !5 8

83 8.1. Il .1\ 32 52 8 7'~ 8

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11 17 21 117 116 ItT 29'. 2 7 29li 00 Inn 10<1

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12 11 11 21 1.' l' 16 16 16

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46700 Pilch Or. 3400 Po.d '00 P Rouyn

222.1 Pralrt. 01 I 5223 Pre.l0 II 7~Purd1 M 2490 Do wll _,Pro. Air 4G30 Pre.tol\

117000 Q Chlb 27300 Q Cop Jl9:Z1 Q Melal 47300 Q Nick 4~61 Queen"0ft

216.\0 R,yreek 13m R POP 17300 Rt"· P l~ Rc,et 4l1l0 R Prado 180l R Alhab

Il2lG Roche 7000 Rexan

22100 R Sllv 1M Roy.lIte moo Rupunl

4:10 Russell 100:1 Raynor

. 193:1-5 Ant 43300 SI.d R 78M Sap phi 6700 Se-c Free 4900 Sherr 510 Sh.ep C

7700 Seur Ralnb ~1J9 Sulllv 10)0 Spoon 1000 Sh wk.,

40.1 Sl,ma 3!DC Sla •••

119G0 S)·lv.n nO) Tand,m

2l3l T.ck 11 2300 Te. C,y

11000 Them L Thom L

1000 Tombll 14095 Tfl'lBII Emp l!Oa T Era 4611n T n ..

2210~0 Trend Pet. 16101 Triad 011 4!OO Tun.t 7~ U MhI

:1691 U ·A.b 1701& U Montlub ~2nn Il Co. 1m Vtnl 472:1 Vlollm 1I01"Vul"n 2131 Walle A

. 3!Dn W .. d I'yr 187~1J Weku.k.

130 W 1.< ... 2'~~ W TOn.

U!IOO w H Tunl.1 lOOO Wlllroy

Winch

-. ill :3 14 71' ·75 73. 12 12 12

320 .310 315 ~.M! ~75 12 12 12

26l !.SO !.SO . 310 :175 :115

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131 145 UI 380 360 375 139 123 123 22 22 22 92 12 tI 1111 11 1IV. Uv. 11 II 41\ 41'0 4li

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170 169 17 0 101~ 101> 101.,

WarFront By SPENCER MOOSA

TAIPEH, Formosa (AP)-A lull settled over the Chinese civil war front Tuesday as Nationalist off!: . cials presumably wrestled with the problem of eva~uatlng the Tachens under the guns of the Reds.

The first dribble of refugees from t.be Tachens, 200 miles north of Formosa, arrived at the port of Kee.lung n ear Talpeh,. possibly forseshadowlng the withdrawal of the Islands' garrison under t.he wing of the U. S, 7th Fleet. .

There were 193 refullees, includ.

OTTA WA-CP- ·'1'he feel eral government Tuesday opened a defence of Parlia­ment's labor cude which three provinces are asking the Supreme Court of Can­ada to rule unconstitutional.

The oode, passed In 1948, 15 be· Ing challeoged by the government& of Ontario, Quebec aod Alberta.

Their chief contention is that it invades jurisdiction on property and civil rights conferred upon the province under the British North America Ac!. INVOLVES STEVEDORES Ing 18 slck aod wound~d National·

ist soldiers and wldolVs and or· The code-the Industrial Rela, phans of men who fell In the de· tions and Disputes Investlgatloo fence of Ylklangshan, an Island Act-deals \vith labor.management eight miles oorth of the, Taehens relations in such Industries as rail. which was s~lled by the Reds last ways, shipping, airlines and com. week. PEIPING BLASTS U. S. n.unlcations that largely cros~ pro.

While they sailed from the Tac.i, vinelal boundaries, ens In two Nationalist destro~'ers, The case reached the highest on the final leg they passed ctlllrt as the indirect result of a tllrough waters protected by the jurlsdictional Light betwccn two 7th Fleet. . 1m ions seeking bargaining rights

(P.elping radio reIerred to the ar· ior about 100 stevedores on the To. rival. of thrce more U. S, carriers ronto waterfront. In Formosan waters and charged the fleet was armed with atomic Frank H. Hail's Brotherhood of bombs. Railway .and Steamship Clerks

{A broadcast heard In Tokyo AFI .. TLC has negotiated for the said that "Uoite.d States Intrigues . group for same years with Eastern lor the so·ealled cease·flre through Canada Steverdoring Company. It the United Nations good oUlees Is' considers Itsel£ under federal juris. an litter deceit 10 cOI'er up new diction but has oot found it neces. war provocations." I' I

(This was an echo. of Premier 5ary to gel formal cert flcat on Chou En.laI's declaration of the from the Canada Labor relations prevlous day that Red China would board.· liberate Formosa, a cease·flre was CLAIM MAJORITY

Royaf family-press . . ... .,. . LONDON (CP) - Buckingham

Palace has sharply rebuked em· ployees of the royal household who take advantage of their privileged position to write inside stories of life at cour!.··

The complaint came Tuesday from Cmdr. Richard Colville, the Queen's prp.5S secretary. In a let· ter made public· by the general council of the press, Colville said It had long been understOOd that persons working for the Royal Family do not prom by making t1:1eir experiences the subjict of books or articles.

"That a small number have ehosen to break the trust imposed in them does not change the fact t.'lat such a Irust exists," said Col· ville.

The press council, holding its quarterly meeting, strongly . en· dorsed Colville's statement, saying ·the last thing It wished to do was "encourage any breach of trust."

The statement i~ the first public reflection of the extreme Irritation felt by court officials over the rash of articles written by former house· hold staff, purporting to disclose Inside stuff about the Royal Fam· i1y.

Baby Sitter Mixes TwiuR •• Are Perplexed

LUBBOCK, Tex. (AP) - The babysitter calmly gave the Wood twins their bath, then started to put them back In ~l!eir cribs. But which twin went in which crih? She couldn'l tell.

tributd much that was worth· Here is the opportunity you hal. while to the Newfoundlaod 01 been waiting {or. With a smal

down payment you can now star their day, . From her early child that new home which you hal" hood in King's Cove the famil! always heeo dl eamlng of. moved to Harbour Grace when I Located in one of the beaul' graduating from school she fol Ispots on the I'o~tugal Cove Roai

. only a short distance from the lowed III the footsteps of hel I City. the new sub-divlslon knowr brother. the late Dr. Tom Han af Penetaoguishene is In th, rahan, entering the teaching pro· 'center of :. growlnh community Cession and for many years taught i So If you are Interested In secur

, : ng one of these_ lots to hulld or ;l.!hoOI at

D ~rOCktehr. s Coye

d, cahr. in the spring, it would be wl5,

.'onear. urmg I~ perla ~ e for you to do· so immediately D!

made her home with the Finn the remaining lots are going faSI family In Carbonear where she For further information conta,·· was part of that brilliant coterie AVALON REALTY CO., LTD.

of friends later to include the late STAN CONDON Right Reverend :'Ionsignor Fino of sacred memory. SELLING AGENT

Across the ycars her marriage DIAL 7848 OR 4813 to ,loho O'Donnen of Mount Pat. ~ec~8~t~ rick, Avondale, who ·predeceased her several months ago, represent· I cd the blending of families who were foremost in Church and, State of their time.

The passing of Catherine O'Don· nell closcs the chapter of the old· : cr Hanrahan family brinllin~ a i

warm conjuring with a rich past amongst her remainiog contempor­aries like J, T, Lawton of Wabana, and Mrs. Joho Finn Murphy of Carhonenr, a.s well as mooy of her olrl pupil, of those far·off days.

To her son, Frank, aod her daughters, !llisses Rose and I{ath· lcen, whll~c devotion to their mother was In the christian code of dutiful children, warmest sym· pathI' Is tendered in the loss of one whose exemplary Catholic lifc leal"ened with buoyant simplicity will el'er be their consolation.

Sec. hear and play Ihe heautilul , ORGANS and PIANOS

we now have on display! A. L. COLLIS & SON

Expert Piano 1 uning Serviu Topsail Highway DIAL 4902-A

FOR SALE 30 3n 30

230 212 224 no 177 177

. ~.'OO Wlnora ....:!O W Hor 2100 Ya. CI' 3000 Y <nore. 3101 Yk llrar 1lOO \'uktno liDO!] Zenmlc

CURB 431J BUlolo-

1130 C P.p 1'.10

:t.1 24'. 24

unacceptable, and the U. S. 7th Last year, the coach·all District Fieet "must" suit Formosan \\'3· 50 of John L. Lewis' United Mine ters.) Workers CCL organizcd some of

the group, claimed a majority and went to the Ontario labor relations

. NolV the whole Wood Camily is DETACHED TWO STOREY upset. HOUSE. Situate 289 I.cmarch.

39' 3!1O 3M 6~, A A'.l

~:I'l m 4~1 !4 ,: ~I

7~ 73 73 300 'P Off'

6200 Yuk Co.

PREDICTS qUEMOY ATrACK

While the Nationalists are reluc· board for certification. The board tant to give up the strongly' de· ordered a representation ,"ote of fended Tachens without a battle, It the stevedores.'

Mother can't tell the diUerencc. GREAT For HEARING ant Road. Garoen front and Daddy doesn'l know-he never did. _ _ rear, Gura ~e. It contains four

Douglas, 5, and Debbie, 3 oCtcn (4) bo(rooms, bathroom, li\"in~ BANKS II JO~~ IO~t

fi~. filn 51n ~1l 53~ 630

241 Montreal 13> N Sc.Il.

Il'Ioronlo 3U CGmmtrrt: 22~ l1emlnlon 6~l Imr><rlll 10 Ro)·.1

was expected orders would go to t~ 7th Fleet to el'3cuate t.he mil. The federal government stepped itary deCenders as soon as lhe U.S. in to protect its 0 •• 0 claim 10 Congress act~ on President Eisen· jUrisdiction against that of the On· hower's r 'Ilmendatlons. tario board and eventually I refer·

N t F Sh a!ld dini~g 'rooms madc in perceptive about such things, say 0 or ow kltchell. 011 furnace (radiation) th~y can't heip. BELT 0 N E r~rplM'ANSI$TO~ Hardward nnd linoleum flOim I 7 I 1

21 %1 21 Robert and Charles were born HEARING AID low groUt I rent. posse~silln 0111 Nov. 26 at Reese air force base. month. For further particular; :~ 2R :n

T~I 12 i21.~ I. 1~ I:, 131m \1'l

INOUSTR1A1.5 10011 M.R 141. 14'\ IW,

1m 1m 17'.\ 191;" 1911 19h

here. T.ltcir lat,lIer is Capt. Douglas BEL TONE HEARING SERVICE I' a',d perrnissioo to I'iew apjllv til" R. Wood. S. W. SHORT. Distributor John 0 0'0'· . I"

IH ~R fi.O 21~ 21n 210 1~ 25 27 A 6 5 9 ftl" 8

3~.1 11 SI.,1 2%1} Simpson!'

Total ,"Ie. 6.1)6.000.

Gen. L' ·1I·chang, commandc! cnce to the high court was de, of Quemo. :~s quoted by the offl. cidcd on. The case now has broad· c1al Centrvl Dally News as sa~lng cned to one inl'olving conslitutlon. the Chrn~se Communists Uddmlt· .

FOOTPRINTS MAY IIEI.P 340 WDIer 51. St. JOhn"li • riSCo Charles weighed six ounces more I P 0 B 862 Read Estate and Auctioneer

at birth. But Robert has gained un'i ., ox Phone 2637 !,ial 6~49 Star Hall, Henry Stre;, til they weigh the same. I Jan17._4,31 1\ 20" 11

I~ 19 19 373 31.1 3511

NEW YORK (AP) Closing quott!s: Beth Steel ........... , .• 110 ely" will Inl'ade that Islaod but allty of the whoie act. Even Mrs. Wood COUldn't tell·

1>21 110 92.1 ~~. 9' 9~t

13\. t2~1 12!i 601l 340 6(lIl

10 910 9" 14 14 H 91011 10

22 20 21 131~ IJ 13 50 4R !2 11'.. J 0'.. 11\, 41. 4 .4

20 1911 20 16 16 1&

331 83S 811 17 18 17

270 27" 270 34% 31 54!i 7~ 7~ 723 210 205 210 57", S&I,~ SH~ 211, ~" 231, 111,~ 6 6

111'& lOll 1011 160 1~4 III Jl Illl 131. 1m 13 13 ~8 54 l5

Borg 'Varner.... •••• • ... 36~~ Ches and Ohio.... ,,;, .. 44~4 Cons Edison.. •••• •••• • t' 471,'2 El Auto L.... •••• I I I' • I 36~, Gen Electric ... , .... ..:. 48~8 Gen l\fotors. ,.; I •• t. 'I ••• 97~8 Kennecott ....•••••• , I •• 105 l\lontgomery W;.. .. ,; .. 81 N.Y. Centrdl. I." . I .. . ... 33~8 Radio Corp, I • • It •• •• I t I 38% Std all N.J ............. 109th U Aircraft., ••••••• •••• 83'k Vanadium'. I ... ".. •••• •• 371/",­\V U Tel.... • • •• .... •• I 7B"h Westinghouse. ... • .. , •••• 780/.

STEAMSHIP MOVEMENTS 77 &9 TO

m 100 ZOI 121. Ill, 12 FURNESS RED CROSS ,m .Im 1m Fortijamllton leaving New York 16 m. 1m Jan. 14, Halifax ·Jan. 24, ·due St. 70 70 70 John's Jan. 26, sailing 'again Jan. i~,.:~ :g\\ 28 (Halifax). 9\, 8~i A Fort Avalon leaving New York

I~ H 1111 Jan. 27, St. John, N. B., Jan 29, ~~J 9~~,., ~'" Halifax Feb. 1. due St. John's Feb, 23 20 21'.\ 3, salling again Feb. li (Corner 32 30 30 Brook). ~ ~ ~. Fort Hamilton leaving New York m 413 12.1 Feb, 4, Halifax Feb. 8, due SI. 7~ 7~ 7~ Joho's Feb. 10, sailing again Feb. 8\\ II! 8V. 12 (Halifax).

21h 22 21"'1 Fort Hamilton leaving Halifax

predicted an attack wlil "certainly be sma~hed."

The Island, across thf strait from r'ormosa, is expected to come under the 7th Fleet's protec. tion under Ihe arrangement for :a Nationalist pullout from the Tach· ens. Quemoy Is the most Import­ant Nationalist 0{l&.'10re Island. ·Il bottles up the Red port of Amoy,

CitY' Experiences Snowstorm

TlI'o and I half Inches of snow was dumped on. city ·streets yes· terdar-the second snowstorm of the year. .

The snow commenced to fall at 2 . a.m. yesterday but moderated shortly before lunch hour;

S!. John's and the 'South Coast received the most· snow, 'witi) only light snow reported from other areas of the· province.

Russia Ends State Of War WitlI Germany , . MOSCOW (Reutersl-The prae· sldlum of the Sllpreme Soviet. Rus­sia's . p!tfliament, has l!nded' the state of war existing b~t\veen t.ie Soviet Union and Germany since June 22, 1941, it was announced Tuesday nlg~t,

Anh'e same time, the praesldium decreed that 'the termination does not Iffect existing four • power

them apart. So she kept one ba by in one crib and the other in an· other and was careful never to pul one In the wrong crib.

The babysitter neatly ruined that system. \'

The Woods said L.iey plan 10 take the twins to the Reese hospital for I a footprint check against their birth records.

A Cherry Greeting Alpha Girls On "The Dance"

agreemeols On Germany.. These .• agreement~. permit troops of the Monda~ mormng the lovely slln-four powers to occupy German ter. shine entIced your reporter to walk ritory. to work Instead of waiting for the

The praesldium, consisting of Main Line bus. Walking down over President Kliment Voroshilov and Queen's Road at the top of Church a \'Ice.presld~nt f~r eaCh. of the 16 Hill we were very surprised to Sovlet republics, Issued Its decree hear a little voiec pipe up and say, 10· days after Russia agreed to "Slippery this morning isn't Itu", recogniZe West Germany If. she and looked oi'cr to sce the br'~ht-drops plans ·to rearm and reJects . . 1-: the Paris agreement. est smillng faced ~Ittle boy ~omlng

WATERFRONT' DIRECTORY

" as!! 5631! _ aGO Feb. 15, due St. John's Feb. 17, I 41\ 41i' sailing again Feb. 19 (Halifax) .• u ' . Fort Avalon leaving -New York ~ 3~ 3~ Feb, 16, St. John, N.B., Feb. 18, 5n II so Halifax Feb. 22, due SI. John's H.M-C. DUCKY ARDS

Britain the United Slates and 11)1 over lhe hIll carrYing a France iermlnated their state of shovel. We replied that it was slip­war with Germany in a joint de· pery Indeed and he should walch daration signed In July, 1951. More out for fear he fell Rnd bump him.

. than 40 other states took similar self. "Oh, no," he replied, "I action, but Russia and east Eu- watch out." ropean states remained technically His cherry greeting and sweet

1&3 183 113 Feb, 24, sailing again Feb. 26 ~~ S6 ~~ (Corner Brook and New York). Newfoundland, Fire Tug 103, 4Z ~ 40 FURNESS WARREN LINE M.V. Cinderella,. Ind M.V. Christ· I~o 11~ 167 Nova Scotia leaving Boston Jan. mas Seal. m. II Wli 14 and Halifax Jan. 18, due St. A. H. MURRAY It CO" LTD.

195 183 m John's Jan. 20. Sailing Jan. 21 for M.V. Irene M, from Montreal, 1~ t~ ~ Liverpool.. d· h d hlfted t th S th 11\. 1010 11'1 Newfoundland leaving Liverpool ISC arge , s 0 e ou • ~~I\ ~~" 101'. January 22, due st. Johnl! Jan. 28, side to take coal Ind 1I1Ied for 11 I!' f~ LeavIng lor Halifax and Boston Halifax. 14 13 11 Jan. 29, due Halifall Jan. 31 and BOWRING BROS. LTD. W· ~\\ ~I' Boston Feb. 3. Leaving Boston M.V. Algerine to prosecute the

123 . l:l 123 Feb. 4 and Halifax Feb. B, due St, 40 40 40 lohn's Feb. 10: Sailing again same seal fishery. Lalle 11'111 be mas.

lion 132'J.9 14029 day for Liverpool. ter. 611 II> 6\l Nova' Scotia leaving Liverpool Philip Wayne, Brinton, master,

17\. 17', 1m Feb. 5, due St. John's Feb. 11. taking freight for',Clarenvllle. 3l'l 3ial J.31

1 LeF abvln1

g dfor Halifax and Boston H- 90 92 e. 2, ue Halifax Feb. 14 and David. Watts, Hodder, muter,

IBI W 18' Brston Feb. 17. Leaving Boston from JrIarystown, discharged, tlk. ;~ ml ra;\ Feb. 18 and Hallfax Feb. 22, due Ing freight f(lr Marystown for J. 31 33' 33 St. John's Feb. 24. Sailing Feb. '25 W. Wlscombe only.

130 121 130 for Liverpool . ~ ~~:; Newfoundland . Leaving Liver. BAINE JOHNSTON & CO. LTD.

at war uotll now. , The Soviet Union recognizes only smile stayed With us ~ll day and

the government of Communist. made the day even· brIghter than ruled East Germany. usual. In~Bonn West German Chancel· We couldn't help musing on the

lor Konrad Adenauer's cabinet cheeriness of the little fellow and called a special meeting for Wed. the possibilities of his making a nesday to consider the Moscow an· first class. public relations man nouncement. h h

In Berlin, Western Allied offi. w en e. grows up. .,,' " elals said the Moscow declaration The htUe poem, Politeness contains a threat of a new blockade by A.A. Milne alBa kept popping of Berlin. An American official through out thoughts and we kept said I "sovereign" East Germany thinking that here is onc child might do what the Russians.Mce who loves people instead of wish· tried' unsuccessfully-shut off West ing they would not speak. BerUn's IIIpply lines.

Be Your Btst In S~apshot.s

Cab Drivers Show No Cl1ivalry

1M 101 103 pool Feb. 23, due SI. John's Mar. M,V. Dauotless,Martin, mISter, 2\2 215 210 1. Leaving for· Halifax and Boston sailed for Hr. Grace on Monday, I:v. I: l~.. Mar. 2, due Halifax Mar.· 4 and

J 31 3. . Boston Mar. 7. Leaving Boston Jan. 24th. . By ALiCIA HART :~ . I~\.:~ Mar. 8 and Halifax Mar. 12, due St. ,.STEERS LTD. Oh, those awful 'snapshots! why

~ORONTO (CP) - A Toronto woman-a blonde-said in court Tuesday seven cab drivers sat by In their cars While she was beaten up on a downtown strect. . I!', 11". II', John's Ma~. 14, Sailing Mar. 15 for Evelyn Crosbie, Collins, mas- Is there never ooe .that looks de·

mIl. \0 LIverpool.' . ter, 'with" a cargo of salt fish, to ceot enough to give II boy friend. 21 II 21 Nova 'Scotia leaving Liverpool 1:; I d d And you just know .. that horrible ;~ l: :~ Mar. 12, due st. John's Mar. 18, e an e at east end premises one that's all teeth is going to 22 19 20 Leaving for Halifax and Boston Bal~d's Cove. Will start diseharg· turn uP' In the annual. ~~" ~~ tt Mar. 19, due Haliiall Mar. 21 and Ing on Tuesday, Jan. 2~. Teeners suffer agonies over the :roO 29 29 Boston Mar, 24. Leaving Boston Philip E. LRke, Thorohlll, mas· snapshots. About the MIl' pre. en· 111\ li'i I:,t sMtar.J25h ~ndMHalif3allC Msar·11129, due ter, from Fortune via Trepassey, table' one show5 you in dirty jeans 10 10' 10' . 0 n s ar. • a nl for mi I 313 Liverpool Apr. 1. discharged empties, and loaded and that won't do. ·The diseom·

300 290 290 c~rgo of all for Burin and Grand fort of awful new snapshots. Is

, Shirley Morgan, a hat check gif\, said a man attacked her compan· ion, Belty :'lorrison a ca!hicr, as the two left the cocktail iounge where they both work,

"When I tried to interfere, he ihll me over the face and I f~1I over a pile of ash ean~," she said.

~ ~:!L 6:1, NFLD; CANADA STEAMSHIPS B.lnk" Sailed .Sunday,· Jan. 2~. only slightly less g!lastly than the • • B II I I I' d b th b b . Though the snow came, Trans-145 133 m e e 5 e II leaving Halifax Jan. CROSBIE &: ·CO. LTD·' m senes cause yea y pIC· ,

~ . ~l~ ~ 24, due SI. John's Jan. 26, salling· tures that delight your parents. Can~da Airlines. succ:eded 18 ·67. '7 67 again Jan. 27. . . W. E. 'Knock, Augot, master, You look like something In fur. getllng both Its fhghts· m yester· ~v. g~l' Belle Isle II lealng Halifax Feb. sailed for Greenspond \vith a lire !napshots if you· inake a con. day. Snow gener:rlly affords I I'~ 11 l7Ii 1. due St. John's Feb. 3, sailing' c:.rgo· of coals,' on Monday, Jan. clous effort while' t.he picture's much beUer cellnlg than fog and 4~~ .:. 4rs ag~I:II!~Y5e-4ineaVlng Halifax Feb. ~4. being taken, This 'won't protect so the planes came· In to land 41 40 40 8, due St. John's Feb. 10, sailing A. E. BICKMAN CO. LTD.. you from the Me. that's tak~n pretty much on schedule 91\ 9 tv. again Feb. 11.. 'Alberto Wareham, Walsh,· mn while you were blissfully eating •

47:~ n:\\ ff:~ _ _ ler, from North Sydney. with a a hamburger, but It will· help on gether lightly. 73 18 f5 ·.CLARKE. STEAMSHIP CO. cargo of' flour, etc., 'for Twlllin. the posed ones.. ·Look pleasant, but dan't force 1~1! '1~ 1~~ North Coaster' leaving S1.· John gate 'and Bonavista. Sailed Satur. 'Remember that whatever IS a smlle that will come out look· .3J' :r.~ N.B., Jan. 25, Halifax Jan. 28, dUB .closest to·ttie caniera."wlll photo- lag fIInny. Licq yoUr lips if you :18.5 .. 271 ':18.5 John's Jin. 31, sailing again Feb. 1. day, Jan, 23rd.: .. graph largest. Watch your feet get a chance. .

4S· 4'· 41 ·Novaport leaving St .. John N.'B., AYltE " SONS LTD. and knees·M this: one. Remember that a· head on shot ~m ~~i~t rehb.,l'FHbalifax Feb. 4,' due: St, G. S. Cutler,' Rogers, masler, : If yOu don't know what to ·do is-least flattering. Wheather it's

-ll .. ·ll· 'n a n a e. 7. ,sailing agaIn Feb. 8. loaded a' full cargo' of freight.' with. your hands, hide them. Put a head shot or a full Doe, turn '. ~~~4~' ~~. SNtl

oJ, rtFh~~~~S~~u:::I~eb~tit~o:un~ for TrIn~ty: .Bay port~: Sailed. on them behind your· back or In your yourself three·quatcrs to the cam·

., .. ·7L 7a·.'70' •. 0 ns Feb .. H., salUng Igaln MondaY,·Jan .. 24th.,. . pockets or In.your.1ap; Just for- era. no Tn. m Feb. ·1l!. : . . '. '.' .. A. HARVEY & CO. L'rD.· get "them.· .... ' Try to be Informal. ·Uniess you 17;. ,~ . .: I Fe~08f.ortHalellafValllngFeSbt J180hnd'U~'sBt" . ·S,S. Random, from No' Sydney, via If your're .st~ndll!!; •. stand firm taik wiUt your mouth wide open

41 . 4' . f7 ,u, ...,' e , '.. Iy .. oll.· both l~gs, 1'ot on Me hip" be photograped 5a~'ing something m - 132 :.: ~ John'. ,Feb. 21, saI.IInli allaln. Feb: Port aux Basques, dlseharglng If Y0!1're sHUn'lI don't let your legs casual rather than assuming a :IOII(::IOJ, '::IOJ 22. .. . . . q.rgo of coal. . .spra~! .. but place 'your ankies to. stiff expression.

• •

There is Romance , There enn ile I"Omance in slati5liCF. in thc. hUI1l!rum fi~urr.s

that pomt 10 the rapid progrcs5 of Canad~'~ mining bu<fne« An~ every now and again some of Ihc Ihrill of pe~<ol;;; achlcvcmcnt cnters into Ihe story of cxpioratirll1' ami. devclopment. The NO~hcrn Miner's corp~ of cnginccr·cdilor;, it:; othCl' :xperts ." 110 ~c~p the ,,"orld In tOllch with :'Ilinin" in Canada m all Its brtlh~nt aspects, do not confine themseh'cs II) stn.rk facls and figures. Thcy try 10 com'ey the spirit which :IUlmates those who venturc their lives and their mone" mto what is one of the great adventures of our limes-th~ ~e:;:::g of the vast mineral reaches oC Canada's far spread

THE $7.50 a year

NORTHERN MINER 'TORONTO At Dealers 20,

Writc jor Specimcn Copics

Storm Rubbers ~et it r"in , • let it snow - your chil· dren will be protect­ed in ,0 pair of these

,3 B U c k I e Rubber GAITERS especially designed for the younger set by

DOMINION

.RUBBER

Jan26,3i

CHILD'S • Sizes 5·12 .............. 3.19

JUNIORS Sizes 13·3 ........ 3.45

. , BOYS' Sizes l·S

, .

r : · : rH~ DAILY NEWS,

, .. .,

-I lUnder au:

.To-Nil 3

. (Tel)

e

1 '1wo unfurr with no chi able for h

. home in thl

Pu F

The Oepor inform all I

II the year l' after May

All contra persons en jects, defe make orro fore the a

jan22,:!5

Lea\'lnr Janl Feb Feb Feb 'Feb

For For

HAR~

R.N,C

THE

Page 15: !Pears,oil .Eis~nhowet~,,;, H· ;' . F' .' · Move ':::~~. litcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · ,mcan II aI', I tIC nnese e so·, . . • tents-it was almost

: ~ ,

II

. -

rHE DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JAN. 26,,1955 9-"'-. ___ J '" .... _,._., ___ _ ..

. BINGO

(Under auspIces Juvenile T~ A. and, B, Society)

GAIETY AUDITORIUM

To-N.ght at 9 o'clock

ITel)

EXCELLENT PRIZES 30 GAMES FOR $1.00

,

T,O 'RENT Two unfurnish'ed rooms, suitable for couple with no children, or one furnished room suit. able for two girls or gentleman, in heated home in the east end. •

• Apply.

BOX 18; Daily News

Public Notice PERMITS TO BURN

, '

'M'EMORIAL STADIUM

EXHIBITION HOCKEY

Thursday, January 27th, af 7:00 ,.

R.C.A.F. Greenwood

vs.

R.C,A.F. Unicorns, Torb~y .

. .. .Holding seats on sale at

. Stadium Wednesday, .and General Admission Thursday at Stadium.

. ADULT SKATING·9·1l

JUST ARRIV£D FRESH HALIBUT COD TONGUES COD FILLET

and. FRESH HERRING

Please Call or . "Phone 2226

CITY FISH SHOP Cor. Prescott and

Gower Sfs"

The Department of Mines and Resources \yishes 10 ·I~~~~~~~~~;~ inform all persons who are intending to burn brush in' the year 1955, that no permits to burn will be issued afler May 15, 1955.

All contractors, sub-contractors,. private individuals,. ::lersons engaged in cutting right of, way for any pra· jects, defence, railways, . roads, etc., are requested to make arrangements to have all burning completed be. fore the above date. '

P. J. MURRAY, Deputy Minister of Resources jlln22,2a

Nfld.-Canada . S~ea~ships Ltd~

Lenlnr Halifax:

FREIGHT SAILINGS

M,S, "BELLE ISLE U" JrALIFAX- ST, JOHN'S

January 24th,,,,,,,,,, """" ",; ... ,Due St, John's January 26th February 1st .. " ,,,,,,,. "".",Due SI.. John s February 3rd February 8th .... "."". "."",Due St. John's February loth .Februaty 16th"" ." .. " •• ""."Due St. John's February 18th February 24th.... .. ... ". .. ...... Due SI. John's .February26th

For Immediate clearance per direct sa!Ungs. For rates, space and other information apply:

HARVEY & CO., H'D., General Agents, Dial, 2151

R. N. COLE, Special Represenfative, St. John's, Dial 2207 . or to

THE ROBERT REFORD· COMPANY, LTD.; Agents Montreal and Toronto ".

. . . HEAD OFFICE - HALIFAX. N,S. . , .

Apartment WANTED BY

. YOUNG BUSINESS EXECUTiVE.

Bachelor Apartment, unfurnished

DIAL 7614 Tel

.. ~====== Business Opportunity

We are accepting· appllcathins now for February, .1955 opera· tlons. to one Individual who can handle a . ' CHOC#LATE BAR FRANCHISE, We wl1l have 25 .. retail outletS operating every day and se1l1ng a varlet)" of bronded well kliown chocolate bars, on pleasant loca' tlons and surr:lUndlngs. No help required. thIs is . a. permanen·· busIness with a permanent week· ly Income assured. Tenns avail· able, Small Investment. For con· .ference write to Frybury Mill. Co., 1176 Sherbrooke St. Wesl, Montr •• ', Que. . janl9,2wks

NOTICE·. •

, . . ,,,

We wish ,to annbunce:' that. due to . .. . . ....,.. . ..'

Tuesday's .. Fire~we"h~ye' esta~'ls~ed

Temporaty' ;Offices -.AT. THE NEWFbu'.,.DLAND 'TRActoi" ~. . & .. EQU"ME~r:;CQMp.ANY.~S . P;~~~ISE~;" 'ON WAr~R"STREET".: TE~.PHO~~:JOll· .

. CROS8IE&':C~OMPANY··LTQ.· _~ .. ~,': .' :,;:. . : .- ' .. I ~ .. ' I·t. : • '

"

, .. .. :' i.. .

, './ :.- . ~:\ '.~~' .'-, .' " "'. ';:, .- '-... .

.. ' . ' ~.

.~. ' . ,. , ,

.. ... -r-:: .,

Wanted " WANTED - A general Maid. 'Phone 7960 or apply, Mrs. Roy Cheeseman, 25 Exeter Ave.

WANTED TO BUY - Comics. magazInes. pocket bOOKS, guitars, accordions, 16 1\I:M ·lllm, sewing machines;' ·typewrlters. clothes,· footwear,-John D, Snow. New

. ,COMM:ERCIAl~\I. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~S;:-t.~· Joh~' 5 Allied Printers' Unicm;·1fi"·', .. MEMORIAL ·.LOCAL '44f :;;i

. 'HOCK:EY. STADIUM There will be an emergency m~eting of the ':; ... 10:30 AT STADIUM . ' . above' Union in the Star Hall, TO.NIGHT,:,i; Avalon Telephone \ .' . .., . ,. . vs. • HOCKEY TO·NIGHT Wednesday, January 26.th, at. 8 p.m. All :/".

8:00 . members are urged to be present. . :;.,.; .

H ·1 C G d C. WILLIAMS,' ~~:;., Gower St., .. jan26,lm Marshall Motors

ST. LAWRENCE SEAWAY lob Admission 25c information now available ·In- Patrons Ir. asked 10 enler 'clUdllig contractors, application I 10 .

. 0 y ross vs. uar s, Recording Secretary .:.:~; Tickets on sale at ===================':1....: ..

. a p.m •. form,·etc. Send $1,00 to Seaway ~~~~::::====~ In!ormatlon Bureau, Room· 707. 65 Sparke, Ottav:a. jan26,31 .

Get ,A Good Deal '. Bowrings from 9 a.m,

Help Wanted ....: Female . ..

A Dress·Llngerle Shop In your own home. ·Flfth Avenue. New

, York Fashions. Good commls· slons •. No Investinent.· . Write Modern . Manner, .' Department 6052. Hanover. Femia., or De· partment 6052. 366 Mayor Street, Montreal, P.Q. ,jan24,26,27

Male' Help Wanted ACTUAL J~ BS In C.nada, U.S., So. Am.; Europe. To S15.000 Travel paid. Wrlte Employment Info, Center •. Room C'14. 4 Green St .• Boston. 14. dee.29.12w

Male or· fer.rale, We have non· compeUt!I'ellllcs, Pralccted ter· rltory. Stamp please. L Parker

. Hemmlngford. Que, . janB.121,sat,mon,tue, .

. To Let FURNISHED·· ROOMS TO LET -~Phone 67M-H.

. For,Sale FOR SALE':"'One Aude/'s electric library with complete coursss in r a d I , , television, telegraph, motion pictures . and several others, price $3.00. Also a lot of other electrical books. Apply John Marshall, 13 Freshwater Road, '.

Stamps

. For' A. Good Deal'LeSB

fo 6 p.m •

.' Sales. Help and Agents 1952 MAYFLOWER .. 800.00 Wanted _ Male 194~ DODGE .... ,: ... 400.00 • 1950 VANGUARD IF WE SENOYOu YOUR OWN

SUIT WITHOUT ONE CENT . Van '"'' .". ".375.00 COST TO fOU wl11 you wear

1950 AUSTIN 350 00 and show It to you.r. friends and . .", .... ""1:5 '00 take their easy orders, making a

1950 FORD ............ :J O. handsome profit on each one? 1948 NASH : ... : ........ 450,00 You need no experienc~. I show

. . you how and supply big woolen 1951 PLyMOUTH .... , 800.00 sample kit free. But act quick. 1951 VANGUARD ..... 750.00' Write us a letter telling all about

. yourself. Send tlO money. Dept. 1952 HILLMAN, .... ",,900.00 5157, Dougta:. Tailoring Co,. P.O.

M· Box 308, Montreal. jan26,29,31 McK£nlay . otors .

limited i

tPhone 3487 or 4916 jan22/24,26 TO.NIGHT

Public Notice

CLUB OPEN

Leo Michae1s' Quartette

Cover 50c ~ , FOR/RF~hvnl(,) . .. Salesmen Wanted

Tenders ar~ invited for the. EXPERIENCED SALESMEN purchase, as· Is and where Is, of An exclUsive lerrltory I. now open In o:'e Lon;'yenr Prospector Dia· Iho St. John'. arc •.

h , Our products are Cully guaranteed, ex. mon'd Drill. gasoline driven. pendablc. ycnr·round necessltle. lor .ven'

"H W VALU" Id" b d ol!lt'('. $lore. factory. etc. Protected o TO ..: 0 stamps. Inspection may e mn e on Icrrltory as,ure. continual repeal bu.lne,", 39.c Is the price of this pamphlet. application to the Mines Branch, Vou Inve.t nothing. Wo liberally ,upply '\C oU wllJ need It sooner or later. Department of l\lines and Re.1t::~P~lt :'c~nlqu. oalos plan. present •. In fact, the· very flrst Hme you . 'ld' . 20 p.o. oomml"lon paid W .. ~I!· on all see a' strange old stamp,-K. sources, Govel'Oment BUI mg, order! plu. repe.t.. Thl. ls no ny.by Blleskl, Station "B", Winnipeg, Han'cY Road, St. Jqhn's. nlghl propOSItion .nd a car I. menU.I. Man. The successfl1l tCllderer will be CEtlnFl~mTI~;~JI~t~rl~O)II·ANr ______ II!II___ required to pay ~% Socinl Secur- ,.1122.21,26

Personal ity Assessment, in addi~ion to ~::~~~~~~~= price offered. '~

SLENDORTABI:.ETS·are effect-Tenders marked . "Tender. Jor IVe, 3. week~'supply $2;9 weeks Drill" should reach the under· $5; at ~er,t. ~dwards, M~rp.hY's, signed, not later than noon Wed. Peter 0 Marl s and Ash s Drug d 2 d F ·b ry 1955 Stores. nes ny, n e rua, .

iF!s,urance The hlghe:t or any tender

will not- neces~ariJy be accepted. L. G, CRUMMEY,

'Crystal Palace GOULD'S ROAD

10-NIGHT

LAURIER CLUB· ",,\j

. ,' ... ~, c·,,~

;I .. ~~ .

. CARD ~PARTY,~~i:' , .' THIS WEDNESDAY,. JANUARY 26th'

.... Members and their lady and gentlemen·::

friends are invited to attend. , ;,~;. ==

CITY CLUB' .. -

"he annual general meeting of the CI~b will be held .. on • • • ..'"

Thursday, Jan. 27th, at 8 p.m.) . .' The IT)eating will be followed by a social hour;

By Order , .. R. C KNIGHT, Secretary , .

";.' (The sale of papers will take place at this meeting) c·

CHILD WELFARE ASSOCIATION ;:/ . The Annual" Meeting of the

Child Welfare Associatiol'! will be held at

GOVERNMENT HOUSE on

Monday,· January 31st . ot 3.30 p.m. .

, .,

ACCOUNTANT'l ·.AVAIL4BLE

For part-time work' in the evenings.

Apply

BOX 15, Daily News '·-===========::::::::=9

. I !. . :1

t·· . 11.'

!. " , . t I',

. ( INSURE' noW with Furness Withy Ie Company. Ltd .• for I.uto, Fire. Transportation. Marine. 'Phone 1073 or Rex Kelland, 501~,

Deputy Minister of Supply.· . , WANTED A.TVPIST

: • I ,! ..

ROBERT DAWE &.~N, Fire lad A,plomobUe Insurance. ,Be safe. be S'1re, In·sure: Telephone 2882. !'.O. Box 85. Royal Bank Cham bera, SI. John·s. ap15,6m

Queen's ·Men

Cover 50c

NOTICE· At a. meeting of the Town

Council of St, Lawrence held at

. :.! -use an Electric Typewriter.

. DIAL 7051 .

for an interview ..

'-',

Coatad STAN FOWLER, Renon 8ulldlD·g. for Fire, AutOmobile an d Plate Glass Insurance. Claim& promptly, settled. 'PlIl'lne M31-P.O. Box 63. apl,lm St. Lawrence cnMarch 3rd, 1954, jan26.27

if" was moved, seconded and ~=================== INSURANCE· -' Bow""" iSrotben' Limited, Inaurance' Department,.. Fire. Automoblle. Marine and ali Cas\!alty Unes •. ·Telepbone 313L

. .

carried that the business tax Imposed under section t7.of the Local Government Act, chapter 66 of The Revised Statutes of

WANTED STEN'OGRAPHER

, . , i·

J. 8. M1TCDELL&SON" LTD. for. efficient service and prompt lettlement of, Insurance claims, Dial 2128·2129. f~bl1 ,601

_. . Newfoundland, 1952, be set at C-R-A-F-T-C-L':'·E-A-N-E""'R'-S --L"''l'J)':':' -:-;; -. w-:b::"'ere one·tenth of one per cent of the the rharm'ot: ncwne;s Is restored turnover of bus~ness.· GENERAL OFFICE WORK DIal ~6985. '14 Hamilton 51. oelll,I'.The rate of· the business tax .

L'1Jr~T}~LT 4,'.£. mCKJIANCo. . was. approved by the Minister of BAI RD· & CO LTD ~. lnstll'&'n ce Alent., 'Phones Retreading Municipal Affairs and Supply •• '. 1

IWiI·iHi-lj·6. P.O,B, 984, for your . .. . the 5th day of January, 1955. • ~urancB rell~ments., ~ . flon't ~akeehances.Have your This notice is published WATER ST. EAST 11 DEPENDAILE FIR .. ' INSUR :ar equipped for winter driving, accordance with the provlsiens .: ANCE-Don't risk your valuables fires rebuilt 1n snow·mud design of Scction 66 of the Local Gov. 1-=~ja=n=26=.2=7================:::::II: to 'save" a few ~llars. .. Our t USED 'I:.IRE .SALES, 86.Hamll· ernment Act. r= I fair-rate, reliable polley· gives ton Stree1. nOV(i.l!"th TO. L ET : Jmmedlate . protection. Phon 6921 or· write J .. J. Lacey .. P. O. . MiScellaneous Box l5OII. tepltl -'. . ..;...,._.:..' -,-:":'-:-~-:-:_.,.. :

. ~ .' .. T. W, TURTLS& SON-MasDns I In central locality 2,500 square. feet open space : '. .: Taxis·' and· Contractors, Brlck'·Manufac.! '. '. .. turers, also In,ttock are different ~ground Flat, separate entrance, h. eated •. Suit.

. colors In cement as well as a I roll Q1l1CK toDd ~Uer 8er.vloe- quantity ol.plaster sand mason able for large open office. Reasonable rental., th~ Ht,JB TAXI. near &be RailwaY sand, concrete sand. Phone .1489 . at any time, to aDy place, call Shearstown: janI3,eod,tf I

, , · , ItaUoD. Dial aon. . . . .. . . I

STOVE OIL-Any' amount from 5; gallons up, delivered. Ken· I mount· Oils. 'Phone 5472-A. .. I

.~-:-::~:::::==~:-'-__ ~ dec3.1in(n.' ..... '. . . j

. . II. :J. STABB· & CO: PRINCESS BEAUTY, PARLOUR, ;!i5 _ 57 lVater street, 13 LeMarchant ·Road. Dial 4310 st. John's. We specialize II, hair stylln)~ and ~~~~~~~~~~~ .uttlng.also tlntlns and ,cold waves. Open nlgbts by appoint· -.--.------

__ .....;. ___ '_.~ ___ '. ment. '. nov24,lmth .. Ne:wtouridland ·CAR ,OWNERS· - Tire· repairs, . Krease, on, cbange. motor tune up. Services .

'lUE CENTllAI. BAltBER SHOP- carburetor. valves, brake:r~linlng. : Fast efJiclent,pnitarY. servJce. AU springs. batterY ebarglng.l.'.BLU.E. FREIGHT SOuTH COAST modern·' eftuipment., five barber •. BONNET ,. SERVICE SlATION, . '. SERVICE

.. sf"] aill 24 N PhonA 488S.. apZS,lOJ The least pas . ¥ ew ng. .ew , . . . Freight for regular !Jorts South Gower.· St.,: opp. Adelaide .Motors ALL WOOL ,.&IA~E~SES re Co.ast.Servlcc for fonvardlngvla Ltd. . . . . . .. Jy9.1mo. pl~ed re-covered,. sprl!1£s.day Argentia and next trip 5.5. Bac· .:.._...;. .... ___ ~. --- bed~ rewired: IlIflcrsprlDg matt· calleu. accepted Railway Fr:elght

I , 0 " .. rt· ·t .. ressesrecondlUoned. Write Pbon.B, to noon Frld.ay. Jan. 2Bth. . .: ' ppO U~~. Y,.. .. 3891, ,1,,\reH. J.Keats. ,1R Mount '. ... _', . .' .. ' ... .- .Royal. Avenue.' ,. DISCONTINUJlIC" . OF BUS yo~ can tarn, moneY, In spare or HARDING'S TRUCK'ING,&'GAS SERVICE TO' CARBONEAR full time. at home, ~o Jexper encLe. STATION~GnsOi1 & 'Accessor Pleas';· Note: necessary. . Stamp, ,p ease,. ..,. ... , .' . Parker. 'Hemnll"-ford,. Que, les, Gen!)raJ. Trucking •. Furnlure ... Jlebruary' 14th Bus janBI21sat,mon.tue '.. ". & Pl'lino Moving a Specialty; Dial operated by· Railway be·

, ,',. • ,. 11,214. Sprinqdale. Streel..'lnell.lm 51." John's and Carbo!.lear '.'''' .. .'. ;'11" d' .' ..... ·FoUR:grel'r.I·.nrups,.\wO W.lSb· be . discontinued. '

,..( <Ven~ttal\ Irw I :"" rack 'IIJ,lmre.-yOu .. Gren~hill,oll :..--;. . . . ·chanl:~· a/ld ·wafhlni!:wbUe,u,wBit. .. ~~~~=~~~ It ,Houas· DELIVERY·· V_~'I .. Cars. citlJeC::i:for ,od delivered lor Blind!: , FleXalum.. Alumlnuu:' these ancL IIP-r.eH repaln-.11'erra. . !

:.,'1t~I.;f·I.~Ue. eottcm tape~Mallu., 'Novr, Mot'~'Bt:td~ Tear Newfound ~ fa~~ur~',_bl' ·Jt~eys. J.,lmi~ land Rot'l •. " .1·.OCU4.tJ, . ,lit'Wlttr. Street ,Pbon, IIS1?.::. . . . -c· .. ' '

"'f' • . ',' ", ... I:' '. . .'\ :~:i' . ~. ',. ". '

· . Apply GIBBS & MERCER i

CABOT BUILDING:· ========:=========:=!'"

FORRENT 'V •

Self-contained . Furnished arid Heated Four-' r room Apartment. Private. entrance! Applf r between one and two p.m., and 6 and 7 p.m." i' to: ' '. ". '. \ .f • " .. ' .- t~>.

.. KEVIN O'REGAN. • . DIAL 6316 . ja024,21

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Page 16: !Pears,oil .Eis~nhowet~,,;, H· ;' . F' .' · Move ':::~~. litcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · ,mcan II aI', I tIC nnese e so·, . . • tents-it was almost

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:...: . ~ '1' · !, -(

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THE DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, JAN. 26'; 1955

97c WILL' BUY J

.~AT~

M r LLEY"S . LADIES' JlLOUSES

VALUES'UP TO 1.98 97 c

LADIES' LISLE HOSE

7Sc VALUE

2 PAIRS FO.R 97 C

GIRL'S WHITE ORGANDIE BLOUSES

8 to 10 years

$1.00 VALUE 2 FOR 97 c

LADIES' SNUGGlE PANTS

75c VALUE

2 PAIRS FOR 97 c·

ENGLISH TOWELS, . .

3~c VALUE 4. FOR 97 C

. CHILDREN'S CORDUROY

VELVET OVERALLS .

$1.50 VALUE FOR 97 C

CHILDREN'S PLAID " .

FLANNELETTE SHIRTS

2 to 6 years 97'c , .

. CUP TOWELS . Good cr .. 19dull size

6 ~OR'97c\

s. MILLEY Ltd. Ing bout. menl but It was "stili too early to

SUch poisoning could caUse death say more." . or blindness' but It was learned Today their condlUon was de· that no signs of blindness had oc· scribed ~s "unchariged."

. .

~ailors Fight :~For Lives curred In wl1at doctors consjder The mixture'. t:13t caused tiic

Ihe first 48·hour critical period. poisoning wns reported 10 be a , - But it was slressed it was still combinatiOiI of apple elder, dup.

:; HALIFAX (CI'I-Fourleen o[ 41 100 early to say whelher ali 1I'0uld Iienting machine fluid, gin~er ale ;~.allors poIsoned in a shipboard survive. . _ .' and shaving lotion. . . ';!I;lnklng sPl'!e Frldar. aboard Ihe A prellmhiary check found Ihe Thc r~maininc 33 sailors are slill :r,rc~~ft Irc~~~ler IMfg~lfICer~ Iough~ poLent cocktails containing d.:IpJl. in ho,pital b-~t have bcen takcn . or. 3 dl\e

bl O(i a~ al~ IIc nla~~ eaUng machine fluid was dislrl· off the seriously III list. .

:IIP.ene ~ ou e n\cs Iga on no buled through thrce of lour messes .. the aUalr.., . (0 avuld detection In Ihc Irequen( 1\ The navy had til'O Inqulric~. un: ,

Teams of !Ired na, al ~oelon and rounds of ofllccrs. . cler wny tuday - a board of In·' nur~cs conll~ued pumpl~g a life.. • Ii\NGJ'D" C(uiry sittin~ ab .11 t.~lC carrier ~a~'m!: ~lkahnc ~olullon m(o thcir CQ,NDlTION, UNCI .'·d Ii I and it separate preliminary' Inve.-;·: "elR~ to combat Ih~ mclh)'1 alcohol Sunday ni~ht the na\y sal IC ti 'alion .. con!umrd in a surreptitiolls drink men were showing some Improve· g. . _ .... -. -... _"'--

c:

" '.

.' .' . ;' ,. " . .'r.: ,.

<. . ..,.: .;.,' .' . \ .. ,.... . · . " ; ." "

. . .. ., . BLUE OR. WINE . '. . .

.' WITH ,BLACK' .. FUR "

· COLLAR· .!

See these~vonderrul·~alue.~·. • III l\1oc~assin·. type .S)ippers.

Iden! lor Ihe' 'badroom or' around the . house:' . . .

NOW ON SALE

In Children's .slz~s:

• 5~10 ......... :: .. ;· .. 1.10 . ". . . .

11~~3 .. : ....... :,.: ... :1.25

Parker ·&Monroe · Lirnited

, ; . , 'I: . I· .~.

THE ,SHOE. ·MEN Jail20,31 .' :

'f \

.:~

.'.

:·A1~~·~tHE,:I· ,~!~' ; SIGN·::

;Out Without 'My Rubber: . The Memoirs of . John Murray Anderson 4.25

MaX' 'Horton' and .The'

Western' 'Approach~s .', . Rear-Admiral W. 5.' . Chalmers ... ; .. ' .... : ......... 2)5. "You~1I Die:Jn. Sinapora'~

Charles McCormac : ..... 2.25 The Fall of France .

Mcjor.Ge.;'erq/. . '. . Sir Edward L.'Spears .4.75'

War'of Wits' . .

Ladis Las' Farago ..... : .. 6.00

The Endeavour Lynette Roberts ........... 3.25

. ,,\ '. .

..

Newfoundla nd, !Products . ,

.. BAKEAPPLES ..... : ...................... 1 lb. Tins ..... ; .... ~ ...... ;.:;:·.2 Dozen to Case PARTRIDGE BERRIES : ........... , .... 1 lb. Tins .... :.~ ............... ;2 Oozen'to Case BLUEBERRIES ......... :; ................ ..1 lb. Tins .. :.; ............. : ..... 2 Dozen to Case SALMON .................................. 1 lb. Tins ........................ 2. Doze~ to 'Case SEAL ......................... ; .................. 1 lb. iins .... ,u .... " ............ 2 Dozen fo Case' -lOBSTER .................................... 1 lb.' Tins, ........... ;.~ .. , ...... 2 Dozen to Case SALT HERRING ............................................... , .................... 225 .lb. Ba'rrels "TURBOT •••.•• ,~ •• I •••••••••••• , ••• tlt'.,.I ............. I., ••• ,.1·., •••• 1~ ............... 200 lb., Barr~ls

GET OUR QUOTATIONS

'PHONES 5143· 5144 AGENTS

,Treadmill' to; Oblivion . , .. ' '11 -, .' • . Ob"t comc to know him down through FI :,F A en' ....... , .. ;~ ...... 4.50 I nary the years, bolh here and at Wit· i norspar

.0f'.fh~ri1C's'More :. less Bay. '.'

,"'John Fd~ro~<:; ..... ::: ... 3:75 JOSEPH ELLIS f To h~d SO{(OI~inff W!Ie, the Shipping Season '.Li,v. irig5t.o.ne~.s:.; .. T .. r.·av~l~ '. . There passed peacefully away i ormer a ou ou. 0 Boston, .

after a short illness. on .January i Mass., ~vho ?ad bcen a devoted 0 . J 30 ; Dr. Jar)1iis' ':MqcNci;r, . ."4.~5·4Ih., at St. Clare's ~iercyHospi(al, ; and lovmg WIfe Iorthe pas~ forty· pens an.

-'

D' '1 . . f Joseph Ellis of this city. Itwo years, and. also (0 hIS son, -I. '. I~: o.gues o· .' : The' late Mr. Ellis, ,vha first Getorge, thtC

h wnter e~t~nds. dee.p" . Shipments of Florspar rnncrn

!.Alfred . North' WHitehead t thO I . ties sympa y. . ' . '. . ' . came 0 IS coun ry some SIX y If f I I k I I'trate, Will 513rt on ,January ~n. ,;)iicic~ 'Pr;c~ ',: .. :.;;;;.: ... ;;.5.50 ~'ears ago, was born in Harlett; ua~s 7t~n~ra ~t oop ta~~ o~I··Ja~ 1955. when thc S.S. lrl'in;: WIIO~

"

'T,h'e.' Em .. i'g'ran .. · .. ts,.·.·.' El. .Gippe, Repuhllc of Lcbenoa.1 'th R ? 03'1\1 a nc rt lU~ch willlakc a full loar! or concrntr~l. and was well and favourably' tVlI cq~lcm ass, k3 cr whlc ! 10 Wilminglon. Dcla\l'are for Ihl

. 'G or L ...,. 250 k I' I I t th I ., I 1C remallls were In 'cn 10 Wit-, ., . e ge ammmg, ., ... ,... nown, par leu ar y 0 e raue 0 I B { I . I' tl f '1 51. Lawrence Corporal1on of Nc\, ;: The Old World. Dies . this city. p~~~ ay or JurJa In 1C ami y foundland Limited.

'. W· ", .• k' :. ":." . For tile past sixty years. he . Shipments or Flourspnr cnnrrn arWlc DeeP.mg , ..... 1. ,50 condd:cted a Drygoods busI'ncss at "!\lay his soul rest in peacc II' ." II E A Iratc from St. Lawrence rcachr~

--~~-----:----l' :New Gower Street and reUred - . .. 'an all time high in 1954, when cnn WHITAKER'S. 'eight years ago. - IIANDSOlllE INDIANS centratcs in excess of 120,000 tonI

:. Previous to eoniin'g 10 St. John's Women of the-Cree Indian tribe were shipped and it is expcctcl\ AlMANACK . he operated a successful business centuries ago were noted for Lbcir that .1955 shipments will exce~

1955 . ".' 3 00 at .Witless Bay fory twenty years. beauty and line physique. all previous years. · .. · .... i·· ........ · . He was first married to Vero-

,OiCks&Co.ltd. . ' I ••

.' , . TrlF BOOKSELLERS, . '.

nica Harrington of Witless Bay, by .whom 110 had three children, !\Iary and Eliza, now deceased, and one son, George, ol this city.

. Joe, as he was·' commonly known, was of a quiet and re· tidng disposition anrl will be

I Illissed by his sUfl'iving family

_========_ a~d .the many friends who had

MaDn·~rs~.'Make ' ..

'. Friends

BlRTIIS i __________ 1

. .JOHNSON-Born 10 ~Ir. and I :tIl'S. Paul Johnson of 138 Rcnnies I

1 ~Till Road. on January 24. at the! ., Hospital, a girl. Mother and I

line, , , OSBIE-Born 10 Grrlrude. I

What utter discouragement eomM liI"the",.... or '",omnn ",ho hn. II collnr~ of the nrl"T"C. Rodily and menially wi:~krn"d Rnd drpremG. Ihe fllture lnok~ hlnrk ~nd hope i. ~Il nil:h looot.

I. .' -.-. - •... wife oJ II. H. Cro~hlc. a son, .rau·'

_-=-....;. . "Peoille arcn t as frzrnrily here u"ry 24th" at the Grace Maternity· J(;(:' \", 'I' ... 1

1 '~~ th~)' ;.rr .backJlOlllr .... sai.1I thr lIos11ilal. '. ,

" .Il ,.1.11 11It..,5 .. : 1I'~\\"r()I11Cr to ·the. oldlimer.' AIIII :.lIENI,EY7~orn at SI. Clares NOW 'TILL SPRING CLOSED _ Window Weather Doubly Dangeroiis • , , make' sure that

. th .. Muffler on your Car is not Leaky, Carbon Monoxide Kills - Replace

,,~~t~!11 1::~\(lnr hp". ~ro1\~n;l' what's tJ\Ol'~ they ·arpn.'t.likcly to ~!crcy IIos)1llal on .1anuary 25th.,

I. as IU~h, as I.J fret .I~ .1l.:-hsh·.Col. he-if the newcomer hangs ontu 10 Mary (1I~r. Batlcnck), and Pal umbla, are much bigger tllan the 1I1at ~up~rior. attitudc,' I1enley.a ~on. castern species.' " . . . l' 9REEN-:-Horn at Weslern 1Ilem· Bc.st .:,ay !o ma,~ -sllre a. new ul'lal' HospItal, Corn~r Brook, on SYMPTOMS:

NervolI~ rxhall~tion i~ II deficiency d~ 1'lc.ncrvr. ~re fnilip~ 10 ~d )1rn~r nnuri.!hmmt.. There i~ l"ckin~ in th~ hi nod certain ingTedienUl ... hich the nervous "y.tcm rnlL!t ·b".,.o lind whiell are supplied by Dr. Cha~~'" l'ierve Food in the form of vitnmin HI lind .1Icb mineral!! M iroB which are equally ncCeNllry for the 1'ti!tor&tioII of the blood lind Jh"- D.I"VtJ!.

that lc~fy Muffler with a .

GENUINE G.M. MUFFLER AND TAIL PIPE

THEY FIT RIGHT THE FIRST TIME.

LARGE STOCKS ALWAYS ON HAND

at . THE HICKMAN -MOTORS, . LIMITED YOUR CHEVROLET • OLDSMOBILE. CADILLAC DEALER

'WEARE . O'FFERING .. ',-

PreCision. Dressed Lumber ". , .

KILN DRIED,6 in. and 7 in. P. & T !

Long lengths - LOWEST PRICES

'Also I , .

PLASTERB9ARD .~. I..

WALLBOARDS· . . .

.A~BO~ITE· ;.'iMpORTED WOOD and METAL MOlil01NGS

, . '., .. ' ': ". .'

'INSULATION AND ROOFING·, .' . , ..

.A~H.:MURRAY-&::CO. LtD;. I • , • • .! ,

. · •. uilding ~u'ppli~s Depar'm!l~t . . .' . - ,.':," -' .. ,.':\". .

S1/ JOHN'S;.I' ,. " .;. . ,.'"

.. ;.

! ",

r.omarls gomg to ltkeYou IS ·to ,1anuary 24th to lIfr and Mrs like. it first. . . Milton G. Green, a d~ugbter. '. Headaches

F.'.ST FE)l.\I.E . . lndlgesllon FiJ"~t '\\"OIJl~1I r!·.,ml· 13 hrrk Ih! .J.\:->U,\r. 1"i"IIAWS . DEATHS Sleep\essnetlll

Whether eall!ed by worry, aDJlet:r Md _ 'work or M the r~llt of debilitAting di!eaM thl treatment required to regain I!trength and 'rigor and health is the .ame. The n_rv", mll~ boo fed back to health. There is DO quick WIly, l'1li YOII must C:ql(!ct to u.o Dr. CbMe'a Nerve Food reguiarir and peraislently until fully I'8tond.

Ii:'.minul m~r:; 101: tI,1 !J1il ~"I~ :.: .1~1I,lIarr Iha\~' in New England' ROBERTS-Passed peacefully Irritability !Jlan .Ln.lhl'. \\"ho uill It· In 4:J9,U, I, m;lItlOncd III htcra(."I1·~ as early Al·.ray at his home In Topsail' C\"' TIred (eellnrs III' Bl'It~lI1 laM ~·c;Jr,. ' r1 1.e8. )ionday, January 24, Doctor WII·

.. :. _ .. " .. _ ..... __ .. _' ..... _' liam 'Roberts, leavin~' 10 mourn, Gloom), spells

" .• .

. IIImin' : ·nOORS art uvailaht~ 111")'011" LUIII' ber J)~:il~rs; I,,"H' x 7." -9' . x' 'i- fJ't~l!k alld" CU"Opy; '!S",:'" H'-'-l'(j' ~ . 7'-1 W lC 7' ' .. racl. ullh,'

GARAGJ 'DOOR VALUE'

.; , .

nne daughter Christine (Mrs. E.' Pains In back J. Cambel\), three sons, George Weakne!!S o( vital at Oshall'a, Ontario. Clarence and' orltlUlS' Doctor James at St. John's. The remains will rest at Topsail. The For New'Pe'p and funeral will lake place hy Molor • E Hearse from TopsaIl to the Gower . ner!y use . Street united Church on Wednes· day, January 26. Interment at the General Proleslant Cemetery.

It will not be 10D~ until yon find that you Me • .Ieeping better, have B better appetite lind digrM . YOllr food properly. 'The SlIn.bine of health ; will again cheer you up and gi.,.e you new hD)1II and confidence to renew with vigor the bettle 01 ilie. Every day will count EO wby nat; KIll started today with Dr. Cbaee's Nerve Food. .

, ,IlEARDON-Passed peacefully away at 6 a.m. January 25th" at Tilting, Fogo, Stella Reardon, (nce ~Iiller). leaving 10 mourn her I hllsbaml. GI·cgllry. six chilliren, I. lJIulher, lather, six si~I('I's :tIHL t \I'll lirulhcr." .• 'l'tlllNlm - Passell Ile~reflllly away ~[(er 3 shOI"l Illness. Mal'y, II ift· of Capt. J(lst'jJh 'I·urllpr. I~av· iUll 10 mOUl'1I Ihret' suus Stunl~Y J. and HUYlllollt1 T., ~Ull Hullel·t, :11111 two 'lIa\lghter~, Mrs. Arch

"""u",nu,,,,, a 1111 Mal'~urcl. Funeral tumorrow Thursday, at 2.30 p.m. to St. Joseph's: Church, : Hayles. town, b:y motor hearse {rom her fale. rcsldcn):c, 124 Bond street.

,

'I'RAm: SlIl'l'I.U:U RY

)iiiii"li!Ii 'liIi"I" till I, ,;, t II" I II II ,: .. " , '!ilia. "g

GERALD s. DO~Ll Utlllllllllllllllllill '1111111 l'IIII!lllll::il';Jij

, Here's the easy, convenient way f~ show your color slides! r·--. .....

s50.00 "

" \

.. T.O·OTON~·S·LI·MITED . : KODAk CAMERAS'· a~d.SUPPLIES. '.

'. D;str;buto~s' 'for Kodak;n NeWfoundland ... . ~. '.

M·.·· ., . \"

C i ~

! : 7.00 p

bs F

9.00 P Pimp

10.00 I Osee

"FIGHT I ..

But Mon

WASH] . for FormoSl eOJ;nmittees­

In the ers declarel t'o discoura

Fear L.ost ~

'celan REYKJAVIK,

TWD British Ira\' hav! gone down a . iale norLh 0

capc, !carch. cr day nighl. . Life.saving a: wide search. ha tbe Utile fishing lea red I,lley had snoll'S whipped hampered the s' tic waters.

The 559-ton U of 20. sent out was Iistlnl bad: sJlen~. . The 810.10n ported beinl in area alter goin Lorella.

Vaccine Save Do On Labr

ST. JOHl'i'S, !ource; Minisl ne..'Uja~· ~nou~1

ordered I~ inj dil:lemper pr~

Reporls con from Labrad[ the epidemic­temper-is sti the N e wfounl Rowe said it j than at first not estimate affected. . He said he with the setU sease has r where vacelnl the animals. places are ex here willlin I ~aizl. . }{eporls "r strik~£ L~bl ),,,:.r, b~~~11 week .... reI\" said the nun would be in II be in Ihe thl curate p~tir made ·until been heud f Th~ "aecin

hn'1 centres. h~re WIthin will l"!n b~ llld inj~ct~d reefed. VICI will not cur,

!I'!cau~ di of transport dor eommUI !:be . epidemi Ihan previa, nomicaIl), 51

Some ~ 1'lto IJ MayC

II.~LIFA~ cal offie camm'and s ""ery deli! DC the 47 5 caUng mac stine shlpbll

In :an Int the 'methyl

. a buard till 'Surgeon c: Haltie said tly . J &1, blind."

"We WOI ~ome lor I