tre. claims lives 'f .: ·txro. .· city ·...

16
--lash film. E 'ES ,TE tre. Claims ol'('o,"·.- ..• 'f .: ·txro. 'f f ' Lives City ·Children - ·--- - __ :c:'__ TO-NIGHT'S PLAY "lHE BARRETi'S OF WIMPOLE STREET" 8.15 p.m. Vol. 63. No. 280 Wl1ere Flames ' F.\ OiL FIELDS Bl rd REFINERIES MILES 0 lOO SUEF ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 14, 1956 Of Force ·Are A SPO'f since the da\\'n of history, the Middle East again has erupted into violence as Israel, the Arabs, France and Great BrilRin Are rmhroiled in an anrgy test o[ force. · The n1ap above gi\·es the geographical details of the area involved. It can be clip- ped ancl for use as 11 guide to future news derelopments, l'ltESI·:·:vi'S DE FALLA a1ailable al , (Price 5 cents) Charles Hutton & Sons ...__._ ..... rten ictims Third Child In Critical Condition Two children are dead and another is struggling against tremend· .. ous odds in a bed in the General Hospital in St. John's this morning following a flash fire which ripped through the home of Fred Brien on Water St. West late last night. Noel Brien, seven-year·old son of the World War II veteran, is clinging by a slim thread to life. :Mrs. Brien. 31, is in hospital suffering from shock and burns to her hands. Two other ,children arc being cared for in the homes of friends, They escaped unhurt. A five-montl1 old baby, Gary. and the only daughter among the five chil· dren, two and one half year old Yvonne, were pronounced dead at the Gen• eral Hospital. . The fire is reported to have' started on a chesterfield in a fits! Hoor room. 1\Irs. Brien took one of the boys in her 11rms. rushed to the door and stopped a passer-by. She handed the boy out tlu:ongh the door ami asked the passer-by to ring in the alarm. Firemen raced to the scene. Whrn they arri\'ell neighbours. who had been aroused_ bv cries from the street, harl managed to j!et h\;o other children from the house' which had hurst into a mass :of scaring flame. Flames licltcd out from windows on all three storeYS or the frame huild- lng. Firemen could not get through th'c sheet nf flame 'into the house. They had to pour streams of wa-ter into the building. Firemen hattled their way! . through the smoke and flame in 1 on fire ·and raced him to the I tbe in her artrts. a vain effort to save the two chil·, .;ccne. There was little that he "'Bob,'" 5he said, "'the dren who remained in5ide. They I could do. He .went immcdialcly to; on fire.'" brought them out as quickly as I the hospital. · "She told me to hurry and get they could, but both had died. · CO:'\TJ:'iUF.Il 'I'nAGEDY the firemen. I took the child and Superintendent Vil•ian of the\ The tragedy came a little more' she followed me out!idc first. l St .• John's Fire Department di· · than a year after Brien's • went straight to the fire box and rcctcil the fire-fighting, Within a fi1•e year old son hacl died in a I rang the alarm. When I came matter of a few minutes it was niotor acdidcnt ncar his home.! I found she had gone inside again under control and lcs5 than an Paul Brien was killed by a motor·' I opened the door to try to enter hour after the fire had broken cydc while playing ncar his hnmc the house, but because of the fir• out it had been extinguished. , on AUl!Ust 6, 1955. and smoke I couldn't get back in · . kept the !lames from I EYE The fire engines had arril·ed in a hckmg mto other nearby dwell- . Robert Furlong, m lns late teens, . few minutes. · lih•cs in a house in the same "! found out later that she tooll J\lr. Brien. a 37 year old em· i He had gone to 'the drug and: one of the other children out ployee of the Auditor General's: 11'35 returning hom!.'. The time was I the back window. Tht llcpartmcnt and one of St. .John's. 11.10. Here is his story as he told , firemen fought the blaze for a best bane! had . 1 · I he O<lily early this morn-· while and when they could ;!CI to talk \\'Ith lmncts at a nearby ing. through the flames· I them taxi stand when the blaze startect.J ".Just ils I got to the rloor of: take out lll'o olhcr children. !l He a.bon to h.c 1 the Brien house. Brien they were the two that had when a friend told h1m lm honsc crl I he door and she hail one of, died).'' -------- ce Charles Celebrates ,Poland's Defence Resign$ ar 1\I:X llchoolleswns will ;:o on as uwal! pri1·ate tutors, or at of Brit· I erable amount of tim-:! playing In 1 . _ rrm Staff 1\'rlter at Buckingham Palace. I ain's leading public school!. London parks with his Corgi dog• Of El l• . . . irl' Charlc! I Sl'l\nn:n FnE:'\CII Some British newspapers have' and visiting 'places or historical ec IOn I M . . t . _t::nt )"r!r.< today but I Pt·ince Charles recently started i prcdicled that a decision is lm·l interest. Like any other youngster, GUELPH, Ont. (CP) - George ! I n I s er not lik· 1(1 learn French in addition to mincnt, but palace circles say ! he cnjoyg sPcndng his own pocket 'd p · r\trp:-,- :nln hi's heavy 1 arithmetic. history, geography, art\ this is •'pure speculation." A pos. money-always a mQdest amount. Hp 2 s Tuesclay .night sal ·' · ·' I and other subjects. Such lessons, slbilitv Is that a oocislon wll come Twice a week, he leaves the pal- sive ConservatiVe chances for wm- ' ' ' ning. a fcclcral election never i'"b·:.:·o: birlhdays plus instructions In gym, mus1c late next spring, in time for the ace for gym classes, bring- looked better. 1, 'Cil,d .a f;,nnly and keep him start of the summer term.• ing a home for tc1.' In . s , 2 ech before the Welling· By Sllll'I'EY TAYI.Oit have been false. I Gomulka, accompanied by Pre- l.d f,,J of crlcbrallon morntng and afternoon. His SIX· The Queen is believed to have a Through his classes, he IS ton iouth Conservative Associa· w.ARSAW, Poland (Reuters)- Roko,sovsky's "resignation'' fol- mier Cyranl;iewicz and either Ed- IT! not 1n;,dr pulol:c. There year-old Anne, is slight pidcrencc for private tutor- widening his circle of friends, r, 1 os1 tion th Progressive Conservative SoviCt Konstantin Rokos- lowed his ousting from the polit- · ward Ochab, former party chief, f f'<: young more fortunate. She has morning ing, whicll she had herself, ·of whom, until now, have been the I member for Toronto snvsky has resigner! as Polish de- buro of Polish Communist or Aleksander Zawadski, president rom f<n::ly nnd, classes only. her husband advocates the same sons and daught<:!rs of childhoocl Broadvic;v said he bases this con- fence minister, Prime 'i party on Oct. 21 following a dra- of the council of state, are rlue to •'· h::·:uday Some time her 0 r c Prince sort of public school education he friends and relatives of his par- vletlon on· information has .Tozef Cyrankicwicz told the Polish malic weekend meeting or the fly to :lloscow this week !or !ur ·t;n ll,th a ot h1s Charles' ninth birthday, the Queen enjoyed. . · . ·cnts. . whil travelling across Parliament Tucsda)' night. central committee of the Polish thcr talks on Polish·Russian reJa . ! .. and Duke arc cxpccled In The young pl'lnce has lnho:)rJted People visiting the palace on of- fh countr ln the last three Rokossovsky, 59, Polish-horn So. United IV or k e r s (Communist) lions. t' .. make a f)rm decision C{lnccrnlng the interest in everything tfctal often hear a sudclen Y viet general and a hero or the party. At the same time as he re- ( p.1n:•· .• father, the their sons future education. mechamcal and the two spend scampermg and clatter or. f-eet as "On th west coasl rcfu 5 al of Second World War, had ;i-2nerally The central commitl-2e session, ported Spychalski's appointment 11l,o ic on his To date,'lhe Queen has ,;iven no considerable time tog-ether plaYing the prince and princess race past. th lo 'as•isl been regarclecl as the Kremlin's which at lhe time appointed j' as defence minister, Cyrankiewicz (; t, open the Indication whether the heir appar. with Prince Charles' fine collcc· on their way to the garden, A in e owe ment and to "overlord" in Poland since 1949. Gomulka In the party post, announced som>2 other ministerial , , ent to the throne will be educated tion of clockwork-powered toys. favorite game: cowboys and ln· out polic)' Stalin sent him to Poland then was interrupted when So1·iet Com- changes of a less major charac- lne parly, at home, under the direction of Prince Charles spends a consid dlans. W'ltll United Stales for ·develop· to become minister and munist party I cad e i' Nikita ter, and a shakimp of the council " commander-in-chief o! the Polish: flew to Warsaw with of slates which amounts to a kind ing rivers which flow thro both army. 1 three other Kremlin colleagues. or "collective" presidency of Po. U., K. lnterv n. R. {Rrutm i-'fwo Tucsdnl' , 1 n:mcnt 0n in E;:nit ,efull;: Pl•nned Soviet to toke 01 er the oil· Ea•t. II' a ••·· . . • ,,!n,nn, of an>l ri1 i! ari.ltion told act!torit:I·J t!101t ol roil fDr l'ast indus. ', must make f:< 1 t. 3 area for mtngue." harl tn break the t)cle ol inlriglie and ln- . · · I am glad we bacl do it," he addecl. S OISTURBf:D thecrctary Alan Lennox. sense that it attcr .• pts to clothe with legality the employ. mcnt of priVille armies, whose alm In fact is lo lay their hold on the stale they arc professing to as· sist. ''That is what has going on in ana may be going on now in Syria." Lennox - Boyd made his state· men! during a debate on colonial affairs. Prime lllinlstcr Eclen orlg· inally had scheduled a major all· dress on tl!oe Middle· East crisis but decided r.galnst It at n cabinet meeting in the morning, Instcacl, Eden spolce only briefly In reply to a Labor 'party mem- question on whether the gol'· ernmcnt still views the. United Nations as the organization to up· hold international law. · e llou;c of 1 , nnw tnorc clearly to which Sov- nd mtrl;ue penetrated . The prime minister replied that .It remained his gov-ernment's po]. that lc:y to "build up the UN for . as It was lo forcing the rule of law." He said s d1;turbed care. his government hopes the action I Plans." against Egypt "will, result ln a wants to dom. stronger UN capable of enforcing · .lmrs she be. the resolutions they a clop!." 10 the Soviet no a frr., ngent , REFUSE INVESTIGATION . of the The opposition's chief spokes, fallen .. in practice Into man I!" foreign affairs, Alfred Ro· Snvict Union All hens, said if the government I:<:!· llpon •• lmm.obil lleves lhr.re was a Russian plot in l:nitrrl ami the 1\llddle East It should have Britain il'ou:rl dlscussecl it with the Unitecl States 10 art. ll'lthout prior inlcr. nnd the Commonweallh. It s!wnlr' nthon." · have ralsed It, at the·UN as n pos· OF 1.1:1; \IJry slble threat to pence, he said. to' nus'. ' llobcns. said If th-e governn;cnt ···"'"'·"·'• i 513 s threat to was wise, It would urge the Umted I f 00 Ps h Egypt States and India, throu::h the, UN, lo!'nnox Brees rlo not to help solve the Middle East 0 Y.d said: problems. . 1rnh an of mtcn·entlon, "It 15 only by. return lo our is detpl;.l hr voJ. funrlamental faith and lsturbmll in And abiding by them that unity ention Foiled Reds countries, makes British Rokossovsky is succeeded by de- 1 Khrushchev and his aides re. land. blans wonder whether the Otlalla fence minister by Gen. Marian turned 2"4 hours laler. The politburo also announced the gov_ernm>:!nt is really In ,Spychalski, associate Poland's Communist pilrly had downfall of a executive re· can ever be restored," he ·Said. I the. British and French. seemg. that province develop. \Vladislaw Gomulka, . the '"Tiloist won the first round in its fight gardcd as a member of the pro- Eden rcjcctccl a Labor proposal! roreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd Inability or the In leader who recently was elected for more from Soviet 1ring of the party which !or an all·party parliamentary in- has denied such as sell huge stocks of pramc heat Polancl's Communist party chief. )loscow :md for a more truly Po· included Rokossovsk)'. l'estigation to establish whether well as Israeli goNrnment ·spok- and its to on Poland's Communist partv chief. !ish leadership. It said il wonlrl mo1·c for tbP. Britain and 1-'rancc consplre.d with esmen. gratn fl\'e-pcr-cent mtcr· Like Gomulka, Spychalski spent The final oll>tin;( of expulsion of Wiklor Klosiell'icz Israel prior to the of In another exchange A. D. est had been causing many in jail in lhc Stalin as defence minister is a sccon·d frcun lhc central of the Egypt. Dodds-Parkcr, undersecretary for l there for more. than a . . (!fa on charges now arlmi_llcd to I rounrl in lhis fi;:ht. party at ils next se.sinn. Some newspapers in the Onited foreign affairs, turned down a La- In Atlanhc .wlllC_n · · --------- ____ __: _ __: __ _ States and elsewhere have prlntcd bor for a full official ac· he \'ISIIed lasl summ?r, d1ssalts what they called evidence count or British • French i faction with the Ottawa H k ld p f · lng that Israel lunged lnlo Egypt sions that preceded the t·.o coun. ment could be heard on all ammars ·J·O OS pones Oct. 29 with the foreknowlcdg() of tries' invasl of Egypt. "Their flat refusal lo asSISt 1 those provinces with the M •ddl E · J k Canucks Emharl{ .·For .Middle East l Canalllan Press Staff Writer HALIFAX (CP) -:The aircraft carrier Jl.lagniflccnt docked here Tuesday night to pick up Cana- dian troops for Unltccl Nations po- llee duty in the Middle East. The flattop tied up at the Hall· fax naval dockyard at 7:50 p.m. AST after a hu,rrlccl Atlnntle cros- sing, Meanwhile troops of too Queen's ·own Rifles were flUng from air- craft that brou'ght :them to this east coast embarkation port from Calgary. A bitter Atlantic wind across the ramp at Shcarwnter naval air station as the first o! 950 walked from RCAF Fl)·ing, Boxcars leaning 'against their coat collars In the blowing drizzle. Then they boarded buses and headed· .for barracks and con. tlnued tralrtlng, T\VO QnOUPS AnRJVE The first two ,!lroups of ahoul soldiers each arl'h'o.Jd here several hours bc!ore the Maggie slippecl into her berth, A third group was expected early Wedno::sday morn- ing: . The carrier reported a stormy crossing from Scotland, where in her hurry tci get away she be· hind a cargo of Sabr:c jets •. WEATHER Cloudy, becoming colcler this a!ternoon; possible snowflurries. - Nfld. Skies WEDNESDAY, NOVEI\IBER 14 Sunrise ...... ; • 7.04 Sunset , , , 1 , . • • 4.25 p.m. 111gb TIDES Low 4.10 a.m. · 10.30 a.m. · 4.36 p.m. 10.38 p.m. ment or hydro • electric power I e · asf .. un ef while at the same time financing the American·oWn()d Trans - Can· · ada Pipe Line Co. lo the tune or By non CURniE I cnnntry, . In\' said further disCil>SliJR Ln :lun- $200,000,000 has caused deep rc 1 Canadian Press Staff \\'rller.. "\VISE TAI.K ! gary would serve only In wor;en sentment." . : UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (CP) • External Affairs Pear·! the situation. He said John Diefenbakcr, 1Secretary . Dag Ham. son was not am.ong the Canadian 1 B·\CKS U :-; \C'fJOS Albert, Sask., MP' trying ljllarskjold Tuesday pogtporto::d for delegatiOn as th1s sec-, · " • ' for the Conservative party lead. 24 hours his trip to Cairo in order ond session of the lith General i British Foreign Secretary Sel· crship, Is the man who can swing 1 to deal personally with United Na- .JI.lstcad. he met j' wyn Lloyd said he supported the vole from the Liberal to the \lions relief for Hungary. ll'llh fore1gn Jlllmstcr du;,ion of ·the East item Conservative party in the gcr.eral. There was ·no suggestion that 'of Italy and Foreign because """! an; not afriad to de- election expected next Jun. Hammarskjold. would go to Hun- Isler Halvard Lange of Norway. blle our'· actions in that matter gary. However, a message froni The so-called· "Three Wise Men''! and our willingness to comply with Communist regime said Hun- were beli-eved putting the finishing 1 the Assembly in that af- Temperatures TORONTO (CP) - Tempera lures Issued by the Toronto public weather oUlce Tuesday night: Min lllax Dawson Vancouver Edmonton Calgary Toronto Ottawa Montreal Quebec Fredericton Saint John llloncton· Halifax Charlottetown Sydn-:!y Yarmouth (NII(llt) (Day) 2lb. 22b 9 45 34 36 27 31 30 45 26 3.'i 29. 36 24 27 38 37 41 41 . 44 54 54 s:; 51 .14 4l! 54 48 51 I gary is prepared to meet with UN touches on a plan for guiding the fair." ' representatives to 'discuss the North Atlantic TreatY Organiza;. · '. .. . . "best means o! providing the as- lion to a more active econonik sw.!tch m Ham. sitance.'' role marskJ9ld's plans, 1t was expcct•2d d , . ' he still .. would meet with \\laj.-Gen. The communication arrive two At a con;m1ttee £()SSibh Et L. Burns of canada during hours before Hammarskjold Tuesday mornmg 1t_ was agre.ecl a stop-over· in Rome. Gen. Burns, to have taken off for the Middle to place ll.ungamn and M1d· commander or: the new UNI rorcP, East to superl'ise the entry of a die, East situations on assem- Is en rout,? to New Yorl( to work UN pOlice force fo the aro:)a. bly s agenda. out dclails of how the force w11l Monday the Hungarian govern- The on the llliddle function · · mcnt turned down requests of last East debate was unanimous while . · week's emergency As- that .on Hungacy was opposed bit·. ·canadian permanent _delegate sembly s 9 s s i on 'that Russian terly by Russia. The vole was R. A. MacKay said he had heard troops leave Hungary, th,at free 11 in favor with the• soviet Uruo11 nothing official in conn_cction wl!h elections be· b?ld and a UN in· and Czechoslovakia 0 p p 0 5 e d. rumors t h a t Cana1llan troops spection group be admitted to in· Egypt abstained. would not be to Egypt vcstlgatc the situation. as m,embers of the force. TuesdaY's message gave . a de- The can only recoin· report on the lype of food. mend. A final decision ll'ill medical clothing and am· Russian rlclc)!alc Dmitri Shcp_i· bulancc- 5 ·needed in the strife-torn made by the i9·nation assembly. Under I he UN-Egyptian mcnt, Egypt rcserrcs ll:·!· right to. reject forces from any country. ' ' ., 1 ' ., :1' ' ; \: I . . I : 1. 'I , •': . ,, ·: .

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Page 1: tre. Claims Lives 'f .: ·txro. .· City · Childrencollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · Wl1ere Flames ' Bl F.\ OiL FIELDS rd REFINERIES MILES 0 lOO SEt~! SUEF ~GYPT

--lash

film.

E 'ES

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• tre. Claims jo.~., ol'('o,"·.- ..•

'f .· .: ·txro. 'f f ' Lives City · Children

--~-- - ·--- - __ :c:'__ ~-------·------------

TO-NIGHT'S PLAY "lHE BARRETi'S OF WIMPOLE STREET"

8.15 p.m.

Vol. 63. No. 280

Wl1ere Flames '

F.\ OiL FIELDS Bl

rd REFINERIES

MILES

0 lOO

SEt~! SUEF

~GYPT

ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 14, 1956

Of Force ·Are Blaz~ng

A D:\:\C~EH SPO'f since the da\\'n of history, the Middle East again has erupted into violence as Israel, the Arabs, France and Great BrilRin Are rmhroiled in an anrgy test o[ force. · The n1ap above gi\·es the geographical details of the area involved. It can be clip­

ped ancl ~al'c-cl for use as 11 guide to future news derelopments,

~ttrf! ~;~ ~~rdl l'ltESI·:·:vi'S

DE FALLA a1ailable al

, (Price 5 cents) Charles Hutton & Sons ...__._ .....

• rten ictims

Third Child In Critical Condition Two children are dead and another is struggling against tremend·

.. ous odds in a bed in the General Hospital in St. John's this morning following a flash fire which ripped through the home of Fred Brien on Water St. West late last night.

Noel Brien, seven-year·old son of the World War II veteran, is clinging by a slim thread to life. :Mrs. Brien. 31, is in hospital suffering from shock and burns to her hands. Two other ,children arc being cared for in the homes of friends, They escaped unhurt.

A five-montl1 old baby, Gary. and the only daughter among the five chil· dren, two and one half year old Yvonne, were pronounced dead at the Gen• eral Hospital. .

The fire is reported to have' started on a chesterfield in a fits! Hoor room. 1\Irs. Brien took one of the boys in her 11rms. rushed to the door and stopped a passer-by. She handed the boy out tlu:ongh the door ami asked the passer-by to ring in the alarm.

Firemen raced to the scene. Whrn they arri\'ell neighbours. who had been aroused_ bv cries from the street, harl managed to j!et h\;o other children from the house' which had hurst into a mass :of scaring flame.

Flames licltcd out from windows on all three storeYS or the frame huild­lng. Firemen could not get through th'c sheet nf flame 'into the house. They had to pour streams of wa-ter into the building.

Firemen hattled their way! . through the smoke and flame in 1 wa~ on fire ·and raced him to the I tbe kid~ in her artrts. a vain effort to save the two chil·, .;ccne. There was little that he "'Bob,'" 5he said, "'the hou~• dren who remained in5ide. They I could do. He .went immcdialcly to; i~ on fire.'" brought them out as quickly as I the hospital. · "She told me to hurry and get they could, but both had died. · CO:'\TJ:'iUF.Il 'I'nAGEDY the firemen. I took the child and

Superintendent Vil•ian of the\ The tragedy came a little more' she followed me out!idc first. l St .• John's Fire Department di· · than a year after ~lr. Brien's • went straight to the fire box and rcctcil the fire-fighting, Within a fi1•e year old son hacl died in a I rang the alarm. When I came bac~ matter of a few minutes it was niotor acdidcnt ncar his home.! I found she had gone inside again under control and lcs5 than an Paul Brien was killed by a motor·' I opened the door to try to enter hour after the fire had broken cydc while playing ncar his hnmc the house, but because of the fir• out it had been extinguished. , on AUl!Ust 6, 1955. and smoke I couldn't get back in · . F~rcm~n kept the !lames from I EYE WITNf:S~ A~COUXT The fire engines had arril·ed in a

hckmg mto other nearby dwell- . Robert Furlong, m lns late teens, . few minutes. ing~. · lih•cs in a house in the same block.~ "! found out later that she tooll

J\lr. Brien. a 37 year old em· i He had gone to 'the drug ~lore and: one of the other children out ployee of the Auditor General's: 11'35 returning hom!.'. The time was I throu~h the back window. Tht llcpartmcnt and one of St. .John's. 11.10. Here is his story as he told , firemen fought the blaze for a best know~ bane! leader~ had ~one .

1· I he O<lily 1\"cw~ early this morn-· while and when they could ;!CI

to talk \\'Ith lmncts at a nearby ing. through the flames· I ~aw them taxi stand when the blaze startect.J ".Just ils I got to the rloor of: take out lll'o olhcr children. !l He wa~ a.bon to lca~·e h.c ~land

1

• the Brien house. ~lr.<. Brien open·l~tncss they were the two that had when a friend told h1m lm honsc crl I he door and she hail one of, died).'' --------

ce Charles Celebrates Bir~hday ~a!:e~~:nce ,Poland's Defence Resign$

ar 1\I:X ~.ILT~II:Jt\T, llchoolleswns will ;:o on as uwal! pri1·ate tutors, or at on~ of Brit· I erable amount of tim-:! playing In 1 . _

rrm Staff 1\'rlter at Buckingham Palace. I ain's leading public school!. London parks with his Corgi dog• Of El l• . . . irl' l-·f'r'~ce Charlc! I Sl'l\nn:n FnE:'\CII Some British newspapers have' and visiting 'places or historical ec IOn I M . . t

. _t::nt )"r!r.< ~irl today but I Pt·ince Charles recently started i prcdicled that a decision is lm·l interest. Like any other youngster, GUELPH, Ont. (CP) - George ! I n I s e r ccl~br<liDn• :~rr not lik· 1(1 learn French in addition to • mincnt, but palace circles say ! he cnjoyg sPcndng his own pocket 'd p ·

r\trp:-,- :nln hi's heavy 1 arithmetic. history, geography, art\ this is •'pure speculation." A pos. money-always a mQdest amount. Hp2s Tuesclay .night sal rogr~s- ·' · ''~crb ·' I and other subjects. Such lessons, slbilitv Is that a oocislon wll come Twice a week, he leaves the pal- sive ConservatiVe chances for wm- ' ' ' ning. a fcclcral election never

i'"b·:.:·o: ~•n,·. ;uy:~l birlhdays plus instructions In gym, mus1c late next spring, in time for the ace for gym classes, usuall~· bring- looked better. 1, 'Cil,d ~~ .a f;,nnly occ~s- and ~ancing, keep him 1H1s~· b~th start of the summer term.• ing a cla~smatc home for tc1.' In . s ,2ech before the Welling· By Sllll'I'EY TAYI.Oit have been false. I Gomulka, accompanied by Pre-l.d f,,J d~t·<~·• of crlcbrallon morntng and afternoon. His SIX· The Queen is believed to have a Through his g~·m classes, he IS ton iouth Conservative Associa· w.ARSAW, Poland (Reuters)- Roko,sovsky's "resignation'' fol- mier Cyranl;iewicz and either Ed-

IT! not 1n;,dr pulol:c. There year-old sist·~r. P~;inccss Anne, is slight pidcrencc for private tutor- widening his circle of friends, r,1os1 tion th Progressive Conservative SoviCt ~larshal Konstantin Rokos- lowed his ousting from the polit- · ward Ochab, former party chief,

f r~N~h f'<: tt:~ young more fortunate. She has morning ing, whicll she had herself, whii~ ·of whom, until now, have been the I Co~mo~ member for Toronto snvsky has resigner! as Polish de- buro of th~ Polish Communist or Aleksander Zawadski, president

rom f<n::ly rrlatlvr~ nnd, classes only. her husband advocates the same sons and daught<:!rs of childhoocl Broadvic;v said he bases this con- fence minister, Prime ~linistcr 'i party on Oct. 21 following a dra- of the council of state, are rlue to •'· • ~ h::·:uday ca'k~. JlO~· Some time her 0 r c Prince sort of public school education he friends and relatives of his par- vletlon on· information h~ has .Tozef Cyrankicwicz told the Polish malic weekend meeting or the fly to :lloscow this week !or !ur ·t;n ll,th a f~w ot h1s Charles' ninth birthday, the Queen enjoyed. . · . ·cnts. . •athel'~d whil travelling across Parliament Tucsda)' night. central committee of the Polish thcr talks on Polish·Russian reJa •

. ! .. rl~. and tb~ Duke arc cxpccled In The young pl'lnce has lnho:)rJted People visiting the palace on of- fh countr ln the last three Rokossovsky, 59, Polish-horn So. United IV or k e r s (Communist) lions. t' fr·•~ .. ~::r "~lrhration make a f)rm decision C{lnccrnlng the Du~c's interest in everything tfctal bu~incss often hear a sudclen m~nths. Y viet general and a hero or the party. At the same time as he re-o~ ( p.1n:•· .• father, the their sons future education. mechamcal and the two spend scampermg and clatter or. f-eet as "On th west coasl rcfu5 al of Second World War, had ;i-2nerally The central commitl-2e session, ported Spychalski's appointment

,· tno~~~~. 11l,o ic on his To date,'lhe Queen has ,;iven no considerable time tog-ether plaYing the prince and princess race past. th fedcr~i novcrn~c~t lo 'as•isl been regarclecl as the Kremlin's which at lhe ~arne time appointed j' as defence minister, Cyrankiewicz ·~ (; U>lral1:~ t, open the Indication whether the heir appar. with Prince Charles' fine collcc· on their way to the garden, A in e owe <!··v~lo ment and to w~rk "overlord" in Poland since 1949. Gomulka In the k~~· party post, announced som>2 other ministerial , , ·a~t' ~~ ~lrlhnurne. ent to the throne will be educated tion of clockwork-powered toys. favorite game: cowboys and ln· out ~ut~al!y-~atisfactorv polic)' Stalin sent him to Poland then was interrupted when So1·iet Com- changes of a less major charac-

lne h:nhd~y parly, at home, under the direction of Prince Charles spends a consid dlans. W'ltll ~h" United Stales for ·develop· to become def·~ncc minister and munist party I cad e i' Nikita ter, and a shakimp of the council " commander-in-chief o! the Polish: Khrushch·~v flew to Warsaw with of slates which amounts to a kind ing rivers which flow thro both army. 1 three other Kremlin colleagues. or "collective" presidency of Po.

U., K. lnterv n. R. ~lal'l.UltKI~

{ Rrutm i-'fwo ~ov­~eade:, '~id Tucsdnl' ,1n:mcnt 0n in E;:nit ,efull;: • Pl•nned Soviet

to toke 01 er the oil· Ea•t.

II' a ••·· . . • ,,!n,nn, m:m~ter of an>l ri1 i! ari.ltion told act!torit:I·J t!101t R~ssla's

ol roil fDr l'ast indus. ', "alofl<~ must make f:< 1t. 3 t~r~rt area for mtngue."

~ne harl tn break the t)cle ol inlriglie and ln­

. · · I am glad we bacl do it," he addecl.

S OISTURBf:D thecrctary Alan Lennox.

~~~~ sense that it attcr .• pts to clothe with legality the employ. mcnt of priVille armies, whose alm In fact is lo lay their hold on the stale they arc professing to as· sist. •

''That is what has l>~en going on in E~)·pt ana may be going on now in Syria."

Lennox - Boyd made his state· men! during a debate on colonial affairs. Prime lllinlstcr Eclen orlg· inally had scheduled a major all· dress T4Icsdn~· on tl!oe Middle· East crisis but decided r.galnst It at n cabinet meeting in the morning,

Instcacl, Eden spolce only briefly In reply to a Labor 'party mem­~>:!r's question on whether the gol'· ernmcnt still views the. United Nations as the organization to up· hold international law. ·

e llou;c of Common~: 1, nnw tnorc clearly ;~ c~tcnt to which Sov­nd mtrl;ue penetrated . The prime minister replied that

.It remained his gov-ernment's po]. r~·idcnt that lc:y to "build up the UN for ~n·

. as It was lo forcing the rule of law." He said s d1;turbed care. his government hopes the action

I Plans." against Egypt "will, result ln a ~:-rldhed, wants to dom. stronger UN capable of enforcing · 1 ~ .lmrs b~11 she be. the resolutions they a clop!."

10 the Soviet toil~ • no ~anger a frr., ngent , REFUSE INVESTIGATION .

of the ar~a The opposition's chief spokes, fallen .. in practice Into man I!" foreign affairs, Alfred Ro· th~ Snvict Union All hens, said if the government I:<:!·

llpon t~ •• lmm.obil lleves lhr.re was a Russian plot in l:nitrrl ~ations ami the 1\llddle East It should have an~l Britain il'ou:rl dlscussecl it with the Unitecl States

10 art. ll'lthout prior inlcr. nnd the Commonweallh. It s!wnlr' nthon." · have ralsed It, at the·UN as n pos·

OF 1.1:1; \IJry slble threat to pence, he said. to' nus'. ' llobcns. said If th-e governn;cnt

···"'"'·"·'• i 513 s threat to was wise, It would urge the Umted I f00Ps h Egypt States and India, throu::h the, UN,

lo!'nnox Brees rlo not to help solve the Middle East tecbniqu~· 0Y.d said: problems. .

1rnh an of mtcn·entlon, "It 15 only by. return in~ lo our is detpl;.l ~1.1rn hr voJ. funrlamental faith and principl·~s

lsturbmll in And abiding by them that unity

ention Foiled Reds countries, makes British Colu~- Rokossovsky is succeeded by de- 1 Khrushchev and his aides re. land. blans wonder whether the Otlalla fence minister by Gen. Marian turned 2"4 hours laler. The politburo also announced the gov_ernm>:!nt is really intercste.~ In ,Spychalski, clo~.~ associate o£ Poland's Communist pilrly had downfall of a chi·~f executive re·

can ever be restored," he ·Said. • I the. British and French. seemg. that province develop. \Vladislaw Gomulka, . the '"Tiloist won the first round in its fight gardcd as a member of the pro-Eden rcjcctccl a Labor proposal! roreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd Inability or the govc~n.mc.~t In leader who recently was elected for more •'indcp~ndence" from Soviet 1ring of the party which

!or an all·party parliamentary in- has denied such suggestion~ as sell huge stocks of pramc heat Polancl's Communist party chief. )loscow :md for a more truly Po· included Rokossovsk)'. l'estigation to establish whether well as Israeli goNrnment ·spok- and its lo~ns to ~armers on ~arm-· Poland's Communist partv chief. !ish leadership. It said il wonlrl mo1·c for tbP. Britain and 1-'rancc consplre.d with esmen. slm•~d gratn a,~ fl\'e-pcr-cent mtcr· Like Gomulka, Spychalski spent The final oll>tin;( of Rokossor~ky expulsion of Wiklor Klosiell'icz Israel prior to the _lm·a~10n of In another exchange A. D. est had been causing resent~cnl many ~·cars in jail in lhc Stalin as defence minister is a sccon·d frcun lhc central commitlr.~ of the Egypt. Dodds-Parkcr, undersecretary for l there for more. than a ~car. . . (!fa on charges now arlmi_llcd to I rounrl in lhis fi;:ht. party at ils next plcnar~· se.sinn.

Some newspapers in the Onited foreign affairs, turned down a La- In .t~e Atlanhc pro1·incc,~, .wlllC_n · · --------- --~;___:__ ____ __: _ __: __ _ States and elsewhere have prlntcd bor reqn~st for a full official ac· he \'ISIIed lasl summ?r, d1ssalts • what they called evidence suggsl-~ count or British • French di~tUS· i faction with the Ottawa g~vern: H k • ld p f · lng that Israel lunged lnlo Egypt sions that preceded the t·.o coun. ment could be heard on all side~. ammars ·J·O OS pones Oct. 29 with the foreknowlcdg() of tries' invasl of Egypt. "Their flat refusal lo asSISt 1

those provinces with the dev·~lop- M •ddl E · J k Canucks Emharl{

.·For .Middle East l

Canalllan Press Staff Writer HALIFAX (CP) -:The aircraft

carrier Jl.lagniflccnt docked here Tuesday night to pick up Cana­dian troops for Unltccl Nations po­llee duty in the Middle East.

The flattop tied up at the Hall· fax naval dockyard at 7:50 p.m. AST after a hu,rrlccl Atlnntle cros­sing,

Meanwhile troops of too Queen's ·own Rifles were flUng from air­craft that brou'ght :them to this east coast embarkation port from Calgary.

A bitter Atlantic wind \\~hipped across the ramp at Shcarwnter naval air station as the first o! 950 sold!~rs walked from RCAF Fl)·ing, Boxcars leaning 'against their coat collars In the blowing drizzle. Then they boarded buses and headed· .for barracks and con. tlnued tralrtlng,

T\VO QnOUPS AnRJVE The first two ,!lroups of ahoul ~o

soldiers each arl'h'o.Jd here several

hours bc!ore the Maggie slippecl into her berth, A third group was expected early Wedno::sday morn­ing: .

The carrier reported a stormy crossing from Scotland, where in her hurry tci get away she l·~ft be· hind a cargo of Sabr:c jets •.

WEATHER Cloudy, becoming colcler this

a!ternoon; possible snowflurries.

- Nfld. Skies WEDNESDAY, NOVEI\IBER 14 Sunrise ...... ; • 7.04 ~.m. Sunset , , , 1 , . • • 4.25 p.m.

111gb TIDES Low 4.10 a.m. · 10.30 a.m. · 4.36 p.m. 10.38 p.m.

ment or hydro • electric power I e · asf .. un ef while at the same time financing the American·oWn()d Trans - Can· · ada Pipe Line Co. lo the tune or By non CURniE I cnnntry, . In\' said further disCil>SliJR Ln :lun-$200,000,000 has caused deep rc

1 Canadian Press Staff \\'rller.. "\VISE ~IE:'\" TAI.K ! gary would serve only In wor;en

sentment." . : UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (CP) • External Affairs ~linisler Pear·! the situation. He said John Diefenbakcr, 1 Secretary . Gcn~ral Dag Ham. son was not am.ong the Canadian 1 B·\CKS U :-; \C'fJOS

Prine~ Albert, Sask., MP' trying ljllarskjold Tuesday pogtporto::d for delegatiOn as th1s aft·~rnoon's sec-, · " • ' • for the Conservative party lead. 24 hours his trip to Cairo in order ond session of the lith General i British Foreign Secretary Sel· crship, Is the man who can swing 1 to deal personally with United Na- A~scmb.JY ~pcncd, .JI.lstcad. he met j' wyn Lloyd said he supported in~ the vole from the Liberal to the \lions relief for Hungary. ll'llh fore1gn Jlllmstcr G::·~tano du;,ion of ·the ~Iiddle East item Conservative party in the gcr.eral. There was ·no suggestion that ~!artino 'of Italy and Foreign ~lin·!' because """! an; not afriad to de­election expected next Jun. Hammarskjold. would go to Hun- Isler Halvard Lange of Norway. blle our'· actions in that matter

gary. However, a message froni The so-called· "Three Wise Men''! and our willingness to comply with lh·~ Communist regime said Hun- were beli-eved putting the finishing 1 the Gener~l Assembly in that af-Temperatures

TORONTO (CP) - Tempera lures Issued by the Toronto public weather oUlce Tuesday night:

Min lllax

Dawson Vancouver Edmonton Calgary Toronto Ottawa Montreal Quebec Fredericton Saint John llloncton· Halifax Charlottetown Sydn-:!y Yarmouth

(NII(llt) (Day) 2lb. 22b

9 45 34 36 27 31

30 45 26 3.'i 29. 36 24 27

38 37 41 41

. 44 54 54 s:; 51 .14 4l! 54 48 51

I

gary is prepared to meet with UN touches on a plan for guiding the fair." ' representatives to 'discuss the North Atlantic TreatY Organiza;. · '. .. . . "best means o! providing the as- lion to a more active econonik Des~1te t~e sw.!tch m Ham. sitance.'' role marskJ9ld's plans, 1t was expcct•2d

d • , • . ' he still .. would meet with \\laj.-Gen. The communication arrive two At a stecnn~ con;m1ttee £()SSibh Et L. ~1. Burns of canada during

hours before Hammarskjold wa~ Tuesday mornmg 1t_ was agre.ecl a stop-over· in Rome. Gen. Burns, to have taken off for the Middle to place t~e ll.ungamn and M1d· commander or: the new UNI rorcP, East to superl'ise the entry of a die, East situations on t~e assem- Is en rout,? to New Yorl( to work UN pOlice force fo the aro:)a. bly s agenda. out dclails of how the force w11l

Monday the Hungarian govern- The c·~cision on the llliddle function · · mcnt turned down requests of last East debate was unanimous while • .

· week's emergency G·~neral As- that .on Hungacy was opposed bit·. ·canadian permanent _delegate sembly s 9 s s i on 'that Russian terly by Russia. The vole was R. A. MacKay said he had heard troops leave Hungary, th,at free 11 in favor with the• soviet Uruo11 nothing official in conn_cction wl!h elections be· b?ld and a UN in· and Czechoslovakia 0 p p 0 5 e d. rumors t h a t Cana1llan troops spection group be admitted to in· Egypt abstained. would not be acccptab•.~ to Egypt vcstlgatc the situation. as m,embers of the force.

TuesdaY's message gave . a de- The committ·~e can only recoin· "tai!·~d report on the lype of food. mend. A final decision ll'ill b~ medical supplic~. clothing and am· Russian rlclc)!alc Dmitri Shcp_i· bulancc-5 ·needed in the strife-torn made by the i9·nation assembly.

Under I he UN-Egyptian agre~~. mcnt, Egypt rcserrcs ll:·!· right to. reject forces from • any country.

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Personal Chit Chat SURPRISE PARTY lion~ recently at the General Hos·

On Sunday arternoon, Novem· pita!. ber 11, the Gamma Chapter of

' Beta Sigma Phi gave a surprise WEDDING ANNIVERSARY party for their retiring Social Their friends offer oongratula· Sponsor, Mrs. Robert Thompson, tlons of S/Sgt, Raymond and Mrs. at the home o[ r._rlss Isabel Tem· Legore, who celebrated their Me· pldon on Bonaventure Avenue. ond' weddlllg anJ:!Iversary on Sun· Mrs Thompson was presented with day, November 11th. Sergeant Leo ~ .~t of Labradorite jewe\le11, to !COre Is stationed at Pepperreli•Alr remind her of the many years Force Base and Mrs. Legore Is lhe ha& been connected ·with the ~he fotmer Patricia Fitzgerald of Gamma Chapter of Beta SIIJI'Ia St. John's, Phi and the help she has been to the 'aids ln all aspects of the ENGAGEMENT GCJI'Orlty's. work. :r.frs. Thompson Mr. and ltlrs. Alex l\1. Hudson of hn been the Social Sponsor of 190 Ellubeth A\•enue recently a~· Gamma Cll&pter..since Its start and nounced the engaaement of thetr ts held Vl deep affection by the daughter, Margaret, (Peggy~ to members. Mn. Thompson thank· Gordon Bursey, son of lltr. and td• uie girls In a short, very mov· Mrs. Lewis Bursey of Portugal InK speech. MrS. Arthur Johnson Cove Road. ,ne 1 brief resume of Mrs. fh mpson'a ·connection with the COFFEE PARTY io~ority and hoped that she This morninl the St. Thomas' ~·ould ~onUnue the work ln: her Women.'s Auxiliary wlll hold ·a

'IT homQ. The guests were, Mrs. coffee party at Canon Wood Hall, ' ~~thur Johnson, International from 10.30 a.m. to 12.30 p.m. Home

Flonourary Member of Beta Sigma cooking and needlework will be on Phi and Social Sponsor of XI Al· sale. ~ha Chapter, Miss Marjorie Ball, Program Director of Gamma Chap- MARRIED AT CORNER BROOII: :er, Mrs. Katherine Roberts, Pro· The marriage took place at the cram Director of Alpha Chip~~r~ Salvation Army Citadel, Corner lliss Je.an King, Presldeint 0 Phi Brook East, of November 2nd, at :liJ Council of Beta S gma ' 7.30 p.m. of llliss Renee Fudge, tnd Mrs. Ne\'a Johson, President daughter of Mrs. Dorothy and the 1f Alhpa Chapter of Beta Sigma late Elihu Fudge of Triton, Notre l'hl. Dame Bay, to Clyde, son of

- Tryphena and the late John Char· I'ISITING CITY · d les Thomas of Corner Brook. Sen·

Dr. and Mrs. E. O'Raf!erty an lor Captain Edward Necho per· :heir !our children are visiting the pormed the marriage ceremony. A lilY on holiday and are staying reception was held at the home ~·ith Miss Kathleen Ha)·es, Patrick of Mr. Wilson Fudge, and Mr. ltreet. Dr. O'Rafferty is stationed Pierce Fudge, M.B.E. was master 11 .medical p~actltloner at St. Al· of ceremonies. The bride Is a un's, Bay D Espolr. member of the S•lvatlon Army

DE\'OTlON,\L PERIOD IIChoo\ staff at CorneT Brook, and has taught at Embree, Winterton, Bell Island, Bishop's Falls, Triton and Comfort Cove. The groom Is employed with Bowaters at Cor· ner Brook ....

ln keeping with World Fellow· 1hfp Week, which Is being o)>­tcrved throughout the world tn rWCA circles the devotional per· :00 over radio station at II 1'clock this morning will he led by MARRIED AT GANDER lllr.s Ruth Curtis, ~.N .. p~esldent The marriage took place recent· 1f the :\lacdon~l~ r cllowslup Club h· at St. Martin's Anglican Church, · 1f the local '1\\ CA. Gander, br the Rev. !lloss, of

t~ HOLL1\~ll ~lr. Reginald Shepherd. :\.O.C.A.

!!rector or the Newfoundland ~cademy of Art. who left here In ;c"ptcmbcr to stud)' In Europe lor 1 ,·car on a Fellowship {rom the :anadian Go1·crnment, Is at pres· tnt at The Hague. Holland, and ls rnJoying his studies, travelling tnd ''!sits to museums there.

FRO~I NEWSTEAD . Mr. Elmo Eveleigh, well known

bu~iness man £rom Newstead is at ·present. visiting the city on business and Is registered at the Brownsdale Hotel.

0~ HOLIDAY ~lr. and .:ltrs. J. Edwards of St.

Lai\Tence spent the holiday week· fnd in St. John's. !ltr. Edwards ls rmployed at Argentia Naval Base, tnd :\trs. Edwards· motored here from her home in St. La\\Tence.

OUT OF HOSPITAL The many friends of Mr. James

Sparkes, retired barber, will be gbd to know th~t he lm return· rd to hi~ home rtt Prince of Wale~ Street after two successful opera·

New Name! ·p~ flNANCl

1

CO.

IS NOW

BENEFICIAL FINANCE CO.

·Same pleasant people , , , Mmt friendly service. Onl1

' the name has chan&ed.

PINANCI CO, olllcoa ~- ... h ..... 11111 . •t 171 IINIFICIAL

· throu1hout Canada

BENEFICIAl FINANCE CO.

f :· .

~ ~ !-: l~'iZ>'>W .. 1: .. ~·

Helen Maude Gail of Pomley L'ove, White Bay, to Willis Collins or Dover, Bona,·ista Ba~·.

ENGAGED ~!r .and lllrs. Harry Bartlett of

22 Rankin Street recently an· nounced the engagement of their daughter, La,•enia, tD Ra~·mod, eldest son of Mr. and Mrs. Baxter Eddy of Little Catalina,- Trln!l)• Ba>'•

THE HEINZ CHEF SUGGESTS rHIS WEEK

HJINZ CREAM OF

MUSHROOM SOUP

~ · It's a feast for hungry eyes and a treat for •: tummies too-Heinz vtlvetyamoolh blend ~ or aweet, thick cream and tender youna ·· mushrooms. Seasoned to perrectlon~ ud · cooked ready lo serve. Try some a!K"'l

.. ... '• ·: HEINZ SOUPS '

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... THE DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 14

'

R.itual .of Service_and Pledges of Beta Sigma Phi /

On Friday, November 9th, Alpha and Gamma Chapters, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, held jolnt formal ceremonie5 ?.t the Newfoundland Hotel when five ~Jew members were initiated and seven pledges received their ritual of jewels degree, Gtiests for the occasi9n included Mrs. Arthur Johnson, social sponsor of Alpha; Mrs. E. Thompson, social sponsor of Gamma, and Miss Marjorie Ball, programme director of Gamma. At the conclusion of the ceremonies a buffett supper was served. Left to right, seated, (Pleges) Audrey Bishop, Joan Mercer, Catherine Roberts, Shir­ley French, Audrey Spurrell. Standing, (Ritual of Jewels) Carol Chafe, Betty Summers, Mildred Begg, Bobbie Tucker, Kathleen Ayre, Doris King, Louise Evans.-(Daily News photo).

Uually add rem~inlng v. cup sugar, beating constantly; fold In­to pumpkin mixture. . Pour Into tart shells, chill until firm. Gar· nish with cheese or whipper! cr<!am.

That certainly takes the honor of being the mcdingest sex away from the wom-en. Women may be persuaded to meet in the later morning, at lunch and In the after. noon. Occasionally they'll get together in 'the evening, though manv women still refuse to leav~ their husbands sitting home

Asldng another person to guess your nge Isn't a very gracious thing lo do. For he has to try and be sure to guess you us young. .er than he thinks you are. That being the ~aM, there Is real!r no point In It, either. ·

For how can you !eel flattered when you know he is deliberately taking years orr tl~oe age he thinks you are, just to m~ke you feelj good?

Oisinfetft a~ it

The Grand PrecellJ.re~s -~

OF RRITJSTf "'''"lllr1 VISIT<; Nl'.WFnTTX"fll.l\1)

'J'~c r:r;-.•ul Scn.h n( thP Crnnr1 ('rv~l·l

l'ritish Amrrlc•: ~'"'· I Pnll. ar~om"1J1inrl hi· ,,, 1 •·inci"J r-ran~ ]\ti<tro!1 o!

'•nndla"rl. ''r.< l!i[•b rr"i l'~•t ~o.nlnr PrrcPnl··"•• Dr-lbv of Toronto. are , Crv~tal t::hanters In :-o;o,,·r ...... ·i

On 'l'hur~dal',

Grand Scnicr Prre~otrr, ci;trrl h~· tho Prm•incial ~listre;< n( :Jowfoun•\1~1 ~

Jlilrla Ford. Pact Srnio;· ccptress Amr Dalh_,. ond lht ~rntre~sc~ cf Crystal (' :lR and No. 43, nr2ani1er1 Chanter l\o. 54 at Carhonear nn Frida>· naid an "Ifitial' to Crv,,tal Chmtrr :\·1. ~; at· Robert~.

On Satnrda>· a rccrnlion held in honour o[ 1 ~e

Senior Precen!ress at Hall in St. John's. anct a ation made to the guests rluring the 1ncrlini followed.

On ~fonday night. 'lr!. Btl companied by lllrs. Ford ar.l Dalbv held a meetin~ or Chapter No. 47 at · there thev will \'isi! the at Grand ·Falls r-nd Corner

During their stay in the !\Irs. Bell and ~Irs. Dalbr guests o£ Mr. and ~ln. · King, 16 St. :l!ichJc!'s

while Mrs. Ford wa; the :\lr. anct ~~r~. "" ·' Cahot R!rr""'

1mrn~ .. at11 IIIIDIIIUIIIt MI.U.tiUil"­

a.J'~~ __ ,..;;..:-;.-..

Gellhh ~ 12·1abtel

tin

FREE! U1e tbe tahh:tt In l~t' frt~ . · don't agrtc that P~.tlli~''l1~:e1 the best thing )ou\e tiff 1~k~ UfJP:T STOMACII. l~fl[tU1fl,._,

BU1t!'i1 rtturn the unt.'rt!':td ~achge to the m:~i.:e" a!:4

, Double your m OFFER LIM!

economic • Premier ·

services' ol analysis.

1'he Premier : D.

Cl out]

S1 e of the fir.<

of Youth United Churc bc~an in St.

when·~ :-01

St. ,Jolu conference, wl

Street Uni h from St

Brook, Gto1•e

Empl)' custard pie £illing into a saucepan. Add Pllmpkin, brown sugar, salt, cinnamon, nutmeg and ginger. Add milk gradually, stirring constantly \{) keep mix­ture smooth, Cook over medium heat until mixture comes to a boil; boil for 3 minutes. Remove from. bJat. Stir hot pudding slow­ly Into egg yolks, Cool about 15 minutes, stirring occasionally to keep mixture smooth. Pour Into pastry shell. Chill until firm, about 4 hour~. I! desired, top with whipped cream and sprinkle with nutmeg.

Remo'ves Slubb.orn Stains! Kills germs! Deodor~tes!

Beat egg yolks; add lh · cup sugar, pumpkin, milk, spices and salt, Cook over hot water, stir. ring occasionally . until slightly thickened, Soften gelatin In cold water !or 5 minutes; add to hot pumpkin mixture, stir until dis. solved, Chill until slightly thlcke. ned, Beat egg whiles stiff; gra.

' .

Mak~s porcelain glow!

ICE CREAM

Protects family's Healt~!

·SCENE at 1 sented· . Party. ;iv~ for the d ..

· . . tsl

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·ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, \

Economic Analysis New Industries

WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1956 ' .

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Fourth ·Pape:a; Mill . Under Consideration(·: . ~: '

for the ~ddltionai power needed to' g~vernmcnt is negotiating in'l makc- the scheme sound from the ·Italy. He described il as a large~ point of view of the dcl'elopcr. one. . ' .. , .•

The British Newfoundland Cor- The Premier commented for the • . The Pro\'incial Government is going to make "a cat·e­

rul r,.01wmll' analysis of eac~ ·one of the new industries" . ., i l'r~nl!Cl' ,Joseph R. Smallwood said yesterday that ;·;;·~ >rrr:vc,; of il Boston firm\ have been secured to make

Newfoundland Isn't going to get a third paper mill in Bay d'Espoir unless it gets a fourth one, as well. Premier Joseph R. Smallwood told the Dnlly News thnt the construe· lion of a third mill at Bay d'Espoir must· come jointly with the con­struction of a fourth mill.

poration is ready to develop the News on criticisms from Opposi··· · . , . power at Bay d'Espolr if there is lion ranks that forest reserves are·:

.i1(' '1l1o\h·:-::"'. 1

a market Cor 70,000 horsepower of not enough to supply any· new.:.. electricity. Third mill negotiations paper mills. "That," he said, "I• ·. have been successful. The Premier why they are in Opposition.··

··Til.: l'n:111:a ·ai.d the Bo~ton: cuurnglng, My collcngucs and 1

1 -~~-.\rthur ll. Ltttlc Jn~.-hn1'c I ngrccd thnt we should engage the

1·;;.,rrl h• t'tllllllWilr<' 1 1l~e hll'm

1·kd s~rl'iccs or a competent organiza­

. :1 m Jll'r•·llliH'I'. am II s ou twn to make a careful economic ~-"~,.:np!t tNI h) thr. Spring. of analysis ol ench one of the new r;,1 ~··;:r. 11'1th lht• anlonn.atwn, lnrlu~tric~. 1'hls a~alysis would dc-1,. ~m;1ll'"""l '"1d, that lis or- tcrmlnc thr efl1eleney of the ~'.;, 1 rrtl ,,n;l) .;, ul the new Indus· huilding and maehinet·y of cnch : . . , ,,.;1 :11·1• u· thr (inl'l'l'lllllcnt 1 industry, a~ well as the erricicncy ;·;:u:•l hr 111 • , .. un1l. po~it.iun to. ol the cmployr.cs Hnd 1mmagcmcnt.

1 ·:c; 1 ~,:r 1u· :hrr pnlil'l: With rc· I The anal$·sls would also ilctrrmine ., .. ; tn thr IH'" ln<hHnr,, I the worlh and the co~t of the ··;.;,r l<\1 Pi rl11· l't·rmirr·, ,tntr·

1 product ma,nufacturcd. It wuulcl

~r·' 1, .• ,1 ,, t<>lilll'·': I nb;o dctcrmmc the profltahilill' or ··::;; 1, 1, "' " nu111hrr nf ~·rars , !llhcrwi~c of thr product m:1nU· jrrr :hr 11:·1 PI th~ nrw nuln~· 1 farllll'l'li, anrl would carcfulll' con·

~he Prc~ier explained tlt~t I said he must now find a firm to Haven't they read the report Df • wlnle a Um.tcd State.~ conc.ern. 1s 1 build the fourth mill and negotia· the Royal Commission on Fot~; . ready to bmid the thrrd m11l lm· lions for this have been under estry." . • . IJ!e?iately it would not be ceo~· way since ·early in the year.. ~lr. Smallwood stated that pulp·· om1c to de\·clop the power for rt Mr. Smallwood, finance Minis- wood reserves in Newfoundland·· unless a fourth mill could be built. 1 fer Power, Dr. F. W. Rowr. and anrl Labrador were in abundanw • A, p01ycr deveiopmen.t at Bay 1 Director Gencrnl of .Economic De· I --he quoted from the Royal Com-· d Esp01r to he cconomtcally ~ound I vclopmr.nt Gordon l'usltlc Jcal'e I mission re'port-and ~air! there:· must produce 70,0~0 hor.sr.powcr. here Wednesday for llal~· to pur. II would be no shortage of 5Upply To operate the l,hrrd null· thcre,1 sue th~ talks for the fourlh paper for the mills. • ; woulq o~b· br. a market f~r 4~,000 I m!ll. The Pr~mier. in his in.tcrl'iew I The Premier i!ppcared optimistic· horsepo11er. The ro.ur!h null 11ould wrth the Dally News dcchncd to I about Nr.wfounrlland'~ chance.~ ot· · he necessary t.o fmd the market name the concern ll'ith which the• getting the two additional mills~ • ·

1,,. c·:.:i•!l·h•·•l in :"<il'wfuuncl· shlc1' the murhct prospect~ oi each .:r.·! ni· "·'· thr .. t·.rmrl!t mill '!nrlil'irlual industry. In short, this 1• II:JII\!•t:m••lllh I h1• null was 1s exactly the kind of economic

1;11,.,.,.,1 <Jll!<'~i.' h)· tht• r'tah!l5h· anal~·~li o\ suri'CY .that pl'il'nte ~n· :·rr.l •>I tit·· II•'" ~) 1"11111 factuQ' terprtse IS contrnually hal'mg 1: n~mh::m••ulh. :wrl the nrw ~tade for the purpose ol enabling ;. •·nd. ([PI•rin: iiiHI dnnr plant rls owners In determine Culmc

City Plunged In Darkness At 3 A.M.

[t,,nnl'n\. Tlw .. c thrrc were policy. II number o£ private com· · hr•l. hu: rhr) wrrc Cullowcd p~nics .In St. John's hal'e, in re·

th~ r.r11 !r11 ) r;m ,hY o!Jiei'S cent years, engaged the scn•ices rarlwnm. ll~rhnnr (,race, Bay of Malnlanrl or United Slates com·

. llri~n·. Holyrood, ~!an· panics to analyze their business 0\la:"n P••ml, :~nrl St •• lohn'5. aclil'illes in Newfoundland and , · nmr111 ha1·r inl'cstcd in, make sug~:estlons Cor impro1·cment.

ln<n• ln. thr•c lnrlustrks "We hal'e been fortunate In , ." , to ~ ~nn<l many mil· 1 srcur!ng the serl'iccs of onr. of .• , nt rioll•r·. 1 the largest enmpanlcs of its kind · .. ,\1 • rrrr1\l nwrtin~ of Lhc jln the Unitrd SIH!cs.- namely, the

. 1 ·n::r·tcd to my Cut.: firm of Arlhut· D. Lilli~. Inc .. uf :ur•. <ntt thr' concurred In i Boston, MHssacussctts. This firm

. "'"· th•t tilr time had romr.1

Cnr almost 70 years has pionect•cd t~r tin•rrnmrnt tu take ~lock in this kind or wot•k. II has built

· thN nC'I mdu;trir>. Our feel· :up a starr of Ol'cr 800 scientists; . ,, 1h:t •••mr ul I hem arc in a I cngincct•s, economists, and bu5l·

l~rol:h~ r<>tlliitiltll and will be i uc~.' and industrial experts. The~· lor 1rr~ htllr lnrlhcl' worry. hal'l! operated for gol'r.rnmcnts,

If', 11r trd. may need noth· ·cities, trade organizations, and mo:r th:.n an irnprurcmcnt in pril'alr business enterprises of all n~ 3 nw-nwnl. :itill other>, it kinds in many parts of the world.

:::· to n•. m;.) rrquirr a little They number some of the largest \

.. :.·'~•1 ll•·r~m~ c~pital. and of American business concerns m;y h: <~ne ur two who~e among their clients. They arc par- A CITY FIREi\·JAN, searc)1tng on second floor of burning Brien home. dis-:. ;r.ri W'JhCt~. upon care· ticularl)' effeclil'e in their market I co\•ers cot in which one of the young children died.-(Daih· News Photo by

. ,~,::.-i,. mr) proi'P to br di~· rc~earch wor-k." 1 Frank Kennedy). 1-------------~-----------------------------------------------

-outl1 Conference Sttc~essful·

Council Statement Abbott On Bus Service E • OJ •

! Thr. St .. John's ~lunleipal Conn· • -i as1er Jtaiil ell h:1s ls~uccl an ultlrn~tnm to Capital Coarh Lines Ltd. to suh· D • bl l B f • t mit its final derision on Council ISa ec Clle· 'l' s '.

; rcquc~ts Cor an lmpro1'ed ~cl'l'icc , , :.nti mu;t sue· the ;>;cwfoundl~tHI Conference: Mr.: within the nest two wecb. • . . . . . , . I

· ,: ,,r \'»:::n 1 ·on!< r~m·c~ of lles~clwood. Christian Education Cit,1· Clerk E. B. Foran saln yes· I hr pro,· metal ~!nuslct· u£ "ci·1 tro~. . I

At approximately 3 a.m. tCl·dny the skies of St • John's were brilliantly lit and secnnds later the whole city was plunged into darkness.

Fnr nearly hall an hour the> city was In darkness while cmplo~·ces of the Light and Power ComtJany checked the cause of 'the trouble,

At press time the News learned that the sudden flash was caused by a short circuit in the sYstem ncar the CNR Station, and resulted in the burn­ing nf high tension wires stretching from Hutchings · Street to Leslie Street. Visiting the area News repnrtc1·s noted that the street was littered with wire~ which had burned off and fell to the ground. It wn~ unknown if anynne was injured. ·

rr..::ci 1 "un h In he held ad1·iscr at Gower Street Church;: tel'd}l)', ."The cilr Council ~nd the Carr, t_he. Hon. H ..• r. Abbott: says, :\n .m~tt.cr ":h~t citanf.e IS madc .. l' k:'" :n ~~ .l•.hn'; Saturda~· ~li;s Ruth Tillman; Rei', Dr. and Caprtal Coach Lmcs l.td. arc con·\ some ~hanges m.l) he .marle 111 the 1 the\\ cl~.a1c ~lrmstcr s.a!d, the onus

••h~n· ·•'lllr Ell lteie~ates ~Irs. l\. s. Butt; Rei', \\', G. and' tinuing negotiations with a l'icw oper.atlnn of the. Dtsablcd Per· i of makrng .th~ . deciSion ns to' T S d ' d m ~~ .fplm'· In ;.tlt•nrl the ~lr~. Langille; ~!iss \\'alket•, dca· I to impro\'ert bus operations In the I ~.ons A!i~w.~ncc Which .would make I whether an mdl\'ldual gets the. al·l urns 0 For . lor.:er,·nt~. 1rhi('h w;~; held at t·oncss 11r st. Andrew·~ Presb)'lel'· ' Cit)·." · lrss rrgul ~he rcqmr~mcnts of lowancc 1:csts up~n the mcd.rcai i

Sinclair .. ,;

Statement On Bait Depots

Federal b"isherics Minister James Sinclair has in­dicated in an exclusive interview with t11e Daily N~wa·: that Ottawa has no intention of turning. the operation· of the bait service over to the Provincial Government.'· The Minister was asked for comment bv the News on · statements made at the fouth annual co~1\'cntion of the Newfoundland Federation of Fishermen which called .. the bait service ''inadequate'',

~lr. Sinclair said, "I ha1•e no 1 , _ _:..._...:

comment except that the go1·ern· 1ce comparable .with lhis one in . men I will cany out its agreement I any other prov1nce of Canad~. :.

I under the terms of Union." Under "lt's not the policy of the Federal·., I the te1·ms of Union the federal go,vernment to compete with prJ.-. government accepted responsibil· \'ale enterprise ... and it is d· ity for the operation of the bait ing this in the bait serl'icc." Fo1 .service in Newfoundland - some· these two reasons, :Mr. Carter thing which it has failed to do in st~ted, I feel that 'ottawa's han~t . any other province. arc tied. "It can't go ali out :to :

CARTER COMMENTS get the serl'ice which is require·d : C. !\fax Lane, the General Sec· ir. Newfoundland ••. the service-·

retary of the Federation of Fish· that the people want." ermcn could not be reached for Mr. Carter said he agreed wt~ comment on Mr. Sinclair's state· Mr. Sinclair when he ~aid the Fed· · ment. Federal member c. W. Car· era! gol'ernmcnt could do nothinlf' ter (Burin-Burgc), however. said else but prol'ide the ~en·ice as il' · he thought the scn·ice was one contracted U!Jder the terms of lhP . whirh could "lie better supplied 1inion. He added, hoii'CI'er, thai · by the pro1·inciai go~crnment." I thi5 still docs. not alter the fact

Major Carter reiterated state· that the ~cr\'ICe would he more · ments he had made at the Con·! efficiently operated by the pro· · \'en lion. The federal .~:oyernment, 1 rincial gol'ernment which is more · he said, does not prol'idc a sen·· ~ familiar with regional problem5. ·

Launch Annual Seal Sale

Speech By St. Laurent

.,, Stru·: l'nilt·d rtwrch. ian Church. I . "A mcctln~." ~lr. Foran con· lll':son_s. sc:kmg . l~cl~l'flts .. under I h.oard whrch' studtcs the \'armus ,. N I w· Of 'iu~lh lro~n ~I .\nthony, ('m·· Alter the supper ~lr. KinHman lllllll'il, "o tlw afternoon of Noi'CIIl• the . Jl~lllli) npcr.llcrt I edcrnl·. C.l;cs. . e\\ Inb(J

Brook. (;("'"''111\1'11 In Car· proposed a l'llle of thanks to the bel' I!! was atlendP<I. by the Conn· l'rnv~ncwl >clw~nc. . . . . , , ~'he .ofl;lwa . mc~t~ng~ brougl~l I . • in<hcs who cutcrecl. and I!CI' .. ~lr. ell and reprc•scntiiiii'PS of thr ~h. Abholl 1\.lrn h.~, Jll,( tcturn· togetl~er \\~if~IC .~IJmsllrs or their General Hospital Campal· 2:ll I On CB. c . \'!pond brought greetings from the rornpanr. 'l'hl• Council is lnsistin;; I'<! !rom m~·~:llngs 111 Ottawa or 1 represen~atlvcs I rum all of . tl.te l,

. of th<·lr l' nil<·d Church Conrcrcn~e. l!e\', J. A. ~icKim ' up~n heflcl' sen·ices and equip· \\ clfarc offlcrals h·om ,'~ 11. ~cross I ten provmccs . 1111~ler Ileal!~ ~'hn~s: . lion. Dr. .Tame~ ~lcGrath, ~lin· This evening in the Ballroom of The Rtght Hon. Lo.Uis S .. ~t. 1lil1ri. :,r;(t appruximateiy • ga\'e an mspirmg address, and .a ment of a new anrt improl'erl IJ'PC Cana~la to!d the ~ally ~ellS 111 St. tcr Paul ~larll.n. fhe mcelmo~ drs tstcr of Health, turned the first the Newfoundland Hotel some Laurent, Q.C., )!.P., Prtme :\llms· .

r.ur.drH lll'lf' prrscnt when I skit to introduce the new Canada· and has outllned Its requirements .Johns . )estcrda) that rccom· cussed thr Disabled P.crsons AI· sod for the new wing of the Gcn· 300 Citv Seal Sale Collectors will ter of Canada and Leader of the· ta;lmnre opl'r.crl on Saltrr· wide Young People's program, to the Company. 1'he Company In· mendallons hnl'e been made for. a lmyance, ~ld Age Assls~ance and eral Hospital yrsterday morning meet ~ith the Directors of the Liberal Pari)', will be the speaker;

. if:crwon. "lldl'ance," wa·s gil'en under the dicatcs that substantial commit· chan~e In the, set-up of the Drs· Bhnd ~sSIStance. Certa~n recom· at 10.45. Newfoundland Tuberculosis Asso· o1•er the Trans-Canada Network of · · •r·~r,rrr· II',; <•ltr•n<lcrl by ~tr. direction ol ~!Iss Jeanette Gould· ments will be involved for the ahlc~l . Per~on~. :A!Iownncc. m~n~lntwns ;or ;hanges 10 the ,0 P· The wing, when completed will; elation to make 'final arrangements the CB_C on Thursday n!ght next · · ;1 K~~·m,n. prr,idt•nl of the In~. I Compan~· II these requirements .. Ple~ent lc~.rslaltflll: ~lr .. llhbott e~allon of all ,l!ree . plans \\ere house th~ new Cancer Clinic, new I Cor the launchin~ of the 13th j!l 10.4~. Newf~undian? t1me. This

hhn• l'rr·h~t<'r)' of \'nun~ Vcs1lers. whlt·h cloocd thc.Salur·; arr to l!c fulflllert. s.Hcl: st~l~s 111•'1 n.pelson, 111 ord~r drsct~sserl at the ~.eetmgs. laboratorrcs and a cafeteria. Part' Christmas Seal Sale. Among the 1s the Bth ann~versar~ of ~!r: St. . · :'r'lihr,.":'''nliunupcnerl 1 ~1.~~· mrctln~. wrl'e lr<l hy ~liss' "The Cnuncill1as rrqur.sted the to reccllc h~nc_flls ~~~~~c: .tills , ~11 ;, Abhot.t smd ali of the of.t!le e.quipment for the Canccr

1

1 distinguished ~uesls will be HisiLaurent bccol)ung Prime Mtmster · • ··"•r·IHt• l'rl'i<><l. : J 11Irnan. : lnr.ai ~lana.:cr to hal'e the rom· plan •. must ~~~ rtthcr eh.ur fast or 1 ch.m':'es rccnmmrnrle.<l at the CIHnc Will he a cobalt bomb, Dr. 1 Honour the Lreutcnant Gol'crnor of Canada. nr·:· n. ~. !:•"' ·rll. ~dl'i>t'r tn j Suncla~: m·l·irr~ tw~~~~ with a· PHil)' submit its final clr.cision upon hccl·I'J(Idcn. 1. here ar: many pen·[ ~1•1 eclln~s ~~·e"rc ~f a nun."! nature. ~J~Grath announced du1·ing the I and Lady Outcrbridgc; the ~linis· . , • .. 1•-:.lm"rr \'•·11n~ l'•·nplc Ex-.l'omrnunwn Srn·icc t•orulnc·trd uy t~r Jl.l'nJin~;ils marlr. hy the Conn· pir •. hc.cnnllnllrll,, 111111 1,1ccd lh~ 1!1c .11~cetu.1 ,.,;~ llcrc. dcsr,.,ne1.1·. t.h~lhnc[ ceremony, which.was attend-Iter for Health. Hon. James ~lc-· FERRl ~oss~GS. : . .' :.-r ~IP· lilrnw atlclrcs~. th~ nc1' .. \11', Vittonri anrl Rei'. ~It•. · c1l II'IIIJin two weeks." allcm~ncc. hut ~un t lnli). qn•.t~f) \\ cifalc ~lllllst~r ~t,ltrrt, .to. c.lanf) : c~ hy rcprcscntalii'C~ of the i Grath, ~t.B.: the ~linistcr for \\"el·! A record ~19,<00 : e h

1 cIt~ S,I,JI Be 11· \\ itnt•»c~." nmrscll at n n.m. at Guwrr Sll·rct · 'l'hr ~lectin~ ~Iunday conclnrlctl unllct tlHS scctwn of the lcgr,ia· · >nme of the cxrstm~ ie~rslatiOn.

1 medical profc~sion, cabinet minis·, fare, Hon. B .• J. Abbott, ilnd His' crosfcd. th~ C~~=d~·U. S. border

. lrr·m : h<· .'\atuutal Conn· Church. . a s~rirs or meetings which were tcrs, and nurse& d the General. 'Worship Mayor H. G. R. ~rews. i hy fcm~s m. 19

Ja, up 13

per tent · m:· ..... h~d1 ll'rrc held at. The rc~uiar morning sen·lcc at· touched oH hy a Council lm•estl~a· lJJII.ted Nc'lll,()llS 7\11ari.li·me His Honour the Lieutenant Gov- ·from

19·'4.

l'olb·. s: Th.,:na•. Ontarto,. ll o'clock followed and at 2.30: linn - throu~h the Clarkson En· lU . ernor will rleclare the 1956 Christ· _..,.!.....__ ------· . l:t~n 1'.' 'I.•· :\t•\\'(Ottnrilanrl. p.m. the youth met In the church: ginccring firm of Boston-Into . mumty, mas Seal Sale officially open in I r turin the CJON Glee ciub un· ,;lr.•, .\11':~·· . lli·CtlCk, pr~.si· ; for the presentation o[ their PI'O· : the n~erntion of thr sen·icc. The Honour Stei ~:er Conference ~~?derators f,or the panel·. dis· all parts of the p~ovince except St. I~~~~ the g direction. of ~lr. lgnatiu~

· • o •• 111< , 'llltrn•ncr Young. gram, "Advance." 1 C'ounctl Is acting upon recom· , c.us.tons haven t b~en named as John's, where the date has been I R mbolt· and a showing of Wild ht·«.t:~,·. Shirlt•)· Rose: Following the cl'enlng serl'ice, mentlatlons made by the Clarkson Canadian painter Frederic Stci~·: 0 S • J w } )el: but the comnuttee hopes to moved to l\londay, :ol'ol'ember 19.1 L~e piciures by ~lr• L ~I Tulk li."lfl• 1:::::!.·11 I about three hundrt•d young people I ('nmp~ny. • ' . e.r has hcrn honoured h)' the I 11 OCla or { . en~rst t~e suppor: ?~ people, W!IO' 1'his has been done in de~cr~nce Biologist with Ca~adlan' \Viid LIC~

.\ ~·n<tu•·t 1,,, II· 1, 111 the <in\\'· I' met In Gower Street Hall for n C;qntnl Lnach Lines Compnn~· Is hhr;n·y cnmmlttce ur the Unltrd " . . . ~Jc enunently ~uahfwd, by tram· to the John Howard Socrety. Serrices . · S.r,;t IL: 1 • ' ti.:lll p.m. on Iiresirlc hour, which was directed jointly owned h~· Newfoundland Nntious, anrl n p;liuting done hy I i.u: exect~tll't• cumunttee 0~ t!Jc lllg a111t experrence, to le;id the whose financi:JI campaign I~ being I '

· · •n ·: • c·1 ll ~lll'sts in· by :lliss Tillman. and mainland lntere~ts. ~lr. Slt•igcr during his trip tn 1 .\l,al'lllltll' l onfcrence. nn ~new! Para• Is. conducted in the Capital this week. I '!'be proceedings will be carried ~~. 1': l:urr~·: Bt•l', :llr. __ .JL ___ . Newfnunillaml last summer will be :\ ut'k, u.nde1· the t•h;urmauslup nf A brochnre outlining the pur-~ Other highlights of the e1·ening's, through radio stations CBC, VOCJ\!

· "' 11 , .. , :;·, Hn:1•1 I' ·r•· IIOTII Vr\I.UAIILt: GUAI\IIS CIIJLilii•:N. hung in a prominent place• in the II~ l'resutenl, ~I!'· H. L. Andrew~. pose of the \onferclll'e is heing program will be a talk by Dr. I and CJON, and will be televised

1 . l'hufl·h: H1·1. anti .\Irs •. r. F.merallls are among the softest , 'file National Society fot• Pre· library of !he Uuill•tl Nations. ~I.A., nwt on l·l'lday, No\'cmher 9, prepared for distribution. .T.ames :\lcGrath; a musical program I. by CJON·1'V. · · ·

tc~ur:: Hl'l. It :\. How,.d; 1 of Jlredous gems, opp11slte lo tlia·l \'enlion of Cn:dty to Children was St .. Johu's people hncl the rare Ill the Board Ro.om of the .Depart· · I. f .. \'iJlonrl. Jlrt!sirlcnt of 1 monds, the harries!. , . estnbllshecl 1al New York in 1875. 'opportunity of seeing the work of. men! nl. Edueal.wn and thscus~ed

the well known artist last· summer some of .the subjects around winch

\.

' ' ... SCENE . I

scnted at ~hr. Central Fire Station last night a\! Superintende.nt Vivian pre·-P~tll· a. gtft 1o ex-Chief of Police L Strange, M.P.P., durmg a farewell

1

[r,r ih gt~·cn. by the liremen to Mr. Stran~e. \vho .is now provincial member e dtslnct of Port de, Grave.-(Daily News Photo). •'

when the Progrcssil'c Painters'. tJt.c lus!rtutes •. Panel and General Cluh of ,St. Johu's sponsored a 1 D1Hcuss1ons wtll he centred whc.n

1 . showin~: of Mr. Stch:er's work. he l';lcn~!lrrs (rom the .four Allanh,c

finished here dnring hi~ ~ix weeks! I ro~ mccs eoQvcnc m St. .Johns ~Ia~·. Thr. ~ccncs he Jlaintcrl with I dnl'lng I he ~nonlh o[ June, 1957. I his knife were all typic~! New·; II. numhc1 or. d~ie!(~lcs thtou;:h· fountllailtl si~hts, and !he nne he 'I::::! ~hr. lltl.~nhc region h.a~·c ~I· I chose to send to the library of the

1 1 t1:1 ilpprol Ptl lh~ fol.lowln~ dl~·

United Nations is the masterful[ cl.sslon agr}Hia, .Picparcd h~ the "Cabot Tower," which is semi·! PI 0?:"~11 . ~omnuttcc,. under the i <1hstract hut is al~n stron~ and· chau m.mshtp of ~hss II. Freda 1

' 1 • I 1. ! R<·rn•, 1 clear cnt an1 l!ll"es the ee mg of 1 It·. 1 1 1 1 1 1 "' 1 strength. : . 1s Jl anncc o w t! pane , uiS· 1

Mr. Steige1', who Cor. the past cusswns ~n the fn!lowm~ !optcs: fourteen years has til'cd at Tor-! PANEl, DIS~US~IONS onto, rcceil'ed a telephone call at 1' 1. ~mpioym.en~ Scmces. his home from the acting chief 2. fhe Vantsh.mg Parents. librarian or United Notions recent· 3. The Unmotivated. ty. .4. ~doptions- Foster and In·

He was born in Troppau on the strtuhonal. border of Austria and Czcchoslo· · 5. Juvenile Corrections. vakl.a and came to Canada In 1922 6. The Disabled. .

He first settled In Saskntchewa~ General di~cuss~ons in wh!ch the and having little formal trainln~ general public Will be lnv1ted to in art, for severn! years he took participate encompass ~uch 'topics odd jobs, anrl finally workert as n as: ·commercial sign painter. GENEHAI. niSCUSSIONS

He gradually tlcvclilpc<l his 1. ~!oral and iipiritual Values in style. nnd began his career as an Social Work. artist. · · 2. Civil Dcfenc~- Disaster Sur· :

Five• vcars a~:o he came to St. 1•ices. r John's ~nd pnintcd1 for Lhe House 3. Social Work in the Law.

ol Assembly the twenty-six speak· 4. Agency Arlministration. crs of the House. He stayerl a full 5. The Team AJlllroach to Health year and also painted pictures of anti Welfare Serl'iccs in Rural fourteen 111'1me ministers. He Areas. , worked from etchings faded tin· 6. llanchcrafts, Therapy or Re· types and 1)1USCljm .'records to hahilitnt!on. , cumplcle the pictures. 1. 7. Socral \\ elf.arc and the Com·

l\lr. ·Steiger llkerl worldng in Newfoundland and plans to come u'nspoiled here, he said, hack again next summer to ·do en lours arc sn wonderful that some more work; Thin~s ·arc so 1 is an inspiration to work .

JUST OPE~NED! KITCHEN CHINTZ

In lovely floral prints .................. ~ ............ 45c ya

DRAPERY 'N' SLIPCOVER MATERIAL

In attractive designs to add color to your home furnishings ........ , .. OUTSTANDING .vALUE -

1~25, .1.75 . '

BUDGET· PRICED WINDOW . SCRIM PLAINS

35' ycird

CHECKS

39' yard

STRIPES DOTS

45' yard 55' yard

,,

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Page 4: tre. Claims Lives 'f .: ·txro. .· City · Childrencollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · Wl1ere Flames ' Bl F.\ OiL FIELDS rd REFINERIES MILES 0 lOO SEt~! SUEF ~GYPT

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' . \ THE DAILY NEWS

Newfoundland's Only Morning Paper '

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Canada .................. $10 00 per annum United Kmguom and all

Forcisn Countries ..... ~14 00 per annum Authorized as second class mail Post O!lice .

Department. Ottawa.

The IMILY NEWS Is a morning papeT ·r.sl:tblishetl In 1894, and publlsned at tht News Building, 355·359 Duckworth Strae:, Sl. .!ohn's, Newfoundland, by Robinson & Ccmpany, Limlled.

~IEI\111ER Oil 't'HE CANADMN PRESS • The Canadian l'rcss Is cxclushcly cnlillrd

to the use for republlcalion of all ncwa despatches In this paper credited to It or t~ The. Associated Press Ol' Reuters and also the iocal news published therein.

All Press sen·lce and feature arliclr• m this papcl" are copyright and their reproduction Is prohibited.

~I ~

Member Audit Bureau Of

Circulation~.

The To S·wing Diefenhal{er

By BLAIR FRASER B~· BLAIR FRASER to denounce Duplessis' famous

Suppo1lcrs of .John Dicfenbaker Padlock Law by which anyone lhnt as leader or the Conscrl'alivc party Duplessis or his police care to call Rrc not mcrc~v for Dicfenbaker, a Communist can be· deprived of "they're against his opponents, the the use of his property". At the established leadership Inside and same time Quebec Conservatives outside the House of Commons, "count heavily on the Duplessis "Blair l•'raser writes In ~!aclcan's organization for any headway they Magazine. make in the province. 'l'hcrefore

"If D!efcnbnl;cr docs !Jccome they heed his veto on Diefcnbakcr. nahonal leader to succeed Gcot•ge But In the · Conserl'ative party Drew, who has retired, these back· itself, says Fraser, those who don't crs will expect drastic changes in want Diefcnbaker <;an't agree on 1 he Conservative hierarchy", says who they do want. At • present Fraser. "'l'hcy'll expect• the men the top contenders, as assessed m 11ho have been llnportant figures the Maclean's article, arc: for the past ten or fifteen years D.avie Fulton, MP for Kamloops,

----------------------------------- to become unimportant figures. B.C.: "First reaction to the news WEDNESJ)AY, NOVEMBER 14, 1956 They'll expect the hitherto unim· he might run was disappointing

Squeezing The Sattelities · Re\'icwing recent events behind the

I ron C\\l'tnin it hn,; been noted that {l!\\'

people were aware at the time that T~to'~ l!l4!l break with Ru~sia wa~ caused maml~· bv economic factor~. And now it lws been determined that the same causes spuned Poland and Hungary to make theit· bid for freedom.

not go as far as that when they advanced a plan fot· the thLl'd mill.

ln the absence of mw new information on the subjcl'l we shall only have to await dm·clopmenls. ln the meantime we hope that the Premie1· will have success duritH! his proposed visit to Italy, and that when he retums he will be able to a11nounce plans for at least the third mill.

Perhaps the excess electric power he talks about could be used for other pur­poses on the South West Coast.

portant - nam~ly themselves _ .• • In rural parts of Ontario and to become top dogs". the Maritimes the fact that he i~

a Roman Catholic is regarded as a Supporting this theory of a drawback . . . To make matters

shake-up In the higher lcl•els of worse he is regarded with great the Conservative party-if Dlefcn· ml~trust in Quebec, which is baiter Is chosen at the party con· alarmed by his views on conscrip. vention beginning December 10- · · . i~ the fact that he has often had !ton for military service (he was

the only MP to make a statement difficult~· concealing his low rc· In fa\'or of conscription in Canada gard for most of his pari)' collea· for the Korean war)". !lUes, says Fraser. "Neither was Donald Fleming, MP for 'l'oronto he a great admirer of John Brack· Egllnton: "Quebec is no more than en as Conservative leader and 5tlll lukewarm to him .. , He led the less of the strategists who picked fight against Duplessis• demand Bracken for the job. Sinvc 1048 that Quebec Income tax be made he has made no secret of his be· lief that the same outsiders who fully deductible from the federal chose Bracken also imposed . • . English-speaking colleagues

have doubts he could! beat Diefen· George Drew on a convention that, baker". left to ilscll, would have chosen Dicfcnbakcr". George Nowlan, ~IP for Digby·

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THE DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY. NOV. 14

No Place to Hide

,

Tito objected Yigorou~l.\· when Stalin announced his mtentwn of making Yugo· sl,t\'ia what would amount to n supply de­pot for the So\'iet Union, as he had done \\'ilh all uther countries whit:h had then been cntshecl under by Red domination. He preferred to rislt fm'thcr reprisals from Russia b1· !lath· refusing to place his coun· tl'\·'s acononw 'at the disposal of the Reds:

Strength For The Day fly I~A RL ! .. DOUGLASS

Annapolis-King~: "He 11ould un· Although support for Diefcn· doubtcdly get unanimous support

baker gained greatly during the from the Atlantic provinces, and autumn, Fraser points out, there he Is not unacceptable to Quebec.

Montreal P ol·t Has A Record •Edson In Washington~

A;1d, a~ the ~\'orld knows, he won a majur \'lcton· and cau~ecl untold embarrassment to Stalin and his a~~ociate,.,.

On the other h:111d Pl'land was not so fct-.uncltl'. They 1\'Cil! 'rapped by the So\'ict \I'Hl' nmchinc and <1fler ~·ems of ~qlleCZe\l)lH~' thr.l' were obllged to. Cd\'C Ill

and until their tr.cent upris111g thetr whole ccononw hurl been chrccted by Russia on a war-like basb.

'l'his unwanted slate of affairs resulted in an ccot~onw which saw the emphasis placed on hen\·,· industr,\' and in tum the lowerinrt of li\·ing standards. It is a fact

~ - . thut Poland's steel and coal ptoclui:\IOn ha\'e reached great heights. ns ha~ the ou~­put of electricit~·. But unfot·llmatcl~· t_hts has helped notl1in~ but the Red urmtes. For the people or Pol:md t herr. has been no impro1·ement, and they have not been able to raise a strong ,·uice, if any. in defence of their ri!1hts.

A tepoi·t from Poland states that Russia is taking oyer half that cotmtr~··s coal pro· <hwtion hut at the same time is onl~· p;w­m::: ln-tlf the mm ket pl'ice, tlm, kccptng the people 111 \'trlual sh\\'er~·. It is ];nown that the Communist rountt·ie5 con.;;ume t1\'et· fi(J )'Jercent of l'nl<mcl'~ e:,ports n~!;limt a mere 12 \l~lt'Plll bcfcore \VCirld \Vnr 11.

Thi~ nn~tcl'i1 \' which \lil' furred upron them b\· Rtis::;ia this \·ear rnu,crl ~o much econonitc su b•r.r\'tClll'~ t hn t the Poles \\'Cl'e

nbhced to ~o without C\'Cll the !title hut let· and eggs thev fm mel'lv en,1o,ved. And so the -~n uceze wns finn I v applied.

A"ml this ,hit back hard at Russia for instead of achiftYing their plan to increase coal output. the figures fell far short of their goal and the decline of exports to t:1e So1·iet \\'as immediate!~· apparent.

These conditions nre bnd enough when thev are imposed from within b~· countries which ma~· b~ tn·inf.! to gel along an a war economv. Bm thcv are· fm· worse when the\; a're i n)posed by an outside and unfriendl\' cmllltl'\', And that is wlw the Pol!.'s sttttl'l• out fot· fn•edum. That is the main rP:1snn bt•hind the nnw famous ln·ead riot:; ol' Pm.natt.

:\m\ i'uii0\1'11\~ tho,Q \ it1t~: there <•nme 11 whole ,erie:- of C\'cnt~ k'.Hling to Poland's outrtght dt!fianL·e of Kt·emlin authorit,l',

And now n.~ we review Jhe situation :n retro~pcr:t it is plain that there are ·man.\' 1es~on~ to be lenrnccl ancl not the least is that il ic rtlS\' to for~et when one \'iew~ the troublr. fr.nm the outsirle lind that c\·r.n the mn~t rllt h le~~ dirtatrtri'/'Jip< hit\'e !units bcvn•trl whwh the" r<mnnt ~o ;mel thou~h th~ hal~m:e of ]10\\·rr 111il\' he temporaril? held h" t, rilnts. ~uffcnn~ huma111tv ranno.t br. snbdu.cd forr.1·er. That ha:; been demon­strated b~· the Poles. Hungarians and East Germa11s.

The Fourth Paper Mill Premier Smali\I'Uod's explrmutioll .• i_!J

announcing the necessi l.v of e:;tub!ishiiig:;~ fourth paper mill in this province: while it came as ~ome surprise, especially ii1 \'iew of the fact that there has been so much delny in the establishment of the proposed third mill, docs make sense.

He states that the development o[ the

A SOI,l:~IN SPIRITUAl. RJ:QUIRE~IENT ~Inn)' people profess to he ~cnnrlalized at the

sng~csllon thai spirltuallr a man cnn be horn agam. They look askance at people who speak o[ thr.m&elvcs as reborn or twicc·bOin Chri~lians. Such people appear tu them In he a hit on the lunnlil· !rmsc.

Bnt why~ An) hod)· who brlie1cs In spiritual realities nl ull bclic1 cs that man Is both a physical and a spiritual being. And certainly the Bible mamtnms this to be true. Man h made in the image and aftc1· the Ill;cnco~s of God. He haH a ~nul. ~nd thai soul is definite!)' related to the spirit· uai Dcmg who created him. And or course he bas a bod)·.

All thmugh' nntm ~. hirlh occurs lhJ•ough the agcn~y of a !athc•·· Our ~piritunl !if~ is not the result o[ the lilc our rarthly fathers ga1·r us; It is somt!1hing thut Is conferred npou us by a he.wcn· I)· father. As it lakes an earthly futhcr to bring about our birth as physical beings, so It lakes n spirllual. hcal'enly rather to bring ou1· ba·th as sphllnal beings. Just as the o111m lie ine1·1 with· out the fertilizing agency or the earthly father, sn the SJU! of man wuuld lie inct·t without the giring u£ life b)' the sph·Jtllai Father through 11 hom r1 er.1 thing-ph~ sica! nnd ~piritual-camc into lie· ing.

The e1.prrlencr of >plrltuaJ rrb1rth doc~ not Rl· \l'a1·~ come about the same 11·a~· for ali people, hut lor r.1 er.~one whn would !inc! his ~oul and keep It unto E'lcrnal bl~~scdnes~. the lmpartalicn of •piritu~l lire inlo hi• soul must somehow como about. "Ye mu~t be norn a.:ain."

\\'HERE TilE rnoon ICcrnwall Standat'd·Fr~eiiolder)

Experts keep insisting that the climate o[ norlh· ern rountries like Cro!Juda is growing warmer We d1n't lmow where they were last summer,' but they are still at ll. . .

-o-:-­FUZZY DELIACY

. (Foreign Trade)

(n''l ·-· ... ~ Natives In the Salisbury district of Rhodesia

!1?ve dcl'clopcd a new industry-shipping cater­pitlal s to Northern Rhodesia for snle as dclicr.cies to cplc·;,;;~an Afrlcnn.

ns•: :E\'t.:NING'.S I.OS1' ( 011 ~u Sunnll Sun·'l'inws)

Wh.tt ~ ~real hl~>sing daylight s~1 litH tune wmtld h:t1c heen lltuinll litis hc.IUIJlul Nuv~mlorr 11L'Illllt'r. 'l'hc Jln~stiJillt)· io brought mote dclin· ltcl~ lo the fotcfwnt hy the !net that New York and other United ~ilales cilles hal'e continued on he "fast lime" while we i9 Canada reverted to the time o_r earlier d?rlmcss at the end of Scp· tcmhcr. Since thnt tune 11e have enjoyed ~orne ol the ffi'J>I hcanlilul \leather of Hie enure sea!un. But most of us hal en't been able to take very much adlantage of it. Soon alter sup. per darkness sets In

-o-I\IUNfC1PAL PRODLE~!S

(London Free Press) . The mumc!pall!lcs are today facing a serious

Situation .. :rhcir only source of revenue Is land tax and with the call for new schools and new services to meet their expansion the load Is In many case~ becoming excessive, The recent re­stricllons Ill borrowing and increased ratt-s has I he. "!nsf time'' 'l_hilc we In Canada reverted to foi needed sct'\'Iccs ls bcccming harder and harder to. obtain even at high interest rates and mauy munlcipalil!es cannot even !!oat bonds to. day. ·

Bay D'Espoir hydro polcmLial would have HmtE OF CULTUitE to produce ncm·ly twice the quantity of (Vaucou1•cr Province) · powet• required fot• the third mill if it were . One of ~he proposed jobs or the ~anarla Ccunc'n to be economically sound; He concludes IS lo provide scholarships for dcsc1wing university then that a fout:th paper mill is the answer. students. This rai5es a IJ.Ucstlon In our minds·

We hope that in making this announce- added to the burdens of the munlclpnllllcs. Mone; the universities? With money In eight err nine

ment Mr. Sm~llwood is not reverting to figures available, ap~rt frorr. the present Federal the days when superlatives were the first 11ranls and earmarked for h

l All N •f dl J · 11 1 ' . ' purposes ot er than ore cr. em oun anc ers wou c we • their own domestic opernlions the · 1 • rome the establishment of two additional . could become, as they were 1~ Euro:~~r~~~~~ paper mills and the vast employment they earl~est days, unll·ersal. They could fostrr art, would proYide. But we wonder if the tim· mus1c, the ballet, the thr.atr~. writing, arlult crJu. bcr t'eH.uorce~ of the province can s~port wouldn't the whnle. cultu.ral job he hetter left to four 1mlls. The ~ennedy Commission did thing that Is vaguely classed as "culture".

remains a hard core of Opposi· But he· is not well known across SJ • • s tlon, and the hardest part of the Canada except to the Inner circles 11ppiJ1~ eaSOJl core is in Quebec. '!'he reason is of the Conservative party". u. . that Prcnucr Duplessis tums None of the other Consen·allvc ~y TilE C:\l'iADit\N PRESS thumbs down on him. "Dicfcn· MPs so far suggested. says Fraser, , Cheri'?' reports are commg from hake1 seldom lets R chance go by can be taken scrioush·. Can.ada s ocean ports on sh1ppmg

· • busmcss for the clllrcnt and forth. coming scasom.

What Others Are Saying col~ 0~1o~t~~~·officia!s say that 1! current trends conllnuc as rx· peeled, the port 11 Ill handle about

lm·SKU:>IKING RECIPE (Saint John Tclcgraph-Jourljall

Should rou cn•t• be fae2tl with lhe problem of rehabilitating a doe that has lost nn cnccuntcr · 11 tth a ~kunk, hl•rr is a friendly 1111 fJom •\ lllllice sergeant in i\cwingtln, l'unneclicut, who says it IHll'ks: First gh·e the dog a hath 1n tomato juice to rcmo1·oe the odur. Then bathe him in liquid detergent, tu remo\'c the tomnto juice. The ofl1cer 11 hfJ paoscd thiR recipe al~n~ didn't say am·lhing ahoul it. but it might be well to snvc enough tomato juice ~nd dctcl·gent for rom·sclf, par· tienlarh· if lhe dog doesn't take willingly to the do-skunking pro-cess.

mais from the killer list. Sheep· killing dogs have been [Jart of the agncultural picture for gcn· erations. ·

18,000,000 tons before winter close> the St. Lawrence Rive11 traffic. 'l11is would be 2,000,000 tons higher than l9j:J, .tnd 11 eli above the rec­ord of 16,899,300 Ions set in 19.i3.

Halifax, Saint John, N.1l., an<l CITY IS 'l'IU: ~1.\KI!'\G \'ancouvcr also repo1 t good buol·

(llegina Leader·l'csl) ness and high pro,pl'<:IS, a C:ma· The distinct possibility exists rlinn Press suncr shows.

that Lloydmlniste-r may become 1\IGGI:R Tllc\HE VOJ.ll~IE Sa>katchewau's nmth cit1•, or. At Montreal, imports tolullcrl 7,. sithng astride the Saskat~hewan· 798,80 tons at the end of OctoheJ', Alberta border as it dues, at an increase ol 15 per Cf'nl o1·er least half a new Saskatchewan la:;l year. Expo! ts inmpe<l 23 P"r citr. The population or this cent to 7,328,418 ton~. northwestern wmmunily certain· Grain export, at 115,000.000 b:hh· Iy offers no barrier now to its els. II as 38 per cent 01·er last ~ e.1r attaining city status. The latest while petroleum products ai·'J figures show its silc to be in snm1 ed a siza bJ.e inrrca ,c both on the neighborhood o[ 5,800 peo· export and Import. Coal, hoi\~Hr, pie, almost 1,000 more than the w~s down. ~ total o£ 1.182,9j.G ton­mlnlmum rcquir~·nent. More· hcm:t handled compared 11 Ith t..

Fl1,,1S FRO~! A:>IY COU1\TRIES orer, the Lloydminister council 216•607 la<t :>ear. (ncgina Leaclcr·Postl is now acti\'clv considering the C,!!nerallr PI'D'pco·ou< lime- 11 r•~

Yorkton is takm~ an internal· idea and is co~sidermg ~ppl) 10~ c: crltlNI !or the n~ei·.,,JI lnt'J'ro ·P

ironnl Ilutter. It is holding its for the necessary pi'OI'incial or· anrl of{ocials Pl'c<hcterl lhal II'Xt

biennial ~·International Film Fe~· ders·in-council. 'r~,. ;1111 ~r ;~t Ic,,lt "' ~oo<l 1\!'TI\ r. I:'i n.r.

tivnl". a 1enture the Saskatche· ·Gram <h1pmrnts thrnn~h \'an-wan cit)• hegan with ~orne cour· C ) 1 d p d} J rom·rr tlm ve~r. smrr t11r <ca111n a~e and con~iclerahle daring in 0 } en a OC \. ended at Port Churcl11ll. ~Inn. n1~ 1950. During the fil'!t three days L N • runnini hi~her than '" lP'i:i. rr. t:>f the week, documentary films a\V ot Valid nnrtcrl Bert Smith nf the ranndian from l'~rious parts or the world Wh•at lloarrl al the Wc<l Coa;t

'arc being shown ~nd judged. This O!TAWA (CP)-A chall~nge of port. . year the !ilms being shown were Queb~c's padlock law, which is AI the rnrl of Octohrr. Vanrnu· produced in New York, Sou~h aimed at crushing Communist 1cr clearance< to!alled 32 000,000 Africa, Italy, New Zealand, Brtt· propaganda in the prorlnce, now bushels compared \lith 1j,OOO.OOO aln, Denmark, Holland and varl· Is under consideration by the bushels at thr corresoondmg date ous other countries. Supreme Court or Can.ada. of last ~·enr. Total shipment, from

Counsel for Joan Swltzman, a British Colcmh'n ports last winter ' POLICE ON TRICYCLES supporter of the Labour Progres. -Vancouver. Victoria, New West·

(St. ,Tohn's News) slve Community Part)', whose minster. Prinr'.! Rupert - were Two o[ the four traffic tricycles Montreal apartment wns padlock· 113,000,000 bmhcl<, romnarPd with

recommended by the Trafflc Com· cd January 27, 1049, :fnd for the the record 130,000,000 bushels in mis<lon for the use of the !lDlice Quebec .attorney-general Friday 1953·5~. will soon be in serl'ice. They will completed argument on the Issue Last vear Canada rontractecl to prnhahly lie run to rlcle but what presented to th~ full court o[ nine supplv Russia with ~00.000 tOtt< of 111:1uers most Is the experience, judges. wh~at a ,ear lor three 'rar<. Snm.:! !J·,ol.nln~ and c.lpacll>' for et£lcl· Swltzman's lawyers contend the of thi• ll'~s ~hippP!I through \'an· l'lll ~elinn uf tlw )l~!;fl(e who are padlock act Is not valid on the rnUI'ri' last 1ear. hut how murh ~,·lellt•d tu rille them. 'l'he JIUr· grourut that the pro1·incia! h•gisln· i• ~oin" 1hi~ "''"'' I, llllrt•rlain Jlnse CJf g1•llmg tht•se !Jicycle~ i• lure in 11as~ing the Jaw in 1937 'T \lltTnm~; Rl'S\' to cnah!e cnn:;tahlt•s un trafllc excc~dt•d its pnwt•t·s and rurroach· At lhlil IX, -h:llPin~ sholll<l he duty to mo1·e ~lowly lhrnuHh the ed on federal jurisdiction Olcr :•' non<l this 1·rao· a< b'l and m<•h· tr:llltr note l'iulahcns o[ dnnng crimi11:1l ia11 . -hh· lorlf·'" '"" pnrt 111ann2rr r pracll;·c nfltl call them to I he Counsel fm· lhl• Quebec att<ll'lll'V n 'litchell llrronl tnnna~r or ;; . attention ul the tlrilcis. general took an opposJte \'Jell'_:_ 500 OOi1 i< expect rei to inrrra•r tn

lhat while commnnism is a nRlion· 6 (\/If) 0•00• • ' • DISTILLH'i(i CEllAR 01!, al and international problem that r.o·~~~ <lupprr• 1' ~r; nol .mal<11:·:

(Cocnw~ll Standard-Freeholder) must be deallh with bv P 1 . · n•·r~hchnn<. hut lh'tr slu~mrn' One of Ontario's lr.~st known ment, the !Uppre>'ion ~~ ~o~- were rxpcrtr~l to he a\:~e~.t a"r~

lnrlm111es IS the d!stillat!nn o£ munist propaganda is a local the !R.OOO,~O 101~.', ole:}',.rte·t to cednr ml whwh has occasionally problem falling under the ium- Genelrali r.1a 1 ~0e r' a 2 0J 000 ton< I [ 11 d l ll' The raw dl I f . . I I . . ~qua as . a ' . "'"' 1cen . o _owe ocn -'· c ton, o provincia eg1slatures. 11 hi! "Vpsum 11 1n dehnitch· in· n1ater1al IS while cedar branch!s. QUEBEC SUSCEPTIBLE P "· •

'fhese are cooked under a steam "Do you sa~· that one province i;;;: order to the "lettrcs de cachet" pressure o£ 70 pounds per square can be more SU!coptihle to Com. used in prc-rel'olutionary France inch to remove the 011. The munist propaganda than another " b)· the kin;: to commit his enemies

Reviewing The CamJmign Of Democratic Candidate

II~ I'EJJ:It f:HSO:"i 1'\J:A Washington Corrt-Silondent

\\'ASI!INGTON-!NEA) - Rei JCII'ing DcmocraiJr. can.rhdatc Adlai Slerensnn's campmgn on the err of rleciJ~1 pohhcal must for the intelligent 1otcr, whether he mtrnn t1 for the former Illinois go1·crnor or not.

Stc1 enson started off like a whirl\1 ind by taking 1 he , m1ny from New York Gm•. J\l'crell Harriman-in sp11e o£ dent Hnrr> Truman. 51evcnsnn emerged ns undisputed he,i Democratic part). He had the opportumty to exerCISe real ship

In m, acccptant·c speech calling for "a 1lcw Amenn · ,n "j)Oiert~ IS ahulished" and • frcc<lmn is m.uje rc,ll," Siller.,0 ~ lined lhe mam is,ucs nl lm campaign

lie rcj~rtcd i'J t•sident E1s~nh< \\('r·s heallh a~ an •·'liE and lll lb place I~Is~nhui\CI's record as president.

Slelfnson rlccl.:rcd the Ebr.nh·m.,r admml>ltaluon I.Jd l'

"SIL,!Ilowed the New Deal" after lighting tl 211 ~ Pao. The: t•hai·gell tl!,J( the fit•publicaus hal'c tried to mampula'e the or Amenrnns 1111h shOI\3, •log;>ns and advertising an,! hale the cnuntr~· only propaganda for peace and a per-cn . .JII' · place of real leadership ·

In hi• campa1~n .<peeches Stc1·enson has hit ~~<I, shortage of ~rhools and teacher<. the need for ~rratcr hra: 1

lcrtion, rchcl for fieprcs.cd art•.1s, rilismg the •land?rd• o! l;;h111 lccis!atwn, I he >G tailed fa1or!IJ<111 to big hnsna-- the l<1hoo· lt·~J;Ialwn. lht· '" cilllrd t.n··Jritnsm to lJc hu-int•" the ' uncttncal conduct nl a nmnhrr nf Eitcnhmlcr a~lmn••:r;JiOII Ires allowed to rrs1;:n ,\n•l 11 lwn the )l!ddlr J·:~·t fi:h'Jn: r•ut. Strl·rnf•on 1~a~ able In o' 1J,I;!r <hplonmtJc · nncl Sl'g"le~alwn, and 11-.1s atci.Jirnrrl for 11. and s~;:rc~atJon, and wa< atruauncd f•or 11

On foreign affnn·'· i'le1cnson pninlcd out that th• 1\nrca all<! lndochma are by no mr.m:: <ctttcd. 1 he prohle·1 l~racl. Egypt ~nrl the whole Mld·East are eHn \10N

with llrit~tn. Franc~ :md other Eur~pean allws arr d~<r•Jpted no progress has bern made on ionpr01•in~ 1 ei<>tion• 1111h

Russia. 1• Ill the closin;: wcel;s or the campaign, hm1 c~rr. ~lerenKJ."'

trted to focus interest on his proposals to end thr h;drogen tests and the pcactime rlraft.

This has tended to throw the campaign off b3lancr Desirable as both steps might be from an ideali51Je

from a practical standpoint they have been open to cnl!ci'~ cause they would tend to weaken U.S. national dl'fcn<e .\l;o. a political standpoint, there is some question even among crats as to how good these issues are as I'Ote-grller'

In spite of a much rr<m! aggresshe campaign th,m pe

~cars ag~. Sle\eusnn's ~pr.crlw~ this n•ar h~l'e hto•n , nwnl tu m:m~· of hb mo,t m dent sUpJmrtt•rs.

One of lhe gre.!l .Sit•I'Pn,on f:ollin~, lhis ,,.,,1 "' • o,,.r lt'llffPJI(')' 111\lill'f( I>H'hfU(l'JIIPII1 Ill IJIL' IIIJ•d '<I lilllo'r• [IJt

thin~ to ::1ttr~1d \ ~tPI!.; nncl cm~durt a "(;i\·e 't~m lu '• lot of 1hill£s ma,· h~1r h~t·n llfl~u·d Jw the Jlo•lll•l•l ,r <3

11i1ich he 1\UIIld not hal<• said in r:tlmrr.Inumt•nl' ,., 1 II' h;l. an ofllcoJt in<ute I he go1ernmrnt with acce•s 111 IJ1 'I''' .-afl

St e1 cnson's mo<t construct" e approach to Ill' , •Pp31:n he Jnund in his SPI'Il'S o£ writlrll •ta[ement<, n1•1ao llll hJ< • for the new Amelica.

Four of them, on fducalion, h~altlf, old ;~ce a-·,•l,nte ;t:

econnmtc pro:mom, came out promptiy But they were !O lon,t: and so difficult tn ~ot 11;~n zrnwl

culatwn 1hat thetr effect on the election i~ cionhlf"i

crease df!e to a new .•·P.ar-round operahon. Some 1,500,000 tons or

yield Is about one gallon of oil, ask~d .1\lr, Justive I. c. Rand. to jail' without trial. valued at about $25 per ton o! "Yes, my Lord," replied Lucien Mr. Beaulieu argued that the small cedar branches. There are Trembla~·. counsel along with L. Padlock Act Is related only to plenty of uses for the cedar oil, Emery Beaulieu for the Quebec property and civil rights-a mat· since It has several uses In mcd· attnrney-general. tor of exclusive provincial juris· lclnc, after further refinement. Frank L. Scott, law professor a diction-because it prohibits the It Is also used In floor and fur· McGll! University and counsel for use of a house for a .definite pur· nilurc waxes and In some in· Switzman, said in summmg up pose, that is the propagation of

gypsum 11 ere expected, G d , ~tiJddJqS .raJU).\1 ,.pooll ,{J'-"A, v an er Res1 season for Saint John was pre· dieted by B. J. Roberts, Ottawa chairman of the National Harbor~ Board. when he l'isited tJ;c po1 t

secticirlcs. !hal !be issue presented to the Communisl ideas. court involves two constitutional ~Ir. Tl'cmblcy argued that free·

Slll\El' AND DOGS quesions. dum of speech, prm and assembl~ (Sudbury Star) 1. Whether basic freedoms of arc facts. As such the legislatures

It is something of a mytti to speech; press and assembly are at and Parliament could enact laws suggest there are wild dog packs the mercy or the 10 provincial curbing ccrtaif aspects of these in "civilized" Southern Ontario. A legislatures and whether the con· freedoms. For example, there form dol: star\s to roam and is eept or 10 legislatures having were laws against slander and join~d by another dog. Soon jurisdiction in the matter is con· libel. there Is a sm,all pack and a sistent with the character of the Since Canada was a confcdcia· flock or sheep offers temptation constitution. lion, with legislative powers ni· for n game. Unfortunately the 2. Assuming that the provinces VIdcd among the federal Parlia· game gets rough, the dogs get have some control over freedom ment and the provinces, both excited nnd the sheep start to or speech, press and assembly,· levels of government could legis­fall. Very :few shccp.kllllng doss could they deprive a person of an· late. on such freedoms. engage· In the.. slaughter to sat· other right-that of a trlnlln open 1\fr. Trembley contended that Jsfy hunger. 'l'he situation Is a court? the attorney-general was not as· lltlle diffqrcnt In Northern On· "LETTRES DE CACIIET" suming judicial powers In signing tarlrl" where flocks are exposed The padlock law authorize~ the a closing order against a house. to hunting rlogs abandoned In ~ltorney.general to order the c!os· The person again.st whom the- pad­the hush and 11olvcs. However, mg of a house upon receipt of lock order was dircc!eri could t;<kc there Is little the government ~atisfactory evidence that It Is be· !hP. maller to the court•. The can do ahout It except place a In~ used to prop~gat~ crimmnnism. Quebec atlornry-generjll was nnl)' total han nn do~~ in the hush. Th, padlnckint i~ for one ) ~<~r. p~rforming an executive function This would remore these ani· Pro!. Scott compared the clos- in signing a padlock order.

,.

".Tuclging by the nmount or g1·arn loaded this year nl Churclnll. Van· couver and St. La11 renee Jlivcr porls, it would ~ppear reasnnahi:· the new town<ile there certain !hal Samt John will al-u ~lr. Abbott tolrl the V11IY hav.~ a l'cry good .1·car for ~:rain yesterday that he h~rl shipments." he <aid. Last year's Gander on hts return [rom grain total from Saint John ll'ns a ·meetings in OUa11a Ja•t post-war rcco1·d. meet llllh a group ol hll

The Emprc•s or. France Will stituents. open Canadian Pacific Steamshin 'ailmg; from Saint .John No1·. 30. She and her new sister ship, the Empress of Britain, will make nine round trins to Saint John from Europe durin!! the winter.

Extension of two piers at Weot Saint .Tnhn is scmdulcd for com­pletion in time for the winter sea: son.

NORTIIERN romiU:\'JTY rhapl~nn. 170 milrs north11 e•t nl

Snrlhun· •n Ont:1nn. 11':1< namrd lnr fiir .To•rph Chapleau. C'ann· <li~n ~tale ;eeretary who d1e<1 in 1898,

IIISTOI!IC COLO\l' ·The colon'' of Sierra ceded to ·Britain br natill In 1787,

UST ;uo\'f.RS Dolphins, among the

of fish, cover about 20 hour compared to 10 salmon.

j!J11VC<Ilric5:da~·. No autum~

could open m1 sheer beautv souls. It 1i•: the da)' of !h1

or Weslel' 1 three lh~v In bug~ic.• a hundred

The sreJ ~aJ I~· dcl'orat were cf c1·1

. preltih· dominating

~tr~,eous hirthday one for

nd was first must hal c 1 and smile

and then, many less in the 11

Page 5: tre. Claims Lives 'f .: ·txro. .· City · Childrencollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · Wl1ere Flames ' Bl F.\ OiL FIELDS rd REFINERIES MILES 0 lOO SEt~! SUEF ~GYPT

!~E pAIL y NEWS, WEDNESDAY. NOV. '14; 1 956 ,

lo&

: r rrr!'i 1 ~rn:it1

riC'rt1nn i~ a

·. c:·:· i··~c--lil hr;,l:h F~

:.~dHci< ~~ !G7

i'''· thr <~llt!tf

:r

1nlo nneral

{Doily Photo)

. r~ rr•'h" rc' for the public t.11c ptcturr whl!•h we had In Au gu~t before :\tr Frederic Steiger's 111.,., .. r.,

11,.n1 un c·xhibltlou· at Bowring Brol.ltci'S. 'l'he picture ;;hows some or the twenty

~~;;,;j:;, !II' l!:.rl rend for tJ1e exhibition, and tlw second [l·om t11c tef.t (on tnp Is the pnlntlng ' . , 1 ·1· •rc·· wl'ic•h wn~ recentlY chosen tJ be placed In the Llbra1 y ol Ur.iled Nations. {1! l ;\,1!1 II . -•··I ~

Railway In the Wilderness \W\1:1: 11. · c I', - ltailii'J~' troublc•>omr. hut con;tructinn kept' !ici11l~. The nctual c1·~~sin~: of .t.h.c

h· · .r· . . 1.t !> •• -~ .11 thr lllll'C un on rollin~ so that ~t·~cl noll' ha:; Cran, 26 mil~s wc~t n.t St. .Feh· ·:: •. :r,l ,, :.!i'::w .. ju·t hrh"l' rc~achc!l a point 64 miles 11·om cicn, is a maJOl' WOI'k Jnl:oll'tng a

1·;. ".

1, ·:.:·e. ,:1 :'\llrtlwm C~uc· Chibougamau. two·spnn bridse 80 fr-:!l abo\'~

,,. T·.- t .. :: .. d.:·ll :'\;c!Jotwl ll:tt!· Tb~ rallll'a)·, to ''pen Up a :10,000,. water. . · : :,.· •r. c-: '•:·:.nl'h linr. :t 290 <ctu:u·c•·milc area t'il'h in minet·al., Th~ Ci'.:n hn• not wat~rd ~or ~'·, ,; , ,,, :11~"'~ li'VIll llcatty ; fore. I and power resources, is IJ-:!.1· completion ~~ the Bealt~'l'lli~·Ch!· ; ~. :':.·• 1 ~:• liH· l'h:bnu~amau j in~ pu&hed through countr~· where bousam~u lmk to ~r.l. mto bus:· ~:; ,, .).•t:·.,·~ to l.;~~r St. ,John ,; : engineers hal'c nltcl'llRlcly cncoun. nes~. It 1~ already ~cn·tn~ .<~ smaol ;;:."::~ :r: ":·~ ~ tcrrrl solid rock, muskeg, turbu 1 ~Inning mill ~car Brnt~)'l'llk anrl

1 I.'·'· :I? .• ,., "" 11! thr ~3.i.· lent ril'rt·s and narrow, smooth· 1 1.~ ~I so handhng pulp11 ood for a .v. ·,; r;o:·• ;~ .,,.,,r,·t " ,.xpcc•lcd lhm inq strcnms. j mnJO." operator. . ., ,, , .... ,·: .... ,,, I\\' ;prin~. Thr · \\'m•k uti the llcattyl'illc·Chihon· O!hcinls of CNn arr. hanlan;: on ~ ..... ,. '"'" f:'i•:ll nrnllyl'illc. in IRll <I runtrnct \I'R~ l!l to ctr.ar. the ti'RflSPOrl or pulpwood. lutnber ::r '\.·:·1·· r···· ,., 1l11rhr~ cli;tric: · ~nnwu ~cction started in 11155. Last and nrc to pay fOI' the C(l;l of the r' 1:• ··:·' · .• • !~<lo:•u~nm:lll. ~P· the ri~ht·of-way fl·om St. Fcllcien railway. . 1 . .-

1 :r.;!r:-. tl•t ,,,. mtlc~ north of. ;~nrl 'Chibougamau. The contract A . ~~~t'\'r~· h~s ~hn~\'11 that In

lt··.::r;: 1 lor the sccnntl half or thP. easl~1·n proxmuty to the ratlll'n)' there 1 •rr'~·· .r.-:;·•n. In nm tJo: .<cction of the line Is ~;et to be I nrc 12,000 ~~qc~ of foi'~St> contam

~ ·1

, !~·":: ~: l'rlieicn. in the i awarded. ing an cst~matcd 12,000,~[1(] corcls L1~• ~: ,l,,:·n ·L•tr:rt. to Chibou. · Clearing or the right-of·\l'a~· hr. of wood. )hllCS alread~· dtscol'ercd 11 ~::1 ., .,•:rrlu!·~cl to be com· · ill'l'Cn St. Fcliclen and J.altc Chi· hare known deposits of 10,000,000 ;:rei :" :<>·,; ,,,. Ht.iS. !(oubiche has been completed, but ton~ of copper and zmc.. . !PRJ\(; tll:U \' l(rnrl!ng has prn1·ed n tou~her )lore than n half dozen mmes m

A i'·~:. ··• r: -;•ring in the nl- problem. For a. portion of the Crnn. the Chlbougammt arc a hare :n:~ .. ,fll·"·1:rrt•d ,-ountrr threat. Ril'er Saller. which the line fol reached the producnon st~g and t:tl • :nJi.Jr clPLlY to tb~ Beatty. low; for 20 mll·2s, the grade take~ more arc expected to open 111 otljer r::er~:h1:~~1::" ;cl·tion earlier to the sidehlll. Considerable roc!; areas as the railwaY pushes 1: .• 1rj:. ~: .. d <uppl~· was also blasting Is involved, say CNR of· through.

.W4M.S. At Cupids csler Bahv Band His Grace Blesses . .

'rtlular Jlm·ty SclulOl atTorhay 'l'he Auxiliary or the Wnmnn's

:\!issiouary Suclel)' of Clltlids hPlll their rally on October aoth in the Uniled Church School auditorium

1\',·.'r.;•d"' \,, .. ··ml,•r ith was , Suucla)', No1·emlwr 4th, was a with one hmulretl nne! ten ladie~ f,;;i~u; :tu:utl!:J <l:il', :t 1i:1)' when ! day of l'ejolcin!( nncl thanksgivin~ allencling.

1r.:tlt! ••l·t·n , :1: !warts ancl.lc•t ! for I he many hundreds of 'l'urbay '!'he Prc~iclent ~Trs. F.. Richards, . ~hrr: '"aut~ nt 11 pr.m· mto i p:u·lshlcncrs who turned out to, on behalf of the Cupids auxiliary ··. :o·Jl~ It 1'. :.• c. ~~w~iul day witness the s..~lenm ~Iessing oi their I exlcnde. d a warm welcome to the

. h! 1 ri~~· r.f :h•·:•!lllttal,hlrthda~· n~w school by Hts Grace, Arch· officers and members of Brigus ~. II r·lry lmtrcl l hur.cl~. _hJShop Skinner, C.J.~J. Due to Auxiliary and to the officers and

:'' l~m thn -tart~cl amnnq. 1mclemcnl weather, the planned i members of Ba~· Roberts Auxil· IH< :n h•1::'''· l':ll'' :u1cl huscs. • prPccsslon oi school children had iar1· also the affiliated society o!

1 h>:i'lr<"i br· It hr. happl' ! In he canc.cllcd and the entire cere· I Cl;rk~'s Bench and all other l'isl· • Tt~r ''' !'r ""' a frslil'r; mon~· tuck place within the school! tors ntirndlnl! and wished for • l•l; r.r,·n:r.tr·i room, balloons •lmildin~. 'cl'eT\'UilC to feel at home. The ··.m ~~. '' ··:" rnlnr ~~ the· AI 4·011 p.m. IIi~ c:r.1cr, Rcrnm-

1

1 mcciing opened with Hymn ~o. 46. ~::.rr~. ·,:1. rh e.-c·rl rhtlcirrn. · l'anicd by \'cr~· llr.l'. Father Mlll!!t', Scripture in unison, the !Oi · · .. lr.'." ·,· 1 I. thr. mo~•t I Pnstnr o[ Torba~·. and RCI'crend I psalm No. 731. l'ra~·er, ~lB. A1·chi·

h.t:.h .;~ r<•kr wllh. ~2: Ill', D. L. 0'1\cele, arl'ii'Cd at the, bald ~orman, Cupids: Solo, "Think h ·///M .r1rr;· ;car s1ncc' nmin entrance of the ~.chool. lie !on Me" by Mrs. J l\for;.n, Bay

r,./;. } _r,r,; <t~rtcd. . 11:as. greeted by the Girls' choir Roberts; llccitatlon, which sr.rmon . ··~'1.1 ~·'.r ,naked clol\n rynm ~mgms 'Viva! Paitor Bonus". Th{! w.as the best by lllrs. D. Williams

3:."' : mtiNI upon _his .little members or the Holy Name ~octety Clarke's Bench.

· ~·~ ~hr1 ";, r1rrhap,, s1uh~d wearing snshes and badges formed Solo, "No Other Name", i\!rs. n. ·:•n. c.. ortunatc of his a ~ 1111 rd o1 honor along !he corrl· N R 11 B · . p "U tn lile world to~a~ b . owsc , ngus, oem, n· 'T dor. The teachers and mem ers awnres'' Mrs. W. Norman, Cupids;

TI1 !n••rt \\'orshin Service was of the local school board were also Duet, "Jesus. Will Walk With h;· the Sup!. )Irs. T: on hand w welcome His Grace. Me", by J\lrs. E Richards and :'!Irs,

with rra;w b;· ~Irs. H. Hundreds o! school children fllled B. LeDrew, Cupids · an~ the ~3rd Psalm In the spaclou~ classrooms; their Reading, Miss Fisher, Brigus ..

proud, eage'l', happy faces spoke Plano Solo "Consolation" by

S!ltral rhilrlrrn were promoted the ~li~1!nn n~nd hi' the Presl· t.f thr 1\'JI.S., ~lr~ .• 1. Crum· •r.d wm welcomed into th~t

· . the lrad~r. )Irs. R.

\'olumes. Among the distinguished ll!rs. G. Splce'r, Bay Roberts. ' ~uests present were Rt. Rev. Mon· Address, '!A Recent Visit to Con­signor Summers, Rt. Rev. lltan· vcnlion In Germany," by lllrs. W. signor Maher, Very Rev. Fathers 'J, Morris, Cupids. St. John and 1\tcGeltlgnn. From Solo, "Eternal Rest" by Mrs. E. the Department or Education were Richards, Cupids. Dr. G. A. Freeker, 111~. P. J. Hnnle~·. Group singing Hymns No. 4961

\!r•. Roy Sh•·"' r·•. mothl'r of 6 and :O.!r •• T .• T. Conran. 482, 240 In Ilymnar1•• • •·1:1 ll:•·· :II. ,.,., 11 ~ 1,,t mPmlmr Aller ,-eclllnl!. lite Venl Snnctc Ilencdletion, • . '"' :;,., hi,·thcl:ll' cake. 5plrltn~. 111~ c:race ·,attenclccl It)' A socinl hour brought the C\'en·

''·' '''1'"'•··1 iv. 1tw 'mntlwr< Revt'rend Fntlll'rS Lacey nn:l ing to a dose. it:}.•: '.'.i'h :• , 1111 ,[ 11.:1. ~l<':tll: )1nnklc•r procrr•lccl to hit·~~ ~neh -·------·· -·--------1:'• t~• • h !•lr: n lll·r•• bring 1·l:c~<rr.om. Dudn~ the rcrrmony, eff11rt~ of the Pastor, RHerenrl J.

:I '' ,, • .J: 11 •• ::nrl milk Fin· "t·:aith 1of our 1-':tthers" nncl olhl'l' A. ~tiller. ·. 1 '':• '""'· :nil tirNI. itapp~·l clcl'utiorml h~·mns were ~~ng b.~~ Jlay It hare Cl'er~· htteccs~ In rile · ' •:attl·rl 1111 thr journcl'\. the rhnh·. Alt~r thc• blessmg, llss ye:u·s ahead, and may the dav be

·,r;rn • Grace adc\rc:s~c1l tile gathering not teo' far distant. 11·hen t'unds n-, . . , lll'et• the spccinll~· lmprol·ised pub· will allow nn extemion which will "tr ••;:n lh• hirthlf;,y party .lie addfess system. He congratu· Iully nne! comfortably meet the

· 1~trh I llll'rr". and mostl)'llatccl both Pastor and pccple on fast-growing needs of the parish. ~~~ ~ llntlnn~ work of the their inclcfntlg;'.Jie :cal and labour

~

' · :!. T. ltohcrts. ror twenty In creclim! such a splendid school .. p·;~~t

1 ~a~ lahnurrd lol·ingly -one 1)1~t was Sl.lrcly needed for

. hi1cr.ul~· amon~ thr. children, 1oml! time. . rrn. linr hahic~ )!row, . 1 · an~ brm• their . · h'l He expressed hts p easure on

hark t~ th~ hnnct1ns c \: seeing such a spirit o[ co-operation de1·otion an1t scni~e st? existing between .the people and . the word! ot Chr' t ~I 0 their goorl Pastor, .•.everend 'Father

!l!d "Ired m1. lnmh!" 15 11 sen ~!lllc'r. He asl;cd the children's -·-- · · · , prayers for his many lntcnilons

\

:and problems, and reminded them again of pra;-ing fervently fot' l'nchtion~ to the priesthood. llq then lmp!tr,tctl his special blessing. ·I m1u~dlntcly ' afterwards, the

lthronqs o! people n1at1c their way to · U1c• church where Pontifical Benediction was given by the Archbishop.

This splcndicl school. Holy Trln· ity School, which Is 150 feet long by '35 feet wldi: with lull basement is most modern In CVe'l'y respect. It Is well equipped with 11dcquate washroom facilities and drinking fountains. Aloog the main colT!· dor are the entrances to the brlghlly lit and. tasteful1y decorat­ed classroQms, each having ltf in· dlvldual cloak-room an4 utility press. Heating ls · provided .. by means of .an oil furnace. .A cafe· terla In the basement will serve hot lunche~.tn the children 8t noon· time. Nearly (our hunrlred chil· i rlren are eojoylni bus trans porta· '1

tlon, neuretl threugh the tlrelm

Worries keep you awake? Have to take pills to put you to sleep? Learn the secret of relaxed restful sleeping, the "ABC Round Robin" and the "Sleep Exercise" for refreshing worry • free sleep. Read "Sleep Without Pills" In the NEW Star Weekly this'week, And speaking of sleep . auggests Qpllts. The Star W eekly'a $8,000 Q u i 1 t Contest offers you. and · your friends a chance to win some big cash prizes by proving your skill as needlewomen. R e ad all about this big money Quilt contest in the NEW Star Weekly this week,

~loo NJWJ NEW/ NEWI St... Waoldr .. ............... , ............. ·-~t-·

.Jl

<

.

-·Beautiful New

And

( for the ..

Young Set At Ayre's Fashion Dept.

Plain and party type dresses ·styled with

the understanding of the I ively way the

young~r set love to look . : Corduroy­

flannel - gabardine - taffeta - woof

crepe - wbol and· rayon a tid . Jersey

acetate dresses - - - some· with little ..

white ·collars, some_ with dainty lace . .

edging, some with crinol,ines .- - - all in '

the loveliest colours including plaids .

7-1,2 years

Plain, flared and pleated skirts

corduroys- wool

orlons - felts and

tartans - velvets

wool ·tweeds in

lovely selection of colours.

a

7-14 years ............................................ 3;95 to 7.95

s¥2-14!12 (Chubby) ................................ s.so to 6.95

10·14x (Teen-ager) .~·: ...... _. ...................... ., .. 50 to g.75

,,

lovely

BLOUSES Cotton, Terylene, Dacron and the

famous "London Lassi'" in white '

cind pastel colours; 7•14.

.. , ...

.'

NYLON ORLON

and ALL. WOOL

PULLOVERS and

CARDIGANS In a beautiful collection of plain and fancy colours; 8·14.

2.40 to 4.95

Sr. JOHN'S I

NI'WTOUNDL JA...,. ...

..

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.1 l r

.. ! ;j . t . i I •.·

· .

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1'

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Page 6: tre. Claims Lives 'f .: ·txro. .· City · Childrencollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · Wl1ere Flames ' Bl F.\ OiL FIELDS rd REFINERIES MILES 0 lOO SEt~! SUEF ~GYPT

I : I I

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~~ ! !

'·' J . I

I· ·'

I

·' " I. r:

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• . THE 'DAILY NEWS, NOV. .....

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Page 7: tre. Claims Lives 'f .: ·txro. .· City · Childrencollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · Wl1ere Flames ' Bl F.\ OiL FIELDS rd REFINERIES MILES 0 lOO SEt~! SUEF ~GYPT

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. ' ·'' .

ALL SETS STANDARD . GUARANTEE ,. - .

MOD~L REGULA~ SALE MODEL REGULAR - SALE M·ODEL . REGULAR SALE aoo2-21" ·219·95 s175. aoo7-24" 339·95 s270. 111'4-21" 309·95 s250 . . aoos-24" 439·95 s339. ao12 .. 24., 339·95 ·s270. 1112-21" 299·95 s240.

Also CLEARING R. C. A. VICTOR T. Vu SETS . .

ANNIVERSARY Hurry I I·. Huny 1·1 Hurry II

DINETTE SETS Beautiful, shjning Chrome Sets in · matching ·~olours .: .... 70.00 up

· · CHESTE.RfEI~D SUITES Modern and in a variety of shades and patterns

. From , 150.0·0 up

r· ... ·. ..· .·... . . BEDROOM SUITES ! -- . ·. . ··· · · ·· .. ·•· .· .. ·.·. •: · ·. •·· ·.: "· ·· · ···· . ··.•. . Delightfully styled ·are these beautiful Suites especially

Dinettes Drastically Reduced designed for you. FROM $185.00 up

'I

END TABLES CO FrEE TABLES LAMP ;r ABLES

: all modernly styled at

GREATLY REDUCED

PRICES!!

. '

·sE£· US ·TODAY·· '

FLOOR POLISHERS

Make your work easier. Limited quantity only.

REG. 59.95 SALE

47.95

Table Model Radios . Beautifully styled Kitchen Model

of Fantastic Reductions

CABINET HEATERS

Winter days are here- Act now . ' and be warm later. I

20% Off i

·COMPANY, . . .

LIMITED

WATER· STREET DIAL 2101~2·105 · ~ '

9

l

' .. . ' , ~

I

' ! '' '

: jl· : ; . • J :

~ • l

J • • I

: . ;; .. ·, .

. . . .

. i. '.: .·

I;

Page 8: tre. Claims Lives 'f .: ·txro. .· City · Childrencollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · Wl1ere Flames ' Bl F.\ OiL FIELDS rd REFINERIES MILES 0 lOO SEt~! SUEF ~GYPT

• I ,. I ,, I I • I

I

··I

' • I

Stock

DIVI.DEND·S More dividend~ hall

been paid b7

than by any other mll!ual fund in Canada

CORNELL, MACGilliVRAY IIMITlD'

.... "" .. aw.. • ,...

Lh•eqJOOI to

St. John's 'Nol'a Scotia"

St. ,Jobn'K lo nrx. & Boston

'Newfoundlond" Oct. 1:1 Oct. 20 'Nol'a Scotia" Nov. 3 [l;ov. 10 'Ncwfoun'clland" Nov. 21 Nov. 23

. 'No1·a Scotia" Dec. 5 D<'c. 12 'Ncwfonntllantl'' Dec. 22 Dec. 20 'Nol'a Scotia" Jan. 9 ,Jan. 16 'Newfoundland" Jan. 25 ~·eb. !!

Marli-et·

Boston llallfax St. John's to to to

llali!as Sl. Johii'R J,lverpool

• Oct. 26 Nov. 16 Dec. 4 Dec. 10 Jan. 4 .Jan. 22 Feb. 8

Oct. 13 •Oct. 16 Oct. 30 Nov. 1 Nov. 20 Nov, 22 Dec. 8 Dec. 11 Dec 22 to Liverpool Jan • n Jan. 11 Jan. !!R ,Jnn. 29 Feb. 12 Feb. 15

Persons contcmplntiog passat:c to F.urupe should make bookings ''ell in advance. · Air Passages arrang-ed by B.O A.C. - K.L.M - Pan American

\irways -Scandinavian and cc:mccting Airlines. Consull us regarding your travel problems.

FURNESS TRAVEL OFFICE

SEWFOUNDLAND HOTEL PIIONE 5623

CHICAGO (APl-The St. Law· renee Seaway now is 20 per cent completed, H a r r y C. Brockel, chalrmnnof Wisconsin's G r e at Lakes Compact Commission, re· ported Monday, Brocl1cl, a mcm· her of the seaway advisory board said r h e project, orl~lnally eX· peeled lo tak.~ seven yeL I'S, wit) be completed In· 41:.. years. • • •

lie smiled. "One who is al· MONTREAL (CPl-Appolntment ways in the Oc!erbruch parties,

of Dr. Llo)'d Gren'•!ll Stevenson in fact usually heads them, is as ~leG ill University's d~nn. of Frau Beale Schwa bach, the wife med1clne, succeeding the late Dr. of \he Chairman of the Central Lyman Dllff, was announced Mon· Committee. Frau Beate might be dny, Dr. Stevenson Is the author rca lied Oderbruch's sponsor. She of a biography of Sir FNderlcl1 likes parties very much.

·Banting, co-discoverer of Insulin, "Heinrich Schwabach is one of and other works. lhe most Important men in East

THE CHAR T,E RED BANKS ...

THE DAllY NEWS, WliDNESDAY. NOV. 14

' Her first stop

-the bank

When Mrs. Wilson planned ro go shoppir.~. 1'CI

husband Tom said: "Meet rou at the bn,;"

It was a natural thing to say, for goin~ w t;,c

bank is just a part of evcryda :· l1fe.

In the bank, Mrs. Wilson noticed !lfi;s f:llis

the schoolteacher ... Mr. Cooper the storekeeper

•• :and her neighbour's son Bobbr, adding to his savings account.

SERVING

. When Tom arrived, he grinned:

"Seems like everybody goes to the

bank." It-'s true. Canadians find the . chartered banks such a safe and handy

place to keep moner that practically

evcry~ody has a bank account. TI1cre are

now more than ~a million deposit account!

in the chartered banks-more account!

than there are adults in the collntrf·

• YOUR COMMUNITY

'

SEC

Anntwl ~lc~t Ncwloundlar t1on was he

nl Oil Fr;d of ~·ovcmber.

iOC!Udcd small11 Joel,

·B. J. ,\bbnt 1\'clfarc, Dr

BE., LL.D., Educaticn, . ~lr. .1. I I)C'lllll' ~Iii 'Jr. \\' .1.

nl ,\lotor \'eh nf th~ ,\r !'rc>hYteri

Arm1· de 'le111~r<al

···d Ill· Dr Prnf. ·~lrD

01gan. The (ion II 1• I

;o::up~:intr!:v

Chief nf l'ol [nspc:hr L:

Page 9: tre. Claims Lives 'f .: ·txro. .· City · Childrencollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · Wl1ere Flames ' Bl F.\ OiL FIELDS rd REFINERIES MILES 0 lOO SEt~! SUEF ~GYPT

i II r ..

Beat-.

Mtss Ellis ore keeper

n Bobbl',

. gnnncd co che

find the

md handy

pracncally l11cre are

r accounts accountS

counuy

• y

SECTION It The Daily News SECTION II

nnua eeting emperance Pretnier Suggests $50,000

For Alcol1ol Education Annual In 1"'his

Expenditure Province

\

No,, I com~ to th~ •eeond ol our pro!ccts, the lel{n! mall•'r, w1lh llhtch \\(' arc cuncctned n nuler that brttcr control" can he secured I "nuld !Ike to mako- It clear tt;:ht from the outset thnt thcsr legal matters with winch 11c

unc~r

the~ arc ~!so used pte are ktl!cd and 800 000 inJured for !'~remomal anp re!tgtous pur 1 annually tn trafftc acct1d<ents Sta. poses " 1 ttst1cs from the National Safety

Temperance

•••••• • II Mail Coupon! FREE INFORMATION ON • II 500-DAY • li HOSPITAL PLAN • • • II fer Individuals or Families • II PAYS CAS~ TO YOU • If FOR HOSPITAL CARE • • 500-DA YS HOSPJTALIZATil)N - ra;s $3 a • • day to $15 a flay i11 Cttsh, direct to 1011 rl•P••Jt.'-

B i11g oil pla11 selected when )Oil 01 oue of )OIIr

• fa mil; go 111 the hosptta/ for uckness or accidmt . • PA"!'S for 500 DAYS, if r.ced he, jo1 e,tcb til-

• IIC$5 lir llljlllj' • NO GROUP TO JOIN

• I • MUTUAL· OF OMAHA • • • MUTUAL BENEFIT HEALTH & ACCIDENT ASSOCIATION • • PAYS WEEKlY BENEFITS OF • · OVER $13.4 MILLION • • Head Office for Canada: Toronto • (Mail! NO OBLIGATION)

Mutual of Omaha-P 0 Bo~ ":17:JE Duckworth St, St John's, NAd. Please supply mformal>on on•

0 SOO·Day Hosp1tol Plan 0 Maternity Benefits 0 Lifetime D1sabJiity Benefits-Paid Monthly

0 Surgery

Name. Phone

Address

Page 10: tre. Claims Lives 'f .: ·txro. .· City · Childrencollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · Wl1ere Flames ' Bl F.\ OiL FIELDS rd REFINERIES MILES 0 lOO SEt~! SUEF ~GYPT

l •

• :· _. .' ·,· :"' '

THE DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 14,

Ill

·'CI-r;:;;;;;,;,;;o;;r;;;~A;;:-~:;~i-~~..a.<>"".oe:..<~.c;:::.<~.c;:::.<:::.<::>.c;:::.<~..c.<~~·

·~~~~~~~~ 7.30-World Ncw1.

.Cornwall Star _,,. ___ ,.,._ ... ., . .,.':' ..... ,_,_ .... -------~---

To-moJ·rotv 'J'o·JUOl'l'OW

tention to ·diet and to medication,· shortness of breath. It i• SINCE so~m of the antibiotics, all unusual to disco,·er ·

tococc!, the treatm·~nt with such sence of chronic nep~rit:s like penicillin, attack certain slrell· ing albumin in the urin1, • , .

substan~s i! often considered. The absence of anr of the evidence for their value In many ior.·~d srmptoms. cases of acute r.~phritis is con· fiicting but they are frequently The chronic form or .

I

' .. ' ' I i . '

CBN 'VEDNESDAY, Nove111ber U CJON-.TV T«?night

il.uo-Breakfast Club. 8.30-Make up your Mind. fi.45-Rcx Koury. 9,00-lt Happened last Night.

10.00-Coffee Time. ·

"VIOLENT SATURDAY'' IN CINE~IASCOPE

"PIIANTOM SPEAKS"

given ~evertheless .. A high pro. I disease requires sped~! : portion of those who have acute Accurate diagnosis of th, n-ephritis recover completelr. 1to the kidneys and the"

· · . the disear·~ is the first SPECIAL ADDED ATTRACTION CIIR~NIC N~PliRITIS, or B~l· dance of overfatiquc :1

A.~t. · . . 7.311-CBC New1. . 7.35-Top of the Morning. . B.OO-CBC News and Weather.

• · 8.15-Musical Clock. g,OQ-Morning · Devotion•.

. · 9.15-Program Preview. 9.311-Records at Random.

• 10.011-Hit of the Day. 10.15-lrlll Power. 10.25-CBC News. 10.30-!llorning Musicale. 10.45-BBC Variety. 11:15-Atlantic School Broadcast.

• 11.311-Nfld. School Broadcast. • 1 ~ 411-Parade of Stan.

P.~l. ' 12:0~-Annottcers Choice.· ~ · 12.15-Dinner Bell Breakdown.

12.311-l''arm Broadcast. tZ.45-Mid Day. Serenade. t.OO-Doyle Bulletin. 1.:io-Laura Limited.

• • l.3D-CBC News and Weather. • 1.45-,\unl Lucy.

· !!.00-Words and Music. · 2.29-Domlnlon Time Signal.

. · 2:ao:-Attanllc School Broadcast. •: 2.45-The Happy. Gang. l·.a.Ili-Tht Way or the Lord, 1 · 3 30-Tral', Canada Matinee. ,. . · 4.30-CBC News.

•· ·U5-Timely Tunes. ··! •. -t.45-Chlldren's Story •.

5.15-)l uslc of the West. 5.311-Fisherles Broadcast. 5.45-Kindergarten of the Air. 6.011-intermeuo. 6.30-Supper Guest. 6.4S:...Girl Guides. 7.00-CBC News and Weather. i.lli-Curtaln Calls.

... 7.30-Tops Toda>·· , . 7.45-Doyle Bulletin.

R.l:'>-!'iewfoundland Scrapbook. 8.30-Rawhide. 8.45-Rol'ing Reporter. 9.00-lntroductlon to Wednesday

Xlght. 9.10-Hardy Finzi-Song Cycle.

10.00-Proud Passage. 11.30-CBC National ~ews, News

Roundup and Midweek Re· l'iew.

CJON WEDSESDAV, !'lol'elllber 14

. 6.~0-llob Lewis Show. 5.30-Nfld. Newa. 6.33-Weather. 11.45-Fishermen's NP.ws and For&

uet. 7.!1D-Nfld. Ne1n anll Sport& 7.05-Lccal Weather,

' "1.15-Canadlan NewJ and Slltll'tl · · 7.311-Round the World New1.

7.35-Weather Roundup. 7.45-News Summary. 8.00-Nfld. Newa. 8.05-Prol'ine!al Weather. 8.211-Shlpplng Report. J.25-Kirldles Corner. 8.30-Nfld. News. 8.35-Complcte Weatner Jtountlo

up. 8.45-l\lornlng Mmy·GD Round. 9.00-Ntld. News ll,O;}-Duke Bnx Review. 0.25-What Difference Does It

(" ..... the \,

Welcome Wagon if' HostelS"

-. Will Knock on Your Dear . . -, , with Gift5 and Greetings · · · from F•lendly Business

Neighbors aoci Your ··'·· Civic and S!)cial ~~ Welfare Leaders ·

The Birth of ~ Baby, On the occasion of:

. .

Arrivals of Newcomers to City.

' . 11.00-To Be Anuounced. 11.311-Hit Parade, !t.OO-Kralt Theatre.

10.00-To Be Announced.

11.00-Turn back the Clock. 11.311-Pepperrell Juke Club . 12.10..:.News and D.B. 12.30-Hillbllly ~latlnee. 1.00-Behlnd the Story. 1.15-Mnsters of 1\!cladr. 1.311-l\luslcal Express. 1.45-Bob Crosby. 2.00-ll!ntince.

·The new CinemaScopc dram·a "Valley .nf Zombies" ght's d1sease, IS a horse of a d1.f· portanl. Dependin~ on 11,' opening at the Cornwall Theatre, ferent, color. Some develop chrpm~ toms and si•ms, it mar t; IUO-Howdy Doody, ·

5.311-Klds Show. 11.011-Ranch Time. 11.311-News Cavalcade. '7.00-To Be Anuounced • 7.3D-I;'antomlne Quiz,

,, has that electric quality found In the past few ~ears, the nephritis from the acute vamty,' sarr to institute rlielat)' · . in nature before the break of a ml'stcry thriller has gamed much. ?ut mo~t arc never aware of ha\· ions or measure; to summer storm. Pitched to the 24· p~pularity with American film lmg had an a~~le attac~. ~mon;:l ination of exce»i\'r t'·~~e

U.O'o-News-Publlc Service. 11.111-Late Show.

hour period before a daring bank audiences. It Is thoroughly under· the .c,ommon s1~ns of c ronlC ne· . robbery is effected in a thriving 1 1 hie although many people I plmhs arc the gradual accumulnt-1 Beran~·' the ;e\·rr!tr uf ·

h s ant a I • f1 'd . r th I' ' B . II' d' copper minim: communi\>'• l e belie\'e this type of entert~inmcnt . ion of Ul s m some n e 1swe:;! n;r 1 s 1sea!e may \'<ri' ,

. .... ' rL---------::-~1 Answer to PreYious Punl1

2.30-0ne Mans' Fa mil~·. 2.45-Curt Massey. 3.00-Fort Laramie. 3.30-VOUS Record Room. 4.011-World News. · 4.05-Reconl Roum. 4.311-World News:

tenseness is built in the separafe is pleasin!: only to children. "Val· I (edema or dropsy)~. recurr~nt head. i from person to Pl't.·<>r.. : studiE!~ of ,the \·arious citizens ley of the zombies," new ~epub!ic aches-oft·~n assocwted \l'llh some 1Iook, as. well ~; lhe .trr;tJ . wrestltng 11'1\h ,.persona.! ~roblems mystery drama at the Star Theatre high blood pressure-and perhap; I to he h1ghly mdl\'i<ll!~:~l:d that arc at a pomt to comcldenlnlly and learned by audience reaction -·---·------·----·-- .. -··- -- -· - ···

I

l Planetarium _ '

ACROSS

I ~:arth'~ Idle! lit~

~2llistress signal 53 Um& edau ~4 Cratls 55 Abstr~ct bcin~ f1 56 Gaelic

R ' C& 6A "II p ' e: { DOL. ,., .. AM EL.A PB "' 6C OP'Iil NliT' .SA NT A '· us BL. E66

BL AN ,, R A.T' OotT ·,·A t>t> ··~ I RE!6 ..... RA > a .... ATA AV RIO: 6111 ~··· p 06 TAL. Lli NT '·< ,., I! A ·r .~.· SST

c I t:J ..... 6 L-OT' ' ~ Heavenly

source or rent 00\VN H .. 6 . 0 5E 5.

A ftl>i planet I~ Too

. I~ Pt~r C:Jinl's I mother t141,ath

I i.~ CIHn 16 Jt•llyll~~

ntat~riat 17 Re~t·ne IH MRrlm•r IH F'nrtiHcallon 21 l'otnt 2~ Cuhic meter ~4 I nut sputa 2ti l'lct'

, 2H SIPKe wh\jpcr : 2~ Payment · demand 3(1 Par .. nt­

l~~t'!~r

""'"~ (ab.) ~II·(• :12 :h·tr<·h

\'ertmrnt. ~3 S'<IIJ ol

!rather ~s ':riiR!ed

' ·:c~:t.l ~~ :iot up :1:1 :\pproache~ 41 \\'Itt! nr Acg1r

'41 ,\cct•mpllsh· '"1C

4tl :~., a ~~ tJ~upe tn ._ .... t~tt pitMII

4, ;;~,.m~n river ~1· ~·, o !en water

: ~li ~mlnulh't · ·•I !'lunlcy ~I l:lir-l'f hume

I Sp~r.s , 2 Ester ot

- RE ov liiR .... ...... I!!•

"'"'~'~ ,.

' Nil! AN Tr;; liNG 19 L.Et> L.B es

oleic acid 3 l.arge hawk II PHces 37 Sleeping 4 Negative word 19 Carne back \'i~tnn~ . ~ Wise one 20 FledgllnR 38 Sphere ol 6 Employed %3 Western nctlon ; Park In t!attle shows 40 Feel

Cleveland, 25 Uevll ( Fr l 43 Rl\·er In Ohio 27 Protuberance F'ranre

8 ~lanuscrtpts 2R Armadillo 44 Fa I!~ god lab ) 33 Barterer 45 Promuntory

9 Winged 34 Credllabte 48 Ri~hls (a b.) 10 Deep gorge 36 Church fete 50 Pronoun

' 3 q • e 9 10 II

ll " 111

15 ' 17

18 r% l.!l ~lJ 11z 13 . 1S

IZh- rn :r~1B

iZ9 30

~I ~

-J3 ~ 130 i!lo 13'1.

38

~ f:<'0 i'IC

~I ~ ~ rw, [lir ~ ~' l!ll

I 51 152· IS3 l&l ~5 f!l'

t

'

i

' :

4.35-All League Club House. 5,15-World of Sports. 5.30-World News. 5.35-Panel Discussion. 6.00-World News. 6.05-Country .Jamboree. 6.30-Sports Today. 6.45-~'innl Edition. 7,15-Pepperrell Toda~· . 7.30-Great G11dcrslccl'c. 7.35-Jack Carson. 8.00-Con\'ersatinn. 8.25-l'olnt of Law. 830-:.lake Way for Youth. 8.55-Jullus LaRosa 9.00-Groucho Marx. 9.25-The Todds. 9,30-Luncheon at Sardi's.

10.00-News and Weather. 10.15-Pepperrcll Sports Desk. 10.30-l\lemorlcs in i\lusic. 11.00-~!uslc till Midnight.

: 12.00-Sign Off.

-------------·-----Capitol

Ignite with the 1·iolence o,r the I that g to oo, they went all out for noon holcl·up, . liw picture.

The screen pia)' is an ingenious i Dr. Rufus ~laynard, prominent device for studying moti1•ations · brain surgeon is killed and a in people tempted hy and iallin~ mob of detectives suspect· Dr. heir to the calamities of pettv Terry Evans, associ.ule of Dr. vices that surround any half- .:\laynard and his pretty sweet· awake community. Producer Buddy heart nurse,· Susan Drake. The

I Adler has pounded the material . two young people whg stand 1 into taut dramatic fare under the i accused begin a probe to clear 1 able direction of Richard Fleischer. their names. During the process i Since the film s'''l".'. '"".'' · ' of clearing, hospitals, morgues I hy Sydney Boehm from a norcl : ~nd embalming' establishments are ! h)' William L. Heath, is a , .. · l'isited, as is the eerie ~lurks es­or chqr~ctcr vig,nettes linl:c<l to· late,. where a few more murders gethcr h,· \'iolcnce. Twenlicth Ccl~· ~arc committed just for good meas­tury·Fox has mustered a star cast ure. of outstanding actors, many of OLrtslanding in the cast arc: them known for their "scene· st.ar, Robert Livingston, who stealing" techniques. This clwrac· gives a superb portrayal, as do teristic of the film excitements is Adrian Booth, Ian Keith, LeRroy alone worth the general ndmis· !IInson, Chas. Trowbridge and sion price. Thomas E. Jackson. The story

Lending the cast of eccentric • was written by the :McGowan characters is Viclor Mature as Brothers who also function as the. strong man of fl1C town who associate producers and is good has ~·et to pro\'C In his son that solid material. Phil Ford is th~ he is not a coward. Richard director and sure knows how to Egan is a playboy who lakes his climax his scenes. Summing it all woes In the prettiest girl in town up, it was an interesting picture (Virginia Leith); Tommy Non· and it was enjoyed b'' a crowded nan is a mild·mannered banl1 house. • manager with "peeping Tom''

---~~-~- proclivities; and Sylvia Sidney. the worn and worried librarian, . ripe Cor temptation. Stephen . Me· i Nally, Lee Man•in and ,J. Cm··i ·

To-dav .-

I roll Naish represent the threr !

I'S,\TEI,LITE IN TilE SKY" who bring the enrl of the world WITII KIERON i\JOORE i In these people when thcv riddle

:their· way through Saturday

y OUI Child, s

HEALTH 'l'he story of the first man·madc noon, .

earth satellite Is on the motion 1 There is reason for Cinema· BY EDWIN P. JORDAX picture screen and opens tomorrow 1' Sc~pe too in this very black and , at the Capitol Thealre. It is War· ~vlute ~tory. The fictional town 1:-t'FL.\:IniATIOX OF KIDNEYS i ncr Bros. "Satellite In The Sky," lis n copper mining center ami · CAN BE ACUTE OR CHRONIC 1 . and ~Iars Kieran ~!oore, Lois the open pits used in the Dr · --

Make. · 9.311-.News.

l\lnxwcll, Donald Wolf!t, Brvan Luxe color film · nre beautiful I The question of nephritis-in. : V 0 C M Forbes, Jimmy Hanley and Thea !"iniat~re Grand Canyon mater· flammation of the kidneys- u1· ' , • , • . ! Gregory. 1al, With the focal point of in· · Bright's disease in children hao :

. "EDNESDAl, No\embcr H · terest the Lavender Pit with it• been brought up by several rend· ·1

'6 28-0 tl Air 0 wn Patrol . In CinemaScope and Warner· rainbow of copper ore found ai ers. One says her 15·p!ar-old son

ON THE STAGE

A~ Bishop Feild Hall

HILARY VERNON in

HTHE BARRETT'S

WIMPOLE STREET" SEATS FOR TO-NIGHT

2.25, 1.70, 1.15, 60c.

'Phone 6221 after 6.30 p.m.

Advance Bookings at Bowrings.

STAR ---·-·-·-·- .... - -- ... ·- , ___ .... ···-· ....

TO-MORROW --·-.... ··-·- -.. ---·-·--· ----···

9.31-Duke Box Rel'le~r. 9.45-Muriel McKa)'.

10.00--News, Courtship and Mar r!age.

10.15-lmprisoned Heart. , 10.30-Ncws, Who Am I?

· n le • a · Color, "Satellite In The Sk>•" 1 Bisbee, Arizona · had acute nephritis about a year 1

7.3D-Breakfas~1~~u~e~n1d Newa ; deals with the front·page story or • The story Ji~e also calls for' ago, The other, r.irs, B. G., sa1·• I !,5ili,VI.l.,.

:·~t:~ Djte Street Y ' man's attempts to penetrate the j an Amish countryside with the her five. year old grandson has lit;. 1

i 10.40-Joan Blanchard Show. i 10.45-Hit of the Day~ 10.55-Wife Saver. 11.00--News. · 11.01-John Turner's Family. 11.31-Caslno. 12.00-News, Tops Today. 1.00-Local and National News. 1.05-Weather Forecast. 1:10-Tops Today. 1.15-Newa. 1.35-Dally Interview. 1.4D-Sports Review. 1.45-Behlnd the SceneJ. 2.00-NeWL ' 2.0~-Second Fiddle. 2.15-0ut of the Dark~ 2.30-News, Matinee. 3.DO-News, Housewives Club. 4.00-Geu. Provincial Nen 4.01-Caslno. 4.30-News, Ranch Pal'l)'• 4.45-Saddle Serenade. 5.00-News, Bob Lockhart Show, 6.011-Ncws and Weather.

· 11.05-Bulletln Board. 11.10-Natlonal News, 8.15-Sports Parade. 1.2..._Provlnclal New1. 6.30-Star Time. · 7.011-Now&, courtship and Muo

rlage. 7.15-Program Report. '7.311-News • 7.45-Ro~·al Stores Theatre. B.DO-News, Casino. 11.311-News, Parade of Hltl. ·9:011-News, Town and Country

Show. 9.311-Listencrs Digest. 9.45-Dosco News.

10.00-The Fat Man. 10.311-News, Dennis Day Show. 11.00-Provinclal News. 11.05-Natlonal News. 11.15-Sports Final. 11.30-Houseparty, News. 1.01-Queen and Sign Off •

• oxg ov:nth De~ L stratosphere, an atomic·sclence typical farm of one of thi~ 1 phrllis and Is doing fine, hut she • &~lt:~c~~~e '1 : , ad\'enture story that Is reportedly ; gentle religious group, In 0 • com. 1 u~dcrstands there 'are severn! , l0.05-A Date with DenrL i as ~uthentl~ as possible under to-; plet.e reversal of screen character· ! kmds. ' 10,55-New!. 1 dn~ s securlly regulations, Produc· 11Za!Jons, Ernest Borgnine, the bru.! Jt l~ t.rue-.t~ere arc sever<! ; 11.011-Burtons. of Banner StretL : crs Edward J. and Harry Lee 1 tal sergeant of "From Her T 1 kmds o! nephrths. For the pur- . 11.15-Big Mountain Show. I ?anzlger spent three years produc·l Eternity," plays the Amishe fa;. j poses of this rl.iscu~'ion, how. 12.00-News mg the film and obtained the as·. mer who is involved aga· t h' :ever, 1 shall confme my remark~ : 12.05-Ramblln' With Regan. slstance of many scientific and : religious beliefs in the ~~~~ IS · to that which is most common In ~ 12.36-News. , I mllit.ar~ organizations to realistic· ; of the robbery, ence children and young ~du!ts-glo· . 12.45-Fisllermeu 1 Forecut, ; ally brmg to the screen the up·lo·! Spotted in other •'t 1 1 _ merular nephritis. Th1~,. m h.lrn. : 1.15-Sportscast. :minute story, Paul Dickson di·: are lllargarct !!a. \.l a ro ~' may he conyenlentl;- rhvul~d mto 1.3D-NewJ. :reeled "Satellite In The Sk~·.•• a • unfaltl f 1 ·r . ~e;; '1s1 .Egan 5 : acu!\ ncphr1tl; and chron•c nc-1.45-Simon Mystery. ; Warner Bros, presentation . 1 11 1~ 1 e, orotl), P~t· '! phr1h,;.

R bli ith R • · . rick, as V1ctor Mature s w1fc ~lOST CASES or acutoc nephri-2.0U- am n IV egan. ' and five youn!!slers who con· ·

1

ti~ follow infection of the upper • 2·~t~c~!;.. on Parade. I 1 t~lbute considerably to th~ n.c·. breathing passageways wi.th ger~;. ' ~·00--N~ws · ---- 1 bon-Donna, Noreen and Kevm 1 of the streptococcus family, Th1< , 4:05-Sam'~ Corral. Paramount ! C?rcoran n~ the Am!sh children.\ ncnte nep~ritis Is frequent!)• a_s. ; 4.55-News. i BI!}Y. ChaPin and ~~cky 1\lurray. soclated With sore throat •. to~s.1.l· , 5.00--Bob's Bandwagon. V.10lent Saturday manages to I litis, the common cold, smus1hs, 5.311-Melody Man. --~-- prov1de ~II the suspe1~se features 1 rhel.lmnti~ fever, scarlet fever and 1

8.00-Newa and Weath•, 'foday· 1 o~ an ou!·and·out nct10n drama I si~1l~r d1sorders. Sometime~ suc!t , 6.15-Sportcast. ! With the mtcnseness of a p,;ycho· ; dehnttc Infection cannot be !dent. 6.25-Lost and Found. ' logical melodrama-and it comes . fed as a forerunner flf acute nc· : 8.45-News. . ocr with stunning effect. I phrtis. . . . 7.00-Ralnbow Rlddlea. REVENGE OF TilE The line of attack on acute ne .. 7.15-Dr. Paul. CHEATURE'' WITH .JOHN , BURXED TO DEATII phritis is therefore aimed al the . 7.30-Bargaln Hour. AGAR-I.ORI NELSON · CALEDONIA, N.S. (CP) - eld- precipitating cause, If one can )>e · 8.011-Back. to the Blbe. ! erly Miles Corrigan died :llonda)' found. If a sourc.e or focus ~f 1~· 1

8.30-Crime Files of Flamond. \ ' ' night in a fire that destroyed his ·1 !ection such as d1.s~ases tonsils IS II.OO-Outlaw. Remember the savage monst~r 1 trailer home at West Caledonia, , present, th-2. ~ephnhs can be tre.at· 9.3o-Songs the People Sing. 1 ~hlch made Its screen debut m: five. miles away. :.tr. Corrigan. 1 ed. In add1hon, bed rest durmg 9.45-New5, ! Cre~!~re, From the Bi;ek L~· i who has no lil'ing relatives, was . the acute pha.se of the. lllness is

10.00-l\luslc. (or Moderns. :)!non. II s .on the loose noaln. thiS I alone in the trailer ~l the lim·.' 'generally deSJrab]e, as IS the at·!

110.311-Sammy Kaye i tim~ wrcakm!! h_a~oc ami panic In ,• 10 45-News · a h1g ell~·. In llm\ ersal-lnternatlnn·

l1 1:oo-Sport~cast. I nl's new shock !!1ril1cr "Revenge : II 111.15-Sandman Serenade, NcWli.! of the Creature, opening tomor· i

l.Oo:-Closedown. i row at the . Paramount Theater.: -------·---- 1 Starring .lolm Agar, Lor! Nelson •

V 0 U S and John Bromfield, and to be · sure, "the creature," the· picture •

" • ,.. ; I / I'>'. <{ I

WEDNESDAY, November 14

6:00-Sundlnl and NewJ. 8.30-World News.

shows the true chaos that Is pos· ... O&JNDLAND'$ FIIEHD'.Y.TMIA1U slble when wild forces nnd uncon· trollable brute strength come Into 1 play In a crowded metropolis. ·

·TO-DAY

TO-MORROW

• Richard . ARLEN

. STAHLEY RIDGES LYNNE ROBERTS

TOM POWERS

Attraction

. :. T.O·DAY

llorrlll JtOBEif liVINGSTON • ADRIAII BOOTH

Ill) IAN KEITH ... TIIOIAS JACKSON • CNAIUS YIOWIIIINI~

IAILE ROOGIU i ,q P~J.M

. . 1 ; ' I I ...

... : I . ,, ' I .·1

'•."

'·'

Also-NOVELTY EVt:NING SHOWS: 7 P,M.--8 P.M.

MATINEE I P.M. . ,, --"-------

NEXT .ATTRACTION 'lOBERT TAYLOR-RICHARD TODD-DANA WYNTED­F.Il~UND O'BRIEN l1 "D·DAY THE SIXTH OF JUNE"­D~AJIA-SUSI'ENSE-IlOMANCE'IN CINEI\IASCOPE •..

Also-NOVELTY EVENING SJIOWS: '7.15-9.15

MATINEES: UD - SATURDAY :l O'CLOCK

LAST TIMES TO·DAY II RACERS II

.. , MOQRE •lOIS r.IAAWEll • DONAlD WOI.fll ""' rcom •o•~ll.!J'IA

Also-NOVELTY - CARTOON . EVENING SIIOWS: '1.00 P.lll.-9 Ul.

MATINEE 2 MI •

NEXT ATTRACTION 'tANDO!.Pil SCOTT In "7, MEN FRO~t NOW"-ACTION­

riiRU,!.S-SUSPENSE.

iiMES OF SHOWS• EVENING-"PIIANTOM SPEAKS" 'I O'CLOCK-9·0~

"VALLEY OF Z'OMBIES" 8.oo-10.b0 .

MATINEE 2 P.M.

lAST TIMES T·D-OAY 11SARACEN BLADe"

. ~ .

S All•\ l'rcsiden I'OIIr re!)Or

· l;c will be members ourpose of

nee rule ro This junior ! has popped 1

some Cl

NAIIA COl

no mention or a junior player the intent of the same r1 senior :Sewf·

corer the jun . somewhere :

was form, the p1 SE:SIOR t

residence rule corutilution

·;:ll~ni1or A and B \\' uniors. Pre! me yesterda~

suppost!d lo co· will be

We Mu Skati

wei I

.: ·, ':

Page 11: tre. Claims Lives 'f .: ·txro. .· City · Childrencollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · Wl1ere Flames ' Bl F.\ OiL FIELDS rd REFINERIES MILES 0 lOO SEt~! SUEF ~GYPT

11,

w .....

I -DAY

' '

• TilE oAIL y NEWS, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 14, 1956

I ··.I . ; Lf.VI.l

il

Brunnettis I Mechanics '·

Win Again; Win 6~3

.... f·: 11,,,1i,n roulrl not b~ ob· I.cn "~loose' Le Blanc, 'coa~h at l .'j' 11 .. 11 tili• t·••lumn ,was be· Corner Brook last ~·ear, Is now

:;:r .•. 1~d-·cl tllll hut a rdiahle doing coaching duties with the :· • 1'"1: :.; int 11 rm;•d your !'I: porter ~Ioncton Hawk>. He has as one o[

The Brunetti Brothers protected 1 In Civil Scrl'icc 'hockey · last the Canadian tag team champion· ! night the G.N.R. :llechani1:5 chalk· ship last night at the St. John's ed up their second win in as many Memorial Stadium as they took starts as the doubled the C.N.T. two falls over the Japanese tag for a score of 6·3, The ~fcchanics team of Mr. Moto and Mr. Hclo. went ahead 2·0 in the first period The brothers took the second and but the C.N.T. came back in ·the third while the Japs took the £irst second period with two ·markers under strong protest from broth· ' and held the :llechanlcs to one for ers and from the spectators. a 3·2 score. In the third period

•' ..

·':,1 :'·I!P!din~ S(•:1t> nt the St.. his players Bob Furze who was .:', .. ~· \t. nwn::l ~~r.~lium will ~~~:down het·e In the cit)' last yen,r as

I .... · ·n ,· k tht• Ill'> I week tn 'coach of the Prince o( \\ales .. ~ ··!'~ r ·:l.h:· ,,ar tht'l'e will be .,·.trams at the Prince of \\'ale~ P•·'~.':, ;I 11 nn•;rtunitit•s lOt' pres·. Ar'ena. Le Blanc says that a line ~ · r• .. : .. 1' iJ,,·I:.:t•t •. .-\; I >aid I hi~' m~de up ol Dob Furze, Haoul Cor· ·• · t. •. ,, 1 ' k 11

• 1 C I " 'n' I•·· :1. 1 bit t•l rnnwur 11.c ·e1 \ m:er am Hcnt')' orm et· ar~ .,01 g '.' '\:;e 11u11·r p:;rt nl thr rcpo.rt l!l'eal guns dutlng th.c practice ses· '.: d •h;t till' l:tl'iliU> ty)le> 11'111

1 sions. The Hawks Will compete tn

'· · ·tl' •• ,,,,r:.lt'l). Tl11: ten •the Southern New Brunswick Lea· , l·r •. I . I [' I . I S L . I . . . , .c.:t.• m: .. • ~" '"' ;,1 t• u·.t gue along II' It 1 us>c~ eg10r.a r.e•,

.. , If'' d .• ~ •. tlwn tii'C dutb·. lloncll>n :\rmed l' orc.es, Sa tnt :'r,. ·r.tl .,, un. 1\'hirh c1:1'r wa~· .fohn Bcal'er~ and the l·I·edcrlcton · ~,n·~,. :\,)i~Cd nul I hupr t1 gi\'CS Cnpit:~:~. . \ .. · nr rh"t't·r to· become • • · fhPll:H a " .. , I ! 1

H;,'tl'n: ~.-.11 rtt-lnincr .. \ccot'l· Back to the :-t:\1\.\ eonstltu·

I~ conditions were not ideal the C.N.n. men hook€d in three for one of the Japs as he found more while the C.N.T. bovs were great difficulty in getting back only able to manage a lon"e mark· into the ring after he was thrown er. nut twice. On his bare feet the Walsh of the ~lechanics was top Jap slipped, fell, rolled and crawl· I point· getter in the game as he cd and, when he did manage to \scored once 'and assisted on two get within holding distance of. the 1 others. Next was Fry with one ring he was politely kicked away :goal and one assist. .

' by one of the brothers. I. In the first period the !!Core

.•••.• 1:1r t rt·,.;·t each cu,tomrr tlon-the Conslllutlon, although :·,:1 :,,1,. l•r .. llonl·t•<l ti1

1r purchn;c 1 It bar~ au~·onc who derives

<'" lt•'l" • ::d;1 '·· 11°11 t ll')' expect their lll'lng from sport from :,: ,:.r::••i i!r· t.' ht') und me. Jllaying Senior B hocklty, It

S.\!1.1 l'n--i•lrnl ll;•lnh <"nt~···r t•hl ~~ur rrnnrlrr y~slerllay thai hr 11 ill ht• rnn•.,dlll~ lhe llfiNII mrtnht•r• nf the !\i,\JI:\ lor thr nunu··•· nl dlsl'Ussln!: the widtm:r rult• fur Junior lloc· ~:)'. Thil juninr n•>ldt•nce sllu~· ti~n h1, }ltti•l•r•l 1111 am\ now Is clu1in~ ;otnr mnr~rn. In the mi>td S.\11.1 l't•ustitutlon there 11 no mrntion nl a rrslclrncc rnlc lor junl~r playrr' although II \ll thr inl1•nt of tit~ Sr\11,\ to h11t thr •amt• rnl~ which go\'• rrn1 srnior :-;,.,l[ouudlancl pia)'· rll1rom thr junit•r r~nks. Any· •II' •omr11 llt'rr a Inn~ the line 11 'thr printrr•. whrn the nrw ron<litutinn ""' hcln~ put In bool form, lhr 1•rinter~ left the urd ~!:SHill l hrre an1l II Oil'

1hr lr•ldrm·r nth•> nt-cPrtllng lo thr t•tn;tilutinn ~ul'l'I'U~ only mi•r .\ and n 11lth no mention ol hniors. l'ro•sldenl Colyer tr·l•l me )t;tmla)· that the rule i• •upposrd to curer all league• l!d ht ITlll hr contacting the urton• mrmh•r1 or the X:\11.\ !rlorr comin~ out wilh lhe of· litill ruliu ~.

I m·es the Junlnr ranks whle open for Junior Jlla~·ers. A play· rr of Junior a1c mnybc a pro· fesslonal 11rayer or Instructor and he can still play In the .hmlor

THERE'S NOTliiNG FRIE~DLY · about this bunch hanging aroun'd a comer. This was taken at night's \\ t :!illing ma!eh in whi~h the Brunetti Broth c-rs defended their title against the Japs, Mr. ·Malo and Mr. Heto. The abo\'e pix shows the Japs ha\'ing a good time with one of the, Brunetti boys while referee Tom Dunn moves in to stop the illegal aclionJ. Des pile the illegal Japanese tactics the Brunetti Brothers

The first fall of the match went was opened by Brushett when he to lhe Japs at the 11 minute mark took a nice pass from Wabh. hu\ the fall W?.s not ver)' popular Shortly after the )lechanics shot with the fan!. The fall came after into a 2.0 lead when Hollett, with the referees held back Joe Brun· Walsh assisting, beat the. C.N.T. etti from getting into the ring to goalkeeper for number two. In the help his .brother. The refs ruled

1

,;econd period C.N.T. got into the the tag illegal whil'e the Brothers game when Harvey went unassist· and spectators figured the tag · ed for the first C.N.T. score. Min· legal. The fall went to the Japs utcs later Conway did the need· howe1•er. . lui for C.N.T. when he ~cored

The second !all was for the after taking a pass from Duggaa Brunetti brothers and this met to tie the game at 2·2. Just bt­with the approval o( the crowd fore the period whistle sounded who were now raging for revenge Hounsell and Fry of Mechanic• against the Japs, The brothers combined with 'the former puttint

came out on top with two falls to.retain their title.-IDaily News Photo). · really teamed up and !1tey ga':e the· Mechanics in the' lead. the saltmen a rough time of 1t The third period saw tlie Me· and eventually they managed to ehanics shoot ahead with Fry, pin Mr. Moto while his brother was Worllell and Walsh scoring un· labouring tn get in off the ice. assist~d while tile C.N.T. boya

I l':···mJ:). "'''tll•:on I rrceivcd i r. "'~: 1r":r .\rt hur ,Johmon,

P:CW(n: uf thr St. John's I.e •. :u•. 'lr. .lohn~on is

:~· :r. ~.11n1 .John, New icl: the 11·a. •,1 hrn he mailed

r.c11<p;r•·r rhppl!lC lo me). tltpP!n: rumr• fr,,m a ~lone·

·. r•rcr ;uri mrnlinn is' made I 1 1~ 0 :cnth·nwn. nnr known hrre 11

.. tnr Clt!' •nd unr at Cornet· · . Tltr rhppin; .•iwws that

· t\11· Nf111. series. This too will hal'e to be lookr•l Into, Another printers mistake I hope~

Ron Skirvlng of the Guards has been stealing the limelight in 'goaltendlng In the .Junior hockey series so far. Ron has been turning In star performances between the pipes for the G1tards so far. He ha~ a good defence In front of him, way better thnn most teams, but still he has been called on to save the day for the Guards. Proving Tn be a dl~appolntment so far ls Pat Barrington .. Pat has been the l'ietlm or ens)' gods the past two ~ames. Players so far ha\'c been sindin!l him easier to score on thls year than last season. He may be having a night off. H<' Is unbeat· able when he puts of his best per· formance.

It- .. •

The Sl. ,John's Hockey Lea· gue will be called together short· ly to discuss the position or out· of·town pla,·ers. It seems that some delegates feel that the St. John's League should take some definite steps as If these lads must play with the cily or go hack to their hometown for the Nfhl. set·les. Se1·eral St. John's pla)·ers arc hcin~ de· prh·ed on R game of, )lOCkey he· cause these out·ol-town piayen ha1·e taken their place on l'arlons city squad~.

The third ran produced a bit were able to get only one goal or e\'erythlng lr- the wrestling which came from the stick o[ guide with referee Tom Dunn Taylor who went. U!Jassisted. getting the boL't along with one Seven penalties were called in of the brotlter~. ana while they the game 11ith the C.N.R. men were enjoying the coolness of getting four and C.N.T. ha,·ing the Icc surfare Joe Brunetti three. · pinned l\lr. Hdo. The crowd was really Josmg their tempers Holy Cross Meet and at times it rl'emed the Broth· ers would ho11'e heir from some of the sperlatNS. St Bon's Toni' aht

The next btJUt is !Cheduled • . ~ for next Tuesctay nigl1t and will Tonight the junior hockey series !eatlfl'e the fot•r midgct5. . continues with the St. Bon's meet·

: ing Holy Cross for the first time i this year. Both teams have already 1 seen action and both have already

: met defeat. The St. Bon's went Commercial Bowling League I

down 'to de[ eat from the sticks of the Fcildians in the league's open· cr by a score o[ 8·2. The Holy

l!ONDAY'S GAMES Cross who hal'e shown a vast im· ROI\'RING BROS:-1 provement over last year ·were on c. ~Ioyst . . , .. 219 145 209 573 the wrong end of an 8·5 score with F. Maher . . . • .146 301 269 716 1 the Vocational Training. G. Newell ••.. 205 210 172 587 Both teams will icc the same G. Fuller • • . .. 229 287 219 735 squads a~ their opening games.

799 943 867 2611 Game time tonight is 8 o'clock PARKER ~ MONROE:-2 :sharp. ~1. Hall .. .. .. 230 253 134 617: ---..----,J. Simm• . . . . '176 229 316 721 I G .1 p • ,J. Birmingham .184 \87 245 616: uarus radiCC L. Sullinn .... 217 165 253 635 i

807 834 948 2589 : . Gu:mh ~cnior hockrv tc<1m will

Orphan Skating Fu1id THE ABOVE PHOTO shows Stadium l\1anager Lorne \Vakelin, Pee-Wee manager Wilson Butler and referee Joe Smith taking the names of the Pee-Wees \\'hich thronged to the Stadium on Friday and Saturday to register for this season's aclil'itics. Players rna~· regis ter to-day hy contacting Stadium Manager Lorne Wake·

c.P.0.:-2 · practice <1t the Stadii1m from I! J G. )lercer . . . . 162 194 184 :>40. to 7 o'clock tonight. :G. Chapter .... 139 226 171 536. -------T.O'Brien .... 230282111' 62~'St B ' p, •t'• ! c. Kavanagh ' .. 207 2\9 199 62J'.. • on s rae ltC ,

1

738 921 665 2324 : lin at the Stadium.-( Daily News Photo).

We Must Keep The Orphans Skating Sessions Going

1\'len's Civil Service !JIJSA:'o/fE:-3 1 J. Burt .. .. 3!!3 230 , D. Howell .. 1 !15 220 i G. Bcarns .. 200 187 I ,J. Ralph.. . .180 225

!il~! hurtlrrd •nd · ~ix dollars 1 well .that b so rlaht now. Your i DI'Fl'NST·'• 0 1116 871

11111 nrrdrd. 'l'ht·t'~ right we: dona_tion be it big or small will 'H ' c~'nnc:~·; 138 205 S9:P~:.:h~t thr chilc!rcn 1 ~n .

1

. rcr~lnly be r.pprcclatcd br •the K: nunphy :.215 202 . i prnrir~;,~'; •n~i· rn~o~;. e lrp ~ns. t~'to ~re p:tifnll~: walt· P. llrewe'r .. 212 172

[·r 1111111 •. ','·

1 1rh. ~ arc·ltumr'llrll:

1 {If c r r r.~l sat ng session M. ~t;u·tin .... 198 245 • ' ·'I 1r cne 1 o o t 1r year. 763 824

lllh•rripli••n the orphans 1 Our thanks to·rlay to Mr. Gurclnn 30 hnnr• nl ~kat in;: at a' ~1. Slirlln11 for his kind and ~en·

1~1 >2~ prr h1111r. rnch ~e~~lnn I r.rou~ cnnirlbutlon n( five dollars 1 h••ttr• r,.,, ~:li.!iO. fliJ:ht ancl to Miss ~IArjnrie Glbhons f•Jr ~~ hr.\r rn• uch lo huy 312 I her dollal". We stlll need r. lot . lk<ttn• limr. ll'e.il let's ~a~· I more so how ahout ail you !elks

PUl\Uf' WORKS:-2

ran n .1k~1in~ twice and i !lctlln~: In thr act and help ns tor<rt II •mtil the ponds ;raise the ONJ-; TJIOUSA!'W DOl.•

B. Mm·.ld~r.. . .2131811 ~I .. Hairr... . .227 138 .T. N ewhonk .. 177 168 E. Noftall., .. 187 160

804 655 o1rr , 101 N I c.t•.o.:-t · . rr. ~·nu . 1, J,\RS which we ncerl, F Kennedy , .140

· '"In: ''' enjoy skating 1 Let's hear !rnm you real .~mn. ;· F. 11 120 !lttr m~hl. rn.io)· the mo\'les 1 Gh·c to·day so that they may ~kale '· .;:~~;~or·.: '· lll·n~hrr cntcrtai~ment and lto·morrow. . ~. Hall .. : :;~:

111rn •11r thl';r children who I Your contrlbutton may be sent 679 !H lor:unatc than vou r.l to· Miss Joan Crltch 'frcr.surer '

All 11·r a~k Is flit)· cents Orphans Skating Fund, c/o ·the, SIIOPS:-2 c~f/!ar, n~t t~n. twenty or Daily Ne11·s.

1 11 1 E. Pittman . H1 "Litt~\h t·m~mher the say· Your donal on w I mean a nt G Kelloway •. 178

In~; ~lean a Lot", to an on!ltan! Our object SlOOO! ::\i. n~·all , .•. 252

Sawchuck H O.t ·.t·es· t :~~:~·::::~~:~~m B. Fitzgerald 190

G It d r ·' ~·. ~~~~e~.'.' ::~~~ oa en e W. Spmns .. ~~~

1!16 170 178 202 755

190 148 195 311 853

193 160 146 335 834

Tonoxro ct . ' \ G.r.o. No. 1:-2 .' I 'l-fcrry Saw-~ goaltcndlng chores fm• four sea· F. Crockct' .. 230 220

•n:n!'M•roonr 01 thr ;fx regular w~s beaten 11 time~ out o( 1121 !J71 !135

26!1 822 223 647 232 028 21:l 627 037 2724

186 529 208 li25 2[)1 585 198 641 703 2380

284 686 1111 484 lOt 506 280 627 844 2303

222 558 172 4il 143 535 163 57ol 700 213!

240 580 151 477 106 613 250 75~ 807 2424

156 545 149 488 233 561 261 846 799 2440

218 685 243 660 103 738 ' 239 716 803 2799 .

11 ~! 1hr nottcst goallender sons before Plante succeeded D Whittle .. 1!14 223 :'iatlrnal liockcy L,eague him, !II led In for Plante but l'C· 1.1• · Til' an • , .. 274 271

and, a1 a result, was

1

1 corded a poe ••. 1!02 a\'et•agc as he I D. Mimdus., .. 265 212

t~t bctlcr his mark shnts. 1 CN!t ,\CCI'i'fS.:-1 l~a~uc.1 clfii·.iency ratings. i Lurne Worslc~ ·OI Ranl!,crs lost .

1

J. Wadden .. 213 257 aoo · !i70 \rec·llrr.c wmnet· or the 1 11 pol:tts on lm seasons aver· D Tal· lor 172 146 202 520

rophy. ~~ a1 . instmmental age as he turn~( II,' the worst ,V, E~gll~h ::171 221 201 503 . Bruu.' wmnlng streak performance by any goalie In a R Nugent 202 164 330 696

11 ' 1 cx.tcndet! to six games. single week thl~ term. Ten of BO • · • '758 788 1033 2579 In outstanding per· shots beat him fhor .an .875 Javhcr· U.I.C.:-2 ag~·nst Sew York age and .941 on t e season. o n· Ill h ~14 224

Detroit Red Wings and ny Bower repl!lted Worsley In a T. urp Y • .~ 1 169 228 666 247 607 166 514 199 617 840 2404

c d h R. Greene • ,19 ana ~ens, who were game against Cnnadlens but t ~ D. Jardine • , 188 160

Y Boston last Habs fired 24 ~hot~ at hlm1

an T. Efford.. • .243 175

11 sbpped 109 of the 115 red at tim In the !our far a 9~~ arerage which

ht; !Colnn·; rating six .,,,:!t·nt ••. 0101 ~•I his closer to

Gl~nn Hall of De·

i!l ~igh• or 100 shots get for a .927 mark on the

and a .93~ average for the

STILL TOPS Plarte the regular

· I' goalkrcpel. was on the · '•t ~~~ Y cek but his 951

mark i• ltll• t G . 1 •.• 1 1 ·1

Op$, crry ' ~ 1" d the Canadlens,

scored four times ,giving h m a 836 720 .833 average. DOCKS No. 1:.;...1

Ed Chadwlek, rookie Toronto w. Holloway · 225 158 :lfaple Leaf gonlel', recorded· an G. Burley .... 191 203 .885 avera~!! 01, the week for a N 1 22B 231 . " I E. oe • • .. .900 season mark ancl £1Cth P ace. E 1 180 160

k AI Ill A. ar .. • • Chicago Black Haw s'. Ro ns 824 758 sUpped two poir•ts to .907 on the TREASURY:-2 seaS'On. · J. Edgar ..... 160 170

CALL FOR SPENCER BASKETEERS.

197 580 166 560 259 718 178 524 800 2302

209 539 233; 629 270 681 309 775

Any Old Spcncerlnns Interested In playing in ·the ladles' practice basketball series are asked to please get in loueh wilh Mis! Ruby Morgan al business 7145 or rcsi· dence 7475A. ' ·

G. O'Mara.. . 240 156 L. Whitten .. 221 190 B. O'Neill .... 244 2~2 LABORATORY:-1 E. LeGrow .. 225 207 . 202 634 v. Hodder •. 200 200 · 186 586 c. Rose . . . .131 163 8.1 377 o. Wheeler .. 153 202 256 611

709 772 727 2208

TEAl\'l CAPTAINS Agnes Thomas of the Old Colleg­.ians and Joan Arm; of the Mercy take the jump in . the opening of the Ladies' Basketball Series last . night at the Memorial University. The Mercy went

on to win the game by a. score of 48-28. Shown in the above photo is Miss Thomas on the left and Miss Arns on the right. Memorial Physical Instructor, Mr. ·J. D. Ea.ton, tossed up the first ball to get the series underway.-(Daily News Photo).

LfGHT & POWEP.:-1

M S B ' . B Cofield . . . .204 204 325 i33 St. ~on's senior hockey team 1•:ill ercy- t, 011 S I P. Power ... , .207 280 :!70 757 hold a. practice tonight at the ' 1"4 481 forum from 7 to 8 o'clock. All

\11• H G i D. Templeton · ·167 140 1 members. are requested to attend. Ill Oop ames · : S. Rockwood ... \32 155 257 544

I 7]0 779, 1026 2515

Th~ boys mixed it up with the !J. H. MITCHELL-2 i Patricians Bowling girls last night in basketball 'hut I.T. Williams ... 255 233 200 C.88: L p d it was in two separate games. The R. Browne · · · .184 270 22? 67t 1 Ca ffUC f0p0Se first was the opening game of W. Coleman ... 2R3 237 \3a 63a tl the Ladies' Basketball Series and .J. Daly ...... 282 252 142 676 the only other game for the night 984 992 697 2673 All pla~·er5 and fathers of pres· was the St. Bon's·SL Pal's game .1 YRE & SONS:-/ ent da~· pupils who ~re interested in the Fall exhibition series. G .. Jacobs . . . .199 256 284 '739 in a Pat1·ician Bowling Ser1es are

The ex-pupils o[ Mercy were the J. Pcarcey . . . .160 143 118 421 requested to contact St. Pat'• first winners for the yeat• In the !.. Carberry .... 15R 20!1 171 538 Bowling Alleys, Mr. Ed Kcarsey ladles' series as they outscorrd B. Ennis . . . ... 155 2:!t 154 530 at 5370, Ed Barron at 6044A or the Old Collegians by a 48-28 672 829 727 2228 R. O'Toole. The proposed· serie1 score. Mercy were led by Blanche will be singles and mixed. Bragg who accounted !or the DAILY Nr:II'S'-2 grancl sum of 36 points while E. McCarthy ... 304 173 226 703 N AFEL:-1 Joan Arns was credited with eight C. Noftall . . . .157 232 227 ,616 C. Kec!s · · · · · .214 188 236 &38 anrl Kay Walsh swished the twines J. Green ..... 173 168 212 553 G. 'Bmn · · · .136 197 256 589 (or [our. For the Old Collegians E. Escott . . . .. 1R9 136 187 5221 W. Parsley · · · .149 132 179 460 Doreen Reardigan shared the 833 709 859 2394 L. Byrne · · · · .174 249 211 634 points with Berry Barnes as both U . .V.F.:-1 , 673 766 88:1 2321 found the nets !or a total of 14 E. Short . . . ... 174 2i9 197 650 I · -- · · points each. C. Reynolds .•.. 284 294 186 764 ERO\\'.VING HAR\:EY:-0 .

In the only other game o[ the J. Short . : .... 194 199 181 574 D. Kell~· · · · · · 1.,7 1~2 118 407 night St. Pat's chalked up their R. Tizzard , , .. 173 185 175 533 P. Sullivan · · .148 1.,2 1~6: -i-ill second win in the series by edg· 825 957 739 2621 V. Sparkes . · .. :!71 256 279 ·8011 ing out St. Pat's by a close score 576 540 543 165g of 40·38. The Green and Gold led NFLD. BREII'ERY~-2 G. E. OIL:-3 at the e~d of the fh·st half by a G. 'fob in .. . .'178 225 211 614 C. King .. .. .149 131 227 ~;; score or 24-21. It was a basket G. ~~ar.tin .. ..192 269 241 692 A. Whelan .. ..208 133 227 ·i539 for basket aU air wjth Frank Fardy F. Sclla•·s • • • .2:11 191 175 597 \\'. Hammond · · .124. 181 234 · anrl .Joe Gatherall sharing top hon· P. French ..... 218.230 218 666 E. Olford .. ..208 187 234 2

1119

2118

ours with ten points each while 819 915 845 2569 689 652 857 Quigley wa~ highliner for St. CLOlJSTON'S:-l -- • Pat's with 17. F'. You den . . . .147 147 210 504 COM.\!f;R: CABLE:;:-2 · w. ~l~cDonald .. 182 174 243 602 R. Stapleton ... 1?6 193 165, 534

.T. Cahill . . . .. 170 164 149 .483 W. Abbott . . • .199 205 222 62R

P cppet·rill Wins Over Countrv Club

A I lao 199 2•• 6M R. P~rr" . . . .. 205 22.'i 257 687 1.. cams .. .. . .,, ,,., ~ ' 682 684 859 2225 E. Withers .•... 224 2lli 281 721

804 839 925 2568 l PUR/7'1' r.<\C.'TOR/f:S:-.1 CAN AnA PACKf;RS:-1

1.. Roll't . : ... 237 181l 2fin 1i94 R. Noftall .. ..272' 214 151 1137 D CJ f ?"9 zo· o57 "143 D. Yetman .. _.182 113 212 :1()7 . In e... . .. ~., ~• ~ •n< A. Rodgers .... 178 195 242 615 T. Morriss~y .. :17.'i 195 23! "'" F. Tavcrnor ... 250 109 281 720 C. Field .... '199 265 19,) 6~R

924 7991049 2772· 828 788 790 2406 ELECTRIC UTIL/TIES:-0 I ' _:__

Peppcrrcll Civilian Athletic As· D. Hiscock •••. 172 170 145 487 1 I. ·r. PERLIN:-3 soclation recorded its first win in G Daniels . . .190 130 216 536 R. Noseworthy .187 282 208 677 the table .tepnis series last night vi. Daniel! . . . 265 171 179 615 H. Martin . . . . 230 214 197 · 641 as they edged the Old Country D. Daniels .. .. _ 56 172 228 E. Casey .. . .. 275 222 201 119B Club 8·7 at the Base Service Club. 627 527 712-1866 H. Long .. .. .134· 159 231 524 Top man _for the night was Bill · · 826 877 837 2540 Wiseman of PCAA who played and STANDARD 'MFG . . C0.-0 GEO. NEAL LTD.-0 . won four. Dee 1\lurphy, also on D. Rideout· .. ~.214 186 223 623 A .. Fogwill ... 101 260 261 622 the ·winners, and Vic Dupree of E. Abbott .': ... 171 155 173 499 W. R. Neal ... 143 151 · 144 43il the losers each won three of four G. Raynes .... 197.255 291· 743 T. Whelan •· ... 148 225 H9 522 games. George Smith and Vera 1. Delacey .. ..159 206 214 ·579 L. Rice .. .. .143 125 194 4G2 Dupree of the Old Country Club 741 802 901 2444 535 761 748 2044 won lind lost two. A. E. HICKMAN:-3 ·

The series continues tonight at C. Bonnell . , .. 189 169 221 57~ CHA'LKER & C0.:-1 7.15 when Cabot meets AACS. The J. Jacobs ..... 170 226 158 554 W. Osbonre ... 179 173 187 539 league will be holding Its mixed H. Sparkes • , .. 165 252 305 722 A. O'Neil • . . , .167 140 183 490 and men's doubles on Sunday, H. Oke . • . • . .286 254 273 813 G .. Chalker . . .224 193 140 557 November 18, and all entrants 810 901 957 2668 E. Nugent . • . .210 163 201 574 will be received by Ed Boulos. -- • · . · · 780 619 711 2160 There as a fee b£ $1 per, team. T. N. MOTORS:-2 'tvALSH'S:-2 ' .

BOLD· PRO~IIJNTORY Great Orme.'s H c ad, Welsh

he~dlnnd in I he Iri;h Sea, has •a lighthouse visi~le for 24 miles.·

A. ~Iarsh .. ..'185 215 171 571 G; Murphy .. ...~6~ 161 ;33 560 L. Snclgro1·e· ... 260 224 202 686 N. Powet· .·. . . ~26 190 ~02 6~8. c. Nugent . . . . 1~5 287 273 755 F. Ryan • . . . .10~ 114 200 ~~! . T. Kennedy ... 201.156 17!! 52n W. Crotty ..... 2~• 1~1 18!1 62!· ·

841 882 818 2541 737 ~56 824 21:1 I

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with. the ' .

Compliinents :·Of .

I The Great .. Eastern Oil Company Limited

·United Church Young_ People

CONFERENCE lind Presb~·tery Executive at centre table dur·ing the Banquet Salurclay evening at the Fall c01wention of United Church Young People which was held at Gower Street United Church on Satur­day, Sunday i:lnd Monday. Left to right:-Morris Bar l)et\, St. John's; Elsie Barbol.!r, St. Joh~';;; Mabel Earle, Corner ~rook; Marie Lane, Lewisporte; Ed. Connolly, St. John's; Peter Winsor, St. John's; Dm·e Kinsman, St. J?hn s; Jane Chaytot·, St. John's; Fred Davis, ~~. John's; · Ina Antle, Botwood, Audrey Hi~cocl\, St. Johns; Bob Cater',, Grand Falls.-(Dail,r News Photo). :"irLll, )Jl!SICio\~' III:,\D ISDUSTUit\L lliHTORS ~tEET

s:r. ,.1011:'\:s. Nfld .. (CI'J-Her. 1\IO~TnEAL (CI'I - ;fhe Cana. b~ll, 1\. Stlrhng, o_nc o! ~cwround- dian Indu1trlal Editors' Associ a· l~nd 1 most dlstmgulshed mus!· tlon will hold Its tlth annup! con. mns, died Sunday In hi~ 82nd rerence here next Thursday and )ear ~fter a long lllness. He was Friday, bringing together about orsanm al St. Thom~s Anglican I • Church for 45 voear5 and taught J l2.1 d c I(! g a t c s. The nssociatlon plano, l'lolln an'd singing at two comprises 275 editors of company Anglican schools here. publications throughout Canada,

• •

Jacoby On Bridge "Princess" Jumper SOUTH OVERCOMES BAD DISTRIBUTION

.. NORTH .K:J 1083 ¥K43 tH3 .Q3

WEST EAST .4 .td2 ¥ AQJ 10 ¥2

19

• KJ2 • Q 10 9 8 7 6 .KJ875 .10116{

SOUTH (D) .AQ985 ¥98185 .A. .A.2

Both 1ldes Yul. !outll WH\ North Easl I. Double 3 • · Pass ... Pan Pass Pass

Oprntng lead-¥ A

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I 8\' OSWALD .JACOBY i

1 IT'S always uncomfortable when:

lthP oppnn~nts trump a good trick. , But it. is ~till po~sible to make the

1

1 be~t nf a han ~ituation. . i Wc~t openru th~ ace of hrarts :

~nd contlnuP.cl with the queen of i heart~ at th~ seconrt trick. The -

1

·

average declarer would hnl'c . pla~·ed the king of hearts from I the duntm)', I hu5 losing the game contract. East would return a club, alter rufCing dummy's king or hearts, and the defenders would thus get two high hearts, a heart ruff, and the king .of clubs, defeating the contract.

When the declarer was Charles Fashion h~adllncs the "princess" J. Solomon of Philadelphia no jumper-because its smooth fitted such misfortune overtook him. anti flaring lines 3111! so flattering He recognized the situation and to every figure! Ensy sewing too;· refused to play the king or heartH make this newest version ln deep from the dummy at the second blacl> winter-cotton or twl't!dy wool

· trick. -have the comvaniou blouse lu Thls simple pln)' waa effective. .sparklln~ contrast!

.• 7 ,1 ~; ~-•• · The winte~ un~e/wear you (u~t can't.

~~/1 1 /}. beat for warmth, wear, ond dQWn·lo·

~-~ J I:~ earth value, There's mdre wear In · ·, ·_ • .· every garment. 'l'au'll sc~e ·money

because. Penmons products ftt better and lest longer. Styled for actlon·fr~e comfort, In a thltkly·fleeced closely· knit fobrlc for maximum warmth, Avulloble for men end boys, In Union

'1,.,) Suits, Shirts and Drawers, and NuCut. 6·27·6

Jcl;..

r

IT PAYS TO LOOK FOR THE PENMANS LABEL .. ·' '

West had to lead a third heart Pattern 4805: Misses' Sizes 12, since any shift would enabl~ 14, 16, 18: 20, Size 10 Nmper m declarfr to drnw trumps, East yards 3!!-tnchl blouse 2 ,, yard~. ruffed the king of hearts and This pattern easy to . U>~, slm· returned a club, but It was now Pie to sew\ !s tested f?r fit. Has too late. Charley put up the ace complete illustrated mstruct!ons. of clubs ruflcd a h t ·Jtl Send _TJII~TY·FIVE CENTS (35 f • ,, . car 11 1 one cents) m co1ns (stnmps cannot br.

n dumms s lngh trump~, and acccpt':ld) fo 1• this pattern. Prini 1lrew trumps. -He was then able I plninly SIZE; !li A ~IE, ADDRESS to lead his last heart, now Pstnb·; STYLE NUo\IBER. . lished, And dbcud the losing 1 Send Ol'drr to A:'I;>;E ,\ D A lU s ~lub _from the dummy; The rest care nr ST. JOHN'S llAU,Y NEWS. 11'15 ea.~y. Pattern Dept. 60 ttRONT STREEi

CHURCHMA!'i DEAD AT &fl ST .. lOHN'S, Nflri. (CPJ.;...T he

Venerable Heber Gosse, 66-year· .old archdeacon emeritus and for. ffi(!r secretary-treasurer of t h e · Anglican diocesan synod· of New foundland, died Saturday at Deer Lake, hi~ western Newfoundlana parish. Born in Spaniard's Bay, Nfid., he wa~ made deacon at Halifax in 1917. and ordained at Portugal Cov-e, Nfid., In 1918. ·

THIRD 'BODY FOUND SU:Il:MERSIDE, P.E.I. (CP)­

Thc body of .Tack Small, 23, one or thl'ce Summerside duck hunters who drowned Sntunlay when their boat capsized nl£ Darnlcy Split, was found Monday, The boll!(!~ or Small's companions, Ernest Mor· t•lson, 25, anti Alexander Mo1Tison, 23, were round by seat·chers sun • day,

WEST, TORONTO, O:OiT. .

The World's Lovelie8t Women • • • · Where?· To find the world's love· liest w om en- Anthony Hunter, v i s i t e d Paris, Stockholm and Rome. His . comments on the tradi·

· tionally · "chic" Parisian beauties, the myth of the !f!male "icebergs" of Swe· d-n and the lad!ea of th1 land of Mona Lisa and Gina Lollobriglda are in this week's Star W eekiy. · Pictures and fascinating statistics introduce you to t h e "World's Loveliest Women",. Entertainment, too, for every. member of the family in a big maga­zine section, the 24·pa~:e full color comic section and the complete novel.

.11>• NEWt NliVl NliVt SW Wttkl7

THE DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 14,.

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WEDNESDAY NOV. 14, 1956

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·Duplessis To, Reply To St. Laurent · QUEBEC· (CP) - Premier Duplessis is bcl!el'ed to ~ pre. paring a· sllffiY·II'Orded reply ·to Prime Minister St. ~aurenl's an·· nouneement that federal grants turned dDII'n by Qt:'3bec unii'Cr· ~ities in the last five years arc being kept· on deposit against the day they are in a position to take th'e mon~y.

The Quebec premer announced he would make his government's 1•iew known from the floor of ·the ~~glslative assembly after th~ annual session of the legislature gets under way today.

Federal aid to universities was instituted for the 1951·52 school year nnd was accept·~d by ali Canadian universities, Including those in Quebec. Quebec unil'er· sities turned them down durng the fo!loyin~· )~ars. · WOULD DOUBLE GRANTS

But :\lr. St. Laurent has an. nounced he' will ask Parliament to dbuble the grants from $8,00,· 000 to S16,000,000 annnallr and. propos e d a new distribution scheme to o1•ercome Queb:!c's ob.iectlons. ' ·

Little is known of what Mr. St. Laurent ond Mr. Duplessis lias been followed by !tron,::ly. worded statem•;nts bv at least two Quebec unil•ersity rectors. They hal'e Inferred that rovincial stat· utory grant~ are too small and a;kcd that the discrctionarv,.. or •pecial grants-made by Q1icbec to ·compensate for the fedcnl grants turnefl · down here - be placed l)n a statutor~· basis with nn political strings attached,

The rectors have been backed up by studo3nt councils and asso· elations of professors. Laval Uni· versity student demonstrated on the legislature grounds to back demands for increased grants.

Government circles say the universities' financial problems will be the domjpant issue before

,.

'· ' the legislatu~e. NO REPOSE \ ANTARCfiC SHAKE Some 500 guests wUI take their African elephants sleep erect- Australia, ·long active in ex·

plnces In the legislative council tlroy may rcmaip standing for the· pluration, has the largest terri· -provincial upper house-to heor last 30 or 40 years of th·~ir lives. tories in the Antarctic, totalllnf the speech from the Throne eX· CUOWDED COLONY ! Jbout 2,472,000 square mil-es. pect'.!d. to co~tain !Orne reference The crown. colony of Hung Kong I STUDY IN GER~IANY to the qucstton. has an estimated 2,400,000 per· I Students (rom 82 countries wert

.The speech wilL. be read by I sons, n-early all Chinese, in its I registered at West German uni• ~utenant • Governor Gaspard I l91 square miles. · · I versities in 1956. nutcull'> after he arriv~s at the . RULING GROUP ' GROWING INDUSTRIES legislature's main door to review\ The Communist party in Ru>sia · . Number of wodvers employed a guard of .honor while a 19-gun 1 noWV~umbers more than 7,000.000 m manufacturing in the thre• salute is fired from the nearby! in a total population of about 200,· ~ Prairie prol'inces in 1955 was 9t Citadel. . tl . l 000,000. · per cent greater than 1939,

Specula !ton is that t~ govern·.---------- ---.-_;_------. . ment plans to introduce some legislation to deal with the univer. sitics quastion, Some sources say this legislation will specifically place a barrier against accept. ance of federal aid while pro1•id· ing for increased provincial aid.

Others think Mr. Duplessis may set up a permanent committee in aid to universities as suggested in the '-report of the Quebec -roy a! commission on constitutional pro. blems.

The 25th leglshiture, elected .Tune 20, Is dominated by !l!r. Duplessis' Union Nationale party, re-elected for a fourth consecu. live term.

StandinR In the legislative as· sembly Is: Union Nationale, 72; Liberals, 20; IJ!dependent, one.

Standing In the 24seat upper house Is: Union Natlonale, 12: Liberals, 10; Independent, one: vacant, one.

· APE LOOSE, IS SHOT TAM'P"A, Fla. (APl - A 230·

pound ~orilla escaped from his cage Wednesday night and se· verely m a n g I e d his. handler before being shot to death by Deputy Sheriff Lloyd Simmon,;. Simmons said the male gorilla, King Kong, bit part of the nose off Alba B. Dexter, 40. Dexter also was badly bitten and clawed on the face and arms. ·'The big ape jumped at Dexter as the han. dler brought hi!. meal.

1\IORE CIGARETfES ~roductlon of e!garets in Paki·

stan Is expected to reach to bil· lion by the ,end of 1957, an in· crease of four billion.

In 2 Se·concls

ASP·IRIN t:dt:Uirk ,,.,

is ~eady to go to work I

STOPS HEADACHE

FAST!

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·WITHOUT STOMACH UPSET!.

STOPS PAIN FAST ACHING MUSCLES· BACKACHE

COLD DISCOMFORTS RHEUMATIC PAIN NEURALGIA

J. H. PtJIIard J6u CtJh ;el hothtllg !Jetlet. · •. ereh of twiee the p11ee.' SAYS;

Our Dominion Security Plan means lm mediate and aubstantlal protection Cor I.

·Jo\'ed ones when they need it, and-if .· ·, you live-it means a retirement fund !or

' you, ,

Ask me about "Dominion Sccurily." Dial 2135

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ut 1 q 1 Jill 1 111 I.IUIW unn 1 1 • 1 " 1 11 11 ~I 13 . . . .

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.11• Tucker; 4 Rendell Place, St. John's, Telephone 91959F,

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. Canada Measures . . The Light Waves

PAKISTAN PRODUCT . · Pnkistnn's North Western Ran. 1

way is training worke1·s to build I il.q own all . s:·~el, light • welgnt mudcrn . passenger conches.

--· ' OTIA\\'A (CPl-Canada Is play- I· VITAL PRODUCT

in~ a signiUcant part In an Inter· 1 Eslimcted -l'alue of printing ink> nat:nnal effort to mal;e it e~>i~r: manu!acturcd in Canada In 19:;:; to mcasUIX! more accurately the 1 was 512,783,000, a::alnst SII,G·tB,~OO i' di;tancc between two tlolnts. ! In 19:H. · 1

A ;cctlon of the Nalional Re.· i ; <carc.h Co-~mcil is co-operating with I 111STOniC CE;\;TRE : rc;carch b~dies in o!h~r conntri~.; Lan~us.tcr, capital of L~nca~hirc ; in a rJmplcx cxnerim~nt to de· 1 count~· 1~ En~land, became a i !!nc the intcrnatianal metre m! barough 1n 1113, and a city :n ; t··~m; o! the tength of li~hl wai'C!. i 193i,

T!;c Can~di~n wo~k h bcl~g co•l·l , , duch•:J under Dt·. h. ~1. Baml, 33! Ill Gill,,\\ TOJ.l, , )·c:r-old exPert in the science "!, .. ~lm·c. thnn 1 703 chlldrct~ .n~·~ 1

11trn;uring the lcn~th of wal\'s m k11l~d m acc.dcnts on Bnta111, s E~ht. roads CI'Cr)' ye.1r. n.·' 'ltn OS )I ETR f. ,

,\t prr!ent. mc~'ltrcm~nt~ u! r-----------, tc~::th m hmd ~n the tnt~rna- ~ ROUND and ROUND tlntiJl rmtrc. ~ plafinum-iri:llum · allt•'' b~r at the intrrnatlonal bm·. • . SHE GOES rau· or wcl~ht~ :•ncl mca;m•e, ~t i _ .:;~ 1Tc>. Franc~ Th• metre. ;l'l1~c:1. · -~-c··' ~ ;:mel ,why she 1'1"'>1'1'~' - rau;:hll' !nral;in-·-1 /.,· . 1~'. . 3? 3i lnrhc·. , •. _~; arlnpte·l a· ~~~l·l .{. ·-~~ ·-- .;,_1,J. s rors . i~l~rnationnl ;t·lnd~t·d or length !nl . ,,,-:;::, .. .1' iJJ 1,.Q, . . :' 11 ,,l ,) our

Prc;cnt ln>tnmcnh ba;crl on 1 -~ ~~ 1 1• 1 t~le international mrll'~ can men;-~ · ·'f:...C 0 ~) , wale una .e nr~ Je11 •lh; to an ac~nr~r)' n! a -·"'~· · · ' KNOWS ~~~~· million!,, of an lneiJ. H~ll' I "·~r. ,,.hr11 1!1~ mrt·~ h•• b~·'n de· BECKER ppnrl !11 t•l'111< of 11'"\'•lrrt~lh< of· t:~ht It will hr nn"ihlr to mnke Certified ~!nstrr \\';Mhmakcr

c nnd .lrw~ll~r. · mra.m•~m~nt, murh morr acc\ll'· i 73 SEW GOWER ST:· alP. 1 oc16 lm

r.realcr 11rrci•lon in the mea.•, ';;;:';;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;:: 11rcn1rnt flf lrn~!l,. Is re~uired hntllj r;-·------·-----··-h•· :nclt~<lr•· nnrl '"~ '"'P1rr.h ,clcn. WHETHEII. ITS A NEW ti-t. Pro~~~_bh· th.r. hr•l e-.: 3 n1nl•~ I INSTALLATION ~I indu•lrtr• rrnmrm~ thl< ~rcotcr ·~~"racy ~rr t'H~<r nro•l,cln• clcr ; OR .. , t·"•nic rwli'l"'''11· ,irl ~h·~r"ft en· :inr. ar-1 erluiomcnt lnr !hr. nc•l' ~ "'""l!r r\'1. . 1

DiAl.

T'•• rlcci;'•m \o "'" """'rlrn~lh<. . 90·901 11 1 H-!ht ~; lh• 1..\"n'bnl fm· ll1-.,:'..;.l ''"f'~"cn1 .,t lrn-!~ 1 1 , .... ,. P'.,<1r :n · n,.1 .. hcr. 1~:.1. ~~ II•• 'Oih Gnnc1•r,l ~ ,. 'n~::":·r-ncr rf \\'r,: ... :u ... ;1nrl ~· .... a~· II""• Siner tltrn m:tn•· t'lt'"ll'i~~ ; .. !.h;ttinr. C'~n~•' •. I h r l'••itcd ~:.,te>. Dritain, Htt;~j~ ~nri \\'est 1;er111an)'. ha•·~ h•'rn 1rl'in~ In find P•r he;l ;ourrr of li~hl [or thi> J''l:"!':"~"r. D •;;\\11 ,\:'\S P\1.\IS\-:ll

Thr ~·ouncil ;a)·~ nr. Baird'; ' 1~\Joralnl'l' ha< L'nnlributcrl "I'CI')'

~i~nific:11it rc;tllb" to -the research p:·,..~ram.

Dr. Bairtl ;~ltl the ob,i-~ctil'c h to ricl'clop a rnelhocl to make JlOS· ;ihlc lhr most prccl£r mca~··trn­m<'nt of a wa,·r~·~n~th o! Ji;!hl. Thl.< ln,·oli'C< clrl·cloplll~nt ol mca>ur­ln: apparah~> and ,election of a material whirh. when actil'atcd e'·~ctrical!)', will nroclucr a sharp. preci;c anrl easily . defined light 1\'a\'C,

J. V, DAWE LTD.· Electrttal Contractors

"NO FIRE ,WHEN WE WIRE."

Once intcrnatiQII11 a~recmcn:j ha; bc~•n reachcrl on lhr \l'oes of apoaratus and the ;onrcc for the - .. Jigh! wa1·r. ,;clenti•t; lhen wlll de· te1 'll;ne cxacth· thr n••mbcr ol 11 •l'i•!·mglh; of li~ht !1·nm the ! ~urce in the metre. II thrn will he IIOS>iblc to IIH' ~tandarrt intrr· •·rometcrs ot· machln; tn ll'•'a>· •trr the lcn~th or an obicct in term; or 11'31'flength, of li::ht.

fk. Bairrl saicl countrir' inl'nh•ed In the "~;rarrh will make rrprr\< h lhr 11th lnlcrnalinn:tl Cnnlct·· r1•cr of \\'ri:ht, anrl ~~r~<urr.s In l~'iO. Thr wrn•k in h;, l~hnralnry

11 "' r\prr\rrl '" h~l'•' an imrnrl· •"' t>r.rin~ nn thr ntr.rtin;', ,drc· Ji~~ nl tbl' ~1111rrr.

o'-' .\ll\'J~on r nn.\ no Tlr. B~ir•l j, " momh•r nf 11'" I

lnlrrMtinn~.l ,\rlt·i•ot·y r"ommJtiP~ "" "" n~linihnn nf thr Metrr. llr. I. r. ltniiiPtl. rlirrrtnr n( \hP. ~Rt" rih·i•inn n! :.rrl'~ri rh~·<ir~. •

¥EWS DRY CLEANERS

'' rl1~irman. . ~l•1rh of thr work in 'lh~ l"hor~·

tor,· ha~ bern cnnduclcd with ~n intcrferomct~r de~i~ned anr! buill h,. Dr. Baird and his starr. Thl; a~d other cnuipm'.!nl ·arc regarded a; amon;! the best in the wot·ld for the calibration o! lenglhs in term~ of light wa1·cs.

The laborator~· has been ex}X!ri· mrntlng with se1•cral possible li~ht-wa\'e sources, Including mer· rury, krypton anrl carlmlum. These ~nta·~· :1\'e olf ll;tht while the)' arr actin!~~ with an rlr.ctrlc cur­rent.

In onr rXIJCI'imrnt mcrcnn· has l~rcn rxcil<'d In ell'~ olf rarllatlons n[ li~ht al thr t~mpct•aturr or 11· ottirl air-3tli dr:rrr, hclnw z~ro. nr. !laird and hi~ ~Ia!! were the fir;t to make a practical mercur)' 13mp to operate at ,this tempera· ture. ll!'f. "ATOMIC BEAM"

Safne Day Counter Service by request,

CITY OF S1'. JOHN'S

ST. 'JOHN'S. MUNICIPAL COUNCIL

Zoning Appeal Boa I'd "1\'e would prefer a · source

whlch can he m02d 'without !cttlnq The following appeals from up tno rl~bot•alr an array of equip. th d • • f h ld mc11t," D1·. Baircl sairl. ''In other • e ec1stcn o t e City Bui ·' "·or!l,, it ~houlcl he tmsiblr to usc mg lnspecto:; will be heard by 111!' •ou~cc with far.ilitic~ .nm;~ally the Zoning ApReal Board on fo•wl 1n te<t Jatnraton~s. M d

E·:perilflcnt• al<o' arr. l1cin~~ on ay, November 19, 1956, m~dr with wh~t i• known ·a.• an at 1 ?..00 o'clock Noon, in the

. I .

] ,, D

. ::tt,%\, -'<-• • .,. I H. ' · ·~(· · t.t.t. ••c- u.s. ht. 0o11.

'7'/,IPIN,Jctre4Q- ~ UU tJ NI'A it""'· I..,.,

• ~'But I d~~·t w~~t a ~e~rdl Now where's .~l ~~z~r?"_! .

' ' . I '

~\·~ '. . . .. , · Smith Corona . '~ ' ' ' . ·'. .. ':

{'tYPEWRITERS ·and . :C~SHIERS .. !, ,.:· . . DIAL .4052 • . . ·~ ':· . '· . . '

.\ .' )'" •• ' - • r • ';; .'. • -- ::_· .·' ••

.:···boMINJON: M~CHINERY:. · & . 'EQUIP.MENlp CO:., LTD .. -,.: .. MORRIS' BUILDING :. • . ... QUEEN·· STREET ....... '· ' . . . . . . - ·.

WANTED . STENOGRAPHER

. Apply

MacDonald Wholesale Drugs Ltd. FOREST ROAD

no1·6tf

CAMPBELL~'S REA.DY TO SERVE SOUPS

48 - 8 oz. per case

TOMATO, CHICKEN GUMBO

CHICKEN NOODLE, CHICKEN WITH RICE,

CLAM CHOWDER, CELERY,

F.C. PEA, GREEN . PEA, MUSHROOM,

VEGETABLE, VEGETABLE BEEF.

· i Institutional Size 12 - 48 oz. per case

VEGETABLE, VEGETABLE BEEF, CELERY

F.C. PEA, GREEN PEA,\ BEEf, CONSOMME,

CHICI(EN NOODLE, CHICKEN WITH RICE,

CR,EAM OF MUSHROOM, CLAM CHOWDER,

FROZEN SOUPS CREAM OF SHRIMP, OYSTER STEW,

. GREEN PEA WITH HAM, CREAM OF POTATO

"•t~t~ic beam." Thl< is • ,met~od City Hall: · n' limn:: up the atoms, whtch .1!11'£ 'II' .. ••••••••••••••••• .. .---' of! wa,•e• of Uqht,. in a slnP.Ic file Wt tam Roche, Corner Tor· ~" th•t tbw trav~l In onlv one bay Road ·and Brady~s rllrr•tlon .. Norm~ll··. the motions Path Trucking Stand "' ahm• are srattered In man~ T B 'cl'f · , , d ~ d'···\1~"' . • • 1 t, ltm1te , 65A

Dr. B•ir~ \" irl •t:r or th~ LeMarthant Road Of-"'''lllllc ""'m" ·ma'' m•l·e It nos· . • · ' · ~1"1• t., tl~fin• th• • .,.~r.t len~th o! .flees. P ll'"'•len;th of light much more Any persons whose proper· •r·•nh•. t' ff t d b h · b ·· H~,;·r''""· e-.:l'••i,;,•n!; 11.ilh the 1es are a ec e y .t e a ove h"'l" !lill ~..,, in thPir ornll.,•~· appeals have the nght to be '"" !tagcs. It n""' ~npear; llkr.ly heard and to give evidence t''"' an l!~t·r• o! r.i'h"" nterC"'"' th · · nf h~·pt'ln "'ill "" ~·tr.rt•r! as the ereon, . l"""'•· ,, th• 111~n m•r.tlll't. Any person Intending to

[lut Dr. B*n '"'" ··l~rtJ.tq w!ll appeal before th~ Bcari:l· is r. ... nt 1",''! •~ p"'n"rlrn~"t '''ith better h. \ , · . · • - • "'"'""~' '"". IIi~··""'".;. lendhs • en .Jy, requet.ted Jo nottfr 'l'"• ""'""'!" "~·"""'"nt·flqure In the undersigned. · · . ,,,,_ wp·J: ~"'' n tlr"•' ma1• come E. B. 'FORAN , .. •··n ,., "''""' f'l1 "'..... accurate ' s:urcc -m3y be 'sc!cc!cd. Secretary

P.O. Box 785 novl3,14

Agents Dial 2444

GIBSOt-4 uUITARS :.. Ho1 ner .' llutton ::itop Accordeons and

· Harmonicas. Richmond Saxo­phones. Boosey Clarlnets.­Charle~ Hutton & Sons. P 0. feh3,Pod tl• .

STADIUM· SCHEDULE

THE DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, NOV. 1

' NOTICE· COURT OF REVISION Under the previsions of Section 230 cf .the City of St. John's Act, Chapter 87 of the Revised Statutes of New~ foundland 1952, His Honour the Lieutenant Governor in Council has O!=lpcinted the I,Jnder~igned to comprise the Court of. Revision fer· the hearing of any objection by any taxpayer or by the St. John's Municipal Council to the assessment of property made within the I:"SUitA.'IiCE f

I_P._o_. _R_ox_t6_H. 'Phone s.or,1J ' -.. ·---~

. ,

November 12th to 18th:

' City of St. John's during the present year, TAKE NOTICE that the Court will sit at City Hall, Duckworth Street, in St. John's, every lawful day from the First day of· November to the 30th day of November in., elusive between the hours of 2.30 p.m. and 4.30 p.m.

r .'lWln~uyu

WEDNESDAY, Nov. 14 HOCKEY, 8.00 p.m.

· Holy Cros~ vs. St. Bon's

THURSDAY, Nov. 15 SKATING, 9.00 to 11.00 p.m.

FRIDAY, November 16 . HOCKEY, 8.00 p.m.

Feilidans v~. Vocational

SATURDAY, Nov. 17 CHILDREN'S SKATING

10.00 a.m. GENERAl SKATING

2.00 p.m. and 9.00 p.m

SUNDAY, No.,ember 18 SKATING, 9.00 pm.

Join A World .. famous Unit I

,,

1'hrec years of adventure and com· radeship await you in 1'he Black Watch (Royal Highland Regiment) of Canada, . one of our country's ' most historic regiments, 1

• WF.AR TilE COLOURFUL UNI· 1

FOR!I-1 OF A HIGIILAND REGI· !1-IE:o\T

• ACQUIRE SEW SKILI.S • LEARN TO HANDLE AND I

I,EAD l\IEN I • 'fRA YEI, TIIROUGIIOUT CAN I

ADA, PERHAPS OVERSEAS f

: • DEVELOP STRENGTH ANDI I CII.\RACTER I 1

• SERVE WITII ;'liEN FROl\1 ACROSS CANADA I

• MAKE I'RlENDS OF A LIFE.· Tim: I

• • FINEST m:DICAI. AND DENT AI, CARE

• 30 DAYS P,:.JD HOLIDAYS A YEAR

• OUTST:\N[))NC P E N S I 0 N PI.ANS AND. NEW, INCREAS· ED PAY RATES

Aller these 3 ;:rr.at years, return to cil'lllan life better prepnrP.d, or huilrl a lifetime Army career. You arn rli~lblc if you are betw~en 17 and 40 ~·cars nld, ha,•e At leas! Grade 8 education. anrl can meet Army test requirement!.

Mail Jhe roupon below, 'phone or \'isit rour nearc5t Arm:-- R~cruit· lng Station.

ARMY RECRU11;1NG STATION, 431 Water Street,

St. Jolin's Newfoundland, Telephone· 8·0294

(

Dated the 24th day of Octobe1, 1956. •

JAMES M. BRADSHAW DONALD W. K. DAWE, Q.C. WILLIAM G. ADAMS, L.LB.

oct24,30nol·6,9, 14.22,29

11-r&.. I .

CLOTHES make the man if CHAFE makes the clothes

WM. L. CHAFE, Tailor 4 HOLD 'WORTH Sl .

CERTIFICATE OF

INCORPORATION UNDF:R THE COMMUNi!

COUNCILS ACT, 19lil

Pursu~nt to tt r pr01.1, .•

Section 7 ·of the c0~ 0' 1

~ouncils Act. ,Q56. 1 hcr~~~l t1fy the arra ur;miJcd 0; ~. moniy known 1 , ' Cl,

. ISLE AUX MOinES l· ··

iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ ! t 0 be a 1 or u 1 If,. 1' rr 11 men I I I . • b . ' t-; tnumty y tr.e l'amr of ··.

Now We Can Serve You Bette~ Our new telephone equipment has just

been installed in time to make your Christ·

mas Shopping easier:-

8 NEW TELEPHONE LINES ADDED

TO PLACE CATALOG ORDERS .CALL:

5011

5113

CREDIT DEPARTMENT:

3830

SERVICE DEPARTMENT:

3777

5012 5290.

3588

2282

5013 6151

3568

SIMPSONS • SEARS LIMITED 170 WATER ST.

CUT THIS OUT AND KE·EP NEAR TELEPHO.NE novl0,4:

i "Tile Local G-overnment (: · · .. j munity of Isle a~x Mortu,•; _:

is here~y a_uthnnzeri 10 PiC'~ .

1 a~d maJ~t~m trc fr:llowiq ,' : VJees anc, co:~trol;: "r : (!) Roads i

Dated at St ,John·~ lhil J . day Of :"OI'CillhH .\.D .. 1!1,.

S. HEFFERTON Minister of Municipal'

and Supply.

CENTRAL

AND HOUSING

CORPORATION

Scaled Tct.dcr~. plainly . · · J as to content :•nrl addrem:

I the Utld~rsignd wil1 he ,11ntil 12 Xo01 .• • ,\"eu·(n, .. ;·J

' ' Standard Time:

TUESDAY, DECEMBER l ' for Construcllorr of '1 ! Yincial Housin& 1 Row Housing and 1,.

1 Units with ReiLfed Smicti j St. Jolin's ,Nfla.

Plans, spccifi<attlln; ar.d tender docum~1. b trav be ed by general · at Central ?olun~a~r Corporation, 1032 Street, Halifax :\ora Sro:i1 at the addrc~, ot the

i signed. A deposit of ~I 00 00 hy .

1 ! ayable to Ceutr ai ; Housing C.H·por~tirm. i! for each set oi pian>

' mcnts. · This dt'!JO;i1 is it sairl plans aprJ no<·u,men~

not rereived at 1ht· , which they w~1, drr.wr.. i and in good cv1•di1 iPn on . :fore the tenth d<ty followi:i' , date of co.1trae: i\ward.

Sub-con•rac\ol' IM)' ,.;rr : plans and rlr.eumrnl~ "' i ?llvrl!liii!C ar·rl II"U'In2 I lion Office~ lu:atrrl i\1 ' i Nm·a Scotia: 711Jt.<·lr111. Sai:t : · i r.nd ft·cdrrietor, \'rw . ·· 11

10 Eglinton ,,,., n11r. onto, Ontario: ?W i'<M

: fluad. Town ,,, )inunt 1 Quebec: Qurlorr · As~ociation, 26'r R r"ul Quebec: H:tli!~x Association, lla!:f>\

:and at thr acorll'! ., mr:;f . 'low. ! Earh \cnrlr1 11111 t ht ·:

I panlcd by a ;c;·u!'i~Y prescribed in 1 hr .tend~r ments. Such drpo;tt •hall tained by r::.:\1 h.C. to

iversity c

nal qualii

ugh knc

Wi

D

ST.

THIS FRID,

Thu1 Novemb1

• PRIZES F

Supper Please senrl me without obliga­tion, full !lo!ormat!on on Army career.~.

perforamncc ot the The lowest or an)· 1t"derl-:;t----­

NAI\-IE , • t, •••••••••••••••••••••

ADDRESS ••• , , ••••••••• , •• , .- •• I

necessari:y accrptrd C. f !:MM5, ... ,••• .,, __

CITY/TOWN ••••••• , •• , , •• , ••,. . .

PROV ••••••••• , ••••••••••••••••

TELEPJIONE ............ , •• , • , , , •

see he's a very fussy young man ! After you ore married he will insist on sending his soiled suits to MEWS DRY CLEANERS.

DIAl 91115

Assistant R•gional Englnur, Central

Housing Corroratino , Office, 357 Water Slrtl·

St . .;ohn'l, NJld, nov13,14,!5

WE ARE PROUD OF o·uR USED CARS

1948 DODGE 4 Door Sedan -. -

and would like to let you know about some of the top qualiry units~ we now have available •

- - - - $250.00 1953 STUDEBAKER 4 Door Sedan - • - - $895.00 1954 FORD 4 Door Sedan - - ' .. - • • $695.00 1954 MORRIS 4 Door Sedan ' $720.00 • • ~ • •

1956 PONTIAC 4 Door Sedan • • • .. .~ $2395.00

THE TERRA · NOVA ,MOTORS ·LTD. ·_. REAR OF NEW :oUNDLAND 1-JOTEL · 1 OPEN EVENINGS .. '. DIAL. 513l,.

te

Page 15: tre. Claims Lives 'f .: ·txro. .· City · Childrencollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · Wl1ere Flames ' Bl F.\ OiL FIELDS rd REFINERIES MILES 0 lOO SEt~! SUEF ~GYPT

to 1:\SUR.t \'Ot:t

AUTQ. MOBILt

\'ot11'

PLEASU~!

lt\:\CE

BOAT AN

··nrnmrnt co:, • ·am( of overnment Colli ~x ~ortu," ~

TIZl'n to PfOI'i~t ·<· ft;lJowln§ !!J. •I·:

liON

•. ptaitll\· marl•• ~~.d add~c!!e~ i; . wil! br rccei•!l . • :\cwfoundla:l

EMBER •. col Ftdtni-Prt

l'roject 6/!S ll!l and Aparlmtlll

• ted Strvicu) ~

: muH hr ,l':·uritY drpO!il It

thr. tendrr do.-t jrpn~il 5hall be rt 1:1.C. to ensure dill

11 the contrac~ d nr am· trndcr n ~f'pted

EMMS. ion a I c-nclrUCIII~

Mortgage h rroratino Branc 1 Vlattr Strtllo

's, Nfld,

R

1'956

st. John's Senior and Junior Amateur Hockey League

All player~ participating in the senior and junior , •• •

1ons of the league are invited to attend a screen·

QIVIS , 'I h k . of instructional f1 ms on oc ey theory at St. lng d' , . patrick's Hell Au 1tonum on

THURSDAY. NOVEMBER 15th, at 8:15 p.m. th ugh the co-operation of the Audio Visual branch ;othe Deportment of Education and the Brother·

; ·perior of St. Patrick's Hall. u EXECUTIVE MEETING

Teem delegates and execut~~e members wi!l hold a short meeting ot .the conclustc-n of tht meehng. ,~rH.l~ trll

MEMOR!AL UNIVERSITY OF NEWFOUNDLAND

Applications are invited for the post of

Assistant to the .Bursar Salary Scale 3000-1 00-3500:·1 00-4000

Apply in writing to the Bursar, Memorial

University of Newfoundland stating educa·

tional qualification, age and experience. A

1horough knowledge of accounting is essential. :.Jr\1.16

OFFICE TO RENT With bathroom facilities •.

165 WATER ST.

Apply

MRS. G. MERCER, 139 Campbeil Avenue Or DIAL 6541L

DANCING Every Friday Night

ST. KEVIN'S HALL, GOULDS

THIS FRIDAY • • THE QUEEN'S MEN ORCH.

CARD PARTY Spomored by the St. Raphael's Parish Association

of Mount Cashel

Will be held at

B. I. S. CLUB ROOMS I

on I -•

Thursday Eve.ning November 15th, beginning at 8.30 p.m. '

t BRIDGE ·and . AUCTION -~

t PRIZES FOR CARDS and LUCKY NUMBERS

Supper will be served Price SOc

(Patrons are asked to please bring their awn cards) .

Patrician's Bowling League All Ex-Pupils and Fathers of Pupils who would

li~e to participate in the Patricians Bowling

Series (Men's and Mixed League) contact the

following: E. Kearsey, 5370; E. Barron, 6044A;

R. O'Toole or at. St. Pat~s Alley~.

INSURANCE AGENCIES.

1/

'

CLUB OPEN 5 P.M! 'TO-DAY.

TO-NIGHT. Evan Johnson's. . Orchestra. DIAL 90069

DANCING· AND DINING MGHTLY IN UNIQUE AND INTIMATE ATMOSPHERE

INTIUAINMINT MON., WID., flU. SAT. OPIN I r.M. 1-0DKflllD ~D., TIL 10017

Crystal Palace

CLUB C(OSED

TON-IGHT.

PRIV k. TE DINNER

PARTY. •

Ctcll

THERE OUGHT A BE A LAW!

S,r AND WAIT WtTfl TICKET ~s LONG­AS 'I'OU PLEASE .

By FAGAL!' and SHORTEN

'Su-r JUST iAI<!: A NAP WITH iiCI<ET , . IN POCKET

CONDUCTOR. 11\10!05 'IOU LIKE CONi~GIOUS OISEIISE."'

T"AiS VI~EN l-IE COMES AT 'IOU LIKE JCT·PR.OPELLED 1<0CKET~

FOR SALE-1 cow (ust fresh· cncd. Anply to Samuel D. 'fnylor, Fox '1 rap. nov14,15 -----FOR SALE-A new milking toll'. Apply to 1\lichael 1\lnsclln, :\!ldrllc Cove.

FOR SALE,-1948 Chev. Sedan. In running order $125,00. 'Phone 0066111.

PIANO, ORGAN TUNING nnd Repairing. Single Tuning Six Dollars. Wm. HOPLEY, 10 Carnation St. 'Phone 2810·L. octl,lm.

WHEN YOUR HOUSE NEEDS a rc;:air job done, small or la&gc or It needs to be paint· cd at low cc.st ane efficient

, TO RENT - On LcMarchant · service Kindly call J. Strat· Hond. n self tontalncd heated ton, 42 Cashin A1•cnue. Dial AUCl'ION

I I apartment consisting of kit· 7500·F. )ne12,1mth

chen, bntltr.mm, bedroom,' ALL WOOL MATTReSSES are !il'lng room nnd trunk room. picked, re-covered: springs Thursday, Nov. lSi Electric rc.ngr. In kitchen. daJ~ beds rewired; Inner 1.30 p.m. I Private cntrnr.cc. Suitable 1· spring mattresses recondition· for quiet conolc only. 'fclc· , ed. Write, Phone 3891, wire

NOTICE phone U411-F · ' H. J. Keal~. 16 Mount Royal TO J.ET-One Cttrnls;d-bc!l-.-~ Avenue. .

ST, ·JOHN'S sitting room. Also wanted male TIRES-Non·\'Uicanlzcd mud-grip

25 Head Choice i I

Butchers' Cattle i boarders. 'Phone 2397-A. G.P. retreads-all sizes.· Limited

T. A. & B. SOCIETY o Box 51. novl3.14,15,16,17 quantity only. Reg. $16.50 I

I I

Th 1 R • ---------------.- now on salc-$14.95. Large size, e annua equtem

1

WANTED TO BUY ,- Baby 1 6 ply 522.00. Used Tire Sales, i Mass for deceased mem· l'lothcs, children s coats, 86 Hamilton street. 1'

. clothes, bed clolltlng, cur· ocll7 lm ! bers will be celebrated · tnlns, me11's clothes, boots, --·--- 1'

THURSDAY N i · shoes comics, r;•Jckct books.-

on , ovem· John'D. Snow. 9 New Gower ' FOR SALE I novl4,15 ber 15th, at 8.15 a.m. in , St. scptlB,lm _ : /

____ ;

the Ba~ilica. ; \VAN'rED TO nUY; Accordions,:'· O·ne 1956 Cadillac· ! sewing machines, skates and HOUSES ;;.;,;;;;;=======;;;;, 1 boots, typewriters, comics,

poclcct books. .Tohn D. Snow, 9 New Gower Street.

Won by Robert Hibbs of : F SALE · ~ WANTED DOMESTIC HELP

Family 2 adults and two children. References re-

. quired. Apply

II • MRS. HA.ROLD LAKE,

1 Robinson's Hill or : TELEPHONE 7322

oct16,1m

·.INSURANCE-Bowring Broth• 1

., Limited . lnsuranc.e Depart· 1 ment-Firc, 1\Utomoblle, Mar· • tne and aU Casualty lines. ! Telephone 3131.

Portugal Cove. . I or Please call at Porluga I Cove A Beautiful new· bungalow in

1 h 1 the housing at ea consisting of or DIAL 6253, St. ]o 0 s. Living room, Dining room,

___ · Kitchen, Bntltroom nnd 3 Bed· I rooms, Oil furn?.cc heated, hard·

TO RENT 1 wood floors tbroughout, free- i i hold land !'rice $17,000.00. ' Possession can b<' had in six 1

Jiweeks, $2500.00 clown, balance In DEPENDABLE FIRE INSUR• ANCE-Don't risk your valu·

~========~' : ables to "save" a rcw dollars. :. . Our falr·rate, :ellable policy gives lmmediatn protecUon. 'Phone 6921 or write i. J. Lacey, P.O. BOle 506. repl.tf

New Bungalow CHURCHILL PARK

Three bedrooms. I easy monthly installments. For ! further particulars contact the ·

, undersigned. ' I

• Furnished • Chapel

• Qualified

Embalmers

• Cadillac

Hearstt

DIAL 2321 393 DuCKWORTH ST:

vs. ST. BON'S

1 FURNSSS WITHY tNSUR·

Rent $150.00.

Apply, I New Bungalows constructed to . your own spee:ticat10ns on liar· : . bor View A1•enue ·off 1:nrbay ' Road or in Glc!ldale for a small

BOX No. B-B, Daily News 1 down payment I ANCE- Department of!erlng dependable Insurance--Auto­mobile. Fire, Burglary; Plate 'fransportatlon, Travel Ace!• nov.ta,l4•17 i For these and ot.hcr good bu)"! dent, Liability. Phone 2073. =========;;;;, • see Glass, Tourist Bagllage, '~

Contact STAN FOWLER,~ 1

CARD • A W BROWN ; nouf building, for Fire Auto- • , • · • i mobile and Plate Glass lnsur· ancc. Claims promptly seltl· DR p J : ·REAL ESTATE AGENT i ed. 'Phone 5531-P.O. Box • • , ; 'Phone 2005 51 Patrick Street.'

R:ERT o11.we ' soN, Fir• McNICHO·L·AS 11..iewfoundland \ and Automobile lnsW'ance. I"" •

1 Be safe, be sure, Insure. Tele- S • I phone 2882, P.O. Box 85 WILL BE OUT-OF-TOWN erVICeS 1

Royal Bank Chambers, Sl John's. UNTIL NOVEMBER 24th FREIGHT ACCEPTANCES

FREIGHT ST. JOHN'S·CORNER Barber BROOK SERVICE

---------- 1 ~-~~~~~~~~~·'[ Frcigitt for ~cgular ports St., 'f"HE CENTRAL BARBER SHOP I 1 .Tohn's·Corner Brook Service via I

We nrc now op.cratlng six i St. John's and S.S Northern J

. chairs. You can be assured _LI. -~ _ . _II .!I_ . Ranger will be accpptcd at the 1

of the he~t posslbl!! service ?T~ i Doclt ,Coastal Shed tomorrow. j

plus tJ,e leas~ possible walt· I"J.~An"A'~~~" 1 T.lmrsday, November 15th, 9 a.m. lng. 24 N£'W Gower St. opp. -~~~ , to 5 p.m. and Friday, Novembel'

I

16th 9 a.m. to ;i p.m. and Satur·

Insure Today

with R.C.A.

R. C. ANTHONY INSURANCE

day,' November 17th, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. :

THE JUBILEE GUILDS For ·

Christmas. Gifts _ HAND·MADE IN NEWFOUNDLAND

FOR ALL.­YOUR

HAND w WOVEN - Aprons,·. Tray-cloths, ·Guest-Towels, Scarves, Ties, Luncheon-Sets, Tea-Cloths and Evening Stoles

with Bags to match. :

· 1 9 5 3 HAND~KNITTED - Children's Pullovers and Cardigans, A U 5 T ~ N S E D A N Socks, Mitts and Caps; Infants' - Jackets, Bonnets and.

$'800'·00 Bootees; Angora-Caps, Berets, Mitts and Ladies' GlovQs;

· ' • · i Men's Socks •

. a·aird Motors Ltd I CHRISTMAS CARDS_. of local .. Scen!'!s, suitable for in· ..

• 1 DIAl 80378·9 . ·l dividual Giving or use ·by clubs or busi.ness firms.

MERRYMEETING ROAD ' --------------------:',.~. _,

. I

. Annual Sale of Work

I I

I

(Under the distinguis)teu patronage of His Grace, . )lost Reverend P. ~· Skinner, C.J.M., D.D.)

PRESENTATION CONVENT, CATHEDRAL SQUARE . NOVEMBER 19th and 20th

Sale wil! be opened at 3:30 Turkey Suppers ............................... $1.25

e NOVELTY STALLS AND PARCEL POST e PLAIN AND FANCY WORK e KNITTED GOODS

Admission JOe.

All ·Adult Memb.ers OF THE PARISH OF ST. MICHAEL'S AND ALL·

ANGELS are invited to a RECEPTION ~t tht Parish Hall on WEDNESDAY, November 14th,

at 8 o'clock. Purpose: to give the new Rector

an opportunity of meeting his people.

St. Kevin's Parish ·

ANNUAL FAIR I

NOVEMBER 27 - 28 - 29

. ·-·--------------·--··------·--ALL ROADS LEAD WEST

TO THE

St Patrick's Parish Fair ! IN

HOLY CROSS AUDITORIUM (PATRICK STREET)

Tonight! Tonight! BINGO! BINGO! BINGO!

CARDS- $1.00 First Game at 8.30

e ATTRACTIVE CASH PRIZES

r----------------·-----NIGHrL Y DOOR PRIZE $25.00

6 Tickets for 25' Tickets pu.rchased during week eligible for Grand Bank Night Prize at clcse of Fair.

Try Your Luc:l< on the:

e CASH WHEEL . .

e GOODS WHEEL e 2 FOR 5' WHEEL e CHOCOLATE WHEEL

And solve y~ur Christmas Requirements. You can't go wrong - if you go West to the Parish Fair in Holy Cross Auditorium. (tel) .

~- ·-- ··-------·.

CHALLENGE TO YOUR ABILITY It ish't easy. It requires study and willingness to work, You must like people and be interested in their pro­blems. BUT, to the man who can qualify, the rewards are many, with no "salary ceiling", group and pen· sion benefits. The company is nationally advertised cmd' one of Canada's best known.· To make sure you have the qualifications for success in the business·we shall be glad to arrange interviews. Apply stating age, pre­sent position, if married, length of time resident in community, business background and previous sales experience, if any.

All applications treatd in strict confidence. Apply

P.O. BOX 809

on;:2.6,B,10.13,14 --------

NOW . 19~0

PLYMOUTH s600. WAS $775.00

'.

...

.·,

'· ..

I ·i: I ;_:

.,

Page 16: tre. Claims Lives 'f .: ·txro. .· City · Childrencollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · Wl1ere Flames ' Bl F.\ OiL FIELDS rd REFINERIES MILES 0 lOO SEt~! SUEF ~GYPT

fHE DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY. NOV. 1

MILLEY'S \' . .

~--------------·-------

Ladies' CREPE

DRESSES '

OUT SIZES UP TO 48 Navy Blue, Black, Wine and Royal

s .75 ONLY

Squandering Hunian Resources

:

I

• 1\. TTHE SIGN.

~

~~ @i. < •

~ AND CO. LIMI"I'•D

OF THE

BOOK ' I

By ALAN DONNEI.LY Canadian Press· Staff Writer

01'1'A WA · ( CP )-Canada's uni verslties, which no\v teach about sev..:!n per cent of Canadian young people, Tuesday, were challenged with lhoe statement that belwcrn 25 and 30 per cent of . stul!cnls ' could benefit from higher educa-tion. lllustriou;,

"\Ve ~eem to be doing an admirable job of squandering tlw priceless human resourcocs :\\'ail· able to ·us," said Dr. R. B. W.

, J aekson of the Ontario College uf

I I I

• I

Eclucatlon, Toronto. In a sp~cc.h to top officials ~!rom'

nearly all of Canada's univer· ~!lies, he asl;ecl wl··~ther univer. sltics really want all gifted young people to continue to higber education. ~ · ·

. Ken.net/1 Pool man ........ 3.50 ; Borneo People I

Melco/m Macdonald .. 5.00 . Arctic Bride I

Wando Neil To/boom 4.50 Off-Trail in Nova Scotia

Will R. Bird.,........ . 4.00 I Born To Fly· 1

"I ·sen:e !her~ is a feeling In some cases that you don't want George Blond ........... 3.50 : them to go on," he said. Some 0 Th p I universities apparently wanted to pen e orts restrict enrolm·~nts. · J. Grosvenor and. WORTII LOOKING A.T I I

l!dwecn 2.1 and 30 per cent of L ·. Comdr. L. M. Bath 3.751 the unl,•crsity a)le group were Three Saints & A Sinner , •:pretty good bets" to profit from T/ 5 50 : un!l·drsity .. education. "They won't tarp .... · . ....... ..... . . 1

all succccrl, but they're wortn i Walker·, R.N. . i ha1•lng a look at.' T R b Dr .. Jackson' spoke In the second erence o erfson ..... 3.50 : day of a conference on "Canada's Taste of Glory I crish tn· hl~hcr education'' 'pon· C 1 1 3.95 ! sorer! bv the 3:i·m·~mber National or elon Beo s Conference of Canadian Univcr· 1 Pine Roots · 1

sllics. Gl d T I 3 75 · '!'he dal''• Corum discussions a ys ay or . . i c.cnt.rcd on the problems of g!fted Forward Gunner Asch ! I children who don't ~o to un11"r· • sltl', the failmes . and misfits Hans Hellmuf K1rsf ... .1.50 l amon!! un!l·cr>it)· students - an Grandma lakes a Hand i c~Limalcd one-third or undergrad· . . · I uatcs-and the rli!Cicultics o! ex· John Tori .... ... . .... 3.75: panding teaching ~tarrs to m~ct North of Grand Central 1

an exocctcd hu!!c increase in . ' university cnrol!ncnt,, John P. Marguand .... 5.50 FJ'IA!'>CE ••nonLE:IJS . 1 Our Valiant Few .

The. conference end~ torlny wllh J

a debate on university financ~:•. F. Van Wyck Mason .. .4.50 inclmling ~up_Port from govern· Warm Wind West Wind ; mcnts, Individuals a n d com- , ' 1

panics. Anne Mal, hew ........ 3.95,

NOW A LUXURIOUS RUBBER TILE FLOORING

-- .. . ot.~{(}' rMt{

In handy "lake-home" pock

OOf each . 9" X 9" till.

A .mstrong SERVICE GAUGE

RUBBER TILE EnjoJ' lhe brallly, 1he ilurabilily. 1he superb rrsilitncy of a rubber lile floorl :o;cw Armstrong Strvirr Gau~t Rubber Tiles are amaringly economical ... ea•y to ccmenl and lil )'Oitrsdf in every room ol the houle as l'iellou in lhe ha~rmentl The>· rome in a wide !election ol di!linctive col~uN in •man marblizcd de.•ign. Ready lo carry from !lore lo floor in ligtHI'ieighl "Tile Toler" rarron, containing 48 tiles, tnough In rmer

2i •quare fed. Sec our compleiC r Jn~r· o[ .~ rm•trong Serricc Gauge Rubber I ile1 .wnn. \\'e will gladly help )Oil de>ign a Ooor pauern.

CHEST·ER DAWE I-TD·. • IJISTRIBUTORS FOR WORLD FA)IOUS .JOIJI\'S·~IAN\'ILLE ROOfll'iG ~

• ASBESTOS PllODUC'J'S. • ~Iac311LLAN & DJ,OI-:Dl·:L SAI.ES 1.1'0.·, Tl~lBER, MOULDING A:-\0

IJECORA'l'IVE PLYWOODS. . • HUII.DII\'G ~IA'l'ERIALS JS OUR BUSINESS t\ND NOT A SJDF,I,Il\F. • OtJ-:R iO.OOO ft. of floor space; OI'ES SATURDt\ 't'S AS II MONDA \'S. • L\RGEST MiSORT~U:NT OF BUII.DING ~IATERIALS IN

:"iEWFOUNDI.AND. FREE ,UJPU; PARKING SP,\CE.

ro-N "THE I WIMP'

8.

S. MILLEY LTD. Prime ~linistcr St. ~aurcr:t Northern Trader ai~)adY has announced Ius !!OI • crnmcnt's Intention to double fed· H. S. M. Kemp .. 3.50; 1--------------------------------~L

C II

· · ern! grants to uni\'ersitlcs fro:n 1----- --------------------...,.--··-·--------' 1\l ·I J'. '-tl·a te's Oltrt IOSprt.nl for treatment and went to a home and drank half a $8,000,000 to $16,000,000 and In '"! o· k & c Ltd I n atl.. ... another of t.lt !Oil~iables arrest· boUle of whiskv and two bottles up a Canada Council with a $100.·1 IC s 0., . She

1 cd the ac•·Usl'll who stood off of wine, aml during that time,

,\ man •:.;ar~:t 0 :nth unlawful nnd strucl; the L'Ull>tablc In the Sheaves said, },e took tlle rule 000•00 endowment. The 8 k 11

'PHONES 2008 • 3191 • 4425 ' ass;m!t and. abt 11:11h a;saulllng facn with his mt. as (hey were Indication of increased help to 00 SB ers . f a pol~rr oHtl'CI' wllll<! he was per· "olnn

0,1t to tht police van. Th from Pollock's potkc~ when they ' unil'•milies from Canadian hu>i·

r l'llllllr, il'' !IIIli' 11·as bcflli'C " " e were holh drlll·k. fhe polic,e · nc•. •. came Tucsdav. !rom W. R.

0 . • .. • • . • • '· . case was pusfJJNtCd 1 t f r1 th I J Sl I " ::llii~l.>tra.tc o :"\••11! In the ~la_gls· : Fh·e men rl·,·r.stc" for rlrllllk· a er nun P. ru e n 1Ca\'C s 1 Carroll, chairman of the Cana· t t ( t ,. tel tal' mormng " " possession. I dian Chamber of Commerce's ed· -------1 ra r 5 1111 ~' • '·' • ·c • . · · en ness were f•Jurd guilty and They were btJ!h found guilty. ·, uc•, t1'on committrc.

lie pleaded unl ~mlly to the first . fined. Ont m:;n well !mown I " G B • £ char~r anrt !!II· II tu the ~ccunci. I • 0 Pollock WAS SCiltcnced to 6 i "A great body of people in: eauJ.v flC s Constahl'· Cl·;·\;:11'1 said that he I the court, and 'Hie \loman plead· months and She~\'CS to two I business aro~ sincere!)· intcrcs~cd t •

11 ~ 111 tu

1 .• 1 ~ p

1,. 111outh Stores 011 ; cd nut Slli!IY In th~ charge of months In the ~oenltcntlary, 1 in these problems and 1rould. ltke _ · ,

1'1\·muuth II unci ir. l'csponsc to a being r!nu.1k. :11 o were allowed A young woma1• pleaded not' to hclo." he sairl. " ... Busmcss if your hair is unruly or di!fi· .c·all aud r

01,

11c; a large crowd; to _go to rnuo.d up witnesses. guilty to tl1c rtoar;lr. of conduct· I is lookin!( to this eon~c;cnce I~ 1 cult tn manage, it may be that

;;•tiwi'L'Co The ~~·c·uscrl was !den·. Several civil tusc~ wet•e heard. lug hcr:.elf in a disorderly man·. bring forward snmc dehml9 l·~ad> you're using a shampoo th<tt's the

1·iricd a~·thc

111;,

11 who a,saultcd! Fh•c moturisl! arrested u\'el' nel' wtolle drunk at 4.30 a.m. on I in a practical way in wh1ch we wrong type lor your hair. There

.:1r pruprirtm r.t the l'afc, a i' t.h.c _wet!k·~lid ,"ue L'!largcd with Water Street Ol' November 11th.\ maY be or assstancc." arc shampoos Ol,l the market lo-

t'lliuc>t'. who 1,_ H hlcedln;: fl'lllll d1 h lug \1 h!lc ~ondm the lnflu· The pollee constable nn duty

1

daY H!r normal, dry and oily hm th mliUIJl and nnsr and had a I cnce of alcohu In each case said that l1e wa8 by the War B , • f types. Investigate these. And harllv ~wo!tcn rye. The con· I the trials wcr'l postponed until ;\lcmorlal Oil Duel;\\ orth Street llC S \ whc~ you shampoo your hair,. fol-

·,1aht'~ wok th• prnprlclm' to the a later date ar d they were al· when he .heard shouting coming! , \\'IJOl,E'.SAI.E SAJ.ES UP . low 1t by a clea. r or cream nnsc --------- lowed to go uu oall of $200 each f m \V t r Street so he \"nnt \ I p t c t th s a ro a c • n ori'AWA (CP) - Whole;alc \\'lOSe urpo~ IS . () ll c () p

with suretlrs tJ the same amount down to sc"' wh,\1 WR5 I,Jappenlng. 1 . ]l·ance 1 siighth· to 5621 . • and lca1'c your hn1r soft and ca;y A young man 11as charged with lie found tht> accuse~, anolber ~~7~0~0 8 ln Sep~ember (rom ssts:.l to manage.

.1tcal!ng fotu' gailum of gasoline w.>man and a man In front of 763 000 a 1.ear earlier, thr bureau . -. - . from a cm· un ,.1 e l'urtugai Cove the Commrrclnl Cables building, of 'statistics,. re orted 1'uesday. A na1l l~rush. ~nd a puuuce stone llu~d un Scpu•p,lLer 5th. He he said, and told them to be Sales for the Jinuary-Scptcmhrr arc a~ essc~llal to lovely ha.ncis ple,1dcd g•lilty In thl' charge and quiet but the rontinucd to be . 1 1 1 11 d s· •20 ?"! 000 up as na1I po\Jsh and hand lotwn. C I I I

,. d' ,r t·r R C ' d l pcnoc o a c ~.. ···' . ' b b d . t ons ~ 1 c ... u .1 cy ,.,. 1e .. : noisy s11 be arrcstc t1c man from SS,004.939,000 la~t ~·car. Keep _nih rush an pulouce ~ o~·~ ~1.1'. 1 cad a st~ll,mcnt the aceus·

1 and the accused for being drunk. EDITOR I>JES handy m the bathroom \•:here l oull

REDDY KILOWATT(!) • cd had made ~nd signed. 'l'hc 1 The girl !tartell tl' abuse the DETROIT (CP) _ ~!ar;hall R. sec the~ and be reminded lo usc r------------1; younl! man ~·al Pl'L•vlously con-I young polil'cman and Insisted Walker former Winnipeg news· them dally. I l'ictcd and l!nr~ for a similar I that ~he was 111'1 drunk. "Whht's naper ~an who was editor ol the --··-- .--- .. -----

ELECTRICITY offence duril,g September. ~tag. the nmtlel' will: you," she said, Detroit Times for more than 3~ Al\:-iOUl\CE~IE:'\1' l1

1strate o:i\e!l: fined him S50 urI "m·c you jealouf tlmt you ne1·er 1·cars. rlicd eaJ•Iy Tuesday alter ~ ------- --·-------- 1

16 weeks.. got a kiss, toJ, policeman. You Jon" illness. He ll'a~ 64, Walker Rov. H. and ~Irs. Torral'i!lc of i

Shoplifts to Catch

Nali01 orders fro

ll'edn·2sday fi'll-• 100 men into

Swissair pi; about ;o D:

troops, we a.m. (10 p.m

force last we

of alerts fc got off tho~

or another Jltlll.·\oriL E. 1..

the force f<:'Jlow Can;

"' ~alhcred 1\'orrl !ron !Ia;: lla:

limn nn will1 is CHEAP in ST. JOHN~S

Hobert l'ollo·r·k and Sydney

1

don't own th~ town yet bay had been r.ews editor of The Portugal Colle anno~ncc the en· • A shopping bag is the shoplifter',; A sllt·type pocket or slillcd coat "Booster" box, ~~~d ~~ if Sheaves wc1·~ l'ltargcd In the wop." At this point the 1\lag!s- Times since he joined it in 1920 gagement of their daughler,l best friend., 1\lrs. IJragoti, who's is usctl by "shoplilted" ~lary take home·, has a >lit in court with slr.Jllng cigarettes, trate Interrupted her and told A native of :Michigan, he worke•l Ba;·bara to Albert .J. .lanes of St. I paid to shot•IUt the Hess depart· IJragoti as she lifts perfume !rom ward "shopiUter". Whilr sunglasses an1! n rule from n I1Cr to be quiet or he would on the \Vinnipc~ Trbunc b.eforc John's, son n[ ~lr. ~!. C. J.apcs 1 mcnt store, shows how sweater l~ a cosmetic counter whUe sales· hunts lor somethin~ In hlr . Burn~. con:

-=-q;;t:;ndl.t:uu:/==- !!ar Shca~·es 11.1 aded not guilly ellargc her w!th contempt of joinin~ 'fhP Time>. r.nd the late \\'. S .. lanes cl Halifax. slipped into bag while clerk ts c!Hks are busy talking at end of ~Ir. Dragoli dill!~ ~ ··anlshilJ 1 ~ 10

confer

LIG" "... and told a story of meeting Pol. court Al\IBUSII TWO BUSES Nova Scotia. novl3,14,15(tell busy. counter, wllh lin~rrir. llammarskjol

Go !oclt, and lookha; for a car pump Sh~ asked for permission to ALGIERS · ( APJ - National!>! --0·-·E·-1·,·-T·H--S n~· ,\LIC1t\ IJ,'RT from !\'c•r 1

c o ., • • ., .. , ., t , • fl rl 1 Tl 11 1 b ., sh·~ sa,\'S, bitina statistics to show follow in the tr~<f!:;nn njla< Canadian 0

' ' to x a at t r ~ 1e po cc cv · get a witness t<, prove that she rebels nmhushed two usc< ~a~l - " · ··'""''·'··• dcnee ~aid thlll no car with R was not drullh "1'11 get the or Oran Monday nigh!. klll!ng WCKER-Passed-~-;;-l'-;~~~lcn-. A.llentown, Pa.-(NEAl-A Bronx that housewives, lawyers, govern- forcement establJ>!Jrli by hi! ' a comb flat tire was in the place the Scotchman" she said and asked seven Europeans and k11lnaopmg 1 ~I d N h 12tl R I tJ N y k c·t 1 k ment employes, students and even her. . the co . , , . b r 'I

1 y, . on ay, ovem er 1, o Jer 1 ew or 1 Y. 10mcma ·cr visits clcr,dv. men arc among those· 11.n· 01. to the we

Chenp. Reliable Electr1cit'

ln ami Around St. John~ accused sa1d tl.r. car was at the .'or a few }Jour•. to fl'nd the mim,· an unknown urn er o "os em~. A T •· g-cd 74· survived hl' \lh11ow rc" I 1 t g • ld

1 : ucnCJ', a . • I' '· .. 0 .,u ar Y. 0 n on. a ha\··~.been caught and convicted a;.

time. '· who was arrested at the same The dead lclucled slx so icrs ?"c WJ[e, Edith: 4 sister~ and nne 1 shophllmg· spree-with the blessw~ He told how both of them tlme. one civilian, Troops be~an a ll'lilc. brother in U.S.A. '!'he funeral will j of the .Hess Brothers D•2partment shoplifters over the years. , ; trial insecticide, .~

spread search for the rebel band take place to-day at 2.30 p.m: from II Store management. IIER COURSE for store em· I' year was \'aluc.ol 'I oCfARabno;•Et S s~.d~~AD.A" EDITION the residence of his ?~oth.c~·m·law, "I enjoy my wo ·k 1 d . ploycs emphasizes this point: sligh{ly ]ower th~n 1951

Jr.ck Pcarcey, 58 Qmd1 V1d1 Road.\ \' ,, . . 1, rcmc~ 0~~ 5 ; I "Keep )'Our eyes on el'~ryonc.'' 1 ____ ... ---LmoiDON (CP) - Thr. Times Interment_ at the Anglican ceme· '· Ql.f, a sBar)osn~.lrlso.ck:lslanlrl~thDarnagdotm1 '0t11h1cfc Sl,1c points out. that "shoplifter. s 1 PRIMITI\'_E ( I.OCK,

Tuesday dei'Oics n special 16-pa~c F t R d ·' r 11 t 1 h h • t 1 d supplement to Canada-"this great tcr~·. orcs _en • i of a .14-year-old boy and an 8- In s ea "any! l~g I at s no na_ll·l· n past cenlunr·' ~·r. ··t . k' d ,

1 rl l\IOORE-Dfl•tl suddenly nt . , .. ,ar-o]d. girl "There' so tl . " eel down, and clles the ; uthen!Jc. hands at regula! .n~cm.;

transatlantic ·m~ om.' n an c · Corner Brook, ~o1•ember 12th,

1

. ~~~w to learn' e •cr, d ~ :~ 11,11

" a ted case of tb~ rowboat that was 1

1 used to sh01r the !'' •;J~e cl

:~~~lnl~ W: ~:;:i:r:~/:Ps/1:~~ Patrick W. l\looi'C, age 5~;' )c3V· got to remain \t~ le~~ta~11~ 0~t~~ stolen from a New York City de- ho_un. .· when Canada Is "stenplng to the log to mourn his wlf~, Rita, and I ahead of the fastmoving, quick partmcnt store not many year~ i • . . --.-front by virll'o'l nrither of her lhree chilclrcn Pat~lck, James i willed shoplifters preying on store.; 1 ago. · . SOC[,\L \\ J.i~LIR~ •• ·

meml)crshlp of

1 h P Common· and Calhrlne: nlso sJX hroLhcrs, throughout the country, Th f' b f h r . _The famous Par:• ,•Hir.tfl .. ,, . Leo, John anrt Thomas at St. · ! , c lr~t me.m er 0 • er anuly; Pllnl •. which also <:rlrd JX'lr.

~~~~}~~ ~~~i~ho~h~e~T~~}~~j";;~~~P~!~o· ,John's, ll\lgh ~i.d .James In the THAT QU01'~\TJO~ is the key i ~~~r/0 110~k-~n II:·~ flcl(l of 1 s_~· · ents, 1\'as incorporat<'d in 16·~ F. US:\ and Philip at Corner In Mrs. Dragoll's successful •'shot'· I D ! ~nd a\\ en orccn~ent, ~ I.·, -·-----·--

tt4 riti~

!llg~:Jfi. ~g)~ ~j:~ Social B~o~k and two ~istcrs, !\Irs. Rich· lifting" career. She's ·an employe 1

v:I~Yo~~os:Jso:h~!~~er n~nlt~rct" ~re: , :loth tb~ flower• ~:n! ·

1 ani Joy, Wast;ngton, D.C., :md 1 ~r the department store and b~r bo 1. · a ~ 1'~~·: I·,, rllnip herb, cllmrno~. :~ .

~fc~l~~ra~~F;a~~~o~:~~Jc~~~~~~~ 1\lrs. Harold l\turp11Y of Bronk- JOb i~ to in>truct employes in the i w!ien'~~ts~:~w~e~~me ~h~~h1ceman• 7";, hal'e a ;Iron, m:~. ··F~IJl.lCan,aol, nlcht it ha~ swung Into lin~ with Jyn, i\.Y. Furc•ral Wednesday c~e1·ices anll t~ieks. used by sho?· 1 ·-· _..." _: __ _s~_____Je_ cdn 01 or.

the Winnipeg declaration and th•t morning at ~:n hng. R.I.P. lifters. Her !lghtfmgered work m' 1

2 Prlce We struck .it lucky ••• buy!ng up th~ complete close-out stock ~f a.nother

record shop. We saved. Now it's your turn to save. ..-·

November 14th·

to .24th .,

·'

\

e CLASSICAL e SEMI CLASSICAL •·WESTERN e POPULAR

·J

···,··~·--'·-""'--··---·--1.....:.-.;_

~ __ -··- --- II!·~ \'arious departments is carried it favor; a mlxccl economl' in NOTI~ OF 'l'IIA.NKS on to test alertness of personnel-which "the need !or T'rivale Pntcr· . . -.----1- if any employe catdles ~Irs. Dra-

. orise in manv fi•,lds" is achnow- The Wife and fal~lly o! I he . ate "oli in the act of shopliftinrt t~e or !et!~cd. The part"'' M~ision' was Norma.n Porter Wlshe~ to _lhanlt i ;he receives a r~ward 1 pc~~onally I ta'ken ol rln;crl ,,.~e1<o11d n'~"•ings. most smccrcly ali the kmd fr1ends, I from Max Hcs~. the store's prcsi·

NF.JTJtTT, "lKE TO ~IEF.T and. clergymen of dlffcrc.nt de· I dent. : WASHINGTON (t\T') - In~ia's nominations who so lmthfully . · . ·I

Rmbassador ;aiel after a While visited him during his illness; for In classes, she wean; a mask to i Hou··~ visit Tucsrla:v th1t Pres· those who sent wreaths, sprays, j prcserl'c her anonymity. ident F.i•enhnwcr ancl Prime Min· telegr::·ms, cards, and leiters r.J! • ~Irs. Dragoti !lartcd her dcpa.rt­lster Nehru have. a'!rer•l to meet sympathy or in any, way helped

1

me.nt store career a~ a salcsgrr!. here, prol1~bl" bdo"~ ll,c r"rl nf to nllcviate their sorrow. With QUJck to. spot shopl~flers whos~ lhh year: AmbPs~ador G .• Menta special thanks to Rev. N. Wins-or depredations cost !X!Iallcrs through­told reporters that. n clerlnltc an· of Lewis porte and Rev. G. Ralph out the cou.nt.ry a total of nror~ nouncemenl •eltiM th• date w\11 of Laurcnceton who eomluctcd the than 300 m1lhon rl?liars an~ually, M m•tl• with!~ • "'ePtr. funeral· service. her sense of detecll?n was respon.

-1\IATJ ·1\Yo\U 1'ERROJI OVER sl!Jle for her prgmoho~ to store de-NAlltOBT, ·Kenya (Rc11lers)- tectivc.

The Brlli•h armv wi11 han1l ov~r responsibil!l'• to the ooJir,. ill thP four-year f!.P.ht ~~ain~t the 1\lrn Mau terrors! cult. her~ thl• "'~ck It wa• a"'101•ncerl Tnesdav. r.over rior Sir F.vclyl' T!?Tin<' """r""""'1 tile declolon, ctfr.cli''" Nov. 17, In thp }~J!'•l•t'"r ""''""'1.

FTII~ JnJP'lS Oll'r MAYSVH.r:r;:, )(,., CAPl A

.oneetncnhr fire. rirnoed hv· th,. c~­nloslnn r• one or thrcP. 20 non.qaJ. lon ~asoJine tank• ~• a · T~xa~o ' ln•l'<...::nlant lwrr. Tn nr.d nnl •' .roo· I tr"l ,,,. r•"\'C'r"l h,. ... ,.,. f"'~"lt' "'''"'" ' ,l.,t• httf m"c: ""'~,., .. 1 .. •1 t., 1·" r,,, .... t,.,.,. lf~:rlf ntlf ... , .. , ..... u•., t'\"'11: ..... 1" .. :.·

•r,;c:: fnt\rJ'IIn"' f1nt thn r;r ... '""" ~ ... ,... h•ot•"ht tu1f1C't' ,., ... f .... l.' /t "'' ....... .,.,n Qo one was lrijurcd In th~ blast 1

Boys' Raglans Boys' Raglans with. zip

tn linin~. Sizes 24 to 36 3hades ol nr.vy and gray. Now OIJ salr for only ·

$.14.95 A'f THE

. '

I The role of "professional shop· . tifler" followed when the store's : training progl'~m .was inaugurat-ed. ·

' I TJIAT UTILE .BIT o! larceny that's' said ·to exist in the best ·of us is responsible for much shop· lifting, accorrling to !\Irs. Dragoti, who attributes the urge in many cases to the desire to get som·~· thing for nothin~.

Shoplift·~rs ran come from ani' walk of life, can be of any a11e n'r I race, .and wltcthcr t!:•,y'rc rich or poor 1s seldom a !odor, a~corJ. 11111 lo Mrs. Dragoti.

The greatest olf~iHlers arc nft· en the apparently 'good citizens,"

CITY

@@® •

POUND

. ·:. -:

II\

"Oiv11 him back his dog or we'll get a iawyer!'' ---

In wh: quilrk

JlUblic c the Brtis

action in E ~cross th

With letter. of Britain

to 5

coir