<<

' .... . ' , , , I ., ~i· ' ·-~· . ;--,·~r·:~ ... ~ ·DOYLE'S ON DISPI.t.Y . ~• ! ·...... NEWFOUNDLAND THE FAMILY SIZE COD LIVER­ "BUie.K I_PECIAL" THE DAILY NEWS OIL CONTAINS VITAMINS Te~:i'a Nova Moton Ltd. ~·;·.:.::-..:;:.;..: ,;.:;_-: (,f\l\Lh:.. DIIYIF.I Ttl ~\ Vol. 6'1. No. 249 THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., MONDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1960 (Price. 7 Cents) .. , ...... _... ·A and D

an erous - ···- --· ------'"'' II"•:• 1•,· '1 -¥- . " '' •I... •' 1,''. Kozlov Gives Warning ·Nikit~ Laughs At To U.S. And Britain Ousting Reports MOSCOW-Reuters-Deputy Premier Fro! Kozlov Sund11 11'arned the United Stales and 1 By ROBERT ELPliiCK , iet· on President Leonid Brezhnev Rrltain against the "dangerous 3d venture" of establishing a Polaris submarine base In Seotland. : ~f,OSCOW

He 11-11 mtldnt the keynote sptech before leaders of the Communist 'llorld In Moscow's packet! Ntktta Khrushchev Saturday 1 vtet leaders laughed and joked S rt p I Th ~ h launrhed celebrations of the 43rd 1nnlversary of the Bolshevik revo· laughed at reports he has b~en · about the rumors of a coup. po s a ace. e sp cc . deposed by former premter . K IN GOOD liUl\IOR lutlon. Seated on the Ntage wtre Premier Khrushchev, President Leonid Brezhe\ and other lead· Georgi Malenkov. i "Khrushche~ just '11ade fun of ers. Seated between Khrushchev and Brezhnev. was Chinese head of Slate Llu Shao-chi. After joking about it with Ca-. the reports,'' Johnson said. "He nadian Ambassador David M. was in very good humor and All the delegations now have: la~.t month. . . I b K'll Johnson, he personally turned up looked well." arri\·ed in Moscow for the Red i Apparently the Bt•ttlsh govern· I Bom 1 S at Moscow ail'port to welcome a. The amhass8dor said he re- Square parade today and a Com-, men! is tying to move in dir-jl 21 , C.~inese Communist delegation. CGil'ed the impr·rssi~n Kllrnsll- munist summit conference expec- ectly opposite directions all all' His appeat·ance there served as chcv had only returne~ to ~los- ted to follow. :once .... Such actions sharply In' es 12 another means to dispel Western cow Saturday hut had' snid.notlt- Koz]OI' said the agreement a~-' increase. the danger ~o Britain l JUf .rumors of a coup circulating. ing about this ..rohnson added he nounced Tuesday for a Polarts herself m case a coilntct breaks through the world Friday. 'was !liven only 30 minutes 11·arn- missile base at Holy Loch. Scot.! out.'' NEW YORK !APl - Two pet·· Johnson, who is returning to ing of tile meeting wllidt he bar! land. was "a \'ery dangerous ' 1\oziov derided \-'ice-President . sons were killed and at least I~ Canada, called upon Khrushchev requested in view of his forth­ ~:amhle of the American mili·l R_ichard. Nix_on f~r sayin_g t~e So· were severely injur~d \~hen . sltortlv befot·e the premier drove coming departure. tary." . . . , i 1'1~1 Unmn IS sllll -~ ehtld ln~US· bomb 1;ent off, Sundar ntght tn to the' airport. The Peking delegation. led by lie satd the U.S. mtlttary 1trtally compared \Ill~ the Umted 1a subway trat~ at a Harlem c Khrushchev g I' inn c d widely head of state Liu Shao-chi. •r· JIOUR~IELON, France--llelmett•d fierman soldiers raise their nation.• I flag while bareheaded planned to se.nd the nuclear-pow ! St~les; . , stop, :when they met and said: "Well,! rived for celebrations of the 43rd french soldier raises the french flag at ceremony XO\·. 3rt!, markin!( the arrival of German ered submarmes from Scotland, Thts ts -a good exa:nple of the: F" "d th b b here 1 am.. 1 anniversary of the Bolshevik re1- lroops at training camp herr. ~layors of small town~ in Xorthern Fra~ce planned to confer on "to prowl near l~e s•a boundar-~ popular saying that he who has I 1 dtredmentltsatt · eh Ito: t te~- i Johnson ·who had called earl-: olution ~tomlav what attitude they should adopt toward the Gennan trootJS quartered in the area. after one may le5 of the Soviet Union.'' bile in bis·mouth can only taste ~ 0 c as e. ram a e Ia .el--'·---·~·-· _ ·-· ______._.._.·.-.· __ , ...... - .. -- Kozlov added: "Who ·cail· ran. bitter," Kozlov said. mdependent 5ubwa~ stat on at :or reCused to allow t1 1em to ~ven pa'~ through h ~~town bt•nuse he feal't~d vinlcne~. ll was recall· to understand that the point at I He described Nixon as "like 1 1~5th Str.eet an~ Eighth Avenue. I d•d K ed that th~ Germans took prtsoners rn the area m 1942, to· fight the resistance movement and issue is a very dangerous adven-!chi!d who concentrates on catch· Flreflghting eqUipment Was rush. c eleven pe1sons Were sitot.-llPI Photo. t~re of the American military de·ii~g a butte~lly and rails to no-fed to the scene. an I ates eep ------·····------I. ~tgned ~o aggrayate sh~rply the' h_ce .~hat 1! going on around f Since Oct. 2, four mysterious •II mternaltonal 11 t u a t to n and Ihtm. • homemade bombs have exploded uN c • • ' W T fraught wi~h dan~erous conse· "Communism is the true_ youth in New York, end there have I 0m m Iss I0 n I ry quences. to tt~ _Amen_ca~.~ponsors I ~~ _the world w~~reas c;aprtallsm been several additional bomb: up Fever .Is h pace . . and therr Br1hsh aJIK'.s. l's tis yesterday, ~e sa1d. • scores. Sunday night's explosion: . The deputy premier condemned The deputy prenper reaffrr~ed Iwas the first In which persons ' British Prime Minister Macmillan the policy of peac.e~ul coexrs~· were killed. ' · · · · T cI H I c !or negotiating with •he Polaris ence and the posslblltty of elimi· By IIAROLD MORRISON Ic~ded or stlent. vole ts beltel'cd 0 0 0 0 ea n use n 1n agreement even as ~~~ discussed nating war even "before the c~m The .subway car was damaged Canadian Press Staff Writer i btg enough to ltp the balance m _ g disarmament with Khrushchev at plcte victory" or commumsm extensiVely. . WASHINGTON tCPl - Dem~-, some states. . the United Nations m New York over the world, - · crat John Kennedy and Repubh-: The :-Jew York Datly News. U:-llTFD \'·\TI0:\'5 \' Y t ~p the commi--ion would go to the·. the assembly se·at reprcsentatJ·,.e,· Ican Richard Nixon, their voices I' which supports Nixon editorially. ., : : · ·. . · . ' · · :. ·. ' -- . . ,hoarse and their hands bruised predicts Kennedy will win the !he LT_mt.ed :-;at tons . cottclhalto~ Congo, They sat~ tt probabl).' ol "the central g?vernment'' of Gable On Iand scratched by eager well- j presidency in "a swee(Y, a land· commtsston for the Congo got m- \l:ould_ leal'e on a fn·st exploratory :the Congo, meamng the Lum· ., wishers maintained a fevel'ish; slide a memorabl l'ictory " The strucltons Saturday to go to the l'tstt 111 10 days or two weeks. I umba gol'ernment. The assembly South American Labor • k L' ,pace S~nday as the most grueJ.I :-Jew~ has been e conducting a . \oung Afncan s_lale and w?rk to _Eight African and .\sian co~m- postponed a ;hoice between L~m· SI( 1St ,ling presidential fight in history Istrow poll in the 50 states.'' : ~econvrn.e ~arlt.amet!t, _ \\:luch ts tnes h~1·c mtroduced a resolulton i umba and Kasavubu del~gal!ons 131 1 • Th k · · 1 reached into its final hours. . , NIXON SEES TIDE : ,enera\1) hJtc~ed .?~'• hle to by winch the Gene~al Assemb~y when tl :·ot_ed the Congo mto th~ s • HOLLYWOOD

·: ·! ·• · (Vol. 4; No. 31). 2nd ST. EDWARD'S. TROOP however, dropped 59. and to polish up his piping . ·, A student in the Memorial Twenty-six Scouts and four The compiled table showed: style. He will be Pipe-Major of Uni1•crsity library last Tuesday HOLD HIKE Wolf Cubs, 156,541; Boy Scouts the Cadet pipe band at Royal afternoon, would have noticed Scouters of the 2nd St. Ed­ 96,368; Lone Scouts, 341; Sea lllilitary College, Kingston, Ont., ward's Boy Scout Troop engag • • ~ short, grey-haired man limp Scouts, 2,368; Rover Scouts, where he is in his final year as : ~"In on a pair of wooden crutches ed in a day-ion& hike into the 3,857; Rover Sea Scouts, 186. an arts student. After grndu- sometime after three o'clock. vicinity of Torbay, on the In· The Canadian movement this ation 0/C 1\loffat hopes to be He was a student of the univer­ dian !\leal Line, nine miles from year has 23,274 adult leaders, posted to the Black Watch, Can- sity, but a handicapped indivi· St. John's last Sunday. all of which are volunteers. ada's only Regular Army High. dual in that he had only one The group of 30 Scouts· hiked • • • land Regiment. · . leg, and which, thus necessitat­ last week were awarded their 6th ST. JOHN'S "B" HOLD 0/C Moffat took up piping at ed the utilization of crutches. hour excursion. TROOP HIKE 17 in the Militia Regiment, He slowly moved over to the • • • Four patrols an4 two leaders Saskatoon Light Infantry, Kin­ open window looking out unto MACPHERSON TROOP of the 8th St. John's Troop "B" dersley, Alta. He is the son of · the. autumn, left-covered cam· AWARDS Boy Scouts took part in an eight !llr. and 1\!rs. Wilfred J. Moffat, pus. Placing a text book on the Three members of the 1st hour excursion into the district Kinqersley, where his father is ledge of the window he began Macpherson Boy Scout Troop surrounding Sugar Loaf last principal of Elizabeth School. to intently read it-while lean· last week were awardedtheir weekend. Seventeen Scouts, Pipe-Major Hill took up pip- ing on his crutches. His face First Class, prologue to the which Included the four Patrol ing at age seven, serl'ed with SCENE from the Play "Tea House of the August lloon", which opens to-night at St. Bonaventure's Culiege at 8.15. The pllf was happy and he had a cheery Queen Scout. The three Scouts Leaders, Stanly Hampton, Gary the British Seaforth Highlanders is •lirected by :\llss Sylvia Wigh, -nod for any who stopped to are John Pottle, Harvey Stone Wilansky, David Howe, and as a boy piper at 15~ in 1928, _ __ ------· talk to him. He was not allow­ and Steve Parsons. David Smallwood (Acting P.L.) leaving them in 19·15 as Pipe· The Scouting Train extends I Add d I Q£ . ing a physical handicap deprive Scoutmaster. Cameron Hop- I Major. Pipe-Mnj. Hill has had. memory of William B. Piercey. Br i gus resse I Tea House him of living a happy and use· congratulations to the three kins and Troop Leader, Roger ,, the pipe-majors course at Edin- . Sin. i.l-St. Anthony.. . J boys. ful life. He was determined to Angel took part. burgh Castle under world fa·. $15.011-Adams SCl'I'ICC Station.: -- I aycees : make good. • • • The' Troop, ·which operated mous Pipe-Major Willy Ross.: . 16.16--Liltlc Harbour We~t.: \\'11liam Pcrcey, aged 41 who: __ Th A , M 6th ST. JOHN'S CHURCH in independent Patrols hiked I A_n instructor .. in piping. and. East, per C.E.W.A. of a h_r.art attack. Octobc;: regular meet 1 PARADE d~<'d Th~ month!~· in~. e ug. oon Are all those people, who arc over milea during the sunny highland Hill ·\I F t E IV B st z,th was laid to rest of thr St. John's .Junior Cham-, . . " Eighty-five Scouts and 5 dancmg._Pipc-~aJ. Sat~rcla?, gifted with good eye-sight, both Saturday-Ions trek. came to Canada In 195o to or- 1 ~ 10 · 00 -:-· ex. ~s er, · : c Oct~het' 29th after a semce 111! her of Commerce took place in Tomght. the production, Tea arms and both legs, able to leaders of three Troops and two Practise in fire lighting and . canize a band for _the 4th Bat· ~- J. ~~ ~tE ~~c. ~~m~~~:11tr~~~ the United Chu_rch at . Bn_gus: thr Xewfoundland Hotel Tues- House of the Augus~ !\loon un· boast good naturedness, such Cub Packs of the 6th St. John's cooking in the outdoors was: talion,, The Canad1an Guards.· ranr · · · :·. ~ _ . . . 1\'Ith Rev. R. \\ells ofhctatmg.j da'' ninht The meeting, un- der the sponsorsh~p of. t~e . as that displayed by the elder· Bay Scouts attended a one emphasized for the younger i He and his wife are now Iil:ing ~~m

the 1980-61 season. $32 OO-Grole Hermitage Bay, flcs ncar the ,\mcrican Embassy. happily. dreked out in smtable . . h' I' ht . , I of more than 450 000 ·

Admission to the meeting per c.E.W.A. ' lme Thursday during a left-wing· costume 'started out for the 1 ~·ollowmg Is en 1g ~mn·., ' · Is It A Space Ship? A Plane? which will be preceded by a $30.00-St. ~{arys (;hurch, Clar· drmonstralion in [a\'01' _of Cu~a traditional "Trick or Treat" Iaddress llr._ Jamieson ans11er~~ dinner has been set at $1.75. An enville. . The scuff:es hroke out m a snle cr!rhratinn. when they hRd .ga~h- , many quest_!Ons ~nd e~tered lll ALGIERS !orris Pomt, were released arter quest10mng .. vrars. will the. foundt>r of. Scope, and remember, alway• "BE ~·; =:.~1c ·Iovera will aoon reap some the company behind both PREPARED." bas long been :~;:;:Side benefits from defense and struments, sot the idea for the :;.~::~:tlectMnic research. organ when he was a "OCH, A 1-U·V·L-Y TONE", a part of the ;:_:i·E:: While workine on vital elec- composer and arranger think! Pipe Major Ronald Hill, :.:;;·::tronic and space research pro- for a li&hter Instrument c;!anadian Guarda, •• he liatens Newfoundland scene :r?~:fects for the government, a ago. critically to the ba(Pipe playing ~:~:,mall Fairfax Va., firm devel- To 1 it Officer Cadet Jon Moffat. ~;.a:~ped two ne:.V musical lnstru· to h 0~hra ~ • 1 player 0/C Moffat recently had a week sc::-:10ents for mass production. li ~t t!s. el eys settin& of lntenaive tutorlnl under Pipe­ ;::::~: Colora are set to· music by 1 Jmpu SPs. These pass Maj. Hll at HQ Central Co~· :;:: ~one called Rhytbm S~ope. The th~f~h small plastic discs on mand, Oakville, to lncreue h1s Imperial dealers Fred an~ Eric Ad~ ;:;:::other, labeled a Vienna Elec-l w c all posibles notes, chodl knowledse of pipe band drill own and operate this modem semce ~·~·~. •:4ron 1c 0 rean by wor kera on , and ha tops are decoded. ---- . ·-- - ... .. · l:!E ~Jhe project, uses light energy T en the light imagea are . station in St. John's. Because the ~: ·;~nd pats from electronic com· 1 transl~ted frCim the discs Into ~! ~;:puteJ'tl to reproduce aounda bet· electrical energy which is then WebuUdwell Adams brothers are ~ood busineBil!IleD :;::. 0:-ter and cheaper in a smaller changed Into sound waves and -real hustlers-and because they have ~=i~rsall. sent out throu1h the speaker mahunyl ;r;• &:: The first Rhythm-Scope mod· Anythln&. • conventional or- first rate products to sell, business ~ AIIB ••v• You. ~;.:;1, wllich could be described gan can do, thia one can do MOII•Y WITH good. g.~~. a musical kaleidoscope is better, the inventora aay, 1 ::!j ~n production. Some 1,1!00 have · It's even poulbl' to , have : Imperlal dealers serve the public from ·~·tt~n ordered for a try-out in other Instrument sounda on the· Port aux Basques to St. John's. Almost alifornia. organ·11 . discs ao that one or-: •l ,._,. _ If It catchea on, you might ganist theoretically could- "play • 1 OOO Newfoundlanders are employed ·'· ·~c -; ook up Olle day at an lnatru· an en~lre orchestra." 1, i~ providing Esso service to motoristll ~'ineat, which resemble• a TV Scope expects to turn out 1 t, ipluhlng be~utlful and 7,000 such oreana with eaally through more than 300 outlets. In · ver-ehanJlil& color patterns on replaceable parts, in the · first addition another 290 residents of the · f ~e~en to £it the mood or the year. 'op~W!Ic. . • Despite Scope'a interest in Island ~ their livings directly with ·• :'l'l!t .. colm .are ·recorded .. on thue lutrmnents, "W're prl') the company· :eompu~ parts ~nd l'e~pond' to marlly In defence !'ellll'cb," Gefllllllllroi•J, IMiuttrl.. . Imperial Oil is proud of the part its lcsl_ U.Spulsel. ~etltion:.. of Jonathan J. Boom,· ~~ com·' ... il 9111MIIIUiiltJ. . IIYI. · ten• Iii lmpouible.- · · pany'1 financi•J -Dfflcer, dealera play in the Newfoundland scene IDIIde the IUIJthm·Scope 11 a "These. two iutruments ware "'. ~ 11ulldlnt . Bfi tape recorder, mltro~ and just extr11.. We made : the IOOilODIIII~7· CallutlodaJ -a part they will continue to play in .•• :.Whttll\1' metal- dlacs, It .can be Rhythm.Scopa for I playthln1. . for flote IIIII !..-, the years to come. ·: .. r;· to fliab ·)JrlcJ ,for ailil· It laid. around: in our laborl· · -. ~d even commerciab. tory for 18 .monthl. before 'WI · •. , .. t'i" prietbl, ~. . tnrentora realllttd tbit '11'1 could tell lt." . ..,, for aompanl• to prepare Bl'OC!m conatdel'l! the Rhythm· FRY'S ENGINEERING IMPERIAL OIL LIMITED , . the tapti with Product plup Scope and the or1an u ''r.. ·11 lprlllldlle Street, ' -~a:w~·~·~:=,:.-out~~··tJie-~;· ~ .. -_ ,.. ;~·~~ ... . I ......

' ' '

ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND The Daily News MONDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 196~ I \ Premier's Mining Forecast • One Killed, 3 $80 Million to $27 5 Million j Injured In Crash In 5 Years Not Unrealistic ... A United States serviceman, 1 cupant of the car which went Thomas Singleton, is still in . off the road at the intersection serious condition at the United 1 at Freshwater and Jerseyside, States Naval Ho~pital, Arg~n-~ Place~tia. Two other men were l!a. today suffermg from m- hurt tn the same accident. j~ries receh·ed in a motor ac-~ It is not yet known exietly ctdent. what caused the accident but The accident claimed the life I police are conducting an inves­ of James Warren, another oc- ligation. ------

E. J. Murphy Of

To Visit Settlements Jd:r. J. R. Tucker, M.P., at present on a tour of his riding, Trinity-Conception, leaves South port today by boat for Thorough­ fare, Ivanhoe, Traytown, Ire­ land's. Eye, British Harbor, Pope'• Harbour and Little Har· llour. To Attend Conference

Fires • ••

The fall meeting of the !it. John's and District Branch of the Canadian Diabetic Associa· tion will be held on November 14th at 8.15 p.m. in Room 102, Memorial University. November 14th to 21st, Is Diabetes Detection Week so the special speaker will be Miss Isobel Lockerbie, National Diet Counsellor of the Diabetic As· sociation in Canada. All interested person• are very welcome to attend.

Specials _For The Home-

RED DOTTED ENGLISH Curtain Lace Scrim White and Cream ON SALE .... 3gc. Yard SPECIAL ..... 3gc. Yard

POUND WHITE JUMBO PRISCILLA Blanketing Curtains Assorted Pieces Size SPECIAL ...... $1.45 lb. 8.1 x 108 ... .'$1.94 Pair ;;.":..·------·------·------T_HE. DAII.Y ~E'!'S!_S_T_;_JOHN'S, NFLD., MONDAY, _N~EMBER .1J.~~ The New Colonialist THE DAILY NEWS By Newfoundland's Only Morning Paper IN· THE NEWS Wayta1er The DAR.! NEWS II a morning paper establl~hed in 1894, and pul): OTI'AWA REVISITED (1) . asked the provinces I<• Sl•l'i\•nrlcr their lislied at the New• Building, 355-359 The domln\un·provil.cial fiscal con· rights to the tollection of income and Duckworth Street, St. John's,· N.ew fcrence whlch opened in July has all the corporatLn tues and es~ate duties in foundland, by Robinson ~ Company, Mppearance lll becoming a marathon return for , ompen,ctury payment~ Limited. · •ffMir. The ,~cond round was fought­ worked out on a highly complex for MEMBEP OF and we mean fought-ln. the last week mula. This dJreemen• lapsed in 1946 THE C:'\NADL~N PRESS of October A slzeaUe part of· the but must of the provinC'!S liked the idea The Canadian Press is exclusivell Npwfoundland delegation very nearly Jf a single col:Prtion authority and were entitled to thr use for republication dl(l not get th.•rp In time. It is, of course, quite prepared 1o enter into a new agree of all news .-fespatches In this paper conceiVable that they might not have ment for the tental of their direct tax credited to it or to the Associated been missed but they, would themselves ing rights. I•• 1947 a new agreement Press or Reuters aud also the local have missed :an intriguing glimpse of was reached ~nd this was renewed it• news publisbf'd therein. Ca11adlan hist•1ry in the making. 1952 and 1957. each tame with some changes. Th~ formul" for computin~ . :yE.~RLY SUBSCRIPTION RATES All Press Service! and feature The railways once used to advertise the rental patd to eac·h province was arltclcs in tins paper are copyright. the deficiench!s and uncertainties of air changed matp;•tally in 1957 chie[Jy be­ · Canada .. . S\2.00 per annum ed and their reproduction is pro·· travel with thP slogan. Travel h)' air • :United Kingdom cause uf Queb"r which wanted to collect hibited. lf you've tlme to spare. There is somc­ its own taxes hut asked Ottawa to rebate and all forci~n lhmg to be said for it tf you happen to countries · Sl4 00 per annum to all federal taxpayers in the province ~tember Audit Burea~ . !in in St. Juhn's. Y~u plan ~·our de' lht' amount ••I lax~ti•m that they had Authorized 9S sewnu class mail, In\\. parture by ail to get yuu to your dc.~­ pa11l to the pro\'incial government. Post Office Department, Ottawa. of Circulation. ,I'll" tinrtlon in amrle time but the weather O\H Torbay must be Iuken into eonsid· This new arrangement was actual!y \IO~DA \' NOV. 7, 1960 eralion. The end result was that half reached in a conference held in 1956 the Newfoundland del~gation found it and it introduced some new features. nee~ssary to m'ltor to Gander to be sure The provinces were given 10 per cent of Amending The Co~stitution of getting started by air on the journey personal income taxes. 9 per cent of to Montreal. Thereafter was suffered corporation t1xes and 50 per cent of Tlte pro\'indal attornevs general There are manv other matters thP sad fate o' those w~o must travel on estate duties collected from their citi­ have adjourned the conference on that could b~ deaft with by a less the m!lk tun on which the sturdy but zens. These were to be supplemented · ·.the repatriation and amendment of exacting method. The present Gov­ almost anachronistic North Stars are by an equalization payment designed to · tlte BS.A. Act aftet meetings ernment, for examplt!, was quite the means of conveyance It took the raise the rct11rns to those provinces best part of ten hours to get from Gan­ wt,use tax pol entia Is were lower than which are rejJorted to have been willing to seek an amendment that der to Montr~•l. Ontario's. This was worked out by tak. marked by a broad measme of would allow Ontario to impose an inr, tl1e averag~ of the per capita tax agreement. indirect sale~ tax. Tt that were Faced at midnight in !llontreal with .vi~lds in the two wealthiest provinces, The desire to domicile the con· done, it would he up to individual the problem of lodgings for the night Ontario and British Columbia. The rc· stitution in Crmada appears to he provinces whether or no they wish­ and uncertainty about a flight out in su 1lant figure was applied to all prov· The Maddening Crowd universal. But first there has to be ed tu take advantage of it. the early morning, thPrc was only one inces to raise their PC" capita tax yield. Edson In logical recourse. That was to board a There was alse included in this new By BRUCE BIOSSAT agreement ou how the basic guar­ ,·t should come as no surprise that the But although ther£> i~ now a fair car and motor to the nation's capital. It deal a stabiliwtion provision. which antees containPd in the B.N.A. Act 1960 campaign, like all those that have hit cf agreement iu principle, the was a tough day of travel but it did assured provinces that their returns Washington may he perm;menth preserved and achieve its purpose although the first from the tax rental agreement in any DOPI:\'G EI.ECTIO:\" I'ERCE!'.'TAGES gone before. has been unable to kHP task of evolving a formula which completely to the high road where exag­ how ~onstit11tional amendments day of the conference wa~ missed. This· year would nJt fall below their average .\IlDS TO TOT.\1, CO:'IIFl'SlON will satisfy all the qm:stions raised geration, distortion and innuendo are was the day on which the prime mlni­ r~ceipts for the two preceding yl'ars. are to be made. a\·oided. h~· the varlou~ provinces is likely st~r shook thP assembled premiers to By l'ETER ImSO:\" Certain rights such as those rc· ~!any times a solid. gentlemanly be­ to he difficult. the \'ery core of their being with his In 1957, the Diefcnbakcr gover!llllent lated to edncatim~ and to the \\'ASII1:\GTON, (i\EAl-Wilh nMI ginning has been made, with the fullest counter·propos11s to their July appeals railed a dominion provincial confer­ political statisticians-the polite name intent of maintaining that level. But preservation of thf~ fundamental Progress has been made. There for a larger slice of the federal lax enle It was :ben agrePd that the share for dopsters-still figuring that the s<~mehow, as the campaign waxes, the assurances given tr the Frcllch­ is no real about the mal·. ur~enc~· cake. It set the scene for a curious con­ each province got of it~ personal income election will he awfully close, thcv are le\"el of performance declines. speakin~ minorit~· will clearlv be kr and the indil'ati,m~ are that in lhct in which all ten premiers. regard­ tax collectionr, should be raisl'd from keeping watch on every factor . that \\'ithout getting into the partisan as­ snhjcct to revision only h\' llll· tinie the problem will he solved on less of party affiliations. found them­ 10 per cent to 13 per cent At the same might mil!ht hold a halance of power pects of the matters, it is obviously un­ animous const'nt of thP provinces. a satisfactory hasis. selves agreed dl least in their opposi­ time, recognition of the special rlis· and swing the result one way or the f,Jrtunate that the subjects o£ Quemoy. tion tv the fetieral plan ab:litics of the Atlantic provinces was other. ~latsu and Cuba ha\·e been so thoroug,h· made in the form of special payments Depending on whether you arc talking ly injected into this campagin. AI this point it may be desirable to to be made fnr four years. These are to a Republican or a Democrat, there Inescapably, both presidential nom· Last Desperate Effort provide some historical background. It known as the Atlantic Provinces Adjust· i' a hope or a fear that one candidate ince~ tend to goad each other on these all began in 1942 when, lor the better ment Grants. And now the history Irs­ might win the popular \'ole and still as on many issues. Where policy points Ha,·ing refusL'd throughout his two the I op politir:d appraisers in every and more effective organization of war· son is over and we come to the July l(Jse the electoral college \"Ole. of extreme delicacy are involved. this tenm to he u political president, state of the union. Thev believe time financing, the federal government conference. This has happened only twice before can do little to a•h·ance the country's in l'. S. history. Geut'ral Eisf~nhower has suddenlv Kennedy to be the likely \vinner in interest. The heat of the campaign forum ' In 1876 Rutherford B. Hayes got is not the place for such points to be decided to go all out to save Vice- 22 states with 282 electoral votes 4.033,955 popular votes to 4,284,757 for tested. President Nixon from defeat in to· and only 26!1 electoral votes are What Others Are Saying Samuel J. Tilden. But Hayes won the The candidates. knowing the dang~rs, mon ow's election. His recent emer­ needed to win. THIS ENGLAND 1970, as predicted by Ira Needles, chair­ presidency with 185 electoral votes to should perhaps have understood this gence as a campaigner has reveal­ This magazine says that the only New Statesman man of the Canadian lllanufacturers As­ 184 for Tilden. In 1888 Benjamin Harrison got only better than is apparent. ed tile need of a last desperate great imponderable is the religious "We choose a number of men from sociation tariff committee. And General the studio audience", said Mr. Philip Electric's staff wlll continue the shrink­ 5.444,337 popular votes to 5.540.050 for But. fundamentally, the responsibility effort the Republicans to re­ issue but this is as much likely to by Wedge, AR's manager of quiz programs. age that has reduced it from 95,000 to Grover Cleveland. But Harrison won the for the quality of our campaigns rests trieve the po.~ilion of their candi­ favour KennedY as to harm him. "We tie ladies' corsets round their 75,000 since 1952. presidency with 233 electoral voles to on those who insist they must be car· 168 for Cleveland. date. Of course, elections can always waists, and the first to get their corsets nivals of bitter conflict. The slron~ par· Even if Canada succeeded in blockinfl BJt unless e\perienced observers, confound the experts and undo the off and hold them above their heads are TIIOUGII TillS HASN'T 11.'\PPESED tisans on both sides constantly hammer put on the program. We find this gives out competitive goods, that would only at their candidates to hit harder, to pollsters and all other valid prog· pollsters. But the measure of encourage Canadian manufacturers to for 72 years. there is a long chance it u~ the right sort of contestant in a high might happen again if, say. Kennedy make more extreme argument. nosticators uf election results are anxiety in the Nixon camp is plain proportion of cases." cuntinue practices now pricing their pro­ dead wrong. i\ lr. Nixm1 seems tu b to be seen and it looks very much ducts out of home and foreign markets. piled up a much bigger popular role The candidates can and do resi;t this -E\·enlng Standard. than he needed in a few big stale> like the lcacter of a lust cause. as if Sen. Keunedy is riding the vic­ In a small cupboard in my flat, used Canadian products would be harder to for a time. But as Election Day nears Pennsylvania and Ohio but lost hy ntar· they hear: "If you will just say this l'.S. New~ & World Report, a tory train. The trend seems too ob­ for storing the two daily papers, The sell abroad-and we're an export iug country-if we weren't hu)·ing ahroad. nw margins in enough smaller states thin~ more strongly you'll win over the usuallv comervative magazine, has. vious to be denied despite the Times and the Daily Express, there is to gi\·c i'iixon a larger electoral vote. a mouse. The Dally Express is eaten And at the same time. they'd trow less undecided. 1f you'll only take a position pnblisbed in its latest. issue the hed~ing about the uncertaintv of and less competitive there. This possibilill' brings the figure bo~·s ol! that topic, you'll take ~lichigan." avidly, The Times not touched. Is there to studying the size of the \'Ole an(l var­ opinions of 'what it h not always possible-though it should Hard Tinies For Smugglers Stratford Beacon·Herald mahogany veneer plywood. And no wonder. The Japanese product finishes dueling three million aliens, prisoners be. Pressures are yielded to, particularly With hydro.eleetric power potential those from the persistent partisans. When Rabhie Burus wrote about employed to conceal the illicit as ·satisfactorily as easterq veneers cost· and other ineligibles cuts it to 10~ mil· rapidly being utilized, and wi\h nuclear lion. If t_hc usual 60 per cent of them the devil being away with the good~ after they had been safely power for industry still in its infancy, ing twice as much. or more than twice But these people should not bear all a~ much. Why should Canadians be for. are registered to go to the polls, the exciseman, he was expressing a brought ashore. coal seems certain to be required in the blame. There are a good many self­ ced to inflate the cost of their homes? total vote wil be around 62.4 million. styled high-minded folk who profess at sentiment that was lo!lg endorsed Eastern Canada for years to come. Al­ This is only a lillie above the 62 million · . But these were the blissful days berta has a lot of coal which is believed the outset that they want not a mm­ in Newfoundlrilld where the smug­ Spare us the usual alibis about cheap who voted in 1956. of yore whe11 liquor was hard to will be in demand as a power source paign of personalities but of issues. gling of spidts out of St. Pierre Japanese labor. Canadians who would But registrations already indicate the They are often the first to complain come by from legitimate sources for years if only it can be delivered mke such excuses are deluding them· vote may go well beyond that figure. was something of a national cheaply enough to eastern markets. So at the dullness which afflicts a cam· and the thirsty were encouraged selves. Studies show that Japanese The five most populous states-New pastime. In fact there was an the Research Council of Alberta is ex· paign without sharp combat. for purely selfish reasons to adopt prices are being held down while Jan­ York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Illinois and occasion some years ago when the p~rimenting with the idea of transport· anese wages, fringe benefits and gen· California-have already accounted for There is a surprisingly wide feeling a tolerant attitude towards the ing coal in oil pipelines. Jud~e of the Central District Court era! living standards rise rapidly. It's an increased registration of 3.5 million. in this country that politics is not poll· crime "f That is no Transporting solids suspended in looked sorrowrully over his spec­ smu~gling. because keep, aggressive Japanese in· Democrats claim that, the larger the tics without a slngfest. Maybe the poli· longer necessary since adequate liquid in a pipeline is nothing new, at· dustrialists are constantly $eeking new registration and vote, the better their ticians should resist more strongly than tacles at a man he had just fined though the lqiuid base has usually been suprlies are now available . from . goods for new markets, are pushing chance of winning. they do. But obviously, so long as this for a breach of the Customs Act water. The use of oil as the transport· automation with all speed, are doing feeling Is so general, our campaigns are legal sources. But that does not and observed that this should he a ing medium, we are told, is a field large· e;·erything to put Japanese goods on USING THE GALLUP ESTIMATES not going to improve markedly, alter the fact that those who prize Iy unexplored but Is being investigated of 56.8 million Americans preferring lesson tc him. "Remember," said shelves all over the world. They are slugging matches-and ancient tradition and continue to because oil pipelines from Alberta to the Democrats, 40.4 million the Repub­ shows-because all too many Americans the Judge, "there's no sin in smug­ Eastern Canada are already in exist· licans and 6.2 million independent or bring in a litde of the warming Postwar Germany and many other want them to be. glin~ unless VQu're caught." ence. European countries are doing the same undecided, for a total of 103.4 million­ spirit without benefit of customs • • • For the fe\v that were caught, There are problems Involved, of thing-including the Soviet Union. chlse to the 104·mlllion vote estimate STEP UP TO JETS? feel they havt' a grit'vance when above-the Democrats follow party lines then· were manv who got away · course. For instance, a way must be A distressing situation in American the eagle eves of the Mounties dis­ found of getting coal mixed with the Canada and its industrialists will get which they did not do in 1952 and with murder. Some. of the most nowhere by continuing to believe that folk life has recently been brought out cover them. These are hard times oil, then getting it unmixed at the other 1956. into the open. Our Hallowe'en witches­ delightful stories of Newfoundland end of the pipelioe. And there are other the world owes it a living. Trying to break down the total to for .;mugglers whc, mav sometimes especially those 'drawn by illustrator~ ingenuity are concerned with the difficulties to be overcome. see how the minority groups may line feel that the:·~ is no longer any The discovery that many Congolese arc still using obsolete and interior fly. methods emploved to deceive the However, scientists are resourceful, have no interest in higher pay or regu. up presents many imponderables. ing equipment-that is, brooms made respect for thr, presfrvation of old Of the estimated 25 million Catholics customs and pt11ice N0 less ingen­ and we may yet see Alberta oil and coal Jar work has been made by an inter­ out of the traditional twigs and scraps, traditions. flowing eastward to market through the of voting ag~. more than the 60 per ious were some of the methods national Labour Office team of experts charges the National Broom Manufactur­ same pipelines. All that will be neces· sent to see how the 14,000,000 Congolese cent average or over 15 million are ex· ers Assn. In this land of the latest and sary then will be a double tap at the fit into a seale of income brackets. They peeled to vote. If two.thirds of them fol­ best, something certainly ought to be receivln& end of the pipeline., one aide don't. Last June, just before independ­ low the expected pattern and vote for done about it. discharging' oil and the other soal In so­ ence, th·e pay of urban workers in the Kennedy it will gi;·e the Democrats a • • • Dealing With Delinque~cy lution. ·It would double Alberta's revenue Congo averaged $18 a month. Millions five-million vote advantage, MISUSING A PREROGATIVE from two of Ita chief natural resources. If a similar percentage of the esti· ; Five boys who appeared recentlY. der 1eview lor · the: purpose ·of of natives in the rural areas, few regu· It is well known that there is an un· Fantutli: u it 1ounds, it is quite likely larly employed, handle hardly any cash. mated 37 million Protcctants of voting written law al!O)Ving ladies to Indulge befl>re the magistratf at Bell Island revising it in the light experi- of to· come to pau. They can get by with a minimum of age vote for Nixon-whic:a is by no in a little subtraction when revealing were dt>clared to be juvenile delin- ence. · . . work, and prefer lots o~ leisure. means as good an assumptic::-it would their ages, even on official forms. But give the Republicans a seven-million quunts Two were placed on pro- Th A ' th . WAILING IS FOI\ WEAKLINGS a woman in England seems to have gone thin · Farming is mostly left to the women. vote advantage. bation, one wa~ fined arid two were e · ct. was some • g m .e Vancouver Sun too far. She was accused of taking off If the wails for protective tariffs re­ ·By tradition they are the toilers of the put in the of the Director nature. expen­ OF THE APPROXI~IATELY 10 MIL­ 2!l years from her real age of 58 when ..:u~tody of a . far•rea~hing flect 1eneral thln)dng among Canada's field, just as by custom any native who of Child Wdlare. ment m the begim~g •• It may LION Negroes of voting age, far less applying for a wedding licence. "A bit ir(duitrlal and busines.s leaders, then has managed by luck or effort to get too much", agreed the magistrate. Tllese nltlv have been the mo~t now ?e nece$-~art to ~1ve 1t another this country 18 Indeed In for· tough his hands on some cash is expected to than the average 60 per cent are expect· ed to vote because of poll taxes and times. support any family parasite who hears approprinte llll'asure~ that could be !o~k m o~der to dete;t~tlne. wl~e~er other restrictions on registering. And politicians try to analyze. Beeau~a · it means these leaden of his affluence and turns up to share taken. Nothh ~. ·howPver, was said It IS adequately fulfilling 1ts lJlltial there is no known basis for determining 1 haven't yet recoplzed that fat end com· it. So, if he has a job, a pay raise Is the O'ne event which bothers them more about psychological ·examinations purposes. J.aat thing he wants, because it will make how the three.to-flve million who do vote than all the others this year Is the un· placent Canada haa to fight for eeonomic will divide. which. might hel_p to reveal the O'IT-.A_W_A_NIB--DS-.FUND- s· existence In the. tough competitive him poorer, not better off. decided vote. Two special polls just Organized labor's 18 million members world. made ·by Facta Consolidated In Califor· caust!s of their behaviour as the , Vlttorla Timel · From these facts alone it is obvious cannot be counted on to vote as a bloc, . If Canadian industry has no answer nla and the Belden Poll in Texas show first step' to a cure:. Where teenage Ottawa Jw preaented the !laue that that getting the Congo on its feet econ· · even though their leaders may lean to this competition but an attempt to the· undecided vote Increased from U offenders are com:err1ed, this is a provlnc11 can tU their provincial ml· wall competing . goods out with high omically and raising living standards is heavily Democratic. And the unions rep· per cent in September to 16 per cent ID · necessarv. preliminary. to effective denta on perscinal and corporation in· · di.tties, tllen doleful forecasts will indeed a vastly bigger task than most western· resent only about a fourth of the total October. labor force. tre · tm t · comu M much u th11 UU. But H theJ ·come true. era had aupposed .. It is not just a mat· If this Ill true nationally, it prove~ a en • - revert to thla fonner method of ra!Jinll : ter of technical and financial aid and A farm voting age population of 12 only that the TV dehtes have coli'~ But in view· of the extent of funds, the procedure will not prevent There -will Indeed be 15 per cent of . canada's working force unemployed by 'organization: Deep. rooted attitudes and to 15 million is even· less predictable fused the \'Oters more than they wero juvenile .. misbehaviour, it may be canada from levying the revenue It . . . customs must be chnged. No wonder a liecau~e there is no sharp• far111 issue. before. An!l it makes prediction of tha · Wondered.if tt.e pr~sent legi!Jlation muat have Jor national defence, forelan national nature and for carry'li!a on U.N. 'official on the spot recently said, There are, of course, overlaps in these ontconie more impossible than a moDUt might not ~ usefully brought uri- commitment&, domeauc amieea of a the netion'a bualness In a:eneral "We. shall be here for years." various segments of the total vote which · aa:o •

.. , THE 'DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., MONDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1960 5 -- Americans Split Vote By DAVID ROWNTREE LEWISPORTE NEWS Canadian Press Staff Writer • NEW YORK !CPl-Americans have the disconcerting habit-dis· WEDDING BELLS !Club. Mr. Scevlour Is president Iprojects, demonstrations, dis- their hall which was well patron· concerting to a politidnn anyway Tucker-Budden of Lewlsporte A.O.T.S. Service cusslon group techniques, pub· !zed and proceeds satisfactory. -af sometimes snlitting their LEWISPORTE-The bells of Club. Mr. Hayward Is an active lie apeakinl and parliamentary At the regular meeting of vote at election time.

St. Matthews United Church layman of St. Matthew's Church., procedure. the Masonic Lodge on Monday 1 In next Tuesday's general elec· were rung on Tuesday, Oct. Both services were well attend- A banquet was served by the last, P.M. Claude Northcott was tion for instance, a ·voter may 18th, announcing the marriage ed and enjoyed. Ilocal club leaders In the hall elected treasurer replacing Mr. vole. for one party's candidate for of Pearl Tucker, formerly of which was greatly enjoyed and Geo. W. Perry who is residing pres1dent and then tusn around

Ship Cove, Cape Onion, and GIRL GUIDES AND BROWNIE 1 appreciated. Special speakers 1 at St. John's. and bick the opposition party's 1 Roy, youngster son of Hubert PACK 1 were Mr. Clem· Williams, Prln- !llr. and Mrs. Arch Robbins 1 offerings for congressman, gover-! and the late Grace Budden. The A v~ry pl.easant event took 1 cipa\ of Lewisporte Amalaga. and two sons of Lumsden, were no~ o~ mayor .. This is known as

ceremony was performed by the place m G111dlng and Brownies Imated Hi~b School and Mr. in town on Sunday, Oct. 23rd, 1 spht-hcket votmg. 111inlster, Rev. A. B. Legrow, when on Oct. 24th, In the S. A. Frank Hayward Chief Forester guests of Mrs. Robbins' brother Take Florida, Texas, Virginia~ B.A., B.D., and was attended Young People's Hall sponsored A.N.D. Company. After every: W. A. Taylor and Mrs. Taylor. and Tennessee as examples. All i by friends and well wishers. by 1st. Lewlsporte Girl Guides, one had enjoyed the good eats !llrs. Pearl Starkes was In are in the south, and the south Wedding music was provided and Brownie Pack ~nd attended provided and llseened with plea· town recently from Nipper's traditionally votes De.mocratle. I by !\Irs. J. L. Budden, aunt of br mothers and friends of the 1sure and Interest to the speak- Hr., guest of her brother-in· Despite this, all ·our states ! the groo~. . I g1rls. Chairman for the evening Icrs a mock 4-H Club general law, Mrs. Will Starkes. voted for Dwight Elsenho.wer as ! The br1de entered the church was 1\lrs. J. L. Budden, who ad· meeting. The executive of this Mrs. Arthur Hann spent a president In 1952 and 19511. The · escorted by :~t~;. Ewnn. Norman · dressed. _the com pan~· wannly 1mock meeting made up of rep. recent Sunday here from Cape governors and senators are 11111 who gave her m mamage. She Iand efficiently. rcsentatlves from the various Freels, guest of Rev. A. B. and Democratic and there is only a 1 was attractively gowned in . A welcome was extended to I 4-H Clubs in this division name Mrs. Legrow at the manse. sprinkling of Republican repre· i

white tulle an~ lace, ballerina I all by Rosalind. Barfoot. Jy-President: Mr. Clifford Mrs. Hettie Ryan from Cor· sentatlves in the House. 1 length ~~·1th Pill. box hal and Mrs. H. Gould1~g from Grand Baker, Campbellton; 1\lr. Ed. ner Brook is at present visiting ~TO ELECT 34 S~NATOR!I 1 short \'ell, carrymg a bouquet ~Falls, the Salvahon Army area Flynn, Norris Arm· Secretary with her brother-in-law, Mr. 1 Besides choosmg a president oi red and white carnations. I director of the Girl Guides in 1 Miss Purl Jones, 'Gay Side: Dorman Noble on Main Street. and many loc~l o~flclals Tuesday. The ma.tron o! honou: wa~ Jllrs. I Central N~wfoundla~d enrolled I Treasurer, 1\Ir. Joe McGrath, Congratulations are extended Ithe voters w1Jl p1ck 34 senators. Emmehne Pardy, slster-~n-law l the followmg Br~wmcs: Brenda ) Tilling; News Reporter, .Mrs. 1\!r. Dorman Miles who recently Twenty-three of these scats were of _the g~oom, who 11:as prettily Peckford, Francis Locke, Betty Don Russell, Lewisporle; Song celebrated his birthday. won by the ~emocrats last time, attired m a ballcrma length Locke, Beulah Downton, Joy Lender, Mrs. Arthur Laytc, ·1\!r. E. J. Cooke, until re· Ill bv Republicans. The last Sen dress o.! pastel blue nylon, with Bursey, Shirley Snow and Shir· Blrchy Bay; General Leader, · cently. manager C.N.R. in New· I' ate had a 66-34. majority for the head p1ese to match and carry- ley Dwyer. Mrs. Eileen Russell, Lewii!)lorte. foundland. accompanied by Mr .. Democrats: their holdover mar­ ing a bouquet of white carnal- Golden bars were presented 1 Included In the mock meet- E House, were here last week Igin iB 43·23. All 437 House of . ions .. Her bridesmaid was l\liss; to the following Brownies by I ing was a· demonstration contest on a ~upervlsory visit to offic· Representatives seats are at I Pauhne Hart, ~ close fnend who Mrs. B~rfoot: .Brada Freake, Demonstrations' were given by !ala here. Istake. In the last house, the Dem­ 1 ~hose pastel pmk lace. a match· • Betty Colsb, ~tnda Stuckless . ~Irs. Don Hooper, campbellton; Mrs. Rose Noble is at present o;rats had 21l3, the Republicans, mg. head band and a houquel I and F~ora Wh1te. • 1~!r, Dorman Dawe, Seldom at Twilllngate doing hair dress- la4. . : similar to the matron of bon- I Sernce stars were presented I Come By; Mr. Edt~ar Burke, ing at the request of se\•eral 1 Among well • known !enators l our. I by lllrs. A. B. Legrow to: Brada Tilting· Mrs Stewart Lewis ladles from that community. whose terms are not up for Te· The groom was supported by [ Frcakc, Betty Coish, Linda Gay Slde' M; Harvey Canning' She is accompanied by her little newal this year 11re Wayne Morse his two brothers, Ted and Smith Stuckless and Flora White. Blrchy Ba;·; ·1\lr. Warrick Hill: son Garry. . d grac· , al leader and roje 1 1 d Robbins and met there by her. best .to upset bls chances for re-, co~ld . be upset m C\ew Hamp-/ !\Irs. Joseph Pardy felt on their lous\y to welcome the new I )Irs. Heber Ha~t ancd Mea ~1~: son W. A Taylor . motoring! ~Jechon, Senator Estes Kef au~ er I shire ~f ]\ennedy's ~ew England Cl b W4 k recent birthdays. On Oct. 14th. Guides ' rs. I h s . d . H I IS acknowledged. to be so ar I followmg IS great enough I u e e It being lllr. Pardy's birthday 1\lrs.' J. L. Budden then pre-~ ver Hooper of Campbellton are ere on un ay evemng. er I ahead that his Republfcan op-~ TRIES FOR SENATE · 1 the family, consisting of Ray- sented badges to the following to . be congratulat~d on. the ma~y friends are. happy to; ponent. Bradley FrazIer. has In Iowa. Hersch~! Loveless I mond Pardy and wife, Harold Girl Guides: achievement . of this chemhed ha\e her back agam. I given up campaignin~. Dem~- I mem.J is giving up the governor. I OTTA \\'A. Oct. 31-Young this will be reflected In di>cus· and wife, Fred and wife, Fann~· 2nd. Class Badges to Gladys 1 award to their cl~b. The con- 1 cratic leaders are talkmg eon.l ship to trv for a formerlv Re-i farmers fron' all corner> of the s1on periods and other eH•nts. (a daughter), Miss Norman For- White, Rosaline Barfoot and I ~er~rce l closed With e~eryone dently of swinging ~ennessee: publican Senate position and is I ~orlh Al;lerica~ contine.nt. will Speakers WI I! include Federal I 1 ward. Emmeline (another Betty Martin. ee ng. t was worthWhile, and SPY RING BROKES away from the Republlcan .col· i given 'II 50·50 chance of winning. .1010 1n Canada s 29th Nahonal Agriculture .Mmister. Hon. AI· daughter), Mrs. Ted Budden Child Nursing Badges to II_IUCh mformatlon and instruc- PARIS !Re.utersl -. French i umn in the presidential bal!otmg 1 Loveles~ was mentioned in July 1 4-l! Club Week being held 12· vin Hamilton. Clarence Camp- ga\·e dad a surprise party with Irene Stuckless and Gladys t~ve knowledge had been. de· 1 counter • espiOnage pollee have ISEE HU!'tiPHREY WIN I as a possible vice·presidentia1 117. i bell. President of the National the usual packed basket and a White r1ved from same. Best Wishes arrested ebout 10 persons In an A surprising number of report~ 1 partner for Kennedy From Alaska to Florida and, Hockey Lea~ue and Dr. E. 1. lol•ely gift. Aft~r the various awards were are. extended to all clubs and lnv~stigation of an a II e g e_d: talk of the possibility that Hube;t 1 Mrs. :l!aurinc · Neuberger.! from Newfoundland to British i Tyler, Prof;ssor in the Phy· The same procedure was re- presented Capt. A. Barfoot gave their lea?ers for every future Pollsb • run. spy. ne.two~k m i Humphrey, . John 1\e n n e d Y gil widow of the late Democratic, C?lumbia. the. boys and girls 1 chology Department. Brandon pealed on 1\lrs. Pardy's birth· a brief but informative address co-operabon and success, France. The ~vesllgahon IS .re·1 stro~gest r1~al !or the ?emo· senator from Oregon ''ho was a · will _leave the1r farms for an [ College Inc., Brandon, Manito· day, Oct. 18th. The beautifully on the high standards and values ported to ha\e begun followmg cr·ahc pres1denhal r.ommatlon strong advocate of ~o-operation I exc1tmg, Hentful week at Tor·' ba.

1 decorated birthday cakes, made of guiding. His address was ACTIVITIES C.N.R. the murder last week of a Pollsh- 1 earlier in _the rear_. may have with c.a~ad~, is meeting tough onto a~d Ottawa_as guests of the: . The group will h~ld. disc.us· 8 1 and decorated by 1\Irs. Ray well received and appreciated Activities are on the upward born photographer. In a search, trouble boldml! h1s Mmnesota Sen· compehhon m bit! to hold his.1 Canadwn Councri on 4-H Clubs. s1on pcnods under the dlrc<"hon Pardy for each birthday were Refreshments were served ~~ trend as the season adv~nces on of his ~orne, they are reporte.d t~ ate seat. ~ poll. conducted by the seat. Elmo Smith, 8 former Re· Each province in Canada will of Dr. Tyler. spend a half day placed on the table and cut by those present by the Guides and the C.N.R. coastal serv1ce. The hav_e discovered documents md1- Minneapolis Tribune showed El· publican go\·ernor. is said to be 1 be represented by 14 club mcm- 1 at the Royal Ontario ~!uscum, the recipients (each in turn), provided by the auxiliary.' The II\[, V. Random was In port re· eatmg that he worked for a spy mer Andersen . Colorado and Alaska. and ~o 1·ernment at the national week a surprise party was held capably provide the necessary 1Friday mght last which was 1 which handled nearh· hal! of all unpre.cedented reg10na suppo~ ·j front porch. 11'011 t he returned. The tO-member Canad1an delr· le,·ct. at !\Irs. Ray Pardy's home in social activities, and co-operate largely attended by a number ithe heroin entering 'the r s in 2: Some surrey~ put ftepresen a- 1DOUGL.~S SEES WISSER galion allcnderl the National honour of her husband and sis· in making Lewisporte Girl of young people and older peo· 'the last 10 years · · 1 h\·~ Frank Coffm hip in the Canadian ter·ln·law 111rs. Norman For· Guide Company and Brownie P!e also. A very enjoyable eve· 1 • 1?f mcumbent, John Ree~ !Repl. ·hoping to end the slight Demo· last April as part of an exchange 4-H moi'Cment has been chmh· ward. Pack the success it is. nmg was spent. 11 is under· I I m the campaign. for gol erno~. cratic edge in control o! the 25 program. ing steadily and this year 11 i~ Another big birthday cake, stood there will be a series of I I. Kennedy's regiOnal attraction Illinois seats in the Honse, they· Theme of the week's program· estimated to he at a record 1 the usual delicious lunch, and • , 4·H CLUB CONFERENCE these dances during the coming! LEODPEOALTDI\~!L~REDERtRED \ ; IS alsotfel,t to endang,errLev~\reectt -are not gil·en much hope of stop· i~ "HI and Education." and 70.000. the happy family gathering . weeks, · · 'IJ • eu 1 ers - Sa 1tons -a 11 s e1 tances. o re.... · ping the re-election or Senator ---·------.. ···------1 with an addition of several Lew1sporte was honoured to • _ ICongolese authorihes have an. 1 tion as the Repubhcan semor Paul Douglas mem. l. · friends. What birthdays and be host to Notre Dame Bay 4·H 1 PERSONALS noun~ed that anyone found guilty senator from Massachusetts. But . eratic candidat~s hare been sup· does will be a measure r.f th! happy parties for the Pardys. Club leaders from Monday Qc. Con ratulat' ·of VIolence or tenorism in the his opponent, Mayor Thomas Douglas' f o 11 ow1 r g and the ported for thr presidencr in llli· conlidl·nce the southern sl~te;

Best wishes are extended to all tober 24th. to Monday, October Bart, !on of ~~~s :~~ ~~end~ city would be executed In public. O'Connor of Springfield, is ! 1 strong showing . of Jud~e Otto· nois in only six of the last 15 hal'e in Lyndon Johnsou as a £u for many, man> more such 27th. Rideout who ~clebr t ;· . · The crackdo":n com e s aft,er comparative unknown and the 1 Ker~er

INFANTS' UNDERWEAR -~•·sidt, wrop-araund &lyle, I and bullon.front vosts fOR tOYS In Rnt cattan. Sizot 3-6·9 mont hi -1 and 2 ytara. ~.-.- Ponmans ha•• tht quality lllat llllnds lht rugged wtar mothers. want ~··. · lor their bey1. DRESS AND SPORT SOCKS OTHER~ PRODUCTS: Mtrint";S"Uncltrwear, ' Mtrlno "71" Undtrweor1Fl•te•llntd Underwear, Penmen: Golf He:e, '•nmons Mi"'' '••mons Sweaters. \ 'TH!

. ' THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., MONDAY, NOVF.MBER 7, 1960

• ,.,.. 'I' "ASTRO-GUIDE" By Ceean ~~~·:Social-Personal... For Monday, November 7 Present--For You and Yours , •. Return hospitality to. :::~· - Column - people "ho have cntert;.ined )OU, Your leme of llllmor "ill do much tOI>w11il~ning up the Bi~DAY proceeJings. "''''~ >houiJ go • Jhiinted birthday greetings are e~ceptionally we:! todal', as vi· .. being extende!i to Mrs. Georgina . brations are \er~· f.t\Or,\i,!e Best, Golf Avenue. who.celebrat· where mo~t bu-.ine~' lr~n,;n::tic:nc; 8d:.h~r 77th birthday on Satur. are concerned. ~Ioney sh~u:d ~~i:Nove111ber 5th. Greetings Paris Is Influenced By 1930s· : present no problems n~11. . . . . ll ~rQm her three sisters. · Pa sf ••. FinL•nJ sumndcrcd to Fd11re ... Atl:tnta, G~ .. 1•.ill huiid a sy:r~m of c!~=:r:: tr~:r.. a Ru~sian in\.a~1on 15Z ;cars from suhuri''i to Um; ntown ~t~~ ago. Rus,ia ·al1o inl',lllcd !'in· tiom from \~ n;;:;, pa~s~:-:gcrs \', i': l.md in 1429 unu 1939, hut b! 7.00rn'!d to offi.::s in "carve'· fln,'' of p;-;-.i"li~s apc:-.1\:~~~ Finland rdu~;!s to rcm~.:a in a t.;KJVe :.tic .. t lc•cl ('In c:Jnv~yo; state or subjcc~:.'n. bci:s.

The Day Under Your Sign ARt F.S I eorn Mmh 21 to April 19) LtnRA (Sept.ll t: Otl. <11 i'••n•iGrr .f'n--i rr11::< i,:t,~i·::.·:. ,.{ 1'1•' ~~~;t. i ,... 1', :.•:-· f \·:;•r .. is g~?t;, b·.!~ 1! •u't 2.to: IH.1~fus ~l·•n m;::.,m:,. u.t~·:;:~s. t-1 t,;~ \CT'Y ."rlt;'lt, 1t !''•"• ~ ... I • ""~"·! ·r \' ~,-~ t'l t .:t c-:;:::-··: . CANCER IJu~• 22lo Jul·,ll) CAP:HCORN IDee. 22 to J,, •. •cJ '(.'I:' l''l~:',t'":,q I \~ \ "~'. 1:' .,., :~'! 1 ... ,.,,..,,.• .. ,,,.c'··. ,.!l"r~(~::- ;t:-ht. (' ·,r:·l•·: r'•.'l\' 011·t. :.1.-:· bms: $1.:" 1 :1~· )} ,,.': b,. f':oll ',· })!'~·~:-· ,:•;":" .11~1'1;, 1' ~ r(•;:~ '·. ,AOU.AR!US iJ'": 21 lo Fob: 19) • , L'O (J,:,n lo "'~· 21) I, ••r ( ··.~·~~~ 1"1 • •, 1.:1: ' ·:,I b: &u.r t, :-~·.die:::~;:,"':·, ,:,tw·v:. ;..;.:: ~~.·: \\< :::' ~· ~·!·~ •..:~~~' j :;:.~,: :~~~~t~:.:l'.~: PISCES ( F,:,. 20 f,, ~~'"' 20) _vtr.::,o !Aug. :2•• :•ot. 11) ~ ·: ·1:·•;.1 ''1 1: uri•"•, h:· t"-;,,··s :-rt . t · ·" ''"' : .... ·.:-'~t, t·A~r··i:"l'· ~, 'I >..J .. 'r.! J· f <,;•:.Hn II )r.; :-:~e·c, b-.:~! ~t.:t"':.; t"J ~ ~t nc.1~ ~ .. ~'ju~. :n. ·..:.:··. '

------·--- --··-----·------The DoctGr Says

Treacherous Staph G:rm l-Ias New Foe To Beat

n~· 11.\ROLD Tllmi.\S IIDL\:"\, in~ 1:10ld 1•·ith whi:·h scicnlbt; ~l.D. lwd been f~miliat· lr•t m a n y On prc1·irJ11s occ~ ,ion> I ha1·e F?L'. c~llcd ~ttcmion to the h ~ ,. o c : c:.< <"!me dini-:1:1 report.~ 1rcoll'~ht b)' a resbtant strain th<·t lhc 11~·.r mir·:dc dru~ nut of >tvphy:ocuccJ. an or~<'ni>m on!" 11or':~d in the lalloratorv f,c,"Niy rr~anh-d ~s ~ haclct· ln•t r "'rc'cd li1c cure of pati. i<•l "we1k sister" !I not a nor· e::ts .'l!ffcrinz from a Yarietv of mnl ""'l hnrmless i;·haiJitant of inlcclions including those ca~sed l11! skin ~urfncc!' "nd body car- by s~aphy!ococci. it~:-. Third came a stowl\' mount- Santa's Pr"h1n< ,·ou rcm~mhe1· col- ing group of ob~en·ntions from Out To Prove Women umns tliat dealt 1rith the alarm- all ol'er the world that the fam­ Knit-Hits ir~ ir.cr~ase it, the fire power ilr of stanhs was ~reducing a of this once Jol"ly and despiccrl ,:!rain that "naid no mind'' to Are The Best Salesmen --~- n~cm;·. It ll'IS recently inratl?d the new drugs and went along lhc oocrr.tir!( rooms and Wct·ds rai>ing particular ned just as if of ho>pital,; pronucin2 sur~ic~J no one had c1·cr heard o! penni· complitati0:1s of all ><•rts, snme cillin. btnl. And pcrhnps you recall Fourth cam c e\'cn more the. column thnt spccificall·; ~laJ·ming renorts to the ef!ect c~lle.d at!ention to •he fifll1 col· that penicillin was beginning to umn actirity of the r:ow fc2rcd kick hack at patient.>, produc· "stroh" that infi\lr.11ed home< in~ serious reactions, sometime~ as stowaway in nnd on the borl· fa:rl. ie< of newborn infants. Xext. from the hu II pen, XF!iomri:ie ou!Jiicit\· 1ras gir· came a rookie pitcher c a lie j en the "~olden stnph" 'stap'l· penicillina>c who was able •.o l'locnccu> aurcus 1 th~t neccs- ,trike out penicillin reactions. ~itated the hos•1it31iz·tion of ~i:;th cJme the theory \'ic~ Pre>;drnt Xixon at the he· that mavhc the pesk1· staph was I ~;nnin~ of his c:1mp~iun for the ~• sn,~rt a,; our scientists and '' P•·e>irle"''''· that th? r~

!low many time~ have yo~ heard a woman 11dmit that she 1·o~ed a~oin,:t a woman for presi· dPlll O[ hrr club •im~ly hccause she was "d) ing to ha1·e it"~

i::U::-A~:~~TI~:ev~:enlng, 'lth, the St, John's School Bnneh of the New· foundland Teachers' Assocla· hlgfl school lr.ld 11""5 tlon will hold Its first general through the stage where ~ ~ only thing you can ccu>t on is meeting of the school year. The meeUn1, aebeduled to com· ~ _!fE!!ite......

,· •

THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., MONDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1.960

..·,' , Use Odds 'n' California· Tokay Gr~pes Ends ··?fue A Thanksgiving Boon

FL,\ME Tokay grapes nre, mold cd Into Thanksgiving lrull salad ring, also heaped Into eenter a long with salad greens,

By GAYNOR l\1<\DDOX 1 Tokays, Grapes are a symbol of a ' On our way north, we visited bountiful harvest and belong to wineries in Livermore and Napa the Thanksgiving table. w, \'a1Jcys, where many of the best always include Flame ' T okn y. wines of California .come from. grapes, from California's San There, from our expert guide, Jo.aquin Valley, the 'nly area in ,Jessica ~lcl,nchlin of the Wine th1s country where they ar~ Institute, we learned two ways grown. Driving throu~h Lod:. to n;e wine in pr~parntion of recently we watched the han·est- Th1n';<;iving vegetables. lng of 170,000 tons of these Tok- SAUTER:"'F.·GI.,\ZED ONIONS ays of beautiful· reddish color. ntakrs 5 or 6 senings) certainly a sight to be thanl:fal One and one-hall pounds small for. These juicy grapes hal'e white boilin~ onions, ·~ cup honey crisp texture and of ~ourse are 'i cup Sauterne or water, 1 tea. Spend pennies. not dollars! Ideal for eating out-of-hand. B>Jt spoon wipe l'inegar, 2 table­ Dress up the whole house with this special Thanksgil'ing salad spoons butter, nutmeg, glittering Christmas trims. uses them as an in!(redi~nt along· Remo1·e skins from onions. ~enny wonders! ,Red, Fringe. with other fruits. However. aftc1· Simmer onions until tender in tnmmed cookie compote-hunnv such a salad, the dessert should boilin~ salted water: drain. Thts door-trim plus more ornament~ be cheese, crackers, assorted. may be done ahead of time if to make of odds 'n' ends. Pat- nuts and mints on!)'. . )'OU wish. Bring all remaining ' tern i015: pattern pieces. CREA~IY Ll~IE SALAD RIXG ingredients except nutmeg to 11 C\lakes 12 sen·lngs l boil. Lower heat und simmer i' Send THIRTY-FIVE CEXTS: Two cups .Toka~· grapes, 1 until heated and glazed; baste fin coins 1 for this pattern · I 1 (11-ouncel can mandarin oranges frequently with pan sauce. , • , , , I stamps cannot be acceptedl to IS 2 envelopes plain gelatin, 1 cup Sprinkle li~htly with n utmeg • LONDON-'Wcnrmg a wh1te organza gown, Daphne Fmrbanks, 20, escorted by her proud father, actor 1 ST. JOH:\''S DAILY :I:EWS ' water, l:! cup mandarin orange before serving. Douglas Fnirbnnks, Jr., on their arrival at the Gunrds Chapel here, October 28th, for her wedding to David Weston. 'illousehold Arts Dept. RO FRO:'IIT: syrup, 12 teaspoon grated lim~ SKII.LET CR.\NBERRY Weston is the son of a London shipowner 11nd former Coldstream Guard. (UPI Photo) . ST., WEST, TORONTO, oxr. rind, one-third cup fresh lime RELISH ------;------'Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS, juic~. 14 cup sugar, 14 teaspoon (1\lakes about 1 quart) a cI 1ppmg. · t o B'mg Cros by .... j tlon· 1s:· A wor k'mg crew in the I PATTERN. · ·SUMBER · salt. 1 pint, commercial sour One quart fresh c~;~~nberries, If yo•1're wondering about the , navy. . . . -· cre~m. salad greens. 1 cup water, 1 cup brown sugar 1 Rmstl Tokays: hah·e grapes tpackedl, pinch salt, 1.2 tea­ title of Pat Boone's next flick. • ::IIGM stardom for Carroll to the Sun" is a this-is-Holly and remo1·e seeds. Drain oran : spoon cinnamon,• ~~ teaspoon ''Wnrl"' Bodies,'' the explana· \ (Baby Doll) Faker in "Bridge wood note. ges reserving n11 syrup. Soften l clo\'es, '·, cup Port of grape gelatin in '1 cup cold water ! juice, 14 teaspoon liquid smoke Heat remaining '• cup water to; loptionall. boiling and dissoll'e gelatin in~ Rinse, drain and pick o \·e r Sexiness Exports It, Add orange syrup, lime rind cranberries. Stir water, brown THE DAILY NEWS and juice, sugar and salt. Stir: sugar, salt and spices together until sugar dissoll'es. Chill until ; in a large skillet. 13ring to a Tickle Lee Remick thickened. Whip sour cream: boil. lower heat and simme: By ERSKINE JOHNSON until fluffy. Fold mto gelatin 5 minutes. Add rranberries. mixture. Gently fold in halved. Port or grape juice and liquid Hollywood Correspondent grapes and oranges. Turn into: smoke, tif desiredl. Continue to Newspa11er Enterprise Assn. "TO-DAY'S MESSAGE" 6-cup ring mold. r.hill u n til 1 simmer until skins pop but firm. Un·mold and garnish with Iberrie~ still retain their shape. HOLLYWOOD - (NJi:A) -1 been less Iaug~able. It . was,

salad greens and fill centet• wit;, Pour into a bowl and cool. ; Double-takes on sex-one ver· i the Great Proftle who once I' sion of a movie love scene for said: PUZZLE Merry s"'hoppl'ng '· the ·U.S.A. and a more vivid I ."l\lovie love scenes?' Bah!: The White ! one fur export to Europe only, The c!irector· is forever saying I -caught up with Lee Remick i 'Cut' " I Plague of the pale blue eyes and 'the, ''Sanctuary" is only Lee Re· celluloid reputation (Anatomy' mick's fifth movie in four years I WEEKLY PRIZE In post-war Korea, there are no of a Murder) for being "the but her quick rise ·to stardom, $50.00 official statistics on the sprentl best man-teaser on the screen via blg talent and sultry of tuberculosis; but well Informed today. I charms, has brought her as estimates indicr.te that the figure But righteous old Boston, many ns 15 film offers a year. Is as high as 15 per ~ent in some where Lee was born, can re- "No," however, is ·one of her ! parts of the country. Orten these lax about' Yes Montand's lips favorite words. ' TB patients are forced to Ji1·e I on her collarbones· in an ath·. "I wnlt for the good roles," with their families in unsanitgry letic ~omantic scene for the' she tells it, "because I don't shacks made from sctaps of cor­ film version of William Faulk· i agree with a lot of people who rugated iron and cardboard, and ner's "Sanctuary." I say i should make a lot of Infection spreads at a ghastly "I laughed-and I couldn't· films to have constant expos­ speed. stop laughing," Lee said about 1 ure. 1 don't agree with that Since the end of tho war, the what went on "for export on!~·" because any actreM can do "white plague" hns been the big· behind a' closed 20th Century· that." . gest health problem among Foll ~tudlo door. She's also a big "No" girl Korean children, but ~lowly con­ It wasn't because Lee Is tlck· to fan magazine interviews and ditions are impro1•!ng, and Iish around the collarbones. , she recently employed a public Canada Is doing her share. A1 · It was because director Tony 1 relations firm "to help me tached to the Norwegian-run Richat dson baa a pixie sense avoid that nonsense in a dip· Hanno TB Children'J Hospital in of hurr.or. 1\omatic way because I'm inclin­ Seoul is "Canada H1use", an "He wouldn't say cut," Lee- ed to be rather blunt." 7-3-3-5 outpatients clinic hu~:lt by the Unitarian Service Committee Jf told me. "Yves knew he had I She·~ also opposed to the 6-3-9 Canada. "Canada H'use" pro­ gone liS far as he could go and home image the fan mags like vides free·x rays for O"phnns nnd so did I. But the word 'Cut' to present. Her daughter) is also serves as clothing distribu­ never came. almost two· and, she says: 8-2-5-3-6-8 . "Finally I start~ laughing ''I don't .-want her expos~ to tion Center lp Seoul'> ~1apo slum, were 190,000 people, the well and and so, did Yves. It broke up any part of show business. ·I 6-8-8-5-3-8-7 the sick alike, are crowded into the tension." want her to grow up like I squalid huts without heat light In tile era of the late John: did"-fashionablc schoola until sewage and very little water. Barrymore, director Richard-J1 the acting bug bit her when Most of them are unemployed re- aon'a little joke might have she was '16. fugs from North Korea and · ' war windows with children 'I'}. _ . Each set of numbers represents a word. Using the first number in the to i ,1 I"\ h. n. support. IH1 t-ttlt.& CMMH> first set, select ONE of the three letters opposite it on the dial. Do For youngsters who are found Felt cutouts..:.gay •n• gala on the same with the second number and on until you form a word. Repeat to be lnfeeted, there may be a Christmas shopping bags. Make sa spare bed In the hospit~I. but one for yourself or for bazaar. with the second set of numbers and continue until you have worked out generally, the whole famlly suf. Make gift-shopping merry and today's message. fers from the scourge, and USC EASIER! Quilted or plain Cab­ steff arrange for an P-xtra room ric bags hold gifts galore Cut lo be built onto the family's out, paste on felt trim. Pattern EXAMPLE 949 668 946 shack to serve as a sanatorium, 7373: transfers; directions. and medicine and food Is taken Send THffiTY ·FIVE CENTS WHICH MEANS - WHY NOT WIN. to the house by social workers. • for thb pattern (stamps cannot be accepted> to ST. JOHN'S DAILY NEWS, RULES OF PUZZLE Houaehold Artl Dept, 60 FRONT ST., WEST, TORONTO, ONT. Contestants are required to record each day's answer in the coupon pro­ Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS, vided below. At the end of each week the daily coupons for that week PATTERN NUMBER. "---·-··---- are.· to be sent to !he Daily News. Each entry must contain a week's T h e r e are many problems. , Families whose only POSsessions coupons. : are their needs, frequently move ' from place to place In search of All ~ntries will be received na later than Saturday of next week. added shelter, trylna constantly The weekly prize of $50.00 will be awarded to first correc' entry to locate the relatives that were torn from them during the war opened. Decision aF our judges will be final. 1ears, with the hope of eventual· ' which has been the oackbone of Employees aF the Daily News and members of their immediate family ly re-fonnlng the famUy ll'OUp are not eligible. · Korean society ~or ·over a thou· sand years. . . . The non·denomlnational us~ ;MAN TEASFt,R-WiiUam Fau~er's "Sanctuary" gives de· r..,. _ _,_.,...,.._-~ENTRY COUPON-----.. ----. A· prs to build ~!!other Children a · tlrabiP Lee Remick range to Indulge her "double Uf~"- 1 ''TO·DAY'S MESSAGE" PUZZLE . l TM kHospiAtel aett thMekseaportd ~f movie love scenes for domestic viewing · and more torrid • ) WELCOME WAGON 0 I 0 I . journeypo, froll) 'ISeoul, • ono, the a banksays ones. ror expo rt to E!ll'oP.e, ' Sh' e s sh own h ere' in an export Il c/ o THE DAILY NEWS , l .HOSTESS of the Yellow Sea, hu not re· venaon-with Frances gifted Yves Monbnand. . celv~ any of the foreign aid ' . I . . . r P.o. BOX 520, ST. JOHN'S. ]1 Will Knock at Yaur DcSor which hilS fiooded Into xprea In projects In chUd wel!are, educa... View!ni · her own .filma lS with Gifts and Creetings recent years. There II nt ne tlon, vocational tmininl, roocii JOmethl~g e,~e ,Which Lee [ NAME ...... l from. Friendly Business free hospital bed In ~·city of and community development In 9 us~,u~ says No. [ J 130000 people, and patients from countries In . Asia, the Mlddll! . Se~mg mys_elf on the. screen Nelghboun apd Your the thousands of fisltlng families East and Europe. IEs · totally disutro1111 for· me. r ADDRESS ...... ] C.lvlc and Social Groups on the off-shore islands must Fund r a I sl n g. deadline is very time I see myself I'm r ) On tht 1 , of tmvel for days by ~all boat to Cbrlstmaa. Day, and Canadians convinced .that I'm In the ' . " occc:'s on I ' reach Mokpo's one tree out· :who wish to Include the golden wrong buslnl!la and that I r ...... I N W C t th City . patients clinic. Tubercular In· ilft1' of hope, health add ·hap- shQuld go home." . 0 l ] !__ Borthmer.:.I. e . b I fectlon among school . ehUdren pinus on their Chriltmu, llatl ' ~bort. Taktl!~ ,A n~\v&paper r TODAY'S MESSAGE ...... JJ '. an. I g..· a Ba y, and orphanages In that area II are asked to ll!lld their contrlbu· tYlie error reporting Gary . · · , · frllhtt~~inlly wldelprud. tiona to· USC Headquarters, 78 Crciaby.'s marriage In which .PHONE 94865 - 909-G The USC's elirrent fund ralllnl Sparks Street; Ottawa, Ontario bla name came out u "Gary I ' ...... I '· objective 11240,000 ''Friendship or to the Blllk .of Monlltal St. Cooper" sent Bob 1;loP.e rush· 1 · MONDAY, NOVEMBER 'tit. · · J '· )Do!Jm". to underwlrte o~'er' eo ~ohn's. ' . '-· -··. -· lng to the post office-mailing , __..;--·-;;;' ;.;;,;_;;.._;.;;...;;;.;;.;...;-;;;..-..;..-;;;...;-;;;.;;-;;.;-;;;...;-;;.;-;;;...;-;.;...;-;;;..-;;~;;..;-;;.;-;;..-;;;...;-;;;.-;;;.-;;;..;;;-;;.-;;;. __, ,.

:- ·. ~ I ·• ' •

; IS THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., MONDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1960 ~~~------·------~------·----~~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Ward No. 6-Colll!ctora: Mrs. Dr. wm. Green ...... 1.00 Delivered Vincent P. McCarthy .... 1.00 M. Greene and Mrs. E. Angel. John Clouston, Ltd ...... $ 10.00 Mrs. D. Pottle ...... 1.00 rang Body J. Cochrane ...... 1.00 w .. St. Vincent MacDona\4 Wholesale A Fr!end ...... 1.00 BOMBAY, (CPl - A grief· Te~::!;~ov~1 ~iot~~~·; Ltd: ~~:~~ A.. M.. Coc~rane ...... 1.001 stricken husband, mouming ~~~ • lllss C Kelley ...... 1.00; death of his wife, w~s stunned SOCiety ~~~i.r.~ ~i:J;~y ~~;~: .. :::: ~:~~ llrs. h. Als<•p ...... 1.00 l to find he had been deiivcred the De ·Paul --· wron~ hody. His wif~ i< recover· Cross & Co.. Ltd...... 5.00 CITY WARDS COLLECTION,iJ. H Devine · · ...... 5.001 Robert Caines ...... 5.00 Total ...... $330.001 ing in hospital. --: Kaliah, a worker in B:mgalol't' . 1959 1Dicks & Co .. Ll~...... ·5.00 lmpor' · Motos, Ltd. .... 5.00 1 , citv in ~lysore state. rcceive1 Wara No. 1: Colleltors-llrs.l"hl ·l•>on's .J~wcllery ... 5.00i ~lax J. Lawlor ...... 5.00 Wa1·r! :-:a 10-Collectors:; wo'nt from the htis01t~i. that hb Gerald S. Doyle and Mrs. E. P. A. T~oton ... · · · · ...... 5.00 B. J. Coleman ...... 5.00 • ~Irs. .1. T. Cdb1an and Mrs wi:c hart died ~nd ihar tltc bod~ Gough· Nfld. Whulcsdle Dry i J. A. IJibbs, Q.C...... 5.00. E. J. Phelan. :was heinrr sent' to his house. · London, New York and Goons Ltd ...... 5.00: M. J. Pratt ...... 5.00 His Grace ! Soon. II~ hodv. drml!d in white Paris Assn. of Fashion Sheff man Bros 5.00 1' Bell's Delicate sen Ltd 5 oo Ar~hhishop Skinner S 50.00: elr•th. arrived at the K1liah home Lim1ted ...... $ 25.00 Great Eastern Oil & . Kennedy's Drugs Store' ....· . 2.50· 1 5 00 Righi Rel'erend ~lonsignor ! Rclnlii'CS and frie'ldS carried i Avre'a Limited ...... 15.00 Import Co., Ltd. · · 1M. R. Murphy ...... 2.00 1 H. :\ Summer, 25.00 to lhe sittin~ room. Bank of City Radio & Music ool J...... 2.00 C~nadtan 4 Par~ons )lr .J l' Kiclly IU.ooi Ihn Face\' 10.00 we< ;omoonc else H. B. Clyde Lake, Ltd. 10.00 R. A. Templeton Ltd. .... · 1East End Stores ...... 2.00 \lr M. I'· )lurphy 10.00 ~l~anl"!tilc. K,•li;•n' children r;lrs. E. F. Kennedy .... 10.00'! Prenu~r Garmcnl 3 00 : F~ster's .Meat Ma:kcl .... 2.00 ~!iss )!. Parl•er 10.00 re'"l'llr'l hnme 1•·ilh 'ht•. 11C\\'S 1.hat I. F. Perlin & Co. . . 10.00 Co. Ltd. · · ;· ...... · · i Br1de Flemmg 2.00 2 00 ~hss E. J Phelan (1 c. 5.011 lheit' mo:h~r was l''lnro\'1~;;' Job B!Others & Co, Lt. 10.00; Tor's <.ave Tr~dmg Co. . 2'oo' A. Stafford ...... 2.00: :\Irs. V p Burke ...... 'i.OD Thcv •.1·c·•·o 1•ol aw:>rP ,r the diS· Royal SP.curitics i ~lodern Clothmg Store 2'ooi W. D Ryan ·...... 2.00 \\'. ,1 ..\lurphy Ltd. ~.oo' '>"'"I' .,f tho "'row: hur!l·.. . 1 corooralion Ltd ...... : 5.00 I Le~ttz · · ·· ·, · 1 W E. King 1.ooi )Irs. G. Bruwnri~g 5.00 \l'iti·'" P1i'•t•'"> l\" !"h ht.m.;cof 1\lr. 1i Darroch l Popul~r Clothing Store.... 2.00 i Modern Shoe Hospital .. 1.00 Hex Hcnouf · ~.OO ''"'< c' th~ i1•!c11!ta! "' th,• side of

1 Mac~illivarv :...... 5.00 5107.00 R. G.• Redmon(: ...... 1.00 )lr. Chas. Sag~> .).00 hi' \\·if(·. curtib -& Dawe' ...... 5.00 Total ...... · Kenneth Hall .c ...... ·t.oo I Dr. H .J. Simn•s :>O:J Til' ':·."•it;·! hiil""~d ;, 3l1 on W. A Munn & Co...... 5.001 - !\Irs. Chcs. Dawc ...... 1.00 Dr. D. C. ~imm~: :l! 0 :""::1 :~·· • .. ·. "! in :Ju• lVot'lliL'ry ~lorg~n Printing ...... 5.00 . , Wm. ~.lcLaughlan ...... 1.00 Dr. r~. P 1\avaiw•d) :U.!O r~·-· 1 :· ·1, ·:~·· ., q(l 1•···1 n~i::~~·l llO Knigh\. Phelan W.ml .:"\o. 5-Collcctors.: ·' 1rs. The French Corner ...... 1.00, Dr. P .J \\"hehn .1.00 1t.. 1 ···:r- !·. ,,_, nr .\.l.(l \\'rl~wn & Hawkins . . 5.00 )I J 0 DonnP.ll ami l\IJSs l\1. llcrcer ...... 50; Royal Grocery Ltd .. 10.00 ~Irs. W. Vok,y ...... 1.00 John ~launder ...... 5.00 ~!J. ~lrs. ~:;">rnard .\on·;:; 2 00 I' ;·h :·!'"';1··.,,.; ;~ ~:;1c:; ::·~ ~~I'!S in ~lr P!'ter MahP.r ...... 5.00 Brace: __ .A. J. Dunne Ltd. 10.00, . --: D. R Th1otle 5.00 .10.00 Total ...... $243.00 lAC Olcril Plan· 5.00 Leo f)'~lara ~.'.l:J •i.e ·.~~~, ... :,,·d . s. Milley: Ltd ...... 5.oo; Cyril A. O'Reilly · 3150.001 Total ...... $108.00 Walsh s Bakery Ltd ... . 2.Wl 10.001' -·__ i O'Neill & Carter ~Irs. .Joe r.ro•r• !IC J. J. Lacey ...... 5.00Parkc• ~Monroe, Ltd.· 100.00i --\Nfld. Hutter Co. Ltd. ~liffli:; :>.00 +------·-·- --- ~lr !,on Kcil;· 2.1JO. L'olem~n ( Nfld.) Co. 5:00 A. E. H1ckmnu Co., Ltd. 10.00 Stead Lumber Co. Ltd. 10.00 ! Hearl Son Wdtson & S.OO J. D. O'Drio<'llll z.r:o H. A Dawe & Sons .. · 2.00 Bennett Br:wing Co., Ltd. 10'00 : No. 7-tollectors: !\Irs.' J. P. O'Keefe .. , 10.00: \\'nrd Nu. n -Collectors: ~Irs. Leith W~rd 5.110 A Fn.·nii ..... 3[) Miss Annie Buckley .... 2.00 Leo !ieale) . 10 ·~~ p D~hbin and :llrs. J. G. An· ~eap & Partners Ltd .. 5.00 i R. ~l:nming and ~Irs. A. ~I. \\'. F.· Calrlwcll Butler Bros '' 00 Bavamn Brewmg Ltd. 10. , d 1R J ~'eehan 5.00 Vras~r · .J. J. ~!addigan ~.00 ;·Oo'1 St Ltd. . . 5.00: erson. . . 'A J. •...... 5.00 Philir .J. Lewis. Q.C. S 20.00 llalley. llickman & Hunt Harris & Hiscock ...... w. 1 ecrs,... . :Crane Llmlled ...... S 25.00· · · .t:.tsey ·· · .... . 1 ; ·, iLlL t'O~ll:~,\~ )!ode\ Shop 2.00 :o.lfld ..It actor ~ oo· F. M O'Leary Limited ... 25.00; Hogans Drug ·Sture 5.001 Ryan & Caul 20.00. \\'illiams & Cummin~; G.l:!l j,(,,) 5.00 1I l'ai'S l'n. Lid. 10.00 mimte. :\1. 1 Da,·.,:'l:ltc ~con ~i!:ll$ OO , ~.. ll •nnrtt 5 OO I·. Shurlal ...... 5.00, Co., Ll<. J 5.00 Sian t :•tHlon 10.00 • • • Mr.. John Cahill · I. 11tc .u.srs c · Charlo:~ n Bell 5.0tl~ IJnitcrl ~ilil & l'yril t:ret'JH' Q.C. 10.110 llr. E. F. ~lourrs 500 E. B. Fo:·an lil.CO T1111 opc•r.:!inn> in one. a --· Burge;s ~iurphy · Harl'nv & Co .. I.ld...... 51l'J; J.o~oundry Co .. Llrl. 5.00 Dr ..J. D. K l'uwan 10.00 )!iss .\larlelinc J\;;~·anagh :l.Oil 500 2.00 IJ .J. French 10.00 ll'ilc's face bc111~ ltflcd and her Sl73.00; ~1arsh;tll ~Sio,tol 5· Llt.dl. 5'oo F. Kwnnagh 5.00 1 Brookfi~ld Ice Crt• am Ltd. 5.00 ;o;rhl Anaesthesia 11. p Caller. Q C. l'nilc~ crcr:o~c > · J 5.00 A"'" iates 10.00 ~I iss \~ne' L'towdell 2.00 Towns E)cl'lric -- B8 · · H a cs . y Lt · .... 5 ·00 ·, E. J. t.odden Lt d .. .. . ~.Otl amc;, '"'ld erd' 1cc 5.00 A. l'. llnyrl ll~tr!ll'rt' 1\'int~r 5.00 .1 \1' Mnhonc~· 1.00 :'\ L'. Hutton 'L\cl l ro~h·e ":' <.:o. Ltd: · 0 \I · , ·Walsh, 2.00 mcrs ~lcLuughlan 'Stlpplles, Lld. 10 011 1 2.00, lliggit:< & llig~ins 5.00, ~1h< .\! Bartlett 1.00 ~liss :Ilona Ry:m 1 \I nc,·me !Thr B1g 6) · · 1 · r. ' c ·· · · · · • • \1' n l'l k ' · · · • .. · 5 00 In \lo•morv of James R)'an 2.00 lmpc;'Jal 011 Ltd . S !~.00 · ar e 1.00 Dr I B. Boulo~ ~.OOi \\' orks 1.00 2.011; .las. ~I. Brad> haw 3.1:•' \1 iss )I. Gouollanrl 1 T II. Hall kills . · 1, . · 'I ·, 1"Donncll 2.00 :\lcl'ul'nlac's Dry Cleaning BurfJ!t s Sto··~ .. 1.00 ~ R. r llallry . 2.00 11 15 2.1111 Fahi.c11 A. O'Llra • 5.00 :.li,;s Eileen ~lalon~y ... \ ~tel· "urpass Shoe ' · ·' • ' • · • l'h · O'K f :. Total ~\46.00 ' .I ,. . ., •, .011· ,\IJ's.·<. \1. Do.l'i<' 1.00 i Ltd. .. . 20.00 as cc r 2.00 Dr. I' .1. ~lrNirlwl> Dcssie Cc lien ;. .l. B ~orris ...... ,... '5'oo'l ·' rs...... I ouis O'Keefe 10.00' A. :\nrlrcws .110 :tugh 0':\eill 5.1•1 !lohcr: Kent I!on. Treasurer. ·,• w G. Johnston · -- • ...... 110 Dr ... ,J II :llol!o)· 5.110 'lis' \lary Boland ... 1.00 )lr>. '.'oo];, !'unk's . 5.00' Total .... S386.00 i P. F. Collins 10.00, C. !'. Howman ...... r. J. Do bb m ...... ----.. ------•

i: f.

0 THE 0 NEW

From coast to coast, the new-and distinctively styled-Meteor is winning record numbers ornew car buyers. The reason? Meteor is big (and beautiful) enough to be a better 'buy. First of all, Meteor has a new, trim straight·line look. High style-with room to .spare. Six people ride on five·foot·wide seats with the most stretch·out room in Meteor history. As for trunk space -there's room enough for ten suitcases! And Meteor is powered to lte·a better buy. Both Stx and V·S's make the most of every gallon. In pt>wer and economy. Meteor goes farther on oil and greasing, too, You can drive up to 4,000 miles between oil changes, 30,000 miles between lubrications. · All this plus an all·new Warranty for 12,000 miles or one full year­ whichever comes first. Meteor's muffler will normally last 3 times longer · than most others and its brakes adjust themselves. Savings-with style and aomfort-that's the new Meteor .. , truly big enough to be a better buy.

,· ......

Monlcaltn lour·door hardtop: 1M of Ford If Clnada's fine cars · .,, builtin Canada TO·DAY ... AT .. YOU·R ·MERCUR.Y· MEJEOR~COMET DEALER...... Certain featurulllustrated or mentioned ore standard on some models, oplianal at extra cost on others

.. \ ~ MUNN ·MOTORS ·LIMITED I Sub-Dealer-s: Cla'renville; A. Duffitt; Elliston, Tilley's Garage st. JoHN'S-Phone 94061 .. · ·· ..... SPANIARD'S BAY, .CORNER BROOK .' ,--~--~------~------~~~------~------~ ... \ • \ • . • . . SECTION II THE DAILY NEWS SECTION II

----.------T~H~E~D~A~ILY~N~EW~S~,~ST~·~J~O~HN~'~S,~N~F~LD~-·~M~O~N~D~A~Y,~N~O~V~EM~B~E~R~7,~19~60~------·· U. N~~ Administration In Congo Said Slipping

Grouch Family .. -~r,,;.·· Signs That Congolese Now Reunited Tread Rocky Road To Stardom r .". ---·-·~~-~--- EVEN FOUR-· MONTHS , r ... '~ Want· Belgians Back COME TO AN END EVENTUALLY · It By BERNARD DUFRESNE Iation system. 1 it calls "the man in the chair" o! CaDadlaD Pteaa Starr Writer Progress has been slow. For various Congo government de· By. THE OLD GROUCH LEOPOLDVILLE ICPl - The I cfample efforts to provide jobs partments. . GLENWOOD - Well. the popularity of the Umted Nations I by means of an emergency pub- But it Is this very kind of neu- Grouch family is once more re· 11dministration in The Congo ap Ilie works program produced tralism that angers the uncom· united, and things arc returning pears to be slipping fast amid about 6,800 jobs by mid-October, prehending Congolese. Those in to the quiet and unperturbed signs that the Congolese want the 1 hardly more than a chip off the power would like to nse the UN existence they once knew. ~·our Belgians to come back. I solid block of hundreds of thou- to crush their opposition, and the months sojourn in another This may appear 1ronic in vie.v i sands of unemployed. - opposition wants to do the same sphere is long enough to make of the e1·ents of last summer 1RECRUIT OWN HELP thing to get back ln. comparisons, and when those First there were the anti-Belgian! This may be one reason why Whichever way the UN jump; four months were months of independence riots. Then the1·e! some Congolese, including Ka· it lands on the hot seat. summer, to return to the grey, was the quick reaction of the ·uN 1 tanga's Premier Moise Tshombe. cool fo~s of autumn ~akcs the to trv to bring order to the for. I now are saying they plan to re· TWINS RECOVERING : comparison more , od1ous. mer ·Belgian colon)·. , cruit their own technical helP- EDINBURGH (CPQ( - Lewis 1 Fortunately th~ result of our However, in this new republic people who already know the and Martin Abbot, 49-year-old mutual und.ertak_mgs arc al· ·of 14,000,000 Africans obviously Icountry and its people. For bachelor twins where who under- re~dy showm~ s•!pis o~ accom· unprepared for self-g01·ernment, 1Tshombe, who still nas Belgians went a rare kidney transplanting phshment, wh1ch IS as Jt should the totally unexpected often hap· i in his government and gendar· operation last Sunday, are mak· be. . . pens. merie, this means getting mor~ ing such good progress that no There. has been an ep1dcnuc one high U:-1 officer who gets. of them. further bulletins on their condi- of what 1s locally called whoop- around a lot in Leopoldl'ille's i Another source of friction be· tlon will be issued, it was an- ing cough, though be~ond a , Roger Perry Georgine Darey African quar\er and ~ays he has ·tween the Congolese and the UN nounced Friday. The twins' oper- lengthY, s~~ll of coughmg and I' ~ fin"er on grass-roots thinking: is ln!lation. The world body is ation was the first or its kind in early vom1tmg one rarely hears Roger Pcny Gcorl!ine Darcy decla~ed: "In less than a. month: pouring rn!llion~ into th~ country, ~ritain but London sur~ eons have anr "whoops." . Nor a_re the ENGLAND - Britain's first nuclo!m· ~uhmarinc, "Drctld· , ~ they'll all want the Bclgmns to ev~n. parmg Jts ~old1ers and 1s•nce transplanted a k•~ney_ from 1 children ye~y sfJCk With h•t1. nought", is shown after its launching here. The whnlc-shnJJed TilEY LOVE LUCY. TOO-Tht·sc four were put oo the return " , cinhans allowances In uncon· a 54-yenr·old father m h1s IS· I However 11 mter eres somcw a . • . . . ' . tl 1 10 1'11 f 11 1 ·11 u 11 1 1 d th llun;h·cds of Bel~ian settlers ~·~rtible Congo francs. Since the [year-old son, with apparent sue-' with school attendance, sin_cc l.lnh, la~?ched by Quc~n Ehzabeth, :~ ~ P.roduct of mdus~nal pa Ill anw Y .ncl c· na \\' wn t ley prove em•

who fled the nation dul'ing the UN force members cartnot take 1 cess. o~e hesitates to s~nd ~ child nnd •mhtary co·opembon l?etwccn llntltn~ ~nd. t~JC Umtccl ~l'h c, a~ nu·mbrrs of the Drsilu \Vorkshop Theater Perry 1 wai'C or 1-iolcnce a~ninst them their money back home, they w1th a cough out ln th1s cold, Stales. The Dreadnought 1s not armed \\'llh m1ss•les. hut h is I Lt• ri!!an Jr. and \[i,s Darcy is "Gypsy" in Pat O'Brien's in the first da~·s of 'ndCI'ICndence spend it all here. The effect is TO REPRESENT CHINA wet no~therly wind. . . designed as a "sub-killcr."-UPI Photo. 11 " .v 'ho"·· "l1.1rri[!an & Son." Ceoq~lade is Bob Stack's ~rc returning each week to re· to boost business activity but, PEKING !Reutersl- Comm<.l·l Loadmg of pulpwood IS hkely ·---· --- --· -· -··- -~---·--- . - .'itl~·,til'k in 'The lJnto-.1chahles.'' ~!iss Carroll is 'Bios• op~n t~eir bu•incsses ~.hops and I combined with s~arcitv.of go?<~s, n~st China an~ounced F~iday that! to. last much longer than usual view TV on Friday and Satur-l The (;rnueh has alwavs hrrn ·"m•,'' t~~~· lmli,m maid on "Gues!w,ud Ho." plantat•on>. Thei: arrn·al pro. I he extra mon~~ 1s !orcmg pnccs II.m Shao _Chi, _the cha1rman ~( 1 th•s Y_ear as the~e. appears to! day ni~hts only. To the, told it in iurrs 3 rloek ,;r watch ~1ck Gcorgl:tde Janice Carroll vides an inc•·~asmg nun:'ber of up and low·p~ld Congolese work· the republic, wdl head the Ch•·' b~ qmte a quanht~ of wood f Grouch's surprise he thinks 'I to put is ·hark. and as he has a. ~,..- murh-nccdcd Jobs an~ m Leo- ers are bla~mg the. UN. ~ese .delegation to the celebra· sllll to come down from the nothing of travelling the few rlut·k which. thou~h SCI'Cllt'·. ""'" ... : .• ~old rille. ~t least. Belgmn·Congo- Some Belgians .. nohng that t~e! !Ions m Moscow n~xt 11•eek mark- lake. . . . . [hundred )'ards along the Trans I )car' nlcl. is sltll kccpin!! •oo;t : · lese relatmns seem happ1·. lop US echelon m The Congo 181 mg the 43rd anmversary of the NavJgahon on the mer, I C d .• . . " CONGOLESE ISCO:SSISTEI'iT made up of Afro-Asian nationals 1 Bolshevik re,•olution. Liu is the I which become almost impossible tlana a H•,hway c~en ~·h~3, ~me. the only II~ mg. hc1t·arcs to · The Belgian 1·iew IJere is that sav the Congolese are suspiciou.; ':So. 2 man in the Chinese Com- due to low water levels m ..;ep· tere 15 no moon. nc "uu 1 0 ~s lo stop •I or "11 tour. As the l':-1 does not understand the or' these former colonial peoples. I munist party, behind Mao Tse-, !ember, has now resum~1l as h~vc thought that ."0 lon~ly a I rach~ _records hme at_. fr~qucnt ' , • I ·h • t' • 'FE •R NEW DO~UNATION . tu g h I th 'I h . autumn rains have cons•: ~rably tnp at 10.~0 at mght \\ ould lmte•' .lis. It Js not thl flcull to • on.o ese \1 o .are .orne •m~· '' ' I n • IV 0 5 e pat Y c a•rman.1 . . , have kept h1m at home, at least get 1t gom" a•am al the ri"hl lc.· lese and in planning solutions to arrest by army strongma_n ·Col. general staff ol!lcer fist Gradel i ;o harder weather may be in: ~clcbratwn~al least so he Diefenbakc1· next 1l'rdncsd;ty. .a 1 Nick Gcorgiade J'anlce Carron problems created by shattered Joseph Mobutu. in the directorate of military in- 1 the offing. I opes. Delegates from fi1·e :llontrcai L. -- . ~conomr. govemment adminis- The UN tries to he scrupulously: telligence prior to tbe appoint·. Little Grouch is allowed to The business of "putt in~ the area hi>lorical socielirs will ~o vat ion. commerce and transport- neutral in its dealings with 11•hat: ment. visit a neighbour's house to clock back" is an annoying on~. to Oltnwa with the petition.

QUALITY CANADIAN PRODUCTS CONTAINING QUALITY I NCO NICKEL·

In Canadian hospitals-NICKEL STAINLESS STEEL

for cleanUness inside • • . for lasting beauty outside

Modern hospitals now make extensive usc of parti~les can't get a grip on the smooth, nickel stainless steel for gleaming beauty, hard metal. 111side, too, stainless steel hard­ utmost cleanliness and ease of maintenance. ware, stair railings and ornamental ac­

Outside, nickel stainless steel curtain wall cessories harmonize beautifully with wood, ln opcratin[! rooms, where cleanliness may be a •systems resist corrosion and w"eathering ••• tile, glass and enamelled surfaces. m;Hicr of life or death, vou·n find nickel stainless sled cquipmenL Shown here is the opcr:uing am phi· tend to wash clean with every rainfall .•• Nickel stainless steel has a bright endur­ thc;ntc of the Toronto [.t>l General Hospital.

stay new-looking for· years with little or no ing lustre ... is resistant to rust and cor­ llo,pilal kill:hcns like this one at the Weiland cleaning and maintenance. rosion • : • is easier to fabricate. That's County General t lo,pital, Weiland, Ontario, depend I on nickel >l<~ink>s >led to protect the purity of tho Inside, nickel stainless steel operating why stainless steel containing quality foods t lie) sen c.

room, kitchen and laundry equipment pro­ Inco Nickel is so often specified fc;>r archi­ This nickel ~t11inkss st~d l.mndry room equipment tectural applications and -for hospital and "ill pro' ide long trouble-free service in the UniversiiY vide the highest possible standards of sani­ llo,pital, Edmonton, Alberta. tation. Dirt and bacteria-breeding food restaurant equipment. .. . THE' . INTERNATIONAL NIOKE'L A COMPANV OF CANADA, LIMITED ,~, 55 YONGE STREET, TORONTO ftlll.tt •••• This modern hospitul in Thompson, Maniloba, site of !nco's latest nickel mining dcvclopmcm. presenls a beautiful exterior with its gleaming polished nickel stainless >tcel window frames nnin entrances and mullions comrasling wilh dull mane finished nickel stainless steel panels and columns . .4rchilt•cts: Waisman Ross & Associates. · ' •

'~· • • J •...... ' 1 / .,: ...: A < •. /:·, ·- . "'...... ~., .:,;10;....---~------..------~TH~E~DA:'.!I!:.!l Y~N~E;.;W:,:S:.:.,, .:,ST!.:,·,.;.J~O!:HN~'S, NFLD., MONDAY, NOVF.MBER 7, 1960 HE· HAS WORDS FOR IT . 1Campus Cop St. ·Pat's- Crusaders IN N Y J..E,4e7:< /:: Howe Scores 45 Oth Goal; f'.):)TfJA/..1.., li-le VIO!..EN;;E W.-1~ NEN 7£MP.Ei<'ED SBAA Softball By ER1.'Dmc ...;, • , • Split Doubleheader I c·~ampiOOShip Mahovlich. Tallies Four BOB COSTELLO IS TOP SCORER ;_ SUNDAY I · Iserving. St. Pal's and Hoiy Cro,s ~.pli~ I Ti;e !' .. ~ .. ·.:.~·;; \J:hind t!:•: D f.1:T R 0 I T (AP J - Gordie NH Harvey was penalized for tak- a double-header in the Christian 1 scorin~ eye oi Bob Cost~:t,., s •, · Howei~450lh regul~r ~enson Na·] L tandlngs ing a shot after the whistle had Brothers Basketball League at • p'led up a 17-12 first q•Jorl~r tiona! · Hockey Leasue goal . stopped the play. He drove a 35- the St. Pat's gym, yesterday 1 edge and increased their !nd ~lpe~ Detroit Red Wings to a 5-2 1 B THE CANADIAN PRESS footer that almost caught Chi· :jW~w BD3 afternoon. The Junior Crusa· : at the half to 29-21 bc~o"~ trJUmph o.ver New York Rangers Y National League cago goal~ Glenn Hall In the A~ACt< i dcrs opened the twin bill with things started to g~t close in Sunday m~ht. . 1 W L T F A Pts face. Hall seemed to deflect the : ca.;:...:;,118/A I a 34-12 win while the senior the h:st half. 1 , game saw St. Pat's take a 44-41 Boh Costello, the scoring ace Howe's first . per1od goal, his M tr 1 7 t 3 53 49 17 puck, ducking backward at the NO'T Q.VL.. Y. 1 ! i i triumph. with St. Pat's was hitting Ill~ first ln six games, pulled the 1 c~·n gea 6 4 4 43 39 16 same time, losing his balance J..:--:-1:::; ,-l ::::.:z-s· Red Wings ftom behind an~ Ica. 0 ; and falling to the tee. · .J..iil. TAC ••:~E JUNIOR GAME hoop steady throughout the 6 4 3 44 35 15 1tarted them toward 'he ""ictory I DetrOit 1 There was a mllllna about of Wk'O ;,;·.\-.:JCi<\S I The junior Holy Cross team opening half and was the big OJW:.V ,~EOPJ.S had no trouble in taking their weapon for the Green and Cold · that p~t them even with Toront~ , ~or~nto ; ~ : : ~ ~~ 1 players but no trouble broke 1 for third place in the standings. os on . out. . ... ' second win in as many starts as he scored nineteen of his 4 9 1 39 56 9 Len Lunde, Jerry Melnyk and : New York 1 Nesterenko's 12 - foot angled 1 as they scored enough points team's thirty points in the op~ning Alex Delvecchio scored as the -= = . shot gave Chicago a 1·0 lead at , in the opening quarter to take 1 half.

l\'ings swept Into a 4-1 lead in 13:40 of the first p~rlod. Mont- 1 the win while keeping St. Pal's 1 Howercr he fouled out with the second period, and the De· real moved in front In the sec· , to six. In the second quarter about four minutes left in the troit club threw up a stout de· ond, Geoffrion shoving in his own ' the west-Pndcrs scored six, to tl:ird quarter. and that's when fence around goalie Hank Bas rebound at 9:29 and 11icke scor· . two for St. Pat's and in tlH: fi. ' things started to look bad for 1 ten. lng on Moore's rebound at 10:50. , 11a! half Hoiy Cross scored St. Pal's.

Coadl Sid Abel yanked Terry The Hawks soon regained the 1 fifteen points, while allo;nng ' r. e-arling 38·22 when Costello lawchak for a one game rest and lead, Hay deflecting Jack Ev- ~L\t'R!CE mJSI.EY , S!. Pal's a hucket each in the kit the Cn ''"'red np th~ Hcly Cross at· Howe got his goal near the before Moore pulled Canadiens Athletic Association soft!Jall ~·,tting on the scorcshect. t.1rk iu>l a !itt:c and at the halfway point of the opening pe· ~ven. , championship with a 9-l \'iclory Fred "Fluke'' ;\'of! all. WJ' the\ ti:rrr• .quarter mark they trailed i over ,Jal'k Walsh's Shamrock; riod, his long blast from the · dal,gc~rons man :15 he cnntroi!ed 1 4o.:;:l. point equalling an earl~· goal b~· ' r yesl~rdny morning at Sham· the Junior Cru;auers from his' Sb>rll~ Holy I the bench as he was nabb~d NHL. I • League 1 racked up a 16-6 wm m _th~, Cro,g raeked up six point> , for this fifth foul. 1 Allen Johnson set ~P Lunde'• ...... !!, opener and claimed the title , while Robert Kinseiia and I All seemed lost for St. Pat's goa] br stealing the ~liCk behind I GORDIE HOWE yesterday, . . 1 Howie Vrdd had four e;:ch. i as the Cru;aders crept closer the nanger nets, ~nd :\telnyk SCHEDULE FOR NEXT _Em£1e): was the v.:mnmg I The St. Pat's team who fought ; and clnscr, but Don Hutchings. and Deh·ecchio followed with FEEBLE ATI'ACK WEEK . pitcher m the game gomg all right to the final whistle. e1·en ' substituting for Costello, came goals . less thn~ t;\'0 minutes l Winger Andy Hebenton led , the way whtle he connected for. though they were outcla~set~ • tl!rou~h with another field apart-both turnmg on passes at what little attack New York coule SECTION (A) 'a triple, the longest hit of the , showed a lot of spirit and had : goal with about two minutes the ~orner o£ ~he cage. : muster with two goals. Camille To· Night: hall ~arne. Jack Walsh started; Wayne Stanford come up with , left in the game, and gare the Bnan Cullens ~~~~I'· play goal I Henry scored the Rangers' other -7.00-. for Shamr?cks . and took ~he • four points. Other field goal I Irish enough breezing room to pulled·. Ran~er~ wlthm, two goals i goal, the one that put them C. Cables vs Bennett's loss w1lh Charhe Doyle seemg , getters on the team were Bill : freeze the ball until the final early.Jn the fmal penod but the • briefly ahead in the opening per· Mitchell's vs Furness W. ·relief action. 1 Lowe ..Jim Fowler, Fred Ker· , whistle. Wind:' matched It three min~tes I iod. • -815- : While Shamrocks were scor·' sey and John Power. 1 St. Pat's lanky center Bob 1 late~~·hen Johnson banged m a 1 Mahovlich, who ~cored three Ayrc's S/M vs T. N. Mts. ~ng. thci~ lone run in the sixth/ Referees Rev. Br. Lawlor Co>tcllo, although he saw onh· --- I got two scores I and Rev. Br. French tooted ten 1 a little o1·er half the games ac· hard··~ot from 12 feet out after 1 times last Saturday night in a Telegram vs Ayre's Ltd. ~nmng Camp~lS • I GarnAtd.com recovered, a loose ; game 6 gain st Chicago Black -11.30- m the open.mg frame_, added 1 fouls, six against St. Pat's who 1 !ion was the top point-getter puck Jlehmd the New York net. I Hawks, batted in the puck from Bowring's vs R Garage 'f1ake 42 :t~ree runs _m the th1r~ and r were outscored 2-0 from the i with 25. Donny Hong, playing B~TON IAPt-The relentless mid·air for his first goal on a O'Keefe's vs Barnes' .J ~ 1 fi_fth and registered once In the charity line. I his first g~me had eight. Tom Eskimos 1 Bostop Bruins handed Chicago pass from Bert Olmstead. Pul­ Sixth. LINEUPS Healey with 12 and Fred Noft· Last year Frank O'Grady's I HOLY CROSS: Fred Noftall all, with 11, both guards, were Blac~ Hawks a 4·0 National ford's and Stanley's goals put Wednesday: • Vi• 1 H.oc~ League defeat . Sunda~ Leafs' ahead 3-1. before Mahov­ -7.00- Forum squad took the erown. 9, Vince Wakeham 6, Howie 1the top Holy Cross scorers. Vedd 4, Robert Kmsella 4, Hu· Rev. Br. Lawlor and Rev. Br. ni~h~; backed by . Don Simmons lich got his second marker. He Hickman Mts. vs Harvey's Oln t lctor:r bert Griffiths 3, Ed. Courish 2, French had a busy time calling brllhdl,lt goal. tend mg. picked up a rebound behind the Nfld. T. & E. vs Brookfield Orv!!l Tess1er, Don McKenney, net after Red Kelly and Nevin .ce Corner Ed. Pow~r. Frank Reddy 2, thirty fouls, twenty against the -8.15- CALGARY- CP -The free·1 with CJU!y one of their own to· Pra(tl ' Bernard Walsh 2, Ron Murphy, Irish. Holy Cross scored se1•en C.h~rley B~rns and Jerry Toppaz-1 had taken shots, skated to the L.N.Y. vs C Cordage Jam -~pplled the goals as the corner of the goal and slid the wheeling Edmonton Eskimos de· make it 30·7 at the half. ; ~like Abbott. · I single points while St. Pat's [ _. R. Stores vs Imperial Oil feate'.l 40·21' Pas3es from quarterback Joe ! . -. -- ! ST. PAT'S: Wayne Stanford managed two free tosses. Brm110 out h u s t le d the Black I puck pa£1 the sprawling McCar­ -9.30- ~aw~now winless In their last tan. befo~e 20,000 fans at l\lell!ahon Kapp to Coleman and Bar?cr ; Follo~mg m the footsteps of ; 4, Bill Lowe 2, Jim Fowler 2, l LINEUPS · Nf!d Brew. vs G. E. Oil Stad111m Saturday to take a 42· starte:l the Stampeders rolling their )Ou~ger brothers, the: Fred Kearsey ,2, John Power 2, ,. ST. PAT'S: Bob Costello 25, fh·~ ~rts. · I Defenceman Don Johns of the Parker's vs E. E. Bakery Sntl!llons,. who ~eems to hav.e 1 Rangers was in the penalty box point walkaway victory in their early in the third quarter and Guards ~eni~r hockey _team Will i John Breen1 Robert Clancey, Donny Hong 8, Don Hutchings lmpJ'qved smce his pre • season when Mahovlich got hi$ third goal two·g~me, total-point Western. the dub was trailing 30·21 going be the firSt 1 ~ Its section to call i Steve Reynolds, Derm King, 4, Gary Corcoran 4, Doug Jones Thursday: . _shellif:ng of the face ma~k ~e to increase Toronto's margin to lnterorovincial Football Union . into the final period. ; a praclic~ this se~son. , M. Mills. 3, Basil Adams, Bob Day, Gra· v:-ore;a year ago, turned m h1s 5-l. He blasted the puck Into the -700- semi·tinal. ThP. game proved an uninspir-1 Co~ch Syb Qmck has open ! ham Tapper, Steve Martin, Bill & ftrsL: sh~to~t of the season. net from 10 feet out. Hebenton L. Power va Furness W. Coupled with a 30-7 win In ing sendof{ for d~fensive guard I pracl!ces scheduled for _the j SENIOR GAME Squires, John Phelan. AmOJ1g . h1s 35 saves were , then got his first goat on a pretty Ml~chell'a vs Bowring'• Edmonton last Wednesday, the Porky Brown, bowing out of 1 Pnnce of Wales Arena tonight i The senior tilt of the twin· HOLY CROSS: Tom Healey so~c -8.15- a_crotrahc the£ts off Chlcag~ ~ i play, drawing Bower out of the result thrust Eskimos into a footb?ll after ten year~; with the I' and Wednesday m,ght. : bill was a thriller that went 112, Fred Noftall 11, John Whit­ fmes.t-Bobby Hull and Ed L1t- net and swooping around him to c. Cables vs R. A. Waters final best-of-three series with; Stampeders. Brown received Both are set to .st~rt at 6·30 r!~ht to the wire ~efore the ty 8, Mike Sulli\'an 6, Ro~ :Mur­ zen!Ji!r?er. fire into the open goal. Ayre's S/M vs Ayre's Ltd. the Winnipe~ Blue Bombers, 1 more than $4,000 in gifts from p.m. and those wishmg to try Imh team fmally picked up a phy 4, Paul ;\!eaney, Ke\'ln Sui· . Tessie~ scored at 14:57 of the Mahovlichs final goal was a -9.30- . beginning next Saturday in the club and Stampeder fans. Ifor a berth should attend. win, after losing their first lil'an, Bernard Walsh, Jim Mur· ftrst. periOd while Chicago had ,a screen shot from 15 feet whicit Telegram va Harvey's Edmonton. · ; Tackle George Hansen was, ---:- . game to St. Bon's earlier in the phy, Ron Healey, Frank Law· n:mn In the penalty box. Tessler s McCartan barely saw as' the puck Wirlter'a '1'1 Bennett's Quarterbacks tosserl out of the game in the i The Guards JUmor _hockey week. lor. firSt goal of the season came on ceme through a maze of players. and Do~ Getty shared duties! second ,quarter for slugging Ed·\ ~f~~~ ;~~Y~fe w:~t ~~~~~;"6 _i05 Ills own rebound. Hebenton's second goal eut the SECTION (B) for Eskimos. Edmonton touch- monton s Oscar Kruger. Starn· I m d b rs f th club ( • _'·.' SATURDAY Leafs' lead to 6-3 and came when 1 0 I d?wns were. scored by Parker, I peders also lost George Talt In. i~e. t:n.u:n~m e e TORONTO

b

I I I I I I r 1' '' Third Period .Goals Give' Don Clarke Will iJ\tiUNI Tied• For First' Withi• < i-! Memorials OpeningGame 1 ArriveThisMorni3g 25-24 Win Over St. Pat's' :I. Don Clarke, the new Fclldlan hockey. coach, will arrh·e SECOND ENCOUNTER POSTPONED • DROP GUARDS 6- 3 FOR LEAD at Torhay Airport this morning at 11.45. He Is flying from ' .The Memorial Intermediate 1 •w·· Scoring three unanswered· Howell saw 23 third period 1 Alberta and will likely Ink a contr•ct wllh Fei'dlans th1s · basketball team edged St. Pat's : f third period goals Memorials drives artcr five in- his second · ·•flcrnoon. · 25-24 at the ~lcmorial gym Fri· · -. opened tbcir annual series with . period stint for clo~e to a shot Len Lev1t1, President of the FPildian Athletic .4.ssocia· day night to move into a first -.-,._ the Guards Juniors fOl' the Iron I per minute. Billard had 171 tlon, commcn!ed. on Clarke last nl~ht. ~peaking about the • place tic with the Irish. . Ore Co, of Canada Trophy by, drives come his way in the first i m..ellhood of Clarke playing for Fcildlans Levitz said:- · The second game of the · defeatin·o' the Guards 6·3 at the half of the game. · 1 scheduled twin bill was called ~ ' "HP Is coming here only to coach and not to play. It never ff d ·1 b 1 d Prince of Wales Arena on Sat· Guards tested MUN goalie, 1 o an now w1 I e P aye at : urday night. Starting a total Tols Chapman, 16 times over was and never will be the intentior of our Association to . a later dale. St. Bon's, one of goals, three game series for the the route as Chapman saw his l,avr him play, ; the contesting teams had only : award, MUN hold a three mar·. defence play well and his for-; "Th~ Felldians have taken a ·~trong sbnd against pru .· four players ready for action ker advantage. wards check a1l over the place. 1 ))layers In our local league," Levitz w~n1 on, "and since Don and referee Bill Wilson called

Ha1•ing the lead change hands Except for the goalkeeping of • Clarke Is not dlgible to take part In our local games, he can· the game. However Edgar ' > ~ • .. three times, the game produced Billard and Howell, the score . llot and will not play for Feild. He may play with the team . Squires, president of the lloop ; .~· some fine hockey with plenty would have been higher. ' series said later that the game 1 of body contact In an earlier LINEUPS in exhibition gam~s." 1 cou ld have been P1 aye d , so 1t· 1' ~~~~b~~~~~l w~~.ture, Memorial ·.' .. ' Ch~:~~~~I~~fencc: J~o~~ov~: .. --~-d-· ~- wal/~·s~~s~~~~~1· the outcome • _C.-L.... B ... ------s ---- ,...... Guards opened a 2·0 first ....::'}:. J. Drover, J. Major. D. Butler, n oor ports between St. Pat's and 1\lemorial, period lead with a pair of taJ. 1·~. )1, O'K~efe; Forwards: ll. :.Iur· . . · ·, 1 the two teams are deadlocked ; lies in just over a minute. Nels phy, H. Hounsell, E. Rowe, D. in first place with ten points. Kearley ,.~ot the goal-getting .\Jarrett. J, Pnddick, ~1. Black· . although the Irish ha1·e two started with a solo effort at more, ~'. Ryan. F. O'Keefe, F. ~ losses against only one for I,· .. 2.30 of the first and Gerald Edwards, B. Drover. s..·et .For Novembe .." 26 1\lemorial. Holy Cross arc third ·,- Badeoek notched number two GUARDS - Goal: E. Billard; 1 with three wins in fiv~ trir~ I IJUl\i i·HEI.:\:\ for Guards at 3.35 tipping home NELS KEARLEY E. Howell; Defence, G. Camp·. , . . : 1~ 1 ile Guar~ h~·e ~ 1\~·o and por:un;tv to nut his dull W·• ~':ven ~~ain;t lih:h t.;,:;m. St 1 0 115 Earl Pollett's quick pass. . . bell, D. Barbour. F. Hickey, C.; On Saturday mght. Nov. 26th,; wh1c~ it 1s hoped that such, .r:-e reror · .I. . re- a two p"011,t ~d:r, ln<~ hac\ his !'a\·s mace ~oo•! 01: II':~ o! t!Jci 1 8 Guards were playing two men Guards mto a 3·3 lle at 16.30 tf Noseworthy; Forwards: E, Vat- the O.B Armoury will be the. walki!lg stars as George Par· ~,am m the • cellar Without ~hot c3 rm off ttw frvn: ri~ t:·ir; fron 1 n·.e r::arity line w!lilt· 111 short as Ches Noseworthy and, the, m_iddle stanza as he put~ le ehcr, B. Warr. J, Crane, N.; scene of the Fall Indoor Sports sons, Gordon Follett, Arthur1 ,,.,n fom .tarts.. , 1 st. Pnrs took pQ;,,:,f'':d oni;' 0111 Kearley were serving tripping iuush1ng touch to a play With Kearley, R, Skanes. E. Pollet, of the Bngade. These Sports, Winsor, Jim Jackson, Frank; ~IE~IORIA~. vs. ST. PATS the ball in the dviu~ st~Oihi> r.: !l;rou::;h th~ houp. ,.. ..; sentences when· MUN had. I'd ~atcher, and Jo~n Crane. D, Bailey. G. Badcock, B. Kean, I have not been seen f~r a couple ~la~ti·1 and Dick _McNil·c,~ ~ill Th~. 1\~emor~.al ;quad ope.~e~l • the gr. 1 ro~ btuld ret it baci: in via~. t!m~' .IIE.\/(IfdAL: !.lh••r'l Haw.r· 1 the play with Henry Hounsel1 er got the wmmng tally for _the I Assoctatlon, sports lovers can be' pate m such a race. If they 1 after no:•~ ~he~an: Ins~ ce~}c~· ran out. 8. Tnls Ch;;;1n;;;n 7, t.'h~ 1 ·:i~- £;. c • w k' . 1 relaying the puck Ill Edwards, i\!UN boys at 5.40 on the fmaJ I' assured that there will be the: are i!ltcrcsted, then the Arm-; ~an ga~le t. !at~- a ·. "fh ' : Al ilo~ r.e.; ',\"~£ i he lr,p ~;·~r· nis 4. DM2 W;mi ~. l;;n i: "1'/h:t, 1 0ml ng ee s 1 for the score at 12.05. frame on a good solo effort an usual annual Sports held in ~lay 1 oury would be open to them' w<1s •e OH Y !~~ m e: er on the ·,rmnin~ sirle wi:'1 ~- Gwr~e :'\tal, lL•lold S4u1re First line center, ~likt.' ~fur· 1Dave, lllarrett ~lasted Frank and in November of ·each year. I for practice on occasions when' ~ame that the Patncians were 1 ci.d1t poir.:, ·.;·hile tr.n:H;:l~C ":'r;T)" ~iattil•:.l .. HIJ\\"ic ;Jwy~r phy. got )!emorial el"en at 16.3oiR~·ans rebound mto the mesh/ HOCkey Act"On In conncctior. with the Sports it is convenient. : m {rant. , Tols Charma;J had we11. Dot• 0 \';,n,· !\o~l. .John F.:nlJnle' o_f the. first ~or. a 2·2 tilt at the~at 7.37 for a 5·3 game. . I the foilowin!l events will be on All rank~ are Jookin~ for- h.Usmg 'te ~o~hg pa~' ann.~rthh·. Pildan of S;. Pat's had :en Da•iri Dnl'. f\cn ow:rs. · 1 111 0 1 1111 5 first mtcrmJSSion. It was un·1 .The last MUN tal~r c.•n~c' . . lh~ programme:- ·ward to the SporU; and the· ~ 1 mo~ e rc ? ~ e 1 pornt.•. tnps f11r tlw ni~ht whi!o ST. PATS· De·~( Ph•i•4 1n assisted. lw1th both teams pla~1ng t~IO I Jloc~cy really ~wm_gs mt,o 30 Yard Dash-Junior. . hig prize will h~ thP. Inter-~ ~tu7 II.'~~ s~~n. mo,dcd m~1 ~;.Tim llickry ~cl1kd for thn~ .lim Hic>. .,y 6. F;e:nie !'ol;.ro.~•ii Guards had Groff Campbell men short, Noseworthy and operallon at thr Stadmm this IOOYard Dash-Intermediate r:omphny Shielri which ha•' 0m orta e can an. coa .. te :ion~ ~N·>hQi> and cix J:0'ni• 4. Da1·f Ry;,r: ~. h·•n Ar.~PI 2 ' ' · , K 1 · r Guard~ ml ~lurph'· · · k p t' d · . · ' : a1 ong to a 1~·7 half hme lead. · · · . .: ' · , . - off for unnrcc~sarv roughtng car c~ o · a , • ' commg wee . rae Ices an , :!20 Yard Dash-Scmor. 'been nrcsentcd bv the Old. Th 1 . Rcfprecs B11l \\ Jl>on ~nd Brrn Bet;r:ett. E1~ (,~·lOo~. fr

FISHI:\'G POI~TERS-Ban·ly minnow-sized himself, Mike · Alexis Jr., nets like a super fisherman beh1·ecn hug;e mar· . lin in San Juan. Tll!'y were :1111011!( 211 lanclt·d durin~ Puerto , Rico's lntl'rnafional Gaml' Fish Tournnmcnt The compcti· :· tion attracted I 0 Carihhl•;m Icams and repn•scnlatives of . ~ 15 duhs from the continental United State;.

J Carnival Comes To To~n

I Thr first ire carnival to come tu St. John's In five years i I will be here m1 !'iol"ember 15th and 16th. and will appear at the Prince of Wales Arena. Ralph Colyer, Arena Manager. t1ld the !'iEWS that the carnil·al will ::il·e afternoon and ni~ht performances on both days. Travellin~ all ol"cr Sorth America the show Is called the "Canadian fccarama'' and boasts 50 entertainers. Including !Jave Parks of the 1958·19 Ire Capaacs, and ha~ ils own or· cnestra. Further details on the Carnival will be released with· in the next few days, , _ '·"' ··- Ian Campbell City •Commercial

i Out Of Action .Bowling League·

For 10 Days I sfnEDl1I-:i: roR wr.EK 'l'ue>da)': :\ llcys 1 •nd 2 7.15-\Iacllol:ald's ~s BLC Plenty of room for six adult· Fresh-air heater. Neat, out-or­ Famous Glide-Ride suspension. Pendant-type pedals keep out Consul: 4-cylinder, 61 h.p, en­ Two-tone upholstery. lnsJru­ 8.30-)larconi 1·s S.·Sears peaenacn gine. Zephyr: 6·cylinder, 90 h.p. ment panel hooded against glare. to sit in real comforr. the-way. ReallY keeps you warm! And extra big, extra 1aje brakes. draughts. Lots of room for feet! ' 9.45-.~valon 'I'. ,., T. Printers Allc~s B ind 4 7.1~-~IJ)'.,J:.;ll'! \'S Slre~!~ D. - THE MATCHLESS &·CYLINDER ZEPHYR-Here's real ·luxury"'lass motoring, yet still at a THE ECONOMICAL 4·CYLINDER CONSUL-No other car in its price class offers you so much: S.:JO- \li\nl!ny'• \'S Whnl~sJ!P room for six passengers ••• big, family-size luggage space , •• powerful yet gas-saving price ~hat makes economic sense. No other car costing so little is built with so much care F' l: v 61 h.p. engine. Many luxury features, too, like padded dash, padded sun visors, foam rubber and attention to detail. Superbly ftnished from end to end-a car for the man who loves 9.~~--:W:d !Ire"'· ~'!I !o!•Jnn'l ~eating, glove compartmcpt that locks, arm rests on all four doors, extra parcel tray and cars. Zephyr's spirited 90 horsepower engine has earned a reputation as one of the longest­ \11~:.< 5 ~;:d 6 7.!5-:\ flrl. Ero:.: ,·:; s.s.D. c~. lasting ever built. Available with automatic ttansmission and many other wanted features. much, much more. Plus a reputation for being one of the most reliable cars on the road I 3.30---:•t~ad h. ,.~ B-~1 :Rankm 9.45-P.dnk of M. va Fark~r':

'I'~ ursdR~·: A!ltys l an

. • t. l2_.-· -:::-:~;:---:------:::::------;-~~~::::::::::==:::::~~:::=~----~T:H:_E ::_D:AI~L Y~N~WS,~JOH~·-'S_, _N_FLD_.,_M_O_N_D_A_Y,_N,_O_VE_M_B_E_R 7, 1960 ·600 Acre Game "Earth, Stars and Man (16) A Hoax and a Hope by Don Oakley and John Lt~ne Reserve Popular

JNM!:RKIP, Ont1

I. man fossils that have been found in scattered ~crre, says Herb Smith, fl rest· Although there will b.e no deer: sT E A M s H I p I die the two. It was contrary to everything sapiens. The jaw, however, was that of a mod· rknt of ncnrb~· \~'aterloo. . I hunting this year, Sll'ith hopes · ! evolution was based on. IJ'he strange thing was ern chimpanzee that had been expertly doc· rarts of the world during the· past century. The pre~erl'e ts set up tn two I the department of lands and for· · . · gil•en an impressive name, Eoantl!ropus daw­ tored to look like a fossil. Someone, no one It was also from Africa. in the 1920s~ that ~ec~ions. One is 400 acre~ located esls will permit It next ye 11r. MQVEMEN JS smli-Dawson's Dawn Man. Dr. J. H. McGregor knows who or why, had pulled a clever hoax. word came that somethin~ very like the "miss­ a little more than 11 mtle from A modern two·storey chalet of Columbia University Included him In his One of the most recent flnd~ has been madr log link" had been found. The story of this, lnncrkip and about 5ix miles can accommodate 14 hunter& famous series of bust! of fossil men. and an· at the 0\duvai Gorge in East Africa. site of po~sibly, most ancient ape mEn of all and of his n~rthen~t of Woorl>lock. Tho ol'el'tlight and up to 40 during the ~~iiiiii"ii5i thropologlsts tried, vainly, to forget about him. fossil digging since the early part of the ren· fight [or recognition deserves a chapter of its l'CEXT: Apes? ot ~cr i; 200 acres, about four dny. A lodge with 'leepinll ae· . In lHO, Kenneth P. Oakley of the British Mu- tury. In 1959, after a 30 years' search, Dr. own. Ape Men or Man m1les to the em;t. 1 commodation for 28 will be com· S'rEAMSRIPS LTD. ~ . PR!~'ATE CI.~R . pleled hy next fall. M.V. Perth loading at ·Mon· "1thln a rad1us of 60 miles are I Smith says he expecl.'t between treal Nov. lith, lor St. John'• ~uch cities R!l' London, Hnmillon. 2.000 and 3.000 pheasants will be and Botwood. Brantford. Kitchcner . Waterloo, 1shot this fall. The sealon opened I M.V. Len don loading at Tor- Iname they've hung on you?" Toronto Galt Guelph Stra1ford, ·Oct. 19 and to prepare for 11 birds onto Nov. 'Jth, Hamllten Nov. "Same old Brett," she said St. Thomas, as well as Wood· were bought 1r 0 m breeders 8th, 1\lontreal Nov. lOth, for 1 with her lip curled. "You're sl?.c~. . th1·ouchout Ontario. They were St. John's. ; wasting your time. I said all I , \\ e ha1·e deer partndgc, kep for several weeks In a hold· •M.V. Dundee load in& at [had to .;ay to you before you 1 woodcock, duck~. geese, rnbhils inq pen thtat Clln handle up to Toronto Nov. lBUi; Hamilton By Ntllon Nyt 'left." I and Coturnix quail n small Jap. 300 birds. Nov. 19th, Montreal N ov. 21st ;, Net 11~ Nr• 1960 • . 1 "I'm here," he said, "to re- anese \·ariety'' Smith says. GUIDES PROVIDED for St. John'•· , . D~trlbuttd ~ Newspaper port some blotched stuff we Great northern pike, muskies Guides and dogs are available M.V. Perth loading at Mon· ·--::;; I found that belongs to you. and S'!'allmouth bass .are to be • for those who want them though treat Nov. 2Srd, for Botwood THE STORY: Brett Fas. The . bunkhouse was dark. 1Packin' Trone's brand on top found m the lnkes, whtle seveJ•nl hunters may brlnll their own and St. John'•· ken, reallllng Trone II the Two lamps still showed when I o_f 0,. he put. 1 Hol!blc~ b~t. nc~·cr. streams running through the,. dogs. S.S. Gow.rle loading at Toron- vldlm of a rustling frame· Brett rode into the yard both 11 there. I m r1dm for V1c now. 1 to Nov. 19th, Hamilton Nov. np, clecldes that the only , in the house. One of the;e, the' H:, sent ~e ,over to. tell you-" 1 20th, Montreal Nov. 28rd for way to counteract It Is to :farthest, behind a drawn shade. I There 1sn t anytbmg you can. St. John'• and Botwood. , report II Immediately to 1was in Brett's old room; the· tc~l me ahout that, thief that [ • Refrl1erat1on. the aherlff. Brett realizes 1 nearer was in what they'd al·l w1ll help !urn no.~. I ve got h1m' I CLARKE STEAMSHIP CO. that his own sister Is be· 1 ways used for an office. Light . dead to nghls- · 1 lliahllner leave Montreal hind this mo\'e to outlaw from this ranged out across the' "He never touched tho~c: Nov 2nd., dui St. John'~ Nov. Trone. dust, revealing the day pen . cows. He'~ been flat ~~1 his back · I7th, sailing Nov. 9th (Bay Rob- • • • open and empty. m bed w1th a bullet. ! 1 erts). XVIII So the crew was gone. I She didn't believe him. She, I •Nov~porl teavint Montreal Lola was gone when Brett I've been a fool, Brett had made up her mind long ago i ----- ·, Nov. 9th, due St. John'• Nov. came out with the rifle, the thought, to come here without· nhout Trone. She had Trone l 114th, saillnl· Nov. 16th. dust of her passaic settling a gun. 'where she wanted h1m now .. 'YJNG •Gulfport leaving Montreal back over the ridge, Brett got No, this wasn't the time for Brett hod to say something. He! NoW PL A ' Nov, 16th, due St. John's Nov. into the saddle and reined the tha tsort of thins. He'd been ' said, •·stoker's ~ecn notified." i 21at, leave No. 23rd. . roan toward the hills that hid Iright. Trone's rifle was on the: All that got h1m was a look Hillhllner leave Montreal this part of Fasken range. , horse-he hadn't even thought' of contempt· · -- Nov. 23rd, arrive St. John'a When presently-for no sure ito find if it was loaded: No: "You'd better go." She tipped .·• Nov. 28th, leave St. John'• NoY reason - he glanced around, 1 matter. You didn't go into a back her he~ d. st1l1 eymg h1!n• 30th (Bay Roberti). he found· Trone watching from I house with a rifle to report anrl spo~e With a cold disdam. •Novaport, leaving Montreal the open door. stolen cattle and hope to con· "That gn·l's turned your head. P.Q., Nov. 30th, arrive St. He crossed the little hills. vince an~·one you'd come with She's making a fool of you." IIMINUIEI John'l, Dec. 5th, leavln& St. The sun dropp~d lower. The air clean hands. Violence grpw its "Lea,·e her out of th1s." John'•• Dac. 7th. was twisted and with own kind of fruit-as who, Jo -laughed. "If DF TIE MDIT INTENIE IUIPENIE wri~gly yo~ c~n't r.11 1111 1: ,_ ••t. Oft. GliLF AND NOilTREitN heat, distorting whatever a man should know better than Brett stand the truth the doors rtght ~ li~O , lrt. t/•5 IN MDTIDN PII:TUIE HlmiYI SHIPPING CO. tried to look at, and smoky with Fasken! Ibehind you. 'IJEFFREY HUNTER - CONSTANCE TOWERS John's Dec. 6th, night he'd walked out with the I could hit 011 more ways to get searchers _have d~1·rloel~ a thr~e- 1 BILLIE BURKE in "" - •Fergus teavln& Charlotte· money she'd flung at him flut·\under his guard than a coiled . way ':accme agamst rhphthena. ST. JOHN'S CORNER BROOK town Dec. 9th;· leavln& Pictou terlnl{ about the harsh strike of tiger snake and he struck back , whoopmg co ugh Jn~ scarlet 221 New Gower St. Western Terminals Bld:2 ACTION - THRILLS - EXCITE~NT. N.S., Dec. lOth; 1rrlvln1 St. his b~ts. She would never for· -needin~ to hurt-just as he: fev~r. Tass reported Fnday. The John'• J)ec. 13th; JeavlnJ lt. alve h1m. No chance to start always had, without sto i~ to I Somt news n~ency smd the d.1s- , Phone 2634 or 5199 Phone 4·4972 John'• Dec. 13th. over-not for Brett Fasken, think. "Goln' round 1:P ag ts' 1ease rate of c~1ldren treated ll'llh i •Feraua leavlnJ Ch1rlotte- committed to keeping Trone's You tryln' to live u t~ nth~ the new vaccme was cut 95 per Route "MUIRHEAD'S" town, Dee. lllth; leavlnl Pictou place 11ut of her hands. And P cent. N.S. Dte. 1'7UI; arrlvlnl St. this on top of what h•'d done .._4UW14',11~~....,,,..,. • ··· - . ....,. .., TORONTO-HAMIL TON-MONTREAL-LEVIS John's Dee. !Oth: leavlnc St. to Clint Wilder. John's, Dec. 2oth. · She wu \Ike 1ome great octo· December 16th .alllng to be pus, •trang\lnl( thla range, car. FURNESS 1 WITHY & CO •t LTD • governed by ice condltiona. ing for nathlng but power. Llnrpool St. John's Bog/on Rallfas St.• John'l •Refrigeration. FURNESS WITHY AND from Montreal Nov. 3rd, due te lo Hfs & Ill to to St. John's, Nov. 7th. St. Jobn's BosteD HalifaJ St. John's 11pool COMPANY, LIMITBD M.S. "Bedford II" 1al\lng Newfoundland, leavln& Liver· from Montreal Nov. loth, due "Nova Sea tia" Nov. 30 Nov. 31 "Newfoundland" Nov.5 NJv 11 Nov. 15 Nov. 17 pool Oct. 18, due St, John'• St. John'• Nov. 14th. Nov. t. Leaving for Hallf1x 1nd· M.S. "Fauvette" aalllng from "Nova Scotia" Nov. 11! Nov. 5 Nov. 23 ·Dec 3 Dec. 5 JJoston Nov. 11, due Jlallfax Halifax, Nov. 12th, due St. NOW PLAYING Nov. 'J and .Bo1ton Nov, 10. John'• Nov. 14th. CLARKE Leavlnl Boaton Nov, 11 and M.S. "Woodcock" aallinll from UR . FREIGHT Hallfu Nov. 111, due St. John'• Montreal Nov. 17th, due St. t.)II: Nov. Salllna •lain aame John'•• Nov. 2llt. 1'7. o\MF.IUCAN AIRWAYS SCANOINAVIAN TWA ~o; . day for Liverpool. . 'Refrlteratlon. '"" - SERVICES Nova Scotia, leavlnl Liver· FURNESS RED CROSS LINE •nnnectlnll Alrlinfs. . pool Nov. 18, due St. John'l M.S. Coral Trader leaving 1 & from MONTRIAL Nov. 22. Leaving for Halifax New York November 28th, CONSULT US REGARDING YOUR TRAVTL PROBLEMS and Boston Nov. 23, due Hali· Halifax November 29th, arrive fax Nov. 25 and Boaton Nov, St. John's December lsi, leav· FURNESS TRAVEl OFFICE To NEWFOUNDLAND 28.' Leavins Boston Nov. 29 and lng December 2nd for Corner NEWFOUNDI.AND HOTEL ' 'PHONE 5621 Tof.0RNERBROOK-w~k~ Halifax Dec. !, due St. John's Brook. Leaving Corner Brook I MfV "lrieh .Role" ~ M{V "trilh WiDow" Dec. 5, 8allln1 •••In aame day Pecamber 6th direct for New i ~~~~~~~~!'~!~~~~~~~~~~~~ for Llvetpool. York. Leaving New York De· , - To ST. JOHN'S-weekly 1 NFLD. CANADA STt:AMSIIIPS cember 14th, Halifax December • S.S. "Novap«t", S.S. •Gulfport" ud LTD. 17th, arrive St. John'• De· i FAST DIRECT FREIGHT SAILINGS S.S. "Hirhlir~er" ' · ~ • M.S. "Fauvette" sailing from cember 19th, leave December i • Complete Iowrance Coverqe Halifax Nov. 2nd, due St. John's 20th for Corner Brook. Leave 1 FRO•t" "ON•t TREAL, P.Q., I FROI\1 HALIFAX, N.S., • Thro111b Ratet .ia C.P.R.. C.N.R., and C.S.L. Nov. 4th. Corner Brook December 23rd ' TO ST. JOHN'S, NFLD. TO ST. JOHN'S, NFLD. • Refrigerated Cargo Space to St. Jobo"a •M.S. "Wftodcock""" sailing diro•t"' to Naw~ York. · · l.ta'I'IDil M•lllrtal O.e SL John' - : LuvlDr 111111as Due I&. lob' • Traclnr aod Expeditin; Se~ (X) M.V. WOODCOCK I M. v. FAUVETTE . • '"••ur.•••••r• ...... SHIRLEY EATON TERENCE LONGDON NOV. 3 NOV. 7. NOV 2 NOV. 4 CLARKE TRAFRC SERVICES ••u•"... ,....,,.. .., M.S. "BEDFORD II" M. V. FAUVETI'E ...... INM ,.. ..,...... CHARLES HAWTREY NOV 10 NOV. 14 NOV. 12 NOV. 14 oHering Bills piling up? (X) M.V. WOODCOCK M. V. FAUVETI'E CONSOLIDATION OF LCL SHIPMENTS A/so - UP-TO TH~·MINUTE N!WS NOV 17 NOV. 21 NOV'. 21 NOV. 23 You're always wekome at 1\I,V, "BKDFORD U'' M, V. FAUVE'l"I'E • SHOWS NOV. 24 . NOV. 28 NOV. 29 DEC. 1 PICI·UP FACIUTIES.In . TIMES Of (X) Refrigeration Space Avail MOROPOUTAN TORONTO and MONTRUL EVENING SHOWSt 7 O'CLOCK ...;, 9.00 ... able. MATINEE: 2 P.M. ~~~GAHA For fi'relgh& CWKE LOANS Reservations 1'-:.o:---~------. .';:·i·:: . T ~1. 5483·2151 GuH ol"firrf St. Lawr.ncel""' "" .. ;~'11\"i'A' >,. ····.·• . or soa~o I .,~ NEXT AnRACTION . or .I lARtlll AJI..CANADIAN LOAN COMPANY .~n llil\t 'At-nli ' :~TONY, CUitTlS - DeB~lf ReYNbLDS ·In "TH~ . RAY AGENCIES .. HARVEY STEMI· l'ar..., llulldlll(, Duetnror til st., Phone: .·711&7.·. 1111 •. TR,NS,OAT CO. LIMITEO ~f RAT ~C~" - ~AUGHS . - EXCITEMeNT .... Wflfl' ~..bon_e; ~~~ .. sm: Ia PlaeonUI: ·Pta· SHIPS LTD .. HR~I I lkll· .-onpQ ·t(lpen ·.Mondo)>• . anct leck't C•••· lt. Jth"'' ( THRILLS - COLOR. . . ll11 I a.m. lo i ·p.m.l Bran\J!Ol · · Pltene: tOll Agents • Qr.nd Falll IDd . Cotper Brook. . ' •

I I . '· \ ; I '·

THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., MONDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 196~. 13

ALLEY OOP By V. T. HAMLIN For Prompt and Efficient OIL DELIVERI·ES. FURNACE FUEL and STOVE lr~~ DIAL 3007, 7469 3001 lWJL Convenient THE GREAT EASTERN OIL Contract THE STORY OF MA~THA WAYNE By W. SHRUGGS ,41/iJI/JIIk;~f$ A sri.';IM5E~ JOC.€v'ltl?o'ti/L "iM Tlm~L'I rtRJ(:f AIJD, Wr;t.l.1 """'H, /M~B:; . ·Service AIM WoW KAmllGI l «JULD ~Of T~l" ~1$ Af'/'Lii-T I<:JI? A .laB: .. COMPANY LIMITED '10 Ull'f, 5~ PIACIO ... ! MEAU, 'ltlUtOClD I ~Elllt~ a....-r ~ W!Til MIO L\KE

11.15-Rigbt to Happiness. 11.3S--Nfld. Quiz 1 1.411-Swilt Moneyman • JACOBY T·V· RADIO(OG- 12.00-News Hlgbllghtl 12.0:l.-Town and Country ON BRIDGE 8.25-News 12.30-New• --. ---···· .. :::::::-• I.SO-Hit of the Oay 12.33--Town and CountrJ - CBN 8.:15-Sportscaat 1.00-Newa. WRONG GUESSES MONDAY, Novembtr ,th. 8.-iO-Breakfast with Bill 1.011-Weatber Forecast. CAN .TIIIP BIDDER 8.55-News 1.$-Don Jamieson'• 7.15-Musical Program. U.OO-Mornins Date Editorial ~~D.-esc News 9.15-Lindas First Love 1.40-Sportl NOI.'DI 1 11.30-MornlJli Date US-Art Baker'• Notebooll .JC..UU 7.35-Top of the Mornins IO.OO-Ntws . 2.00-Newa HlghllJbta .Kol lUGS lUNNY By LEON SCHLESINGER 8.00-CBC News and Weather 1I).05-Stork club 2.03-Jef!1 Wi&~IDI Sbuw U7U 8.111-Mu•lcal Clock 10.15-Jim Ameche Shr .w 2.30-Newa .J2 9.00-Mornlns Devotion• 10.511-Newa 2.31-Jerry Wl111n1 Show WEST EAST t.lii-Program Preview 11.00-Jim Ameche Show 3.02-Weltern Jamboree. .71 .5 9.20-0rgan Stylings. ll.l5-Western Jamboree 4.00-Newa In a Minute .us •QJtiU 9.30-CBC News. 4.011-Raneb Par(J, • 143 .101 9.36-Direct Reports i2~western Jamboree 5.00-News In a Minute .AK 1085 .IIU 80tl'rll (D) 9.411-Records at Random 12_30-New• 5.01-Bob Lewl1 Dance Part, · .AQlOIB 10.00-Arcbers 12.35-Ramblln with Record1 8.00-New• Hlthllchll · ., 102 10.15-lris Power. 12.45-F!Jberman'• Forecast 6.01-Weather tAKQJ 10.211-For consumers bll 'tb R .... 6.05-Bulletln Board 10.30-Nfld. School Broadcast. 12·50-Ram n WI eeo....- .Q7 . . . 1.15-Sportscast 8.10-Natlonal Newa East and We1t vulnerable 10.45-~lum. m the 1\lormns .20-Ramblln wltb Record• 6.15-5 ports 1 1 SoliUI W!a& NarUI laat 11.00-l\lormng Pops. : 1.45-So The Story Goes. 6.25-Ever Battel'J Newa 1 • Pall 2 • PUI 11.15-A Man called Sheppard. · 2 uO-Jim Amecht Sbow 6.30-Ciub 93 4 • Pall Pus Pas1 ' . ' U.30-Nfld. School Broadcast. · 5-News I 2 5 7.0:l.-Ciub DS ·~·.;;"!Je.J '1.30-New• and Waterfront 1D.15-Housewlves Choice. Capt to 1 TODAY'S QUESTION t ~-- _.,. Dlrectol'J 10.30-National New•. f 1 Your partner continues with l -: ,, '1.311-Breakfast wltb Bill 10.33--What's Cookln'. 'na J a _bid of four clubs. You play ' . 8.0G-Torba7 Weather 10.35-Housewlvea Choir.e I Now Playl • tb11 bid 11 normal and not a 8.0f-Breakfa1t with Btu 11.ol-Housewlves Choice. ' reque1t to ahow aces. What do ''TJJE LAST- VOYAGE" you do? L:·c~;~'J-i~}~ WITH ROBERT &TACit, An1wer Tomorrow DOROTHY MALONE AND L,~~·~/"~~1 EDMOND O'BRIEN film. B11t It is by focu•alnJ his drama on the plight of a young "The Last- Voyage", a mot­ husband, whose wife and child Ion picture which ha& received are trapped in the wreckage, a barra;t of publicity and com· that Stone has clven his narra­ ment even before ill release by tive heartbreaklnl Impact. I Metro·Goldwyn-Mayer, due to .the extraordinary circumstances Robert Stack playa the bus· SHORT RIBS By FRANK O'NEAL oL itl filming, unfolds a sus­ band whose wife (Dorothy Ma· penll·fllled atory of the sinking lone) and young daughter of an ocean liner and the dra­ (Tammy Marihugh) are trapped f ·28 Slouan JndlaM 42 Ruulan eiiJ matic rilscu• of ita 1,1100 pas­ in their atateroom after the 2iEe1worm 41 At thll pllat 11hip's boiler blow• up, ripping ' 35WDiow «Balkan native ..n&ers. 36Femalt •o Flnalllltlllc&l AJ1 Andrew and Virginia a gaping hole through all the • saint (ab.) PIIUII . Stone Production, In wide docks. The child is rescued but 37Tou 47Employer the wife ia pinned down by an 40 Muattllnt 48CGuchOI 1creen and color, atarrlng Rob· maml!lll ert• Stack, Dorothy Malone, Immovable 1trip of metal. The 60 =r:,nt'l attempll of the deiperate hul· 41=rlllld !Uiah Georae Sanders, Edmond 0'· Brien and aix-)'ear-old Tammy band to secure aid in uvJiig Marlhugh, the fllm Is unique her as tbe •hip tlowly beglna to In the annals of motion picture alnk, alter the en111ne room Is maklll&, . In order to &lve his aet afire and the f11rward alack ltol'J Ullquestlonable ruallsm, craahe• IJito tbe wheelhouse, give the story harrowlns mo· wrltor.dlrector Andrew Stone menta. ·, FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS By MERRELL BLOSSEP. le11ed one of the world'• most .. famous ocean ,liner• at a ata&e Geor11 Banders. portra)'l the 1n which lt was read)' for re­ Captain, whose delay ht ord~r­ tlnmtnt and then proceeded to inll his passen11er• Into the life· link ltl The unusual picture boata brlnss aboul a personal waa filmed In the Japan Sea tragedf. ]!:dmond O'Brien is with practically Its entire 1ction seen 11 the Second E1111neer, Pbt1toll'1Phtd elth1r on or who .comes cloao tO rel!elllnK alongside the tf,OOiloton ve ..el. aKalnst his· better Judgment, 'l'lte result Ia one of the most with an.other outJlandlnC role IU$hentlc 1nd powerful de­ pla)'ed by Woody Strode as a plellt!ona of 1 aea ~tel' ever young seamon who rev~als his bfousht tel the ae~een. heroism In aiding $tack t.o save .The drtma of the alnldn1, It· MiiJ Mal!lne. . aeU-the explo1iona and firu; the panic among the pa11en~ers ·the. beroi•m auendaJtt to last­ Wherever it'1 · againJt tile minute re•cue1-maltes "Tho law to pick up ltltchhlkers tile Laat Voya1e" and engr~ulnl 111to II a passing tblpl'.

' ' I THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., MONDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1960 .

For Your Xmas LOST. Shopping? 'WATCHES 1 Beagle Pup Ten Prizes of $250.00 • each to be won in In vicinity· of · Cochrane Lions Bonanza Sweep rond Road. Finder please on November 30th. Public Notice Dia I 927 49·L GET YQUR TICKETS LES INGERMAN NOW. Molloy's lane

STADtUM For Fast TO-NIGHT I Taxi Service SKATING AUTO PARTS (Whole) Nfld. HOTEL TAXI Armature WorkJ

''I want to leave my finger· prints on your white wall~ to .:ivc them a touch if color!"

But ~lister. if you had your ~·BliiLDING MATERIALS walls paintrd with the new washahlc paints why worry I CHESTER DAWE, LTD. about fingerprints? And if ' SHAW ST. and TOPSAIL RD YOt: want easv to tlun For all your Building walls. ~rr u~ ior I he paint Requirements call fhat fit.;, :·om· n"rr' ~·. 80161-91171 HORWOOD . LUMBER Co., Ltd. WATER STREET WEST •· PHONE 3011 ' HEAP & PARTNERS (NFLD.) LTD. Wiring Materials, Wire and Cables, Motors Starters, GREAT EASTERN Lamps, Switchcl, Lightlnt OIL & IMPORT Fixtures, etc. WAREHOUSE: PRINCE'S IT. CO., LTD. Be DIAL5085 ladio, Television, Wuh.., Modern Refriger1ton, Deep friiiVI FIRE INSURANCE Electric Rangea, floor Polilher~, Live Gramophone~ :ROSBIE & CO., LTD. Public Address Systnu, Electrically ! Agents for Tap. .Keeorders UNDERWRITERS AT &EPAIRS AND SERVJC.'I LLOYDS. I LINES LOW RATES 8IAL 1001 to ... DIAL 5031 WATER STREET lan26.ly.

U. s·. ELECTIONS NEWFOUNDlAND - SERVICES

PASSENGER SERVICES CONNECIION GREEN BAY COMPLETE. COVERAGE ERNEST CLOUSTON, LTD, SERVICE McCLAR\ AUTOMATIC Train ''The Caribou" leavinll WARM AIR CONDITIONING St. John's 1:30 p.m. . Tuesday, 210 WATER ST. November 8th., will make con· DIAL U83 nection at Lewisporte with :M. DIRECT FROM S'PECIAL C BC NEWSROOM AT NBC, V. Nonia on Green Bay Service. CONNECTION LEWISPOII.TE· CORNEll. BROOK SERVICE NEW YORK. Train "The Caribou" leaving St. John's 1:30 p.m. Tuesday, · November 8th., will make con· nection at Corner Brook with ON S.S. Springdale on Lewisporte Corner Brook Serviee. CONNECTION SOUTH COAST SERVICE Train "The Caribou" leaving L. HEALEY St John's Thursday, November Cross Roads and Water Street uith., will make connection at Dial 3026 Port aux Basques with M.V. Bonavista on South Coast Ser· CBC CBC vice. FREIGHT. ACCEPTANCES FREIGHT ST. JOHN'S JOB BROTHERS LEWISPORT£ SERVICE RADIO TELEVISION & CO. LTD. Freight St. John's Lewisporte water Street Service for forwarding via Lew· Dial 2658-4123 isporte and ~1. V. Codroy ac· AT AT cepted at the Railway Freight REG. T. MORGAN Shed to.day and Monday, No. \'ember 7th 9.30 a.ril. to 5 p.m. 10.00 P.M. INSURANCE LOOTED 10.00 P.M. Temple Bldg., P.O. BoJ 168, FREIGHT SOUTH COAST 341 Duck11orth St. SERVICE TUESDAY Dial 80370 or 7756 Freight is accepted daily at TUESDAY the Railway Freight Shed for ports South Coast Sen•ice, but THROUGH in order to guarantee move· THROUGH ment by this trip of the .s. S. CBN, ST.· JOHN'S. Bar Haven freight must be at the Railway Frei€ht Shed not later than 1.00 p.m. Tuesday, CBG, ·GANDER. CBYT, CORNER BROOK. November 8th. AYLWARD'S DIAL 90070 PBARMAC! FINAL ACCEPTANCE SOUTHERN LABRADOR CIT, GRAND FALLS. CFSN, STEPHENVILLE. Cor. Monchy & Empire Aye. SERViCE PARKDALE Freight for regular ports CBY I CORNER BROOK. CJON, ST.- JOHN'S. Southern Labrador Serviee to PBARMAC! Goose Bay per S.S. Baccalleu Elizabeth Ave. accepted Dock Coastal Shed Di~ 91120 Wednesday and Thursday, No­ vember 9th. and lOth; 9.30 a.m. FREIGHT SERVICE to 5.00 p.m. This will be final COMMENTARIES, INTERVIEWS ANALYSIS BY c.A.NADA'S TRINITY SOUTH acceptance for this service for From St. John's f11 season. WbUbo~~n~e to 'Old PerUean. ·TOP . NEWS, ·COMMENT ATORS ·IN ADDITION TO ·North Shore Conreptloa Sealed tenders, clearly mark· to Carbonear. · Trucks also avallable fm ELECTION . RESULTS. ed ·~Tenders·. for Crown · Land Timber ·Eastern Region". and long haul serv1ce. Rates Reasonable. indicating· im envelope the Lo~ STUART S. PETERS, DIAL 9311038 CANADIAN NA TIONA • 1 Number and Manaj!cment area. Deputy Minister of Resources. stating stumpage price per cord nov5,7 For further lnformaUon

c I . ' ' ' THE ,DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., MOt-fDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1960 1.5

liAVE YOUR CLEANING Painting jobs done now. Prices reasonable, satisfac­ BARGAIN.S tion assured free estimaU:J. ' KINSMEN FALL FESTIVAL Sam Sterling, Phone 2449; ·.; ;?: oct!H,lmtb :':;;· REDUCED FROM $7,500 TO $7,000 • < ' CONTRACTOR-We do . ~; Boys Club 28 BONCLODDY STREET kinds, in side renovating,..-: PRIZES sparkling, painting, out side. This is something you have been looking for repa.irs painting and etc. A. Newspaper DOOR PRIZE.S­ in a modern two storey Home, in A1 Stockley. Phone 3371-L. BINGO condition, near ehurches and schools. Con­ oct7,lmth UNCLAIMED tains living room, modern kitchen and , FOR ALL "OUR Exterior SERIES 38 kitchenette, tWo bedrooms and modern bath­ AUCTI.ON : and Interior Pairoting, 29031 ...... · .... $ 50.00 i Paper Hanging, Cleaning, room, hot and cold water. Wired for 220. TO-DAY'S NUMBERS 1554 ...... 500.00 Roofing, etc. 'Phone L. SEE THIS PROPERTY TODAY. VACANT. 'Villa Nova'·. _Howell, 739~H or 3752A. REAL BARGAIN. . \ ,.. URi\'ITlJR~ ICEI'AIRS - Re· BOAT -969-UndaimP-d. pail, to spring-filled mat· B I N G 0 REDUCED FROM $19,300 TO $18,000 Man Uel s I tresses. Ch~ tcrfield suites also rebuilt. Fift~ yeara' 8 24 1 31 46 62 SUPER - SPECIAL TORBA Y ROAD (FREEHOLD) experieolCC. keats ~!attr~~· 15 28 35 I Factory, 16 ~loutl' 'Itoyal Ave. 49 66 $3000.00-402824- Here is a beautiful _property situated in that To DAY Dial 92753 or 2656. 12 19 36 57 73 popular section of Tor bay Road, a new mod­ 10 17 37 52 74 Paul Nugent, Empire Ave. ern Bungalow, excellent design, oil furnace Wall Washing 18 42 47 69 West. heat, full concrete basement, suitable for NOV. 7th WALL Wi\SHI!oiG - Watl1 ""1 38 53 68 basement apartment. Contains large living cleaned by new machine. 9 48 12.30 p.m. Results pcrtect. sa1•es paint. · 20 61 $2000.00-223811-Uncfaimed. room and dining room, (com.), modern -New 1Iethod Rug and Wjilk~ 2 55 64 kitchen, three large bedrooms and modern Cleaners. Freshwater Re'ait,> 45 $1000.00-197646- 'Phone 91033. . · tiled bathroom. Hardwood and linoleum 16 floors. landscaped, driveway. SEE THIS . 126 HE·AD ITHE CENTRAL BARBER-.; 65 Doug Youden, Rankin St. SHOP-We are now operat·"'i: BEAUTIFUL BUNGALOW TODAY. VACANT. i ng 10 chairs, you can lie- -: $500.00-539860-Unc!~imed. CHOICE assurer! of prompt, effici· · 75 · ·ss00.00-~.43952-1 'rr.'~hned.' ' cnt, s~mtary service. No__ .; John C. Hamlyn & Son Ltd. BUTCHERS I walling problem. 24 New Tickets will be on sale at all leoding Gower Street opposite AilaO:::: REAL ESTATE AGENTS, I !aide ~!otors, Ltd. ' Stores until November 30th, 1960. CATTLE ! ~;uv ~IE'\'IIOD RUG CLEAN· 238 HAMILTON AVE. DIAl 2339 or 7351 ERS--Rugs and Carpet J (Please note change of made to look like new. • Von Schrader process add!' time.) y~ars to life of rug:; Clean· ed in home or at our plant . .:·:~·· 'Phone 91033, New ~lethod Consolation prizes to the first 20 ·to com· ENTERTAINMENT RIVERD·ALE TEI~NIS CLUB .....· ' ·u ~ Rug Cleaners, Freshwater ·_-: •'? .~F. 11 11 . ., Road. plete the letter X • ~ ' ·"" \.. · M' ru.ilirh.;" NICKEL THEATRE N··OTICE , I l •' TO-DAY'S Help Kin·- Help Kiddies TONIGHT AT 9O'Clock Members i~lerested in playing badminton are requested to attend an important meeting DEPENDABLE SPECIAL 30 GAMES FOil $1.00 at the Club House at 8.30 p.m. WEDNESDAY, November 9th. New members will also be Fire Insurance. 1956 Dodge very welcome at this meeting. Prompt Settlement Royal Expert Wat~h Repairs You can't afford not One owner. CBRONOMETEllS OWNER.LEAVING to be protected A-1 Condition. AUTOMATIC CALENDt\1 J. J. LACEY · McKINLAY PROVINC·E INSURANCE LTD., ''AOTORS t TO. LeMARCHANT ROAD (l.O.D. 211 WATER ST. JllDERb ST. JOHN'S MUNICIPAl COUNCIL Dial 6921 PHONE 4193- 4 • :~~ MUST BE S·OLD I ------~----· ---- 90 ELIZABETH AVE ... TENDERS AVALON CREDIT JEWELLERS Tenders are invited for t~e construction of Now reduced to $20,00 • • • is this ~ WATER AT ADELAIDE PHONE 78%9 Sanitary Sewer and Water Main in accord­ ~1··~ lovely modern Bungalow at 90' ance with specifications which are available 1 Elizabeth Avenue ••• Modern built-in at the office af the City Engineer. kitchen, living room, dining room, Bids in sealed envelopes marked "Tender three bedrooms and bathroom, oak for Construction of Sanitary Sewer and floors, fult concrete basement with Water Main" must be deKvered at the office SALE URGENTLY garage, oil furnace heat. Landscaped of the undersigned not later than 9.00 a.m. grouhds, large rear garden, concrete WEDNESDAY, November 16. 1960. walks and driveway. See it immedi· The lowest or any tender not necessarily Knitters and weavers in Baine Harbour, Glover- . NEEDED- ately. Low down payment. accepted. town, Fogo, Harcourt and other places all over··. MR. E. B. FORAN, the island have been producing so much work : We have an immediate cash sale for City Clerk. that we are over-stocked in certain items. Boys'·. a modern Bungalow with basement ST.AN CONDON JIOV5,7 Pullovers, sleeveless or long sleeves, Girls' Gym> Pants, Knee Socks, Fancy Cap and Mitt Sets,·> apartment, or two apartment two Opposite City Hall storey in good locality. Preferable Smith Corona Angora items, Infants Soakers, Sweaters etc. Also in the West End, but possiblly the DIAL 7848 • 7103 :- 4813 bargains in Luncheon Sets, other woven goods:': nov7,9 · and little girls Smocked Dresses in broadcloth ·. East End will be suitable. . or viyella. Reduclions up to 30 ~ ~. TYP·EWRITERS &CASHIERS Hours 9 a.m. to 5.30 p.m. Tuesday to Saturday. OFFICE SUPPLIES and EQUIPMENT STAN CONDON DOMINION MACHINERY &EQUIPMENT CO., LTD. The JUBILEE GUILDS··-'i Opposite City Hall OFFICE EQUIPMENT DIVISION OF NEWFOUNDLAND. 191 WATER STREET DIAL .5105 DIAL 7848' • 7103 • 4813 263 DUCKWORTH STREET ST. JOHN'S·. nov7,8 MAIN OFFICE 4052 - .4053 oct31nov2 NOTICE Speech Studio AVAILABLE Applications for Maiter Plumber's Licenses will be received by the under· MR. C. F. RYAN signed up to 5:00 p.m. TUESDAY, • VOICE PRODUCTION. ELECTRIC MOTORS Room or Room and Board • ELOCUTION. for 2 Gentlemen in private Nov~mber 15, 1960. • BASIC FRENCH. • BALLROOM DANCING FOR SALE home~ (Sgd.) E.' G. POMEROY, . Secretary, Also H.P. VOi.TS AMP. R.P.M. MANUFACTURER " TUTORING. 1-50 220 120 B75 Hugh J. Sc.ott & Co (Belfast) Ltd. PHONE 92783-t. Board of Plumbing Examine·rs. 288 Duckworth Street nov7,D,12 . 1-40 220 82 ..5 1145 General Electric. Tel. 7724 3-25 220 62 1750 Wagner Electric. oct26 to nov26 1-25 220 54 1160 General Electric. 1-20 220 50 1750 Wagner Electric .. CHANGE IN' 1-15 220 60 690 Westinghouse. . 3-5 HIGH SPEED. Where To Stay ALSO TELEPHONE ·NO. Balsam Hotel · 1-SURFACE PLANER, dired electric drive. I EPA IIS BARNES ROAD 1-RIP SAW. .LUIIZIU ••• Situated in the Heart of 1-TENON Machine. \Central Mortgage -.And· fjrestoae the CitJ, . 1-DEWALT Cut-off . Quiet, Comfortable Atmos­ "ouslng Corporation ...... phere. . FINANCING CAN BE ARRANGED. • For heservat!ona and ID- Telephone Numbers. ch~ng'ed from those· Nfld. · Armature · WQrks Ltd. formation. · BAMBRICK ST. DIAL~7191 ~ 7192 I thOWft ·1ft JDrevlous advetii~ment · 1ot:- · CHESTER DAWE LIMITED ' . Dial 6336 MRS. .JOHN FACIEY DAWE'S OVERPASS TOPSAIL ROAD DIAL 91171 ·. t~1.t5-1 :9.1152 Realdent lllanagereA •• ~ • • . ·, ' ·~ a i m3\,U i· ~,. A'dvertise .In The News . ' \ •' . / .,. I . I

A Tribute •• IN STOCK • SEEDLESS . RAISINS

IRAN DAIRY RATION 16 oz. and 11 oz. •• ·CRUSHED CORN HORSE FEED CURRANTS LAYING MASH LAYING MAS+I PELLETS · PRUNES MIDDLINGS PIG GROWER CALF MEAL OYSTER SHELL EVA'P. APRICOTS OtiCK STARTER CORNMEAL .. EVAP. APPLES SCRATCH F,EED SO's and 1OO's CHERRIES CUT MIXED PEEL T. &M. WINTER LTD. COCONUT DIAL 5101 - 5102- 5103

GENERAL MERCHANTS ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND GEORGE NEAL LI~AITED , ST. JOHN'S 'PHONeS: 2264 - 4440 - 3420

• Poppy Day Appeal

NO RED TAPE OR SPECIAL

INTERVIEWS All6nancing arrangeme1110 when you use the arc com pitted on our pro­ bes ..ben rou buy on tbe I.A.C. Merit Plan Merit Plan. We "'ork 0111 for time purchases the details of your purchaM in just a few minutes­ then it is youra, 10 11ke home aad use immediatd,.

~~~~~'\DISPOSER 3ives you all these features: Leak proof • No vibration \'owerful motor, lifetime !ubrlcatlon • Self cleaning ~ontinuous feed • J £ASY STEPS . .

J 'hrn o~ Cold ONL1' .Walllt s70.oo Ql Feed ID foodwute '-----'' C. A. HUBLEY LTD. KING'S ROAD ... PH. 3916

EQUIPMENT FOR.SALE • Automatic Printing, Presses A. H.· MURRAY & Co., Ltd. 1 METEOR Sheet Size 11" X 19". BUILDING SUPPLIES DEPARTMENT

1 KELLY ·B ,Sheet Size 17" X 22". Lowest prices and best service. 1 KELL-Y No. 1 Sheet Size 22" X 28". CEMENT 1 KELLY No. 2 Sheet Size 24" X 35". ROOFINGS BIRTIIS 1 DAVIDSON OFFSET ROOF COATINGS Sheet Size 10" X 14". ' ALso· 'PLYWOOD CLAPBOARD 1 Model · Double 0 Cleveland _FOLDER (Automatic ··Feed). REPAIRS WALLBOARD ' ' .. TV 1 BROWN FOLDER. (Hand · ·fed)· :REASONABlE RATES DOORS OF ALL KINDS 1 · Fold SizC' 12' x 12"- 24" .X 34". .GUARANTEED WORK · MOULDINGS For furth.er information LUMBER • ! ------·-·····--- Electronic· The family of the late Mrs Margaret ·Dur.pl)y of 67 King' , LOCKS Road, would like to. tha •; the I -Th.e .... _DAILY N-EWS Centre . Ltd. many ·relatives im'd frjends who : sent wreaths, Mass cards and in I And All Finishing Material. DUCKWORTH STR~T I . 90 .CAMPBELL· AVE. -any way helpr!l·to alleviate the · · sorrt'w· in · th~ passing of a be After hours 'PHONE 731 ~ loved . mother. . .

) l \. \