. ' ' • ' j

NOW • ~~ --~ PARKING IS NO ·PROBLEM THE DAILY NEWS GET YOUR G.M. PARTS fROM US a~~~ __ Terra Nova Moton Ltd. Vol. 67.· No. 156 THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., TH~RSQAY, JULY 7, 1960 (Price. 7 Cents) Charles Hutton & Sons

• . ------~--- $500,000,000 Worth Already Taken Over HAVANA AP-Denouncing Premier Fidel Castro's' --­ m~ve to e~propriate their property as blackmail, Am- ' Bl.lmp Crash'es encan busmessmen Wednesday flocked to the U.S. '

1 Embassy Ia ask for help. • Embassy officials, studying the latest Cuban decree In AtlantiC ____ . for retaliation to U.S. curbs Cuban sugar sales to the United States, said any action would have to came : I,AK~:JIURST, ~.J._ lAP\ - A • h · · huge U.S. Navy bhmp, longer f rom W as hmgton. T. e U.S. announced late Wednes· 1· than a football field plunged into day that it was cutl'ing imports of Cuban sugar by th.e Atlantic Ocean Wednesday 700,000 tons, ll'tth 21 men aboard. ' d d d • . . The na~-y said one m<~n was • Cas I ~o s • ecree, a opte at a post-mtdmght cabtnet dead, three were injured and 17 1 sesston, mvaltdated all previous legislation and left w~re missing, an estimated $1,000.000,000 in Americ i t t The aiyship crashed off t~e • . • . : an nves mens central i-icw Jersey coast wh1le m Cuba sub1ect to conftscation Without recourse to any searching for a missing yacht. Cuban law. Fishing boats and the aimaft Experts here estimated Cuba ( _ __ carrier. Essex joined In picking already has taken over at least ------·--.------, up smwors. 8 $500,000,000 worth of American· crce , hlufr and satd. the~ aaw 1 A y-acht has in employee said investments including 80 per I a dc::t ee o[ desperatmn m the • a fishing vessel brou•ht in one cent of ail • the American·owned Cuban.. ' ~• 0_l'e Jnmen· t'_s ac t'mns, . 1 body ami one survivor" with su;::ar lands. · 1 thJ.nk t~e act_wn. of the 011 broken legs_ A s~cond fishing But still remamm;:: to be compnmcs 111 • re)Cctmg .soriet boat brought in another surl'i\'or. seized il Castro goe~ al1end with crt~e. shoo~ -~hem a!!·" smd oue He had minor injuries. his· threat are the $300,000,000 \0""·llm_e te~tde~t. and no~ :t NOSE COLI.APSED 1Cuban Electric Company, hail· 0 ~~s hke _U.S;) congrcssmnal: Andy Lockie. skipper of the owned by. American interests.! a~h~n on. sugat. and the, prob- fi,hing boat Blnc Chip, said the 1 and other mterests ranging down·~ Hilty of •1 seletc quota c.'.'' has nose or the blimp collapsed ~-' i to small pril'ate !irms. 1shJ~rkc.d them e:-en more. if a spike had been drh·en into : INTERSATIONAL I.AW , ..\uttmg Cuba s su~a~ qn?la. it. He said the blimp struck the 1 JAZZ RIOTERS u.NDER GUARD ! Under the teJ•ms of Castro's I \:'·. t~Je ~ost • s.e\cle t;·~· w~ter at ~ 50.dcgree angle. I NEWPORT, R.I.-Two of the 1azz fans who were arrest- 1decree, said one embassy ex-1 act Jon ~e: taken a~amst the Cas· A spol

Three c~nvicts who broke out o( !' spotted. When he surrendered, po-1 1 blimps continued to ho1·er over; lhe Maritime penitentiary at Dor· lice moved in on the other two . . 1the scene looking for survivors , Dies diester, N.B .. early Sunday were I who were nearby and h11d no: ROME. ICPl - Rtotmg led by; It never started. Police movert as darkness approached. Aneurin Bevan, eaptured Wednesday afternoon in chance to escape. 1 Commumsts broke out Wednes-1 in end flayed away with clubs. 1 ~ooded area four miles east of FIND STOLEN CAR ~ay in .the streets of Rome and i Their red riot cars and trucks By FRASER WIGIITON hi, fiJ,al fi~ht for life_ said in a ~tatement Wednesday 1 l!atnt John. The!{ were unarmed A car owned by Roy Gaudet of: In parliament. :swung around the square. Fire o·lsml·ssed i Lo:-moN (Reuters)- Aneurin Prime ~(in is ter ~lacmillan. night Bel·an's death was a "most and offered no N!Sistance when Fredericton and stolen et Dor· At least 50 persons were hurt, hoses were brought into play. In i Bevan, a poor miner who be·· one of Bevan's major political' grie1·ous loss to our party, to 111rrounded. chester shortly after the J a.m. a. hundreds of police battled: a matter o[ minutes the crowd! 1 came one of Britain's most pow- foes, snide: "He was a great and' Parliament, to Brit a in and The trio, who had been hiding prison break was foulld in the 10,000 demonstrators in the his- was dispersed. i Q Ch · 1erful political leaders, died Wed- courageous fighter for what he • indeed "the world." tn a children's playhouse in woods and hauled to the roadway toric southern section of Rome The Communist rally followed n arges •nesday 'after a seven·month ill· bcliered to be right and was re·. Formal tributes to Bevan will ,.-oods off a secondary road. are by a jeep. around the Gate of St. Paul. the discovery earlier of a bomb I I ness. He was 62. spccted by members of all par· be paid by leaders or all parties

Frank Alfred Klare, 23 Toronto; In escaping from the penlten· Communist and Socialist dep- with a live fuse in the courtyard 1 TRURO fCPl-Two St. John's ! ~·he sill'el' . tongued socialist tics. lie was a great parliament· in the House of Commons today. Gordon Matthews, 211. and Louis Uary the con1•icts lifted paving, utles came to blows with Chris-. of the Soviet Embassy. I ~fld. youths were dismissed 0~! sen-ed as deputy chief of the arian." 'HEALTH PLAN FOUNDER Joseph Roy, 22, both o! Saint stone from their cell floors, • tian Democrat deputies when. Police arrested more than 100 ~ charges oi breaking entering Labor party and as its spokes- Earl Attlee. from whose La- The burly Welshman long will John. dropped to a basement, broke ~ews of the rioting reached par-; demonstrators. : and theft here Wedn~~day after man on foreign affairs until he hor cabinet Bevan resigned in a be remembered as the man who, They w~re taken to the county through a door, crossed the exer- liament, : BAN MEETINGS 1testifying they slept in a car underwent ~n abdominal opera- heated dispute in J9jJ, said: · as minister of health, gave Brit- jail here while police continued cise yard and scaled a 15-foot The Senate adjourned after be-! Police had banned public meet· 1 while four companions broKe lion Dec. 2n. "His death is a great loss to the ain socialized medicine in 1948. in1·estigation of three car thefts wall. It was the first excape in I ing advised several MPs weN!. ing 5 to have been held by neo· : into several stores. The cause of death was not labor and soda list mo1·cment. He also will be remembered in the Saint John area this week five years from a cell at the fed. hurt in the street fighting. -fascists and the left-wing resist- 1 William Carew, 20 and ~or- immediately announced. Funeral Although we did not always for gi\'ing his name to a left· 1 and a breal! into a general store era! prison. 1 ARMED CAMP . ' ance federation ~ednesday fol· 1 man Skanes, If>, w~rc charged se.n·ices, lollowed by cren:ation. agree. I had ::real admiration wing faction within the Labor at ~earby,Lakew~. . , - . Downtown Rome looked hke lowmg the .explosiOn ?I a "Mol' along with four other St. John's,' w1!i. be hc.ld Fmla~ at. Lrocs>·- and affection [or him." party which became known as Ctty police recetved a ttp about I Klare was sentenced tn 1956 to an e.rmed camp. Trucks of po- otov cockta1l" bomb •n the gar- ~fld youths who pleaded guilty, ce1hog, ncar Bevans bn·thplace Party leade1· Hugh Gait>kili the "Bel'anites." the fugitives' location and joined ' 10 years for armed robbery. lice were stationed at strategic dens of the Soviet Embassy to a ·~cries of breaks m northern \ in Wales. ------·------~------~CMP and ~imonds parish police I Matthews had seryed one of two corners. Heaviest concentration Tuesday night. . Xova Scotia and C~pe Breton. : A.. Labor party spokesman .~aid·

1n surrounding the area off the • years for obstructmg a pollee of- was at the Gate of St. Paul. 1 The bomb inctdent came ~~ . The others Walter Noftall. • he passed peacefully away ~t Old Black River Road. between Ifleer and Roy was sentenced 11l Crowds gathered near the gate· the height or a wave ol conflict : Edward Biila~d William Rear·! his rose·covered farm home 111 I Grand1•iew. Avenne a~d Cottage Iyear . ago to .seven years for long before a scheduled Commu-: b~tween • neo·Fascists and left don and Jack' Reardon, each 1 (lsheridge. in the rolling Buck·: !load in Stmonds PartSh. breakmg, entermg and theft. nist rally. wmgers m Italy. were sentenced to two years in mghamsh1re h1ils northwest of: Van Horne To penitentiary June 17. Lon~on. . . Carew and Skanes said thev Tnbutes poured mto the qmet ~ were asleep in the back seat of i farmhouse within an hour of his P. M. Says -Joint· the car when the breaks oc- - death. _The Queen sent a mes· Part Of Congo's curred "I wasn't told about the 1 sage of sympathy to his wife, Res1gn Seat , breaks. until after I woke up,'' I.a~or MP .J~nnie L:e. who re- Warhead Control I. Skanes said. mamed at h1s beds1de through • By DON HANRIGIIT week's New Brunswick election. Noftall testified that Skanes ---··-··--- ·------··---~· 1 eanadian Press Staff \Vriler That wasn't the sort of conduct OTTAWA (CP) -The question Mr. Pearson. began the ex· "was asleep all the way from w H , OTTAWA ICPl-Chariie Van! that promotes party solidarity. Army Mutinies of acquisition of American nu. change by askmg wh~ther ~ny Amherst to Cape Breton." rong ouse ·Horne, self _ styled "dissatisfied' But party sources said Wednes- B NIG clear warheads for Canadian nuclear warhlads whtch mtght , Tory" from northern :-lew Bruns· I day the question was not raised 1 EL RYAN to go into the field to try to forces took a new turn Wednes· be 'ded d' f 1 LEOPOLDVILLE, Congo -The , wick, plans to resign his Com·, at the caucus meeting, Mr. Van tersl - Large segments of the crisis. day,. . . under NATO in Europe would be PEKING (Reuters) - Chin- oil man delivered 235 gallons mons seat. 'I Horne wasn't there, anyway- 25,000-man Congolese army mu- Ppm~ . Ml~tster D1efenbaker ~der "sole Canadian control" esc newspapers Wednesdav of fuel oil to Douglas Tuck- Although the t-esignation rlate which isn't unusual for him. 10 tinied Wednesday against Belgian PROMOTES ALL RANKS mamtamed m the C~mmons' the sam~ way that ~r. Die· I hailed the establishment of er's home. which was too' still is in doubt, he said Wcdnes· NO I.ISTENERS officers and Belgian Gen. Emile . that he had never satd that !enbaker satd. the quesllon was i Ghana and Communist China bad .. Tucker doesn't l:al·e an day he's definitely goin~ to quit. "! go once in a while for a

Janssens resigned at the request Lumumba, 34.year-old one-ltme Canada would have sole control! Improper. ., .. 1 as a sign "that a new epoch oil burner. And apparently he will be leav- half-ho~: or so," he, tol~_report~rs of the six-day·old government. ' ~tal cler~. ordered every 101· over s~ch warheads. Wh?.t.. he I THE WORD SOLE ! has dawned in relations be- The truck driver spotted an . ing under his own steam. rather: later. But I. don t hke ~~\king d1er in the ermy promoted one had .said, he avowed, was JOtnl · . . J tween China and Africa " The I than because of anv pressure: when no. one listens to me. . Je.nssens wa expected t I rank, but called for discipline I control.'' i "At t I ?,O thltme. dtd I. ~aty sodle New China news a~cn~v re- intake pipe at the home and , . . H d r C ervahve f r Br Wdn da 0,.,heat ve while the future status of the II • con ro , e pnme mtms er e· " · pumped -in 285 gallons. Then from the Con>er\'ative caucus he' e sal ormer ons . 0 115 se 15 e es Y n.,. : ita is decided m '[ A first·class row between the i clared. "I said joint control of ported that Ghana's president. , he checked his bill of lading. has flouted. i Premier ~ugh John. Flemm!Dg No deaths or serious injurtes ry · prime minister and Opposition ICanada as to use and also as Kwa.ne. N~rumah, h.a~ acc~pted · It was the wrong house. ' The caucus met Wednesday lost the New Brun_sw~ck election :were reported in the widespread I Lumumba is his own minister Leader Pearson erupted on this to everything connected there- an mvttatton to 1'lsJt Chma. i The oil had run through the : amid repo1·ts that the 39-year·old b~c~use he wouldn ~. hsten to ad· 1 ~my revolts. Iof defence and Is empowered. to point. Speaker Roland Michener with and that statement still pipe, all that was ,crt after i :liP for Restigouchc·~adawaska vt~e, an~ .added:. have told Premier PatrIce Lumumba give the army orders. at one stage suggested that Mr. 1 stands." Mr. Diefenbaker said nuclear · the Tuckers converted from might have his status qt1estioned ~nme Mtm.ste~ DJefenbak~r that uked for Janssens' resignatiun 1 . Ditfenbaker withdraw a remark I Mr. Pearson read from Mon· warheads in Canada would be : oil heat, '

Perzonal The New Ferry SPANIARD'S BAY-Mr. and BELL ISLAND (Staff)-An Jllrs. Walter Barrett and family adequate ferry service between of Corner Brook spent last ' this island cc mmunity and the weekend here with Mr. Barretts' local mainland has been an parent!, Mr. and Mrs. W. E. issue for a number of years TO CLEAR! Barrett. and it seems now that nobody wants to take the responsibility. If it is a fact that the ferries are not paying, it is very hard LADIES' SUMMER to understand as far as Bell Islanders are concerned. COTTON DRESSES Two private companies pre­ COLOURS, 1,/ viously operated in competition ASSORTED From Bell Island we saw and obviously made money. Mr. and Mrs. Natha.n. Crane I Today the volume of traffic SIZES AND STYLES - and Mr. a~d Mrs. W1~ham Vo- 1 has more than doubled and the PRICE key who viSited relatives here travelling public has increase~ ALL TO CLEAR AT /2 on Sunday. tremendously. Why no profits? Mr. Clyde Barrett and his son -- were here from Lewisporte for a couple of days last week, as Visiting A GREAT BARGAIN! was Mr. John Gosse of Gander. BELL ISLAND (Staff)-Mrs. Margaret Connolly, the former LADIES, MISSES, Constable Fred Murrin, Mrs. Margaret Kavanagh, the Front, 99 Murrin and the girls of St. who has resided In South Bos· CHILDRENS - C John's visited relatives here on ton for the past 35 years, Is Sunday. visiting her formPr town. PEDAL PUSHERS ...... $1.49 She is staying at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Flynn, Davidson Avenue. BARGAIN BASEMENT (AYRES COVE)

SATISFACTION .. ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND The Daily News THURSDAY. JULY 7, 1960 Fisheries Scientists Record Fish Catch To Resume Studies Of i During May Month

1 During May, Newfoundland lion pounds of haddock valued : fishcrm~" landed a record catch : at 80 thousand rloilars, 4 million Newfoundland Lobster 'of 27.8 million pounds worth: pounds of plaice and greysole 'a total of La million dollars., worth 114 thousand dollars, 4.5 Fisheries scientists in St., scientist· in charge of lobster This is an increase of 82 peri million pounds of herring val­ John's ue to resume studies on investigations at the Research ' cent in \'olume and 94 per cent i ued at 70 thousand dollars an1 lobsters in Newfoundland, and Board's Biological Station, St. :in value compared with the' 2 million pounds of lobster preliminary arrangements are Andrews, N.B., who visited St. same month last year. These. value at 544 tho!lsand dollars. now being made for such a pro- John's for the open house pro· , figures were compiled by the 1 The salmon season opened cram to begin next )'ear. This gram. Economics Branch of the Fed-· on May 15th and fishermen waa disclosed at the open house Dr. Templeman is, himse!C, era! Department of Fisheries caught 149 thousand J!OUnds lleld last week by the St. John's an old hand at lobster work, anrl released )'esterday. , during the month compared Biological Station of the Fish· having studied this crustacean ' The catch mchtded 12.5 nul- with only 65 thousand pounds eries Research Board for the for a number of years In both Ilion pounds of Ct•d valued ot last vear. Newfoundland fishing industry. the Maritimes and Newfound· ! 303 thousand dollars, 3.5 mil·' Du.ring the period January

The revived program will be , land. His published works on 1 - ···--·---·----·-- • to ~lay landings of all species tonducted by scientist H. J.llobster have been a valuable , were 74.4 million pounds val­ Squires with overall supervision : guide in the framing of pro­ ued at 2.4 million dollars, com­ coming under Station Director II tective regulations governing Garden Party : pared with 57.1 million pounds Dr. W, Templeman. Valuable the lobster fishing Industry, valued at 1.7 million dollars for advice in this regard Is being Mr. Squires has carried out .Tust a frw days rrmain for the samt ?eriod in !959. This provided by Dr. D. G. Wilder, research on various fish species ts an increase of 30 per cent in in Newfoundland waters, in­ the romhinerl Garden Part~· and Outdoor Entertainment to I'Olumr. and 4" per cent in cluding squid, scallops and value over lats )·ear. shrimp, and more recently has , he hrhl in the grounds sar· Posted To •been in charge of plankton I'IHindin~ thr K. or ('. BuiJ:J.' studies. ing. St. l'lare A1·enue. ~atur­ day ..July 9th. The attraetions will inrltHle New 104 Room St. John's the cash and chocolate wheels. Murder , FATHER AND DAUGIHER · refreshment stands. can•J:· Victim , The winners of 1960 Chevrolets in the St. John's lions Club "Buyers-Sellers" Sweep. left to right: Mr. Les cotton machine. anrl or t·ourse. Hotel For City Freake, Secretary of lions Club; Mr. Bob Bartlett, Presi dent; Mrs. Peggy Martin, holder of the winning ticket the people's fal'orite ~amc. The larlirs are srring to it Premier .1. n. Smallwood an­ Buried Today and Mr. Lou Mulrooney, father of Mrs. Martin, and seller of the winning ticket1 Mr. Jock Walsh, Post­ nounced yesterday that ne~u:i· that drlkiou~ tcils (serl'ed in­ President and Mr. Doug Brown, lion T~mer. doors) will be up to the mual ations for the t·onstruction of a ' The remains of Mrs. Mar.ioric 104 room motor hotel ha1·e been Scott, murder victim, whose body stan an added attrar· tion there will he a special completed. ;met a two-storey was shipped in a truck !rom strultUre will he huilt on the Toronto to Argcntia on May 4tb, gate prize to he drawn for dill'· ·~~ Adopts Public Pool Legion To iM the aftemoon. corner or Elizabeth Al'cnuc and ...... • ~..: ..' will be interred In the Anglican thr :\cw L'ol'e noad. . . Cemetery this morning at 11.00. In event o! adverse wrather . teas will he srn·ed indoors. as The new hotrl. which will · 1 The body, which has been rest· Street Or Garbage Dump ? Hold planned. and the Garrirn Party cost in the l'icinity of Sl.500,· • ; ing in the General Hospital Outing 000 will be operatrct by Ter­ ~ morgue, will be taken to the will he held on the fol[n,·:m~ day . .July lOth. minal Realties of ~loneton cemetery by Undertaker Barrett. ·::'\rll' Brun.-wick. As far as is known, no rela· Line A grnrroll~ support is PX· ('omtruction will ~tart ~s lives will be on hand to attend peeler! for a ,·cry worth." ca·tsl' soon as plans anti spccflrc~trons : the funeral service. and it is hoped that ll'ith finr hal'e rrcri1ed final appr:,ql, 11 rather and the full .;upp~rt of and it i> cxpcctl'

·...... < ...... Struck By To A.ttend Bicyc_le A.dvertising Conference

June Hottest Police In 6 Years ·a Iotter

Loses ·Mast

Requests Bus Service To B,e Discontinued GIRLS' SWIM SUITS Mayor H.' G. R. Mews re- 24 residents o( Shea Street In . In novelty print Cotton. Shirred front quested the council yesterday . which they requested the bus Traffic Light morning not to take sides in a route be changed for the safety ' and elasticized backs. letter received from Mr. Gor- ol their children and that the I i l don T. Thomas and other res!· service to the area would be bel· , Badly Needed Fil 2 - 6 years dents of Shea Street rcquc~ting ter if transferred because the t!1c St. John's Transportation \'&st majority of the Shea Street Councillor Ruhert McLeod at ! 1.49 Commission to rediverl the bus , re~idents have their own cars. ~ yesterday's meeting or the City ' : Council requcst~d that the Fit years ...... route on Shea Street to Emcr- 1 Also tabled at the meeting 7 - 12 1on and Downing Street. [' )•esterrlay was a copy of a letter I City Council ~ive serious con- I sideration for the installation of 2.45 In his letter Mr Thomas said sent to Mr. Thomas by James R. that when he first went to live I Chalker, secretary of the Com· • . I a traffic light at the intersec­ on Shea Street there were no I mission, stating that, "the mat- i ' lion of Bonaventure Avenue 1ide-walks for people to walk ter had been discussed by the i and Elizabeth Avenue. on or for children to ride their Commission and it was decided i Councillor McLeod said that SPECIAL - LITTLE GIRtS' SWIM SUITS. bikes on but this was offset by not to discontinue the Belt 1 the light was badly needed in the fact that, "that only traf· Line Service on Shea and Os· . face of the rising volume of fie on the street was the resl· bourne Streets, as this service · , traffic proceeding to and from dents cars and the scattered has been originally requested the Confederation Building, Elasticized, Fit 2 - 6 ...... 9 7C service \•eh lcle, now with the by many residents In that area." bu!es running alon~t the street Mr. Chalker went on to say , n find ourseh•es livin~: on a that· It is part of standard In· through·way and the noise twice structions to drivers to exercise 1100Cadets e1•ery twenty minutes reminds extreme caution on this route, COLONEL ARTHUR G. CAMERON, me of many years I lived on aa well as on all other routes Barnes Road." and at meetings with the man- the S'Oivation Army's newly appointed Chief Secretary In Camp 1\lr. Thomas &aid that their agcr from time to time drivers purpose, (St. John's Transports· are reminded of this. for Canada and Bermuda who is accompanying Com- Carlrl~ from three Atlantic tlon Commission) can be more In view of the petition and missioner and Mrs. Marshall tp Newfoundland in con- l'm·incrs, including 100 from fully-served by running as they the reasons for the Commls­ neclion with the Army's 74th Annual Congress celebre· Cadet Camp at Summerside, were on Emerson and Downing sion for refusing to discontinue Prince Edward Island. ltleets with a .atop at Emerson the · llel'VIce Mayor Mews re­ tiC?nS. As Chief Secretary, Colonel Cameron is the For the majority of these boys and Downing and at Downing quested that the .Council not Second-in-Command of all Solvation- Army operations it was their first flight 1n an

and Osbourne they would aer- take sides but rather write the in the Dominion of Canada and ,Bermuda. Colonel ai~craft. They were brought to 1 viet the area enllrely, Commlulon and ask. them to C h k • ffi · Prtnce Edwa;·d Island in a RCAF Accompanying Mr. Thomas' reconsider their original decl­ ameron was .t e guest spec er at pnvate o cers · c. 119 Transport, better known as . letter wu a petition· aigned by aion- on"tht matter. gatherings in the Salvation Army Temple yesterday. Ithe "box.,car." I ..;4~·------~T.'2.HE:.,_D._AILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., THURSDAY, JUlY 7, 1960 11/E DAILY NEWS Must We Always Have This? t.Jewfoundland's Only Morning Pap!r, By IN THE NEWS Wa~arer The DAILY NEWS is a momfnt paper established i11 L8!l4, aud pub· WHERE THE MONEY COMES FROM came after. How was I to know thatl lishcd at the News Building 3M-3S~ Those of you who have an interest in we began to build railways at the start Duckworth St.eet, St. lr.hn"s', New· publlc affairs so long as It docs not put ol the motor age. Well, the spirits of toundlar.d, by RubillllOII & Compan'' an excessive strain upon your minds the past had their midnight meeting and Limit .. d. during the summer may be glad tha: this vanished. But what, one wonders, would MEMBER OF column is willing to try to express pro· any of them have done if he could have THE CANADI~ ~ PRESS vincial finance on the easy-reading spent the present-day equivalent of a · instalment plan. Havig rega;d for the hundred million dollars in hia own time. The Canadian Pren d excluslveh season, we shall try to do this In words -·-- ~ ~ntitled to the use (or republic11tlon of one syllable and if It were not for But times are different. So are val· of all news despatches In thl1 paper the fact that syllable itself has three ucs. The halcyon days when there crl'diit>d tu It or to the ,\s~uclated l>;r.ss or Rrutcrs and also the local syllables you will find that most of what was no income Jax, when a glass of beer n"ws published therein. we have just said has bP.en put in-oh. was five cents, the schoolboy could get YEARLY SUBSCRIYriON RA H!l dear, a new big word-monosyllables. a circle of chocolate cream with a wal· All Pres' ·~rvir.a and fenturo article'· You know, this last sentence has more nut throw,J ir for good measure for one Canada ...... $12.00 per IUitl•Jm in tins paper are cupyri~hted and their than fifty words and all but seven o! cent, and a smart new Ford cost lesa United Kingdom reproduction is prt'bibited. them have really been words of just one than a thousand dollars, are gone for· and all torei~ syllable. We would say to all who like e\·er. Not only values but also wants ·.countries $14.00 per annum Member Audit Rurea" to write well that they can get a Jot ol hal'e changed. We ha\·e to spend a ·Authorized a! second class maC I fun if they will try to see what they can hundred millions this year to kocp Post Oftice Department. Ottawa. of CirculatioD. do with words of one syllable. Ther~ things going. Where do we get this Rl'e 33 words in that sentence and all seemingly vast amount of money? THURSDAY, Jl'LY• 7, 1960 but one are monosyllabic. W~ll. 1tz per cent of it com~s from 1'\ow, of COUI"SC, if you want to talk the statutory subsidies that ar~ part Symbol Of Confederation about millioM. you can't stick with of confederation. From the tax rental words of one syllable but we shall do agreements-the arrangement by which The tall hnildin~ whose ,gbun· as a permanent memorial to union, our best and hope that out of t11e stuff the federal ,government rents from ua ing faradr of fawn-coloun'd hrick, it mav be regarded even more as we shall write in the next few days you the sole right to collect our exorbitant representative not only of an alter­ will learn a bit about whert the cash income and corporation taxes - we get bh1e panels and glass has lweonw comes from that pays Cor all the things about $21 million. The transitional grant the most notable landmark in the ed wav of life and a completelv we must 1tive the man in the street and that was to help us adjust to confed· ' nortlwastern an'a of the dh· is a new era of social development htit what those things arc. And this bit of cration has virtually disappeared hut sYmhol of confederation. :\ohocl\' also of a new concept of adminis· linguistic nonsrnse having come to ar out of the t.tlantic province grant anrt can sre it and fail to he imprrssed trati\re efficienc\·. The offices have cd, let us get down to the serious busi· the McNair award under Term 29 we nne\ perhaps Prcmirr Smallwood . been )aiel out \vith that thought in ness or finacing a province. get a shade over $15 million. 'l'hat mind. Moreover, one of Canada's mai\CS a total of nearly $38 million might he well instified in setting The blackness of night had dcsc·end· which Canada has obligated herself to owr the main entrance that same best known firms of business con­ ed on the old House of Assembly cham· pro ride. inscription Christopher \\'ren had sultants is doing an exhaustive ber in the House of Assembly. The inscrihed oYer the interior of one work studv with a vil'w to stream· !~arlin~ splriis of the past were alone Next we come to local taxes-nearly of the doors of St. Paul's Cathe­ lining departmental operations. with their memories and tt was clear SB million from gasoline. a &_anguine ex· Washington News that they had kept themselves abreast pectation of $2 million from the :;airs dral: "lf von would see his monu· Ont of that mav ulti,natelv com~ Righteousnesa enlt a nation, but ala Ia of he present. They're ipending nearly tax, about $2 million from motor taxc~. Notebook mrnt )\round." That, at least. not onlv a morP. efftctivr condurt SlOO million this year, 5aid Whiteway. a million from resource royalties an:l a reproach to any people. - Proverb• !~ the English equivalent of of affairs but also a suh~tantial Do you know that we had less ihnn two taxes and more than four millions from By .JERRY BE:\~ETT I4:34. "si nHm11mrnt11m rcqniris, circum· sa,·in~ in administrati,·e co~ts. It mililons a year to put the trappings of liquor profits. Then we collect boad :-l'rwspapcr Enterprise As.sociation As citizens of this fair land tal •s ponder this ancient word of wisdom Splc·e.. " is a consummation devoutlv to be an elephant on the back of a cat when I and lod~ing from nurses and doctors and WASIII:\C.TON - tNEA) - Perle :llesta, ace Capital hostess and ex­ which history teaches us has been priiY· But while the hnildin~ stands wished. · decided we should build a railway across the rest of it. or most of the rest of it. the island~ We did it, too. But Bond comes from the federal share of tho~c ambassador to Luxembourg is always en to be true again and again. had to have ·his say. Think, he said, that fifty.flfty deals into which we have bad ready wiih new ideas on how to make with my private resources of about to enter without regard for our capacity parties bigger and better. When a re­ THE LONG VIEW Too Sensitive For Politits $100.000, I saved the governmrnt sav· to pay. When we have added to all this portrr asked for her latest tips, she re· ings bank t·om a disastrous run in 1895. the ten millions we intend to borrow. plird: By BRUCE BIOSSAT .Tt has heen reported from Lon­ newed fear of inflation, he has And ~!orris, gettin Into the act, admit· we find thBl we ha1·e acquired a sum "Don't question mr about parties to· Genuine sadness must certainly grip dnn that the Chancellor of the been subjected to adverse com­ ted that there was a bit more money in of money that runs pretty close to one ni~hl. I was busy until 4 o'clock thts many Americans who look b.ack on Presi· Exchequer, Derick Heathcoat· ment. his day but in a seven year period he hundred millions. Ha1•ing thereafter morning. and I'm too tired to think dent Eisenhower's now completed trip to Amon·, is about to resign. He is a shv and sensitive man had managed to find six millions to pay taken a de!'p breath. we try or wr about parties." the Far East. Cor the branch rallwa~·s. We needed should try to see where the money Asked what had kept hrr hoppin~ Un· It may well be true, as Secretary of Th.is \\"as freely predicted about who is distressed bv this and it has them. he said, no matter what criticism goes. til 4 a.m., Perle answered, "Another State Herter conceded to a Senate com·

the time of his last hndgct speech. confirmed him in ·his decision to ------·---·-·- ·-·- .. ·---.---·--~----·- party!" mittee, that the State Department ml5· 1t was said that he was anxious to retire from public life. judged the gravity of the situation that get back to his business career. There is little doubt that manv What Others Are Saying ~'"'t lavish roming.out party of th~ caused the collapse of his visit to Japan. democracies are deprived of tlie yrnt· was the one tos.sed by Stale De· It is surely true that good will tours But it has hltely been suggest­ partment's )lrolocol cihel Wiley Buch· ed ·that one reason for this is his services of first-class men who SMART WIFE WHO'S ARGUING! of this nature do not of themsplves Galt Reporter Winnipeg Free Press anan for his debutante daughter Bon· make peace and do not represent policy sensiti\"itv to recent criticism of could make valuable contributions The perfect wife laughs at her hns· nie. Some 600 pMple were invited. action toward that eoal. his polic-ies. to public policy by a similar sensi· bnnd's joke!, not because the)" are 'Sponsored by a special commission of Estimates of il~ cost run from $25,000 Yet it is a bitter commentary on the The Chancellor has been given tivity to unfavourable criticism. clevtr, but because she fs. the Economic and Social Council of the to $50,000. The nearest that the pro· state or the world and the character of full marks for a very good job of Success in politics has always call· United Nations, women from 18 coun· tocol expert will come to verifying any our Communist adversary that the head CRITICISM tries in five continents gathered in the bl'ating inflation and providing a ed for tough moral fibre and the figure is to say the 50,000·dollar guess is of a great nation should not be ]ler· Calgary Herald Argetinian capital to 5\udy the status high. mitted to move freely about the globe, health\' economic climate. But fact that they lack this quality has 1\!ost of u& say we prefer constructive of women in the prcsent·day world. The Buchanans erected two pink tents in the simple cause of good will. latel~·. "and particularly with a new kept many good men out of the criticism to the other kind, but really Their considered conclusion: "It's a on their lawn; one for the buffet, the ll!illions hungry for peace must won· rise in the bank rate because of re· political service of their country. would rather not have any at all. man's world." Did they have to go all other lor the dance floor. Bird cages der why a purpose &o plainly decent the way to Buenos Airrs to figure that suspended from ceilings were stuffed and earnest as Mr. Eisenhower's had to WHAT DIFFERENCE? out? with sprays of red. white and pink be thwarted by riot!l in Japan and Vancouver Province roses. ~lore roses and gardenias float. marked for contempt by Red Chinese Lesage Takes Over In Quebec Prophets in the automotive field pre. ed in the lighted, blue swimming pool. shell fire against the Island of Quemoy. diet that within 10 years automobiles DANGEROUS GADCIUS Two bands were on hand to supply the We understand well enough that any· will be hurtling along the highway john Lesage l1as taken over as could produce an awesome dis· Edmonton Journal dance music. One was ~leyer Davis' ~ew thing which adds to the &olidarity of without the aid of human intcllieence premier of Quebec and a lot of plav of political fireworks. York society band, the other a troop of the free and independent natio111 is a at the wheel. This, it appears, is sup. The only criticism that can be offered handicap to Moscow and Peiping. an~iety complexes are reported to Of course, Mr. Lesage has many posed to differ in some way from the of the new Alberta Go\'crnmcnt regula· Calypso musicians who were flown in Nevertheless, ii is hard to grasp why be: de\"eloping in the province. other things to do besides investi· present system. lions outlawing dangerous gadgets and from the Virgin Islands. The new premier has promised gation of the Union Nationale's ornaments on motor vehicles is that they they think they can reap advantage from conduct of affairs. ARDOR OF YOUTH were not imposed long ago. Just why Barbecue was the highlight of Wash· gestures so openly brutai. a Royal Commission inquiry into . ington's biggest spring season cookout. Whatever they mean to the Commun· the record of the Vnion· Nationale He has made many promises, Canadian Doctor any driver should want to obstruct his Changing family relations over the '"ision and district his attention by hav· r'or their annual picnic. the Texas State ist world. l\!r. Eisenhower's trips in the gm•ernment which had been in some of them expensive to fulfill, past few generations has not fundamen. inl: kewpie dolls, monkeys, giant dice Society bought about 900 pounds of beef, eyes of most of the world are harmless office for 16 \'Cars. and his future will depend less on tally altered the attitude of youth to· and other fripperies dangling on his and imported barbecue chef D. E. Wood: moves. Their goal has b~ri the en­ He took steps to prevent former unearthing scandals hidden in the wards Its traditional responsibilities. A windshield Ia a mystery to most motor· ward from Spur. Texas, to prepare it. largement of friendship and understand· cabinet ministers from taking docu­ closets of the old regime than on nation-wide survey conducted by Purdue isla. It is also hard to understand why More than a thousand people. includ. ing, the creation of a warmer atmos· what he can do to make goud on University came up witr the surprising anyone shouid wish to spend good ing most of the Lone Star State's con­ phere in which all nations might pro· ments out of the legislative of­ gressmen, showed up. In addition to gress more resolutely toward peace. his election pledges. result that 84 per cent of teenagers money for large, shiny, ugly protruding fices. agree that "when people become old and hubcap spinners that catch the sun and b~f. they gorged themselves on lamb. To the extent that' these tripa are And of his projected investiga­ There is no doubt that he i~ likf. need financial assistance they have a dazzle the eyes of other ·drivers. They pinto beans, cole slaw, home baked discredited by r~ent events, the result tion, the Financial Post said last ly to be in the forefront ot Cana· right to expect help from their chi!· are not functional, and pedestrians have bread and "sonofagun." i~ of course a diplomatic block to the week that nobodv seriousbr doubt~ dian political new~:makers for the dren." Only 15 per cent subscribed to had their legs shattered by them. ' Sonofagun is a stew consisting main· Uinted States and itJ allies. Herter next month or •wo. the view that the government ghould The numerous drivers who have in· ly of steer hearts and kidneys. It's also suggests there may never be another that if intensively carried out, it dulged In these gadgets and ornaments take care of their grandparents should loaded with hot :\lexican peppers. such journey by the Pre~ident. they become ill or indigent. should remove them at once and save Yet the long range balance may not themselves a $10 fine. Alberta, ill com· The Texas colony's barbecue produced be against us on this matter. The mi)· mqn with most other provinces and Canada's Industrial Troubles TOO SMART BY HALF a tall story that Rep. Burce Alger (R· IioM in Asia, Africa and Latin America states In the U.S., bas declared them Tex.) is now telling as fact. It concerns whom the Communists want to have Bellevllle Intelllgeneer illegal. The police should lose no time Manv Canadian manufacturers the national level with a view to That was a 1neaky trick the women a millionaire Dallas rancher who credits join them can hardly have been made In seeini that the law is enforced. It is played In Collingwood on the. ustern his good fortune to accidentally spill­ to feel easier br developmenta. seem to be having their troubles discovering whether production to be hoped that the new regulations and the Financial Post has recent­ can be stimulated by more rational fringe of Ontario's Sahara that cover• ing blue dye on a sheep. What gain can there be for ~em In will be brought to the attention of every The animal looked so pretty that the "friendship" with a totalitarian bloc much of the beautiful Georgian Bay law enforcement officer. ly been viewing with particular means and to charting a more district! In a liquor vote recently mixed rancher decided to dye all of his sheep which finds it necessary to undermine alarm the current difficulties of progressive course for the Cana­ beverage rooms received the necessary blue and sell them as pets. and besmirch the simplest displaya of the electrical manufach1ring indus­ dian economy in the light of a 60 percent approval but men's beverages Today, Alger says, the man is known international good feeling? MOTOR SCOOTERS rooms were rejected. As a result, when as the biggest lamb dyer in Texas. More clearly than before, they are try. The blame is largely laid to rapidly changing world economic Calgary Albertan foreign competition. That, of environment. a woman wants a glass of beer she will likely to see now thai where Commun. be able to buy one, but when a man feels -··· ··----- The number of motor scooters being Rep. George Andrews eanuts. lie: his college cannot "give" anyone thia polnt of view provided all qualifi· Nati01;aal Committee. cures could so raise the cost of liv­ inhabited by the usual cross-section of catlona are met. an education. No college can. Speaking at a Women's National Dem· Men have long been used to the fact Canadian humanity which Is certain to that women control most of the wealth ing · that they would be gravely Education Is like character: it can· The problem Ia to insure that motor ocratle Club luncheon, Sen. Stuart Sym· include a number of women with built· in this country. It should come as no harmful to Canada' position in the not be given, It can only be gotten. No scooter operatora are given proper In· lngton (D·Mo.) assured the gals that a1 In permanent thirsta. They are &oing surprise that they could well become export markets. parent or teacher who thinks that he is atructlon to lnatlll in them safe-driving a presidential candidate he is definite· to be In demand aa "admission tickets" the deciding factor in national politics govlng someone an education ever made habits for there 15 no doubt that these ly in favor of ladies' or&anizations. They are also remedies that when the Colllngwood beverage rooms should they ever campaign for a wo· a ereater mlltake. The opportunity for open. And wives will have nobody but machines, improperly handled, .can be "The reason," he cracked, "is because usually bring sharp retaliation. education ean be &iven, but liot tha man's ticket. That might not matter i£ Canada's themselvet to blame. dangerous to human life. With motor women control most of the money and education ltlelf. That hu to be golteD scooters, becoming more popular with all of the men." ecol}omy were almost entirely self· or acquired by the person blln& con­ youne people, there Ia an urgent need about the animal's peculiar talent. To contained. But since .'it is largely ducted. 'No one elle can do it for him. belne exposed to it. He muat reach out for traffic authority representatives at his astonishment the man abowed no re­ dependent for its _prosp~rity on ex· Education Is not 1 paulve procen. A and take It, atudy It, absorb It, master provincial and municipal levels to meet Rep. Sidney R. Yates (D-Ill.) com· action to it whatsoever. ports, higher tariffs could prove a very youn1 child lell'lll about tl\e world Jt, and make It his own. in conference and work out more ade· plains that some of hi; opponents are Finally, the doe'• owner exclaimed, around him juat by beln& In It; but the Real· education meant real work. It quate regulations govemlne the opera· 10 dense that they remind bim about "Say, don't you notice anythint unuaual oestructive boomerang. older ha &eta and tba more complex is often pleaunt wor'k, 10metlmes In· tlon "Of these machines. One problem the story of the bird dog that could about my dog?" What is clearly needed is a lmowledll he netdJ, the more he muat 1plrlng work, but It Is work. Any atu· that must be dealt with concerns insur· walk on water. His neighbor scratched his head and put Into the process himself. No 1tu· dent' who hopes to become educated ance and the legal responsibility and One day the dog's owner took a neigh. said, "By gosh, now that you mention searching study of the situation at den~ le1n11 a dilllcult aubject merlly by needs to face thla fact and buckle doW!I. financial liability of operators. bor duck huntinll without telline him it, I do. Your doc c&n't swim." THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., THURSDAY, JULY 1960 7, -- .. -· .. -. - ... 11------,, . ~dl Q·f ( LB To·: Capitol ,'~ HeU • • • , NOW PLAYING : "ON THE BE.\CII" WITO I \ . I GP.EGORY PECK· t~ F L :~' THE STORY: Ry Buck· Ihaving a look first. Not if his ' ·v· S·~ t ' e e e oe AVA GARDNER ' I · nc1· and Pru LLne fight off old friend Ry Buckner is in Air ~larshal Sir Aubn•y B. · Ministry during the translUon Following Stanley Kramer's Sp~nce Rigby's hardcases. sight. Likely he and Dorcas Ellwood. K.C.B., D.S.C.. me· period from war to peace, Sir global premiere In 18 major Ry and l'ru are In a desert· heard ti)e shooting and are tired 1. who pa~·s an official Aubrc)' was appointed Air Offi· cities on all seven continents ed ranch house. Between somewhere back in the hills. Yisit to l'\ewfoundland this 1 cer Commanding·in·Chief Bomb-, "On the Beach" received tri· shots, Buckner · hears a But maybe they'll come down month as head of the Church I er Command I 1947-1950) and I butes from all over the world. wagon approaching, now. And maybe I can meet Lads Bri~ad~. has had a dis·: appointed Knight Commander , Overseas newspaper reviews · • • • him on the way." tingui5h!'d ~~rct-r in the service of the Bath in 1949. 1 and leaders of world opinion XV • • •. of his country. Fro~n 19_50 ~n\il his retire· hailed the l}nltcd Artists re· i Pru came back Into the room. Pru shook her head. "So · • Born in En;:innd sixty years ment. m ~ll.J2 S1~ Aubrey finis~· lease as a umversaily tmporta~t "A covered wagon," she report· you've come full circle. Ry, back : a~o he wns educnted at Cheam , cd hts dtshngul~hed ~areer m · and powerful drama. :rhe PIC· cd. "Two people on the seat. to where you were when Hat· 1 School and !ll~rlborou~h Col· the RA~~· a~ A1r Officer Com· lure opens at the Cap1tol Thea· There's a rider alongside the wa· chet showed on the ridge and ! 1 lege before takm~ uplus cnrrer. ~Jandm.,d·.ll·Ciue! Transport. trc;;, f'l d h' h . gon. leading two saddle horses the shooting started. As I was i 1 1 with the A.ir Fore~ Cornman . 1 1 1e 1 m rew 1g pratse Ours 1 th' k ht · saying then, you were giving : 1 10 Sir Aubn·~· joincti the Royal In r~lircment ~ir Aub~ey; fro.~n Lord Atlee .. who called it where." ' caug up som~. Duke the bcnefjt o~ the do.ub~:: !';a1·al Air Scr1 icc in 1916 dur· busiCs lumsclf on Ius extens1ve a very 1mpress11'e and very "Good'" h 'd · H t but I shook your faith in ·h1m. ' lng the hctoht of the First' I arm JUst south of London but moving experience." his h· · H ~ ~a~' th e P~ t~n "Just the same," he said, "I'm 1 1 0 1 Be was f j '1 World War~ awarded for rc,·t·cation he enjoys riding 1 T . 1 th 't' 1 windoaw' et . tel troug T Jell grateful to you. You wanted me . :, · n 1 f' hing ) p1ca o c cr1 lea ac· , us 10 me o see u 1 t 1 b f I 1 d h th 8 D 1 19 1 8 lstmgm~hecl Service rro~s a . · . . claim accorded the flint is the :rise from behind the trough 1 ° ge ou ore earne ow 10 1918 ~or work in th~ :\mn· As. Con:mand1~1g .offtcer ~f review appearing in the Lon· land start running .toward the things stand bet~een Duke and I ber 3 Jl:aral Squndro:J which the Cburch. Lads Br1gade he 1s d Ev ning News describln" lJarn. Tull had heard th th .I Dorcas. I appreciate your try. was en::a~rd in oifcnsil'c PU· a \'cry ~clive person a~d he "~~ thee Beach" as "one of t11; dcr too and thou~h thee ho~~ I ing to spare me." trois Ol'cr enemy lines and as nen•t· spares himself m . the' most moving and powerful films' cut' of his view he'd been able I She was growing more fis·, r-. t'.L.D. fl::hter C.icorts to h~mbcr and 11'01'1\ of the In fact smce 1 f thi 11 .,·Th, t 1 th' . f h tressed. "I'm not concerned with' · . . his appointment he has onlv o s or any o 1er year. e, o guess a e stze o t e h 1 , . hi d t D k 1 .•• rec~nnals~nc~ alrcrnft. mls<~d one mectln of the Bri·, review in the Evening Stand· or I~ arriving. Now, with Tull w ,a )OU. mig o o u 'e.: ~·

S1r Au~rc~ rrccJ\'ed a per· · . S ard called it "a film that should 1 up nnd running th d He s got b1g shoulders. too. I m , , . manent ComJtll.« o11 1·11 tit" R \ gadc's ExcculJve Committee. b . d, . B k, , d ' e e ge was concerned with what ''OU may ·• . · . · · · • ·' · · · not e m1sse . 1 uc ·ner s an he went thr 0 u h ' ; . F. m 1919 whrn he went to In· nr.~ade Council or Officers lh .· d ' d g do to yourself. Your face looks ' F I , · c f c \\•n ON an after Tull The • " .• dta and s~rvrd th~rc until 1923. on.rrence. . . ! In Rome Ava Gardner, star· Iman heard th b t f ·b different from when you rode • . · , . He was on the trninin~ staff at H1s two·w~ ck. v1s1t to. New·: red in the movie with Gregory behind him f e heat 0 d ootds here this afternoon. Older. Har.! ;.;;./0··. · ·.· · Halton until hr attended the foundland WI 1 I mclude VISits to Peck Fred Astnire Anthony ' or e urne an der. It wasn't that round with I '·· • • .· • II (' L ll · th J · ' ' 11 trew a shot Buckner felt the ' ' · · ·. R.A.F. Staff Collr:;e as a stu· a .. · ·camps m e prov nee Perkins and Donna Anderson, 1 . 1 : . Sam Tull that made it so. I put ' , "· · dent in 1930 in aoditio1t to a busy round of received a standing ovation at 1:~r nsh ~f lt. He fell behmd another strike against Duke In 1 I .. ': · ·. t H~ then returned to India and other official functions. His ' the Fiamma Theatre from Hal· I e. watenng trough, on the OP· your mind." i · in 1932 was pro•notcd to Squ:•d· · complete itin~rar~· will ~e pub· ian President Gronchi, minis- I~f~~~:nslde fr~m where TuB had "All the more rea~on I've got 1 ron Le:dcr and later in 1934 ' hshcd upon tis completiOn by ters of the Republic and other 1 • He fired, but Tull got to find him," he said stiffly. : · \1'3~ for two vcars on the Head· llcgimental Headquarters here high dignitaries attending the nto the barn. "To have It out-with guns'" ~ quar1ers Stair in Dtlhi · in St. John's. glittering event. The man appeared almost in- He shook his head "I! th~t ! ;,. I · 1 stantlv. mounted and at a gal· . · 1 '· • n 1937 he attended a course ; , , 1 i· . . had been my nohon, I'd have } '· at Imperial Defence College : B ·rd· PI walsneSnttohcukshl·aoslmtl·c'alolvnrtehceet:S,.eeadchby hoo~s~ ~~~~ganctoheonsetylseldeanodf f~lris fetched a gun with me when I: t and up (('I the outbreak of war: lJi came home, girl." in !93!1 Sir •\ubrey was a mem·l' t rnga ans a premte~e. aud1ence . ' that mclud·. :'. ~~~ ; und.er the ne~k. The bullets- ITo Be Continued) her of the Directing Staff at ed the Kmg of Sweden, ambas·: \lent ~1de, but the~· kept Buck. R.A.F. Staff College, when he · sad?rs, "!inister&, · the Lo~~ I ncr Plllned down. Then Tuii command~d the wartime staff Recommended: lila~ or Go1 ernor and the. Pres!· , rounded the barn.

until it closed in 1940. E. N. Peach, 15 Torbay Rd., dent of t~e Town Councillor. 1 Buckner reared up. He ran n~ was then Deputy Director front porch. I~ Zumh, Maror Landolts :forward and. reached the road Paramount of Bomber Operations. Air Min· F. J. Lukins, 6 Darling St., dch\'Cred a special comm~nd· , a.nd ~ot a ghmpse of Tuii spur· is try. and then Air Officer rear extension. mg Stanley Krame~. and Umled . rmg hard, but the dis~ance was Tomorrow Commanding :->o. 18 Group · E. L. Hickman. Lo: No. 18 Art!sls for, an o.utstandmg now too great for stx·shooter 1 GLENN FORD, BOLL Y\\'OOD-Bin~ Croshy"s ~on Phillip and his wife Sandra pose Cnastai Command in Scotland Rennie's ~!ill Road, bungalow. achievement followmg what · usc. He turned. Roaring up DEBBIE REYNOLDS I:'i on anti·shipping patrol work off William Norman, 6 Kitchen· ~~as termed by t~e local press: came th.e covered wagon, a man "IT STARTED WITH with their new son Brian Patrick who was born at Queen of Angels Hos. the :\orwegian coa~t. and anti· er Avenue ..private garage. the, most ~xclus1ve and cle·: a.t the .hnes, a Y?unger man be· A KISS" pital here July I. This is the second child for the couple. (UPI Telephoto) l'·Boat patrols in ;o;orthern T. Hibbs. D01·er Place, exten. gant prem1~re of a f1lm In s1de h1m. Flanking the wagon ' . . ' '! Water>. sion for gara~e. that city's Jnstory. :was Boxed J's Billy Larb, and It takes what is probably the . Laid to Rest Freighters Load ·.a ted on for acute appendix. . -. ,.. - In 1944 Sir Aubrey wa~ ap· St. James United Church, _,_____ 1 he was leading the two horses, briefest courtship in movie his· pointed Srmor Air Starr Offi· Elizabeth Avenue, church. :front and side porch. . that had b~lted with the fir!( tory to persuade Debbie ReY· BELL JSLA:>m 1Stlfn- -The BELL ISLAXD !Staffl-The' )Irs. Edgar Bennett, Main

err Coastal Command llend· Dr. Simms, 27 Long Pond i Stapleton Ltd., Lot. No. 37 'gunfire. 'I nolds to marry Glenn Ford in funeral of tht late Eclwanl '.Iii· <>crman freight<'r ~LV. Bochuin, Road, is still receiving medical

quart~rs where his work in· Ronri, rear extenison. 1 Dunfield Avenue, bungalow. ! Larb said. astonished, "Ry Metro-Goldwyn-Maycr's racy, ler, 68-yrar.old rc,idrnt of X<•. cnmplrtrd loading and sailed. treatment at the Grace Hos· riutled planning for Coastal Wm. A. Trask Ltd., Lot No.I A. Perry, Lot No. 12 Long: Buckner! Didn't figure to find I romantic comedy, "It Started 1 East. took place during l:"t for a port in Germany, with· pita!. St. John's. Command's part in the inl'asion 11 Horwood Avenue, bungalt~w Pond Road, bungalow. you here." With a Kiss," in which the popu· week·IJHL 1.120 tons or ore cargo, )I01· ~lax Hutchings. East Wa· of Kormand>·. This work was. C. Daniels, Hatcher Street, Kingdom Hall, 1\lorris Ave. "Hello, Billy," Buckner said. • lar stars appear together for· Funeral serl'i<'l'> v.prr hrU day af!Prnoon. bana. is also receil·ing medical of great importance to keep at bungalow. ! rear extension and alterations.' "Believe me, man, I'm glad to ; the first time. in the United Church. Dandso,J Another German freighter, a treatmrnt at the General Has· bay l:·Boat threats against the C. R. Englt

.. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • uckncr looked at the wagon 1 m!llionaire. Instead, she mc~ts fore rctirin~ on ppnsinn. wa; Home From ;0 r paint from floors-even when and 1.ts nders. On the canvas of 1 A1r For~e sergeant Joe FJtZ· employed as a mine fnrem~n . it has hardened. Let the re· ' bthe stde nearest him, words had gerald (mcome: base pay of. with Dnseo, Wahana ~Tines. Hospl'ta] ;mover sink in for a few minutes • . een smeared with axle grease: $40 a month) and within 24. Deepest sympathy is rxtend· , onl\' then rub off with a e I o t h Ill ke "JUDGE NOT THAT YE BE hours is wearing his wedding ed to his relatives. BlLL !SLA:Oo/D (Staffl-Ed·· and 'wash the spot with warm, NOT JUDGED:" The man at the ring. Within another 24 hours, • warct Shaw. No. 6 Ro:td. has rc·, soapy water. . d lines was a preacher if he'd Joe is on his way to an Ameri· ! turned home from ho

! I THE DAILY NEWS. ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., THURSDAY, JULY 7, 1960 •• :s 1!341 ...

------· 11 ASTRO-GUIDE11 By Ceean Social-Personal For Thursday, July 7 Present-For You and Yours ... This is a quiet, peace· • -Column- ful day, but activity speeds up by evening and a gay time is ir..

1 J'A.SSENGER LIST due ted by Jllrs. Clarence Will· dicated for young and old. -r .• ~c R.M.S. Newfoundland from iams, assisted by Mrs. Arch it easy in the morninv. Slocp late St. John's to Liverpool. July Thornhill. Special soloist for if possible. Do routl~e ~hare,, 4th, 1960: !llr. W. Abraham, the evening was !llrs. Peggy but don't initiate ·'"1 l~ng·range !~!iss L. Braine. lltr. B. Butt, Pittman, accompanied by Mrs. projeciS for the moment. The Jane Guy, Captain T. Blanche Hollett. Miss Carrie !~!iss ; unexpected is a~C·~nted all U"Y· Hounsell, Miss A. O'Brien, !\lost Parsons, Literature Secretary, Rc\', M. O'Reilly, D.D., Rev. J. gave a· very interesting chapter I W. Taylor. llliss L. R. Thomas. of the study book on Africa. A Between Past •.. King·, College "'"~ Future ... Africa. "hi<:h needs From Boston: lllr. H. F. short business period followed, f·c~odcd in :-o;cw York City 011 e(onomi~ ,tid baJiy, may rccch·c Brown, lllrs. Brown, 1\lrs .. s. after which the members par· lui~· 7, !754. The name "'"' '"b,lantial help from the United N. Caso. Miss Churchill, Miss ' ticipated in a "Bring and Buy" changed 30 years later to Co· E. Cleary, Mrs. 111. , Mr. Sale. Tea was served by the Us Stat(). Thi< 11 ill be done in order lumhia College, and is now the R. Fischer, 1\lr. w. Fischer, social committee. to prc,·cnt Ru"ian fCnctrauoa, !~!iss Y. G. Fischer, lllrs. J. ll!rs. Hommerson, In her famed Columbia Uni,ersity. Lundrigan, !llr. T. 1\!addox, lltr. closing remarks, wished aU Women la1. J. Taylor, Mrs. Taylor, :llr. me1nbers a pleasant summer W. Whelan. and felt sure the fall meetings By RUTH MILLEn The Day Under Your Sign From Halifax: 1\!rs. A. Ber· would find everyone filled with ARIES {Born M"'h ll to April 19) liBRA (Sept. 2J to Od.ll) nier, 1\lstr. P. Bernier, 1\lr. J. renewed energy for the great \\<~.1! lnr a l•l••,lt"nL tu ~tttl,. ~,f 11• ;·.~n l.•Jio·r 1·:: 1 I:T• :;• ~~1111 1 \• ~~d ~·,111~ .lclrrr\ in•tra•l ••I tnrcLnS.:;; ~·;·,1:••:1. mnuol·, ,.., 111.1 ~ ..•1 r:o~lt mto thi1: atr. C. B1'll ard , 'I., r. J . c . B1'I lard , work of the Woman's Mission· 'WOMEN: ACT NOW TO 'Irs B'll d 111 A K ar~· Society. EXTEND 'GOOD YE.\RS' TAURUS (April20 to M•y 20) SCN.PIO {Oct, 23 to Nov. 21) ·' . : ar , r. . eenan. If ••I~~"T• r~fL!•e t~.. .s .. · \ .. . lEO (Jcly ll to Au~.; I) 11ilm .. arc at pres· , A0UARIG5 :J,•.ll !o Fob, ltl t'nt sprndin~ a ·ac~tion in St. ' former Geraldine Sulliran of the Unitrri St~tes Senate Sub­ : ' " 1 tJ'~\' "' t 'r··,l ;o • ' r • ~ • • 1 rhl11r'lh)" i1 you're :~~:.:")I 1~: "" ('."! \\3·~ • ··,h !II"! ,riJ:":: 1: ~ \'OU •IJ committee on l'rohlems of the 1 John·~. Thcv carnr b1· rar to Harbour Grace. :•nd 1 ~·. i: v:J: rtt:J~r. ~~t ;;,.1or1 Ancd and Aging. ' "'· Sydnr1', cro,~rd the . Gulf on --- VIRGO f ~uq. 22 lo Sepl. 221 PISCES fF,b.lO lo loA·'<~ 20) The best thing that women; 1 thr Carson and motored from ARRJ\'EO R\' CAR T~'..·r &LIH· ~ ! ·.,. l-:'1•1!' rn b~ hild.rd ·~n· ~~r:~:m, a:! • z~· ,C<'Ih·. A 1111llt II the C<:'mm')n drMr.LI'Utor 'cf !rif'nd•hi~ Port aux Ba~qucs tn St .•John's. ' ~lr. and Mrs. Frasrr llarri~ who are still in those h~ppy i . u "til ,. '"''' hr~, ) ,.,u k!1o;v.•, While herr thry arc ~ 11 r,ts of tncr Gwendolyn Toolan) re· productive years can dn is slart I ~lr. and ;\Irs. s. Carland, 72 t•rntly ar~ii'Ni h.Y car from figuring out how to extend the , ~lcrr~·mcctin;: Road. Ottawa w1th thetr family to "good years" beyond 50, -"---- ! sprnrl a month's vacation with Here are a few starters: c· y F .I A B ak OS Bt'SISESS TRIP I )Irs. Harris' father Mr. A. M. 'As your hmne duties lessen, I IVe our ami y re ; ~lr. ,\aron Bailrl' of Port : Toolon at Topsail, Conception f10d some kmd of satisfying community work (not just busy ' St ££ t'nion. who has her~ on a bus. Ba)'. work) that will keep you a con· ' U inrss trip to Halifax. arrived in And Roll Round Steak LEA n:s FOR ALDERSJIOT tributing member of societv I the City on Tuesday by TCA As you begin to have a· iittte' BY GAY:-:OR :\!ADDOX l'i hours. or emU: meat is tender. and \\'ill he sta)·ing at the :'\ew· ll~rold ~laking of the eltr will be leal'ing by CNR today more time of your own, find Hemove to hot plalter and make foundland Hotel while finishing some satisf,·inl( hobb1· that will Round steak is always an gravy with drippings in pan. some business here. for seven weeks course of train· ·.. • ~t C.Hnn Alder,1hot. N.S. enrich you~ life. (The sooner economical buy. All of it can be Cahb•ge is good now and also ~IOSTIIL '\' :\IEETISG with St. Bon'~ Army C.adets. you can start on this the better. ·eaten. prel'cntin~ any 'W1sle. To economical. The l'- s. Depart· i Durmg th1s hme he Will be Not e1•eryone can get as late a prel'ent monotony, howel'er, vary ment of A~riculture suggests pan- r;.r regu.lar mon.thly meeting : l'isiting the surrounding towns start as Grandma :\loses). ',\'OUt' wa"·s of coo1dng it, cooking it for a change. Add 1 of. t.Jc Sen10r Aux11iary of the and ba~es. Double your effm·ts to streng· : Rotlrd Sturf~d Round st~ak quart finely shrerlrted cabbage to \\ JI.S. of George Street Church ' then old friendships and to make !Yield: 6 to 8 servings) · 2 tablespoon< h?r.tcd butter or was hc!d on Tuc>day. June 14th. I new ones. (A woman with manr Two pounds round ~teak, cut margarine in a heavy pan. The \\' orship service was con· · friends isn't likely to be 8 lone .. '2·inch thick, 2 strips bacon Sprinkle with ~Jit. Col'er pan to lr or bitter woman.) 7 crumbled. '' cup chop!J€d onion. hold in sleJm and cook over -. r•. If you can go back to work v, cup shnp!J€d celery, I tnhle· low heat for .; to 10 minute<. ·. ':t:~ and you think you mar need spoon chopped parsley_ '' tea- ,;tin·:~~ o~c:·o-innalh· the money later on, trv to est· spoon powdered sage, '' tea· Crisp (f :· ~··~ ENJOY 5·~1innte C~bbage ahlish ~·ourself in a job before spoon ~wlt, pepper, one-third cup ,en·ings you get any older. r It is much soup stock or hot wmer. 3 table· One and one·half cups milk. 1 .LIVING easier for a woman of 40 to spoons lard or drippings, ·, cup quart sht·er!derl cabbage, !' 2 find employment than it is for water. . tab!e;!1con< !!our, 1'2 tablespoons a woman of 50.) , Combme. bread crumbs, melted butter or margarine. Mr. and Mrs. William J. King at their rec~ption at the Crystal Palace fol· If you feel that your mind bocon,. omon. celeQ', parsley, Heat milk and add the cab· lowing their marriage at the Church of St. ~licltael and All Angels by the Rev. has grown rusty from disuse 1 s?asomngs a~d enough slock or bage, S1mmer about 2 rnm· T. F. Honeygold on Monday, June 6th, at 7.30 p.m. The bride is Lilllan Ruth, during the years when you were : ~atcr to mo1sten. Spread stuf. 11le;, \!IX the flour and meUed youngest daughter of Mr. and 1\lrs. II. P. Alcock, Patrick Street. The groom tied down by small children. • fmg on .ste~k and roll like a Jelly fat and add ~ !Jttl.e of ~he hot .. ~Irs. + h the son of Mr. and Ralph King, Hickman's Harbour. (Photo by Garland start reading good books m k roll. Tt~ m ~e,·eral places or m1lk. Stir th1s m1xture mto the Studio) more of Rn effort to k~e au c fa,tcn wtth skewer'. . . 1cabbage, and cook 3 or 4 min· 1 ------:with world affairs, even /bac~' Bro~~n. roll on all stdes m lard· utc'. or until thickened, stirring I 11 ~WIM -MIA~ o h /. ot school if you can m t 'or ~rtppmgs. Add water. Cov- • constantly. Season to taste with take a coli anage 0 er hghtlv and cook slowlv about' salt and pepper IV' j Be sure to write 11 note of CInc , ege course or two, or ' - · ---·--- tiAFE • I 1 appreciation _to each person who Packing .For Vacation Can Be A go to night school. gl\'es you a Job recommendation. -~ BY KAY SHERWOOD 1 With imagination and effort Packing for the family vaca· , most women can push the , Orange Blossom Wedding Punch lion trip is sure to start a hot 1happy year~ far beyond the 50 i debate on what'• "necessary'' I mark. LoL~ of women are at. · ~ulr. Ideas ::· luggage, ready doing it. from .: If the trip is by amo and the : I know women In their 70s­ destination is a rented summer and do you-who 1 '? p~o~ably cottage, the debate is more com· • are sllll hvmg the good years One wok to.4nother:. :· plex. I because they have refused to Clothing is only a small part of! let age defeat them.

~·~-d~~~~~~~~~~ things to be transported. Listen 1 I I I to the list lengthen: clubs, 1 K' ~.~:~ ~£J/ak Carnation Homo5otv1drtdor ·~ . ' reakets, beach things, JtChen Comfort fishing gear, favorite doll and bedtime companion, rock collec· lion and so on. Cheat-the-heat dishes ft Not to be overlooked when 1 ·: Whowant.5 to C<'. .Ma~l\ 9·il'lch singlt·crult pie QUICK POTATO SALAD too much space, use vonr lm-' 1 package Malt" -' ta 6 servlnaa ~cnuity, Pack warm pajamas .'! i Con\'enient frozen concentrated Florida orange juice is a perfect Saruhtptious! JJ!ffirent/ choit·e for the hnmrmakers keep a ~pr· toes. aeasonlnu, onion, eelery rolls 9• long; cut into 9 slices. housekeeper and do cut down on· gay rcmnanls. , line \\'hen applyin~ foumlatinn rial box in which they sal'e all tray 11ntil 10ft Ice eryatala form and l hard cooked e«r. MIJ: 1 envelope thr laundrv 1 p c ·eam , washin~ ins!i·uction lags, each la· around edre of tray (about 15 Flelschmann's.Active Divide each slice Into 3 pieces; · · . . . altern 7199: Pattern pieces: , 1 . ; 0 u can remnl'c a n y ~ to ZO minutes). Whip until stllf well. Spoon mixture Into ae"· tnr bowl and carnllh wltb re· Dry Yeast roll each piece lnto a 5" rope. i Although ~ c accept . the 11~1· transfers: directions for mixer- ' makeup on thr fl·ont strands of he led with the name of the ar· laboat l minute). Add lemon matnlnr err. CbUI unlll ready Let stand I 0 mllu. THEH stir Brold 3 ropes together to i tattons of ktlchen• cqmp~ent 1~ ~ cover doll. Easy! f<'un to make! . hair with a pad of colton, lightly ticle to which it pertains. ~Ice ud wblp very stiff (lbout to ae"e. well. make each bun; seal ends. I 1 IJaillutetlonrerl. Fold whipped the r~ntcd cotla~e phliosophi· Send . THIRTY·FIVE CENTS , dal)tpcned with skin !rcshener, : • Arrange, well apart, on greas• , cally, 1t .may pay to take along! lin coins I for this pattern: or astringent. or brushing it out. Costume JCW~lry that dtscolors f':aru&lon IJito relatiJI mb.'\ure. SPECIAL OFFER! My colorful "Fun lo 3o Cream ed eookle sheets. Grease lops. lpeo~~IDto baked pie JheiL Gar­ COCik Book" &fvtl al~s 11d 1 to 14 eosr Yt c. butler or Blue a few thmgs. I' stamps cannot be accepted to with a clean eyebrow brush. ; the s~m may. s1mply need a good "lah wUh additional peach 1nstruetlons on boslc cookln1. Sond 2k, Cover with towel. Let rise lin· I feel strongly,, for example, ST. JOIIS'S DAILY NEWS, -- 1 brushmg w 1 ~ h warm, soapy your name and oddrtss tot Mill' Bloke, Bonnet Margarine Ill doubled-'about 40 mins. tlllcea, It desired. Chill unUI Dept. EN, Comotlon Company Llotltod, Gradually blend In about the dull kmves, rusty cap 1 Household Arts Dept, 60 FRONT No matter what cream or cos- 1 water. Then rJDse a~d dry thor- *m (about 2 houn). Brush with a ml~ture of 1 egg 1 Aylmer, Onllrio. Y:. c. granuloled augar : openers and fli~sy egg beat~rs ST., WEST, TORONTO, ONT.: metic you apply, start with soap. ou?hly .aud coat w1th· colorless yolk and I tbsp. water; , one encounters m rented eqmp· · Print plainly NA!I!E, ADDRESS, suds facial. There's no nali pobsh. 1Y1 lips,' aall sprinkle with caraway, pappy beaut~· Add and beat In, erie at a 'mrnt. PATTt:R:>~ NU:YIRER~ , suh,litulc for soap anIImmer colta~es lrr~gular Carnation 2 •aa• Yleldt 1Yz doz3n braids, . rom my 01~·n .. ' e en a e s Alice Brooks :-leecilccr:tft Book, :ceilings and dorm~r windows i~ . 1 IIIII whlta · more than .IUsli!Jed by the con· contains THREE FREE Pat· a room can be made le~s appa~· • • looks like cream Stir In ~luolved yeast, luke· ; 1·cnirnce of having them. terns. Plus ideas ~:alorc for If you should be unfortunate en! by using a single cclor on . warm milk and ~ Cottage pots a.nd pans may home fumishings, fashions, ~if!s enough to get a bad sunburn, :walls and ceilings. 2 c. once-silled not Ill! your ch.01ce but: re~em· toys, bazaar sellers - exciting, you can get rrlief in a hath of te·, • whips like cream Otl"JIUrpose flour FlEISCHMANNs her !hat alummum fm.l imcrs unusual rlesigns to crochet, knit, pid water in which yot1'1·e poured · Beat until smooth and elastic:. for the p:1ns and foil hakml! pans srw embroidcl' huck weave. f b k' · d d ' 'I h cd d. bl . ' ' a cup o a mg so a an a cup l! vou'l'e nel'er owned a li~ht. • tastes most like Work In an additional e; a~p east v ~urc as 1spos~ r quilt. Be first with the newest of starch. weight "'ool J'ersev coat b.•fo-re, 2Yt'c. (naut) once­ a1ds. They re more pracltcal -send 25 cents now! " J ...... YEAsr than trying to carry your own : now's the time to find what a joy silled all-purpose flour ... ,.,,~~ , fresh cream ... skillets and casseroles. The newest togetherness is : jersey is. You can roll up TIH'n out on !loured ...·::::'."•" a 4, ... , Don't forget to take along a Touring time usually means fragrance togetherness. New · wool jersey ccat and toss it into "from. C011tented Cowi board; lcneod uniU 1111001h and radio-! transistor or plug-in por· crumbs and debris in the car. To his and her fragrances are bein;:; :1 luggage rack, sit on it, g[l·e it ... table a clock, a deck of cards. protect the flooring against the introduced in the United States.' :areless h3ndling, and tlill fc' Sales Agems: Nt~~ruUNIJLAND 81\v"L,{AGE LTD. and some books, for night·time onslaught of untidy kids, cut mats , His is a masculine toilet water it emerge lookin& smooth and un· St. John's. Corner Brook, and Grand Falls ' and ralny·day entertainment. of clear, ribbed "Fabrilite". and bers is a delicate colo&ne. I wrinkled. I

...... ·.~ POLlY'S QUIZ Pleats Here· To Stay .Daily Recipe 1 I BY POLLY CRAMER Food prepared on your out. Dear Polly: We're planning In This Sleep Coat door grill can be as 5imple or to buy new furniture this sum· elegant as you wish and for a mer. But our problem is that 1 "fun" barbecue you might like we mo\·e about a great deal. So to try your hand at these h o r s we need \'Crs·atile pirces that can d'oeuvres ideas. Rememh~r go into anv size room. when setting up your grill to line I'd like ~ couch and chair both it with alumin\lm foil... it acts as' with simple lines and no exposed a heat reflector... saves on clean-, wood. I'm fond of blue and h~d up work and cool~ ~eant1fully, ' thought of buying a couch, chair , These appetite bmlders are 2nd rug all in the same shade of Blend Of Old And New Creates Charming Decor ;~s~itt~e:n~h~e ::yd ~f~r~eo~r:~~; hl~~d then have some basic pieces m the cool of mormng, stored m with continuitv. Is this wise• JY KAY SREitWOOD the refrigerator and whisked on·: -R. s. E. · I i to the grill for the party. Dear n.. s. E.: You started The way In which interior de-: SHRIMP SCAMPI out on the right road, then took a signers pair' off the old and new,;

gests ideas to homemakers who· % cup butler or margarine, 1 ba>ic color. Save the blue for often must menage a. similar 1 melted 1 accent. union of furnishings In their own 1 small clove g~rlic, minced · A pair of lounge chairs that homes. 1 tbsp. lemon juice , match each other and blend u·ith In the never-never land of 2 tbsps. minced parsley :the couch would be 8 wiser in- model roo1111 designed by skilled Pinch mixed herbs ~ \'estment than all matching decorators, stringent family bud· 1 Cook, shell and devein shrimp, pieces. gets are no hindrance to the J if fresh, thaw if frozen. Place on Avoid the conventional dining lmallnatlon. I a small, shallow pan made from room set. You could use a fold. Model rooms are not meant to' two thicknesses of heavy duty ing or drop-leaf table In a hall or be carbon-copied. They sugge1t I aluminum foil. Make this your- li\·in~ room. too. new Ideas or fresh cOmbinations.! self by turning up sides and mit· Chairs need not match. F 0 r Two of the settings by mem·j1 ering corners of foil. Combine instance. peel cane tub chairs bera of the American Institute of remaining ingredients and pour can be used for dining, then fit- Decorators for the fourth annual 1 over shrimp. Place pan on grill ted into other rooms in the house. venetian blind panorama are I and cook until shrimp are heated good examples of this. through. Dear Polly:, We are going to They are not extravagant; the · HOT CHEEZETTES . have our hall, living room and warm color combinations and the I I t to a golden brown m\' dau)!hters' room aqua. wood· a white·tlled wainscoting, right through the foil and the fil. \1' ·o r k and ell. Th~\· h a \' i . He uses a huge white bear rug ling will be hot and delicious. a brown. gold and red brnided .. ~;i on the floor but I'm reminded KABOBS ru~. mapl~ furniture anct whi~e .... t that a washable white synthetic ~lake hors d'oeu\Tes kabobs Cape Cod curtains. fiber in a bear· like shape is more Iby spearing pieces of frankfurter -~ :'If\· trouble i~: wllat to u Besides the padded window /rice and \'eJ(etJb!es, the dish rlif- seat, there is a comfortable wing ~ ferent each time. according

A. J.D. ' cooked rice 1 An outstanding feature here Is 2 cans 1tlb. each tomatoes the way he has tr~ated the win· I 1 tsp. salt PAIN dow wall to give maximum con- ,, tsp. tabasco trol of light, air and shade. Three 1 can luncheon meat or corned tririr:ii=ir;r::W~i7;:t~ UP AND UP venetian blinds, two yellow and beef. or Higher prices for fruits, vegetables and meats pushed the middle one in white, are set · 2 cans \'ienna sausage, cut in In Individual frames mounted on Here II the aheath nrlmsult ln designs which make the most of a figure. Both ~ pieces Canada's cost-o·:--living index up slightly to 127.6 at pivots. aulls have complete inner bra and both are knitted with latex and a ~ynthetic I Melt butter. Add gre?n pep~cr June 1 from 127.4 a month earlier. It was the second The frames can be pivoted to for tht ultimate In comfort and quick-drying qualities. These are Durlene de· onion and nee. Cook orer high an angle, to open up the view or I heat, stirrin~ until rice is !i)(htly monthly rise in the last seven months. as an Interesting variation on the alsna. browned. Stir in tomaloes. salt. "=~!:!:~~~~~=: Upper graph traces l:ving costs, based on 1949 prices flat look of the ordinary shaded I Tabasco and meat. Brin~ to a · equalling 100, for 1959 and to date this year. window. ------·----·-----~-- lower graph sh::>ws a small increase in the index of_ Sunny yellow and white are A girl wears less tG the beach !,------used for the marbelized vinyl tile these days, but it seems s he. 1 average industrial wages and salaries to 176.9 at May floor and for slip cover.~. needs to carry more! The new- 1 from 175.4 in April. At the same time last year the In sharp contrast is the use of est tote bag holds up to 75 index, based on 1949 figur:s equalling 100, was 170.5. a red-and-white damask-pattern· pounds. It's big enough to bold ed wallpaper on one w a II. a girl's purse, radio, bottles of -(CP Newsmap).) Matching fabric shows up on the lotion, sun &lasses and m an y ladder-backed chairs, w h I c h other extru. Fascinated by the exciting pull up to an old-fashinned round Technicolor rainbow of eye makeup shades table to be used for dining, On many of the newer coats, now available and like to try sancks or study. Red tweed up­ collars unsnap, converting them Treat them all? Now you can try six holsters the love seat which un· to a cardigan neckline. fuhion shades of eye makeup folds to a guest bed. for the price of one, A cosmetic Accessories, such as e to I e manufacturer has introduced lantern over the table, sea shells, The latest two-piece bathing a new slim pencil with six sect­ lavabo and antique bottles fur· suits actually are 112 piece suits. Ions which holds '>2 Inch sticks !her underline the cozy country The shorts part Is tradltio!lal, of emerald, turquoise, bright sap. air. but the bra Is less than It h a a phlre, blue violet, mauve and Williams also likes low ground been, Strapless and backless, silver. plantings of greenery just out· It Is held into place by gripping side the window 85 a foil for the the sides of the wearer at t b e In answer to many requests, and as a special service to lllllide atmosphere. bosom level. the buying public, The Model Shop - the store where style lstamps cannDt be accepted to ST. .JOHN'S DAILY .NEWS, begins - announces that throughout the months of July and Houtehold Arts Dept. 6G FRONT August, until further notice, The Model Shop will remain ST., WEST, TORONTO, ONT. Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS. OPEN FOR BUSINESS ON SATURDAYS, and will CLOSE PATTERN NUMBER. ON MONDAYS. The Model Shop is following this course, in JUST OUT! Our New 1960 order to give service to the many people who have expressed Allee Brooks Needlecraft Book eontalna THREE FREE Pat· the wish that the store remain open to give them a chance terns. Plus ldeu galore for to shop on their Saturday off. home furnishings, fashions, gifts, toys, bazaar sellers-exciting, ' unusual designs to crochet, knit, The Model Shop feels that the public should have an sew embroider, huck weave, quilt. Be first with the newest opportunity to shop on their weekly holiday, a day when -1end 25 cents now! there is ample parking available on Water Street, and when customers will have plenty of time to shop at leisure and in comfort. Therefore, until further notice, The Model Shop on Water Street will be open from 8.30 a.m. to 5.00 p.m., Tuesday, ENJOY Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday, and from 8.30 a.m. to LIVING 9.30 p.m. Friday, during the months of July and August. • Beginners• joy! So bright and beautiful-never a dull moment with this color-gay quut. EASY two-pateb quilt-blocks 'r.he '11lodel. Shop £,td. flOW awlftly! UM technlcolor· + bold screpa for IQUife and trl· lillie. P a tt e r n '1359: :chart: SWIM patell patterns; yardages: dlrec- t.lons. . The dante cotlon 1hlrtwalli dr e11 &et. a lot ef fa1h1011 help Seacl THIRTY-FIVE CENTS SAFELY here Ia the form of a pouch bag prlaled bl mulllellored gros jiy2,4,5,6,7,8, 11,13,15 (Ill co i Dl for Ifill pattern poblt IIIII moUIIIed oa JU, bla ell leather frame,· THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., THURSDAY, JULY 7, 19611 .

·s·· I Wl~?.1~a2;r~e~~ New· Fayetteville Lawyer .ergs Res·lst Ice 1 .-:·. [fvuend/~n~ d ~r:,cr~!~~fai.;~er~!t · · there is no up-to-date record of I debates in the legislature, he was B b ·a sentiment voiced Heads Kiwanis Intn'l ~xpressing. , for years m several other prov· Chicago. Illinois. June 30th,! law at Wake Forest College. Patro I S Om S I inces. 1960-Joseph 0. Tally, Jr., 39,1 Taily attended Duke Univer- . I While printing· o£ Newfound· Fayetteville, North Carolina sity and Harvard L:.w School. The International Ice Patrol more. U.S. Coast Guard. t·om·: land's l"erllatlm report of debates attorney, has been named Prcsi-1 He is a m2mb~r of Phi Beta has completed its test aimed at I menced mininJ: sc1•ctal selected . is about four ycnrs behind, the dent of Kiwanis International. . na1ionai honor frat~r- the demolition of icebergs. Com·' large bergs in the area with i province is at least betler off He was elected to the number' nity, and Phi D.:lta Phi n~ls. He a\o p~rtbp~tcs · headquarters in Argentia said; Boarding an icc berg can be only ones that keep no detailed tion of Kiwanis International in in a wide var'cty of cil'ic, ~cr- that thia year's program was in I tricky business: it is much like record of debates, a cross-Can· :lliami, ~!iami Beach. News of i I' icc. !'burch and lin cia! r~ti1·itics two parts: the continued bomb· an rink tipped on its I ada survey by The Canadian Tally's election was received to-: in Fc•:ctt~l'i·l2. H~ nr.d ~!rs. 1 ing of bergs at sea and the, side. But a berg is always Press shows. day ~Y officers of the Kiwanis· 'Li:y h"l'e l•:;o c:,i:u~c:J. boarding of bergs along the I "calving" (breaking apart) and' Earlier this year the Quebec Club IPf St. John's, N[!t:~~ 2 ~ds ho!!lort••· l:":•·;t:c;. Th" tot'l rum- 1 in 1959. This year twenty 1000. Coast Guard, was standin~ by in Alberta ·and British Columbia Albert J. Tally. ~iobilr. /.1::1:,.3 h2t' of tn 1 ,~e~' 011 th? Kiwanis pound armor pierdn~ bombs in the area for any e\·cntua!it)·. hJ\'C b~en demanding for years . r.ttorncy, Tully h?s idd the Int:rn::t'o!wl BoJrd is lwcll'e. were dropped on a large berg · Thre detonations were conduct- ~that the gol'emmcnts introduce ~ K' · · · \ I twcms nr~stdcncr stn~c : :t:i· ,, f'' · ~ixty miles northeast of Cape ed leading up to a blockbuster. n~ellodI of record Ing daily discus- ,,cw o .Jc~rs anr 1 tJ·mtecs arc: . ust of 1050. · n \\. Bona1·ista. It was hoped that, charge of almost half a ton ~wns, t 11ere is no certainty the , lmmcriiatcl)' prior to hi,; e':•c- 1· '· 'tt11:tm.1 1 ~lilwruke:·. Wis- a penetrating effect of the tough and buried into the base of a p:·oposais will come to anything tion as prc;ic:cm of I\ill'nnis, crn:·in. PrcsiCcr.t-clc~l: C. L. 'tee! nose cones would pierce large Jlinnacled ber~ four hun- in the ncar future. I ~!o;.i;, Sp:

the large berg far enough to drcrl feet long and one hundred Lack of such records is a I T~~ly. ~:I:I'e~l on~ :~.·c,~rt '" 1 ~~.~ .lames !~. tlou~tt,on, EdmontQe, m~amz..twns ptc".rcn -c.c... \I' . It t' ,,. p • athicl'c the most effective t~·pe thirty feet high. ~ource of annoyance for politi- . • "'1'•2, n :rr~ 1011:1 1 tee- res .. of explosion. After sixteen di· The results, while hearin~ lians, particularly when sitting: ;rei 1w~f. the ftr~t m~·l~h~r to. rlcnt>: .'.lct·l~ II. Tucker, Gallup rc<·t hits howr1·cr, it was ac· out Professor Barnes' findings in opposition. A favorite tactic in I i 10 1 liS ncw.y-cr.~a.c! po;t. · \'c·.1· :dc::i:-o, Jnt~;·n~t!onai trea· knowledged Ulat lhe g\al'ial icc t•f rrmarkablc explosil'c proper- debate is to di~ up quotations :Tally ~~s aloo ~e~~~d 11':·o ~:rms su~cr: Dr. Erne.;! G. Bashor, Los wus too touD"h for the bombs. tics of !hermite in ice, once from a statement made years as .8 rlustrcd• 0 t•.vams nter· ,\w:elr•. California, Clum c. I ..., lembers of the Queen'.; Own Rifles of ranada station- n·1 1wna an one ye·tr as Its While thousands nl tons of it•e aJ:ain appeared to haYc little ef- eal'li~r by a membet· of the gov· LES ORIGINALS-" ' · ' · · Iluc 11cr. Bloomington, Indiana W. \\WC shattered into the sea and feet toward the o\'cra\1 dcstruc· r•·nment and use it to embarrass td In Germany recently made a pilgrimage to the Re~imcnlal Rattle Honour tr~:surer. lie has... ~!so. b.c~n Clyd~ Glll 1\lCilat·e to s.ht'n.s. •.1110kft atl!l flatllft, tltc her" rft. tim~. • [' 1 ttl 1 · \'' II\\' o Caroitnas Ktwams Dtstnct. and R. O>bornr f:ast York. Toronto, • ' ,. ' ' " ' mentleres was the scene of the Regiments 1rst Ja e 1 urmg • or 1 ;tr ne, b 1 h f "TERMITE" omms rnain~d disdainful and w~at This is often done in the House a mem cr am c atrman ° 'Ontario International Trustees The second phase of the pro· ahoul its way:at the whim or or. Commons and 1-emarks Prime (National Defence Photo) ..... ··· .. · ..... many rli>trict ant rn ts a prac. 11th~ inrgest in tne organization's · 11111 111 Bonal'i~ta Ba~·. The ext rem~ Iy ll'orks displa~·s C\'CI' seen in the 11)' 11• Jer~ I opponcn t s aIt em1> t mg 1 Th"" dc"t'<,·t'on• to cotllitmn' lhl' • ' tl!'lll"~ al'ornev• • ami a past• \'tee • •1· o yrnr h'ts 1ory. 1n add't' 11on 1o

deep 1\'atcrs n£ this rc~ion form area. to ~how how the responsibilities 1 I F' F hf ng 'arrangement wn, rl'ncllcll at ." It lll'rmits firr-fi~htin;: equip nrcsident of the North Carolin" sclc:tin~ officers ror the coming a natural trap lot' !ar~c bcr~s L,UIPIII,,\CK PR0\'1-:S of ;!0\'crnmcnt leadership hal'e n Ire I g I : mectin~ nt Falcon Lake m soutol· mcnt tn he sent from one prO\'· '1ar Association. He is c.lso a year. delegates to the ~liami. at•d pro,·idc protection to the F.•·n:cnn: . 1>rnmptcd changed views. I WINNIPEG ICP - Ontario 1 eastern ~lanitoba m~d was an. ince lo lh~ other without the need ·ormcr mayor of r':l)T<:el'p!r. 'liami B~alh Conl'ention adopted prr-ons si·ahn:: the ice diffs 1\s an interesting side P~:)Jeri- .Just ldot·e .the end of t~c New· and Manitoba hal'e renewed for ~ouneerl hy. C. 11. \\ tt~li'Y .. mtn.", of spccinl appro,·a! Costs me ap . .1 pa>l president of the ~:orth zalion's >C!'I'ice program for 195~· 1 !II tl1e her~. 1'he purpose of mcnt durin~ the projrl't. a small lr•nmllanrllr~islature sessti>n, ~Ir. the lOth time their agreement to. tstrr of mmrs and no~flllal H· 1 portioned 1 ate r, r!copcnding on l'arolina League of )Jur.icipaJi. fiO will be based, rcco~:nized "the

t'n., work marked a return to her!! wa~ t·oatecl with blliJI· lirccnc noted that con.siaet·able co • operate In fighti~g fires on i' sourc~'·...... l /where the fire was. lies and a former n:·ofts,or of bc>t ali ·round Kiwanis clubs and 1 fhr >tudies of the late Prof. H. black to tc,;t the effects of the money h:ts .h:en spent since Con-, either side of the prol'mciat bonn· A stmtlar a!!~cement ts .thn Ill 'rcsolnt10ns upon which the or~ani- districts for l!l:i~". T Baries of ~kG ill llnil'ersity. inneased absorption of sun's · f~dcralton m 1949 to keep a rec·l------··------·-·-·-·· --- ·· nne of Canada's earliest and ener~)'. It i' signifit·ant to on! of debates but that It hasn't • Iorrmost experts on "icc-en- note 1hat within t wcl>·e ho 111·, h~eu printed lor the lust four i ~mecrml:". It was Pt·ofessor aflcr the cnating. the IH•rg ':rars. He cnlhl it ·:abuse~~ pub· l>mtc," dream to keep the St. broke in half and turned turtle.· he funds and an tllus~ratlon or: J.axrrm·c open ~·car around and· Lit•utcnant Con11nan•lt•r Dins-· complete and ~hs?!ute disregard' NOW IN CANADA! to t·••nlrol the lecher:: threat. more was rrhtctant C~I! work 1s gomg ahead on t!'al'kh and iron fcnt•t•s. Profcs- ~0 ~JOICE l:XI'I.OSI\'ES the Wo7 record. ~or Bartics. howcl'er. found that In rc~ard to the further usc 0~ lh~. final. ~ay of this .year'a 1n il'c. thr sudden formation of of bombing and explosiYcs on ~cssmn m .Brlhsh Columbia the steam and other gases produces icebergs, Commander Bullard so.cial Credit government of P~e· a 1 iolrnl I'Xplosion. It was stated that the Coast tiuard nucr ~ennctt accepted 11 mol!on thcomed that thi~ hi"h tem- has no plans at this time fot· a hy CCF member Tony Gargrave perature explosion witi7 its ac· continuan!'c of the project. thal "t.hr .g~1·crnment ~o~sider ·:. rompanyin;: thermal and shock "The risks to participating lhe adnsaln!tty o! establts~mg 1 ·:···. wa,·es would produce a destric· personnel and the expense in· system of l'erbat.un ~~portmg ?f 111 e fracturing of an iceber~. 1ol\cd do not warrant the rc· h on.~ e proceedt~gs. .But thts Toward this end the Intcrna· suits we han· obtained'' s;ud doe~n t mean acl!on will neces- ,. .-.. 1ional lee Patrol Oceanographic· Commander Bullard, "but yon sm:!IY he, taken. . ;i:: ·:· .···: Yc~sel the l'.S. Coast Guard may rest assured that our rc- Stnce 1.105 the Alberta legtsla­ ~- t.'ullcr E1·ergrcen dropped an- >carch program will remain ac· lure hns hat! only a daily record 1·hor in J\onal'ista !lay on June til c and will im·esti!lalc every· of ''1·?tes ~nd proce~dings" which IUlh and a small ~roup of pi'Omising means by which the c~•n_lams the ?are mmutes o,r each ot·eanosraphers Ierl by Lieu- krbcr;: menace rna)' best be ~1tlln~-~howmg th~ status of l'ar­ tcnant Commander R. P. Dins- controlled." tous motions and btlls-~nd a re- port of w1·ilten questions and their answers. Opposition members ·.have bctn Haven For Reunited bringing in motions since 1951 Youngsters , TIGNISII, P.B.i. idren. . reumon when the famtly got to- he\', therr. was no hope ol getting Late m June, ~Irs. ~!offal, gc.thet' at !he old homestead near ~nsard. He maintained such a npe_n~d 11 holiday .camp for such i tins northwcstc~n Prince f:dward l'rpot·t could ne1·er note the in· youngsters, a proJect. mad~ pos- 1 Island communlly. · fleet ion of a voice, a smile or 11 ~1b!e by muney received m .ani ~Irs. Arsenault last saw hrr suht le meaning. out-of-court scltlement rcsultmg brother, Stanley Bernard, when Bul when the I ale Paul Sauve ew i from t~e death or ~er daughter he returne~ ho.me briefr'Y. in 19L9 took ol'er, he set up 8 committee m a 19o7 tralhc acct~ent. . . 1 ~fter ser.vmg m the , l.S. Army to study the question and it pro· ~Irs. M~ffat, who hves m lhts m the Ftrst World \\ ar. . 1 posed that debates be recorded 1

town 40 mtles north of Edmonton, After that Stanley went to hl'e 1 by relays of stcnogr'aphers ~a~·s her decision to use the 1 in the southern United Slates and, ' · money to establish a camp was "never got around to writing." · In other provinces-Nova !co­ prompted by the interest her Last year he retired to Iil'e in tia, Xc"' Brunswick, Prince Ed· gives you the benefits daughter, .lean Emily, 25, showed Pittsburgh, got to thinking about ward Island. Ontario, Manitoba 1 in less-fortunate children. his early home and decided to I and Saskatchewan-speeches are She has taken her daughter's ~ whether he could pick up the recorded by mechanical means initials lor the name ol lhl' camp ties. , and transcribed from tape or re­ of tooth·paste el~~ -Jem's Holiday Camp ~lemorial He wrote to the family home; cordings, It cost Ontario $50,000 P~rk. and the letter reached a brother for Hansard last year. Located on a se\'en • acre site living here. Plans were made for . b!'side Redwater Ril'er, the camp the reunion. . But the Quebec cot~?mttlet de· will be available, free of charg~. It wasn't until the meeting took c1ded the tape reco~dmg ayste~ 'ntis is the remarl

THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., THURSDAY, JULY 7, 1960..;..------. • I Irish And Crusaders T1e: MC United Blank Ted Gillies Is Top Batter; No Goals Being Scored Feildians 2-0 Bill Wheeler Tops Pitchers Yetman And Benson Score Ted Gillies heads the batters and Bill Wheeler has 1 Brown And Connolly Star In Nets MC Un-ited mode their first junior football appear- h h h f once on impressive one lost night as th shutout t e top pile ing record in t e irst senior , Holy Cross and St. Pat's bottled to the first score- f I .. · ' F 'ld' 2 0 t h A A hi . G e~ 0 statistics released by Gerry Murphy of the S.::orers' As- . less game in senior football this season at the Ayre l i I. el Ions -d .a ht e.. yrhe If I . ehtiGC roBun s. oug :social ion yesterday. I I Vetman score 1n t e nrst a w1t ary enson regis!- , ---· --· Athle~ic Grounds lbst night. Meeting in a closely conJ 1 ! Iering in the secbnd stanza. AB 11 .\vg.' Cross-3. tested fixture the Irish and Crusaders got fine goal- : D Y t t I l t . · T. Gillies, SB 13 7 539 i oug c man conn ere< w 1a -~ ~------~~-- ~~ -·~ B. Ploughman, F 6 · Triples: To Is Chapman,, tending jobs from John Brown and Bill Connolly to proved to he the winning mar· I\'Hrds. Eldon Drodgc, Alee Yet- , B. Redmond SB ;~ B .4BZ Feildians-1. prevent any markers from being tallied. ~~~ f~i~s;tchaYr"it~:.b~~t6 ·~a,~! · man, Ed ~Ioyst, Ron Martin,' Bob Cole, F lfi 7 :!~~ Home Run~: Bob Redmond, Played under fine weather conditions the contest . • . • ' ~:arl Wicks. Robin Shorl, HC 21 9 .429 St. Bon's-2. drove the ball deep into the· · · · Runs Balled In: Tols Chap. was highlighted by the defensive performance of both Feild zone with Yetman mo\'· · ., B. Neville, HC 15 6 .400 man, r'eildians-12. squcds. St. Pat's took an edge in ploy in the second ! i~g around the fullbaeks to' ~)!·. ri.\OIT IAPl -;- .Officia!'. n! II. Simpson F 16 6 .:175 Stolen Bases: Bill piCk up the rolling ball for the lhc Umted Au~o l\01kers Unwo~ 11. Yetman. t' l'i 6 .353 Gillies, . half while H~ly Cross oppliecl the pressure in the open­ ' goal scoring blast. \l~rc ~ccuscd m a fede1·a! cotu·, '. Br)·ant, SB 12 4 .:133: Sl. Bon·s--4.

'nq frame. 1 The insurance tally for ;IJC ~mt \Vedr~esday o~ mamtammg ; ; ols Chapman. t' 19 6 .316. PJTUIISG Holy Cross drfcatrd SL Pnl·,, United cume at 6.45 of tht• finul nrtual diCtnt?I:ship: usmg umm: :. Sparrow. SB 16 5 .313 (Jiasrd on 10 or more lning~) 4 1 in their first round M·tion lhr Irish halflinf' worked well stunza. (iary Benson wns the funds fol' pohhcal pur~oses anc '· Fitzpatrick, SP 1:! 4 .:lOU marksman on a fine play. Rollic fulscly recol'ding tl1e ex"penditul'c : ;. King, HC 20 6 .300 E.R.A : .John Power, St. with all ('rusndrr ::oals t•omin:: in the first half when Holy Bon'sL\7. in the st•t·ond half. Last ni.~ht ('ross had tht' pressure on. Full· Bull and Doug Yetman ex· of at ic.ast $10,000.000, The .14· LEADEitS ; S1. Pat's played their top sot'· ' hacks Hubert En~lish and Pat changed passes with the ball. page smt, filed by two umon Run>: Donny Yetm

· Yankees, Indians 1nd Braves 1 •ill be back from last season ' •ith White Sox replacing the . QUEBEC CCPl - A venture­ Pepperrell squad. · some seal was C1lught nat-flip· pered by the ebbing tide Wed· nesday and will spend the rest of his days In the pool . at Que­ bec's · zoological gardens. The 150-pound seal was found flap­ ENJOY ping about on the bank of the St. Lawrence River at Levis, across from Quebec. captured LIVING unhurt by Levis pollee. it was with BLENDED BARLEY MALTS turned over to the zoo where 1t wlll ·join two other seals and a This it to certify th•t Dow Ale Want a beer that's always eaoy drinkin1, always sea lion. · it brewed by the txdutive Cool uniform? You want aDOWI Dow brine• out the best Control procc:... Thi• proceu ia continually tested, thereby cn1urin1 in beer with Blended Barley Malts • • • grain If you've never owned a light­ uniform hirh quality. -+.. weight wool jersey coat before, apecially rrown for brewinr, then blended for quality now's the time to find what a joy that cannot vary. Next time you order beet', jersey is. You can roll up a If~, P-t~ order DOW; beeNt ita ~aay-drinkinr beat. .WIM wool jersey coat and toss it Into Dr. R. H. Wallace. a luggage rack, sit on It, give it D•m••'· CNow, ''"'"' careless handling, and still see It emerge !ookin11 smooth and un· Not inserted by Board of Liquor Control :IIOLY wrinkled.

··- ,

• • urr1cane o ommon ense

THE COMPLEn nXT OF AN ADDRESS BY DR. FRANK N. D. BUCHMAN AT Til OPENING OF THE MORAL RE-ARMAMENT WORLD ASSEMBLY IN CAUX, SWITZERLAND

IDEOLOGY AND CO-EXISTENCE the principles of MRA. To recognize absolutely the dominion of God, or to bow down under the domination Caux, Switzerland, June 4, 1960-There is a hurricane of human tyrants, that is the alternative which should of common sense sweeping through the world. "A unite us all whether we are Catholics, Christians. or Hunicane of Common Sense"-that was the headline non-Christians." Valerland also reported how Father ill a newspaper read by the leaders of Washington. It Rector Thommen of Kollegium Niklaus von der Flue refers to the manifesto lcleolo}?y and Co·Etistence which in Sarncn declared, "llccause you li~e what you believe, in the last six months has gone to 73,000,000 homes we can whole-heartedly accept this ideology." Chancellor Adenauer conferred on March 19 in Las Angeles with hislong.lime friend Dr. Frank Buchman. He said, "I must throughout the United States. Canada, Sc11ndinavia, Germany, Italy, France. Great Britain. The Netherlands, In Luxemhourp. where the German miners were Gov· tall you how much I value you and your work of Moral Re-Armament. It is absolutely auenliol for the peace of the world." Greece and Turkey. as well as India, South Africa, ernmcnt guests, the Prime Minister, Pierre Werner, said, "The moral nnd spiritual values on which your actions all over the world arc fighting the hattie ?f Moral Re· South America, Australia and Japan. It lms alre:~dy been Mrs. Daisy Bates, Negro leader of Little Rock, Ar· translated into 24 different languages. and will he read arc based arc the ideology that can save the Christian Armament to restore the world on the basts of absolute kansas, known all over the world for the part she played West from its enemy."' moral standards." It was a real hurricane, and it was by the millions. It puts squarely to the mod~rn world in the battle with Govc1 nor raub us over racial integra­ the choice-Moral Re-Armament or Commumsm. The hurri•·anc hlcw into Kerala and its 16.000.000 common sense. tion in the schools. saw The Crounill!! f:'xpNience. inhabitants, the first major state in the world to vote When Chancellor Adenaucr arrived in Tokyo for his She said. "Magniticcnt! It must go everywhere. It if My old fric.nd General Guisan, wartime Comniander· essential in the South, but MRA is now needed through in-Chief of the Armies of Switzerland. wrote the fore· itself into the Communist camp. Night after night Yast state \is it. he was welcomed at the airport hy his miners crowds flocked to hear the evidence of Moral Re· !'rom the Ruhr. He spoke to a joint session of the out the world. It will soon catch the imagination of the word to the Swiss edition.;n it he said, "On the ideo· whole world. Nothing else on the scene can do it." logical plane neutrality can he dangerous, for refusal Armament. Mannath Padmanabhnn, father of his State, .Japanese Diet calling for a moral ideology that could to fight for what is right plays the enemy's game. The leader of the Hindu majority in Kerala, has found at unite East and West and answer Khrushchev's challenge Mrs. Bates. and her husband, as publisher of a news­ training centre at Caux is a unique instrument that has Caux the secret of uniting with Christians. The Governor to take over the world. Next day in the Japanese Diet paper, came to our training centre in Mackinac Island. changed the conduct of nations. I long that our whole of the State. the Cabinet Ministers, trade union leaders. a Cabinet Minister said, "Chancellor Adenauer pro· Michigan. There Mr. Bates said. "For the first time in industrial men and students in their hundreds and their claimed Moral Re-Armament to Japan." people should face realistically the forces which co~­ my life I have lost my hatred of the white man." On her front each other today, that we draw from our trad1· thousands came to hear the news of an answer. The miners had come to Japan in response to an return to Little Rock, Mrs. Bates invited some or the tions a relentless determination to safeguard at all costs invitation from Japan's Prime Minister and other leaders leading citizens of her State, white people who had also the freedoms we inherit." COMMUNISM OUSTED IN KERALA of the countrv and they were the guests of the Japanese been to Mackinac, to dinner in her home. They came­ the first time in the history of Arkansas that such a dinner This was the last public statement General Guisan throughout tilcir six weeks' visit. A special train was Archbishop Gregorius of Trivandrum said, "History put at their disposal hy Governor Sogo of tlu: Japanese party had bee. . possible. After dinner, Mrs. Bates sug­ nt:t-l'. When he died 300,000 citizens of Switzerland will record our permanent gratitude to Mannath Pad· gested a time ~· f quiet in which together they should seek stOl'd in silent tribute to the man who was regarded as National Railways in gratitude for the samty of the manahhan not only for having ousted the Communist news they brought. God's way of ending the deadlock. The thought came that the sa\iour of his nation. His widow wrote to me, "Gen· regime in Kerala, hut for creating the unity of all the Mrs. Bates should visit Governor Faubus, the man who era! Guisan was gripped by the idea and the might of communities following his return from Caux." The Prime Minister Kishi said, "You are giving a moral backbone to the whole world. I wish to express my for years had been pictured to the world as her bitterest Moral Re-Armament. In the evening of his life it was Governor of the State, Ramakrishna Rao, then said, enemy. She trembled, but she went. She said later, "The a great girder of support to him.'' "All our problems, political, economic, individual, m~st gratitude for the massive impact MRA has made _on this nation during the past six weeks. The reports winch Governor could not have received me more graciously be solved in the spirit of MRA. It has an essentml if l had been the President." They shook hands. and the MIGHTY WIND OF HOPE appeal to every mtln." I h;•ve received from all over Japan have convinced me .. of the effectiveness of this mission in giving ideological picture of that handshake went round the world. Go"" . . Moral Re-Armament is a hurricane of common sense Men changed in Kerala. The leader of 38,000 students claritv and a moral answer to our people." emor Faubus had previously said, "Moral Re-Armament '-:~ sweeping irresistibly through the heart of nations. It is made the experiment of listening to the voice of God . A leader of the Japanese Socialist Party at a crisis is sowing the seeds that will prove to be the salvation .j amashing down the barriers between nations an~ races, He said, "I am going to end impurity in my own life and of us all." clean up the student body. It is through moral com· point early this year. said that Moral Re-Armament has .. ··t· di~persing the t'Cigs of hate that threaten hum~n.ny and played a key part in healing a fresh split in their ranks Mrs. Bates told an audience in Washington, "Without ., l bringing a mighty wind of hope to the mllhons of promise among the students that Communism has Moral Re-Armament it would have been impossible for the curth. gripped us. I see that the choice for India is Moral and prevented Communism from taking over. A leader ·... -~ of the Scinendan. a political organization of 4,300,000 me to meet Governor Faubus without hate. But I have . .-~ Hoj)i111ng-Hope-is the name of the pia)' God put Re-Armament or Communism, and I choose Moral learned to fight for what is right without hatred. I want ":' _; . youth, cabled me at Easter saying that. MRA had once :··:, in the mind of a miner from the Ruhr. He 1s a worker Re-Armament." Moral Re-Armament for the children of the South and ~ ;~;.; agnin won every seat from the Commumsts at the annual ~-· ut the co:1lface. He had never thought of writing a play. Rajmohan Gandhi. grandson of my old fri:nd ~~1hat· of America. We can see on the horizon a new day." ..• election in spite of the Communists' outpouring of ... ~-''!' He chanl!ed. He found an answer to division in his rna Gandhi whom I met on the first of my mne v1s1ts to manpower and money in the last twelve months. A major American broadcasting system in its review of ..... home. his nation and the world. Chancellor Adenauer India in 1915. said, "Without Moral Re-Armament the 1959 described this handshake as possibly the most ..... heard of this play and sent for this Rultr miner and his new government in Kcrala might already have fallen. A trade union leader tells how through Moral Re· significant news event of the year, which could mark . ."'· friends. He asked them to go to Britain and France to Moral Re-Armament will save India and Asia and the Armament the President of one of the great mines of the end of a hundred years of civil war in the United _\. -~i prepare the way for his own visits to those countries. world from Communist take-over.'' When Chou En·lai Japan was changed and as a result of _his change, 3,500 States of America. ;· .,... I "Manv of us Germans," he said, "do not realize how arrived in India for his conferences with Prime Minister miners who needed 3.000 armed pollee to keep them . -~ from a;tacking the President, went back to work satisfied I 1 d~cp im the wounds in other countries which were Nehru, the Times of India and the Hindustan Times MRA IN SOUTH AMERICA .. ., ·that their just" claims were being met. ~: ·~; caused by \\hat we did through having the wrong ide· carried full pages with the double-banner headline, In the Republics of South America the hurricane is ology." In an exclusive article in the New York Journal· "Moral Re-Armament-the next step for Communists At the Miike mine, wiJere workers had fought workers blowing too. Millions read the news of an answer. Amer iran headlined "Adenauer Calls M RA World's and non-Communists alike." at the pithead, one man had been killed and hundr~ds Millions more hear it over the radio. In one week alone Hope", the Chancellor said, "A nation with an ideology These pages challenged the two men who t?day ~cad injured. The leader of the organized women of ~he mn~e all the main newspapers of Montevideo carried reports is always on the offensive. A nation without an ideology 1,000,000,000 Asians to find a new way of domg tlungs said, "You brought us the answer. t? bate. W1th?ut 1t of the world work of MRA, and eighteen leading papers is self-satisfied and dead." for the sake of all men everywhere. They said in part, more would have been killed and InJUred. MRA IS the of Argentina, Uruguay, and Peru carried 51 articles. In Britain, Hoffnung was like a hurricane. It shifted "Communism has failed to produce the new type of answer to every injustice and human hato." A leading editorial in ur Prensa, the largest newspaper of the prejudices of years. In the spirit of Moral Re· man-the unsellish man who can develop and run Peru, said, "Moral Re-Armament has a unique strength for the ideological battle in the world today. It is an Armament men like James Coltart, executive of the the unselfish society. The ideology of MRA changes RESTORING JAPAN'S DESTINY British press and television, took inspired and fearless people. That is why thousands of former Communists insistent call to all who believe in a supreme Creator to action to prepare for Chancellor Adenauer's visit. His And one of the great men. of Ja~n, primarily re· confront those who preach atheism. It is a world effort lime in Britain was hailed as a triumph. Back in Bonn, sponsible today for the secunty of h1s country, saui, to defeat materialism. The morally rearmed are not an the Chancellor at a meeting of the Christian Democratic "For the first time since the end of the war you have easy prey to materialist indoctrination." Party referred to the mistrust between Britain and given me hope. Moral Re-Am;a!"ent is restoring a Eudocio Ravines, one of the great revolutionaries of Germany which had been swept aside, and said, "We sense of destiny to a. hundred m1lhon Jap~nese peopl_e. our time who, trained by Mao Tse-tung, introduced have to thank Moral Re-Armament for that." You are ta !king stra1ght to us and cleamng us up m Communism to Peru and Chile, met in Moral Re· In Paris, French audiences stood and cheered. Some homes and politics. You are saying to us what no one Armament a superior ideology that changed him. He were in tears as the German miners sang the Marseillaise else has dared to say." says "The basic problems of Latin America are not in French. A movie is going out to the millions which says what und~r-development, but corruption and Communism. needs to be said in a way that the modem man under· There is a shrine at Mont Valerien where during the While our countries welcome economic aid, alone it stands, accepts and follows. It is. a full-le~gth Tech_ni· cannot touch the root problem. ·Without a moral ideol· occupation 4,500 Frenchmen of the Resistance met color musical called The Crmvmng Experrence, wh1ch their death. To Mont Valerien went those Ruhr miners. ogy, it may even aggravate the problem. The best export in the words of Arthur Baker, for 21 years Chief of the United States of America or any nation can send to They were escorted by the wife of the General at the the Parliamentary Staff of The Times of London, is of bead of the French nation's defence, and the niece of Latin America is Moral Re-Armament." "indescribable beauty. Its message is so deep that it In a long lifetime of experience that has taken me to President de Gaulle. They were the first Germans to needs to be seen again and again and yet again. It go there in fifteen years. They gave news of an idea answers all the hunger and hurts of nations." all parts of the world and brought me in touch with powerful enough to unite nations separated by genera­ every sort of people, I have never seen a greater hunger When Spyros Skouras, Pre~ident ~f 20th . Cen~ury and a greater hope than we find today. Man must choose tions of hate. They expressed their sorrow for the past Fox saw this movie, he threw h1s arms m the a1r saymg, and their resolve to lay down their lives to rebuild the road of common sense or he will inevitably take the "Fa~tastic! Fantastic! Fantastic! This must go to every path of common suicide. Europe and the world. The columns of Le Figaro gave movie theater throughout the world." the news of this event to the French nation. S. S. Vasan, President of the Indian Film Federation, Vaterland, leading Swiss Catholic newspaper, reported WORLD-WIDE TRANSFORMATION said of it, "A thousand times wonderful. You have Mr. P. J. Little, the well-known statesman and thinker tbe response to the miners' play in the monastery schools shown me not only how to make a film, but how to of Ireland, put the challenge clearly in the Dublin S~ay of central Switzerland under the headline, "Catholic live a life." Colleges Hail MRA Play." Vaterlartd reported Rector Pre&&. His article about Moral Re-Armament occup1ed Scherrer of Schwyz as saying, "We can all subscribe to And the leadership of the nations of Africa are two central pages. It was headed, "World War III­ clamoring for The Crowning Experience. They say i~ will . the war of ideas-the battle we cannot lose." blow like a hurricane through the hearts of the Afncans He said, "The Cold War has only to heat up to boiling and heal the hating of a continent. Dr. Azikiwe, the point for ten seconds and civili_zation wi_II be bias~ Prime Minister Kishi of Japan gave a man to whom 35,000,000 Nigerians say they .largely o:-ve reception In hl1 official residence Ia into eternity. Ideas not bombs wtll determme who wms their freedom, says, "I spent many years 1n Amenca the battle of ideologies, and on this battle depends the the Moral Re-Armamentlntematlonal where I was fed with the bread of bitterness. It took me force which Included the German length of time we have left to live and whether our fifteen years to find an answer to my spirit of revenge. children will ever grow up." mlnen presenting their play "Hoff· I found that answer at Caux." He added that The Crown· nung" (Hope) In Japan. Mr. Kishi But the far-seers of this century recognize in Moral ing Experience attacks with tact and .subtle!¥ the social Re-Armament the certainty of cure. My friend Robert said, "Moral Re-Armament Is the inequalities that hav_e create~ wrong 1deolog1es between moral backbone of the world. The men and gives defimte prom1se of a cure. And be says, Schuman of France, who has twice written the foreword world will rally to 111 work of build­ "Moral Re-Arm?.ment was the secret of independence to the French edition of my published speeches, puts it this way, "Moral Re-Armament is a p~ilosophy _of life Ing peace basad on true freedom and for Nigeria." moral standards." applied in action that I have seen reachmg the mllhons. Jasper Savanhu, first African ~o be a Member of the It is a world-wide transformation of human society that Federal Government of Rhodes1a and Nyasaland, _says has already begun." The Crownin}? Experience must be see~, b~ ev~ry Afr!c:an, It needs a hurricane of common sense to bring men black and white, this year. He says, Wmmng pol!ttcal to their senses, restoring the Communist and the non· power will not by itself secure the future of the Afncan. Communist world to sanity and unity before it is too We can thwv off the foreign yoke and then find African late. That hurricane is sweeping through every nation leaders who live only for personal advantage. Unle~s today, and in the midst of the hurricane the still small leadership is inspired by Moral Re-Armament, t~ere IS Voice of the living God, an unseen but ever-present no future for the people. Moral Re-Armament IS. the Guide, willing and able to speak to the. ~en of the solution to the greed, ambition, selfishness and com· Kremlin the men of Washington, to the m1lltons t:Yery· petition in high places all over the world." where, l~aders and led, who have lost their way and Leaders for the 40,000,000 French·Bp~aking Africa~s seek to find it. eagerly demand The Crowning Expemnct for thetr It is so normal. It is so practical. It is a hurricane. people. They say its messa$e could bring the bloodshed And it is common sense. in Africa to an end. Gabnel Marcel, the world-famous French writer and philosopher, said after seeing it and (The above address also marked the opening of the MJU Reprennlatlns of the Baluba and talking with leaders from Africa, "~ came to Caux in Ammbly in Mackinac Island, Michigan, on June 4, 1960) . Lulua tribes of Kasal Provine& in the despair. Here I have found a transfus1on of hope. A deep '. Belgian Congo at Coux with Dr. Frank confidence flowed back into my being." -:. Buchman. They asked him to give all Moral Re-Armament is incorporated in Canada as an .. association not for profit. It is jinanctd by voluntary con· ·: his attention to the situation In Africa White and black leadership in South Africa want :: and to send tho all-African color film their Cabinet and the whole country to see this movie . tr/butions and the sacrifice of thousands of people. All its :· "FrHdam" with an lntemotlonal They say it holds the secret _that alone can. cure the workers serve without salary. Cheques made payable ta .. farce of Moral R•Armament to the racial divisions that are teanng South Afnca apart, Moral Re-Armament are deductible for income tax pur­ •-: .. Congo before Its Independence on dividing her from other countries, and undermining her poses and may be sent to M RA, 749 Yongt St., Toronto 5, June 30 this year. economic life. Ontario •

I ,, ... THE DAft.Y NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., THURSDAY, JULY 7, 1960 Maris Hits ·27th Homer; Crusaders Face Debourke Stars In Feildians In Win Yanks Drop Orioles· 5-2 Replay Game '14-12 Hygrades' 29 Walks Issued In Contest Published by Authority Team

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Ale FREE HOME DELIVERY ST. JOHN'S: Phone 7345 or 6359 GANDERo K. J. Griffin Ltd., Phone 894 GRAND FALLS: Bond Beverages Ltd., Phone 2U6 IIU ISLANDo Tom Murphy, Phone 2186 10 Year. 01":- Paul Collins, Walter Butt, BENNETT BREWING CO., LTD. James Stanley. Gerald Man· IW""trlod by laar4 of Uq.., C.trol ning, Gerry O'Neil. 12 fHE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., THURSDAY, J.ULY 7, 1960

OUR BOARDING HOUSE with MAJOR HOOPLE~·------OUT OUR WAY By J. R. WILLIAMS

HE WAS .5QUIRMifJ' ARDUfJD s·tock Market Report AND 61VI~' ME A HARD TIME, $0 J MADE "THIS PAl~ OF Cbb-lloy 11100 II U 11 LL Lao 500 IQ Ut IU 6LIIoJDERSTO PUT 01-J HIM Chlb M 1000 110 110 50 +1 Lorado 132110 Jt 11 Jt +~~ :50:5 HE CAN'T SEE WHAT Toronto Ch"'m 100 en 4TS IT$ Londo wta 1110 ~ I S - \lo Cbmo 100 a 61 41 +& LJadllal 5500 11 10 11 +l I'M DOIIoJ'··MAY6E "THAT'LL ,..,_,. 140ek Excltaar~•l1 1 Coeb WW 1~ l1t 2!1 11t Maollo 11000 I ~~ 4\'o CALM H:M DOWJ.J! CQaolallou ID Hnta IUIIea marked s. Comb Mol !DO :M S4 :M H ltlae~ 4100 110 101 110 +I 1-0dd Jol; xd - Ex•D\'iduda: xr-Ex• c· ~ellel C Haltwtll 39!00 II 48 51 +I lllarllmo ~00 U 10 12 i J Abanu 86110 ~7 :t:•i 15 +I C Marben 357110 57 54 56 i2 MarUn 1&100 351'1 J! 14 •-1 Acad ttrn 2000 I • 6 Con ~~ S 4il Ill~ 17~ 17~ - It Mal\alalll '011 500 iOO 500 Ad•·oc:alo 21:!.1 303 315 355 C Mo1u1 500 10 110 to ltlarbna 1000 7\t 7\~ 71'1 - 1'1 Aroro 1185 67 66 66 C lll.orrll.. :180<1 18 15 II :.tclntno 110 1221'< :Ill 22 -1 Akallcbo 500 37~ 371'1 37'> + Z\l C MolhOI' !?00 IT2 I" 11.1 -1 MeW II 11*1 50 It 10 Am·Lardrr loot SO 20 20 Con !'iecus JOI.4a 500 S4 S4 34 Coprand 1639 I:W 118 118 +I New Alb 46/il 3:1 31 SJ ~~ ·"! 0.: Cop :oo HO 110 1110 -10 Cou1tt' toQ 111~ 11\i :SI'o- ~ New Bd 100 I 6 S •· ~~ ,IIUmacho 19<•10 8 !\2 8 +2 Coumor 1000 I a I +111 Ntw Cal 1100 U U 13 +1 Aumaquo 5500 61t 6'' 611 Cawoh 1600 2.\ U 2.\ Now Dtlhl 12000 10 10 10 ...... ~DO w 137 137 +7 CraiJml 100 140 1M !10 +It N Dellon 1000 m Jl:! Ill I B•nklltld !00 I I 8 ~ 10 Cuo,oo 100 $ S S N Cloldl'llt ~ 41\ Ill IV. + II But ltlt1al 5500 11\i II 11\i + ~ DaernJ 1.100 II 10 11 -1 N Harrl ~ 11'1 ?1'1 I + II !!••~• ssoo 7 lti 7 + 11 D'Araeoa 1100 · 23 23 23 +I Now H.. ee 4700 'II 74 74 -1 l1 ,• !!·Duq 320$ 14 13 U llo Cour IICOO 911 I I New JUOJI 100 a I I +I ... R'" Loci 1000 1 s I Derr Hom 6ll10 23 :n :12 - ~ N Koloro llOO 1a 11 11 1 !lothlm 2000 f1 M &I -1 ll'Eidnna !lOO 7 6\i • Nowlund t~DO 13 ll'a 1110 - II I Db,, lSOO 1 1 s Dtnll.. ma t50 100 til +15 IN Mylam 111100 7! II T2 +3

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Corp. • f'leel Wood 700 Sl~'' 12 12 - \1 3 STEAMSHIP C".\ .. li'lltJl li(IO ': 'T i Gr.:JliiiO)' 3000 14 U 1t Phllpl :, l\6 51 It -S eo&t ~dn teJaR 20 Shawn 21i Fam 'Flay zjBO 'i:~~ 2F'~ 21 • + \ot lt\M !l •1" Gunduc 37S 3!t 31 -- Pick CrDW U50 IS 13 ll -5 I Power pr 42'-'¥ Stul li $2SVc - ;• (tl~~tf'r 31~ ~J !a•~ ~PI~\ 24 rta ;~~~:ratn ;i~ :!~7: 2;~: (.,., wr 2~ 2~ 21 21 -2 1 Guu;1ur ~ 715 700 100 ""' Ptch·Ore \~00 4 -' 4 i l'nns Can Ca~'lf z132 lJ H't U\4 I (;UMar Wll AOOO 5 4WI ~ IPorlfllt tnukltal 31 " , .. t ~0 J nl-1 UN Stce) f, ' ... Jltote pr !105 -100 41)0 4.GO C~lb Ja• IJI'4l 26 25 Iii + 1'1 11 nl t,akOI :300 ' 7 ' +1 Pmlon 6110 tiO 40! 410 +l I Sruramo ~l'.t Wal~er 3!li Frout A 100 Sill~ II~ 14~ ' MOVEMENTS . 1 .. -- , HCid•·ay ~900 :all U 21 Purdn IOOO 4 4 4 I D Bridle 151< C,O.:-JADIA:i Galncau 1m $35\i ~~, 35 > + 'tO I I H••t:1 111(1 4'• t~ t\i Que Aoeat soo 1 1 1 . llom Tar 13 Cons Pap IO'o Grt Wp• vt 100 Stn\0 1011o IO.o + 'i THE NFLD. GREAT LAKES : 1 31 I Hollln•or 273 W\lo :12" U\. I Que Clllb 111111 It n 17 -1 'G1. Pap•r 3.,505 ~ ,,?3 •,5 1> -~ +II I STEAlUSIUPS LTD. ' - OY llt>"l• 100 3fO 3:SO m -II ' QuoJCOp !O(I(l If 10 ID -1 N y k i llomt Oil A • 0 • • ' I llu~ Rn 130 '"" 41\. "" - ... : Que Lib 100 1)1 231 JJA -4 . ew or I !!om• 01 R 100 ;, !ls 7!~l ;~~ Hl ~!. v. Dundee loading st ENJ ' HJdra F.s 1100 21 II 'I +IIi: Que Mu 1110 I I I -21• 1 Horn• PHrd 1110 • • ~ Hamilton July 9th. Toronlo July 6 61 l1nt )lnl) 700t1 I I -I I Q Mrlol 1l011 'i II SEW TOTIJI Cl O .l~JA l'r.nnN·rtt 7l', In: :\kkr-1 9<~•J ~M::.., ::w11 ~4~• - H• • •1' ' 11n 1S 23 11 ! Ro All::om 4112 Ul 63 n • lnt 1· 1' .to In~ U:l .1~~' SJtl,,. 33\a :w.. for Botwood. Jonomlb 1100 10 tl'o 10 . +I 1 san Ani 5322 11 91 !14 -: 11 Il;t'.r Add ~330 $1111 11 ... u~ ..... 1'- l.'•to11111 :t%00 40 :\3 3rl . 5 Lulerp\' Pl. 33:r, .jJ~, sw., ~~ .... • " ~LV. Perth loadin~ at Tnr. 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G•, 102o 57':.~ 714. 71 6 U .\' , uc • . 0 11 ~ • \1 y ... , . ~~~~~ ~ 800 1;; 121 1Zl il ------'' ~ 1;a, "" ;o m s; ss , sailing July 27 (Bay Robrrts). I \Vote Am us w Ill 815 ~lutuaJ Funds I ~~~111~~~·· ~n m ~~ ~~ i 'i\'ol'aport !eal·e llontrl'al "Think of all the people on the S:!har• whe eoulll 1 4 1~~ s,uo~ ~~ \~ 1U ,:l • '• ne~1hons .~ z;o 111 "'' 11 July 27, arril'e St. John's Aug. USE thi1 water!" ' " 111 ., 1 ,~ f-!c·~ :\\' C;n1 9:il 4i.i •n.\ ·I'm -1 · I ... 5 Yale Ltd 1100 1l l •. I "" The t:anadlau Prtb Roe A,. en p 135 170 iO 70 1• ea\'C Aug. 3 . \"k Bear 2:300 '2 M ~:! Bd \3~ 411 I ·oan•. HG .-.~ 7! 78 79 , 2 ..•'-, , , Roll••d B us Sln ~o •Gulfport lca1·e ~lonlreal •Reft•i•cratt'on. \ "w .-\11 l~n 1·om 6 " '" 3 n(lj;,•l RnM ll1!l IGDI-: fi& lifil• 11 : Zrnmac 1000 18 11 II All ('an u,, l.~o ;.~3 sn, corp !.1" SIP• t7•\ t7 1 t '• Aug. 3,.arril'e St. John'' Aug. 8. GULf' ASD :-iORTHERN Lawyer Doctor 7 3 3 ; curh 4•0 410 .\'"~'""" !,;ru"th ·"~ ·' Rof,llc 200 •ss m l; , 15 leave Aug. 10. SIIIPPI'.'"G CO. ' Bulolo .'\00 ,j un I Bcauili'BII zj f;fl :!9 ..fO ~ l CO:"JI A pr ;)O S9.J !t4 04 ., VA~COUVER (CP - Jack TQ.,MORROW 1 Pend oro 400 :!1\ 2!0 :;o <:on•o•ln ln,estmtn:t g,:; '1·:7 Showm mo :•; _ 11 Highlincr lca1c •Fer us leal'ing Charlotte· 1 ~ 6 26 ~lontrral 2 Lederman is both a lawyer and r IOOfl ot~~ II 11 '' l'cn,:.lr.:l ~~ t ' 3! ~:; 3'.~! "·"··· l vr 4'• !lo IO Jn Aug. 10, arril'e St. .John's Aug. q a doctor, one of lew men quail· . ~;:t,.!~~ !OO 7 7 7 ~-~~~~;~i:·ealt~• "! ... rr. :::~~ ;:;9 ~~~;"11'111 vr .~~ st;:,' 12~~. 12~,' 15. leal'c Aug. 17 (Bay Roberts l st·ot'.vnJo.Jhulll·~.: BJ.u!~·icltolu, sJaul.lltyng9. Jduul)~ 1 10 olnchor l~Otl 10 9 .... :\ l:or'1oratC' Jnve~tors r. 1". fl.~~ ."ihl"•ono •.. 1·, s.•••, •.a " ' lied in both fields. 1Baity I A '2fiM us Ill\ 51~ t lS Oh·;r .. l'ell IIH'. ur•• 8 3 6i) :.;.9.) ~cu~i:~;:n ~·J·l ~~o~ .. ~'O'• ~~~, -~ ~: ·~0\':lport ]can:• )]ontrenl 12. He received his law degree 10 Bat3 1:ion t ~ 4 U.\'Jcnd S11arC'N :? ••·ti ;;.lt SletJ t·:1n Jill sns 611 1 63 Aug. 17, Hl'Ti\'C St. John's Aug. F" · Ch 1 tt 111 1 years ago and has just Jl'adu­ Brltatca 1100 210 210 210 " Do:nir.un Eq\ny ~~.~·: 1;~:~~11 ,. en:,;: ... ;;no ~ 10 ~, 18 ., t;..;~~ J ,., 22, lca\'c Aug. 24. ergu!ll cavmg ar o e· I 0 ated for the second time from Ute g:::~~ lEg s}:•l ::'• 1i·· :3'• H~~~ ~:~:\~.. :t~ :·.t~ ~·~~ r:~:r:·~ ~~~e ~i~ :m: ;!:: ;r: ~';: \',Ci!rs S•c ;~oq m. 4~·. 43 . I ~~~n st.u~~h~~~ r:~~~oul8~~:ili~i University of British Columbia, c 01 !AI 1~00 ]1)(1 100 too +4 '}'ond~ CoUeetlJ c 4.~7 r,,4n l',·al\; (; w 17135 536 J61. Jh3• 1- ~ Clente 1()1'10 72 i01• i0b6 an.; July 19. with a medical degree and 1 cs on wtt -~ 22 2:! 12 - 1":z GrCIUP lilt'. ,.. ~u :J V7 Wt>bb Knap ~co 270 270 2i0 CO(';,t Cola S'iliO fi]b 62~~ 623, .. 3.. Charlotte- 1 cs pet• ~ 219 279 279 +1<1 Groupell Jnlme A1·l'um ;, 14 5.51 CA~AntAS 1 ens J,~oo 42 ~!3, 4:!' - ~. •Fcr,:!U!il leavin~ prize for outstanding scholarship. c Cllrltn 730 73 73 7J .2 Group Seleclil ,\ ;.r,o >.tJ An~ Cdn ~1 $3~ 38 3R I cnml Sol\' '"~~ 2Jio ~''• 21', town, July 22, Pictou July 23, ''I'm not a disgruntled lawyer," 0 ~d~llD~~. r.: r:: ~: i!~ :io ~~~~~t~u b~"!t~ia;U11d ~}~ ::;~ ni~~ ·~!~ !~ ~~~.~ ~:; ~~: I ~~~~[\~~'~ ~i~~ ;~~: ~~ 1 :z ~~~,-= ~~ due St. John's July 25. sailing he says. "I just alway1 wanted I 1 c Jtusky 4&96 490 "TO 480 1-10 lr.H:.;:on ~~u~u111 10.74 ll.fil 1 • nom SUI ~Oi Sl:.::~" 131 :.~ JJI:.: _ 1 :.1 f"on 01 6~00 ~H 2 .tH -1r1 + 1" Jub• 26. to be a doctor." Also "UP-TO-THE-MINUTE NEWS" I c HUlk)' Wll aoo 110 1M 1t0 ... zo K~y.!.tOnf. lJ.l!l 11.~7 c Co11er!c!! 600 $8'~• ~·· 8~ Cfl)lW Slt-11 70U 371,.! 37 Ji - :"~ C ~perlor )Of} 8l 8JO S3 Le\'CI.'Ol~(' Fund 6.~:\ li.85 '( . !'" $,~ ~ i -a, ('rnne ('() lj!Xl -171~ 4il. -171,. -- "~ *Fergus lea\'ing Charlotte· After a year of Internship at TIMES OF SHOWS: I('(!nt · Dc1 &w~'" 4•o~ .."• ,'Jo + 30 :\tu:u-.l ,.\ccunm 1:1.hu~ · F un d r'·'·. ,.. , •~:iii •r Consr ·'' Papcoa. 82-'•" S40'a 3':r'4.·• 4rl'• + ~. c rown z " 11 •sco~_,., "'I'' • 131 :: .,'3' '- • ' town July 29. Pictou Ju1 y 30. Royal Victoria Hoap!tal, Mon· Charttr Ol fi(!O 'if) 70 70 ~lutuol Income Funll ~.'J) ''o:~. r;oHI IO'l Sl.~~ :J ~ J9:!j .. ,._ t'urttu Wr , 00 ·17·l4 17 1 ~ l'i''l St 'I 9 1 ! J I , A 1 .1. treal. he plans to enter 1eneral EVENING SHOWS: 7 P.M. - 9 P.M. c:om Pete 800 223 22] 223 -7 ··or.h r\U1C'I'. Fund til l':\11. ;.~9 E.Ga D E11:-' zjO StSt. l:i lS 0C'f!"f(' 32DO u~ 41:1,. 4~~~~ + ~" ( ue . 0 m s ug. I satmg 1 'c nrar:on 5000 :'10 28 !!8 -;~ 0 R;;uU!.son "G:J j:~~ i."lc!"t .\ff!f .1GO 1q 49 4g -.5 'U Snl lOO ~!) 2& " ~~·'• ... ·~ Aug. 2. practice and says ht hopes to get MATINEE: 2 P.M. I Mlc Mat 430 1110 118 ,, .• ao:.t [nle>l ,. • 0" [l ziti $32 :rJ l2 ,nom•, .IQU 18 !7', IR - '• "Fergi!S leave CharlottetO\I'n c IP~ !·u~~ . o~ .. ~ulh 1 into some branch of forentle 1 C West Petr 100 300 30 "· 1 , Supen!'ied :\llll!r. unu ~~.ry~ 1o ' liabba•.l .\ z)O s:zu 20 :!O Jour: a1 ~1t'IO 27:0.~ 27 ~ ~7 1 '.1 - ~~ • • • 1 medicine where he ean make me j g:~~a~tte 3~~ ~~~ ~~ ~~ ... 2~ ~~~~~:~tc~l ~;~~~· :~; .N.:!I ~:~~a~~~!n~;~~~m 1~~ ~~~~~ 1;~~~ 1~~ ~~~wp~:~~~em ~~~~ ::~~/~ :!G~~: ~~~.~ = ~, P.E.I. Au~. 5th. leave Pictou. 0 11 2 2 of his medico-legal knowledge. I UU\'eX :'1000 ~ ~ Suprt\'l:.tll J::,;C!(' 5j ·~:,\; ~·.51 In Fou.td y pr :l4 $jOll jOl~ SOIJ .f t~ T·;nst Kml 72!10 l~i>:l112il~ l~m2 ~.S. Aug- 6th. arrh·e St. .John's 2 I J>vnomc 21~Cn ~~~ 4.:1 :!~ ~ SuperHrd \I:\[C j8 I., li.i1 1\l'll\' D.\ ziUI ,61~ li til. I:JtOll ~Hg l3nll ~J,;. ~r· ~~ - l~ Aug-. 8th. leave Aug. 9th. LAST TIMES TODAY Far.:;o J":!OO :!90 2!)0 Supenlnr~.lG '·" Fund LolJiaw co 8 2;) SlR ":!R ~:1 El Aulo L i!JO • F I Cl I It t "'h faT'ntl he Fr l't>le pr ::su 410 410 tto ·:'-·, su.perv .. etl lmome rund :-R·.·._r;_~ JSJ ''•'~.:l·~r. PI' ~1;- Sl'; ill.~: 11 ~~ FI Paso :--·1; :'~,on Jt'~ :1J1~ :rF ... •. .. crgus C"a\'£" \aro £'own. n en k person . "TAKE A GIANT STEP'' 11om• llll A 1985 820 8(1.1 8111 . 1"• 1'\' l·:lcc.IO,:t• 8.[" '10 l'aptr 120 ~~··; ~a·, 231, _,,, Fimlone ~IIlii oH'• 37'• '11'.- '• r.E.I., Aug 12th. leave Pictou, should be laid on tbe floor, with Home 01 8 30~0 suo 7i0 1!1} 1;0:; 1'mrl.l lrt~l'~~mf'ni ruml ;.:u ~~·:~ ,,,t:lll't' 1~!0 $~7'4 o1;l;,: ~;·4 .. t.., •·ord 1.-.orm h7 I;"JJ 1~7 \ I I . s hi'• fe•t ral'sed above the level H 8 Oil r. 2l:ili M 9:l 9411 - 1 'ni~ttlt;loJnto. $H' :~.t.:. 0 ~ Q Pow lp :15 S~j ti 4.1 + I'J Fru('h Tra 9J[)(I 2.! :!r·. 2P.- • -'• x.s .. ' WL 3t l, arrl\'e .. t. .. '"' .T.mp Pud lOOn 13 15 ll '100 n ,.,. I~CU w. ' ~·· ~ •• llvn ~~"" w. 11'• ·IF< John's Aug. 15th. leave Aug. of his hea.d. to increase tile Margold 11)(1(1 7 ' sCan Pow 6p ll Sll:!> ll:l l:<'lt !l7r, ~ ~ ~ ~~1 I 11"~ t~l{'(~ ~ru1 ~.! 9:!·\~ -1'~ d A ~tedal 30Ml l~lo HS l",IJ 1 ontt·ea T r:'ln ), I~S Sl/34 ;;~, JJ1~ Ill f;c!1 Jo'ontl~ Uflll l~!Pt 1~!11~ l''!l·~ - :11 16th. flow or bl•d to the hea . ~tldcon 3Jco 36 3:. ~.:.' t . ~~'J l Ttn c l'n•elt zj(l 5j'• il ~ :il :1 (i•n \tlls fiUCil ::!i 21i, ~ ~~ • 1 , Refrigeration. : seated person who feell faint ~1111 C1iy :ooo 18 17 17 -1 'l'rano \II 100 "'· ,,, 1,, • '• t;on \lot 2~~D'l 4l'< " ll ·- '• ANADA I d til ... N Cont 900 ~0 '.!.u 2fl ~~~~fti'!'SJ:\1, fLO~J~a; ~TOfltl' lr..on (ia~ xd 9,10 Sl:JI~ l:jl,& :j3. I" (icn Tlrt ltoo Ji'~: ,i,·, ,j,;~~- ,_ NFJ,..D. c . .should bend forwar un me NC 011 200 195 m 195 • ; ny Tho Canadan Pru• I l'r rr M•l ~o; ~CII 201 ' 1:\ddon 101:0 "'' ,.; Jl•'.• • ... stEAMSHIPS h ad touches the knea. NCO .. 1.1 ~00 -13 1''ll 4:i -r:!~11 Montreal s:cc': ~!.cnlur;u-J.uly 6 \\'atf'rm<\n ~00 ~7~ 4.50 ,SjQ .:_·35 eoo1rich ~~I'll 6:!1t 61 !;11,.- ,,. r __e ___ -=--=--- ___ · ~ ·-- ISorlhld $00 12 12 12 Colftplc1e 1abulol\t>ll nl 1\ednesd•l' msr.s (lo:i)·r 11900 '"'• JR m.- '• ~!.\'. Fauvette sailing rom' I okalla r.o 34 31 31 tranoec'on•. Quolotlons n c•"l' union .ldroc.to 1000 310 340 ~ 40 _ 10 C.r Pm~• s·:oo ~·· ~ 2 Halifax .June 29th, due St.' July 21 and Boston July 25. , I Place 1~00 52 11 1: mari:cd $. •-Odd lo1, xd--E,-dlldtnrt, .\,1,, :oo 4 4 4 -I 1;rand l'n ~too 27'• 27' • 21•;- '• John's Julv 1 1 Newfoundland due St John I Pander 11000 50 4R w xr-Ex·rh:·ht!>;, xw-~x·wurants. . Atla~ Telt 43 eoo 62 ~ 0 52 ~2 Gt .\ and P 280o 351" ll~• J5!l\- 1 ' • • • f H I f X and ll'ro•·o 12m 184 1303 -I S•l , Gt \or Rr 11co 48•, 18 IF.·'•- '• Woodcock sailing from July 22. Leavmg or a I a .. m 1 1 ~, 0 20 20 ·~f.V. 1 a . ~:?:Y Espl 7~ lo~l loo lg,, .J .~;~· s•1';o ~~~,,L;~,,ct;i~."~·~:. n~~; •.;,,, inoo it 11 tt fi~~.. ~~ moo 23'• 2R ,, - ;, ~fontreal June 30th, due St.: Boston .Tuly 23, due Halifax 1 11 Rocky Pttl 1133 !ll;~ ~;~ jl~ + ''' ~l:toma SH.i 531 3c;, ~o::. ·- • Blltt:n:trn .:;.3;jo~~o t• i', in r tntrrlakP ~·;,~ ~~~: ~~~: ~~~ ... s. John's Jul)' 4th. ·July 25 and Boston 1uly 28. 1 Sappblrl sooo 4fu 47 47 -3 I Alunln 11~3 llCI1 30~· JOl.~ ~ • Bratnce !Mn ~ 4 ' lnt Bus ~!ch 2100 S22 ,j\~ 1 ~ 521 - l J J I 29 and soeur Froo 100 37$ 371 m ,.5 ArJUJ 377 117 •7 2; - ;, '1'"·"'• son Tnt Harv mo 41'• 44 11 -I M.S. Bedford II sailing from' Leaving Boston 11 Y , 11 12 12 12 1 Spooner :13.100 Ill'. II II -: i Atbtatoo •9~ ·~~~· ~,;; ~~ , ~~~~1.:~ 2118 4 ~ 4 - ' · 1111 ~lck ssoo sG s!wl 551>- •.> Halifax July ~th. due St. John's 1 Halifax Augu~~ 2, due Itt. Jolin I Sllaw.U :ltf!l 37 35 37 + Atlu Sle•l z, 1 -~ "'' • • i onoron• moo fi! 64 18 In! Pap 280Q loot; 991. w.o + ,,. July • 1August 4. Salhn" aJain M!ftl Tda1 noo II 45 45 Bailey s l 1>p )00 Ill II 18 . 300 112 12 ll lnt Tel !U300 101< 391' 40 7 1 D 1 Tr••• Caa 533 33 32 32 Bank Mon1 · l>J,I53 l2 Wi ' 'I! 2~:~~~oy zoso m ~~~ 21: John• Man 2100 11 l9l. ;w., -1•~ 1 :\I,S. Belle Isle n sailing from day for Liverpool. , Triad 01 &SO :MO Ill 240 +II I Bank NS rt sm 'iO 3!0 40! •IS ' Chb J ziOO 25 l5 ll K•nnecol %600 m; w. l • I• ' N s tl d ... John I NOW PLAYING u Canao vi 1100 II 61 II -3 Bonk NS !Oil Sll ll!o 58 + •• c . p ·~lie :uo :m :Ul 227 + Kmu : )I){} 30~. 30\o ;~ •• .::-v. ~lontrea! July 7th, due St. I ova co a Ut '"' 0111 . 112 1• ll'• Un 19100 108 112 +2 nanque cs r:zo m;; 51 m; 'eN u' 1 911 Kroohler :oo w. II'• • '• John's July 11 1August 5. Leaving for Ballfu WQDI 1000 • e 6 I Banque Pc 100 $31~\1 l~ 1 2 J.H-:. + ,, ICr~a ;~t. ~: 1~ 1~ us -1 ' Locw's !!:!flO fll:'!!! ROlli a1 + '• . d A t 6 du Hall WHpac 1714 121'1 1m m;, Bath Pow A 214 $461'. t& 411'1 ' 1600 149 146 119 +I I~lorsh Fld 2oo 54 51 " _ '' • :\!.V. Woodcock sa !ling an Boston ugus • e • w Cdn oa :zooo 1a1 101 101 + 1 Both Pow B 520 m J&~i 3&1'1 - \It ~~~ ~f1'" oon 4 4 4 ~Iarin co 2ao11 w• 1:.1• ,;~; from :\!ontrea! July 14 due st. fax August 8 and Boaton AUJU&t W Cd OOwl 1100 3& II 35 -1 BtU Phon• 1!67 JI!!A 4S 4! + ""1 Falcon zm 112 12 12 ~lercl< 7400 89 87'• 88h + •; ' Le · B t Augult 12 Waburno 2100 II U :5:2 +I ~owaler 5 pr ISO S4ll'l 451'< 4!\t Goon Mineo zllQ 111 17 11 Mlnn MM llboo 76'l 73"• 71 --2'o ,John's July 18. 11. avtng 05 on Ws1at11 1100 115 IIJ 113 + 3 Bow at M pr II IIi 49 49 +I · 700 57 57 57 + 1 i )linn ont ~on 2A'' 2••, 2','· + ',• •Refrigeration. and Halifax August 111, due l_t. W Dtcalla 4100 13 lt ·63 + ll Brazil 774 315 380 33! -1! Gold Age !OO 715 700 700 -20 )[on san Ch 11000 W, 41' < 44 > S IIi W Naee 2000 25 U 2S IIA 01 lOll 12&~ :m !W. Gunnar 2 3, 31> 31>.+ •; "••I word Jlco 12'' 42•, m\ =,, FURNESS WITHY CO., LTD. John's August 18. a n1 arun 1 1 Yan caa 15$00 3 3 3 -I> BCE I pr 25 ~71\ 47h ~71\ + I> r,~::~~.. mm ,, 22 ~ I I Xal Av.t 300 2:•, 27 l ;,·o·',', _- ·.•.. Newfoundland due St.l same day for Liverpool. •ANU BCE 5\'opr 200 ISZ !I II • 1000 47 47 47 -! ! Xat Cash '900 61 flO' I " N SS RED CJlOS!I LINE N0111 Ill an 12\1• Ill\ + 'II DC Foresl xd 30o 111 II II + V. J·o 1 coni 1000 14 14 14 1 Xal Dlsl mo 28!< 28 28 -'I .Johu's Junr. 21 Lea1•ing for FUR E CDIIIIII 471 l!l!i m• ~~· + n BC Power 165l 1311\ ~l ~t'' + II Ls::~ador %90 Sl7l,i 171'1· 1711 + "'' Xat Gypt 1400 .15'' 5l'o ~·· + 'I Halifax an:! Boston June 22.! s.s. Guernsey leavinl New NS \231 5711 + • Brockvle pr 200 Ill Merrill 500 60 10 60 +3 NY Coni 25DO · 22•1 22 •• Halifax June and Bos· · York June 24th, Sai_n t John, 1111p Ill 1110au 59 $91\ + 1'1 1Brown 300 S1! IS 15 Kr d 1000 5 1 6 Nor l'ac ,2kO/I!' 2B7n mO ~1'1 46"1 du~• 24 1 'l'or·llom 371 SU'II 32\i m; + " Cal Pow S25 120 191~ 2° + "' N ~~~aq 4000 1 1 -1 Piulco 89oo :m• 27'1 211• ton June 27. Leaving Boston IN.B., June 27th, HabfaJ, N.S,, JloJal 1010 1611; 116 Can Cern 300 1211'• 21V. 2&11•- It N Hoscn 1000 7 71 75 +4 Philip ~!nr 1000 71 Ju•, 70'\ ·- ., ,.._ • • St J h 's IIIDI1trr•IALS can Cem w z7 S26 , 7! ,, 26 N Mylam 100 18 116 68 _ 24 I'll Plate 2;110 wr. 6m w; + ,.. J•me 28 and Halifax July 2, June 3vm., a'!1VJng • 0 n Alamia 214 U0\1 3~1 30\'J + lio Can Iron •75 Sill• IS,, l51i N Santuo 6000 ~~ 211 210 Proc Gam 1soo 1181> 117'• 11311 + ;, due St. John's July 4. Sailing Jul:r 3rd, leavmg July 6th., for Anrlo Nfld 100 ~ 61.1 6¥. en Iron ''"P TOO . STS 75 75 -1 NW AMulet SilO 17 17 17 +I Pullmaft 600 35 34'' J! k H lif d N c llrew 1440 S3n<. 31'!1• 37 + 1io cao Malt 100 Ill 53 l3 - 1'1; 'IIA Ror ~1 31011 ~ 52 l! RCA mon til'!fo 6311, w 1 _,,1 again same day for Liverpool. Corner Broo , a ax an ew lnlaad 710 420 420 420 +10 can ~!alt pr •21 S23\2 2311 231'1 : Opemlsea 1000 9 9 9 -1 Ropuh su 4700 62'1 6m ~2'> +l!i 1 Nova Scotia dUe St. John's York. SlnlPJOJII 1111 111 2HI 2711 - V. CSl. m •~~-> u\1, 42\ii + V. 1 r d b 2000 18 m IB -2 Roy Toh 9900 nv, l!'o n E CllOS!I LINE Stedman n m 12011 2ov. 11ooo _ '·• 2s w 32 •I c Avlalon 2011 • " Prlu J'1c10 111000 3 3 3 Royal nut 37 35,, 36, 1 .July 5. Leav\ng for Halifax FURNESS R D • Walker• 131! SJ&!i 3i'.i 36\l • '·1 1 Bk Com :03 !II> 5211 + ' 1 Provo 100 1112 182 182 +10 Sear.• Roob 95oo 55'• 55'• 55..., + •, and Boston July 6, due Hali· S.S. Guernsey arriving St. c 152~1 3 Wolloa • 111 136 36 31 + ~ C Brew 2015 U7~1 36 t lit.-.& T ~1 Que cobalt !iOO 33!i 325 llS + 10 Sheraton 2300 17~k till~ 17~4.- lA ' • J } c Br A1u zJo 110 10 10 Que 011 3500 2 2 2 _I> snclalr stoo 39 ... 39 39 ~,; .. '• !ax JUly 8 and Boston July 11. John's July 6th, leavmg u Y 1 <: Bronzo 225 Ill 11 n Roberva1 100 21 21 26 + 2 socony moo 37'~ J6'i 37 1 + " Leaving Boston July 12 and 1 8th, for Halifax and New York. c Bronlt pr 21 113 13 13 +I s1 L lllv :roo 54l m l45 -15 , Spmy R 23ooo 825'1 24~• 2; J h ' · N y k J 1 15th c Colon 125 120 211 20 SaleU~; 300 381; 361~ 38.,., _ 20 , Std Brand 900 :4611 w. 45,. _ 'i Halifax J•1ly 16. rlue St. o n's I Leavmg ew or u Y • c Husky too m m m -5 s Dulault 3000 11 11 tB +I I Sid 01 Col 811){} 42'• 41 1,., 12'• T '• ,July 18. Sailing again same day 1Saint John, N.B., .Tuly 18th, Montreal c Hydcar LIO 110 10 10 5101p R e:o TiS T10 T10 -! strt on Ind moo 37'• 37'• 3i'• . for Ll.\'erpool. Hal!' fax, N.S., July 20th, arflv· CII, 11.5 $13 U 1l Th Ex.plo 2500 I 8 8 I Sid 01I N J .f.:!~OO • o.IO~• 4114 + 1 HI OSTIIEAL CLOBISG Cl Pow pr IOM S4l•, 42'• c•; + Tllan 21310 14 It•; a"" -lh stud Pacl< Moo ''' ''• B¥• + ., Fort A\•alon due John's' ing St.· John's July 23rd. lUI'· Abllb ~TOCK~ 1 ~~ St. 31li Fraser 2! i I c Oil I! 119\1 ltl'o 19\oo I Tl'ebor zm 1 1 I ' Tnaro 8300 7l 71 71 T I>' I' 1 6 h f c B k Aobo- 22't0 Gt Laku 3~ CPR r.u m 24 24 I\'anJU•nl 13100 15 "' 11 +I 1rex sutphor 4700 11 ,, 15 1, July 18. Leaving for Halifax ing Ju y 2 t or orner roo·. IIIIQUI c Nat $JI; How Smlh 31 'c Pel \II' Z1~4 .191\ ll'!fo ll'!fo Werdoa 1011() 4 ~ ~ I Thlokol 6400 38\o 37!0 no.; - ... and Boston .July 19. Due Halifax Halifax and New York. -AIIRSOI B•nk Moat 51/ llud Bay ~lin 4,:1.,.' Cock111hutt z:i7 SH 14 1-4 I Clttlal ulet• Jndastral.J 61),!00; Mints Tdewater 1000 lij3 1';'• 17'•- ~ ....- -.l.lllll'rl=II.IIJlSTS Bank NS !I Imp 01 314i I' Con ~~ s 275 al71\ 1711 Im + " 116,100. . I Timkon 1500 w. m. 55\'< - llnquo PC 34\i lnt Sick 51'1 Con TexUe 1M 2110 2M !00 Un Carb :1000 !30'i 1.29•> IJO - 1'. Balh111'11 A 41 .'lla~•·Ftr t . Cre FAST DIRECT FREIGHT SAILINGS Balhurol 8 Jlli N 51 Car 12\'o Dtl Sear 315 1%8\i 21\6 281'. + l'o ew or Utd Corp 700 7'1 7\'.o 7'1o Boll 61 NoraMa !'1\i 1 ll Bridle 275 at&IO I~ 11'11'1 I:S Gyp, 1200 112 1111< Ill'> C Cemenl 11\1 Prl 311\ 36~ - ~ AMERICAN CLOSING STOCKft M.S. "BELLE ISLE II" a Jllio'l .lloattll Ralllas St. Jeh11'1 L'pool M.S. "BEDFORD II" BETT.ER THAN RINGSIDE. ""' CJn 5100 57V• 51% S7V.. + " 87 The Associated Pnn: JULY 21 JULY 2~ "Nova Scotia" Am Mot 31'100 23'!fo 21'11 22%- \It Amelcan. SlD 46\1 + \It MATINEE: 1.30. Aur f Armoll Ck 7100 4110 II II - % Brazl 72DO 4\lo 4 4 + l'o "Nova Scotia" Jly 29 Aug 6 Aug. 12 Aul 111 AUI 18 Bal>fook 2100 :II 331\ 3!1\ - 1'1 BA Oil 700 27 261\ 27 + l'o Ball Oblo 371111 3Mio 3)1\ 3:1\lt -1 Bun! liS 400 1111 14'!fo II% - ~~ Btlb SIHI lllOO "'" 15 4510 - l'o Burry Bll 1900 IO!t 10 101.3 + 1io Penon& contemplatln~ 11annxe to Eurollt :Boear Air 3000 21 2.1'11 11'11 - % Can So 01 1900 2 13·16 2 IJ.\6 2'i + 1·16 ahould make booklrw well In 1dvanee Borden Co 271111 liO tW.. Ill> - 1> Can Marc 1000 5\4 • IV. m 'JR.. PASSAr.ES ARRANGED BY: B.O.A.C. K.L.M .. PAN Borf War 4000 37% 37\lo 3N C\ltltbro 1100 341:. 33\1 33:"" -1 N~T AnRACTION Budd Mil 2400 18 171'1 1?1'1 + %j Con MS 100 16\1 18\1 18\1 s\MEBICAN · AIRWAYS. SCANDINAVIAN. TW.A. IJid Burl MU 5'011 18\\ 18l> 161> Creole 4000 2m 21V. u - 111 MARLON BRANDO - ANNA MAGNANI - roanec:Una a\irllnf.'l, Burrourba 1700 3m 361\ 36% + 1'1 Crown CP 6110 9~1 9I ~~ + \1 Con1ult us regardln- rour travel problema C&lumet 700 :w.\ 22\ii 231> -% dev·Pal 1200 a;, 9-15 9-16 -1·16 JOANNE WOODWARD in "THE FUGITIVE can Dry tOO lOlli Ill'> lOlli •llome J:xpl 19()11 s•a 51\ IIi + l'o cr11 2900 141'< 341'o 24.., - '4 Duke Pow 200 ll'i 51 51 IMk"t Covi, St. Jthft't. KIND"·- ACTION - DRAMA - SUSPENSE. FURNESS TRAVEl OFFICE c... Jl 4200 10\1 101> 101'< I El Bod 4300 lJ 2m 2:211 Phone: toll Catl!r Trae 17700 291>. U 211'< - V. , Ford Ltd 25 HI\ ~ \o ~t~WFOUNDI.AND HOTEL '· 'PBONt: 1121 CeJan111 3600 2.11'. 2!1> 2.1\• : •·onl Can 25 134 l3t 134 -1 •• H. COLE, s,eclel RtiiiFtnntetln, Rey•l a1nlr: aldf.1 lt. Jtt.••s.. Plu 2111 C\1" Ohio 1300 &ll-1 60~ 60\& -ll:f 1 rtoldrtd 54CIJ Pt )1,4 tt• - 1' I I Cllrtoler 11100 ~ 44\lo 44% -·% HoUinJer 200 211'1 22\t S%1'1- ll TH£ DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., THURSDAY, JULY 7, 1960

THE STORY OF MARTHA WAYNE lv W. SHRUGGS A' 'MARCONI CAR RADIO Installed 1n• your car Only $1 O.oo Down Complete with aeria I Both in dash and under dash models This page is presented by ALLE'I OOP llv V. T. HAMLIN-, up The Great Eastern Oil Company, Limited· - I BARBS T·V· RADI0{0(;- i •JACOBY i ~y HAL COCHRAN 11.01~- 'l'urlluy Weather 1 Designs may dtange from 8.05-Breakfaat with Bill ' lime to time in the modern f ON BRIDGE 8.25-News home, but the laat word Ia atill CBN the wife'a. THURSDAY, July 7th. 8.30-Hit of the OaJ THIS 'BAD LUCK' 8.35-Sportscut • • • A.M. 8.40-Breaklast with Bill Most of the things that are WAS POOR PLAYING worth ha1•lng are worth going rAPTAIN !A~'t 7.30-News 1 8.55-News f1 ~I!SUE TURNft 7.35-Top of the ~lormng ' 9.00-Morning Date I after but most people are sa tis- South's four spade contract 8.00-CBC News and Weather' 9.15-Lindaa First Lova I fled 'to 10 after them after a Ilooked like a cinch to him. He I while. ruffed the second heart lead 8.15-:\lusical Clock ll.30-!llornhlfl Date 9.00-:\lormng Devotions i 10.00-Ntii'S J • • • and played the seeond heart lead and played the king of 11.15-Program Preview • lt'.U5-Stork Club 9.:!0-0n Parade. 10.15-Jim Ameclle Shr w trumps. When it was allowed to hold the trick, he continued 9.30-CBC News and Direct I 10.55-NeWii I wit.b a low trump to dummy's Reports 11.00-J im Ameche Show 1 11.45-Recnrds at Random 11.15-Western Jamboree jack. That held the trick also, and East showed out. 10.00-Arc\1ers 11.55-News 10.15~lris .lanes. · P.~l. At this point, South went Into, 10.25-For Con•umers 1!2.00- Western Jamboree Whydon't we plant weedt in a long huddle and remarked · 10.25-For Consumers. · 12.30-Ncws the garden in the first place? "Nothing breaks for me." Then 10.45-Clifh Kitchen : 12.35-Ramblin with Recorda They come up anyway. he started after the diamonds t0.~0-:\1\J~ic in the l!orning ' 12.45-Fisherman's Forecast • • • and eventually West made two 11.00-:\lusical Pro~ram. 12.50-Ramblln IVIth Recorda Living properly leads to trump tricks and one elub to 10.30-!\lusiral Pops. 1.15-Sportscast one'a living happily ever after, set the hand. 11.15-:\tusical ::llerry·Go· 1.20-Ramblin with Recorda uys a pastor. We thought It Round. · 1.30- ·News took two. There wa~ no question about !1.45-Sacred Heart Program. US-Passing Parade (John South's bad luck In finding four P.M. Nesbitt) 9.05-Muslc for Million• trumps In the West hand, but FRECKLES AND HIS fRIENDS ly BLOSSU 12.00-BBC News 2.00-Jim Ameche BbDW 9.20-Jerry Wlrgina Show he lost the contract due to care- l 12.10-Announcers Choice 2.55-News 10.00-Newa In a Minute '!less play, not bad luck. j 12.15-Farm Broadcast. ' 3.00-Dollars On Parade \0.01-Martln's Corner . 12.30-Farm Broadcast 3.;>~News 10.15-'l'he Rlflbt to llapplne~a . South s d~uce of clubs repre- ! 'Jt'lLO I.AI!O THAT YOU'Re 12.45-!\lid Day Serenade 4.00-Bob'a Bandwa1on 10.35-Houaewlve~ Cholet ' sented a tr1ck that South would O~ESS~ A/olD TO MAKE: 10.5:1--Music for Relatina have to lose at aome stat• of HIMSELF AT fASE ON 1.00-Do)·le Bulletin 4.5~Newa THE PATIO/ 1.1:1--A Man Called Shepparrl 5.00-Bob's Bandwagon 11.00-News In a Minute 1.30-CBC News and Weather 5.30-Supper Serenade ll.ot-The Rev. ~tattbew 1.45-Bllly O'Connor Show. I 5.50-Fisherman'a Forecast 11.35-Nf!d. Quiz NOITR 215-Musical Rendezvous 6.00-Bulletln Board 1l.~Town and CouniJi. .JU 2.29--Dominion Time Signal. 6.15-Sportscast and 12.00-Newa Hlrbllghta \11103 2.30-~lusical Randezvous Travelogue 12.02-Town and Country tAQlO 2.45-BBC Variety. 6.30-Supper Serenade 12.30-Newa .16543 3.15-John Dranie Tells a 6.45-NeHs 12.33-Town and Countr)' WI:ST EAST Stor)'. 7.00-Rotary Luncheon At!· 1.00-New., .A652 .7 3.30-CBC News and Trans drese. 1.05-Weab,•er Forecut .AKJ878 \119H2 1.15-NIWI • 7 6 t432 Canada Matinee. 7.30-Shillelagil Showtlme. .KJ10t8 ,4.30-Passport with :llusic. 8.00-Cream Of The Crop 1.35-Don Jamleaon'a "'Q SOUTH (D) 5.00-Frontier Stories. 10.00-VOCM All Time Hit Editorial 1.40-Sporta .. KQlOU 5.30-Fisheries Broadcast Parade \IIQ 5.4~1\luslc from the Album• 10.30-Event!de Meditation• l.~Art Baker'• Notebook tKJJIS 6.00-CBC News 10.45-Sporta 2.00-News Highlighta lOOTS AND HER IIUDDI!S ly EDGAR MARTIN 6.05-lntermezzo 11.00-Torbay Weather 2.03-Jem Wi111lns Show Both•u vulnerable 6.25-Progrum Pre1·iew. 11.05-Big Top Ten 2.30-News llouth West Norlll last 6.30-Supper Guest 11.30-Club 590 and Newt. 2.31-Jerry Wlgglna Show 1• 2 \II 2 • Pass 6.~Light Music. Newburgh, N.Y. 3.01-Westem Jamboree 4 • Pass Pa11 Pw 7.00-CBC News and Weather I f.OO-Newa In a Minute Openln1 lead-¥ K 7.15-Musical Program. CJON '-01-Raneh Party 7.30-Tops Today l!.OO-Newa in a Minute 7.4:1--Doyle Bulletin I THUltSDAY, July 7th. 11.01-Bob Lewis Danee PariJ Lhe proceedings. Tbe time to 8.15-Rawhide 6.00-News Hlghlltbta lose it was at tric' two and In­ 6.01-Weather 8.30-Trans Canada by Car 1 A.M. stead of ruffing the aeeond 8.40-Kitchen Corner. 6.30--The Bob Lew!J Sllow 8.115-Bulletln Board heart South should have dis· 8.!!5-Weather for :llariners 6 30-Nfld. Newa 6.10-Natlonal News carded that deuce of clubs. 8.00-Ask The Weatherman. 8.35-Weather ForecAst 6.15-Sporta If West continued with a 9.15-Nations Business. 8.40-The Bob Lewla Sbow 8.25-Ever Battery Newa third heart, South would have 1 9.30-Songs of my People. 8.45-Headline News and 6.30-Ciub 93 been able to ruff In dummy and 10.00-Drama in Sound. Forecast 7.00-Newa In a Minute retain all of his own five 11.30-National News etc. 6.50-The Bob Lewia &bow 7.02-Club 93 trumps. If West shifted, Soutb 12.00-Sign Off-0 Canada- 7.00-News 7.30-Newa would also have had his five The Queen. 7.05-Local Weather 7.45-Don Jamieson'• Newa trumps Intact and would have 7.20-The Bob LeWis Sbow 8.00-Newa in a Minute been able to pick up West's . PRISCILLA'S POP lv AL VERMEER 7.30-News 8.01-Best from the Weat four without trouble. VOCM 7.35-Complete Weather 8.30-Natlonal Newa TRt!'JISDAY, July 1th. 7.4~News 1.31-Best from the West 8.00-News 9.00-News In a Minute CARD Sense 6.3U-News ana Weather 8.05-Weather 9.03-The Big Six Programme. 11.85--Breakfut witb Bill 8.15-Shlpplng Report 9.15-Nfld. Soiree. Q-The bidding has been. U5-News 8.20-The Bob Lewis Sbow 9.30-Chapel by tbe aide of South West North Eaat I 'LOO-Brealdut with Bill 8.25-Kiddles Corner the Road. .1\11 1• 2• Pall '7.30-News and Watorfront 830-Newa 9.45-Doseo News. 2 • Pan 3 • Paaa Director)' 8.40-The Bob Lewis Show 10.00-News Highlights 7 T.Si-Brealdast wlt.b Bill 8.55-Just a Minute lO.ot-High Adventure. You. South, hold: US-News 9.00-News 10.30-Natlonal News •U \IIKJIO 65 UQ98 ... KQ 10.45--Sports 10 10.55-Musie In the Night What do you do now? "Empire State" 11.00-News Highlights A-Bid four no·trwnp! Your 11.03-Muslc In the Nigh! partner appeara to be short In 12.00-News hearts and you have a perfect .-:aosa 2 ltallan coin JCudael 12.01-Muslc In the Nltht Blackwood situation, 1 Clpital of 4 Poker sta'ki 12.30-News New York 5 Require. TODAY'S QUESTION state 12. 35-Muslc In the Nlt1ht T Thiutate 8 Alllrmath·e Your !Jlrtner shows two aces 8y DICK CAVEt\ ranks-In reply MORTY MEEI m -bought 31 Lampreys square mile. Sport. I I 7 Aae the Statue ot 37 Be quiet! 51 Contlllld · 11.4:1--Football. •I ~ I 21 Sapient Liberty for 39 Legal plea S2 Whirlpool 8.15-Natlonal News. 132 Strays America 43 One of lb 84 Female saint 1.30-Gunsmoke. !33 Short-napped 22 Church dtiH (ab.) i fab:lc festival 44 SlraniCI' ~51\ II an- 8.00-Walter Winchell File. 34 Soulher.n 23 Go by aircraft 45 Peltry center 11.30-'11te Deputy. 1enera1 10.00-CIOHup. Ia& Westchester [I [I .I I• ,~ [i 17 :I II IU II II ' Count,. vltlaae 11.00-Man From Blackhawk. I Jnlefest (ab.) [13 11'1 · 11.30-WreaUina. ~37 Ratify 12.30-New• Headline~. 1,ULarlssan liB , mountain " BUGS BUNNY By LEON SCHLESINGER ~OH'-hmd 1l II !41P~ve JU'Gnotm 11 ill, Zl ID ENJOY A :C llpalllth II ..nee .D Z4 ,. ~ tn WELCOME WAGON :fSLethal 3Z M M Hana Ill LIVING HOSTESS : folds ,. · j!! ~allll UWonhlped [31 .. Will Knock at Your Door 18 Jttiterall with Gifts and Greetings . 57 Send111ew S8En1Ush ~. from Friendly Business 415 47 411 41 ,[ID II 'I" ' eleruman Neighbours and Your and novelist u [M + It Diplomatic '"' ,. Civic .and S~ial Groups aareement ,Ill [17 SWIM On the occasion of: DOWN The Birth of a Baby, llurcpean [II : I" IIIDUn!allll ~· .WILY New Comer to the City, '· • THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., THURSDAY, JULY 7, 1960

·.• : f'OR SALE-One Breeding r ..------., •.: The Norma and 1 NOTICE AUTO PARTS (WholE' SLIVERS and KNOT HOLES Bull. Apply Wm. Houston, Outer Cove. jly7,8 Application will be made to J:lll'J Nfld. A TEACHER Gl d the Board of Liquor Control for a YS LOST-One young Setter Dog, Ia Hotel Licence to sell liquors. L Armature Is required for the one room United Church School black head, and ears. Phone is discharging lumber at 1 beers and wines in the Beach ·'F,~jijj[iJiid WorkJ 7837. Reward offered. at South Brook, Humber Valley, to teach begin· C b . When dis- I Grove Hotel, situated at Deer U 38 jly5,3i ar onear. 1 Lake Bambriek ners to grade eight. charged will be accepting i 'Dated tnis 4th day of July. street. ,\CCOMMODATION for gentle. Applications should be forwarded fo: freight at Steers' wharf for 1960. 'lial 7191-~ man, Elizabeth Avenue h I STANLEY HUTCHINGS, . -· ~ East. Telephone 90924. B. MANUEL, .regular ports nort , Eng ee, Proprietor. jly4,tf Roddickton, Conche. Main jly7,14,21 BV!LDING MATERIALS I Secretary, Humber United Church Board of "My j~d~ement. was right! ! FOR ALL y&ur Interior, n· Education, 7 Spencer St., Corner Brook East, Nfld. Brook, Goose Cove, St. j-li.aiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiill CHESTER DAWE, L"J:D. lll~dc.rmzt~g t.hts. b~smess terior painting, repair work Jh·6.7 Anthony, Great Brehat AL SHAW ST. and TOPSAIL RD bmldtng 1s brmgmg In the and roofing. Prices re1son· St. · Leonards, Griquet, FOR S E For all your Building customers. able. Phone L. Howell. d h Requirements call ' • ' ! 7397H or 37 52 A, Quirpgn an Nort to No. 1 TOP SOIL 80161-91171 This business man is right- I jne21.2wk Cook's Harbour. Sailing $10.00 per load. modernizing YOUR business ------buildnig will bring in the . Wall Washing Friday midnight. SODDING OF DRUG STORES 1 customers, and if you want 'WALL WASHING - Wallt CARD GRAVES or LAWNS help to bring your building cleaned by oew machine. M. CONNORS LTD., up-to-date, then call us Results perfect: eaves paint. at short notice. Prescriptions Pickup and today. -New tfethod Rug and Wall delivery service. Phone 2206 i Doctor C. A. Also clean-up jobs. Cleaners, Freshwater Ro3d, 'Phone 91033. ELECTRICAL -· Phone 6956-A HORWOOD· 1 WINDOW Boxes and Sashes Morris APPLIANCES 1 made to order-R. Pelley I Dial 4849-H. in7,1m 6 ORDNANCE STREET 'iAINE JOHNSTON LUMBER 1 FOR ALL your interior and will be out of town LAND SURVEYS COMPANY, LTD. 1 exterior painting and • Agency Department until further notice. LAND APPRAISALS ·1' sparkling, Contact Frank 243 Water St. Dial 2102 Co., Ltd. jly6,7 ~lclcndy. Phone 4767F. DRAUGHTING YOUR FRIGIDAIRE 1 Free estimates. jne29,tf DEALER. WATER STREET WEST ------WHITE PRINTING PHONE 3011 I<'Uit.' to spring-filled mat· WANTED 1 ~ - I tresses. Ch~ terfield suites PHOTO COPYING (NFLD.) LTD. also rebuilt. Fifty years' Wiring Materials, Wire and Wh T St TYPING ere 0 ay cxperie.tce. Keots Mattrest Dr. G.' J. Cables, Motors Starters, l Factory, 16 Mount Royal Ave. lABOUR RELATIONS Lamps, Switches, Lightina B Is m Hote 1 a a Dial 92753 or 2656. Gerry Halley Fixtures, etc. , ,· BARNES ROAD oct8,(tf) O'Brien . WAREHOUSE: PRINCE'S ST. I Situated in t.he Heart of ASSISTANT Surveys ltd. DIAL5085 i the Cit:. ; NEW METHOD RUG CLEAN· ERS-Rugs and Carpet will be out of town The Iron Ore Company of Canada requires a TELEPHONE 90876 · FIRE INSURANCE Quiet, Comfortable Atmos­ made to look like new. phere. Von Schrader process adds until end of July. Labour Relations Assistant for its Carol Lake Pro­ ,-~~~~~~~------years to life of rug,. Clean·. -5·-S~I·S-·ta·n--t·li: :ROSBIEA&genctso.r'orLTD. ject in Newfoundland. .------,1·L-.•·b·--ra_r_y--A·· For heservation~ and in­ erl in home or at our plant. USED-GRU~I~IAN AJ.U~1. formation. canoes, 13. 15 and 17 ft. : w t d UNDERWRITERS AT Thone 91033, New Method The position is one where a university graduate Exc. Cond. $145 to $165. an e I LLOYDS. Rug Cleaners, FreshwatP.r with a minimum of two years experience in the LOW RATES Dial 6336 Road. fields of labour legislation, contract interpreta· USED-12 ft. CRISCRAFT ThP Newfoundland Puhlir ' DIAL 5031 MRS. JOHN F.4CE\' THE CENTRAL BARBER "Fisherman"; marine ply. Lilmtrics Board indtes applic· Resident l'flanageress tion and industrial relations may hope to grow. with libreglas on outside. SHOP-We are nnw operat­ . ations for the post or LihraQ· · HARDWARE STORES ' mJt.tf ing 10 chairs, you can be \'ery Stable, take up to tht·ce : Assistant. CataloJ:ning Depart- ~ Background in business administration or law adults and motors to 12 h.p. ';;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;;;_;;~; Assured of prompt, effki· · ment. The successful applicant HARRIS & HISCOCK, LTD. ,: 1 fnt, sanitary service. No would definitely be an asset. $135. 1 would be expected to carry ont General Hardware REAT EASTERN waiting problem. 24 New general library duties in addi- Distributors for Sunbeam Please reply stating education, experience and USED-"TceNee" TR;\II.ER G i Gower Street opposite Ade­ references tor tion to catalogue typing work. I Electrical Appliances, OIL &IMPORT laide Motors, Ltd. will carry boats 12 ft and , Minimum qualifications are ' Sports goods and Sporb up to 300 lb. . $90 Grade XI and a business course. wear for all occasions. CO., LTD. P!RSONNEL DEPARTMENT, OFFICE No. 51, . typing essential. Salary scale DIAl 5016 Radio, Television, Washers,

1 USED - 1959 40 H.P. is $1800-100·2~00. Position on .. Refrigerators, Deep Freezera Iron Ore Company of Canada. "Scott" mater, manual start; : scale a~cor~ing to qualifications. · ERNEST CLOUSTON LTD Electric Ranges, ·For Fast 1 1 • • owner traded for two 25's. Apphcahons statmg dale of 1 Floor Polishers, SIS LeMarchant Road, St. John's, Nfld. Perfect condition; suaran- birth and qualifications togeth- 1\lcCLAR\ AUTm!ATIC I Gramophones teed .... $550 ; er with two references should WAR:.l AIR CONDITIONING Public Address SysteDll, Taxi Service fly6,7.8 : be submitted to l\lrs. G. Carew, 210 WATER ST. Tape Recorders USED-'57 5 h.p, ELTO I National Employment Serl'ice, DIAL 4183 1 REI'AIRS AND SERVICE Prompt Delivery On recond. guar. as new $160 . Duckmaster's Field, St. John's, / ~ LINES • STOVE OIL HOTEL TAXI - ' not later than \\'ednesday, .July r..ADIO TV REPAIRS JliAL 3001 to 3005 • FURNACE OIL USED-20 ft. LIFEBOAT I 13th. 1960. The selected candi· 1\ " • HARD COAL with new Stewart 2 crl. 2 date will be required to furnish ------1 WATER STREET • SOFT COAL Dial2424-2410 cycle gas engine; Go.ing for· a medical certificate of health. i GREAT EASTERN OIL I' ·-;an-26.. 1v. • IRON FJRE:\IAN QUEEN'S ROAD less than cost of engme and I Certificates of academic stand· 1 NY LTD ~~-:;;;;;;;;;;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;~: HEATIXG EQUIPME!'\'T. ()pea from UO to Z a.& prop...... $700 I ing should be submitted with C0 MPA • · 1 the application. REPAIRS TO RADIOS, TV 1 ----· AND ALL ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES PROPERTIES DlAL 3001 to3005

GROCERS (Retail) LB7 GO.WER ST. I'HONE 4947 FOR RENT myll,1mtt L. HEALEY Cross Roads and Water Street Dial 3026 Topsail Road INSURANCE AGENTS Near Paradise 1 9 5 6

AND BROKERS I Road AUSTIN 2 bedroom basement Apart­ 1960 FALL FESTIVAL ------JOB BROTHERS ment. electric stove and & 00 CO. LTD. refrigerator, heated. $80 $700· Water Street per month. JIIDDY ICILOWAn e SUPER SPECIAL Dial 2658-4123 1st. Prize: ...... $100.00 monthly for 3 years or $3,000.00 REG. T. MORGAN Harbour View ELECTRICITY Baird Motors Ltd. INSURANCE LIMITED MERRYMEETING ROAD 2nd. Prize'r ...... $] 00.00 monthly for 2 years or $2,000.00 Temple Bldg., P.O. Box 168, 3rd. Prize: ...... $100.00 monthly for 1 year or $1,000.00 341 Duckworth St. Avenue is CHEAP in DI.AL B-0378 • 8..0379 Dial 80370 or 1756 2 bedroom basement apart­ MONTHLY DRAWINGS ment, lil1ng room, kitchen ST. JOHN'S June 30 ...... :.. $500.00 Prize and bathroom, heated. $90 July 30 ...... $500.00 Pr!ze DRUG STORES per month. .NEWFOUNDLAND August 30 ...... $500.00 Pr~ze M. CONNORS LTD. ) Co .... ,.., L11141Jti SERVICES September 30 ...... $500.00 Pr1ze 334 WATER ST. ·~· Dial 2206 Pouch Cove Opening Night at Fall festival ...... : ... $500.00 Prize 3 bedroom Home, living 11 C ~ap Reliable Electricity I PASSENGER NOTICES TICKETS ...... 25c. each AYLWARD'S room and kitchen, bath­ : In and Around St. John's CONNECTIOS WEST RUN room $75 per month. Drawing for June 30th. Worth $500.00. Drawn by Mr. Jim Wells. PHARMACY PLACENTIA BAY COr. Monchy & Empire Ave. I i Regular 8.1 a.m. train lea~- Witnessed by Miss M. Flynn. Dial 90870 Torbay Road 1 ing St. John's to-morrow, Frt· WINNING NUMBER ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooototoooooototUO ...... :...... 539860I ' : day, July 8th., will make con· 1¥.! miles past Mount I Tickets for the Super Special may be obtained from the followmg: PARKDALE . ' nection at Argentia with Motor PHARMAC1 Cashel, modern 3 bedroom Vessel for the West Run Pla­ FEEHAN'S DRUG STORE, WATER STREET. Elizabeth Ave. home. $95 per month. centia Bay. THOMPSON'S DRUG STORE, QUIDI VIOl ROAD. Dial 91120 CONNECTION SOUTH COAST CIGAR DEPOT, WATER STREET WEST. FREIGHT SERVICE 69 Queen's Rd. ' SERVICE THOMAS RICKETTS, WATER STREET WEST. i Regular 8.31 a.m. train lU\'· TRINiTY SOUTH 4 bedrooms, livin~ and O'MARA and MARTIN, RAWLIN'S CROSS. ' ing St. .John's to.morrow, Fri· From St. John'• ~Ia , dining rooms, kitchen and ' day, Juy 8th., will make eon· MURPHY'S DRUG STORE, MILITARY ROAD. Whllbotlf'ne to Old Perlican, • pantry, 220 wiring, hot neclion at Ar~:entia with S.S. North Shore Conceptloa water boiler. $90 per BAILEY'S BOOK STORE, DUCKWORTH STREET EAST. 1 Bar Haren for regular ports to Carbonear. month. South Coast Service. CORNWALL DRUGS, HAMILTON AVENUE. Trucks also available for PARSONS DRUG STORE, LeMARCHANT ROAD. long haul service~· CONNECTION ST. JOHN'S· LEWISPORTE SERVICE THEATRE PHARMACY, LONG'S HILL. Rates Reasonable. For further information WAREHOUSE Train "The Caribou" leaving THEATRE PHARMACY, DUCKWORTH STREET DIAL 93603H SL .John's to·morrow, Friday, THEATRE PHARMACY, ST. CLARE AVENUE. July 8th., will make connec· 4 Bell Street tion at Lewisporte with the 111. DUNN'S PHARMACY, MERRYMEETING ROAD. 2 storey Warehouse, ap­ V. Codroy for regular ports St. COLONIAL STATIONERY, WATER STREET. proximately 400 sq. ft. on John's-Lewisporte Service. H. POWER, MILITARY ROAD. both floors. Safe and fit. , ing cabinets. Rent $95 SOUTH LABRADOR SERVICE POWER'S STORE, HAYWARD AVENUE. month. INCLUDING PORTH BENNETT'S STORE, WATER STREET WEST. NORTHERN LABRADOR SERVIC,E . ·M. ALLAN'S STORE, WATER STREET WEST. Kenmount Rd. S.S. Burgeo for regular ports PETER O'MARA DRUG STORE,,WA.TER STREE1 WEST. South Labrador Service includ· Large 2 storey WarehousP, REDDY'$ §TORE, WATER .STREET WEST. , . ing ports Northern Labrador 40 feet x 50 feet. ·Rent Service will sail from the Dock DON HOOAN'S DRUG STORE, NEW GOWER STREET. $200 per month. Coastal Wharf Noon to-morrow, J. JONES STORE, WATER STREET. Friday, July 8th. M. P. O'KEEFE, McfARLANE STREET. DIAL 2141 REID'S CONFECTIONERY, ROW AN STREET. Bevera_g'e Sales NOEL'S H. ASH, LONG'S HILL. . RENTAL AGENCY ;·MI.SS J. HAYES, WATER STREET WEST. . Ltd. (Not !nsei'ted ·by Board of DIAL 94072 Liquor Control I ~01 IN$1lll0 IT TH.! J,~!;. CANADIAN NA T!ONAL • THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN 1S, NFLD., THURSDAY, JULY 7, 1960 15

FOR SALE KINSMEN 1 1957 Chrysler Out Of Respect To The Late Boys Club Windsor Sedan Law mileage, no winter Newspaper BINGO ST. JOHN'S BRANCH driving. EDWARD J. DUFF I CANADIAN LEGION For further particulars. SERIES No. 32 Phone'3813 The Annual Outing for Members of the Branch J. J. DUFF TO-DAY'S NUMBERS and their families will be held at lester's Field, WANTED SUPERMARKET LTD. G 0 Old Bay Bulls Road on Tuesday, July 12th, 1960. B I N Transportation will leave the C.l.B. Armoury An experienced FRESHWATER ROAD 2 30 40 59 70 at 10.30 a.m. 13 17 45 55 64 Tkkets may be obtained at the Club Rooms. BARBER 9 26 42 56 66 In the event of inclement weather the Picnic will J. J. DUFF 4 28 31 48 63 be held in the C.l.B. Armoury, commencing at Apply to 5 20 34 57 74 2.00 p.m. D. SCURRY SUPERMARKET 11 27 41 58 71 J. W. GOODYEAR, 1 16 4.4 72 Secretary, St. John's Branch. 256 NEW GOWER ST.; CASEY STREET 7 18 33 46 61 3 24 75 C. of E. 6 21 Orphanage Spot Cash Grocery 22 67 Dr. CLARE RANDELL Garden Party PEDIATRICIAN MONROE STREET T. R. JOB MEMORIAL has commenced pradice in association with GROUNDS Duff Dr. C. ]. JOY will be continued Poultry Farm Ltd. RAWLINS' CROSS SATURDAY jly7,8 AFTERNOON will be CLOSED FRIDAY All Consolation Prizes have been won­ at 2 O'clock Names of winners will appear at the end Exci!ing S~de-shows with July 8th Until 1 p.m. of series, CARD PARTY attractive prizes. Refresh- ments on the field. lj:·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Help Kin - Help Kiddies To be held in I ·- .... ~ . BAS·EBALL FOOTBALL ...... ·.: St. Patrick's Hall Auditorium .· ·:-~ ... TO-NIGHT TO-NIGHT : ... ·." ···. \ BONAVENTURE AVENUE NOTICE ·.:=( WATCH BROKEN? 6.45 p.m. 7.00 p.m. :~··1 THE FIRM OF THE . ···i Hne U Expert17 SENIOR SENIOR ' ~.~:-~ Tonight July 7th at 8.30 p.m. . . Repaired Here . \:~ HOLY CROSS vs · ST. BON'S vs ·...... Ji CHRONOMETERS 20 LUCKY NUMBERS Newfoundland Wholesale . . -~ .·:" ~ AUTOMATICS 3 MAIN PRIZES • FEILDIANS . M C UNITED ... I I ···- Dry Goods, Ltd. : ::i CALENDAR CANTEEN SERVICE. AU Given Potrons are asked to bring own cards. l•medlate AUentlon 319 Water Street C.O.D. ORDERS WELCOMED FOR SALE Will be closed TO-DAY, THURSDAY, July 7th .. .Registered NURSES TWO STOREY DWELLING, until 1.30 p.m. out of resped to our late SIMON LEVITZ & SONS LTD. Are required for the following posts:­ 8 RENNIE'S MILL ROAD. esteemed employee. 111 WATER STREET ST, JOHN'S Apply OPERATING ROOM, PEDIATRICS, RONALD JOSEPH COLEMAN MALE SURGERY, F. M. O'LEARY Ltd. 98 GRENFELL AVE. FEMALE SURGERY, WATER STREET DIAL 2119 OBSTETRICS. el'.tu,th,tf Modern well equipped hospital. Excellent condi­ Beautiful three bedroom Bungalow, modern in tions of service with good personnel policies. ---~---- e'lery detail, this Iaveiy home has a self-contained basement Apartment, hardwood and linoleum Apply to:- flooring, fire place, furnace heated also has MISS G. B. FITZ-GERALD, R.N., THE .ANNUAL den and la'!.fldry room in basement. Here Is a Superintendent of Nurses, chance to buy a home with an income. Excellent Western Memorial Hospital, locality. Corner Brook, Newfoundland. REQUIEM MASS The Funer~l of oor late Comrade Ronald J. jly4,5,6,7,8,11 Coleman, will toke place this morning at 9.15 a.m.', PRICED FOR QUICK SALE at from his late residence, 57 Field Street. CONTACT All available ex·Servicemen are requested to Bally Haly Golf & MT. CARMEL CEMETERY attend. J. W. Goodyear, ERIC W. NOEL Country Club will be celebrated on Secretary, St. John's Bronclt • . REAL ESTATE PHONE: 478 - 94072 DIC·KINSON MEMORIAL TUESDAY, July 12th . at 10.30 a.m . APARTMENTS TO RENT POPLAR AVENUE CUP If weather is unsuitable Mass will be at MEDAL PLAY -36 HOLES celebrated at Basilica. MIDSTREAM MANOR Here 'is a beautiful home, modern bedroom ON HANDICAP Plot holders are asked to have all work 3 Fully furnished. Bungalow, hardwood and tile flooring, furnace This competition will take place on SATURDAY, done as quickly as possible. heated, full basement, with drive-in garage, July 9th. The draw will be at 10 a.m. Only 37 TOPSAIL ROAD landscaped, freehold land. This is an ideal home members present when the draw take1 place will in an excellent locality •. be eleglble to complete. PHONE 3383 J}y!l,7 jly7,11 PRICED FOR QUICK SALE GARDEN PARTY Sponsored by the Church of The Ascension, Mount Pearl, JUST ARRIVED ERIC W. NOEL Cook Out Doors will be held REAL ESTATE PHONE1 478 - 94072 THIS SATURDAY jly7,8 It's Fun at the Parish Hall Grounds, Topscril. POWERED LAWN. Get your Barbeque Equipment from (In case of rain in the Hall at Topsail). SIMPSONS-SEARS For those without transportation arrangements MOWERS Complete selection. are made with the United Bus Company for a bus· to leave Dunne's Lane at 3 p.m. proceeding PRICED FROM ...... $4.95 UP along Park Avenue and thence to Joyce's Corner. PRICED FROM AND UP;. Bus Fare Adults 25c., Children 15c. $48.88 NO DOWN PAYMENT ON ANY ITEM Bus to leave Garden Party 8 P.M. NO DOWN PAYMENT AT Dance at night with Dave Owens and his .,.;•. ••I···-, ••• Orchestra. Price $1.50 Double. IIIII - SIMPSONS-SEARS SIMPSONS-SE.AR Nfld. Armature .. Works· ltd. PHONE 5011 369 VVATER STREET IAMIRICk ST. . · ., : :' .-.DIAL 7191 • 7192 Advertise In The News

---····•'"" ··---·~ THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., THURSDAY, JULY 7, 1960 1& ·~··

I Cuts Sugar!

Imports ! \1'.\SHI!'\GTON IAPl - Prcsi· dent r'iscnhower, accusing the Cuban regime .o( delibe1·ate hos· tility toword the United States, i Wednesday cut imports o! Cu· I , ban sugar 700,000 tons. I DON'T FORGET A KODAK CAMERA Eisenhower's action means PILGRIMS .IN PARADISE that only 39,752 additional_ tons : Frank G. Slaughter $4.50

o! Cuban sugar can be shipped · 1 into the United States during the; WATER, OF LIFE • I r~mainde~ of this year. : Henry Morton

The Umled States pays about 1 Robinson ...... • BIRCH 21, cents a pound abol'e the world price for the Cuban sugar 1 YIAMIZELLE BON e MAHOGANY it buys. :VOYAGE BROWNIE 8 This subsidy, as it is in effect, 1 Gil Buhet ...... 4.00 • WALNUT e would have amounted to about .... eoAK S35,ooo.ooo on the ;oo,ooo tons rut . THE LOVELY AMBITION -~ eELM from Cuba's quota. ! Mary Ellen Chase .. 4.50 Premier F!del Castro ha~ ~le· BLAZE OF SUNLIGHT eASH clared a pohcy o( exproprmtmg • • all American property in Cuba 1• Forth Boldwrn ...... 3.95 ------· I and paying lor it only if the! BIRDS AND FISHES United States bus more rather Ph'/' ) b Wherever beauty 1nd dur.. 1 1 billty are the keynote1, you'll than less, sugar. • ''P ou er .... find NUFAply PLYWOODS. In Eisenhower acted sh01·llv after DESERT SQUADRON ofllce~, playrooms, II v I n 1 signing a bill passed by C~ugres! 1 Bictor Houort .... r o o m • or hotels. NUFAply sunday morning, g.il·ing him a11- THIS IS ROME PLYWOODS are outstanding thonlv to reduce Import quota.~ Lolfi'S/ priced morie camera in Kodak history! I on sugar from Cuba, ! J. in their field. Visit your ne•r· Fulton Sheen "" 4.95 i . Join the lomily fun of making movies • , • keep a record of est Lumber o.. ttr and ln•l•t MEDICINE IN on NUFAply PLYWOODS for good lim.,s! Buying the camera and making the movies are ies In I THE MAKING bctr. ~asy with the new Brewnie 8. The price is the lewes! ever,· •II your Interior flnishe~-•vall· D Gordon Murray .... 5.50 able in Birch, M•hoe•ny, W•l• ont> :hooting movies is os easy as taking snapshots! Just set nut, Oak, Elm 1nd A1h. FOLK MEDICINE a oiol to match the day's light ••• no other adjustments. Air Crash D. c. Jarvis, M.D. J.sc CHATHA~!. :'oi.B. ICP 1-A sill·' Dicks & Co Ltd 1 ONLY s27.9s dent pilot was killed and another ' • para~lmted' s.afely when two Sa·: bre Jet trammg planes II'Om thr : The Booksellers RCAF station here collided at noon Wednesday 30 miles north· Spin 4.{25 or 2008 or 3191 cast of Chat ham. FO Gary Smith Hanson. 21. son of Mrs. H. C. Hanson of Van· SlllP lilTS ROCK ·- ·--- --·-·----·------·-----· ·-- · ·· __ ...... - I coUI'Cr was inJ'urcd in the mid nir ST ..JOII:"''S. :'olfld, IC'I'•-TIH· QUEBEC (CPl - A venture· ' ., om charkr vr,;scl c!l·de Vall"' 23 1 Isome seal was caught flal·fliP· 1 Tc~ash .. FO 0R·1 C. ~ebbder,l . · '1' rear heel Cartwright, • Labrmlo.: with your precious SUMMER FILMS. For careful 1 pcrcd bv the ebbing tide Wed· I f Immmt· nh ·• c)ectc Hmsc r cdncsdav under her owl' ~lean · ·'"I will spend the rest I rom ~ 1 ~ ot el' P!anc an~ es· after hi'tting a submerged rod· of his days in the pool at Que· c~pcd InJury, A hchcoptc~· p~cke(~ c:-m marine superintendent E..:. .:leveloping ond printing of both block and bee' zoological gm·dens The him up near the spot 11 he! e he l!calcv said the 4iii·ton •·esse' 1 · . landed. · white and c · ur rolls, return .. ·'"at was found flap- ' H . d . owned by II. B. Clyde Lake .. ~ l•·"" a.JGUt on the bank of the • ~nson die when his plane hit St. ,John's, had a full cargo ol ~\\\\~~~'\DISPOSER I St. ~Lawrence River at Levis, ; the ground. · salt and oil for northern port, 11lem to us. ·3ives you all these featurest across from Quebec. Captured · · when the a c c ide n t occurred Leak proof • No vibration unhurt by Levis police, it was 1 EN J OV 11... ·---·1!!· !!!!·-II!!· ~~~~J!I!!!!I-II'I 55 YEARS EXPERIEW" 'l'owerful motor, lifetime turned o1•er to the zou where 1t TO·DAYIS will join two other· seals and a i 'ubrleation • Setr cleaning AWAITS YOU '\Continuous feed sci~;;-REAL (CP) _ A drdft i LIVING SPECIAL 3 £ASY STEPS .• agreement between the city of · Montreal and the CBC lor estab· +.. SEE THE NEW ..• ONL! lishment ol a multi-million dol· .!) Tlml...... on Cold Jar "radio city" in the lower east 1960 end will come before the execu- , C!l ~·lip •lortlns owltcb s7Q.oo live committee of city council Tt·iumqh Fttd \II loodwo>te .____ _ today. The agreement requires .. m 1 , , •. , ··:t .. ~cquire the land at an :8 I M Her~ld TOOTON'S unspecilled cost and cede it to w " 1 I ut for $2,i!Q,Q00 before at DISTRIBUTORS FOR KODAK IN NEWFOUNDlAND" C. A. HUBLEY LTD. ' March 1, 1963. The CBC must 8A Ibegin construction before :\larch FEIV McKINLAY ~' . . ' ~ . ..- . ' ----•K1ING'S ROAD •• , PH. 3916~-~~ jl, 1964, and finish by March I, • I 1974. ' ------\40TORS LT·D. --·------· DETROIT (AP) - Officials of Obituary :treatment. It was hoped that ing of a dear relative. the United Auto Workers Union LeMARCHANT ROAD this had been successful but · The remains were convev~~ were accused in a federal court PHONE 4193 .. 4 • 5 ~T.\S. ALLAN DAVIS further complications proved from St. John's to her h;m .. suit Wednesday of maintaining a HR. GRACE-News of the too much for her already weak· at Hr. Grace on Sunday e1•en virtual dictatorship, using union passing of one of this town's ened system and rest came to· ing by Undertak~n ~1. Par;n··• funds for political purposes and 'best known and most highly ~he sufferer on Sunday morn· and the many who called '• falsely recording the expenditure ·regarded residenls in the per· mg, June 26th, at the General extend sympathy as well «s t: of at least $10,000,000. The 14· son of Beatrice, wife of ~Jr. AI· Hospital. St. John's. :profusion of floral trih· , ' page suit, filed by two union · Jan Davis, was recrived at Har· Always cheerful and kindly testify to the esteem in \\":1:: members, named as defendants hour Grace on Sunday with this estimable lady won a host the late Mrs. Dal'is was hr > UAW president Waller Reuther. l'rry real regret. of friends by whom she will in this town. secretary · t r e a s u r e r Emil The dPceased was born in be sadly missed. The funeral took place f • Mazey and the international un· this town sixty-five years ago Left to mourn hrr passin~ her Water Street re.;i!lence n; ion. and was a daughter of the late arc her husband. Allan, and Tuesdav afternoon to t;,, :l!r. and ~Irs. Jeremiah Shep· ine sister, Hettie, :\Irs. Clinton· l'nited.Church where the h:r •I pard. The past winter had Pynn o f ~lrrkland, both of scn·icc was taken by Rei'. i FOR ALL YOUR heen srent by :llr. and ~Irs. whom were con>tantly at her Ilcmolds. Da1·is with relatil·es .at :\lark· bedside during the days of her · Goes a long way PAINTING SUPPLIES. land and during that time the illness. A sister-in.law, :\Irs. ThE' sincere sympathy of al: Contact · dtccased was stricken by ill·; Elizabeth Sheppard of Grand who knew her is extend~d tc when you Advertise In ness which necessitated her · Falls and several niecrs and the bereaved family in thci1 THE J~RDINE'S MacCORMAC'S 1 entering hospital for surgical ; nephewf also n:Jurn the pas,; hour of scrroll', I i .. ~·:'"' ' .. PAINT & HARDWARE Dial 5181 • 2 · 3 Dealers for GEAR STREET MATCHLESS­ RECEIVING OFFICE, SHERWIN-WILLIAMS 1 ADELAIDE STREET 8 & H. Dial 4846 BE 165 WATER ST. ------·------DEATHS PHONE 5567 Prompt Deliver/ DUFF - Passed peacefully Service. away July 6th Edward J. Duff jneB,lmth in his 76th year, leaving to . ~VISE mourn his wife, Elizabeth, six · ••• daughters, Mrs. William Kav- ' SEE CHESTER DAWE LTD. FIRST •••• anagh. 1\lrs. Albert Tobin, 1\lrs. ; Jack Vinicombe, l\lrs. Gordon FOR ALL YOUR BUILDING MATERIAL REQUIREMENTS. · jMurphy, lllrs. Andrew 1\lurphy

1 and l\Irs. Bernard Prowse; five WE CARRY ALWAYS A COMPLETE LINE Of sons, James, Val, Terry, Don I and Kevin, also one sister, STORM AND NOW Agnes, residing in Boston. Fun· ROOFING MATERIALS • • • • era! from his late residence, • SCREEN Oxen Pond Road, 9.00 a.m. AMPLE LOCAL and CEDAR CLAPBOARD DOORS Friday to St. Teresa's Church, • (Aluminum) I Mundy Pond, for 1\!ass of Re· e T and G. LUMBER LOTS OF PARKING SPACE quiem at 9.30 a.m. Interment FREE SPECIAL at 1\Iount Carmel Cemetery . .. ONLY jly7,8 PARKING e WALLBOARDS . JONES - Passed peacefully $43·95 away July 6th. 1960 at 1001 . PALINGS etc. Stamford St., Niagara falls, On· • GET YOUR , tario, Marion Irene Cook, be· : loved wife, Percy C. Jones, leav· QUANTITY OF EXTERIOR AND INTERIOR i ing to mourn one daughter, three sons, one sister, Mrs. SPECIAL PITTSBURGH PAINT Harry E. Long, three brothers, Reg. 8.65 per gal. NOW ...... $5.25 Gal. Charlie, Lloyd and Eric, all of 1 GENUINE GENERAL MO.TORS St. John's, Nf!d. Funeral Sat· . THIS WEEK ONLY urday at Niagara Falls. .1 Reg. $2.75 per quart NOW ...... $1.59 Quart

PARTS. AND A'CCESSORIES SPECIAL FINANCING AVAILABLE FOR EVERYTHING WE SELL TV REPAIRS e e REASONABLE RATES FROM US GUARANTEED WORK PHONE 94123 THE TERRA N.OVA MOTORS LTD. Electronic AT THE· REAR OF NEWFOUNDLAND HOTEL. Centre Ltd. 90 CAMPBELL AVE. After hours 'PHONE 7313

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