DaVince Tools Generated - Memorial University of...

16
Hold . -::ntton ... , ,. 0f hr I 011 CenturY ·:l I Bihle .l r •·. 3 p.m. ]I\ -- 0 ICe, RUN DOWN? . . 1410 pEOPLE BOUGHT USED CARS and TRUCKS FROM US LAST YEAR THE ·DAILY NEWS NEED A TONIC? 1 TAKE erra Nova Motors Ltd. Vol. 68. No. 65 THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., 20, HJGl ---,..--·· (Price 7 Cents) -- BRICK'S TASTELESS erwoerd Raps Diefenbaker For Stand On South Africa uth Rhodesian litical COUNTER Weather &in%. and cold. Hilh ............ 17 37 ................ 29 G ................ 20 37 ............. 17 3B John. ........ 14 38 .............. 11 38 .............. 23 38 Nfld. Skies MONDAY, MARCH 2t Sunset toda)' .. 11:13 p.m. SUnrise tomorrow .... 11:02 a.m. Todl)' at •...•• 11:02 p.m. SprlnJ beJins and Winter enda •• the Sun enter• tbe Sian of Arle•. Moouet . tonl1ht •••• 10:48 p.m. Fiut Quarter •. Marcb23 TIDES ............... 20 42 Hlgl: ............. II 31 10:03 a.m., 10:21 p.m. · ...... 28 31 Low 4:10 a.m., 4:26 p.m. the brighte1t planet, will continue to move amon1 the atau until late in April. (All time• Newfoundland Standard) Computed for Tile · DaJIJ New1, "- St. John'•· Newfoundllnd, • .lality L J'ruk, .. tal, Vermont. ' . Resume Tomorrow Afchaeologist Finds New Hoard Of Dead ·' \ Predicts Breakup Commonwealth Of LO\DO\ CP-l'ri11w 'di11islrr lfcudrik \'cr- 1 , \\ond. nmcpcnlanl apostle of while supremacv in South Alrit:a, \\'Ollll<lup a ltllllllltuDus ,·isit to Lm1don I Satnrdav night hy predicting that the Commonwealth . 1 rack up nnclcr prcssmcs I rom African and Asia11 I mem hers. At a press confPrencc· 011 the eve of his tleparturc , for home, Vennwrd also lashed out at Prime •er Dicfenhakcr for joining Afro-Asian leaders in I blasting South Africa at the Commmtwealth Prime , :\I inislcrs, cmderencc. Verworrd lu·ld fast to 1m Canada disrc:.:ardcd matters of rcasnno for lo pull common concern in helping to · :iouth Africa nul of the com· make. it unlcnahle for South · nwnwralth. lie said his country Afrit·a to remain in the com· was rarc.d wilh unac!'cp'ablc de· · mands In modify its polieies o[ "I look u1>nn the common r:«·c ion or f<lt'"- cxpul- ll'callh a1 hody of nations who sion from lhr. eomrnon1rcalth. untkrslanrl that while then art Altemali1-el 0 ·. he said. some rliffcrenccs. they can work to· Mro-.\si:m lr;nkrs lhrr;1lcnerl ;;ether on those thin;!s of com- In ttutl liH' commoml·callh I hem- mon ronccrn." llr said. scht•s unle" South Mrira lie said that when India tis way.<. plied for commonwealth mcm- •·f had to rclic1·c Rrilain or hcrship. South Africa for , lhal Verwoerrl its admission even though India I a"crtcd. Ile said he believed 1 had been attacking his country ' that Britain would he better! in the United Nations and had able to hold the commonwealth i placed a trade boycott on South ;ugclhcr without the "emhar-: Africa. rassing" presence of South Af- . AGREE ON SOME rica. South Africa's position !tAPS IHEI'ENR:\KI·:n that although there were l!'eat \'crwlJcrd. who has said he differences between the twe hopes his financial ancl drfencc ; countries, there were other mat with Britain will con·' ters 'on which they wert lr \in,Je after South Afri2a finally as their mu quits the commonwealth on he·· tual opposition to Communism coming a republic :\lay 31.: Similarly, South Africa had showed his only note temper supported the applications of in referring to Diclenhaker. . Ghana and Nigeria. Ghana t011 He rapped the Canadian had been attacking his country prime minister for "an imma·! hut South Africa took a ture ou!look" in siding with . "mature he said. critics of apartheid, and rleclar· "That's why I say Canada'• crl: · ; attitude on this occasion 11'11 "White South Africans do not i immature." nonwhites as ' "If you find a of na· nr inferior hut merrly as dif· lions which cannot work to· fcrcnt.'' . gether and forget their differ- Verwoerrl s<\irl Canada's alii-· ences then I think you are act· Iurie was immelurr because: in!!! like R child." . ---------------·-· Polish Cardinal Hits Back At Communists ENDS Sea Scrolls •' '' ' \ i <.' L !' I J 1

Transcript of DaVince Tools Generated - Memorial University of...

Page 1: DaVince Tools Generated - Memorial University of ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · you $18.00 (in 12,000 miles) l} 4,000 Miles be tween Oil Changes-Saves you

Hold .

-::ntton

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• 0 ICe,

RUN DOWN? . . 1410

pEOPLE BOUGHT USED

CARS and TRUCKS

FROM US LAST YEAR

THE ·DAILY NEWS NEED

A TONIC? 1

TAKE

erra Nova Motors Ltd. Vol. 68. No. 65 THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., ~IONDAY, ~IAHCII 20, HJGl

---,..--··

(Price 7 Cents)

--BRICK'S

TASTELESS

erwoerd Raps Diefenbaker For Stand On South Africa uth Rhodesian litical

COUNTER

Weather &in%. and cold. Hilh

............ 17 37 ................ 29 G ................ 20 37

............. 17 3B John. ........ 14 38

.............. 11 38 .............. 23 38

Nfld. Skies MONDAY, MARCH 2t

Sunset toda)' .. 11:13 p.m. SUnrise

tomorrow .... 11:02 a.m. Todl)' at •...•• 11:02 p.m. SprlnJ beJins and Winter enda •• the Sun enter• tbe Sian of Arle• . Moouet .

tonl1ht •••• 10:48 p.m. Fiut Quarter •. Marcb23

TIDES ............... 20 42 Hlgl: ............. II 31 10:03 a.m., 10:21 p.m.

· ...... 28 31 Low 4:10 a.m., 4:26 p.m.

the brighte1t planet, will continue to move amon1 the atau until late in April.

(All time• Newfoundland Standard) Computed for Tile · DaJIJ New1,

"- St. John'•· Newfoundllnd, • .lality L J'ruk, .. tal, Vermont.

' .

Resume Tomorrow

Afchaeologist Finds New Hoard Of Dead

·' \

Predicts Breakup Commonwealth Of

LO\DO\ CP-l'ri11w 'di11islrr lfcudrik \'cr-

1

, \\ond. nmcpcnlanl apostle of while supremacv in South Alrit:a, \\'Ollll<lup a ltllllllltuDus ,·isit to Lm1don

I Satnrdav night hy predicting that the Commonwealth .

1 ma~· rack up nnclcr prcssmcs I rom African and Asia11

I mem hers.

At a press confPrencc· 011 the eve of his tleparturc , for home, Vennwrd also lashed out at Prime ~linist­• er Dicfenhakcr for joining Afro-Asian leaders in I blasting South Africa at the Commmtwealth Prime , :\I inislcrs, cmderencc.

Verworrd lu·ld fast to 1m Canada disrc:.:ardcd matters of rcasnno for dc!'idin~ lo pull common concern in helping to

· :iouth Africa nul of the com· make. it unlcnahle for South · nwnwralth. lie said his country Afrit·a to remain in the com·

was rarc.d wilh unac!'cp'ablc de· r~;onwcallh. · mands In modify its polieies o[ "I look u1>nn the common

r:«·c se~rc~al ion or f<lt'"- cxpul- ll'callh a1 ~ hody of nations who sion from lhr. eomrnon1rcalth. untkrslanrl that while then art

Altemali1-el 0·. he said. some rliffcrenccs. they can work to· Mro-.\si:m lr;nkrs lhrr;1lcnerl ;;ether on those thin;!s of com­In ttutl liH' commoml·callh I hem- mon ronccrn." llr said. scht•s unle" South Mrira lie said that when India ~P· <"han~cd tis way.<. plied for commonwealth mcm-

•·f had to rclic1·c Rrilain or hcrship. South Africa ~oted for , lhal cmlxtrras~ment." Verwoerrl its admission even though India I a"crtcd. Ile said he believed 1 had been attacking his country ' that Britain would he better! in the United Nations and had

able to hold the commonwealth i placed a trade boycott on South ;ugclhcr without the "emhar-: Africa. rassing" presence of South Af- . AGREE ON SOME THIN~ rica. South Africa's position y,·a~ !tAPS IHEI'ENR:\KI·:n that although there were l!'eat

\'crwlJcrd. who has said he differences between the twe hopes his financial ancl drfencc ; countries, there were other mat relation~ with Britain will con·' ters 'on which they wert lr \in,Je after South Afri2a finally a~reemcnt-such as their mu quits the commonwealth on he·· tual opposition to Communism coming a republic :\lay 31.: Similarly, South Africa had showed his only note n£ temper supported the applications of in referring to Diclenhaker. . Ghana and Nigeria. Ghana t011

He rapped the Canadian had been attacking his country prime minister for "an imma·! hut South Africa took a ture ou!look" in siding with . "mature ~iew," he said. critics of apartheid, and rleclar· ~ "That's why I say Canada'• crl: · ; attitude on this occasion 11'11

"White South Africans do not i immature." r~gard nonwhites as ~uhhuman ' "If you find a J~roup of na· nr inferior hut merrly as dif· lions which cannot work to· fcrcnt.'' . gether and forget their differ-

Verwoerrl s<\irl Canada's alii-· ences then I think you are act· Iurie was immelurr because: in!!! like R child."

. ---------------·-·

Polish Cardinal Hits Back At Communists

ENDS

Sea Scrolls

•'

''

' \ i

--~~ <.'

L !'

I J

1

Page 2: DaVince Tools Generated - Memorial University of ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · you $18.00 (in 12,000 miles) l} 4,000 Miles be tween Oil Changes-Saves you

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THE D:\TLY i\'EWS, ST. JOH\"'S, XFLD \10:'\DAY. \IAHr:n 2o,

Street Lighting ·l'o be Improved

~,,._ iHir.r· •

-~ ... ~ ~~~~ part 111 !his in!{' ,._., '!·1 1 r' '., ., ,\ 'lly )'I~ S 011 ., • ""·~ 1 J,Od I • l'arned I hal 'I ...

. - \ l!'~l' .. , !lllN•r.-;t IJJO 11 ' ·

"• )!ElL ISL.ND (Std!)-Tho •

• - 11n~, h II ~IJ:,n'l B11 , . ('I •h

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~~ lighting system in the town of Wabana is to be lm·

-=~.::ec~l.by the Wabana Town 4 Members Happy Home !Entered Hospital Ferry Service i Here at the Wabana Boys rlrtrd by Boys Club memhm

An intense sleet storm in Get Honorary LOL Scholarships BELL ISLAND (Staff) - Breaks Down Club we ha\'e been plc<Fcd to. and pa>.s~d IIllO our offlre. -~·llla.reh 1958. totally destroyed welcome a number of parents [ ThJIJogh tlw genNosity and in· • 'the 180-odd light system. Since Certificates Awarded Kevin, 8-year-old son of Mr. and of members. These people ore . teres! of Readers Digest Assoc·

that time only 31 lights have Mrs .. Walter_ Hawco, was ente~- BELL ISLAND (Staff) _A. no doubt interested in tlwir 'iation (Canada! Ltd. members. bten replaced. -- ed m hospttal at St. .Johns b k l'nder head Tuesday children and wanted to st·e·i of g.,,.s Clubs across Canada,

! .. •,This inadequate number is to BELL ISLAND (Staff) - Tuesdav, for medical treatment. ro e~ 1~Y 1 f J 1 G · to where they spent ihcir leiourc. can p;rtiripate in a E""'' con

omn P!\ss THAT BP,P.Gi11tl

;, be· increased to 120. BELL ISLAND (Staff) Three Scholarships of $50. each . c~use - .1e erry · 0 1n uy hours. We are alwa,_·s !JieasPd test. Thl'rc are valuable Schol· h t f · t 'ning d X dtseontlnu~ operatmg.

· ,T e cos 0 mam 81 George E. Normore, Ernest Hill· were awarded to Gra e stu- !llemorial; Miss Shirley Gosse, I It is experted to have repairs to welcome parents and any, arship prizes and lo the two In l 'lilt 1: 1~'1\1 \tr• 't

I f 1\\ .f ''"'I. I !I I -1'-·:, I

street lighting is ~0. per light gins. Thomas Rose and Gideon den's to each of the Protestant 1 Salvation Arm•· and Clyde Hig- 1 1 d . h 1 1. adults who want to see what ultim:1te nat1onal 1\'IIIIH'rs the r S h 1 · h 't b J comp e e m a s or rmc. or one year. . J. Robbins have been awarded c oo s m t e commum y, Y I gins, st. Bonifice Regional goes on inside the Boys Club prinl··~e of parllcipatlllg in the

•. · In th~ pa~t v~ndellsm has! honorary membership certifi- "Happy Home" Loyal Orange High, walls. We have noted that those offic1:>1 opening of thr Headers ·.lte~n:. btg factor m the cost of 1 cat~s for long and distinguished Lodge. I who 1·isitcd the rlub for tlw ));c·r·:-' lluilding 111 :lloutrl'ai 111

Y. X l 'i. '~I. X !. xx..: i

X y xxx '1.1.1

·mamtenance. I sen,ice to Happy Home L.O.L. "Happy Home" Lodge has Certificates were also pre· In Hospital (irs\ time were amazed at the, the spring of this year. Bo;·, • .;,;;;.,;;.,;;;,;...;;.;..;.. ______ ., . Lodge. donated these Scholarship sen ted. amount of activity taking pJa,·c•' can >ci<'rt their suhject from

Xf./1 I X I 'j. :'I./ /

· r / awards to children of Orange and the 1·aried programme.1

: tlw fnl!mnng list nf topirs: ' 'I'AKS A TIP-TaT . The presentatt'ons were made t d' h h 1 d The presentations were made [ 0 1 1 1 men at en m~ t e sc oo s an , nee ac u ts 1a,·e seen what I. :.!\' ;·uture. .; -~®~'ifi@~ :during the I.odge social even- who merit the award for the Vb~: !the ~mmedi~e Past Master, BELL ISLAND (Staff}-:O.Jrs. • goes on inside a Boys Cluh. if· 2 ,.;1nada nllll'--lt> tulurr

1 . • -I , '

. U @/ U ~Q 'Iff ' in~ past 1~ years. IC or ammon · i Nkholas Shea who was airlifted 'I they were once r:ritkal .thry · :l. \;,;· Bo~·s' r·~1h. · lJl 1 ~obert Jarvis another mem-1 The 3 successful canididates The awards are designed as: to hospital hy hellcoptcr. car- arc wheal, no more: -1. lnr• \\orld and me.

ct~·'~!::~ stl~~· her to receive the award was j'for the 1960 June exams are: an incentive for students to I her this week, is reported to be j By ~larch 31st. we hoiH' to 1 ll'r hclir1·r· that a 1111mL•·r ,f •~ .... tiO:l·2-'BOJ not present at the social. Thomas Strickland, Jackson proceed to Grade XI. ! showing improvement. havr a number of essays l'Oill·' our mr•mtwrs will '':ant to tak" I

L-~~~~=~-~ ---- ---- ___ .. _____ .. _____ . ___ , ---· ---·~ -·----~-- ----- ·--

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Look how much you save 'with the

can save you as much as $75!2 •

on operating costs alone! Some car ••• some saving! And beneath that Classic Ford Look there's Ford's unsurpassed quality and value, plus genuine economy and depend­ability from Ford's famoua Mileage Maker Six! You get every one of the Carefree Features, liated below, and a Dealer's written warranty for 12 months or 12,000 milea, whichever comes first.

See the '61 Ford Six at your nearest Ford-Monarch-Falcon dealer. Here's proof of the real savings and the extra motoring pleasure you'll get in an average year's driving of 12,000 miles with a Carefree Ford:

l} 30,000 m~les between Chassis Lubrications-Saves you $18.00 (in 12,000 miles) l} 4,000 Miles be­tween Oil Changes-Saves you $6.60 l} Self-Ad­iusting Brakes~Saves you $4.00 .1}. Aluminized Muffler lasts three times as long-Saves you $18.70 l} Diamond Lustre Finish never needs waxing-Saves you $23.00 l} Automatic Transmission, 'throttle linkage adiustment only-Sa~es you $5.10

Falcon sales and economy leader in t~e compact field! Falcon changes every idea you've ever had about Compacts! Here's a perfect blend of styling, economy, power and handling ease, plus many money-saving features.

Falcon, with sturdy, single-unit construction, gives you room for 6 big people ••• brings you a vacation-size trunk almost 24 cu. ft. big! And Falcon has the highest resale value at trade-in time.

But check the facts yourself-Here's proof no other compact measures up to the '61 Falcon:

l} Up to $710 less than sc1me other l} 4,000 miles between oil changes

compacts Up to 35

miles per gallon on regular gas h}- Diamond Lustre Finish never needs waxing h}- 12-month or 12,000-mile warranty, whichever comes first h}- Bolt~on

front fenders for low-cost replac·ement ;:} Choice of Standard Six or more powerful170 Special (both run on regular gas)

Come in and see the white Economy Twins now!

Get: the full ~conomy .story I I. find out the big savings you can make!

.• • ·r

·'

CEO. G. R. PARSONS, LIMITED I

ELIZABETH A VENUE

' . r·· .t

PHONE 9-1011

Net Alarm, Ex ere

h. \1 punng t IS .

·n" carne · bCI ~ sase, Tot

of 1

rcadincs Guards at val

rhcl'klng and a but th<

for ala

Lal O:mstj Agre Is Rj

,\rt!1ur Bish -133 G

[nion at Gra of LUI

Ltd .. cone Grand Fall

a satisfa reached.

talks

hirin~ of 1

two 1J1 laid off.

11 i! cxpectr resumed v men will ·

Trair He I

Plan1 Next

repairs, month.

Actual da dedded o LawrencE condition Plant sa

Page 3: DaVince Tools Generated - Memorial University of ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · you $18.00 (in 12,000 miles) l} 4,000 Miles be tween Oil Changes-Saves you

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ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLANt The Daily· News l(ftUftUU«n:O~

Need For 1 Baby Dies; .. i .

R·CAf 1 Pneumonia l • • Exerc1s1ng

To Visit .City $9,000. S·.o Far­

Red Cross!

Drama Festival

An autopsy has revealed that 1

: a three month old boy, Kevin j _ · :11, werk an exercise , Lake, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jos.

: , .1l'fll'd out at the Lake of Empire Avenue, died: . !~ .. -• l't•rhay. Tlu. IS for' fro.n pneumonia.

:· ...... o~ tl·stin::: the oper- The rhild had died in his car- • · ...• '·"''·" of the station.' riage last week and, as is usual

.: '.mous points will in all cases of sudden death, an · ~11 personnd. autopsy was ordered .

.~!arm~ may hr ·r:•·:·r will he no :1 :.n·m £~r t'OIH:t~rn .

• • ,111 f'X<'rdsr, says ,.: 1hr hasr.

l.ll /Jour-

~ (i rccmen t .......

Is !<cached

Plant Opens Next Month

Convocation fneeting, MUN·

about 150 Memorial University students made a special· canvass of businessmen in St. John'~ donations to Memorial University National Fuud. One of the businessmen who was calle<~

Was Gordon Elton of the Royal Garage. Rod Stevenson, a third yJar Science student who is also ~lemorial," received the donation from Mr. Elton. Shown are (1-r) Dou~las Elton, Gordo!'

. Who is passing his cheq';lt to c~~:nvasst:r Stevens9n, William Elton and Eric Larkin. The donation ln the amount o~ $l,()()(J.-4200 now and the balance over a five year period.-(Royal Photo Ser-

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A seal-spotting plane from Gander described the Ruo'Sian sealing vessel as "a type of ice- 'I

breaker with two helicopters aboard." It was believed to be the first time a Russian ship was engaged in sl'alin~: at the front.

· The size of the hrrd was not ; determined hut the ~111'\'e)' :

plane said the Arrlic Eagle had , struck a corner of lhr henl and was making a good kill.

About 30 milrs away the AI· : ;:crine, Finhack and Arctie

: Prowler were stcainin~ toward I -· . ! the area to share in the kill. i

I

i Wrong Number SYDNEY (CP) - A tele­

phone operator here ca~led 1

ottaw~·s Chateau Laurier hotel • 1 during the Progressive Conser· 1

vative rally over the weekend and asked for Nova Scotia Pre· mier Robert L. Stanfield.

The hotel operator appeared to be having difficulty on the

:line. I "The premier of N o v a

I. Scotia," repeated the Sydney operator. I Ten minutes passed. Then

, the switchboard operator re· l plied:

Premier Smallwood of New : foundlanrl is not registered for ' this meeting." i

I ",\~·! neither were any othc. : Libc.aJs. l

MONDAY, MARCH 20, 1961 :· ''

Visits District

THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL MISSES' 'N' WOMEN'S SIZES IN

SMART SLACKS e SLIM STYLES - TAPERED lEGS.

e SIDE ZIPPER - USUAL POCKETS.

• NOVELTY PRINT 'N' STRIPED CORDUROYS.

• lEX-MADE SANFORIZED COTTONS SLACKS. ·

e WOOL 'N' RAYON BLEND PLAID SLACKS.

.75

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Page 4: DaVince Tools Generated - Memorial University of ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · you $18.00 (in 12,000 miles) l} 4,000 Miles be tween Oil Changes-Saves you

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Newfouncl,ancPs Gnly Morning Paper Thp D·~J-l lj.WS Is t morni11~ Pill~~

esta~Uati,d · In 1B9t. ~~~ "~~~~!d I~ the. News Building. 355-3~9 Duckworth

. SP'~~t. &t. John's, !itWflll:l_ 9!\!1!1~· llJ · . Robinaop lc CoJI!p&ll~. f.lllli~.

: ' . ' . .

TEABL\' !iUJJSCRIPTION R-\TES

Canada .................... $12.00 per annum

United Kinadom ~nd all foreillll countries .. $14.00 per annum

Authorized as 1econd clll~ l!lall, POL!SI Office Department, Ottawa.

MEM1Jft ~ TUE C.AN-\,1,\IIi .. ,~

The canadian Prm !J ll!FilWV'1~ entitled to the usc f9r ~':l~li~•li9A ~ 1ll news despatehe• lq t~j~ ~~~r:r Fffgi~· l'd to it or to the <\nll!!i'~~9 Pit~! Pf Reuters and also tb' !~cal ~eJ¥S Plllllis~· ed therein. . All Press ~ervice~ ~~~~ ft~t~r~ ~rtlc!".

m th1s ~P!Ir ~re copy~ipt~d !~~ ~b~tr rcproductioo 11 probi~ite~.

• Member <\'!~it ~~r~•~

of Circ~l~tio~.

.. ,·.~ ......... ::a ........... s ..

MONDAY. MARCH 20, 1961 .

Signs of a re\·h·al of interest in the fishery in the Grand Bank area has prompted our correspondent in that south coast town to take a nos­tal_gic look to the Yanished days of the oldtime bank fish!'lry and thE: "eaplains courageous'' who manned the fleet.

Grand B;:mk \\'as one of the great centres of lhis branch pf the fish~ er~·. at one lime ~ending as manr as 26 \'es~els on the annual \'oyagc. Bunn. Fortune, Belleoram, lVlarys­town. English Harbour. Harbour Breton .. Terse\' Harbour and Ramca '\'ere other n1ajor OUtfitting ports. And earlier in this century north­ern ports such as Catal.ina and Trinity also ventured on this only deep sea fishing operation then pro~ecuted b~· Newfoundlanders.

The larger \'essels carried from ten to tweh·e dories, each m:)nned b~· two men. Most of the South Coast crews and the bait they used came from Fortune Bay and it has been the decline of banking and of the herrin_g fishery that has made this one of the most. distressed areas in the pro\'ince today.

The fleet usually sailed on the first "baiting'' of the season early in March, making for the stormy western banks where men put out from their mother ships to toss about in rough seas and freezing weather while they baited their thousands of hooks and set out their long trawl Jines, handling the complicated coils of hundreds of

..... ... . . -.. .. ..._,_ ....... -. .. s ...... -----

fathoms of line \Yit~ P,n in~r@rtiP\t: skill. When fish were runniPR ~~~Y wquld toil inces~C\ntly f~r m,~ny d<jys, thinking nqthjpg qf sl~!!P \Vhile there . was sliil fi~h tp b~ ~apght and split ilng ~l~eP. ~~1~ stowed down. ·

The spring ca1ch \~'CIS 4S4~llV driad in good timt: to bf! ~~P'lne~ to Portugal· by the v~ry early S\1111· met· and hundred~ of wr@ep t~il~d on the be11ches of Grand Bank and the flakes at other centres to spread the fish and protect it ~gainst changes of weather. ·

The hank fisherv had its effect upon the trade of St. John's and gave it its first lift in ea\!h new yeqr as the owners of the fle!!t came tp buy their supplies. rvrore th~m 190 vessels and up to 2,000 m~n had to be equipped and busjress was qrisk as the simple requirements of ~he dav were bought and shipped.

Portugal still operates a dory fishery, using one-man dories, but for the most part the deep sea fish­ery has been converted entirely to the use of draggers and trawlers in which the per capita output is high and men not only have much bet­fer and safer w'orking conditjons but also much shorter periods at sea. The sailing ships of the past were surrounded by ~ romqntic aura but they and their dories rep-· resented toil that was both prduous and dangerous and over the long run proved costly in human life. They belonged to a very different age.

Valuable APEC Report A committee of APEC has

produced a \'aluable report on the recommendations and findings of numerous Ro_yal Commissions which have considered financial and· et:onomic conditions in the Maritimes between 1926 and 1960. This report includes a bt,ief but useful re\'iew of the historv of the negotiations leading up to 'confed­er~tion.

l'his volume is first of all a major cohtribution to the historical and reference bibliography of the Mari­tittte Provinces. It has. of course, no specific reference to Newfoundland which, with the solitary ex~jiptio~1 of the Gordon Commission, was npt involyed in the vari{!US subjects of inquiry with which so many Royal Commissions have been concerned in the period under review. Sop1e of these maners were, in any event. retaJ~ to specific segments of t\le economy of the ¥e~ritimes such as Nova Scotia's coal and apple indus­tri~.

'! ·'

But we ha\'e in this pro,·ince a considerable interest in the bat::;;­ground to Confederation, the prom­ises that were made line! the m~n­net· in which they were kept, 1.he general effect of union on the Maritime economy, t~!l improve­ments that hav~ bej!n map~ in fis­cal and other arrangements since union, and some important prin­ciples which wer~ set fqr'th fr~w time to time in such signi~icant :re­port6 as that of the Rowell-Sirpis Commission.

Tlje full story has been most suc­cinctly <~nd l"Hciqly told by tne APEC cprnmittee which wqrl!:~f{ unP.e:r the direction of Mr. :tlpm~ Zwicker and received much useful assistance from the Dalhousie In­stitute of Public Affairs. It has now q!l~~ s4ppl~me~ted by the stud~ of eCPflqniic deve1qJ:1ment in the Atla~­tic Provine's which was made very recently by Prof~ssor A. K. Cairn~ cross and published by the .f\tl~~Hc Prov\l}c,s Researc\1 Boanl. ./

Light In Th, Wipdow

. ~~--~~ .•. 1 ' .. ' . ~d.-" .. ~~'·' . '

ElJUCA'ftpNAL STANDARDS ~QUAL

ONJ.\' TO TiiE TEACHERS

~~jtgr {l~ily ~FWS• .

ll~~r §ir-We ~m b~cn h~i_rin~. once UliM: lj1\\CP ~\l!l4~ e~\lc~PQil· The m~~ W~ w' bm t~ ~ece~t _Plle4ucat-'~ ll!l~il~ iP.~!I !h~ \fPt"\!l ~pday ~~. b~causc ~m i~ ~HJliC~hl!l~ Wflllli ~lth the t~JFk~r~. "j>ithef t!le~ ~~~·~ not been \fiill~d i!Htp~fiY !lf ~*~l~~ 1!1 l~f!lr own iF!I~t:m:~ ~!lllf~~ tp sp~k 'W \llt: ~nowl· ·~P tlwr w~re S\Jiljlq~~d tQ_ ~~qturc \!1 \leFft!Jic ~~~ej1prs. W~ W!>h that tcg~\1Cfs •~RHid ~llt~.~ P!P.ll~r!~· t~em· ~~!!fS ~!1 tl!fl' q~q!d lffil!Df~ i hiHf cia· C\1\iRn t11 th~ir Wftf~· H ~~~IJlS that ~f~ffi~\~F *11~ ~!llllfq>ii\Rtl ~f~ 11~! too wall ~llPWII tq !l1P~t te~~~~fi !11 {,rad~ ~ · i1111 ~~- ~i'PP s!Jm~ F~!l~m who \lar~ ~~~~ ~ l'C~f ljt ~hlirefo!ll' ~Vm not cprmtpjl ill tlteir miJlnlar ~ljd still ~F!IIf lite ms 'Ill~ tl~ms pf ~HI!!Is whp h~4 ~~~~ time in ~FIWPI Jlpt rr.s:~tnd a ffiliF~ bf\t!!f ~fp~tfl~ill~ ijl ~pi,lish . T~§~ln:rs m mnv ~~~bl~ P~i~ iH1~ we ~hpqljl ~F ~xp.~~\ing !II~ IIIHIP.§~~ in re· ,,t1\~.

PtHill& t!l'~U\V~H· Qf Wfit:&Tl-11'\G ~"~A~ nHvtstpr,

S!!jt(lr p~i!y 11! pw~: fl41~f !iir-l-'1~~~\ISe lh~ ~~fmFs hm

~!lfll\'f~ ~m~Jiilli to g~t qut of ha1:d. it i' high ti!ll!! il was fC!llO\'~~ [fO!J1 the ~i~ht of telc\'ision audil'llccs. Such un· ~p~r!smap·lj~e wrestlers as Roge~s should he barred from wrestling. Ills unpfn'·okJ!d a(l~ck on Flannigan in th~ J~st Wf~~tlj!\~ SjlO\ffl ~~~fe is an iudica· lion of the l<iw calibre of wrcstlin~ now. 4 . ~e~l referee would have ~isq1ialified Rogers. After all. there must be some rules cren in professional wrestling-. If the re~fercc is too stupid then the fans spRjlld (akc ov~r and kick such clmac· ters ~~ ~()~crs out of the ring. Th~ CBC bills wrestling as "The wprld of sporV' Down here we think ~port means fair play. What is wrong with the CBC. Tpronto referees and the Toronto sport fans. If \here is no prolfst from the )~cal t~]erisiQn (\Ver WfCStliJlg the(1 the J'!e\Yfoundl~pd firm 11nderwritin~ thf advertisi~g should withdraw. When wrestling came to television audiences here first it was one of the most p~pu­lar s!tows but now it has oniy a small viewing audience because of such poor referl!eing as displayed Thursday night. Let liS take wrcs11ing off the local view· ing picture just to show Toronto wrest­li~g au~ience that we are not in fayo4r of poor sportsmanship, We \lt\nt to sec wrestling h~ndled as an)' other spnrt­wjth pen<jltics for those who brealt the rules.

EX·WRESTqNG FAN.

:'\11;1:4;1 ~~; I'E:'< p,~J,

f:r!ilor Daily News. Dear Si,r-1 would be rrr)' grateful

if YOll can kindly publis\1 111)' pame in your paper to other pen friends in Your country. I am wrilin.g this 't'rttcr .as 1 wish to make friends with some of your c11untn· pl'oplc: that is. I wish ~·ou can iptrp,ducc nir to some who have the s~nw idea with me: and desire to .learn ~t1ot1t the Way of li'\,'(ng' an~ .in ~n)' ot~er. t~in~s ~hou\ r\'jgeria. 'lnd I ~m a J\!ntl1r t~~cher !1pre. ! am I~ rears old· and a western by birth. I am the Garnes ~~~5\er 9f 11\Y school. J.ly hobbies arc J!1~jc, photography and reading.

I think underst~!lding ~~ch otjter is tllf lljOSt U$efU1 ~~d P,OWC!'(!\\ 111pthod of ~stablishiqg the peace of the world ~~~- promote -rel~~ionship b~t\Veen Ni­ger!~ fnp Y9.4_r co~Jltry ~!I~ ~er~~~~ cor­respondence 1s one of the best ways to ~~rry ~P,is ~~~t.

.1 wish th~ eqitor b~st of )!lc~ ~!Jd !u~ _c11-wor~.t~rs. J\me~. ~ ~~all be ~x· pect1nf t~e J~~~l ~ap~r ill w~ifh my nl!_me IS pu bhshed and your reply ~ir in due cpnrse. ·

l ~~vt *e hono11r to be si~,

· YQ\IfS trqly,

Editor Daily News, Dear Sir: Of all the big talk that IS

gpin:; 011 today on both radio an~ t~le· rision about ou.. unernph1Yment nql much seems to be do!Je ahout it. It is like tiJc old slogan, "cverfOJl!l talks ab~ut the weather hut no on~ do~li ~n~· u1ing alJout it." Where the rcijl trqt!bl~ l'es no one s~cms to he lool<ing in ~he right direction. El'cn when ~pbs arc plentiful there is' a lot of Otlf p~pp,lp still walking the streets through rJP f~ult of their own. It is through. t11c f~ull of the people in dtargc of the ~~~vern· menl. who don't seem to do ~nrlhinc to ~how the a~c worker a square deal. Some ·people have gope three yc~rs

without work. The greatest barrier in the unemploy

me11t todar is. the age limit and also the cdqcation. A person can't be hired if he is over forty-fi1·c and if his school grade is too low he is out of luck. These arc two great wrongs done to our work­ing cjass. ~s I will point out in this letLer to the public and I'm sure they will agree with me. When a worker passes forty-five he is left out in th~ cold and this man or woman could haw th~ greatest skill and experience to tal·kle the parlieular .ioh and do il hetlcr than most youl)gcr prople. Pro1·iding the person from for:y:fire to sel'enlY· fiye is in good physical conclilwn and i~ exp~rirnced and rlrpcndahlr the agr and education shouldn't count.

I ha1·e good proo[ of this for I have worked side by ~ide with mrn who worked at the age of se1·enty-fi1'c and older. on the American hascs in Mid. When the hascs, started the Uniled Slates Gorrrnment sent 1rorkcrs here who wt•rr of all ages, for a~e didn't make a big difference. The American 1:01-crn· ment found in these people the greatest of experience and tradesmanship and they rcall)· did a great joh. Som~ nf them were not able to sign their name on thrir work check hut they were heal')'· duty mechanics, electricians. steam-fit­ters. etc .. ele.

So this prores that it is not the age or \he education that makes a good worker that counts and let us not forgl't that experience is the best teacher. A man must spend a long period of time to hl'· come an expert.

This is a good lesson for our Canadian employers to follow. While I was work­ing on the base at Harmon Field, one of the American hcary duly mechanics celebrated his sel'enty-eighth birthday. On this day he took part in insta!lin;( and remol'ing- two truck motors. One month from that day his contract j!nflfd and he was about to sign for another one but a letter from his claugh!er. back in ~linnosota, asked him to rome home. lie ~howrd mr this letter and I thou~ht it was a really touching arll'ire frotn his dau,::hter. She said to him, "Cpmc home: daddy. you are sel'enty-cight and I t~jnk it is timr fur you to take a rest." Sur~. it is m~n like this and way youn~:~r ones I '"t our hiring companies ar1: kicking cui in the cold on aceount of their a;:!' and low edncat inn.

As [ar as rtlucation ~IH'S a worker could only want enough In sign his check for this is all that is ri'I(Uircd of m~cha\1· ic~ in reganl to it. Yes. the poor wqrk· er is really ge1\ing kiekrd armunl in thi!-. old world of ours. If he is too old lw is not hired and if he has no rducalion the same thing happens. I wonder what t]1ey arc going to do wilh this class of p~ople who hare twenty years (rom the time he is forty-fil'e to when he is sixty· five and gets the old age assistance. I think it is now time for the fedcr~l gol'· crnment to do something fpr tljcsc peo· pic. They should he pcilsioncd oii if not hired lo work on account of their age. There arc a lot of people in this same bn~t today rowing hard againsl the ct1rrent and making nu headway.

It is a sad thing to be poor. It is lillr in the words of Abraham' pncr)ln. "God must have loved the po~r people, he made so many of them." Well then God must lo1·e the unemployed for he sttr~ made ~ lot P,f thcJn.

.JACK DqpD. St. John's ~~st

• ~ '· .................... ---~~~~- .. --

il_trength g~r flfd(l'

EDSON • lfl

SEW 'f,\X PROGJ{All'S E:'\Ol'Gll

TO TAX ,\NYO:'<OE'S 1:\GE:'<Ol'lTY

WASHING1~0 RcvistOn of deprrrlalt•,:: :oii ·

~~hcdule:;. There are no final dem1•.or ... on a~:

' SoCJl '·-- (

.Geor •venu~. ~e ttie enil!~m stella Jrenl'

.· yr . and }(rl l AibaOY Flac . 8000unced be . ___:.-

Ft~STl Davie~

..• ctera:a)· to he"

to the use · another orl

the St. A will hold

meetini: toe in the Clmrc

1re asked to I · will he

fly PETER EDSO:-.: those. yrl.

The whole tax pro~rarn :, •:nde: :\1·:.\ washington Con csponclcnt

\\'ASlllMiTOi-<-!NE:\l - President Kennedy's tax program i' now set for unveilin" 1Iarch 27\h, follr days alter his nH!S~"lgc rcd~in~ next year's bu~gct goes. to Con~rcss under the rcvl~Pd

retarv of toe Trea~ury f.'. llr; 1:!'; Ion .• His specia!i;ts are .\'''·':,t;t tqry Stanley S. Surrey. forn:n H. · Law professor and lhe JW'I" t:r•:l ' er of internal revenue. :.lnrtimer C~Rlin.

,chcdule. This is about three wc<·ks later than

ori·cinally int<'ndcd. The delay is clue cnl.ireh to inability to work out all the compl~x problems im·olred in so shorl a

time. !'resent thinkin;: is that there may

h<JI"C to he two tax mc.ssa;~es. The first would co\'el' shorl-range ehanges which could he enacted by June, so as to apply 10 ~ol'crnment operations in fiscal 1962.

Thl'll ;I long ahout April. aft~r the _last lRiil ;md the first 1n62 laX collccltons hare been counlcd. there eould be a sec· oi;ct message on hong-ratt·.2c tax reforms This could probably nol he enacted be· [ol'l' Ia,xt year.

Also. by Apnl it should be app:~rent 1rhelhcr lhc htbine's n'cO\'!~ry will havP. henun or 11 twlhcr there .nil be conlln· ned high um·tnpluyment. Either wa\ · both ·lbc lllllg and shorl-rJnge tax pro· grams could l>e affected. .

li uncnlploymcnt ronllli'WS ht~h. pressure will -incrc:N· [or a h'mporary smp,•nsion of 11 llhhold1n;; taxes on Ill·

cotpe. J.allor union rt•onomtst:; ha\C bc~,j1 pnshin:' tl1is as ~ means of g1nng people more monr)' to 'Jl' nd. thus g~m;g busine;s a boost.

This id<-,a has not !JCt'll entirely ruled out. The· diffieulty with it is thai by the time it could be appro\"ecl hy Con· gress au! I put into l'ffcc:. the rcC2SSIOll mi"ht be n1·er.

<1n a lon~·ran~e h~1::--i:-. ;1 tlworctical way around I he ohjecl i·lll mi~hl he lo gii'C the p1:csident aulhorily to sus~eud pa)Toll tax reductions whenenr un· employment reaches, :oay. 7 per cent. \Yithholtling taxes would then be re· ,;mnecl automatically wl:cn unemploy­ment dropped to. sa~·-· 5 per cpnt. Ilqt this whole idra is not now considered politically realistic.

The same criticism applies to propos~ls bv Committee for Economic Develop· · n;ent and qther businc>s groups Ia re· ducc the high tax rates on upper in· come brackets. This is offeree! as an in­ccntil'e to husinc:;smcn to invest IT!orc money ip new enterprises i1~stcad. of m· to lax-exempt securities qr 111 tr:rm~ to. evade taxes.

But the general fcel111g !lO\V is that there c~;l he no sp~ciqi ·\i!X ~uls of tl)js kind. II anr redtictions are mad~. \hey must be acr'os~ th~ board, bcn~filtjn~ all \:jXp<Jyers. Als\1. Prcsi~·cnt JiP!lll~dr has indic~\cd tax cuts arc not feasiblp n~w.

This dqcs not rule o4t revisions ip sfll!l!ial i~x rates which wilJ end ~a:< a\jusps. The prq]>lcm here ts t9 q~fme

· ahuscs. Tax loopholes mar )le infe:l· til'cs to one grou·p· · o[ tnxpayers. )lui abuses lp qther taxpayers whp ~qn'l han· them. Th~ o)Jjcctive set fpr llp\h \qng ~n~

shorl-lpflll tax Pl'P,grat!IS is 40t Ws\ ~~­cplp·nti~g ajtlir~cpssiP!' JI1c~s~r!!S. ~l!t ~~i\vcly. s\ill)4latjng eco,1:ct11jc ~rqwt~, · Allq ~Yh~tper loss of r~\'~114~ \h~ j!p~· prgljl~!l! !l''IY incur br a~it:~~ll1!!n\s t~. lHftne~ 11\is !lbj~~H~c w\11 n~ve to \le 11'\liH!! up by ~lqsing \<JP~l]P.I~~ thro4gh 'VIJ\ch P.O.t~l\tial t~¥ fPllefHR\1s ~r~ llq\¥ qsfl\Pill~· ·

'f~~sl! ~re ~om~ ?~ tlW prP.mllls flO~ ~~iJ1g ~qnsid~rcd:

Wi\qll!l\Pi!lg taxes ~r ill~~~~st JG~ divi4Pll~ p~ymen\5 ·

Tighlft cpntrol over cx11ense ~cc~~nts. ~~HqiHF~tion of lhr pr~s~llt d,iviqen~

tq* m~1t. Elimination of foreign "tax hav.ens".

But the new chairman 111 lllc dent's council of econonilC Prof. \\'alier W. Heller of l·n,rer;it; mnnesota. and others arc i economic background.

-------·-

Auld Lang Syne I From the Files of till' ll:oll:- ~ew

~larch 20, 1931.

THE \'IKI:\1~

, All hut six of lhc \':kine·· ha1·c now been taken on b:oard · sa "on a. Dr. ~loores 1 1 ,Jtrd '\1 :•.e it;~d men on the Hor;e J,lanri : dar and rndc a romplctc rqM:_ ,f ;~! snn·il'ors to the )linistcr of ~l:.rme lr.' Fisherie>. The only rlond nM:. from the loss of men. is tlla< the ing ice mar force the ~"~""·1 1" · the Island. ~rcn if the "' n;~t:rd tm n>cmhers must n·nwin on 'rc u

mora::"iE HEI I'' Thr S.S. Imo;:ene ha< r' • r:ci tr;:

.'he i> at llor>c Isl:md an•! i··' ! · ·

the doctor alright. while tl1• 1''"1 ·: tion is fair!~· ~ood. hut ~hr r-.,,. ;:tli lar.i morP prol'isi()ns >afely.

SA .\I'P.Q!:"i'DIDT LI.-Col. llaldwin snh lrr:··'·::·,;d

rnander of the Sal rat ion ,\; ... r Jt' ~f.' fonndland was inforuwd •i;-,t lla;~r Pitcher. f.encral Srnet<tr::. !:.vi b!f:

~ppointccl special F.fforts end Sub;cn hers Secretary fnr C:tnarla f>i

:'~arch 20. 1916.

SO HARROl'R \\'OIH\ \\'atcrfront w~rk i< prae::c.<i'! 3l ;

<tan!l>till with Yery few sbi;'' "'.'r~ir.l car;:~. yesterday a fell' me;; .. ,,,rr e~ playerj at the Shaw Stcam<h:; prr:m'l~ where the S.S. :llriglr wa' unlosdll, livestock and mixed rar~o . '

fillO~ SI.EIGIIISf· il!r- l!ed!er ~rett, [)ircclnr of n .. :;

& S. Osmond. Moreton's Jiarlt~lll ' ·· ·· · · t ned h~H hern 1·isilin:: I hat pllcr rr nr

to St. .John's ~londay He ''1 ~nc trip from l~cwisport~ to :.Inrct•'n'l .

. I I •It• bonr nyer the ice. corerin~ 2'1 <H•< "'' • ... r. . d • hllf

with hors~ team in about 11"'' an • !]PUT¥

ronusT p1pr.r. . Two ex officers in the R .. \ l· · . . pr~

I hem \\'. C. Piamond of St. ·101111 '

p'o'sc crcchon. of. a touri;t ho:trl on

~a~ll19:n· ~ifh_ Lpw~r .II un~bcr. Th:ando~ V,ll~ tlnl~ f!l;:~t o[f:c~r ~> A. J I C\lfl\ttl:.

Ckm~ Of ThfJug hi d · the eye!

The heart's letter is rea IP -~~orge aerperl-

TO C David Hilli

Falls o to visit his p<

city today.

\p~t lhi& is sp,. We can, sec o~r Lor•r~ opp~n~nts ~~d

their 11~teful si~J'(~s Ojl that l~st we~k of controversy in his life. They did not ltiww it b·ut they were trying to stQP God in t~e c~~ryin~ o( hi, P.~rP.o~e

· · · L1S'l' . l!~'f~~ T"E or .. rds woulo

I~ I w~~!!. ~~i~~ mr last ~~~ unkn~~ be: have fa1th and ~ursue th -· · end.

-0. W. HolmeJ. Jr.

Page 5: DaVince Tools Generated - Memorial University of ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · you $18.00 (in 12,000 miles) l} 4,000 Miles be tween Oil Changes-Saves you

! l

: !,, . \\ ~ t -.~ ~'

1\lo

t • ~.

•. ;

:-- .... :.·:·_,, 1··

. . \. ,~ ~ ..:

!!Ill''

',1'11\T

' ~!"lip:;

;":H'Il \\ rrc .. :c:'hlp prr:l:t

·,\ :: ~ 1: nl c::1

i.onr.f. : ::c R .-\ f.

. ci St. .John·~

.. r:>t hostel oD

; ::1 bcr. Tbe .~j,.-\_J.

. :eJ in Icc Huatef r: The~

; " brlDI: -~ "'

. . . . . . . . . . . .. " . ~ ' . . . .

·'

'ocial-Per~onal - (:(,)umn-

ooffi~er, )Ilea&, Bqck.mtstpn ~·iel!l for mem~'r• ~f th• ¥•51 to m,et the !IIW Bpt,r11 Com· mand r.~.o. . .

}I:• t;cur~;c Putt, 1 .l• ~n.:•· ;tre plea~ed t_o ~::c , 11 ;.•~~mcnt of th!lr ,.,·ia Irene. to Davad,

11 ~ · dt:.i \lr>. Regiu~ld 4 'f SV~Slfl~J ~.\¥P ; 1 :· .• ::: Pl_a_c:c ~-eddmg 1 The followin~ i& 1 list of .i ,;:1: ...... cul latcl. ' paqeltls at the Sunshine Caq1p

. ~ WhO *fe feported Wj:ll llld n:~nr.\1. I Th' I' . . i lappy. . .15 lSI II Sllhll\itle~

f:i•l p,,l iCS_ \_lcfl l'St. ' thruugh l~e C!ll\flesy ·0~ th~ ,,,;,,,,,,, 1" 11· to ~or· 1 Junior R!ld Cross.

~ 1,,'1C m· wall attend: S)')\'ia De 0 • J h ' a b ' 11~·":1• Fcsllral. ~ H b . W \'s, To n sO;-Teacl '

.. ,. J';dmcr. MUN i pumt er .,esl ; D~pn~ H .. oo e, ,;,, .• _ .. ·- St John' i 01 11 ~u "!I; pnn, &flllllll· n.~•·" · 1' 11 · 5 I Corner Brook· Gertrqde Qil_'

i·' f• .\ fnr Corner 1 1 G ·d· 0 ' . :· R · · · . - · -.1111 be aHcud- , art' · r~p .,~Uti, •roller Pe~·

··~~~~ .::.' i llrJma Fesli- ney. B4fiiiiYHe s Coye; ~~Will nc •· .... • Locke. Corper ~rop~; F~trick

,. _1_ _ t.trc:n Ayre. i ~l1e!fcrm~(~l, Purl Jll ~or(R; _ll-!C~)'d

...... • •·. , ., . : " crccr, -orncr ..,roo,.; tcllar. .. '. :: .. · " .. llt.tllliland , N B II t I ,~ ~h· I U :._ ••• , 1 ,,l'lvlc!tSt.l'e~ry, e tSI\U.,;.,_tr'f II" l•'~::~:,:,.) ft;r Corner I ~hall, B~lwpOij; .l~~n. Wlll&~, 'i: ""' ,.-lledulcd to ·

1 H~ppy Vl!lley. L~~f~41lfi .!P.hll

-~' 11, ·'·' tianlncr at , 1.lann~furlj, ~Dill~~; Sll&fQJI ~. _·

1, ·d .. v : Saundm. W!IJ!i&Qfi pqre~Jl

,:li• ... · • • . I Power, Bran_ clj, st_. ~-llrf's; 1\m_l-~ PI \HilS rcy Thpm~s, S!!U!~ ~fllOk,

.luhn\ I !iall's ~ill'; .\_li~e Bra~~. Cr!lS· . ;::.:: -the l~lh Rc·' to_n:. ll!ICe!llta wc~l; J\!1!1

i ,, 111 ,, 1 111 Cur-. O i';ctll. ~~~·erhe~P: Har~our , ~ 1 .John's yes· I Grace; Ltnpa f,:l)totl, Grow

. · · I Head, Tw!lllllllllle; .James Bis· •: 1 ·•· hqp. Oltm·ille. !ll~C~Jllill ~ay;

1 II-~ II I J.OWSJ'lJl I Fra11~es W~l~er, CJlfli'li; !Jri-.!1 .·, ,r

1 he r trk 1 Osmond. jJolwqnd; L~urte ~fer·

1: __ , 1111 ,:;:tinn on ccr. Newman's Co\'e; l}ruce \,:.iJc\l ·, Fel- '~_!JIIC)', _Springdal~; J.l~xin~

. t thrtr s.c.n. i Chaulk;_ Wmdsqr; l·lnda jlanllls· · , __ ,. :.tomla~· 1 t~r. \1. Uld>ur; E~~~~ (Hi:epfc. ~-, II all. ~!em- , B~'hop s Falls; Gerald Dum,

· ...... :e that this 1 \\ mdsor. .. ,. ,. B 45 t>.m. ------

. ":Jil~ ol I he I Easter Preview ': \\et•k. I PRINTED P.!\TTERN I

WJIJ 1

:~.'- \1 l t';, btl'aU.'iC Of '

.. .- 1 J.ada•s night. : ;,\::"_":.::.·Will he Oil'

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~:.;~.,n:, Edwards lc[t !

·; ~,,:mlny for Corner I 11 o::r::~ the 12th Re­Dmna Fcstil'al being !

Cort:l'r Brook this '

l'r>tival in Cor· '.lr. fl':\et\1 and Mr.

. a:r rwmhrrs of the 1' \Til. which is :

I

~llSS :MEMORIAL '61 ~!iss Mcnlnri'll for H>61, Verna Ilobbins (a 2nd. Year Science stmlcut wqo lives at fH Cashin Avenue), is crowned hy oiw ol the jiHlges, \lr. ~lanr~~~ Wil~nsky. as ;\I. C. Haines, right, prepares to plact' the cloak on

The Moture Parent

Q.J::SfEr:T ~Jil!:P Fqlt Sii.ENCj> AFTEJt QPJ\ltfiEL­

n~~ "E~J. Dear 11ro. Lawrence: -~ parent shpiii!l never gi1·e

the silent treatment Ill a child 1 sh~·s punisher! oi· scqlded. ~)10uld

1 'S~e'! My upstairs neighbor • clams up with her kirls ~fter she's punjshcd or bawled them

:out for doipg something wruq~. ·I lulrl her I'd heard a PT.\ psy-• chnlogist s:ay how had this was, that parents should alwars let bygones he hy;<ones when punish· ment is o\·er. Rut sh~ said she <iidn'j care lfh<il the psycho!·

· ogisl said ... ' .\NSWER: You care. 1\'Jouih. 1lnn'J you'!

Tell me something. Doe, the psychologist's stalcment worry yon? Do you sometimes find . it hard to ~ire your children the . same easy acceptance after pun- ! ishmenl that you gare them he· · fore they offended or firghtenerl

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We, Women

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The . Patty She Us CaU :For Variety of I Delicious Fills I

H~· RUTH ~lii.LETT you? GAY!'iOR ~1.\DilOX

\\'hy should this re,ene make TO H.\VE GOOD FRIE!'iDS- Palty shills. llhelhet· hom~· you a bad mol her'! HE .-\ GOOD FRIEND TO made. from )'OUr ba!\rr)'. m· fro·

Some of us need timr to let O'fHERS 7.C.•, m;~kc il ea,,· to ~ile de-bygone;, he uygones with ~nyonc , li~htful parties I'Ct:y easily. Lob·

·who has hurt us. We nc~d to 1 The time when you can jump ster. shrimp. chicken. mush· withdraw into the priracy of our- in and hcln out a friend is al· . rooms or o)·sters in a smooth ~eJ\·es to think or feel more deep· most never a eom·enient mo- sauce make ~ourmel filling-; for

· ly about what has happened to us .. mcnt. the natty shell~. llowerer e!ah· I h we pretend we're not this I SQmehow, the crisis imoll'in;: or~te the S;jUces mav look. thcv 1'kincl of person: if lear of wh;1t • a friend never seems to hit at a arc really very simple lo cmi­. some psychologist thinks com- moment when our own Jives are coct. All are \'aria lions of the :pel;: us lo put on an act of tot~! runninl( smoothlv. tsuallv we hasic whit~ sauce. I forgi\·eness before we·v~ accom· are up to our c'ars in our'' own ll.\SIC S.\t:fE 1 plishert it. our dishonesty llllt affairs at th~t time. · 2 tablespoons hutter . , only rtamages om· ~~nuint Rflec· You caq react in two ways !o · 1': teaspoon ~alt ~ tion for the child hut confuses his this situation: ~ tabl~spooni flour : lntst of w<. You can say. "If it just weren't 1' teasooon pepper

It is impossible to lo\e anyone at tl1is particular time I would be I cup 1101 milk. beer or chic~en for whom we ha\·e to falsify our able to help." Ot, "Surely there stock

. tnte feelings. is some othet· friend who is not In top of double boiler melt So. if you find it hard to always as husv as I am who tan pitch butter over low heat. Remore

let bygones be bygone~ when in and. help out." from heat ami stir in flour. salt your children's puni~hments are The other way to react is: · ian~ peppt>r. Add hot liqui_d .. re· o1·er. let it be. Don't pretend ":-low is when I am real\v turn lo heal and cook. slirnng, you find it easy. Tell the children needed. 1\ow i> mv chance to ~:until sauce is thick. Cook 01·er the truth. saying, . a friend. And n~n though it simn;ering water. covered. for i "Look, I'm not ready to be . isn't com·eni~nl for me to help 10 mmute,. . cozy, and talkatil·e yet. I still out now. I'll lind the time some- CREAM SAUCE

: ha1·c things I hare to thin!.. ~bout. how.'' 'lake hasic sauce with milk. · In their professional experience And then you go ahead and When cooke•!. slir in

1" cup

----- ·- ------- -----·- - · --· psychologist, meet parents ·who make your offer of help and hean- cream. · giw• '.·mmgsters the "silent treat- somehow mana~e to do what :\IOR!'i:\Y CRE.\~1 S:\l'CE

roa_rm~ at. he. I_', she st. ares in· to make this clear. We forget lo it. Thev lovr lo make their "in- .. •ctd l 2 tahl

~Hss l\fcmori(!l. Other charp1in~ finalists in the rear applaml the HeW

_g~:_c~--(~!~x--~lcr~cr Photo).

" 11

1 · men!" ·alter punihment. not be- neds to he done. '' o cream ~auce ~-''~ cause thcv need time for true· Good friends real'l in the sec- ~poon~ eac gra e WISS an i!llJ, a.~~mcn.t. Wb __ a __ l's th~ matter. sa~.·. "Wh;,· didn't ;,·ou lele]Jhom· dependence" tile iS>ue >o th;:t h t d S · d

I I

II'Jtli you'? $h~'s .!)ld enough to ito let us know you were safe? we'll forget their contrmptnou' forgilene;s but to add to the ond way. And that is wh_,.. in Parmc:ctan cheese. Cook. stirl'ing look a_ft_er h.~rs~lf. i.•n't she'! 1llow could ~ou so i0"n_orc nm' feel- tr~atment of our n:~tural con- t'l h · Jt~rl ~ .,. ' punishment. the long run. the.v are consider- un I c er~e 15 me ' ·

. SIJe w~_sn.'t d_Q __ /·ng ". P''t_h_J .. Il" wron~. _1 ings or concern for ,-ou'!" cern. S\"CE RO\'\LE

h" " < " ,. ' Rut all of us vre not so male1·- ed good friends. OthErs know · · " · '

; -~11 s. ~·s ~n d~jqg is havin~ i Insle<td, we threaten. We !'X· So we ha1c lo kcr·p lhr rra: 1 h Add to cream saure 1 r':l~ :·olk co.ffee wllh B_ !l_i ~n_I_l_ a_ cQuple of pt·"ss aJl~t-'' dol1llt of il"l' alli.ll-t\' one in mind: t·cfu<c to Jet Con- o en!. We can want to hold our ! at they will manage, somehow. bl f th I' ""' • ~ -• • peace for many reasons: to con· to pitch in and help out when beaten with 3 ta c,poons

0 .e

F.:~-r~! ~'i'llrrs of :\lid· ! ~-:;:: ,: :;~ lPp>ail Road. ·

':~·:·ry at the Gen· 1

ai :o:.<J 1' progressing

f:(,: L,. J'.L<\ returned I r·.!y 1:, -;:1 \'ancouHr Leading t~e Easler fashion pa-

;, ~ .. ~ i•rtn l'at•ationing rade-a dresS With sott\y CUI'I'ed . 3 -,,._.:. on the way neckline, soft gaU1ers in jus~ tqi:

h · .. -::rd :rilnds in Tor- right places to do just the right f•::a-,•.-a. ~:ontrcal and things lor yom· figure. · Choose

.;:;;,,:, •. ,, .. , arr extended d ~·lr•. l'rtcr ~lurphy t.::r. c,f a hahy girl at

' :.:. :T' Hospital on _.;k' 11:•:· \b. ~Iurphy :::~:tr Shl'i:a :-lurphy of

crepe, tissue faille, cotton. 1

Printed Pattern 4935: Misses' Sizes 10, 12, 14, 16, IQ. Size 16 takes 31o yards 39-inch fabric.

S~nd f IF'TV fENTS (jn cQill& l (stamps cannot b~ accepted l tor this patlern. Please print plam· ly SIZE, lH~t:. ..llPJlESS. STYI.E NUMIIEJI.. . .

Th~ Mature Pcuent

S~rls .she met !In th~. way h"ome. 1to Jake care of her~clf. We e~- nic ~idetraek II> into arguments th · hot cream sauce.

Whl!t S t~e 111~~~1' Wt!h you: i pt·css everything but the proh- 01rr her right to drink coffer templ~ll~ God. to ab~orb the. ~n· help_ is ~ePrlcd. . . !'iEWHURG S:\UCF:

Wh h 1

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hcnuh of new Jemes, to look m· .\nd thetrs Js the help that lS, b . 'th 'lk at's t e matter wjth us in, !em at issue: Connie's fai\ut·e to \l'l 1 cr mnc s. er ng 1s no _ward· to ourselres. , nerer forgotten because it is • :\iake ns1c s~uc_e w1 m1 · th~S!! sjtl!aliqns is tfial our feel·' treat our feelings with respect. 'the tssue. : It's up to each of us to begin given when· it i~ needed most. . When cooked. stir m

1' traqlOon

inss bave peen ignQrcd. I This disrespect for parental The issue is our righl this time. ; with a respect for our ne~cl for: It is what s~parates good~ paprika. dash caven~. 2 egg Sqmelhfi~S, in lhp be~t engen·l feeling is always the issue of late the ri~ht to be informed of her I silence so that we can begin to . friends from merelv pleasant ac· : yoll!s lightly beaten With 'I cup

dered I!Y qur l\llXil:tY. we forget hours. The young love to con~usc safety. understand its mearind to us. 1 quaintances. rr ,.0;1 have 1·115t a, cream and 2 tables_poons sherry ---- " · •• I \'1 t d le tmce1

i few such good frtends you are or u.u e mon . ·

,

!blessed. -

But it isn't fair to say that you are luckv. Because if von arc B u that kind Of friend yourself, )'OU etween s are almpot sure to hare a few freinds- of your own kind-who Worn_ a.n can be counled on to make time \. for you -,;;hen you realy need their help and support.

Manners I By RUTll mLLETT I

; P.\RE~TS: GHOOM CUILDREN . • TO ·sTEP J~TO YOUR SHOES

"The greatest ·r.ducemcn' In

growth in children is the priril· e•e of hein" around excitin~ par·

: e~ts-parents wbo help kindle de· sire in children by eujoyin:; them·

, sc11·es as 'whoiP. adults'. ·

~"~· ~!JRJJ!:J. L-\Wtf~f\IPJ

HlHW TJ!:Jl:NS VmJ.~n: P~ t!-l~lff TP l{~QW .

''It is no ~ign of health to ex· . pect proridencc. creaturt com·

fort. or special schooling to gire the 'child an appetite for adult

))on't butter a li·hole slice o! roles in lif• when. as the child bread at on~e. J:lreak· of! a bite· • can plainly. see, these roles are 1

si1.e piece, bu!!er ~n!l eat it. ! not particularly enjoyable to the

Will b~ ~~~~ lfl" Alarch 2Dtji at 1~'

. ~ fl·m~PzE ~QWfli;~!J'AN!f~ ¥00 1.\'fiSS PRESS PHOTOG ·~~· NEW YORK-Mary Ann Mobley, Miss A~erica pf 19659, takes the me~sprt:P.Wil~~ qf J41ri Willinger

"ne a~oit In " Clunlnl (36-33·38), 30, of Mount VernorP, Ji.¥., as Evelyn Ber11ie Loefell (35-2:1-35), 19, of Flushing, N.Y. (left)

HUafb!~s:~Aa.Y7:~fAllln P.n~ ~~4rp ~~1\l>l {~lH4:3~) 1 ~3, (rift~H llf N~w yor~ City wait theil: tum, Manh IQ, 1'Jte girls gather· a..wsua ~0_-\ ed at the New York Coliseum for the preliminaries pf the "Miss Pre55 r~wiP.irRP1wr of 1961" contest.

._ _______ ..JtMilll Mobley is one of the jud1e1 of the contest. (UPI rhoto)

... :~

I adults themseh·es.'' ! These two sentences from the , new book. "The IIJlpOrtance of i l!eing Imperfect'' by· John Rob· • eJOt Clarke, ou~:ht to mal!e a lot

of parents take a closer look at

themselve-s and a~- t-~eir .childre~. · Whl!n we buy JUmor a car m

high school and get sis her first evi!ping dress 111 age t<~--,-aren't

~J..:::r-:._.- .; we a~tually saying, "You don't · · need to wait to grow up lq have

adult minds". Don't yttll for. someon• to tak' f phone call. Go ~~~~ 1~11 him quietly be'$ wanted Qn lqe phone.

Lipstick-smeared teeth can ruin the prettiest smile. ·_So, .. wh81le\',r you apply lipstick, che~~ ~~~ mak~ iUFt ther, are no' _ iane~rs. Aad cn~ck :tfl!ill alter you havtt fini~hed a tnejlll. · '

l!)lll\!ni lipstic~ witll 14 clt!JDJ· -; .~ illi ti~sue is one s]lre ~PY to . av~id lipstick smears. AIIAW tell ~¥~iJ1Uii!i !or the colur to sef, then bl<l*.'' Lipstick is usually ,et fer ihree pr (Qur hour~ after that. -.. - ------ --- -----GrMil 01\ipns l~ '. · with Ff~~ straw·

~OAP QUI OWN BIEAD

lllf IY TEST

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• THE DAlLY \EWS, ST . \'FLD., \10\DAY, \lARCH 20.

New H. ,Q. For Bank Of N. S. At Cornwall-Hamilton Av

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• The new headquarters for the Bank of Nova Scotia at Cornwall and Hamilton Avenues. This modern

building was designed to give the utmost in service ·to staff and clientele. '·

The interior of the new home for the Bank o[ No,·a Scotia at Cornwall and Hamilton :hrnue1,

N·ew Building For N. S. Branch In West End

I Principals I

And Mothers Special Guests I -

BELL ISLAND (StaHl -Principals of Jackson Memorial, Salvation Army and St. Bonifice Regional High Schools and the :

Bank Of N. S. Oldest Canadia Chartered Bank In Newfoundla

Of .St. John's Opens Today mothers of 3 Grade X students· N from these schools !hot recciv· : o·w

I ed $50. Scholarship awards, Has 26 Branches In Provin(e I of St .John'; on · Street near < ,,, l11ane

' Director nf the hl.'i.! 'ations in :-.;, .. ,,·fnun~l<r.d

The Cornwall and Hamilton due to the rise of the parking , and pale green, providing an · were special guests at a social : The Bank o[ Nova Scotia. the branch of thr Bank of Nova lot, gives the impression of : effective contrast with the lon~ cvenin!: in the Lodge, durin;: nldest l'~naclinn chartered hank Scotia moves into its new build· · two level. Interesting exterior · counter in white formica. · whirh the presentation were in Newfoundland. is constantly ing 1t 2 Cornwall Avcnue, to· colour i.~ provided hy panels of The vault with safety dt>posit made. expanding with the province's day. blue-green porcelain rnamel be· ! box facilities bas been convcn· Wi1·es and lad)' friends of the · increased c·nmnwn·ial actil'ity.

Acrortlinc to mana~rr J. D. Anderson the n~w buJlrlin~ in· corporales all the most modern customer facilities possible.

nrath the tall w:nrlows. The iently located on the ground l.ndgc members were also The Rank nf Nnra St·otia opcnrd ni_ght depository is also set In floor, , guests at thr sncial. · its first branch in St. ,John's, an enamel panel. j \\'ol'>ilipful ~laster Alhrrt in Dcc1·mhrr. 1394. following

U l ted r·l·lroad ties last ' lli~~tns ll'as ~laster of Cere· the crash of thr lwo local hanks The interior bas heen de- n rea • monies. ---Fnion ~nd Commercial. · d t t d · from five to nine 1·rars on an s1gnc o crca e a warm an 1'1 · · ·t 1 t' Archit~cturalk the new of· . . I al'erage, w 11 e trea r< trs

!ice is o[ unust;;~l and pleasing : frtcndly atmosphere, wtth walls show an a,·era!!e life of as Curtis Thorn~. PritH"ipal of

the SalYation Army was ~:urst Down through tho;·r 67 years

the Bank of :'\ora Scotin has hrcn a rral hulwark in the fi· dc;ign. It is only une-lcrcl but of candlc\~J~~--~~ello~-~~hnu~- much as 20 to--~~ .. ~~~~- ~p~akcr. ------· ... _ ~---

I 1 • 2 Cornwall Avenue. That's the new ocat1on. of the Cornwall and Hamilton branch of The 1\ank of Nova Scotia. It's a brand new build· ing, too-designed to· moke bcinking at Scotiabank ·more of a plea~ure than ever. Every effort's been made lo create a light and airy look outside ... a worm and friendly atmosphere inside, .Customer fad I· ities-including a Night Depository, ground· floor vault and safety deposit boxes-ore located to provide maximum banking can· venience. In fact, manager J. D. Anderson and his staff are so pleased with their new bi ®ch, they'd welcome a chance to show it off to you. So next time you're in the neighbourhood, pay a visit to the Cornwall and Hamilton Scotia bank; now relocated at 2 Cornwall Avenue.

1 nan~ial affairs of i\cwfonnd­land. It has often h1,cn referred to as the "fisherman's hank" bc·causc it is deeply ronsl'ious of the importance o[ the fi>h· ery and a"ist those firms t'losr­ly iiiYOIYPd.

main hrant'h man2:rr. G .. John:-ton. •.ri:n Cii!":':~ John's in .June. 1~.1~.

onto. The ll;H:k of ~011 he says. ll•"" ha'

: m~in anrl thrN ,,I·. I :'\rwfounl\land ',1"" h·:t : OloYrr! tn llrq· .:l!'r! .

, q11fll'IC'1'S ill f!lr p;~c• ;p· . and nthrr~; h.•· c h~r~

lr<l.

Management ·committee Meets

FLOODS ROliT RESIDENTS , ·&~BANK THE BANK OF NOVA SCOTIA

. · h line~~ PHENIX CITY, Ala.-The flood interrupted some body's wa!>'hday, judging from this full was d

evacuate , an inundated area ef Phenix City, Ala., Feb. 27th. Residents- of this Negro district were J

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Cornwall and Hamilton, Branch

J.D. Andenon, Manager

. flouu Hundreds of homes have been inundated in Alabama, Georgia and Mississippi by rampagtng

waters.-(UPI Photo).

mders o· GRA:\ D BA:\K-'1

reminders thol us althou;<h on

warmth p\'ident. 1\'e

a late ~pr i quantites o[ d

cou:d· e1·en ~ ' in~ofar as :-1 arc concern.

BE

BANK COR~\\',

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Thr ~tanager of .the Cornwall-Hamilton Avenue branch of the Bank of Nova Scotia, Mr. J.D. Ander­surronnded by his male staff. Left to right: Jim Young, accountant; Kevin Snow, teller; Jim Thoms,

accountant; and Oliver Pitcher, teller.

Taking a break in the staff room are Mrs. Sidney Dunne, stenographer; Miss :Moya Neville, ledger keeper,

and Mrs. Elizabeth Walsh, ledger keeper. , ___________________ _:_ ___________ . ----------

---------------------------------------------\~m~su~r~~~d~~dio~.l Be~~n ~~, Md tltir~iSchool Concert 1 WithEast~testsna~l

RAN. D BANK NEWS · This community always has young men have been attcndin;:: I underway, the teacher and :been generous in its support of I basketball training and practice H j gh I y Rated \pupils have unanimously agr~ed

inders of Wintar : ;\!');\\!\-There :rrc still

·,·~· .. ,. ... , thnl ll'intcr i' still . _ •. : ·:·~-· :.:!1 on fine day:' the

.. ·: .. , .• :·:'''!1 of I he ~lin is . · · \\'c arc rll'firritl'l;-

·: :1 .. .'t' :';li·ir•!:!. Hn!l with .' :::'.: :!:'• of drill il'~ around

·. r·_,,, 1,.. pxtrndrcl into .-.>-~:· ;1..: ~}litltlill.~ 1l10\'C·

;·: , ... ,H"r:·ncrl

· :1 rit:oi'U\1!-' wint('r as ·. . r\:·r·rtrnl·r•l thi' war . ~ ·. ·c:, :::\\ c fiwnd he an

~, :.-: tnt.•l ~upplil''. Ai-2· ·'·r p:·1·>cnt time thrt·e

,:.:n:r <tpp!irs of coal here ·::.C.:·, "' r not in~ that then· : ·'·:1 ,,•,·w:·mal ht•:·.l')' de· ~- <::: th~ p<1~t rnon~l1. It

'the Red Cross, which even in our sessions under the supervision o[ · to gire a repeat performance own small circle is rendering; Constable Ron Howe. Judgin~ , , and this time it will be staged

·great service through its various I from the calibre of the men at·' CARBO~EAR, \larch 16 -A in St. James Hall, on Easter committees. We are confident i tending practices we should ha1·e. pre-Lenten School Co?ccrl was Tuesday evening. that public support h~re will be ; a very good town team to repres·l stager! m St. Andrew s School,

is estinwtcd that present supplies, Fisheries Ltd. trawlers each land· I pans. Crew members at first at· as generous this year as its has· ent Grand Bank in inter.town South Stde. under the dircclton Since quite a numher who should last until the end of April.· eel orer three hundred thousand 'tempted to canture the ani1ml been in tho past.

1

competition between Peninsula· of the teacher. ~!iss Helen l'icwed the premier perf or· Shoul:l iec couditions be such that: pouids at Fortune on successive but tieing unable to do so, shot l• Cl b teams. 1 Earle. mancc have signified their in· re;scls <·ould not get into :'\orth days. We hare been adriscd by the fox. To prove their point and IOnS U I The children. rJnging from 5 tcntion to sec the repeat per· S)·dney Ill• fore late ~IHy to load dn.ggrr fishermen that they hm·r a~ a prized possession the bush)' .\t the rc~ular dinner mc(!lin~ · Last week a group of yuun~ 1

to 12 l'cnrs. had been well train· forrnancc. all who arc planning coal cargoes thl'll a shortage 1 ne1·cr seen haddock ~0 plentiful tail of the fox now adorns the of the Grand Bank-Fortune Lions· P.eoplc wh~ ;u·e intere~tecl in grt-. ed a~d did so well that tire to see il for the first time arc could n•sult. For those who u'c 1 or the banks lis tlre1• are this win· I dragger. • Club on Thursday, March ~th. tmg badmmton organized hrld a owrflow audience were thrill· urged to get their tickets now oil for furl supplies the oullook is· trr. They o]so report that mil·! Welcome News Education week was c!Jservcd. · .meetin~ in the ~lemorial Library. ed, "' much sn. that they just and arran~e for hahy-siHers, if n111eh better and adcqtwte sup.' lions of thc~e fish arc hein~ I . . The chairman of the evening was ~he re;;ult was that a n:ldmmton about clemanc!Pd a rrprat per· such ar" ncccs~ar)·. plir;; arc bt•in~: maintainecl. cau"ht and bcin•• (lumncrl back . Rc>tdcnts of thts town. as well Lion Doug Sheppard. 1 Cluh was fo:·med and II IS mtrnc!· 1 . . Th Sr 1 · rc IJanee hv /1 rup of lea will be srn·cd

· '· t n tl , ~ 1 1 as all others on the Bunn Penlll· The feature event cir the e\'Pll· eel to ha1·e thirtv nnnbers enrol· t;mntncrl. 1 c · \1a ·h was e; followin~ the eonccrt and pro·

DragCcers Get BitJ Trips 111 0 re ~ea a1,am 'eac · 1 sula ami alon~ the South Coast in" was the presentation of thr: led. We under~tand also tlwl o!rl-' re t1 :n\r c wo·11 11\; · (

1

' ~. ccecls will hr in aid of the new Dra~:crs arc,enntinuing to get Foreign Trawlers \hal'c welcomed t?c nell':s tha,t t!,rc Cl~•h's annual Civics seholarship'er members of the cnmmunity 11.crl) .' 01~c.' 111

.. r :_trs .• eorne 'l'h It r f 0 t I opci"Ltor< of RadiO Station \ oc I f d 0 G I 0 0 I 0 t 0 ·t I . ·M

0

' M t,ar c. as ,(( compalliS 0

hi~ tr!ps of hmldoeli on the hanks e rna e1· o uretgn raw crs 1 ' • • ' • • to the success ul 5 tu ent m .rare are a so m e1 e' cc m or ~amztn, _ .. --- __ __ :mel are rcturnin~; tn port with fishin~ off our coasts and the use-· are going lo a~ply fo~· a hcrnse X Ci1·ics in the schools of Gr;md: into a senior Radmintnn Cluh in 1 --- -..;·-----·--.;..~~..;;;;.;.;.~.;,;..;;...;...;...--.;,;..;_;...~

An;:lican school.

flu loads ;mrl keeping plant t'lll· lc~s .three milr limit has hr~n r~- to ~.rrrt, ~ .1?'110 statiOn °~ th': Bank and Fortune. This vear's I the near future. Prol'i>ion is m~dc plnn•es lm'l' at proce>Sing the. cetl'lll!! plenty of comment m rc- · llmi.n I ensmsula lo sene I he winner was Mt'. Hnl>ert Hillier o[: at the auditorium also for playing·

· · 1 1 I Penmsu!a and South Coast areas ' b ] large ~uantities being landed by cent weeks. It seems to lC t rc . . . the United Church School at For· 1 Volley a I. thr dra~gcrs. Last week four of

1

general considered oninion that ; Pp untrl now thrs a:ea of the Pto· tune who obtain 84 percent in last' tho B01ia1 ista Cold Storage Co.,, nnthin~ less than a twelrc mile, \'lllC<' h<r.s been ohl.tged to denen.r~ .June's public examinations. ).!r.! Personals Ltd., flrct all ]and:d full load~ .l!mil is ;my. ailranta.ge ~r pt·oter-: upo~ .rllslant ~tat tons for \1:~ 11• tune who ohtain 84 pe~~nt in hst 1 n~1·: w .. T. Bakrr was at St. here nnd the two new large Bont.t hon to om· tm;horc f1she1 men aml racho mf?rmatto~ a~cl enter ,'1 11 Byron Bursev. Pl'lnctnnl of the .John's last week on husincss for:

. that the pre;;~nt patrol ;')'stem ment. \\::' c:rtmnl~ do apoieCI· Fortune United Church School i the t'nil~d Church Conference. :

1 anrl tvpe of ~hm cnga~ed m snch

1 ale the. mtet.es

1t1 an~ effot~ls 0

1f was also a gue;;t at the meeting! '.lr w \l Buffett h·rs bern at: · t. 1 t' 1 · 1 t "the nood ncr" r Jour • sla ron o . . · · . · · • · ' 1

SINCERE

BEST WISHES pa 10 ~ are en rrc y mac equa c i ' . h • • • • t and sooke brtefll• on F.duca!ton. the c·mital rrcentll· on husinc;;s '

; and incffectire to u;;e a tm1~~ at· , extend a~d tmorol'<' rt~ sen·Icel 0t The presentation of the cheque for· Cap,tai~ Thomn~on S A ~l'ns ai t 't 1 1 . t 1 t ·1 the nuhl1c and we feel sure t •J - 1 th .· 1 . ,.. · .. · · '· .' 1 U( e n ~re1en wr .r ~all ~rs I ·.. d t I', , $••0.00 was mace to c lllllner l), St. .John's la;;t week on officta1

: ~rom invadm!( ot.tr terntorta! llm· all Cillz:.ns • ~n . rcp~sen a 11 e 1 Past President George Crewe. business. CONGRA TUL~TIONS to

and

BEST WISI-IES to the

I BANK of NOVA SCDTIA CUI~\\\'ALL and HA.\IILTO:'\ BHA:\Cil

0\ THE OPE;'\I:\C OF THEIR ?\EW BUILDI?\G

* * * * *

Henry Harvey ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR

: tts If they so w1sh. Wlrat ts re· ~rou~s 11 til gthl e whale\ er sutppo.rt · Chairman of the Education Com- I 1!r ·\ c Jloi'Cl Hudson is al • d t b d f t reqmred bv t e promoters o en· . · · · · . · • . ' ; qun·e seems o e armc as h 1• . · t •1 m1ttee. • present in town cloin~ audit work.

1 cr:1ft with trained naval type pPL'· su•·c• .t~at t e rei ens~ rs 1ran/ 1 · , The Club will continue its Edn·t '.ir Rohnrl stnnrllr1· ,,,rnt a sonnl'l capable to hoard and srize Offtctals .of ~ r.et th rBoac ~asp· 111 ~. cation observance at the nrxt din-. f~,·,, rl·.1,·s "t st · Jnlm'; i'lst •l'rrk

; · b t 1 Company will \'tst e urm en· . 1 ' ' • .. • • • • • • • a shm If necessary. Such oa s . · d .11 t ner mcetmg on March 23rd. when· 'It· T·tck ''·tnrritt" of St .John's ' · 1 1 I msula next wet"k an \\'I mee . . . ·' . · ' ,_, , , . 1 could sen·e du~l pumoses ly le· : b £ tl 1 . t :it will hold rls puhltr spcnkm~ is in town doin" audit wnrk at ' in~ both protective craft. and ~1- Wllh 1:he mcm ers ~ re . '~nnn · conte~t at which ounils from the Bona1·i>ta Cole! Stora~c C'o. Ltcl. i so supp!~·in~ our fishinJ! nert wtth

1 Cou~ctls of the B.mttn ~lrlmt~.ul. · ;;clrools at Grand Bank ond For- 111· ~llison Stnvlc< Jrrt on the

' 0 r t' d rl' I 1 to rloo·OI'"' the nro•c" WI r oom ' 0 I ll ' 0

0 0

• •

1m orma ton an me 1c<1 anc · ' · ' ·. hmc will cornnctc w1t r rc ll'lll· "Blue ~li;;t 1!'' for Jlnlif:,x.

: o~h~r nlliecl sm·i~<>s. <luring thc Red Cross Appeal i ncr rrcril'ing a tro~h,·. ; ftsl~m!!. senson stmtl<'t' ton that \lnrch is ned Cross month: Education Weel< !Jhipping m:untamed hv the Pcll'tu,.ue;;c : (' 1 It · 1 f nl I D "(' 1 B ··· "(' .. l G . . t · · th · tcr st f 'Is • acrm:s .anne a. IS a sn u r ·' Last wee~ was ohscnccl as 1 raggcrs •l'<tnr a) . .·1 ,111r f:n~~~~T,ent 111 em c. s 0 1 · 1 raisin~ month with the thousands Education Week in the school>! Duke", "f'oriunc Star". "Luc!d-ls m, rc · of branches of the organization ~f: here. Open house sessions were I rnre'' ancl "Blue :\Jist 1!" landed

Strange Catches which the Grand Bank Branch ts' held when parents and friends of. here rluring the past wee!;. Fishing vessels sometimes come one. . , I the school!; visit~rl the classroo~s: Tanker "S~ekonk" lanrle~! p:tro-

llp with strange catches of fish At the nresent t1mf.' lad~ mem· , and took part 111 the academic· !cum products here 1nst .:' eek:

I on the bankr.. However, when n hers_ of the Red Cross ar~ .c~n; 1 activities. :\1. v .. ":\lcril•·n . Clat:· '" smlecl

. fox is the prize taken seventy vassm!( tbe tol~'n and S?hrt~m,. 1 On last Wednesday aftemoon for llahfax, ~·rlh ft;;h c_,n.:.0·. . . ! 1 miles offslrore it is ~uite an funds for the II' ork or !h1s g1 eat

1 the ladi>s of the Home and School Dragger Cape Bnll~t rl 11 as m '

I achi~vcm~nt. La~t week wht":l or~anization de.dicated to the se:· i .~ssociation held a pantry ,ale in 1 port over the ,weekend as .. was 'the dragger "Red Diamond Vlll" vice of mankmd. No need ~s 1 the Academy for funcl-rai;;in~ pur· 11lso the :11. V. '!lad~cr R<1Y ·

Scotia BANK B.\\K OF \<J\".-\ SCOTIA

COI\\\\':\LL a11d 1!:\\llLTO:\ BHA\CII

0\ TllE OPE\1\C OF TIIEIH \E\\' BCILDI\G

JACK GREEN ~JASON CO\TR:\CTOR

GHE\FELL AYE. PHO\E 92969

I was sel'enty miles off Scalar! Is· necessary to convince th~ publtc: oo;;es for the use of the ,t·hool. : ~1. S .. "Blue Trndrr" loac1erl land and workin~ throu~h loose that tl~eir. support. to this gre~! The event was quite succe~sful' f1:o:-2n ftllrts and s:uled for the

~~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ic~e~th~e~v~s~a:w~a~rotx:_:on~o:ne~o~f~th~e lmmamtanan scrvrce agency 1· anrl a sum of $125.00 was realized. l·mlcd States. · -- -- necessary. The work of the Rerll on Thursday evening, :lfarr\1

Cross down through the yea~s, , 9th, the Salvation Army School and in the ~resen~. through rts 1 here held its annual speech night

OIAL 96076

PRODUCTS LTD. 1lOokFIELD 'ROAD MOUNT PEA~ \ .. PHONE 92141

1 mnnv and drverslft~d spheres _of programme. The chairman o[,

; activity have made 1t an o~gant7.· the evening was Mr. George 1 ! "'ion which we cannot do Without. Crewe Welfare Officer. The pre· I The most emphatic and remark· sentation of the diplomas ancl1

[ able characteristic of Red Cross prizes to the successful pupils wa' I

activity in our o~inion is thr~ug~ made by Mrs. Crewe. : its disaster servrces: :When 1t IS We hope to have a detailed rc· always ready and wtllmg h> ren· port on this event for the next der assistance wllen it is needed issues of the "Notrs."

I most. Sport Occasionally we hear criticism

of lhe Red Cross disaster services I Now that the "green light" has which arc unfounded and which been given for the use of t?e result from individual!!' either gymnasiu~-audito~ium those m· having a wrong Impression of the terested m ?l.aymg . bask~t.h.all application of such services, or have been avatltng of 1ls factlrties else looking for personal ~aterial on every oecasio~ possihle. Th~ P-ain at the expense of th1s pub- basketball court ts equ.al to an~· llcly supported organization dedi-jthing in si.ze and qu~ltty to any cated to ,the service and relief of anywhere m the pro\·mce.

CONGRATULATIONS

Scotia BANK THE BANK OF NOV A SCOTIA

CORNWALL and HAMILTON BRANCH

ON THE OPENING· OF THEIR NEW OFFICES

R.· S~ ROGERS Ltd. Plumbing and Heating Contractor

197 PENNYWELL RD. PH: 90079

CONGRATULATIONS to

Scotia BANK THE BANK OF NOVA SCOTIA

COR::\'WALL and

HA~IILTON A VENUE

BRANCH

ON THE OPENING OF

THEIR NEW

BUILDING

I I I

l I I I I

I

l I I

I ! ! I !

FLEXACHRO~lE A:'\D VIJ\YL ASBESTOS TILE FLOORS 1AND ALL DRAPES \\'EHE Sl1PPLIED AND INSTALLED BY

AYRE'S CONTRACTS DIVISION.

.)

! • } .

I i :J '. I I' •J

! ' ~

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~ ,. - . .. .. .. ~ ... - . .- - ..... . ,,. .. THE DAILY \'EWS. ST. JOH\''S. \'FLD .. \10\'D.\Y. \1:\ RCH llO j(Jr·· - ' . )I

'Nflliii ········.;>11'• ~~"ft~rtr· .· .... .

SPANIARD'S BAY-As part of the observances of Education \Ycek Hoi~· Redc~nwr S ·ho1u! held

''open house'' on \Vednesday afternoon when amnllf! rttll('r items rtf intere~;l parents li~ll'ned In a

011 "Spaniard's Ba'' should have a Town Council. (H hasn't).'' For lh!' :\ifinnatin w•.·n· (Jar:,_.!'

rett, Lee Greeley, Olga Smith, and for the Negative . .Janel ,;nkcy, Ed ~eil and Vern a lli~hllJI. Gosse was the M.ode'rator. 'fhe Affirmative won, of (ourse.

BAY ROBERTS-1\Ir, R. D. Pepper, Principal of the Amalgamated Sehoul Academy, readit~g ftport at the Speech Night held in the Auditorium o{ the school, February 8th.: Seated m

ground are staH members and special guests.

his annual

the hack·

BAY ROBERTS-Seen here are the nine pupils of last year Grade X, Amalgamated School Class,

who won Confederation Scholarships to the value of one hundred dollars each, they are Margaret Abbott1

Florence Kearley, Barbara Mercer, Shirley Parsons, Geoffrey Butler, Charles Dawe, Dennis Brown, Reg­inald Kingsley, Wilson Russell. Colonel Brown, Sup ~rintendenl Salvation Army Sd10ols, one o[ the special guests for Speech Night, assisted hy Mr. M. H. LeGrow, Vice-Principal o[ Amalgamated School,

presented the Scholarships.

;. ..

Postponement C':\RIJONEAR. ~lareh lfi

The regular mnnlhly sol'ial cn.·nmg of ··victory'' Lodge :\o.

' 425. Orange Young Brilous. was I cancelled for March 15th. In its

place a regular meeting was held and twelve members 1. ere advanced to the Royal Council Degree. 1'he Social and Bowling will now take plal'c on We!lnes· day next. March 22nd.

Carbonear Newsy Briefs

CARBONEAR, l\Iarch 16 -Mi.ls Doris Hiscock has severed her connections with the Cor· ral Restaurant and has taken work with Pottle's Supcrmar· ket We wish the young lady every happiness in her new work.

In an earlier news budget your reporter gave the names of Hr. Hock Hill residents who are prosecuting the seal .fishery

I in the "Finback" and "Arctic Eagle." Didn't know then that

1 Harold Hiscock. son of Mr. and

. -~

! ! ; .... ·

SPANii\R.I)'S Bi\Y-Folk Dancing i~ just anllllwr item on the pn•.l:Ta!llllH' in til•~ l'h,1··i•· .. 1 i:du Classes for girls at Holy Hecleemer School. In charge of "Ph~·s. Eel.'' is :\Iiss LitHia :\<•1dwo!; 1rho j,

ializing in this field. This is the first year t1Jat thb ,chon! has lwen ahl(' to !II'IH'llfl' the "·;··. irn ni Sjll'cialist in Ph~·sical Education, and is Cllle of t•hc ,·cry few sclwnls outside ~;t. .John\\\:'"!'" 1!11· is being offered. Classes arc held in all grades frm11 Kindergarten to Gr;uk Ele\'en. ;n"l iot· ,;,r h")~ the junior grades only.

i ,,

., · ... )

it

. .· .. · .· ; i

.;;, ... ; .. :..i .. :h ......... .... t "''-· 1.:.,,,.·.~·-~ ........... .

SPANIARD'S BAY-Pupils of the Second Grade arc seen here as they perform their r:l

under the guidance of i\'liss Linda Newhook, Physical Education Instructress, Holy ltl'deL·ma Spaniard's Bay .

I

Obituary -- ----------- .... ______ . --I

BAY ROBERTS-Bon. Dr. G. A. Frecker, B.A., B.E., LL.D., addressing the assembled audience, teachers and pupils, at the annual Speech Night of

the Amalgama~ed School, held in the auditorium, on February 8th. Seat­ed on tbe platform are members of the teaching staff and special guests.

Mrs. William Jliscock, sailed in \ the former ship. His father is 1 a member of the later's crew. ' ill ISS BERTHA IJA \'IS

1 Panl's Church whcncrer her · health permitted and wa~ known for her Christian way of life and for the warm friendli· .

Needless to say, we wish both . un. GRACE-There passed ness shown to all with whom more than a saving voyage. .,... ~ peacefully away Tuesday morn· she came into contact. 1 ing, March 14th, at the rcsi· :

Two months a)!o, her illness · ' dence of her daughter, !\Irs. L. Personals ----------·--··--------Cartobrita Meets' Wedding Bell's At Hr. Grace 1

PIERcEY. PENNEY

:. liR, GRACE - A meeting of lbemben of "Cartobrita," com· Ji'islng teachers from Brigus to Carbonear both inclusive was ~d on Wednesday evening, ~Ii Ulth. at the Anglican etntral High School, Harbour Grtee' with President R. D. Pep· per in the chair. ' l)eaplte the very inclement tiltlier 10me thirt)' teachers •ttended and discussed several IDportut· topics. .· TM first of these was the 41lation of dropping Arlthme­lie· ftooll) the Grade Ten ourri· c$dam and this drew strong oh­llaeUoas from the group.

· $ Dllelwion took place on a 1 Seminar to be held

Fall. . Dl for the banquet for .. of thi{ 'relion which tie hllcl In .lu~ were di•

baalDai wu followed nomiDitiol:l ef deleptet

the NOd. Teac:hen b Coevtntien to. 1M held

~ . .

. !.... ••

CARBO NEAR,, March 16' -Margaret, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Piercey of Hearts Content and George W ., son of Mr. and Mrs. George T. Penney of Carbonear South, were unit­ed in .marriage at Harbour Grace on Saturday, February 11th last, by Rev. Dr. J. L. Rey. nolds.

· The bride was prettily attir·

in June at St. .fohn's and re· suited as follows: Newton Mor. gan: · Principal Central High School, Harbour Gnee; W. A. Wells, Prindpal United Church School, Cupids and Walter Hud· son, Principal United Church School, Carbonear.

Objections were brought for· ward by members of Cartobrita to the new rental system for sehool book• which is to be adopted in September.

An Executive meeting or this Branch wu arranged to be held at Spaniard'• Bay on April 18. The meetin1 adjourned at 10 p.m.

V. Chafe, Victoria Street, Har· : took a more serious turn but

I ed in a beige street-length HR. GRACE - Miss Jane hour Grace, Bertha. widow of her sufferings were borne with dress, with beige hat and 1 Sheppard and Miss Joyce Quinn the late Mr. George Davis of resignation the will of the J!as· · gloves, Her bouquet was of red : are vacationing at Montreal this town. ter whom she stro\'e to serve ; roses ~nd w.hite car~ations. She . where they, are . visiting reJa. The deceased was in her well and to whose Kingdom her ; was g1ven 1~ marnagc by Mr. I lives. eighty-first year, and was born · soul took its flight in the early Joseph P. P1ke and was atte!Jd· . at Harbour Grace. She was the hours of Tuesday morning last. : ed by her sister, Myrtle Pter· , Mr. Don Qmnn, B.N.,\. Man· 0111 ~ surviving mcmbet' of. the Left to mourn her passing: cey, who wore a street-length : ager at Corner Brook and Mr faJ~il of the late Thomas and are two sons, William .. residing i

dress, similar to that of the :.John Quinn B.N.A. Manager at 'M y G'll . at t\cw York; Rupert. of this' bride's but in ·a moss green ': G.a~?er spe~t the past weekerrl : ";:;~c/ tl;e passing of her hus·: town and four daughters,. Ada: sha.de. Her acce~sortes were. I VISitmg thetr p~rents,. Mr. and band, twenty.one years ago,: at Wo~cester .~lass.; lllarJorte, i

white and she ca~r1cd a bou~uet I Mrs. Rupert Qumn. Mrs. Davis had resided with her : ~:rs. Claude Hoi well, He.rnng ~ of red and wh1te carnations. I .. -.-- . daughter Jl!ary (Mrs. L. v.: Neck; Ma;y. 1\lrs. L .. V. Chafe, • The groom was ably supported I Bonme Qumn, daughter ~f , Chafe) at Harbour Grace, : I!arhour Grace and Vtv~an, ,Mrs. , by h1s brother Frank. Mr. and Mrs. John Qutnn, IS 1 wher she had received the . Jo..rn Cormack, SL John s. Four· , . Following the ceremony, a re-' visiting ~cr grand~arents ,).!r. care ~nd affection of the family ; teen granrlch.ildrcn and two j

ception was held at the home I and Mrs. Rupert Qumn. and of her children who Ire· : great grandcluldren also mourn 1 j t'W · of the groom's parent~, where I . . quently visited her there. 1 her passing and to those re· i more than thirty guests extend· , Btr!hday gre:tmgs are ex· Although in failing health : Jatlv~s as well as a large ctrcle : ed congrat~lations and best tended to Phyllis Barray, who for some years, the deceased \ of fnen~s, deep sympathy 1s ex· 1

wishes to Uie newly·weds. Mr. more w~;;\d have been but for lady had been a regular allen· . tended tn thetr bereavement. and Mrs. Penney win be mak· the fact they had a previous en· dan! at the services of St. ' ing their home on lhe South gagement. The gifts were open· . Side. The groom is an employee ed by the bride and Mrs. Fred celebrated he-;-tw;Jfthbirthda'' JAKARTA, Indonesia fAPl - i Of S n" H 11 d c ' An earlhquate razed the larger au uers, owe an om· Powell read the cards, they on Marcil 8th. by entertainind

Ltd W · · 'th •·! d b part of the town of Ende on pany · e JOIII WI " r. an were both practical and altrac· h f · d t h h L Mrs. Penney's many friends in 11.ve. · er nen s a cr orne on e· Flores Island Tlmrsrlay night,

Marchant ~l. Anatara news agcncv s~id J<'ri· wishing them bon voyage over ~·onowing a short "thank . 1 . · E ;\}crcer. life's sea. -~. . . i l uy, Quottng reports from Emir, BAY ROBERTS-Magistrate W. ,, '

S h.... you" speech by the bride, the Mr. and Mrs. WJ!ham Davts ' which has an estimated popula- i • • • , [ u 1jls, ince "1 marriage the bride gathering enjoyed games, etc., arrived by ·T.C.A. from . New . tion of 10,000 to 15,000, .\ntarJ, dressmg the assembled aud1encl 0

1, P 1

0r tk .

was given a miscellaneous with a pleasant and enjoyable York on Wednesday mornmg to s~id casualties are not yet known ,11nd guests at the annual Speech Night shower at the' home of her eve,ning being brought to a attend the funeral of Mr. Davts ?ut th:1t 80 pet· cent of thc·bwld·! .,.a mated Sl'hool held February 8th. mother-in·law. (luite a number happy conclusion by a buffet mother, the late Mrs. Bertha mgs m the town had bern de· i"' ~~ her friends were present and supper. Davis. i molishen.

• •

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No com but it is c

that ~ Europe

I whost

and w~ rnanv Sl

be ex·

is was in t I ]ires that t

~cw ( rctncmbcr'

5ank · e~pericnccd 1

on eartl innocent

~·ere drircr millions n

tormented ir camps

still, of whu and a half

incredible would be it not full te~tified to

themsel

. who. amon: been incharg

for the it · conccntratio

answer to used a ter Nuremberg

·lor month;; of word~

documents. familiar. by the r

Pohl said, Himmler ·

of the

was to paper-a has yet be captured r the e1·idenc most prob to Goerin

who the sum

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SECTION II The Daily News SECTION II THE DAILY NFLD., MON MARCH 20, 1961

e Mysterious And Bloody "Final Solution ,,

' · 1 earh olher even in death." ses. The ~old was mel! eel down' been encouraged to bring alii No comprehensive blueprint for the New Order was ever drawn' . . . I and shipped along with other their valuables with them lor

•1 · clear from the captured documents and from what took' Ltvely CompetitiOn valuables snatched from . the the promised "resettlement." but I IS I condemned Jews to the Rctchs· There were also great stocks of

that Hitler knew very well what he wanted it to be: a Na:zi-. There had ?een, the rec.o:ds bank, where under a secret jewelry. especially diamonds.

h ld b I • d f h f' f G .how, some hvely compehhon ' agreement between Himmlcr and much silverware. And there' Europe w ose resources wou 8 exp Olte or t e pro It 0 er- among German businessmen, to! and the bank's president, Dr. were great wads of banknotes. I whose people would be made the slaves of the German master procure orders f~r building I Walter Funk, it was deposited The Reichsbank. in fact, was'

' h " d • bl 1 11 b 11 h J b , these death and disposal con·· to the credit of the S.S. in an overwhelmed by the "l\lax · and W OSe un estra e e emerttS - a OVe a , t e ews, ut · lraptions and for furnishing account given the cover name Heiliger" deposits. When the: rnanv Slavs in the East especially the intelligentsia among them -.the lethal blue crystals. of "Max Heiliger." . Allies overran Gmnany they i'

· , d 1 I Thus the Didier Works of I disco\'ered in some abandoned

Chapter

10

:uld be extermmate • 11 Berlin bid for orders for a fur. Many Diamonds · salt mines. where the Nazis had

•• , .•· "' 1 hr plunder of! "I l'isitrrl Trcblinka to find nace at a Nazi camp at Bel· hidden part of their records .. ,, ' lli«l llw merci!ully, out how the)' carried out their ' grade, claiming it could furnish I This prize booty from the ex· and booty. enou~h left orer I! iller's Xcw Order: such was I such a rerersion to barbarism :;.~ \• ,, Unlcr will he. e:;tcrminalion. The camp com· i a very superior product. corrcs· termination camps included, he· from the "~Tax Heiliger" ac· the debut or the :\ali Gangslcr but by I he defeat of German

· 1 . . t ld 1 h 1 d · pondence which por.ped up at · sides gold from dentures. gold count to fill three hu~c l'attlts Empire in Europe. Fortunatcl.v artTl' and tl1n con•eqttcnt fall of ,.·aH m;"'rt'IL I en· :-.iaz1 mall! ant to me t 1at e 1a 1 • • ' ,

,,11

,,, 111, 10 ~ lt·l·cl sci· liquidated 80,000 in the course . the Nurember~ trials discloses. watches, earrings, hraeclets. in the Frankfurt branch of the for mankind it was !lcslroycd in the Thin{ Reich. ·,:•rn<·ll<'rd hy man in all of half a year. He was prin·l 11"For pntlin~ the bodies intlo 1 rings, necklaces and even spec- Rriehshank. 'its infancy-not hy ~ny revolt l'iEXT - Hitler decldr~ 011 . . 1 ,1.11. f . 11 1 'th 1. . • t • t c furnace. we suggest simp y · t 1 f f th J h rl S h h' ·~r ,, 11 carll ..• t lt'IIS o l'l)la y !'nncernc< WI 1qtu1ta · 1 ' t 1 f k . r d . aces rames- or e. ews a , uc were the br~innings of of the Grrman prople against ts last ~real ~amble.

• 1nn<11·rnt nll'n and \\'o· in~ all the Jews from the War· I i a me a or mol'lng on cr m · i- --.. -~------.. -------------- _ --· ___ _ _ ______ _

· r d I crs. i ~ orrr dn·. l'll mto urcc saw :: lctln. "Each furnace will have an

Mtllton• nwre tortured , '·' · ''N V Eff' • " oven measuring only 24 by 18 !:::nrr:trd tn the t•oncen· ot ery ICient inches, as coffins will not be , PRICED MANY HUNDREDS OF DOLLARS LESS THAN NORTH AMERICAN COMPACTs·

cant!'' and millions .· 11sed. F'or transporlt'ng the '1·

I I "He used monoxide gas and .:til ... r 11 wm t tere were corpses from the storage pot'nts 1'. · f '11' J I did not think that his methods ;~d a hal nu 1011 ews · to tl1e ftlrnaces we sttggest '

I · II were very efficient. So when I •m· ma;,at•re< rn co 1 · ttst'n!! lt'ght carts on wheels, and • 1 t 1 t set up the extermination build· " ,: drh·•<·ratc Y s arrcc 0 we enclose diagrams of these and 1 ht•lr remains-in ing at Auschwitz, 1 used Zyklon ,

:o n·mo1·r the traces- ll, which was a crystallized : Once they were inside the t drawn to sc~le." . prussic acid which we dropped ' "shower·room" _ and perhaps 1 Another f1rm. C. H. Kon: also

1

Jrrtrdthle >tor~· of hor· . into the death chamber from a , this was the first moment that ' sought . the B~lgrade busmess, '"'''" hr unhdieveable small opening. It took from they may have suspected some· . cmphasmn~ t~s great exper· ! .: 0,,1 r11 11y nocnmcnted three to 15 minutes to kill the thing was amiss, for as· many as tcnre lll tillS ftel!l srncc tl had : :r-uftrd 111 hy the per· people in the death chamber, 2.000 of them were packed into 1 already constructed four fur· . tho·ln,clvrs. depending upon climatic con· the chamber like sardines, mak· · naccs for D~chau. and ln·e for . ::::r .hme day of 1946 at ditions. . ing it difficult to take a bath- Luhlrn:. winch: tt , >r J. had · ;.;·r~ 1hrrr mrmhcrs of "We knew when the people the mas;;ive door was slid ~hut, : ~tve~ full saltsfactmn m prac· t-::rn~;1 n prusf't'ntion staff ... "'I'C dead berause their locked and ·hermetically scaled. 1 1lte. . .

. ! mtm .. ~ating s. s. screaming stopped. We usually· Up above where the well·: "Followmg our nrhal d1scus· .:cr?<IIIIH'hrcr Ll s w a 1 d waited ahout a half hour be· · groomed lawn and flower beds i sion rrgarrlin~ the rleli\·ery o[ : · ,, 0 ~ 111 ,. 11 ~ other things, fore we opened the doors and · almost concealed the mush· 1 equipment of simple construe· ·

1 .. 1111 har~e ol work pro· remm·cd the bodies. After the room·shapcd lids of vents that I lion for the burning of bodies, ' .. r llw mmatcs of the bodies were removed our ran up from the hall of death, we are submitting plans for

.:~, 111 tratt"n camps. special commandos took off the TDSE Unusual Term

i rings and extra~ted the gold ' from the teeth of the corpses.

"Anoth'er im11rovement we These articles on Adolf Hitler are adapted ;~.·"' r to one question made over Treblinka was that from material gathered by the author for his c·d a lerm with which we built our gas chambers to monumental historv of Nazi Gennanv, THE S::tn:her~ prosecution. accommodate 2.000 people at RISE AND FALL Ol'f THE THIRD REICH, :.:month; in poring O\'er one time. whereas at Treblinka

THE ONLY CAR IN ITS PRICE CLASS WITH ALL THESE WANTED FEATURES

:• t•i wt•rds from the cap· their 10 gas chambers only ac· : puhlished by Simon & Schuster, and copyright, ;j,\umrnt.l, had begun Lo commodated 200 people each."\ 1960, by William L. Shirer. It is based large- I

famthar. A certain col· , The gas chambers themselves 1 h d G d by the name ol Hoess · and the adjoining crematoria, i v on t e capture secret erman oeuments,

Poll said, been employed I \'iewed from a short distance, on the diaries and memoirs of leading Nazi bmlu "in the final were not sinister-looking places • officials and generals, and on the author's per

of the Jewish quea· :at all; it was impossible to.~ sonnl experience as an American correspondent make them out for what they · wrre. O\·er them were well·kept ' in Nazi Germany. *; lawns with flower borders; the

1

•----------------------- ~· ·.,

signs at the entrances merely ·- I ·,: said BATHS. The unsuspecting ! . I''

1xprr><ion crept with .Jews thou~ht they were simply ; ?rdcrhes stood read~ t~. drop' "Best Material" , ' fw1uenc)' 1·nto the b · g t k 1 th bath f r mto them the. amctiJ)SI·blue. , .··;

('Ill a en °, . c . ~ 0 ' crystals o! hydrogen cyanide, or

' . anti the files of the . the ~elousmg "htch \\aS custo·. z kl B h' h · . lly h d "We suggest two crematoria " · h 11 A 1 t k y on , w 1c ongma a 1 ,.;;: ,,azts a~ t e war pro· marv at a camps. 111 a en b . 11 f 1 furnaces for the building pan- ~~~; • · f een commercta y manu ac ur· , <'' 1ts srrming innocence to the accompamment o sweet d t d' . f t t d ned, but we advise you to make . sparing these men music! fe asha hs rong Htsill echa~ anth further inquiries to make sure

)llin or remindl'ng one or w tc Herr oess a w1 ff' . t h L• ht M • so much pride found· a new that two oven:; will be su tcten

' al L1 meant and per· 19 USIC for vour requirements. too. thry may have . . use.h h heav . lass or!· "\Ve guarantee the effective·

furn1;hing a certain 1 For there was hght mustc. : 1' roug ~ g ' p ness of the cremation ovens as for their guilt should the An orchestra · of "ydou.ng ha~d holte~ the; ~xe~uttoner~ c~t~~ well as their durability, the use · 11apcrs ever come pretty girls all dresse m V: lte wa c V: a appene · i [ the best material and our

blouses and navy·blue sk1rts," naked pr1soners below would be ' 0 1 k h'

. · · b d 1 k' g t tb sh wers from fault ess wor mans 1p. hi>rame known in high as one survtvor · remem ere ' 00• 111 up a e 0 "Awaiting your further word,

rirtles as the ":'uehrer . had. been form~d from am~ng whtch no water spouted or per· we will be at your service. on the Final Solution" , the mmates. WhJ!e the selection haps at the floor wo~dermg "lleil Hitler'

was ne\'er commit· . was being made . for the .cas · why there were no drams. It "C. H. Kori, G.M.B.H." paptr-at least no copy chambers this umque mustcal I took some moments for the gas The bodies were burned but

~~ Yet heen unearthed in ensemble played g.ay .~unes to h~ve much effect. But s~n ' the gold fillings in the teeth raptured :\azi documents. : from "The Merry W!dow and I ~he mm~tes .became aware t at '· remained and these were re·

t11rlence shows that it "Tales of Hoffmann.' . . I Jt w~s IS~umg from the per· ' trieved from the ashes if they lliO!I probably given ver· To such music, recalhn.g as It , (orations m the vents. It ~as ' had not already been yanked

. to Goerin~. llimmler and did happier and more fnvolous I then that .they usually pamck· I out by special squads working Wh•• passed it down times, the men, wo~en and I e~, crowdl~g away fro~ the 1 over the clammy piles of corp-

th~ mn:mcr and fall of children were led mto the , ptpes and fmally stampedmg to· ' which have hitherto given full I nm•th~r of witnesses "bath houses," where they were ! ward the huge metal. door satisfaction \

b .~· :\11rcmherg that tokl·d to u~~rhess P~~p~ato? to ~~~re c~!~~w pil~~oo~~sp~~te~~~ ~ ~ur perfecied cremation O\'ens I •d hfanl of It but none . Ia mg a s ower. me lmes • . I h' h t 'th I d

· the)' were even gi\•en towels. pyramid, clawing and mauling 1 w IC opera e WI coa an

odd ~::~8: Hopes To Fly Nfld. tontentrallon camps were . ·

tamp, and millions of : F. h T U Canada .. ltarved inmates: lS 0 pper .

Beginning To Thaw

m them. 1 11 was the extermination I This past holiday and the

the Vernichtungslager, weekend have seen the first lllost progrtss was made I Earl Crane To Use Fleet real thaw since very early the •·final solution." The i January, and the shows that

have hindered the Avalon Pen· lt:~d .~~~~hre~own~ nr o+ Three Flying Boats insula for so long have shown

huge ; c hWI zb, w osde 'J first signs of being melted .as c am ers an

crcmat · 't •. away. . for d om gave .I , 1 , TORONTO (CP)-When Earll craft are ~o be lade~ w1th veg· , The Torbay weather off1ce

h eath and bur1al : Crane was training as an RCAF etables, N 1agara Pemnsula frUit i reported yesterday that the high ~e~~ of the. others- 1 pilot in 1943, the main course . and rush order items like· car 1 temperature for St. Patrick's

, all . cc, Stblbor and is one of his first meala at • parts. . . . , 1 Day was 43 degrees-certainly 1 lime m Poland. , the mess was codfish. Crane IS conftdent of fmdmg I wa.·m, and the ice softened up

If ri\·a there was qUite "It tasted like a tired rag." a market for 12,000,000 poun~ · somewhat. lry am?ng the S. S. he recalls. of cod, sea trout and resll·[ There were driving rains, and

tffit:~~ to Which was the Brooding over his lacklustre gauche salmon in his first year a total of .39 inches fpJI in Ia ~e~t gas to speed the dinner crane decided that an of operation. squalls and gusts. Yesterday

etr death. Speed waa aircraft carrying 10 tons of Subject to financial backing, was almost completely cloudy, factor, especially bombs would be equally useful Crane Aviation has negotiated except for a short period in the

ea where to~mt the lugging filh. for the three Solents, now in early afternoon. by mp w~a setting n~w Early -next June, If the for· Portugal, and plans to have The City Council took ad·

.. Y ~assmg 8,000 VIC· mer Newfoundlander's plans go them reconditioned at the vantage of the holiday ,and aid­. ne of the. Camp's throuih, 1 fiylng boat will take Short Brothers and Harland

H for a penod wu southwest of St. John's, with a plant In Belfast. . ed by the warm rains, broke up '-doess, . an ex-convlet off ft'Om Holyrood, 30 miles Crane says he has talked over the ice and was able to get

Big, 1J·cubic·feet trunk will hold an your family's luggage. The high-styled, raked·bilck rear window stays cleilr In rain and snow. R~~ar quarter windows ha,_·e sate. drtiught-frc~ hinged openings.

No other cerin its class offers so m•Ich head­room or such slrelch-your·limbs comforl. Front scats are scien!.licil.11y contoured for correct dnving sup~ort, Foam rubber pad· ding gives •ddcd lux"ry, There are thre• ashtrays. And padderJ armrests,

~-.·'·:

You qet a11 lhr onstr11mrnl~ you nerd. Ard a qlo·.e C01nparl1'1ent that l~c~. Extra. tuii-.Nioth p~rcr!_ shelf . , . padded sun visors ... and a. last-acting, hig 1-citpaci ty, fl~sl!.:~]! type h eilter.

World's first short­short~stroke engine. So quiet you may some­limes doubl that it's running. And with the engine weight up front, you get i\ sure, Sdftl!"

driv~. The b.1ttery's up lrool, ton, 'Nher• it's easy lo get at. T .. el<e· volt electrical system. Fulf.flow oil filter. Standard S.A.E. nuts •nd bolts, Paris &nd Se1vice Across Canada.

tiUllty of murder, aouthwerrt of St John'l with a his project wltb Newfoundland some of the aU.winter solid at Nuremberr on load of chilled cod, deatlned for and federal gover.nment offjcials ice away from the street sides.

'tlll'iiorittv of the 111· he the tables of 1even eltie1 from and Ontario busmessmen and Especially on Duckworth Street, d h' b t Weat End, the graders worked

7inal Solution' of the tlettiori meant the com­

tltermination or all Jewa

Toronto tD Windsor, Ont. "receive not mg u encour· most of the afternoon and clear· . Now a resident of Kitchener, aaement" ed the street · so that parking

SALES ~NO SERVICE WHEREVER YOU SEE THESE SIGNS Bl!l I wu ordered to

extermination faellj. ;IJ&chwitz in June, liMl. C: there were already

lh raJ Government of ca Itt other extermin·

-..a: Belzec:, Treblinka

Crane 11 enthllljaatieally can· will be much easier. vaaln1 financial backin& for Cnne Aviation, the cmnpany he formed with hls m111tering· Remove Irish flag out pay when be left the RCAF . HALIFAX (CPl-A fl r tb ·two years a1o ag o e WILL CARBY PERISHABLES Irish Republic waved briefly

On their return fillhtl from' from the city hall flagpole in die Lalle Erie port of Wheat· downtown Halifax· before dawn

Later a similar green, white and iold • striped flail was re­ported blowing from the pole in front of the city's public library. Chief librarian Mary Cameron called on the fire department to

lte)', Crane'• three Soltut air· Friday. A constable removed it. take action.

'I

MUNN MOTORS LTD. St. John's-Ph. 94061 Spaniard's Bay 'Corner

Brook. Sub·Dealers-

Clarenville, A. Duffitt Elliston, Tilley's Garage

GEO. G. R. PARSONS LTD .. ST. JOHN'S

Phone 91011

HR. GRACE

Phone 256

GRAND FALLS

Ph!)ne 224.5

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Page 10: DaVince Tools Generated - Memorial University of ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · you $18.00 (in 12,000 miles) l} 4,000 Miles be tween Oil Changes-Saves you

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THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOH!'\'S, NFLD., ~fONDAY MARCH

.Only One Major Deal Backfired ~On Buccaneer's. · Gen·eral Manager :· . '

f h out of Duke University and the 5. Hal Smith from tile Kan· got in 101 games and the World <Thil Is the last 0 t ree sas c1·ty Athl"tes for Dt'ck Hall Series when Bob Skinner was di t h f m the Pitt• Armed Forces to play short- " spa e es ro and Ken Haml1'n, Dee. 15, 1959. hurt. Murtaugh and the Pirates

.......

b •b Plra•- • camp In atop for the Pirates. Swash-ur., K> Hoak, Haddix and Bur"ess have great expectat:ons for the ,.-\. · Fl rida on how to build 1 buckling Buccaneers were de "

' • •. 0 d gave the Pirates the defensive fircballing Cheney. · ·: hamplon1hlp •lub) veloped on the farms an were "" c • • th1'rd baseman, the lefthand Brown acquired Clem Labine drafted, but in the end Brown's Jy HARRY GRAYSON lmart swaps put the champion- pitcher and the left.hand hitting as a free agent last Aug. 16 and

. Sparta Editor ship club on the field. ealeher they so sorely needed. 1 the veteran relief worker had New1paper EnteJ11rlle A~!n. • • • Virdon stabilized the out· . a 3·0 record and saved f11•e

B 1. t field which positively showed 1 other games with an earned· :'. . FORT MYERS' Fla.-(NEAl Th111e closest to the. ucs 1s : · 1 h off in the World Series last ~ run average of ess t an 2. . -Joe L. Brown demomtraled Brown's five most Important fall. Miz~II won 13 games for : ,,, • • .. , that he waa a shrewd boss deals in this order: th p· t RI'OII'll's most recent trade . . •••der •hortly after being I 1. Don Hoak, Harvey Haddix c If& cs. • • • .,... • h ~ent Bennie Daniels, R.C. St rv·

" 'named general manager of the and Smok~ ~urgess from 1 e The highly 8gg1·cssi\•e Scho· en~ und HRrry nr;ght to the Pltl!burgh Pirates In 19:16. Reds for F ra~k Thomas, .John· field ~ave the Rues the finest ' new Washington American

d fl 1 b ny Poweu Jun Pendleton and " . . The frustrate rs aseman Wh ·• D glas Jan 31 reserve infielder 111 the bus•· . Lcr.~ue club for Bobby Shantz. 1 ~ .. ·.has been lloinK strong ever :mmy ou ·• · ' ness. When Groat was ~ide·· Now the Pirates poKsess left GIANTS won the Holy Cross AA Bowling series yest cnlay aftt>rnoon. )fcmbers of the winninq S![Uad

.. since. . I 111~ . Bill v· d from the St. \lined for three weeks by a I and righl·handed vest·pockct (left to riaht) Dolf Meadu~. Jim Gosse, Jim Dooley, Gerr:r Cmran and Leo Gossc.-Royal Photo , Of 10 ma)or deals only one I L ·. C d.1r 1°0for Bobby Dell broken wrist late in the going: fire fi~hters. and Roy F'are "

kicked back on Brown. After 1 .oms a~ ~a k~ Littlefield May !last season, Schofield batted won't hal'e to make thai long . ------ · --talking it O\'cr with Manager , (rreco an lC ' I .336, Groat, the great shortstop, walk from the bull pen 68 limes' G d R B k T l,)anny ~lurtaugh and others. 16. 19~·6'e"ar Bend Mizen from I National Lea~ue batting cham· I as he did last season. ' an e r 0 a r s . a c 0 Rrown 111 December c~f . 195': I 1

3· ~ 1~.n 1 1 r Julian Javier pion and MoRt Valuable Player Of all the deals, howc\·cr.: . · . ~enl Bob Purkey to Cmcmnah 1 lle ar mas t M 2(; . wasn't missed. llwre isn't any quesl'on but ' . · · ~ for Don Gro~s. A stocky IJittle I and E~ :a~lt~ r:d a;nd 'cash i 'Smith turned out In be an that Brown derives the mo~l I ~ncrease lefthandcr .. Purke~· ~ecame a: 4· DIIC c/ ;. lei~ for Johnny' under·ralcr! catcher who could; snlbfat•tion out of having draft· Ill 17·game wmner. c.ro~~ de·' g.c~m t le nda~~~: 'Freese Jtme I hi!. He blasted the nevcr·tO· ' cd Ror·ky Nelson from Toronto . St I n N AHA R· u n n In g vcloped ~rm trouble. . ! nen 8 T ' I he·forgolten three-run home ' Dec. l. 1958. The first ba~C· I ay . . _ Capt. ~~c~ ~oat ca'.ne ~~g~t ~· ~5~ I r~lll in the ei~hth innln~ of the ; man wa~ 34 at .the time and h.nrl 1

· !mal World Serle~ ~tamr. , nme trtals wtth five ma.1nr 1

Cl b D R d I The other Brown deals Jca~nc clubs. . . u arts oun up ~ helped keep the Ph·atrs roiling. "They titlerc•d when I nunwd II

' Preston Ward went to Cleve· Rocky," recalled Joe L., as thr Race Tightens With Four land for Catcher Hank F'olieH, ~riz7.ltd old warriol' reported j

'!vi · who lent a rather capable hand at the Trrry Park lr;tining site, • . , , 1 B,\' P. 0 ) .. . , for four campaigns. Dale for his third year with 1hr · bAND~R C:Slaffl - !he

· ~ Hoi\' Cross tontinue their hold on first plate m · Long and Lee Walls wert! Pirates. "S~meone asked me 1 Gander Srnlor All·slars roared Club D~rts but the battle for second and third posi- shipped to the Chicago Cubs if I didn't m.enn young Ricky! hat·.k Wilh a l'cngcn~c on Sa~ur·

. . , . · d for Gene Baker and Dee Fondy. Nelson, the smgcr. I day ntght at the (,andcr Gar· stwns, and e\'en a thancc of 0\ ettakmg the Crusa ers, . Baker did a good joh for two ' "Usually I talk over player: den' here In slay in the run·

' is shaping up between four squads. :~·ears, or until the infielder in· : geJectlons . with Danny ~lnr· · ning for a berth in the All· - Joe E\'O\' of St. Pat's had the highest three leg 1 ,iured his knee. Ted Klu7.eW·I laugh and others, but Rocky: 1\'ewfnundland Scnio1· hockey • , . ]· ·t ·• k , . he posted 906 while Da· 'e Ware- : ski's batting a\·crage and runs· , Nelson was my choice and mine. fmals as they overcame a 3·0

· SCOI e •15 \v ce as • . · ' 1 hatted-in total improved when 1 alone," concluded Joe L. Brown. 1 Gmnd Falls lead to stop the

ham of CNR, Ned 0 Bnen of Star and Hal Gosse of 1 he came from the Reds for "And I've got news for thrn1. ; Andeos H. ~~CS all had two finishes for their learns. I Fondy, 1 Ricky Nd•on couldn't hal .300 ~leanwhilc a! Corner Brook

LAST WEEK'S ACTION Frizzell, 116: Frank Skiffington, 1

Gino Chnoli and 'Tom Cheney : in the National League and hit I the Royals were riel'eating the Mondav, M1 rrh 13: !100; Ches Stevenson, 100; Hal , were obtained from the Cardt·: a two·run home run in the final. Btwhans Minrrs 8·1 to ha\'e the 7.00~St. Bon's 2: star 1. Bob 1 Andrews. 100; R.E.W.A. Char·\ nal& for Ronnie Kline. Chnoli game of the World Series.'' I Western Ni\J!A semi·finals

E\·ans. one~; Harry Cowan. lie Nugent, 100; Bob Nugent,. ·---·------.. ·----.. - - .. - ·---·-

elevens: St. Ron's. Ned O'Brien, 100: Star. j c • I B 1• L fours• Star Pete Deutsch, 100: . 9.00-F.C.S. 3; St. Bon's 0.1 omm r Nrd Cl'Brie;l,l16. 108; Star. Bud. Hal Gosse, Olle& and twos; Jim e Cia ow Ing eague Rus~ell, 100. St. Bon's. 1 McNamara, tens; FCS. John

9.00-R.E.W.A. 2; Holy Cross Cowan, 108; Bob Evans, 100; is ·l. Ches Sle\·enson, twelves; St. Bon's. t t• t• F Th p Walt Frizzell, ones: R.E.W.A. - I a IS ICS or ·e ast Jim Tucker. sixteens: Holy STANDINGS ' Season

Games left

FIU\U RURKE .\:\'GIE C\RHOLL

St·rn·i,,:.: ~ :::n:11 rr 1•

T1·,Ttt :.:,~·- ;_, n: ,., ··.,r-,. .­

lf·ad tn f~an~··,,,., I~·~·-:.(·' . .' S1:trli1!'TI (Iii :-;, ·-· '.•· ·,

' . . ' h~: ~!J•tt:n:.: o~.: ~: ·-~:r:, ;;.,) Trrr11 .':ll\. :1 .:.:(•:• ·

iJ W~...; hj.; ~H··.;·,·~ r•<ir: and lrlt llt!ll .,. ··· ,; 2!\ :1:.!1'. top" lfl ::u· ', <":~.

\\';lYIH: ~:r;. '; · ··: !wicc for Tr; !' t \r.··:i· ·.·::· .\n·~cl ;n\,lin:.: :.r- nt;.rr Fred :\oftall d:·· ·' · ., 0 ,

whilP An~"\ :11:(~ \\·~~ r,e nan had an ;t·...:i .t •<!• : •.

:-:ix ~anH'". Tr·tTt \rr.~, nine pomt-: ~·- h:lr·· ['l·r 'r;,•; ~ix. C;1rihon.: ;~:·_,; t:;~:>s

firr poitlh l';wh '.' :::; r . till' cdl~r on :111.o ..

Minor Offi ~10\11;\ Y:

.T Rrard: :,'!. [I HPdd:

rn:sn.\Y: \ il 'llll'jlhl. F \\'1r]

\':nt~it<~n . .I · :\'EXT c:.nn::

Cross. Frank Furlong, 122, 100; ) (as of Thursday, March 16) Holv Cross Walt Frizzell, 120, P W L The final statistics for the I W. Abbott, (C. Cables) 226.57 !\fid .Coal & Oil 81 51 30 101 . D B. k 100 F k J'oly Cros• 48 34 14 St J h • C · 1 B J' 'N O'K f (O'K f • ) 226151 c ·' p 1 8 • 30' li!!htnn up. With four ~ames Trrn . .Jc~ssPau ha\'in~ an assist .J. Rt'~rri::::on : on ra e. ; . ran . 1 • .... .... .... • o n s ommerc1a ow mg · . ee C1 ee e s . an au a ac :ers 1 .,1 .. ' .. · Skiffington, 100. 100; R.E.W.A. ! Star ................... 51 3\ 20 1 Leagu,!! have been released by • D. Fisher, (R. Stores) .. 228.14 Chas. R. Be:! . . 81 47 34 · left in the semi·finals only Buc· . ca,·h. R .• li!I'Kt11 "" "

C.N.R ................. 48 30 18 1 secretarY Jack :!'-dey. [.!.Norman, (Harveys) ... 225.78, c. A. Huhleys ..... Rl 46 35' han:; ean he counted nul of the • (;t':·ry ll~ucock tied the game :\"EXT G.DIE: Tuesday, March 14: C.L.B ............... 48 30 18, SECTION "A" 1 B. Perry, (C. Cables) 224.67! United Towns ..... 81 4ti 35: running. for t:andcr early in the third II. ~lurph,r. :••'

7.30. -C.N.R. 3: F.C.S. 0. Char· Can. Legion .... , ... 48 30 18 . T S 11 . : G. Vaughan, ( G.E.O.) .. 224.41 Geo. Neal 81 44 37 : Grand F~lls helil a :l·O fir't . period l'.'hile his own team was flrdd~·. li ~. · 1

. lie Bi~'Jop. onrs: Dave Wareham R.E.W.A ............. 51 29 22: T eam tan '"is W L

1

1 T. Caines, (Imp. Oil) . 224.16 Bur~ey's Trucking 81 43 :~R period lrad and were out front shorth:Jndeu and I he Airport :\'EXT r:,n1E: nine~ and ·fours: C.N.R. Pat F.C.S. .. .......... 51 25 26' earn 16 J. Cowan, (G.E.O.) . . . 223.45 N.A.F.E.L. . 81 43 38: 4·1 early in the middle frame follo•1·rd it up with three ~oals .r. Rr.mli~:ll. EO Barr•m. 122. F.C.S. Max ll!iller, St. Pat's ............ 48 20 28 Bennett Brewing .. · 78 62

20 C. Doyle, (Bennett's) .. 223.32 Daily News. . .. 81 40 41 1 but the Gander team 11wc not as Gr~nd Falls had a man off. .T. O'Toolr L. 100: Charlie Bishop. 106; C.N.R. K. of C ............. 48 18 30 Brookfield ···· · · ·· · 78 58 I A. Joy, <E. E. Bakery) 223.05 Standarri Mnfg. C'o 81 40 41 1. to be denied. The.v had it ·1·3 SPI'cn of the 11 minor pcnallies ·

' 2 K [ Sl B ' 51 17 34 Nfld. L. & &Power 78 52 26 • . · ot.9.CJO-Can. I..egton ; . o . on! .... .... .... • F. Soper, (Brookfield) 22.1.00 Royal Bank 81 38 43! for the Anrlcos ~oin" into the 11·rnt to Grand Falls with four I b I Ti d h T d G d 48 16 32 Parker &. Monroe 78 52 26 1 ·· ' " ... ( ' C, J. Wa ly zzar . I rees: e uar 8 ........ ·.. .... 26 [ J. Kiel ey, (N.L.&P) ... 221.70 Dominion Dist. .... 81 37 44: last period and four unan>wcr· (;andrr goals roming while they 0 um 1an

'Morton, 8ixteens: Can. Legion. Feildlans · · 48 14 34 ~reat ~~~ern Oil ~: ~ 28 1 W. Ennis, (Ayres) . 221.37 c~n. Pacific Tel. 81 37 44. cd Gander goals in the final ht'ld a man edge. The Andcos •

JiD,I Brennan, nines; K. of C. TOP TEN AVERAGES N~l~e~ to. & E 78 48 30 L. Sullivan, (Parkers) . 220.53 Browning Harl'ey .. 81 3fi 45 stanza gal'e the win to the Air. :'l'omi onec with Gander a Jim Brennan, 100. 100, 100: Based on 75% of games played: E F. Brac on · 78 46 ~" G. Newell, (Bowrings) .. 220.14 Electric Utilities .. 81 35 46' port 1,1"\·c·r s!Jort T . 1 . 1 . Loeo Peddigrew, 110: K. or C. · F. Furlong, Holy Cross .... 15.95' · · arnes ··· ···· ,, .. A. Jackman, (Winter's) . 219.75: Top Tone Clc:1ners 81 i · "· · · 0111 ~ 11 s ;a nil'''

G d I W Tl d C L · 13 651 Nfld Brewery 78 42 36 35 46 : Fred Burke paced Gander (:"" J,\tsh dom1rd the Gander 8.30-flrri \\'::1:; ·' . Vlallv Tizzard, 140: or on . zr.ar , an. egton .. · · · ~7 L. Soper, <Brookfield) 219.67. Nfld. Great Lakes Rl 28 53 " l'.'eal· 1oo: Jack Cunningham,. F. Skiffington, R.E.W.A: 13.10 1 Commercial Cables 78 41 ,

3,,7

R. McLellan, (Barnes) 219.23 1

1

Colonial Gnrage 81 26 · : with three goals plus an a"ist go:ll:r pads to replace transfer- Rall':n' ·.' 133 C L g. J Brennan K of C 12 76 Royal Store~ 7!1 41 J R 1 L y 26

5555 ,' while A. ngie Carroll had a [lair rnd Bob ~lnrks and came up Ro,·al• ... 1 ; an. e 1on. • • · · .... · · · ... ·.. 38 . oy e, ( .N .. &P.) 218.65 Baine Johnston . 81 ' ·

F. H ne Guards 12 70 I Colonial Cordage 78 40 M II 6· 1 ·of markers and two sdups. 1\oh 1\'t.tll ," tc1p 1lt·s. pl."~· a•.· 11~ IJloc·l:. 9 30--flo';rr' · • r.:a(k ·- • Y s, .... .... · .... •39 . IIR , (Parkers) 218.00 Dun & Bradstreet 81 20 " " ., ' · .. ·Wednesday, Marth 15: ,J. Roberts, Star ...... 12.48 Bowring Bros ....... 78 30

40 G. Martin, (Nfld. Brew.) 217.63 1 Tootons Ltd. 81 15 66 . Dean, playing on the same line•. cd 4G of the 50 shots fired his :\lapk 1."''' "~

·7 30 Guards 2· C L B 1 Ted J Cunningham Can L 12 42 1Imperial Oil ·· · · · 78 38 p Mor"an (R st ) 21717 H 1 111 d 81 14 67 ' drew two assists for a ten point w:::• l':ddic l'owPr. hPiwecn the adil.'ll' . · - ' · ' · · · · · ' ' · .. · E t E d B k 78 37 41 ' ~ ' · ore~ · ug Jes aynar · 1 • •

Spencer tens· Percy Kelloway I Andrews C L B 12 281 as n a ery r R 11 (T 1 ) 216 80 ·1 production by the trio. Carl lirand Fails pipes. sa red 47 of Ftrst roun•• fours:. 'Gua~ds. Bern Pelly: A.'. LaFosse.' C.L.'B.' . :: ::.: 12:271 ~~ne;s. WJthy · .' ... ~~ 3~ 42 D. 11fuarp'hy, ~L~gra~.) . · 216:72 High Single Frame 'Bursey, and Gerry Hancock the ;;~ dri1es that were taken will he pnbli· ·!I eight,o;: C.L.B. Lar Andrews, D. Wareham. C.N.R ..... 12.12

1

ee e s rocery .. 3. 43 V. Gorman, (Tractor) 215.00 .T. Cranshaw, (Levitz) 388 added single tallies. at him. week. : .. 140, 100; C.I...R. Percy Kello· HIGH THREE DARTS EAveninLgtTdelegram ·· 78 33

4456

F. Nickolls, (Imp. Oil) . 214.38! V. Withers, (U. 'I'. Elec.) 376: Cec Thomas, AI Dwyer. \'ril . way, 120: Ted Spencer, 100; Wes J. Birmingham, FCS .... 1~ yres · ............ 7R 32 IE O'Neill <Tel gam) 214.'.'0 ', J. Cranshaw, (Levllz) .. 372 • Kni~ht and Vic Gre"nnn scorcll A: ConH'r Brnok. the Royals St. Pat's

P 100 J'm Lufta' 100• HIGH SINGLE SCORE I Ayres Supermarket 78 31 47 J •. D 1 'c I ce rd . ) I IIJ"uh Three Frame· f u h i h had lillie trouble with Burhans.' erry, : 1 ' ~. • I T & w· t 78 28 5 1. . oo ey, ( o. or age) 213.60 : " • ' or t e Am cos \l'ilh Dlrjw. · Gllards. J. Neary, Star . . . .. . .... 496 1 . d ~ e~ "& p 5~ 1

G. Hollihan, (Parkers) . 212.57 J. Upham, (R. Bank) !142 Clobie Collins, Jim Temple <Jnd Aft• r the :.liners held an early 9.00-St. Pat's 3; Feildians 0. HIGH THREE LEGS on on · · · 78 26

52 I'll. Biliard, (Furness). 213.11 C. Keels (NAFEL) 937 · -------- -· J.() Jp;JCI. the Hoyals were out

Pat Neilson, sixteens: Harry: L. Andrews, C.L.B ....... 1074 Royal Are. Waters 78 26 113

c. Williams, (Ayres S.) 2l3.00 J. Cranshaw, (Levitz) 908 1 R. Short (\Valshs) . 2H.40 front :n after the first period Junior and Norris, tens: Joe Evoy, fours; I HIGH AVERAGE, SINGLE Royal ~arage ........ 78 Zll

56 K. Re,.nolds (Brookfield) 212.00 High Team Single Frame W. Dawe tNfld. C'oal) 21 t.:!:l and H·l going into the last teams are tn 1'- ·' 1 ~ • ·.,.

J B !111! h 1\ 78 22 ' A 1 1 11 B 1 ' the school tnn'~i' a• 1 :! lit Pal's Joe El'oy 140· S!.J Game · · c e .... .... J. Ryan, (R. Garage) .. 212.00 va on Te ephone Co. 1151 ·. ut er (News) . 211.00 frame. The Hoyals j!ot two ;·~t'l. · ' ' (Three Legs) Hickman Motors .... 78 19 59 J. Murphy, (Harveys) .. 21 1.76 High Team Three Frames D. O'Regan (O'Rcgans) 210.00 goals in the third. All are to hrin~ ti.c:r .. ·· I L. Andrews, C.L.B ...... 19.96 J B' H~gh h Slng~e ~rame B. Whitlle, (L, & P.) ... 211.22 O'Regan's Agencies ... 2940 .

1

. G. Rayne~ (Standard) 209.flu · Ed.~ar Hillman scorer! three. cquipnwnt tn 'i'' JYrr:: Thursday, Mareh 16: 1 MOST GAMES FINISHED · 1rmmg am, ar ers .... 407 c. Domt'ney, (Imp. o1·t) 209.00 Averages . R. No flail (C. Paek.) zon.32 1 1 1 h .11 ,. ' !II' N O'K f O'K f • 401 tinws or l 1c Roy;1 s wit \\'t is countl'r . . ~ :'7.30-Slar 3; R.E.W.A. 0. Ned I W. Tizzard, Can. Legion.... 12 ISs · ee e, ee e s H Cowart (G E 0) 2o8 00 J. CranRhaw, (Levitz) 250,02: L. Delacey (Stanrlarril 20B.7l d 1.11 " \\."''tr 1 .. ,. ··'".l·ft"."·'· ' M' N O'K f O'K r • 396 · ' · · · · · ' Fn'nch. Walt Rl'n l'ii, .Jim " , · •' O'Brien, sixteens and twenties; HIGH SCORE LAST WEEK ISs · ee e, ee e s A. Holloway, (Barnes) 207.51 C. Andrews Nfid. Coal) 236.01 : R. Caughie <C. Parker.; i 21JB.:l;; ·

E P • 906 High Three Frames C W II' • R Dw:.·cr . .lack Critrh and Orin rlude nn \\'c·•b .;:or :.n Ed. O'Neill, fours; Star. Walt J. voy, St. at s .... .... .... 983

.. J. Pender, (R. Stores) . 207.35 . i tams (News) 232.60 • . Bursey (Bur~eys) 20B. Hl . 1 f·.r,

iii~~~~~~~~~·!!!!_i!i!~!!!!~~i!!~ii !II Hall Parkers D d 1 • • l'arl'rr adclin:; a goal each.· da1· ni.~hl'. c.;·,t:•. '·'·

J ·B. ! h P ... k. · .. .... 960

A, Marsh, (T. N. Motors) 207.00 . Oldfor ()}, Dis) . 228.52 , v. Wtlhers <U.T.E.) 20n.on . . 1rmmg am ar ers D G 11 h (A T 1 2 I E n· · 1 (R Ilk· 21 ~ 7- Frank Finlayson ~ot the Buc· pia,· al f'on:e:· 1:1'"'' · ' · .. N McLeod (L & p ) 207 00 · a ag er . e ) 28.50 1 . mmng wm . ·.1 J.. " .

G. Wadden, Bennett's 950 111: !lleadus: (C~I. Co~d.') 206:42 B. Woods (A. Tel.) 227.36 i w. Gillard rPeriins) ~07.1111 h:nh otorc ami hac! another Burhans will ·" · 1 : ·~ r High Team 8ln11e Frame E W'th (C C bl ) 20 16 c. K~els (NAFEL) 226.50 1· P. Ring (lluhleys) . 20fi.OO ruild out in the third period. dl'r.

Brookfield Ice Cream ... 1161 w. 1!ay:r~R. A. ~a~:rs) 20~:oo J. Molloy (O'Re~ans) 224.25; A. Gardiner (Gt. Lake.; I 205.00 S1x of the nine minor penal. Thr st;mdi1::·- '';,, 1\';.\_

High Team Three Frames H. Engliah (R. Garage) . 206.00 P. Hurley (O'Regans) 222.07 1 L. Byrne (NAFEL) 202.00 lie> rnlil'd in the game went to ld i 3 Parker & Monroe ···· .... 2741 c. Nugent (T. N. Motors) 205.00 W. Crotty (Walshs) 220.20 1 G. Prowse tNeals) 201.50 Comer Brook with none hal'ing Grand Fall< , Winter Cup Knockout Winners D. Brophy, (Barnes) ... 205.00 W. Austin (Hubleys) 219.60: A. Chafe m. Utilities) ~Ot.:lll an effect on the scoring. Cor· t;andt'l" Ill 6 '

O'Keefe's Grocery, L. Blundon (R. Stores) .. 2o4.2o H. Simpson (Avalon T.) 218.36 i S. Epstein !Levitz) . . 201.00 ner Brook hell! a big 31·1G C'ornc1 Brnnk 10 6 1

J W 1 h (AHveragel) 24 o• G. Withers, (Ayres) .... 204.00 F. Walsh (C. R. Bell) . 215.43 1 R. Murphy <U.T.C.) . 200.6t: shooting adranlagc in the en· Budwno 1° 1 9 · a 8 • arveys ···· 6. 0 G. Hynes, (E. E. Bakery) 203.21 ----- _., __ ,_ . - .. - ----· -~-

J. Birmingham (Parkers) 243.76 A. Spearns, (Mitchells) .. 201.58 G. Wadden, (Bennett's) 240.03 T

,~'I . STADIUM MONDAY AND TUESDAY

8.30 p.m.

NAHA Semi-Finals r: ., ' •· 'I I ~ . ~ J. O'Keefe, (O'Keefe's) 239.24 · Kennedy, (T. N. Mot.) 201.00

P. French, (Nfld. Brew.) 236.41· C. Reid, (C. Cables) .... 201.00 BELL ISLAND VS. ST. JOHN'S ' . \ :_; I : t ,· ; l ~

.. ' ; . ,, I. i

~··

RESERVE $1.00 GENERAL .50

1 L. Byrne, (London) .... 233.28 J. White, (Bennett's) .. 231.90

Tickets for to-night's game 'on general sale TO-DAY. Tickets for Tuesday's game on Holding Certificate Sale TO-DAY General Sale on TUESDAY.

T. Benson, (Tractor) ... 231.04 L. Keels, (G.E.O.) ....... 231.03 G. McKay, (Bennett's) .. 230.67 G. Fuller, (Bowrings) .. 230.21 C. Mercer, (Barnes) ... 22UO R. John80n, (Tractor) .... 228.20

SECTION "B" Team Standings

Team P W L Avalon Telephone .. 81 73 8 Simon Levitz & Son 81 63 18 O'Regan Agencies .. 81 61 20 Walsh's Bakery .... 81 57 24

J.' Lalte, (Brookfield) .... 228.17 I. F. Perlin's ........ 81 53 28

ALL THIS ·INCLUDID IN YOUR CUNARD. TICKET

• 271 !Ita. free Hlllll •ll•wence • lupellt cul•lne • Duty-free 1h1ppln1 • D•ncln1, p~rtlea, 1111'1111 I : llllllblfl fer lnlleth lllllftl I fiiWIIII lrltllh aervln

lave 11" H l'llft•·t~p Ultll a,ll14 r-.-FAS-T-, FIE-QUENT--IAI_U_N_OI-TO-Dt-Gl-ISH-, -Sc-om .... s_H,_I-RII_H_I_F-RE-NC-H -PD-RT......,S

PAY·LATII PLAN AVAILAILI .

IH YOUI LOCAL ACIINT-N• One C.n lerve Yeu .....,

115 Jarrlqtoa l&reet, BaUfu:, Nova koHl,

'Pbo1te: 1-11181

.10M NIW YOlK & HAUPAX QUI .. MAI'r Mar, 22, Apr, 5, 19, May 3, 17 •mVANIA Mar. 22, Apr. 14 QUI ... IIAIITH M.r, 29, Apr, 12, 26 °1AXONtA Mar. 30 MIIHA NM.II, Mlly 5, J ... e 2, 10 °CAIIINTHIA Apr. 7 PAII'IIIA AJ!r, 21, M11y 19, Junti 16 """"' Hollhr•lo!iow~l dll'f,

.10M MOMTIIAl I QUIIIC IVIINIA Apr. 13, May 5, 26, Jane 16, July 7, 21, Aug. 18 IAXONIA •• 22, May 12, J•ne 2, 23, ·July 14, Aug. 4, 25 CA~IA t•· 28, May 19, June 9, 30, Jaly 21, Aug. 11 tfiM lo.otlllon1 doy, I!GUIAI SAiliNGS TIIEIEAFifl

~OCUNARD . .,_dl• If: Hallfu • Sallll John • QuHec

MenlrMI • T..,.ll • WlnnlpiiJ • 141monlon • .Vancouv•

/.

SMILING JACK-Jack Withers, captain of the St. Pat's Senior Hockey team, is smiling ted he holds the Boyle Trophy at the Stadium on Thursday night. Mayor H. G. R. Mews pre~en Trophy to Withers. Left to right Mayor Mews, Char ]it~ Walsh, Jack Withers, Jim Byrne and Jun

(Royal Photo

The ~~me. wa: chcckmg

the crowd in oh·mpic his•.ory-hm

\bolt! the onlv · thr flvin~ I

·s failm ~o:•l. He ne·

the :'\Ill." R:ch~rri

· anrl Geofi Thursd:>\'. wa~ its

Plante. with a a ere! in~.

was P l a n r.&nadi~ns' com<

place in trailed

and aope their title.

~EW YORK I

Leafs pi :-lew York night and place in t

League 'rontreal th~ ch 2·0 I'

g.,me wt:

Leafs. who to hare ; But hel th, outc

gaP~€ wa~

snuffed ou hopes.

Th1 batter(':! the

!!oals SC('I"'

Toronto's F finished v in ch~ck

Jnhnn,- Wil> !ron! 1·0 a

Page 11: DaVince Tools Generated - Memorial University of ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · you $18.00 (in 12,000 miles) l} 4,000 Miles be tween Oil Changes-Saves you

~:n ...

I~ . ' r .

!'. -:11

'_II ~

:n ~~

10 1

. ' ,r

,'·

1961

• IrS or our

. '

,.p•1T ·l'PI - Montreal • '·.,, ... , olt'(r;ltrd ()otroit ned

•11 '"n'la,· night !o wmp .; . ·' ·.l<•llal lln~kcy Lea::ue

, .. ,. J:,.t ~:mw of the •:,·:·nic· (icoffrion was .•· 11 ;, at tcmnt to beat

:,-1 •1

1. :--rnrin~ l'rCOI'd h(\ . ~ ::· ·. -.11th ~laruice 1 Roc-

I' .l: l · !'• i :,"._' \I "n t r r a l's fourth 1 · · :·:,,,. ch:unrion5hip. ·

· . ." .. ·~c::•c:n: >Corrd in the · · . ·., :.•.I ;~ntl Claude Pro­

,.,, :111 nnrn net n ~ec· '•' ,. · ~ ~'t' t.'IHI.

.•·':t'lb. skatin~ with .,.,·.1 throu~hout, had

•• • ••• '· 1! 11ith thr fourlh· 'i, · > :wf1•re pulling out

' ' '

·' ,I• worth ~t.OOO to :·o·nnant-winning Ca-: ·~ pJa~·c:· on the; \l:1ple Leafs gC'ts

·'"' ru~!!CII with 1

thrnud:out ami

BERNIE GEOFFRION "ART ROSS TROPHY"

Aldcorn's decish·c 1n · foot I goal came at 10:55 of the last

·.I ,,f 1;.•1~3-h:r~-.. ,. ~!;Hiinm's 33_ period. McKenney sco1'W 1

twiee. making it 26 for the 1

.. c., tii,anpointmt•nt Fr-·pchn·rn \\'fl~

... ,:rc to ~et hi~ ::t· ·d·.•tl th;~t to he·

\ 1 :1.·, al-ti:•~c ~o:•l· : d ~l·on•(1 :;o in

• ,,.,,fl"i•>U I'(JUnlJed it \lonln·:•l"l< hi~

·, ma:-.krci 1!oH Hr " ,,.,.,. wl•o ~tonned

. :· · :> ac•:-LJhat ir di5play

year. Whillic O'Ree got the other llo>ton tally.

t'hirago scon•rs werr ~1urray B:1\four. Hon Murphy and Ed ' L itzcnhcrgcr.

SATURIJ,\Y NlGliT

TORONTO, CP - Toronto Maple Leafs, who haven't won ' a National Hockey League cham· S~ VE: Duke Foote, CeeBee goalie, makes the save on Mike Donovan o£ St. John's in Saturday. night's

~i~~~l~ip B~1:,i~; ;.~ar~~r;h:r:: NAHA hockey game at the Stadium. Howie Meeker and George Faulkner are in front of the nets. The

.• :: t r who ~parl;c1l da)· night and sent the title' 1

CeeBees won 7 -2.-Royal Photo Service. , ·•:lll'''aek from ~er- -------------------------

ri"ht down to the wire. 1

.. , Fehru~ry when "

Take 9-5 Victory HARBOUR GRACE (Staff)- i Clarke and Andrew Galway got

V1ctona opened the Conception . the other markers for the losers , B~y lnlermed:atc Horkey fmals while Ed Sharpe, Bob Clarke

11 tth a 9-5 v:ctory over Upper; and Alvin Drover were each ill Island Cove at the Stadium here on a score.

I on Saturday night. The game i Upper Island Cove held a 3- i , opened a hest of five games 1 first period lead but saw the 1 scnes for the Lorne Wakelin 1 Victoria club move out froul I Trophy. . · 4-3 after two frames. In the · .wmners m the "B" Section last stanza Victoria outSl'OI'eti

Vtctona got three goals from · Upper Island Co1·e five to two ' the st~cks of both Lorne Squires for their 9·5 win. Three of the

and Gerald Penney while Walt five minor penalties called in , Penn~y added two talltcs and the fixture went to the Jo•'n"

Ho; Slade got the other mar- Upper Island Cow team ·• " kcr. Gerald Penney and Slade, The finals are sched~lcd to also d;c" two assrsls each continue ~t the Stadium h••re whrle. Cl:f,C Butt, Walt Per)ney on Tuesday night with ga~re and .Jun Clarke each had a set· time set for 8.00 p.m. With the up. . . Intermediate hockey champion·

Ralph Sharpe ftred a pair of ship of Conception Ba\' ooin" goals ~or the losing. Upper Is: to the winning club, fuJi c;owd~ land Cove team hc>:des having are expected for the remainder an asml. John Drover. Lewis :of the games.

F eilclian Garde11s · Open Final Pltase

The final pha~e of the cam· The campai~n actually started ·pai;:n \o finance~ new artificial two years ago. Contribution~ . in St. John'~ begins to-night. from Felidian supporters. Angl-i

,. d Toronto hy six The Leafs, playing thl'lr last i G F lk Sh c B '·'''''arell dc;;tined to' ~~:\!~maen o~a~~e tf!geul:~a~::; :1 eo rge au n e r ow s e e ees

·"' \ • •! K -:-;p' - T~oto ~";.':;!":; •,rgo;::;,:~:;'!'b I i . . ... : .:.,:· o!a,·rd 11 2•2 tie. Ne\ m helped Leaf~ to a 3-_0

1

. To 7-2 Win Over St. John's

Collectors from the Feildian and pledges have been sought Garden A»ociation will canvass can families. and parents of the O\'CI' 2.000 names \'.'ho have not 4.000 children attending An~li­hccn approached previously in can schools in St. John's. No an effort to raisr $40.000 in general public campaign has cash for the new arena. A cash heen undertaken, although

, total of 560.000 was realizer! many well-wishers have gil'en previous collections, and the generously toward this project. final total of Sl 00.000 cash The Gardens will be built on would start work on the Gar- Pennywell Road. ncar the site •· ·\. , , .... · Ranne S lead before the Brums could htt w , .. . ,,, " , ~ r~ un- b d

• : .. :;Jl,; fini;;hed in sec- the ~core oar . . i ay . : .. :.- .:: the ;.; a 1 i 0 n a 11 B1g Frank Mahovhch, ~eld ,,. ; ,,:,:: 1 ~ _ two point5 ~c.oreless for four games, f1red ·· •.• .. ,.,,,.~] C'anadirns who h1s 48t.h ~oal of the seas~n to

· · ' .. . rhanmion~hio with pull w1thm two of the smgle ., ictor~· 0\·er the season ri'Cord set by Montreal's Conception Bay Assured Of Tie

i dens next month. of Bishop's College. It will have i The arena will cost $275.000 a regulation ice surface. and • to build but just $100.000 is will accommodate 2.200 people i required to begin construction. at capacity. It will also be

I The chairman of the cam· ' adaptable for use as a re·

paign, H. Darroch MacGillivray, . creation centre for indoor , says that if this week's cam- sports. youth rallies. fairs and

1 paign. is successful. it will be exhibitions, roller skating, and

1 the fmal appeal for funds for special events .

·:~ Detroit Maurice Richard in 1944-45 and f tied by Bernie Geoffrion of

1 "' a "mu~r· or 1 ·~n had to win in )lontreal la5t Thursdn~·· By DEE MURPHY ,. :1 d:anrr for thr Billy Harris, Bob Pulford and Playing sixty minutes of hockey and accounting !•t•fore thr game dcfenreman Allan Stanle~· got f . ·•:tll'nme of tlw :.ton- the other goals for Leafs. who : or over half of his team's goals George Faulkner dis-

' this project. "It ·.viii allow the · :Gardens to pay ils own way," The city-wide canvass will I h_: said. _ _ _ . _ ·---- . continue each ~~~~this week.

.• .1;" ~nnmmrP:I and scored three times in the third: played his great hockey talents to 2600 fans at the

: .n:t Toronto'~ flick- period to put the game on ice. Stadium on Saturday night as the Conception Ba'. · , Rookie Dave Kcon, centre on , .

. .. ·o•d Le~fs ~;:re it a line with Mahovlich and c:eBees defeated the St. Johns Semor Caps 7-2. The :. ·!

11.,· ha

1l. hut tlw I !'>e1·in, played an outstanding wm assured the CeeBees of at last a tie for the top

. ::.•:1~rr~ pln,·ed .iu~t two-way , ~:ame and collected\ spot in the Eastern NAHA semi-finals. · . ... ,.,.n thr dendlor~. three ass.sts. Wh'l G , . .. . f . . . •

. 1

w:thout re~•:lm· Jfard-slmting Willie O'Ree! I e eorge \\as scormg our tnnes Carl Pen-~~u~<rr Hnd wing- only ~cgro playing in the NHL,' ney, Jack Faulkner and Alf Hiscock added a single

·" :. ned Kcllv ?tHl and nteran Jerry Toppazzini, 1 tally each. Mike Murphy and Jack Withers scored for ·-.:-tron~-all on th<' s~ored for the Bruins who com· 1 St J h • G 1' M .', G. f h , • pleted their season series with ' · o n s. oa Ie en 1 een o t e Caps and Dul,e · .:. i•·r Grrrv :.lc:'\a-' Leafs with only two wins and j Foote of the CeeBees were the other outstanding

::~ an exerllent p<'l'· three 1~es in 14 games. , playrs in the game. · , .. ·;~ ,a,·c, for the Ro_okle. C~sare Mamago, ap-1

. George scored on three blue- Pardy's )llueline slap into the

Curling NFLU. GJtE,\T LAKES

TROPHY CD'IPETITHlX TO-XJGIIT'S GA~lES

7.00-~.30

Dr. .h>=-rph,on .J. Camphrll .T. Green J. Ander,on

G. (;ionnou \\'. D. <;unn

.J. .T. Jlurphy ~1. Bursey pear.m:: m. h1s se\•enth game re- line screened slap shots and a low right side at 14.29 of the

.<onw so I a c c. placu.g m)urcd Leaf goalkl'eper 1 revenge stick-handeling displav. final stanza but 1\like Murphy's

,:,. ... ,.r t•o:nturcrl the :lohnny Bower, made 25 stops I. Being tops defensively the Cc.e- high backhander was deflected whirl: goe~ to tn a fmc effort to help Bower . ' T f . ·:· "f' team allows win the Vezina Trophy. 1 Bee playmg coach blocked behind Duke Foote by George : . . .aws

., .. , . The Lrafs had Referee Eddie Powers called. many ~hots and broke ,up more F?ulkner at 16.18 for the first: GEORGE 1'.\ULKNER :mmv (;REE:'\ G. F:. Knight ,.rJ ~gainst th"m. eight pcnallies six against Bos- 1 than h1s share of Caps attacks. C1ty goal and a 5-1 score. 1 ' D. S Davi~

.J. P. ChciYer~ F. Snow

F. D. Bull \\'. R. Win>or

: ::n:l; ~laho\'lich. tot!. including' a misconduct to S~. Joh~'s more than hel_d i' Within 13 seconds George! ncr on_ Saturday night with I CEEBEES: Goal. n. Foote: A. 0 Km~ht ., :·•: ~R go" Is. wa< (;ary Aldcorn in the second per· thetr own m the gam: ~ut thetr I Faulkner had thts one back on · A~ftc lhscock and .J.mJ Penney defence: G. Fa~lkn.cr. F. Pardy,

1

1,, the 1\R:l"crs. ind lack of goalmouth ftmsh plus a revenge play. ~·a king the. as the other top. CceBec for-· .1. Kennedy, F. Flcmmg: for- , " · .,.

11

nut :'\1,11. York top hockey by George Faulk· puck deep in his own zone 1 wards and Jtm l\e!Ulcdy play-. wards: M. Kelly, A. lhscock. B. C 11 .. Conroy F. Hue

:c :hr e•JCI 11

r the ~10!\TREAL. CP _ Chi<'ago ! ner and line ~oaltending by George drove around two Caps: ing well on dccfnce. : Fitzpatrick, J. Penney, C. Pen·: ·1: Tatt~ G. Graham

·'•"I J\ilh· !l:u'l'i' Bl11

ck Hawks spotted Montreal ·Duke Foote, held them to a . forwards and through the de· Don Yetman was the best at-' ncy, .T. Faulkner, A. Dawe .• J. 1

(,. ~IcNamara G. Wells '" nf th~ · secotlll C:m:•di·'n' a goal Saturday . pair of scores. The two Caps' ! fence to draw Green and slip tackc_r for St. John's with Boh Coady, D. Pierce. B. Wakelin. \ A. ~!. Dro\'cr ,J. Halley

.... , ~ " relwumrl. ,,,{d" ni;::Jt. then strnl·k hack for a 4-11 goals came in the last four· min· the puck home. At 17.00 he had 1 lllarKcrmc ami Lloyd I\clly as CAPS: Goal. ~!. Green: de-' F Warren E. Kennedy

Notes .J. Herrick D. 0. Bartr~m

.r. ll. An~cl G. ,\dams

.J. K. Clouston H. P. (;oddcn R . .f. !lt:" \\'. Chafe

.J. B. :'\orris F .. r. 1\iclley I!. :'>I. Whelan Dr. Lawton

Dr. Stenlaforrl B. Rockwell P. V. Burns

R )!acGilliiTa~·

F. l'olhurrw 1'. F. ~kDonaid

.J. Reyno Dr. )larshall

l;. )le Donald A. n. Bell

(;. Angel T. Petter

City Inter· Club Bc.wling League

lhn J1~n~"'' :1 ll'in to lcH\'c Montreal's hopes utrs of play. it 7-1 on ano!her hlueline 1 the other Ca_ps' .~tandouts. On ; frnr~: n. ~lurphy. ,J. ~Ialone, 1 1:: ~lcfntosh B. Jeans '·c , ... cl aml J1nn ~II''·'·· nf thr :\iltiotml !Iockey Lea!(ue i Ql'ICK GOALS screened ~lap on Mike Kelly's defence Rolhe Clarke and .Inn In. Clarke. n. Phd:HJ .. II. l\lcck·! 'I Finn ~- Mrl:r .. ~nJ'\'

.,, r · -''" a minutr latrr l'lli1'11Jlinnship riding on the I George Faulkner !:ol a pair:. passhack. I Malone as the hest Ci!y rlefcn- 1 cr: forwml;" .1. Wtthcrs. .J. 1 \r·. Ca;r ,J. Rrll

•· r l.eab. 1

final. g.amcs of the sch~ule. · of quick goals in the serorul SECOND CITY G0,\1. ders. . · llyrn_e. L. l~clly, ~· Batten. fl.· 1TESDAY. MARI'H .;.t , , .. ;~. - Rrtlhant wor.k by goah~ Glen~

11eriod after Carl Penney had I The CecBces were shorthand· Howle Meeker worked hoth 1'\!acKcni.JC, D. \ etman, ~I. .\lleys 1 and :!: -;~

. ' ''. . • IP ' - '"' '' Ito II ' '"'' ' hrg '"''' . m Chr. : h II io tho ""' '"mo. Poo '" w h" J "' With~• '"t lh• .,. " '''" '" "'' f ''""' "d 'h ccph >. ,\t. """"". B. : ' '·'"- to. no 7. !5-Si m ""' . Sem " Am . . . : :• ned "'' of "'" "'" "''"" "' Re"..rlom· '"" lho ""'"'' '"m '"' ' '"'' Cilyg"L tt<ome 1, tho ''"'' m , !me '"" wrth "'''"'· "; "'·'' T. S. Clill hmt TC .. . •. \:~: tn the .:'>alt~:al i m~. a Montreal castoff, ~co~ed .

1

i-·aulkner's shot into the open dying seconds of play as ,lim. some lop clear_mg, plays and m STOI'S . ~ ·Jo~~~cll n. Hooper 8.30-F'eildian> "' We~(: ~nrl .c . · c :• ''""' "·"·I •'". '"""' '' lho. wmomg . '"" ••• " !8.50 , 11, r 1 "'"' .,1 wnhm ,, '"' , ~o thml pwod "' '' '"'" rooTE' 14 t5 "" · . 0< fl. B. ""''"' 9.45-'"'' TC " cO'!'•••

-::· l,a;n.f · hound ~h1cago · goal 111 the second per1od. Hall

1

. after City goalie Merv ~r~~~ scoring shot to the far low good scoring chances. , GREEN: 10 t2 9 31 B .. Jake man Wilf ~!oorc l'nion •· : ..

3·''·' ~-3 on lhird-per· stopped 38 shots. ' • . . . REFEREES: John Dovle and Alleys 3 and 4:

·''"1' "" Don !llcKennev Fleming intercepted a pass by had made two stops. nght corner and a 7·2 ftmsh. G d f · 7.15-~larshall's TC rs M C

r;ary. \:,tmrn. · Montreal's Bernie Boom Boom! Alfie H_iscock passed to_ Mike Rollie Clarke of the City and 1 ~~-~n_Duf · _ _ __ I G" ' H" R B ~lo\·sc F. Bishop t:nited · · ":'"~ '·''":"" "·"" .,,.,., Groff•i•m '"' """' • 20·. ~~tty wrttr lh• "'" '""' to AI!'.' Dow• of th~. c ... ,~"'"' ' ' JriS Jgh I A·. c;,; . A. G. Crane 8.30-,Jammy·s· TC vs 1\l~nn's ,u...... r.\,·nn n:

1Jt

110 foott•r past goalie .Jacques. !.torge on t~e pomt for a a mtxupn~ the fnst perwd w:th i IOVtlA'lliOR .".. Earlr c. L. Byrne TC r.

fur !lit• \'t·linu Trophy-

1

l'lanle : s(•reened slap mto the low left bo!h draw111g ftve nunute fight·.! o U 1 W . .1. ~loor~ ~1. \\'allal'<' 9.45--lmprrial TC vs cl'·ntral

. :11\:ll::~Ol~(~r \he he-st. l3:t:eo~~il~;;dawyho~qe u:l~~~:l gf~!; ::d~.::~ ~~1:r:: :~~epp:eJu;~,:~~:. ~~~~~~~~:~tii~~·,~!·r~~n~! ~l:n:i~: i F"lna·s Open School Game \\', Tiller ir. \\yli~ '('(' Pnt ~. .-\llr)'S :; and ~:

frPd thr contest need· NIIL record in a season was, in~ pass to slap another screen· the CeeRees with the last City 1:nitt-d l'oll<·~i:ll<· :m•t !'rinre C. Dearin H. \\'. KeJI~· 7.15-~lun. Wurker~ vs Afalon

1 shut!Jut to assure him the stopped cold by Hall -who eu drive into the low right side. goal being the only one scorctl i ur 1\'olt·s na•et in a 4.~0 Jixture • A. Bell H. F. Hurwnod Telephone •: t~d trophy and prize kicked out nine shots fired by Alf Hiscock had it 4-0 at 8.23 with a player off. Mrmorial University take on this afternuon in the (;irl's H. ~kCarthy r;. Ilk~ B.31l-Sicau Lumber l's ~!aple · He turne~ in a SJl!lrk· .tbe powerful Boomer. of the second unassisted after The CeeBees now have 12 St. Pal's in the finals of the 1 I!i~h School Basketball Lea- . Leaf Club dtf . game but rei!I'!Ved Don Marshall found an open· three Merv Green stops. II points from six wins and two denble elmination tournament gue at .the Bishop's Gymn. The·\\'. Weir R . .J. Kent 9.45-Vietorians \'S Nfld. -r.:;and

::'!'' "'""' JohmrY ''' t.tw~n Holt •nd th• pMt '"' '"'lk~ """"" _, gom"' both '"''"' "" c.,,, ,, lh• MUN gym ••·night " ""' h~ tittle '""' " the' '· ''"" r. D. Lowi•, E. ~ llo . moolo Mop• LoW k "" Mont~•t • 1< fool 'loft. st. John'• pby; B•ll ,,. 7.15. A win by tho Uni.o"ity dmmpion;hip. " Bi;bop; Col· I B. Niobolwo C. Cook • TIIURSU.\V, MARCH ;, troph~. period lead. c F land four times and the Cee· squad will give them the cham· lege have already been declar- .. II. Roherl.5 .J. Cot~h The Hawks struck for two', aps ace Bees twice. The City must win piouship, while the Irish must: cd champions. ,\llrys 1 and Z: ..

goals in ·the second period by I all six -games to force a play- win two straight to be crown·: In the fin;t two meetings 10.00-11.30 7.15-Stcad Lumber \'S M. C. Murray Balfour and Fleming l off with Conception Bay. . ed champ:o!ls, :Prince of \~ales .came up .39-19 W. Watson J. R. Parsons United and another pair in the third B II

1. d Mike Kelly backed up the 1 Memori'll, who are u~rlefcat· . and 43-26 Ytctor:es. A wm by II. Buckingham 8.30-Crcsccnts ,.~ B.L.C.

by AI Arbour and Ron Murd· e Is an ! performance of George Faulk: I cd, handed St. Pat'~ thlell' only Pnncetof\fVales wrldl moll'e tlh\elm w. W. ~IcDonald. 9.45-Imperial TC V! C.NJI. phy, The goals by Balfour an loss of the ~easnn :n t te open- 1 mto a tc or sccon spo . w 1 e E. Brakefield-:\loore .\lleys 3 and 4: Murphy were th~lr 20th of the ing ga\ne, when thrY stopped I a l'nited win will give them · S M. Cannon 7.15.:_Feildians \'S Royal Gar-

season. w L T F •• Pt ·oates For lh~ -~i~~-~-4~5~-- _______ u~~:~- two pomts. ! J. Fitzpatrick L. Chisholm: age n With

8 loss meaning elimin· : 8.30-Counctl TC vs Nfld. T.

M011treal Taronto Cbwaa:o Detroit Ne\\ York Boston

4119 10 254 188 92 391912 234176 90 29 24 17198 180 75 25 29 16 195 215 ' 88 22 38 10 2.04 248 54

15 42 13 176 254 43

~Horse Races Sat Today

Tbe borte races po1tponed from laat Friday, St. Patrick'• Dly, are I now. scheduled for Quldi Vldl to-day. They'll start at 2.30 p.m.

Two classes of races will be held' with seven entries hJ the two aectioill of sulky races.

I

ation from the Eastern 'NAHA f.RA· CTURED CALISTHENICS and E.· semi-finals ~he Seniors Caps NAHA Games 9.45-Cordage Union vs Pontiac.

host the Bell Island All-Stars TC at the Stadium to-night. The Alleys 5 and li: game will open a six game per- 7.15-MaeDonald's TC vs Holy

formance over eight nights for hTe dates for the remaining Cross the Caps. game In the Eastern All·New· 8.30-Victorians vs Central TC City playing coach Howle foundland Senior Hockey semi· 9.45-West End vs Mammy'~

Meeker releared· his lineup last finals were released by NAHA TC. night. .Merv Green will be In Vice-President, Lorne Wakelin the nets while Eg Billard is his last iUght: understudy. Ray Murphy, Jim March 20: Bell Island at St. Malone, Dick Power and Rollie John's Clarke will make up the de· March 21: Bell Island at .st. fence.' .fohn's

March 22: St. John's at Bell Jlni Byrne, Jack Withers,

Lloyd Kelly, Joe Kenny, Bart· Ford, Mike Murphy, Don Yet­man, Bob McKenzie, Dave Bat­ten, Mike Donovan and Ed Kel­.ly will see action up front.

· Game time is 8.30 p.m.

I ,

Island March 24: Conception Bar at

St. John's March 25: St. John's at Con·

ception Bay March 27: St. John's at Bell

Island

BETWEEN CATCHES Detroit - CNEA) - It WE

a long time between catching · · passes in regular season play · for Detroit Lions end S~ve Junker. He. was out with an , • injury in 1958 and held with·

1 out a reception in six games ,in 1 '59. He fmally uught a pass

I, in the .fifth -tame of 11Ni0. fre.

'.

!

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. \')

!/

\(} ~~· ~ ftJ

~

i !

I

Page 12: DaVince Tools Generated - Memorial University of ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · you $18.00 (in 12,000 miles) l} 4,000 Miles be tween Oil Changes-Saves you

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.

USED WASHERS RECONDITIONED and· REPAINTED

from *39·10 ONLY $4.00 ttOYiN

THE GREAT EASTERN OIL co.; LTo. WATER STREET

r herseti uprlcht, ih.·lftliit Ail tliat

~ she rnovell jbs! l &tt it i flint, l:.o"'t.~ she angled herself jriJuhii until

dAth""'-' · she faced the ih~el thiir. gr'\I:J J Clinging to the ~8ii bt the 8'

.._.enry Fa"'rlll.l mattress, ~he swung h~r numb-

... ,_.:...n~ . ....,,,, --· M

I JAtOIY ON JAlDQI

" .. ed legs ollt and dbwll. Cltflit't 4111MO loJ lltur farNII Distrlllotod 11r N~ hlirptu Aaa Flghlllli down a ne'iV feeling tlANb Fitbift Eth

. h of dttzlnl!si. sli~ turned her rl:Aiit tdtJittiltt XXV , aga1nst th~ nightmare s e now attenlihn to the b~dsllle Uble ·

After the last two days of shared wllh Jane, but sh_e I and reaehM out tor th~ i:6ne, recuperation. Blanche was feel- forced herself to be still. Evi· I d I If p ·r· e beside h' I ina: better, much more alert; dcn\ly Jane's crime had not r~~fgdiizlu ,} oscun. 6. · ~!· I the real had begun to unravel been discovered; she must have: . . . th nb~; . e bet shf'\· its~! from the unreal. managed somehow to conceal, ~or~ f 1•~ . 0 tb' it u r ·

The sight of the stain on the Mrs. Stilt's body. Perhaps in I use 0 ve in · carpet had ~hmncd Blanche. this l'ery house. Blanche shud- • • .,; The, thing that had remained dered as with a sudden chill. I , obscured in the dimness ai the The police had to be told at I After a moment, 'sh' r~· back of her mind was suddenly once. Whatever the conse· moved bet !Ut irrn frllin tiie thrust forward into the blind-· qnences, there was no alterna· table, . reachtd back for. the 101 lieht of complete recall. til·e. cane and extended It toward An1ry \'Dices echoed clearly 4 • • the arm of the wheel chair. 1

aa:ainst the inner ear of her Blanche stopped, forced all She was able to reach the chair me111orr; and the figure was' at once to the realization that easily, Hooking thi hanllle of there again before her, sllhouet-' she was no less at Jane's mercy the can~ lit plri~e ,shr pulled. ted aharply in the doorway, And ! now than before. Possibly Jane The chair remamed stubbornly then there was a second figure, i still controlled the telephone immo~ile ex~ctl~ where it w~, holdinl aomething in its hand I from downstairs. Her gaze and With a smkmg sense of dis­raising the thing and bringing 1 lifted to the closed door. If appointment •he realized the it down viciously upon the head : anything .. ihe was mor• help- brake was set. of the other. The rest was as ' less; even If the phone were D · 1 th · · ba k t' It had been before. The first I available, she was too weak to raw ng· e rane c 0

the tllble, reversing it, she figure fell. The aecond step- r reach it. Slowly .tb.e old panic aimed it at the foot lever I

.~--· .. ,, ·~· .... __

No one vulnerable South Wi!sl J'lfortll 1,._ 3" 3N.T. 6 "" Pass Pass

Opellltla lead-t &

BY OSWALD JACOBY

ii

ped fo!'Ward and slammed the I beg,n to build up inside. She that operated the brake and door. had to get out ... had to find prodded. . Here is another team of four ,

Blanche ~at staring into the . some way to reach help. . . · hand in which both South play-abM!ows, thoughts of feverish, 1 Her gaze came to rest on the It took several iries before ers landed at six clubs after a remembered terror winging draped window. Before ahe had the brake finally gave. preemptil'e heart junip o\'er- . through her mind like scream- I started to drop a note to the When she had teased the call by West. I ing black devils. "I didn't mean (woman next door, Mrs. Bates. chair into position, she paused, 1 As you can &ee, lhJ! contract, to ·till her," Jane had said. Perhaps, If she could only listening; Jane seemed to still· ls very optimistic a.nd can only

1

Klll . , , Blanche brought her manage, to get out of bed and be mo1•ing about down in the be made if West opens a spade. 1

hanll up to her mouth against actoss the room ... Guided ' kitehen. Sure enough one West player I •n ·inad\·,rtent 1101! of anguish. by the mtmory of h~r previous (T ... "'"-tl 'll I did oplm the sPade king. Sou!h. She 'knew now ~·ho the figure I effort, she reiched into the 0 De "ua nut woit the trick with dummy's : In the doorway w~s. She knew : pocket of her robe, found the , a~e 6nd, eventually tell i spade 1

-th1t Jane had ktlled. piece of paper that she aought A paper plltte itued 10 th~ liot-: from dultimy ihd pla~ed his 1 Ml'5. Stitt had tried to warn I and pulled it out. ' tom of • pllibt etin wn1 pr~v~t I nine sPot. '

Blanche, and she hadn't Thank heaven Jane hadn't paint from runnlill over clntb the At the tither iable East gave li~ed. Tears of remorse burn· found it; It was a sign perhapi floor and mif hsUy bt Jtiiivect his Jiir!ner i ralst In hearts n'f her t)"es and abe let her from divine providence. Blanche with th6 C:aia. aiid West ripeittd tb.t iix of hand fall away. All these years reid the note over rmfully. h~llt!:!. South still made the .~ had gambled blindly. And It would serve. Flrit ichbol for veterlna- li.ntl, bitt It required • tre· 1~ had thought herself so She had to get to the win· rlins wii btabllsbl!ci it Lyons, mendbus play, plus an etrbr by wl¥- Now she saw that her dow; abe hid to think of a way. France, !It 1762, ittorillrtg to Weist. bll,dness had destroyed two In a surge of frantic determina· the Encyclopedia Brltlilnlei. Sbltlh riltfed the heart, pr«ious lives-that of the per- lion, she reachtd up to the lift- · · Pli~ed the ate of Hubs ~ild a 10n who served her all these ing bar, grasped It with both A meinbtr ol the Unltl!d chlb to dummy'* llrtg. Rlided years-Jane-and that of the hands and this time, with the Statei Stnde ll!uit be it leAst i secl!itd heart. Pl•y~ti I tha· o. :.who had tried to save her the advantage of being propped 30 yeari bl 11~. • t!Hien of •mtlhtl to diiinmy'l jllck. itufled -4!.'11na Stitt. The guilt, therr, up on the pillows, manalled to the United Stites lor nine the tul hhiH. Led li diamond fta hera just II much as pull herself UP into I Slttlnl years 1ncl i r'ildent of fbe lb dUtrulty's ace trtd played the J*l'e's. position. stilte lrnlil which he li jtnt to 1 diiitc~ of spad~s. Ellst pl!yed ~~~ Jane's pment mood of She returned her attention tonireils. 1 th~ liv~. Sbtith lbf! nlnli ind

edhtrltion was explained; she to the chair. It was just beyond I Wesllhe king. wia.trying, in her own pathetic the bedside table, just out of Hiteh-hikera art jiiled in a 1 Now if West led a fourth way, to atone. For murder. It reach. Then she remembered ':"estern town. Not the ki!"d o~ i heart he would set ihe hand, 1il5 too horrible, too ugly ... , her cane ind brightened. 1 ride. they expected to be 1 but West led tHe four of lltanche wanted to cry out I Using the lifting bar t:; keep taken for. spades. South let tlii5 come

around to hia jack, drew the hist trump and claimed his contract.

; • • •

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. '; '

. . :· '-: .~·.

·' . ''·. ,.f>.r,:

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lncideittalb, thlil hAnd is taken from the finals of the 11160 World's championship matches and the ·nbt time you mis-defend i alarrt you can con­sole yourseU with the know­ledge that W eat at the aecond table waa a me!Jiber of the World champion French team .

CARD Sense Q-The bliltlln&. iias b~eil:

Nortb East Stjmh West 1 ,f. Pass 1 • aPss 3 + PaSll 4: N.T. Pisi; 5 • Pilisi . t

You, South, hold: .KJ865 .8.32 fA854 ... 6

Wblit db you do! • A-Bid ill spades. Your part·

net baa shown liD .th.e Dlls.sinl ices, but It Is dodbtfttl If he will bave enOtllll atber ltuir to Dltlkt a 1rat18 dilll bid a aiood glirillle. .

TODAY'S QtJESTION What do you resptitld to you

il'dner'8 opcrilnll heart? •k I .AKQJ 10 '7 ¥11 t A885 .,.

~~ l' AnstH 't!iiiltil-rbw I

lbAF tsUI dWN 811EAD.

arn BY TEST

TfiE STORY OF MARTHA WAYNE

I!O'IJ ~OOK ,10M I 'r!JU cAW Al LEASf l!t' lJI/tL TO Mt:!

ALLEY OOP

WI-leN YOU\t: WORKED R:lR MR. BOOMER M3 LQ.JGA'5 I HAVS ...

I

PEE·

Bv V. T. HA\IU~ ..

- -

nada Tag

those people \\:itl and poetr~,

ll'ho ha,·e read poet. Rabindr

ll'ill \Je interestE A. W. Truem canada Cour

to Bombay II rentenm:·y celel

po •• J.IlraiiiOnS WCI

as the 36t India Bengal

and were ~linister :'<t

~·eck·long liter attended by

from some 23 co . a~· . y;ith \'3ri0~S -

. ~<ork. H1s cor 0£ knowle

..liln!'opn:y. religi reconsl

NO~

EVEr-.

NE AVA GAB 'THE ANG COTTEN DRA~lA.

NO

Also -

EVJ

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·:1issanc~. . l)'tlling!''

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$TEAMS HI Pt MOVIMENTS :.~~

·,;; . . ·>

. CLARKE STEAMSHIP co. :· 0GUitpot't ldv~. Hihfax March ri,

n!h, irrlve Sl. John's March.~: 201h, leave same day. ·~-:

'Gulfport leave Halifax Mar. · 25th, arrive St. John's March. · 28th, leive same day. ·;1 . ~Gulfportleive t-Jalifi.x Mattti: :' 3rd, irrlve St. john's April lith;· ieav~ saihe day. nada

Tagore Represented

Centenary· ·n~triterauon. '·

- t THE NFLD.·GREAT LAKE!! ·:·,; . . STEAMSHIP LTD. : '; A steamer , leaves !llontreai:..

about April 12th. and April 19th. ~ for St. John's.

A steamer leaves Hamilto!IJ . ·, "1:11 :1 lore of l'illage welfare were also discus· . abo!li April U!lh-2oth. c:ll!lng af :~

. : ., ., '. thn>e rspe· sed. Thet'e were al.~o perform· :Toronto and Montreal for St. . , · · ,. :.·:hl lhr grcnl ances of his music and plays. John's. Freight being receil'ed at

·. · !: •!•11Hiran:1th Ta- rem\ings of hls poetry and exhibi· This pahillng, completetl in l88b, p_tirely tn tfie Eutbpi!alt tradltiort, is c:dh· our Docks on March 21st. ;::;: · • '''trtl to learn, lions of his paintings. · k k Jt 1 1· ul 1 ·

! :t'<'m"n. Dirrel· Dr. Trueman opened the Janu· By PUIUP VAN DOREN STER:-.1 . . ,. . ~ side.r~d rieghoff's outstanding wor . iSlOr -~ slibject _fd~ !•.1 s. C~ orftll ~Ont· FURSESS RED CROS!I Ll:tt · • ':•11nr::. r<•ct•nt· ar\' 2nd session with an address The Clvll War ln lhe West Is 't ' 0 ~ 1•

1!1 Ch1' 11 ,_Wnl· 1~1 ilit:u·y ~JOg., pos1hon-Gendron's Country Inn-at beauport, Quebec, still eXISl!> ttiday. :.r. v. Coral Trader Ieivina: .. ,. 1 • F' l I · • a rap ncs as ueen reiSsued wtlh a 1 • •• .. • i C 1' · K' • h ff · · b · • " · 1

·"·' 1" la,;e par on "Tagorl' as a World 1gure", a>t ge ling the attention it de- new introductio b G W 11 • 1 One of Canada·s leadmg p!b~eer pa hters; bttt~ ms r1eg o was orn 1n -'ew York March 241h., Hltlifax, ;(cr:• . ,.,,'pior~timt> for and ,·isited s~~cral ?lhcr centres serves. Amon!! the books for! B I 1l S l h ~hl~ ise~- :. ~I /1Rl5 in Amsterdam, Hollanil. Through IUs Jtlliti~lngs he leave~ us A rith lind N.S., M~rcH mh. arriving it St;

· .. :·. · ,, •• ~ ,,,,,., 1n lhe East, d1scussmg wlth of·. spring Is Confederate Strate~\"' IIC< cl m, 1 · . . . th t' L It f 1 C dt· 1• f H <~i· d · 18.,2 ~ohn's, Nfld. March 30th., leal'· ... , ...... '"rrhrlddur· ficialslnlndia Pakistan Mala,·a from Shl'lh t Vikb . emersons classlcwmkSionc- au _entc:uer ageo eary an:t .ante. eoe tn '• llllgApriltst.forNewYork

., ' . . .. I • • J 0 0 c s urg by wan Ja k (Lo $8 9") p . . d b c 1' K .. "h 'ff I .

. : . ,:, :,- · _,,;fh '~''.>~on of ~nd Australia problems concern· 1 Archer Jones <La, State Unive1:. : c son ngmans, · " amtc Y orne IUS r1eg o , --

. :· :·. !\"c1:1 L1lcrar~· mg the encourngement and sup·. slly Press, $5.00l. In It, :\lr.! Two Georgia hooks are of more 1 1 . FURY..'E55 li'ARREN Lim i ; . : ..• 'r •. lllllllguralerl port of the arts and letters. : .Tones - ~ Virginian - gl\'cs the ·.than ordinary irltercsl. The War· I : .. - .. -· _.,_,._,_,_,_,_, __ , ____ ,_,_,._ ,_, __ ,_,_! I B. . t 0 . r· ria . 5. s. NO\' a S~otla ~·iii omit eal·

•I \:. -·e:· \phru. i . 0\'et·an picture of I he estnblish- ; Time Journnl of a Georgia GirL I r·. H' . .·· . N. . . A . ·. I I I gges ve Sc- s hng at St. .John 5 on tt! east~d .,,,. ·. ::l.'l"<li"Y ron!rr-, A member of lhe United ment of a command s,vslem in ·edited by Spencer Bldwcli King i E NEWFOUNDLA D B RD I !Ex' h'tbltot at ,voyage from Boston_and_Haltf~x.

·"• ·· • .i "" n·J1rt'~rnla· S 1 t b t ·1 1 lhe We•t in !Rfi2·"'3 ' : Jr 'rd1'1'an $"> '>01 g·11·ns a' d"l" : · endea1·ourlng to ~am t1mt lost ·' , . · .· . Slalcs en a e mus e a eas · "'· ' ·· " · ·" • '· "· · 1 • ' .... , •· ' · • '"1111111(''· and . f ltl f And Rober! II. Jones In The .IJI.'·IIav account of Eliza Frances I . . ; L·· d ·· Sh ·due to 1ce blockade.

1 [ lh :JO \Cars n lf!~. a c ZPn 0 l . ' '' . . - ' ~··-··-··-·'-"-··-··- .,_,,_,,_,._,,_,_.,_.,_ ·-·-- -··-.. -···-··- OH on ow s a '! h t ,.. d" '\! · ·' · · · :• :L•twr' 0 c 1' "t· : d St 1 r· · C' 1'11 War ln the Northwest 1Uni- Andrews while she liYed in coun- · · . ~- "anc es er ~>Uar tan ll') • 10 • ('lll~trihtl1ion lo I thr ·mldr a_de• orr ntlhne l'ersity of Okla Press ' $4 00' I try invaded during Sherman's STORM DAMAGE be leal'ing. Lil'~rpool fGr ~t.

. :~.,-., :•·d~r. includ-, ~·rars fan a h~eshl bent_ o t te tells what went ~~~ in .. ~iln~·sot·l·, march lo' lhn sea And Confe,dct:· .John's on March 25th arril·iil• r · 1' slale rom w 1c e 1s sen o · "' · 1 ' · · , · · - \ ·1 3 d ··:--"' ., :~11>n. 1_'0 t1lra; , and nearby slates where lhe In- ate Clty: Augusta. George IBS0-6.1 By RICHARD A. PARSONS Canadi will lia\·~ tile llr&~ol · pn r · c.::: :"'""trud10n and congres~. i dians were more of a problem !hy Florence Fleming Corley !tlni- (The Newfoundland Bt!trcl) :display ef iny overseas exilibi- _ -·-··-·----·-··-.. - .. - .. _

1 than the Confedernlc~. Oscar i l'crsitv of Soulh Carolina P1·ess. . : tor at the 1961 Daily Mtll Ideil . . • . Le~·l~ carries the wnr !o the Pa- ·~.om' is lhe kind of local history· The storm had spent its fury· but not quite; I Home txhlbition in .London,. e BARBS e I clhc Coast in The War in lh~> Far :we hadly need .. Told in pictures i Yet olfered us. to some deg~ee respite I he Dep~rtmtnt of Trildt tnd . West 1861·65 mouhlcdny, $3.H51. , and words, th1s unusual book 1 • · ' . • · '

1 The capture of New Orleans in gives 8 detailed account of a i From all tls clamour, havoc and affnght, Commerce reported today in re-, . ! Aprll. 1662, h,v the llnion :"'avy s.outhcrn community in warlime.l' To view: the wreckage of the awtul night. leasing,. four-colour. iolder il~ '-·-·"B;IiA.Cco"C:iit'AN"-"" I under Farr•nut 1· d 'hcd 1 \" ld h 1 k Canada 1 partlcipahon. The 1 J, k" K · d h .. ~~ s escrl n, .e cou usc more sue Joo 'S. Remove the inJ·ured overt that due care hi' . . d .. ·tt· f. a·· ac Ie enn~ Y u none I The Nlght the War Was Lost by I . . . . . ' J'U ldllon 1 ~ esl_gne. ?r. IS· more lor the pillbox than ill

Charles L. Dufour <Douilleda~:. I Other b1g picture hook~ arc: Be glVen them efftctently elsewhere; tri~utlon . at thr. exhtbttlon I he country's doctors. $4.95l. And a Weslern unil th:•t . They . Fought for lhe Umon by UncO\·er those, of debris unaware which .runs ~!om ~arch 7 to • • •

t did noble work in the East is de- , Franc1s A. Lord . tSiackpole, W k , h ·.. h , h d · h th. th. . . , April 3 _and I5 bpec~ed .t? at· . It's funnv how things we I scribed l·n The I. B . I I . $!2 501 and C<'ntenmal Album ot e see ' OJ ence. t at 1\ e a soug t em ere. 'tract over 1500 oco visitor! , • • h. , · 1 on r1ga1 e " ' · . .' . . d . · • • · • never get· worry us more t an Alan T. Nolan !Macmilhn SG 95 ; ! I he Cl\'ll War by Marvm H. Pak· And through the day. as wane the storm, restore . .

1d. t . .. h ~ . , thin~! we lose

R · 1 · I ' "' • ·ttl· I Yo e'l If •o5 001 Bolh arc The fo er race! t e ayna- e · eJOHmental h stones hm·e been .. ·1 5• 0 • •-· · · ' • The snowbound town to commenc~, as be for~. ·. · · ' • • • u~ed here as sources for a fin<' ; filled Wllh useful data. o~- ~m . mie grow_th of the ~anadlan i Hitch-hlker! are jalled IIi a account of lhls historie hrl""ll~ 1· forms, wenpons. flags. mstgnm. I economy m the twe.nl,leth een- , t rn 1 Not t"e k'nd •f

MITRO·GOlDWYN·MAYER ,_ AN ~RTHUR FREED PRODUCT!OM

' , "" c. • t · · lh 'Tl b' 1 1 1 t t · t d r ts th !18 f' d' wes e own. n 1 u • It may seem difficult to 00 a etc. And. as 1! o anlic1pate e 1 1ere were some Il'C s. so ova o our s ree • tury, an 1s t. . trms IS· ; 'd th t e t d t · bt r--~ worthwh'ne one-volume life of Li~- . end of the Civil War Cente~ntial.! The\' staYed all winter through the snow and sleet, I pl~yin~ their. P.roducls 'in the : :a:;n e for.ey xp c • 0

coin a!ler all that has been wril· .John S. Blay has done a ptr.turr 1 · .. . h. - . Canild1an Exh1h1t argamzM by , • • •

1Jalfs are 'Rf~

""'""' . Ju»rHOUIDAY1DmN MARnrr

CLARK • CI~!MASCOI'l • M!TWOeDlO/t 11i1~ EDDIE fOY, Jr.· JEAN STAPLETON

.\!~0 - t:P-TO-THE-MINUTE 1'\EWS

TIMES OF SHOWS E\'E;o\l~G SHOWS: 6.30 - 9.00.

~IATINEE: 1.30 P.M.

NEXT ·ATTRACTION !I'A f.\HD\'ER - DIRK BOGARDE in 1HE .\ \CEL WORE RED"- with JOSEPH COTIF\ - SUSPEI'\SE - THRILLS -DR.\\ 1.\.

NOW PLAYING HIGH ~NO MIGHTY ADVENTURE THRILLER!

.• . :\11n - l'P-TO-THE-MINUTE NEWS

EXTRA - IXtRA rson • Johansson Plght" TIMI'S OF SHOWS:

EVENING SHOWS: .8.36 - 9.00. MAtiNEE: !.3d l'.M.

trn on the subject. hut Reinhnrd hook entitled Allel· the Cll'il ~·ar: , And though the! e was scarce anyt mg to eat, lhe DepArtment. Tile Jarge i A~ I. a. k . a r 11 I 11. Luthin has don~ 50 in The, 1,ans lo 1900 ICI'ol;cll. ~12.00 1 . Bu~: They would. on 110 account at all, retreat. numbrr o~. hhih_ilor~ ~Hleets: com~05°;/ ~~~:~ps,~llo "nAte; Real Abraham Lincoln IPrcnlice- 1.1e end Js four ~em. a.nd man): A few of those, bedraggled. 'numbed and worn lh~ .~nthuslas!" With .whicli the i to it will not bt. lla11 $10 OOl bv rc-examinin" old hundrcrts of hook~ A\\ a)· Of' . d l f t . d th f I t · Brthsh gnvernment s recent I • · · .· ' · ~ · j \\'lll anc ros , sll1TIVe e aw u s orm· .. , . . . . . . malel'lal and mcorporntm~: rcrcnt 1 . · ' trade hberahzat1on measures 1 CARD GAM!: information ln a hook of nearl)• 1 For hn~·s we knew. qmte unsuspect of eare . J were greeted hy Cinidian b~si-! The "ri~:ina!(anit of l!i!Zi~ue 800 pn~:c~. . ... " · MaJ'. Gen. Allard • Or tcndemess,. had found them helpless,. where_ nessmen_ from rout_ fo roast,: l!!. lhe snr~!tor nf . Amerlr~n ,O~e of I he most mtel esltn, mill·· . , They stumbled m the snow, :tnd brought them hbme.' 3nd thetr. neter!"mahon In Ill· i pmohle. Sa1d tn be &! Sdndtn·

Ill fiP.llres of lh~ war hn~ hroughl c and DIV I . . . . h • . . I pand Canada's exp!lrtl. I Avisn origin its nam~ and ••r· In life in "Pori Cravon", the Life. omm . I. From whence m vlgour, they long ave rlown. ' J" t t d • Ia 't •

' ' di' · · t•·· · · · IPS nn ~ pnpu II Y IF II· , of Dal'id Hunter ~trotl_wr h~· Cecil I G . 1 Cana ~n ~xp_or .. n an 11ow : sociated with France (t,beut i D. E~y. Jr., <Umverslty of Norlh n ermany • Hanrl signs, effecth·e smne few hours ago, r ablt to ~~~fer a full. ~IIIII!_ af i liiSO). rt Is Sir Wirritn!l Cftur· 1 Carohpa P.ress, $5.00l. Strother. __ • , . . . . . 1 product~ m t~e Un1ted X1?g.: chill's fmmrlte urd ramt . 1 who lived tn the Harper~ .Ferry "Her Majesty The QMcn has, Laj spent, mept and ludtCIOUS m ~no\\-. dom market, and tile Canadtan. --·-·---·----·---

/' region, did the well-kno:vn approved the ~ppointmen~ Df j As thus we healed the havoc of the storm Exhibit featur~s. consumer I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;illi;;:j;;;:;;i;=o; sketches of the .John Brown ra1d. Major-General Jean v1ctor , Or tried, we noted one another, shorn goods tueh as apphancu, cloth· It fn• _. ftf-ft! Althou~:h he seemed. to. fa~·or the Allard, CBE, DSO, ED, CD. of ! • • , • • d , ' mg, footwear, furmturt, tools, .

1. South he became a Umomst gen· d' A 1 b C Of all ogance and fi om small pomps With rim n. •p~rt1'ng "oods and toy• a• well m·· ,~m ' . · the Cana tan rmy, o e om· . . o u . .. •• " ~·· ! era!. Mr. Eb,v ed1ted The Old mander of the 41 h Division, Our frail Importance altogether gone; ali a wide nriet,. of foods and V.

I South 111ustralcd by Porte Crayon 1 B ·r h A r the Rhine in For in acknowledg.ment of weakness Wt btveraltl. for the same publlsher !$6.00\. Grt ts r~y No b r! 1961 I H d I t f d h 'l't Cltl.!.urns,_. a·m·tft.

The dramatic story o.f the war's ermany, m ?vern e • · 1 a . perac ven ure, oun uim 1 y. . The Cinadian Exhibit also - llfi 1 greatest mine explosion ls told ln We welcome. t~ts ~ppoln!mcnt; ----------------- - --· includes a large demon!tration no.. '*'".,_ j Inferno at Petersburg by Henry for such 8 dlst~n~tushed Cana· i . area where liuch produda i5 ; · · · . . Pleasants Jr .. and Geor~e H. than Army officer. Exchanges : I t . fashions and do-lt-your&elf ni•c·: rw::rtn«~«t·~· Straley crhillon. $3.95l. Dr. Plc:I- o! offlcers between British and : Actress c~sin kiB will he llit~lilhted. IT'S A HONEY OF A sants is namesake and cousin of Canadian Forces have taken 1. V1s1ton to the Canadtan Ex- ! • the brilliant young endncer who I place during and since I he Se_ · I ACROSS s Blrd's home , I~ LOAF planned the coup that mi~ht ha\'e 'I cond World ~ar. How~ver. thiS I 1Screenactms, 4Germa_nstream hibit will abo Je! I :itlection nf I . OUR OWN IREAD manders had properly follower]: a Canadian Army Officer will S,8Shewasbornln 6 ~ik.!~r!ll : tllmK &n Can*d• arrll Cinadian : BEST BY TEST shortened the war lf Umon com- . will be the f1rst ocras1on when - Allyson · 5 At no time I through. And one of I he fines! command a British Division. Lu~me,- 'I Tiny producli;. ~~~-«•n.tt~· -· ----·. ····--- 12 Mimicked a Shouts

Building?

•uiLD .iiTTiiflt llt••Taii-PDII Lli••

Cdmmercial Industrial

Community An ul to 1how yiju the

ftiib a11d Ilium on 11M lowe.! cll*t wa;

to build weiL

• i:NCINUR.ING

e 25 SPRINGDALE ST.

From lime to time the 41h. 13Be!ore 9Verbal· Canadian Infantry Brita de Hindi~~ ~~ ~~~~ony Group icnln" under N/.TO in lSMedtcmal 19 sell-esteem

, . h h l . l • portion Germany trams wtt t e Br hs 1 ; 16 contend 20 Conger 4th Dl1'islon. , 17Tardy 22Anolnled ll3 :.;;iiift~ile!l·~

18 Diimer course 23 Sup ll4r General Allard Is now Vier 1 20 Feminine name ~:~~!~!sway ~ ~:~alblleet

Chief of tht. General Slaff al · ii~~~~elnTexas 26Solardisk <ltFlri Armv Headquarters in Ottawa. ' 28 Nothing . : 27 Sea (Fr.} 4i Wlllmt

" · 1 29 Gael 43 Bargalllemlt lie had an excellent record as I 29-11 ap~alf! ns soAtthlsp!ice 44l'finCI

. d tl th h t mo onp1cure 1 ... •· a f1el comman er roilg ou and!elevlslon lllAges 45Cil:11ln191.,. the Second World War. 82Topofthehead··-.P"!!!!""'I'f'.., lll-"'ll~lir11M

3Sindlte In 1953 Gener11I Allard com·

manded the 25ih Canadian In­fantry Brigade in Korea where he then served tinder British Army Dlvlslnnal Command.

A successor to Gtberal Allard will be named later."

U Maple ~~tnUJ ss HeavY blow 86 Malt beverage 87 Girl's name 38t.owhaunt lll Native inetal 40 Poker stakes 41 Absolve from

43W:~~e;J: typbgnp~

48 Lookl fixedly 51 Prayer ending 62 l!lbllcll propllet 54 Wbmlll's name 6-+..-i-&5 She has bad a

long....,...of i iiticeeuful

I portriyall

M Shettmd side 57 Plateau 58 God oflove ~9'{~atilate eo Wint~r vehicle

· DOWN 1 G~!n stone 2 PrepDaitioll

NEWSP APBII. ENTERPRISE AI!Jl'f,

FROM THE PRINCIPAL CENTRES Of F J1o COl QIRECT • FREit:iHT !;1\fliNG!io

ONTARIO and QUEBEC FROM DALIFU, N.S~

TO ST. JOHN'S, NFLD. LfUIDr llolllb MARCH 16 MARCH 18 MARCH 23 MARCH 2~ MARCH 27 APRIL 1

·APRIL 8

(s) Relfli~ratloll Stlace Avallable.

II .. II. Ji'o'l MARCH 18 SARCH 20 MARCH 25 MARCH 21 MARCH 29 APRIL 3 APRIL 5

MARK YOUR ORDERS TO SHIP

MUIRHEAD FORWARDING LIMITED

All rates attractive eipi!~!ally where V~lUM,E is offered. A good :5erYJC8 boc.ked by •JC11trt­enc:e. A Comn·-nwet:ilth-wlde 6tg4!1i11Uiflen:

ST. JOHN'S CORNER BROOK 221 New Gower St. Western l@flflffllllt 81~, !1hone 26:ht or 5199 Phonlt 4-.tf'~

' Route "M·UUtH£AD'Sh

TORONTO-HAMIL TON-=-MONTREAL.::.LEVIS

FURNESS RED CROSS LINE SAILir\GS TO Ai\D FROM

NEW YORK, HALIFAX

TO ~T. JOHN'S NEWFOUNDLAND

M.V. CORAL TRADER Lv. N1~w York ............................ March 24

Lv. Halifa:i: ................................ March 21

Ar. St. Johi't's, Nfld ..................... March 30 Lv. St. John's, Nfld ..................... April 1

!>t. Nt~w York .............................. April ~

trREIGlrt ACCEPTED AT PIEB FOUR BUSH TEJ\:f\fiNALS BROOKLYN, ftf.Y., FOil St.JOHN'S.

,or rafes, etc. Telephone 2073-5890.

Furness, Withy & Company Ltd. ' ····- -· ...... -·

CLARK ALL-WINTER

SERVICES .to

N.E Yi F 0 U N D L A N D Dirett SeMce

HALIFAX t6 ST. JOHN'~ S.S. GUtFPOltT ................... :Mat 17 s.S. GULFfi01\T ........................ Mat. 25 s.s. <)ULFPORT .......................... Apt. 3 Flil' ljlfilrmilion and reservation, contact our nUr­el!t 6fliee-'-sT. JU~t. S NFI.D rei. 5411 ~ leu• .. er .:ZlH Telex 01&.- 2a8

BARV8t· ~'iif.AMSBII'S

L'tD. 4r.F.'1110

I ' • l ' i

' l

. ' / ' ' .. \

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I .

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Page 14: DaVince Tools Generated - Memorial University of ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · you $18.00 (in 12,000 miles) l} 4,000 Miles be tween Oil Changes-Saves you

i • '

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. '

..

. _, 't·.

p '. . ' '

1.& •

I Paramount! WhereTo Stay

Ba I sam Hotel

!AUTO PARTS (Whole)[ JUMBlE SALE

T·V· RADIO[Or; Now Playinl

fiiJD Nlld. iCOW~H ST. Clll' HCII - Ar\Vmatkure. :-.1E':-.10HIAL IIALL

I ;- e'-

CBC CJON

MONDAY, March 20th, lt!ONDA Y, March 20tb,

JURY HOLIDAY -DEAN MARTIN, IN "BELLS ARE RINGING," IN COLOR.

BARNES ROAD Situated in the Heart of the City.

Quiet, Comfortable Atmos· phere.

For Reservations and

,.. ~ ors1 __ ,U:JINJ11

38 ~ , . !!!•!J Bamhrlck : 1 )fliJT. Street , ~ Dial 7191·2

1

i BUILDING MATERIALS. Resplendently staged and cos- information: turned, with a wealth of song 0 . I 6336 1~ and dance numbers, colorful Ia ! CHESTER DA WE, Ltd ..

A.JI. 6.J~· Tbe Bob Lewt1 si!Ow characterizations and moving at MRS. JOHN FACE1'. 1:. SHAW ST. and TOPSAIL RD! 1\.M.

at 7 o' dot:k

TO-NIGHT Admission: Hk.

NOTICE 7.:t6-CBC Newl tl.a5-Weatber Foree.•~• a laugh-a-minute pace, !llctro- 'Resident Managerrss For all your. Building 'I.J5- Top ol the Mornin.; tl.~·Tbe i:lub l.ewl6 ~llow Goldwyn-Mayer brings to the m31,tf Requirements call Three weeks after the date 8.110-CRC News and Weatbe. 645-Heudlmr Newa ~ncl , screen the musical hit of the ~=~:=~=====~~ 80161 _ 91171 hereof application will he marie 8.l~Mus1cal Cluck Foretul year, "Bells Aie Ringing." ,. - ·---·- ----- · - i to the' Board of Lirpaor Control 1.00-Mormna l.)~ollona s.:IU.-'l'he Bob Lewtl Skuw . The film version of the Betty 1 ----------- 'i hv the undersigned for a tavern 8.15-Prugram Preview 7.00--.News Camden • Adolph Green • Julc I ELECTRICAL licence to sell beers and wmc:; 9.20-Piano Playtime 7.05-Loc~l Weatber Styne stage hit, which ran on APPLICANCES 1 on premises >i1uatc at No. 52fl· 9.ali-L'lll l'e~. i.20-·The B111:> l..eWII llllow Broadway (or more than three' 1 528A Water Street, St. .lnhn\. 9.:16-llirect Reports 7 3:)...-l.om)•lete Weathel years and continued its success I Dated this I:Hh day of ~larch 114:)...-Hccords at Handum d.05-- Weatner on the road, stars Judy Holliday 'BAINE JOIINS1TON , A.D. 19!H. IO.UO-Ar~hers B IS-Shipping Report and Dean Martin, with Miss COMPANY, Llc. ( Si~ne<l)

WILIJ.\)1 WILSO:'I:. mar13.20.27

IO.J:)....lrl~ Power 8 21).-The Bob Lewis Sl.!ow Holliday recrutin" the role of, e \UTO St 'I)Pill'S Agency Department lo -'5 c• C II IIIII r• " I ' \.! ~ ~. . ;~. -··or o s r ' 8 25- K1dches t:orner the humorous and IO\·eahle: 243 Water St. Dial 2102 10 ~LI-:\!td. Sl·hool Broadca5t 8.411- The Bob Lewis Sho• telephone answerinJ: serl'icc; • SPORTS EQUIP. YOUit FRIGIDAIRE 10.4:)...-~Juslc an the Mormng a.55---Just a Minute operator which she created in: e TOOLS DEALER. 11.UU-~Iornlng Pop~ 9.0J-MuS1c fur Milllunl the original musical play. e APPLIA\'CES 11.15-)lumal l'ro~ram !1.2U-Stnr Time. 1 1.~11-:'\flrl Sdwnl tlruadcast. 9.30-Austin Wallis. Filmed in CinemaScopc and • TOP QUALITY 11.4!\-Rc~lna ~lrHridc 9 5J-Jane Gray Show. color against lavish back·; Easy Credit Terms. 12.Ull- BBL 1\cws . IU.IK).. .. News 10 1 Minutt grounds, the picture was pro·' \2.11).-Annuuncl·rs chm;:c. IL' Ul-Martm's corner dueed by Arthur Freed and i:!'3U-Fdrm Bwadcast . lO.i:)....Housewivcs Choic~ directed by Vincente Minnclli,' 1., 4" •t d u ~ d the team who have oivcn the 'I _ ..-.• 1 ay .,crena e · I'J.31)-l\bt:v;;:;.l News. " 1.01).-!Joyle llullehn : 10_33_\\'hat's Cookln'. screen two Academy Award 1 DEALER

1._15-~~ ~l_r.s~cr • i lO.:i!i-_ Huusewaves Cholet~ winners, "Gigi" and "An Amcri·! PHONE 6127 ULI-CBC l'cll> and Weather: 10_4;,-!lomemakers News. can in Paris," among many 1 1 FLOWER HILL

HEAP & PARTNERS (NFLD.) Ltd. Wiring :llatcrials, Wire and

Cables, :'\lotors, Starters, Lamps. Switches, Lighting

Fixtures, etc. W AREIIOUSE: PRINCE'S ST.

DIAL 5085

1.45-Tummy Hunter Show. !I 10.50--lluu.;ewives Choice. other hits. 1'----------...J 2.15-~lu5il·al Randczl'oUs , 11.10-K!lchen ({latter. Fred Clark, one of Holly· ---- .. ----- --~ I FIRE INSURANCE 2.211-1Jum1n10n Obs T1me ! t 1 3fi-.Nfld. Qutl wood's top comedians, co·stars: i -----------

Signal 1 11.4:)...-Moneyman in the role of an edgy Broad· i 1 2.31)-~lll$1ral Randezvuus ·P.M. way producer, with the support· • CROSBIE & CO., Ltd. 2.4:)...-A\Iantic School Broad· ; 12 Ja-To•vn and CounllJ' ing cast headed by Eddie Foy, · Agents for

cast ! l.OU-News. Jr., and including sucn mem· UNDERWRITERS AT 3.00-Atlantic School Broad· · 1.:15-Don Jamie•on'a bers of the original Broadway LL01'DS.

cast . Editorial cast as Jean Stapleton, Ruth Prompt Delivery On LOW RATES 3.15-To Be Announced 1.40-Sports Storey, Dort Clark, Ralph Ro· • STOVE OIL DIAl, 5031 330-CBC ;>;cws and Trans l.i:)....Art Baker's Noteb!IM berts and Bernie West. • FURNACE OIL

Canada ~latinee 2.00-News Highlights "Bells Are Ringing" is high-· • liARD COAL 4.30-Thirty :\linute Theatre 2.03- .lerry Wiggins Sbuw lighted by fourteen musical I • SOFT COAL 5.00-ln Lighter Mood 2.31-Jerry Wiggins Sho" numbers ranging from love! • IRO~ 111REMAN 5 3n-Frshmes Bruadc!!St 3.02-Wcstern Jamboree. songs, topical ditties, humorous i REATil'H; IWlJIP"'ES't 5.4:)...-JIIusic from the Albums ol.llU-:News in a Minute ballads, Bongos and a Cha Cha 6.00-CBC News ! 4.05-Rancll Party. routine' to a honky·tonk chorus' 6.05-lntcrmcuo ! 5.00-Ne\91 rn a Minute girl number. They are sung and li 30-Suppt.:r c,uest 5.01-Bob t.cwis Uame P.uiJ ·danced in solos and ensembles 645-l.ighl ~lusic 6 01).-NtWI Highlights in' such varied settings as the i Ull-L'BC i\e11' and Weather 6.01-WeaUier answering service office, Times i.I:)....Loui~e Hutton Sing5 1 6.u5-Bulletin Board Square, Central Park, skyscrap· · 7 .3ll-Tops Today 6.IU-Nali011al New• er penthouses, smart restaur- 1 '1.+5-Doy!e Bulletin 6.15-Sports ants, cafe society parties and '

-

··~ ~ b:S ' COAL & OIL CO~

'-' "TE. ,IT-r\f'"" 6077 -sss6 8.15-l'ariiamcntary R~port 6.2:)..--Ever Battery Nen glittering night clubs. 8. 19-Rol·in~ Reporter 6.30-Club 93 The songs include "Bells Are , -;;..· --::~-----........;;:,

HARDWARE STORES

TOOL RENTAL Electric Sabre Saws.

Portable Sanders and Skill Saws.

Reasonable nates 11.\ltttlS & IIISCO('){ LTD.

General Hardware Sporting Goods.

ERNEST CLOUSTON, LI~ITED

. McCLARY AUTmiATIC

SEE THE NEW ·wiLLYS

JEEP (2 ancl 4 Wheel Dri\'C)

AT

McKINlAY MOTORS LTD.

Le~larchant Rd. Ph: 4193-4

Be Modern

Live Eledrka llv ' J

~t;r'.i u .......... y ,,lilt •• ,,

W ,\:'\:TEl) - 1\y a rrliahlP 1 wom:l!l clwrworL h>· lhr •l:1y

or ofl':l·e' to dc•:111 after !Hill!'"!. Plra!'e send rr!11ic·~ to l:ox -!!H rio I>ail• :;e"·'·

FOR ~:,\I.E ! - t:scd :!:1' Elt•c!rlc Han~c 'ullahk lor Apartment. \n excdlent •·or;clliinn. Oni.1· .<ii~.OU. Call H. :>:o,ewurthy 404!.

· 1\.\lt(~.\1:\! bt•!l Oil Jt;ow~<', Jl dooe\. ln good condl· \ion. Call Fred (~node. 404 [.

FO!t s,\LE-.\ mikh (3W

ius! frl•,llrned. .\ppl;; Jlavid L'hurclllll. Portu~al ,'oH. marl3.~0

J'IIE CE:\'rR.\1. B.\111\Eit SIIOI'-1\'e are now opera!· 111~ 11) chair:-. you t'3TI be a"ut'('(l nf prompt. effie~· Pllt. ~anitary ~=er\'il'e. :\o w:ulln~ problem. 24 :'\cw t;om•r Street opJto"tc ,\de· la1dc ~lolor~. Ltd .

. H lt:\ITl'RE REI'.\IItS-1\c· pairs to wring-filled mal· trcss.·s. Chrstcrfield su1tes also rebuilt. Fifty years' e:·:pcriPtll'<' K<~ats Jlat!rcs.< F<tetol'y, Hi ~lount Royal Arenuc. Dial 9275:l or 2G~6. 110\-:JI).tf

CASH PAID FOR:~mnics

~~a~"zincs, pocket novels and hooks. .John D. Sno11·. 9 :\pw Gower Street. fchl:l,lmth

. TI·Tii\'ICL\:\'S, )1.\LE, to a'si; l biologists in field alHI laboratory work of fishencs re.'e.1reh. Applicants must han· (;radc Xl. he in good phy.-ical c'Ollllition and he able to work at sea. Be· ginrcing salary range 52910 to S3420. Appl~· in \\Tiling gi\'ing full name. addres~. <l~:c. trainin_~ and cxperi· t•ne''· induding ability to 11ork at sea. names of three reflrences Inn! relatives) iJwludin~ a tPaeher. anct ,,.,·tifi!'d copy of (;rail<~ XI mark' and of the results of any higher examinations tak•'ll. Applications to Ui­ree:or. Fisheries !lc.'carcb Bo;,rd of Canada. Biological Staton. St. .John's. Xfld .. not lafl·r than ,\pril 3. 19!il.

WAR:\1 AIR CONDITIONING DIAL 4183 I Cheap Reliable Electricit> I

216 WATER ST. : In an 1 Araurod St. John'! OIL lll'R:\'Eil REPAIRS ; • and m~nntenance. Furnaces,

GROCERS (Retail) I--·----- - 1 Silm !fcatPrs and Ranges.

8.25-Rawhide 7.UZ-Ciub 93 Ringing," "It's Better Than a 1

. ,· n Emefgency 8.40-Hour Of St. Francis 7 4:)..--l.)on Jamieson's Newa Dream," "Hello," "It's a Per-8.55-Weather for l\lariners B.Dl-Best from the Weet feet Relationship," "Is It a 9.00-:-;ational Farm Forum 8.30-National News Crime," "Mu Cha Cha," "Drop·

mart:!.25

9.25-Secrctary's Report 8.31-Best from the Wilt That Name)' "The Party's I 9.30-Hawaii Calls 9.00-News Highlights Over," "I'm Gain' Back." "Do 1

------~---'-- 1 Pilnne 91884L. dec7.lm

See 10.00-CBC Chamber !llnsic 9.40-Sait Lake Choir. It Yourself," "Just In Time," 1

· 10.30-Nfld. Radio Theatre 9.4:)..--Ncws. "Long Before I knew You," 1

11.00-Take it from Ht're 9·01-Nfld. Soiree. "It's a Simple Little System" i

:L.HEALEY I Cross Roads and Water Street ' 1 DIAL 3026

11.30-CBC Na110nal News 9·40-Salt Lake Choir and "The Midas Touch." Roundup and Talk., to.OO-News ~ighlights They form an integral part of !INSURANCE AGENTS .

12.00-Sign Off. 0 Canada. Tht IIO.Ol-Jury Tnals the plot which revolves about ,I AND BROKERS Queen ll0.3t -Nahonal Newa Ella Peterson (Judy Holliday),: , -----------

. 10.4t.-Sports h k f s h I 1

10.5:)...-Letters and Messa g-. w o wor s or usanswerp one I JOB BROTHERS for

VOCM MOSD:\ Y, March 20th,

11.30-Sign on and Nrws 8.;!:)...-Breakfllst w1tb B1ll 6.55-Nt'WS '1.00-Breaklast with Blll 7l!')._Spor1scast 7.30-Sportsca5l 7.45-Sportsca5t 8.00-Torba7 Weather 8.05-News 8.10-Breakfast Club 8.15-Sportscast 8.25-News 8.30-Hit of the 087 8.as-5portscut 8.40-Breakfast wltb BW 8.M-News 9.00-Kitchen Capers

10.00-NUil lO.~tork Club 10.10-Homemakers News 10.15-VOCM Coffee Break

Special 10.55--Newa 11.00-King Cole $1000 Club

and has a deplorable tendency ' 11.00-News Highlights to get involved in the lives or' ' & COMPANY, Ltd. 11.01-Music In the Nigllt the cnstomers as she takes and ' Water Street l.Ql-Sign Off. delivers their me~sagcs. . ~- INTRO.DllCEI> PAGJo:ANTiri, DIAl, 2658 - 4123

Ella has_ fallen m love, stght 1 Martin Van Buren introduced REG T i\IORG\N unseen, wrth the party answer-: pageantry into U.S. presidential! • ' 1 '

• • I. •

BOAT KITS FIBREGLAS MARINE PAINT BOAT NAILS

ing to Pt 0-4433, the telephone i inaugural parades. He rode' INSURANCE Ltd. IUONDAY, March 2oth, number of pla)'·boy playwright i down Pcnnsrll'ania Avenue in a ; Temple Bldg., P.O. -·ox

CJON-TV and 168,

I • HARDWARE :========== Jeff Moss (Dean Martin). What: handsome phaeton built of wood i 341 Duckworth St. happens when circumstances' from the frigate Constitution, ! DIAl, 80370 or 7756

llU.t:i-t:artoons. bring Ella and Jeff togethE'r: accompanied hy infantrymen, 1

11.00-Romper Ro~m. changes the course of hoth their 1 cal'alrymcn and political dele·~ DRUG STORES ' 12.0~Local and Nationa• News. Ji\'es. Their romance takes place gatiom. 1

2.00-~1y Little Margit. amid a series of halarious com· ' -- -· I 1 d 2.30-Chn Helene. plications in which (a) Ella is • head the cast of "The Crowded 1 M. CO~NORS Lt · 2.45-Nursery School Time. shadowed by a police inspector I Sky," with John Kerr, Anne Prcscnpt1on5 Pickup and 3.00-The Verdict Is Yours. (Dort Clark) who suspects that F'rancis, Keenan Wynn, Troy dchvcry srmcc. 3.30-H!JW to Marry a Million· the girls of Susanswerphone arc Donahue and Joe Mantell also PHONE 2206

alre. giving more than tel,ephone ser- starred, al)d Patsy K e II y, 4.00-Qpen House. D ld M d L · Q · . 4.30-Reflectlons. vice; (b) she gets mixed up ona . ~Y an ou1s mnn AYLWARD'S

with the activities of J. Otto appcarmg m featured· roles. FUAR~1AC1:'

DIAL 90070 5.00-Junlor Roundup. Frantz (Eddie Foy, Jr.), a Portraying the captain of the 6.00-Annle Oakley. "bookie" who uses Susanswer- passenger plane, Andrews re· 6.2~World of Spol1. .phone II a cover-up· (c) she. turns to the screen after a year Cor. Monchy and Empire Ave. 6.30-New• Cavaleale. encounters romantic' competi· on .Broadway starring in the hit 7.10--Wanted Dead or A.'ive. 1 "T f h 7.30-lnterpol Calllnl lion from the voluptuous Olga P_ay . wo or t e ~eesaw." RADIO-TV REPAIRS

(Valerie- Allen) Jeff's race· Ztmhahst steps out of hts detec·

Hli CU\Y El\ STI\EET DIAL ·1947

~-.~t:_~~!!~~~~;¥:~. track-minded giri friend. The tive role in the popular te1e·. GREAT EASTERN OIL indomitable Ella takes all these vision series "77 Sunset Strip"

8.30-Father Knows llest. obstacles in her strr'de and to play a navy jet pilot, and the f:OMPANY' Ltd. I

OIL Bl'RNER SERVICE­Furnace~. Ranges and Sp:H'e [[caters. dependable scnicc at reasonahic rates, t~cor~~e Royle. Phone 47793 mnrl.tmth

FOit S.\LE-I.ook at this rral bargain in a tra<le-in TV. fleeontlit inned and ready to go. Only S59.65. Call .John S!'h]ie,mann at 40·11.

Yfll:\\'E'SBE~~TYSALON E~:pert bair ~tylist,. 124 llm·l;~rorth Street. Phone

3443.

The you may ., 11 h~·

\IGIITL'i DI\ · and/or D.\. : ·

The f!llr't 1n FllOIJS a111l 111-:\l:R.

al lFI('C, Y~ll' C.~:':' \t'HlP.n \\ ed.. I· n. anrt ~at

Orehrst.r;1 Da::•:e · Sat. bruadc:,l ·

Pn,('~.

S1~n.: Cint·nJa.-:·! 1 p~ :I . See for \'llltc , 11 Whv

The 'Old .

L\1\1)

Dr. K. H. Marshall

\I ill Ill d j,.. i11 l1j, rt\

llt1lil li1ri\,. r 1111 :i

at I ,('II i,p.,r11.

:\ ppnt\ i111at1 ·I\ land adjact·l.l !11 1

road aud r:\il'-'· ,~. For inlorto~:tli"~~ .,, ;

.\I. C. YO l'\ r;, 2011 l'illl' -~ll'l<l.

PhiJad,·lphia ;_ F \lakit1C: 1dln.

mar21Ui

TEACHERS WANTED

:\111 al ~at11a II'< l Ili!,!h . Sdlii"L Br;>ok n·q11irt' .

Teachers lor ·~r,'.tk' and .\[

.\I. SO

.-\ Grade .\I C"1 Teacl]('r ar1d Pln · strudor for c:irk S;ilar\' i~ a~:::n1t'11:eo the Board.

Serdt:es ht·'.!.:tl

HlGI.

.-\ddress apl'lical· the Princip:d \m ed He!!ional 1 kh Corner Bn"1k. \fld . mar20.22.2.i

BOARD A LODGING

:\cc<>lltllliHLt:l'l'l a1

'for nnr ::·'~dlrman

: l!Hirl£'1'11 !11 •ll'r

· Jrl\1 :hf'IIW

Telephone - ------

iTo Whom It I

i Concern i

;I. \Jr. F. C.\· .. 1

1 \\'ill not lw n·sp1 · i an1· dt·hts inr·11JTrd l,,·ifc. \larirlll 1dwl

· :...:: 11.05-Juke Bok Jamboree 11.1~ Western Jamboree 11.30-Western Jamboree 11.55-News

9.00-Don Messers JubUet. REPAIRS TO RADIOS TV comes out the W!'nner in every- s_ ultry, red-hair.ed Miss Fleming \ , , 9.30-Danny Thomas Sbow, AND ALL ELECTRICAL department including that of- 1s seen as h1s sensuous and

10.00-Jack Kane Show. LOVE. ' faithless wife. APPLIAr.JCES 10.30-The Flintstones DIAL 3l01 to 3005 11.00-Festival '81 Betty Camden and Adolph The part of Andrews' co-pilot

1 dr\' of :310 I 1

Hriad after thi> march. 1%1. mar18.20.cl :·> PJ4.

·: ·: 12.00-Five Rose-Money-Barrell 12.~Ramblin' with Records 12.»0-New• 12.35-Ramblin with Reeorda 12.~FiJherman's Forecast 12.50-Ramb\in with RecordJ

1.00-Ramblin' with Records 1.15-Sportscast 1.30-News

. • 1.4:)..--So The Story Goe1 ~ .~ 2.00--Prizes and Problems •

2.~Newa 3.00-Make Beleive Ballroom 3.~News 4.00-Bob's Bandwagon

•.. 4.55--News 5.00-Supper Serenade

. : ~ 5.50-Fisherman's Foreca~t 5.55-News

.11.00-Bulletin Board. 1.15 -sportscast and Travel

Guide. 11.30-News 7.00-Shille1agh Showtime 7.30-Sbillelagh Shuwlime.

· 100- -rream 01 The Crop 11.48-Newt. .

lD.OO- VOCM All Time Hit Par~de

' lO.~,.na 10.11--Sen 1!.110-Torba' Weather 11.01-llf Top TID

.) l Jll: -:(:f. ~-. ,_Jill• .._ M ewr · .. a••· .. ;_~~=·~t• cillnutt 1r1

. .

12Jltl-Enqulry Green wrote the screen play is played by versatile young ----~ ------ .. 12.~0-Local News Headlines and lyrics of "Bells Are Ring. John Kerr, who distinguished

ing," with th,e music by Jule himself on the stage as the win·

N Styne. The !creen version of ner of both the Donaldson "QUICK 0 ES" th B d h e roa way it emerges as Award and the New York

Chinese call chopsticks • topflight movie entertainment. Drama Critics 'Award as Best 1 "kwaitsze" which means "quick Supporting Actor for his per· I ones" in English. The word tormance in the stage play "Tea for "quick" is "chop" in pidgin English, hence the translation Capt•to} and Sympathy." He played the J

( h same role in the film version, o "c opsticks." ' making his screen, debut. 1 i 2011 - 5 LINES

NOTIL'E i.- lirrrhy P , lSABIOLL,\ niCl\ERT. 1 :'oiE!l. o! tile lit~ pf ~ in the Prorincr of

'land ~larri['(! \\·om;n.

, plv io the P<trliacnrnt d · ·t or · . at t ht• present· llC\ f

LEOI'URDO'S LETrERING Leonarao da Vinci, artist,

and scientific writer, wrote backwards (mirror writing),, probably to keep his scientific work secret, according .to the En~yclopedia Britannica, 1

Today In her first motion picture as·!' signment at Warner Bros. since "Battle Cry," petite, ash-blonde Anne Francis is seen in "The Crowded Sky" as an airline stewardess who has a tcmpes· tuous romance with Kerr.

I ing session tile reo f. or L'A:·.,\D.\ j of Divorce front her.

EXTENSIO~ OF TI~IE 1 Gordon Gardiner.

~AND!~ . { GO~E 401 • •

DEPOSITORY . The U.S. lll!ld depository at Fort Knox, Ky., Is a sollil,

·square, bombproof building con~tructed ot granite, steel nad concr~te, enclosing a two· level torchproof steel a11d con·

· crete vault, according to the Encyclopedia Brltaimica.

"THE CROWDED SKY" WITH DANA ANDREWS­RHONPA FLEMING

I I siding at 3i5 \'irtor" · : NOTICE is hereby given that 1 I Apartmpnt B. In the . ; the time for the reception of I NOT. INStRTED ar -mE a.t.c. ! West mount, in the

GRAND fAllS, .,.. HflD. 8'-EW!RV 2541

! tenders for Harbour Improve· , ~=========;;;.!Quebec, Receiver, otl the "The Crowded Sky," Warner Aft · · t h I mcnts, Reconstruction of Pier .. '

Bros.' action-packed motl'on pi· c. er rlsmg o t e top as a A . of adultery . Com d·a t "C", Pictou, N.S. due March· GREAT EASTERN ture today at the Capitol Thea· e 1 n on s age, screen, Date<l at the (It~

tre, probes the conflicting radio and television, Keenan WELCOME WAGON 122. 1961 is extended to 3.00 p.m. I OIL & IMPORT John's in the rro' inre . emotions and inner secrets of Wynn switches to a dramatic HOSTESS (E.S.T.) , foundiand thi' 25th the passengers and crews of a role a~ Nick Highland, flashily APRil. 5, 1961.. co., LTD. November. 1960. trans-continental airliner and a dressed Hollywood writer who 'II K k RC•~n;RT FORTIER, Hadio, Television, Washers, navy jet fighter involved in a loves 'em and leaves 'em and: \V!h nifoc atdyour Door Chief of Administrative Refrigerators, Deep Freezers, D. C Jl[~f. aequence of events spelling breaks a few ~earls along t~e 'wit G. ts an Greetings Services and Secretary. Elcctr;c Ranges, :;olicitor for thr mo:tnting suspense and high ad· f~ay.tKeentan gltvcs one of hts I from Friendly Business Department of Public Works, Floor Poiis,,ers, 4 ent in th ki mes por ray a s as a. pass en· I N . hb d Ott M h 16 .1961 ' Gramophones mar3, 10, 16,

v ure e B es. ger on the at lt'ner In "Th el cr ours an Your awa, arc • . ;::;:;;::.;;::.;:;;~:;;;"' The new Teehnicolor film is , ,r e lc· • r. d S . I G ----- Public Address Systems. · · '"" A IIP-ft'l jn the. tradition of the aame Crowded Sky.

1 !VIC an oc1a roups E~" 1 Tape Recorders

~/1)~~ . . ;tudio's "The Hillh and the· Troy Donahue who zoomed On the occasion of: IT'S A HONEY Of A;, RE"AIRS AND SERVICE

. U ~l/cu:Ana- TJL ~m:,.Q-.IM!f. · lig~ty," combining warm hu· to otardom in his' first film rolr New Comer to the Citv,·l • • LOAF : 1 DIAL~ 3~~~~~ 3005

~IN/~ 1an drama with breath-taking in W~rner Bros.' "A Summer 1 The. Birth of a Baby. I , OUR OWN BREAD~ ·~lion. sequences. Place.' plays a young sai!Qr 1 1-, "' WATER STREET

· . ~!.':"'..:::=; · J Dana Andrews, Rhonda Flem·J who hitches a ride on a navy ll PHONE 94865 - 90943 11 .~ BEST BY TEST ; ianZS,Jy ._ ____ ...;.;....;.. __ 1, in-. and Efrem ;Zimbaliat, Jr., jet plane to see his best girl. . and 3582. ~~•.on~

' .

B 11 14 2 1 6

3

20 canst

Help

CURT

Va1

Cl

Followi1

' Or

In ten

CLC IF CH

4 HOLC

' Applica as Insp1 Applica Eleven fication

1. Kno• 2. Be

Plan 3. Be f

grap 4. Kno·

·draft 5. Driv Applies gardin~ the Bu: ApP}b Engine

Page 15: DaVince Tools Generated - Memorial University of ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · you $18.00 (in 12,000 miles) l} 4,000 Miles be tween Oil Changes-Saves you

I

'·A 'J ' '!

! \

l. ·'-

dl

..

\(,

dERS Tt:O , I-

··.one

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.. : ~ : ·'- ,, n! . ' \I' 0n1 a>l­. I . , r~· t"' :1 t o • . : .. l;·r,t or . ' r : ::errof. .o ir0m hrr

],"j ,;~£ DAILY XE\YS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., },IONDAY, ~lARCH 20, 1961 ···;..----------------------------·---~

KINSMEN Boys Club

Newspaper SERIES No.

BINGO

8

3

44 TO-DAY'S NUMBERS

I :ll)

::'fi _,_ _, :10 II:\ :2-1

N 39

--11 . f.)

--1-1 -t3 :3(i

40

G 31 .-,fl ,1;) i'i\l 50

0

~11 run,olatinn pri:t.es for the letter "II"

Help Kin Help ·Kiddies

CURTIS ACADEMY PUPILS Present

Variety Concert at

CURTIS ACADEMY AUDITORIUM

WED~ESDAY, March 22 at 8:00 p.m.

Tickets: 50c. l- ,;;, ''' ing the program refreshment will

be sen·ed bv l'.T.A. . '

WANTED One Graduate Nurse

fur Buchnns Hospital

lHI•·rcsted parties may conlad the

Employment Agent

AMERICAN SMELTING and REFINING CO·MPANY

BUCHANS

CLOTHES MAKE Tf-IE MAN IF CHAFE MAKES THE CLOTHES.

Wm. L. CHAFE TAilOR

4 HOLDSWORTH ST. ST. JOHN'S

CITY OF ST. JOHN'S

NOTICE Applications arc invited for two positions as lu~peetors in the Buildin~ Department. ~pplieants must have at least Grade

!~Ieven education and the followln)l; quaH­Icatinns:-

L Knowledge of Buildin~ Construction. 2. Be familiar with reading Building

Plans. , 3. Be familiar with the use of Topo-

graphical Plans· 4. Knowledge of simple surveying and • drafting. · ~- Drivers Lioense. Applicatiton forms and information re­~arding these positions are available from tbe Building Inspector, City Hall. ~Pp~cations will be received. by the City ng~neer up to Friday, Apnl 7, 1961.

W. D. SHARP~, City Engineer.

I I

CONFEDERATION CABS CONFEDERATION GHOUNDS

8 a.m. to 12 p.m. Confederation Building PHONE 94071 PHONE 95011 Ext. 524 dec21,1m

' ST. THO·MAS' CHURCH

THE

Annual Meeting will he held on

TUESDAY, 21st. at 7.30 p.m.

in Canon \V ood Hall. -'---------------------------- ----------

NOTICE Ladit·s' College Aid Sodety of Prince of

Wales College, Holloway ~nd Harrington Schools

A General ~lceling will he held on

MONDAY l\'IGHT, March 20th

at 8.1.5 p.m.

in Pills ~lcmorial Hall.

1\lllS. FRED. W. MILLEY, President.

,. . . "£. . ', '

The Ladies Auxilliary of the

R. C. A. F. Association will be holding

JUMBLE SALE

in the Cathedral Parish lh 11,

Queen's Hoad

at 3 n·dock this afternoon.

Admission: 5c. (Five)

NEED AN APARTMENT? 4 rooms aml hathroom,

Furnished, Jlrivatc. \' ery quiet - Central.

!\lost suitable for middle-aged couple or Elder ladies to :.hare. Address enquiries to:

BOX 308 c/o DAILY NEWS.

JUMBLE SALE THE ST. BON'S BOY SCOUTS

LADIES' AUXILIARY

will he holding a giant Jumble Sale at the Knights of Columbus Hall on

MONDAY, March 20th at 3 p.m.

Admission 10 cents.

REAL OPPORTUNITY FOR HiiNDYMAN

10" ACRA- ARM RADIAL SAW

with 2 h.p. motor

Complete, ready to go with payments of

Just $14.00 monthly.

CASH PRICE ............................. $264.00

See or call H. NORRIS - 4041 Hardware ·Department

' .

SIMPSONS-SEARS

I

' I

I I

I

I I I

OLD COMRADES EASTER DRAWING

THIS WEEK'S LUCKY NUMB'ER

54774 ---- - - ----- - -------- --

Sisters Of Service Auxiliary

General Mee~ing will take place Tuesday EVENING, March 21st, at 8.30 at the Heside11er. 7 Garrison Hill. Following the h11sincss meeting, an interesting film will he shown.

A cordial invitation is extended to all.

AUTO INSURANCE-the USF&G way Accident Date:· To-day

Claim Cheque Issued: To-day A typical example of the Claim Service onr own Staff Adjusters give to our policYhold­ers. Almost anyone you ask will verify the above. We have been doing it for forty years !

Call us TO-DAY

U. S. FIDELITY & GUARANTY Co. J. K. LACEY, Resident Manager

2ll Water Street Jl)JOm~ 70:-15

1'~----.. -.. --------~------------~ INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT

BANK J.OANS FOR INDUSTRY

l:'ou are invited to enquire nhout LD.ll. finanring for husmesses engaged in mom~"cturing, prner><s­ing, assembling, installing, overhauling, re-cmHiition­ing, altering, repairing, cleaning, packaging, transporting or warehousing of goods, Jogging, opl!raling ·a mine or quarry, drilling. construction,, en~ineering, technical survc~·R, or seic~ntifie researd1, generalin~ or distributing electricit)' or operating a commercial air service, or the transport<Jtion of persons, or supplying premises, machinery m· equip­ment under lease to any husiru.•ss mentioned <Jhow.

Mr. E. A. Bell, Regional Supervisor for 1\ewfotllHI­land and Nova Scotia, and :11r. N .. r. Wer1lmark. Credit Officer, will br a\·aibhle for c\iscus~ion at the Newfoundland Hotel, :1-larch 20th to 24th inclusive.

J PLEASE TELEPHONE :lO:H

FOR APPOINniE~T

1--~ar16:1~,20.2: __ _

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WE WilL BE GLAD TO ARRANGE DEliVERY.

The

Daily News· CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT.

AUCTION at residence o(

:\Irs. J. L. !ilad~tonc 'fe~sit•r, 66 Monkstown Roa<l,

WEDNESDAY ~larrh 22m!

at to_:ltJ a.m.

Li~in~ room:-24" nell trle­vi~ion set. hookeasc, small honk­case cnntainlng set of Dickrn,:s works, hookslwlf. misePI\anc~ous hnoks, chcstcrfiehl and chair t mint )!recn), handcan·cd wal­nut lounge with 6 matdling 1'11nir.s, t•ns~· dtair anr! stool, large ea.sy chair. nceasional chair. JlC/1 v:etroln and rrcor<l-'. ~ oak chair•;. c~<Tllli\'f• d('.sl<

: anrl swird <'hnir, ~t('no.'!r:lpher' . .:; I <IPsk aurl d:·•ir. I tar~" an<l I ! sm;~ll lahh· lamp. hr:oss rurll i 11nrl fire-'<'l'<'l'll. earprl 22'o :< ' !1', 2 pairs nh-Pt drapPs :u1tl <·urtains, "nokr•r',; st;,nrl. dre­tril· dotk, c.'o!"y :,.:l11w.

l>ining runm:-<'lw:<t'rfield. 2 large easy chairs. oak ,idehoarrl

, and matchin~ <linin~ room tahl<'. Mk .siln•r cabinet, c·n<l t;~hlc. hoobheh·rs, brass fire screen, chrome curb. 7 da)- elnek. t:Jblr. lamp, carpet ami pad. <tl<nntity of silverware and rut ~lsas. case fish knives and fork;, s~l figh knife and fork server. cm·l'in~

Jirl. Toil~lma~l<·r toa~ter. orna­nwnl~. chainawan .. ;md piC'IHrl'~. glAsses, drapes ancl curtains. copper krlllc and stand and flow!'r pol. fern.

Kltclwn:-Fri~i<lairr r!Pelrit . ran;.!P. \Vl·~tinglwlL~c frol\l·frrt'

refriJ:Prntror. dlrom" ltitchcn . lahlc and four matchin~ elwin•.

Hoto broil 4110. rh-ct ric kitdll'n . l')oek. rl<•etrie t•al~<~ :nix••r. pJtoc­. triP flonr polisher. qll;llltity OJ'

dish<•s, pots and pans, p)T!'S d:1~~ ll'aY-=. El1 1!'lrnliJX l':II'JH'I .'"\\'!'PIH'l', nl:Jl. li!Wil 1110\\'f'f.

llall•:-f';orprt sla;:· rnnnrr !rose), II door m;~ls. ropr mal. mohair I'll~. ,~.;tair earpPI and 14 sfilir rod~. mirror. pair hr;1!-'.~

· (•;mdle ~lic·k.'>, 2 <·arrl t;1hle~. hat i rack. oak eh:tir. !lower and , !:'tt~nd. ~r1Pr. pil'lun·~. ' llr<lroom :'>in. 1 tS.W.I :-Car­~ prt. <lrapPs and rm·tain<, lar~r ' ~asy chair. hra>S table and

tahl<• lamp. Spartan radin. din­. ncr wagon a1HI tray. drop lc•;1[

tahlr n1:d table Limp. chairs. qtllllll ity pi.-ltll'<'' and orna­mPnt,, flower and stand. Kodak Camrra with tripod and ran~<' finder. 2 fla:;h rrp1ipnwnt >Pt>. fin• >t'l'<'<'ll and e11rh. luunrtc·­rorfPP 1nhle. hr;:l~~ !'ill!) lHlrkPI.

lkdroom :\o. ') t:'\.W.l:­Cruat• eh••:;t. day hP<i. 1)('<1 table. lamp. oak dres.-.::in:.! ('ilSl\ fno\­'tool. 2 chairs. eu,!uon:-:. drilp!'>' and curt:lin~. tPnni-= rarrpwt had•ninton raeqnet. sl;iis and hoots.

Bedroom :'\ n. :l t :..· .1\. \:-Bed

1 room :;;uilt• l'ompri:-.in~! modC'l'tl

1 ll!'d. hi~hhoy, drc·.--cr. vanity . and stool. 2 ehair.s. footstool.

tahl<'. oak wardrnhc. e<Jl'!H'I. drapes and tllrl:ii,:s. :-:l';llP. 2 ruhhrr brid~e lah:c cm·er~. 2 sp\:-; l:m1p:;, hl•dronm ornament:-:. pidtlr!'S.

Br.drnum :"in. -1 (S.E.l :--Bed. 2 matching oak dr·:~sing <':lSC'~. trunk. s~tl.Cl'l" ~rwin~ machine. 2 chair>. hump:y. mirror. \'ihra­'or .'el. cnrtains and drapes. carpet. Bathroom:-~lolnir rug, foot

bath, hnt water b;;g-, hed pan. Jla,;rmrnt:-Chn•mc step lad­

der. 2 wondcn step ladders, · ganlPn toob. gi1rdcn chnir.

trunk. 2 saw<, 2 h:rtchcts. piek, shovel and broom, ho~e pipe. 2 gnrbagP pnil~. 2 gnt\·nnizcd tuh~

' tire (600 x 16), 2 tubes, boat. water bucket.

[ Inspection !I o'clock to 10.30 ' morning of sale. All l(oods I must be paid for and deli\'cry I taken following sale.

John M. 'Naish,

PROPERTY FOR SAL!

THE

ROYAL TRUST C0\1 P:\:\Y

H RI·:N:'\Jt:'S mLL lOAD Three storey, scwi-detachcd.

!urnishcd dwelling c<>nsisting of li\'ing room. dinin;! room, kitch­en. den and toilet on main floor

Second floor consist~ of thrc(' lar~c bedrooms anrl two bath rooms.

Thin! floor contains an apar: mcnt consisting of Ji.,·ing room. kitrhcn ami two bedrooms.

Full cnn<T•'If.' h;r>rnH•nt COll­t:lil\~ an :lpllrlmrnt ton~is1in;r of lil'ing room. kildH•n. be<lrnnm bathroom. furn;wr room aPd two :-\ora~f' rnotn;.;.

Fn·pholtl l:lllrl wi!h r\rl\-~\\'a)'

;IIHI ~Hra::l' .

10 ('lll!TL.\Ii R0.\0 Thn·r ,torr')' dwrlPn~ >ituate

in llll exrlu:;i·.-r :-e,irlrntial diE­triet ron>istin~ of li\·ing room. dining room. kitchen and toilet on tlw mllin llnor.

St•cmHI [)onr contains {our bedrooms and hathrnom.

Thircl floot· contains three herl­ronms an<l hathroom.

Full concrete basement con­tllinin'; thrcr rooms.

This dwcliln~ i< in e~cellcnt condition. pla:;!rred throu~hout. oil furnacr heat. fn•ehold land ll'ith drill'\\'"'. a' wrll as a ~~rd('n al n·ar.

30 ~10:"/KSTOW:-.; IIOAB Thr<'<' slor"" dii'Piling con­

tllinin~ two srlf••nntain•·d apart­ments. !)np ap:~rtmenl has four hrr!rnnms. hat hrnom. washroom, dinin~ room. lidn~ room. kitch rn. hrPakf;o,t nook ai\11 consist­in~ or lhr first ann ~ccond floor.

,\pllrlnwnt nn lliinl floor ha; :hrre fwdrootll'. l'"lhroom, \il'· in.~ roo:n~ iltHl kitchrn.

This prnpert:: is in ~oorl con­dition. full eoncrrtr ba;ement. furnaee hratr<l. frrrhold land with drire11·ay as well as a dnuhle ,l!llf<lg(' at rear.

['or ft<rthrr particu!ar3 apply,

THE ROYAL TRUST

COMPANY l'hnnr :; 1% mar211.22

1'.0. llox 1300

1':\SSE\GER :\OTICES co\:-.;1-:CTIO:-.; B.\ Y Rl'S

I'L.\I'EYfL\ 11.\ Y­\\'Eil\ESil.\ Y

Hc~ular fl::lO a lll. train leal'­in~ S<. John'' \\'crlnr,;day. ;,\ardt ~:~ncl. will m(1kr connrt· 1 ion :<I ,\r~entiil with 7\Iotnr \."'"'1 for Bay Hun Placentia Bay.

FREIGHT :\OTICES 1FREHiliT Sfll'TH COAST

SERVICE

Frci~ht is al'ceptcd daily at the Rail\rar Frei:~ht Shed for ports 011 the South Coast Ser­\'iec. hnt in onler lo gnar.1ntee monmcnt b)' this trip of the ~1. v. Bona\'icla lrci~ht must be at the Hailway Freight Shed not later f11an 1:00 p.m. Tuesday. 7\larl'h 21~1.

Truck Owners Attention

MUD FLAPS IN STOCK ~ss.oo PER PAIR

GROUCHY'S LTD. Lc~IARCHANT ROAD

P.O. BOX 56

IEPAIIS ULCUIZIII

Nfld. Armature SAMBRICII. 51.

ST. JOHN'S

DIAL 5433

Works Ltd. DIAL i 191 - 7192

.'·

~1

i-

;.·· .

I )

r • I I ! I

r

Page 16: DaVince Tools Generated - Memorial University of ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · you $18.00 (in 12,000 miles) l} 4,000 Miles be tween Oil Changes-Saves you

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Gander U.C. Guild Surprise Birthday Party

GANDER - On Friday even· ina March lOth, the officers and mtmbers of Fraser Road, Uni1 ed Church Guild, sparked by their President pleasantly sur pristd :Mrs. Katie Pike on tht

·teeasion of her 68th Birthday. ~~··Mrs. Pike who has been con fitttd to her bed for more that. fil·e years, is keenly interestc11 ia the work of the Guild. a~ y,•ell as that of the other or ~aniutions of tile church. Sht .: li\'CS with her son ,John and hi> y;ife at 6 Boyd Strert and wa: enjoyin~ a chat with a lriclll when the door opened and tht

·~trains of "Happy Birthday'

fil~~~s. 1 h.~a~l~~-~~quires Co-Con .. :,: 1~,LJ:.~w:: .. ;.&,:i,,~;4H.d/:,;e;, ..... ;,.o ..•. : · ········ '' ··· ''· .· .. · ..... ···

\'Pnor of the s.irk ,·isiting rom· '!'HE SlK l<'RED.l<:lHCK BANTING Nll'.f>iUlUAL ttlJ:Sl'l'l'L>L. \>1\rwr.li m1ttees. m fttlm~ words, on he· • • f I "C d' S'd " f G· hllf of the group, presented : GANDER-One of the few bmldmgs le t on t te ana Jan I e o •·m· Mrs. Pike with a beautiful ' der Airport is Gander s old and soon to be replated hospital. The construction floral arrangement and a box of · on the new hospital is expected to start this summer. ( Sta£f Photo) chocolatts. After everybod)• 1

conferred their personal good 1

wi~hrs, games were play"ed, one ' .being a comprtition in which ' the jumbled words were items : used in a sick room. !\Irs. Pike ; tritd her skill at this one and ; did very well. Prizes were won : by Mrs. Gilbert Wells, ;'11rs. 1

John Pike, Mrs. Herbert : Manuel and Mrs. James Squires. ·

After a delicious supper Jllrs. : Pike thanked the Guild for i their thoughtfulness in remem- : bering her in such a pleasing · wa~·. The members expressed , lhr wish that ~Irs. Pike would i enjoy many more "Happy Bir· : lhday~" and they would he back .

. iL~ain to join in the ccle· , bratmn~. I

Bowling Averages and Team Standings

n:.UI STANDIN(;S TeJm Samr: (J, P. RC\F ;>;o. i 51 55 EP.\ 51 49

. Ji ('. \1' :'\ () . I 51 45 RCAF :'\o. 2 51 :~5 l':-;T 51 :n I iawkr: rs ............. 411 28 ,\ Jlry Cats tR 28

!

GANDER LAKE FROZEN-A view of Gander Lake in the background shows

the great lake frozen for one of the few times in Meteorologic:al history. It has been said that the lake usually doesn't 'freeze because of its great depth. The surface of the lake is less than 1 till ft. a hove sea level and as such

is over 400 feet below the level of Gander Airport The above picture was

taken from the fourth floor of Gander's new hotel, frnm where an exccllt~nt view can be had of the Lake and River. (Stu£[ Photo)

OF THB

OK TilE PATII TO LEADEH.SlllP

Field Alarshal \lont<romerv . ,., '

rilE LOST ;OOTSTEPS

Sih·in Craciunas T\E \lA~ A~D

JIIS DOC: ,\ nthonv

~ ·11J'" '(' ·-·J

Hichardson 3.2.) !'II E \100;'\ H.\KEHS

Hohert Carse 4.95 I'H0\1 SEA P\TO SEA

\\'. C. Ilanh- (i.OO SIIAKESPE:\HE I~ IllS TI.\IE

I" or B mwn J'llE B.\TTLE OF miT,\ I\

bkard Bishop ,'liE FO\ES OF !'liE DESEHT

I ~­.. /.)

1.7.)

Paul Carcll :J .. so CO\FESSIO:\S OF :\ ll A PPY \I A'.'-!

Art Linklcttl'r .. :3.cr) FATE OF THE

. IJllYfEH Ernl'st K. Cann 6.00

Dicks & Co., Ltd. The Booksellers

Spin 4·125 or 2008 nr :wn

MacCORMAC'S Dial 5181 . 2 3

GE,\Il STREET

RE<'EI\'1:\'G OFI'ICF:,

1 AOEL\InE :-.TitEET

111·:.\TIIS

THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHX'S, XFLD .. :\10\'D:\Y, \IAHCII 2o l ' 861

Your Protect Future! Get Your

"GUARDIAN"

FIRE I

f'OlfCY TO-DAY

PHONE "51 01" and

get all the facts of "Guardian" Fire and Auto Insurance, udinit::l; Eertert

GENERAL INSURANCE AGENTS ST. JOHN'S, .NEWFOUNDLAt-.0

Dogcatcher Under Fire

OTTA \VA I CI')-Dogl'atl'her Hlwal Amyot of suhurb;m l;Jou­l'e,ter Toll'n>hip has come un· rlcr lire a~ain for hi> (•olletlion nwthotb.

Town>hip rr,idt'nt \l'illial!l Sweet Satnrday at-cu.sed ~lr. Amyot of "do~·n,1pping"--u.;in~ the :\m)·ot l'ililrlren to coax dogs from their mrnprs" y;1rcis with daddy standing h)· to pick tlw'n up a:; :-.tr~tys.

Last nwnth the Ott:nra Jlu. ma1w Sm·iPt.\· prolbted to town­shill r·ouncil tll:1t )Jr. Amyot wa:; u-.:i11g a ~'<Hill.!:! female pooch to lttrP <l~:~s into his picl:np truck. ·

~Jr ... \m,·nt. who gt'ls .~-! for radt tin~ l1r rounds up. denied that char~<· hut ll'a> warned hy t'IHIIH'Il that Slll'h a pratlil'r llHI...:I stop.

IT'S E.ISY 0\' TilE l:l'JH;J·:T TO HE Sl.l.\1

M.IL\ IL\HT

I' neither 'H're nor tl!Pte in re­l;ltion to fashion. llrr shot·s \I'Cilr

. out la<trr ;mrl must l1r repair('r! ·and r(_·pl:1ccd oflen. The ~:lm'_' tl1i11~ is true o\ Jin:erip ~n<' fOIIIHI:ition ~a I'll! I' Ill>. llo'il'ry too. .-\nt] tilt' llpilololtT<'rl lurni· lure in \:rr home ll'on't !;1'1 '~'' long o1· I·Jo~ :1 . ..; v:e)l.

CJ' ;md 11n! •jr·:·. 1: ~:.t' j~

;,',oul the r;,te o· ··.'· ch ~a~:c-· off ',1 :·l:..:.h· a~~-: ';!~-~~ IJ:· he:· .-.;,;in v;;1i:r ~r ... d',r·~

."l1ould :·ind rr.<Hi': rr .. :t•·ri·, · .· in;... h(·!· t1t th~ f-~;r: o~ ;,r;- ~:et.

.~:•t)H~H:>}'));H••u~~

: IT'S A HONEY OF For p•·oplo• \':ho arc ,·.,rl'ful :.~ LOAF

;. ;1hnut ll1iiliL'.''· thi> alon(' 'tllH 11 tl ! OUR OWN BREAD he :111 ll'tl'llll\,"'- to Jo .. r \\('!~ht. • ln""'t,,i>il·. th. ''.otllan "ho 1o,,., • BEST BY TEST •.rcdtt !wcin.s In look both yotm;:. ~ •.•• ,.,.,.,,,.,,.,.,.,I>UiiW

-----···----

Enjoy Maximum Comfort

From CONCOA 011. RT:\TISG IIOILER

GIVES LOWEST-COST TROUBLE-FREE HEATING AND BEAUTY UNSURPASSED.

:: .} .J ~Al : d

• You'll enjQy mnr, h!l from far les• fuel .•

• Amplt domrs1ir htl water from same onlt:

:1~-.-- :" ·~ i' ·Q/: .·.~n . (1, :~\'"-._ ' "~· i::::~:;

~k ~ ~ ~" .. -~',.- • HPat tornr~ np ~uickl! ·!' · ..:. ] • in \'Cry fe1< minute1: } /!"" ~ ~ •

RC.\fo' ;lin. 3 4R 25 . Odtl Hall~ 45 23

llid 1·ou know lh;l! it', f;n· Bli\'(;.\ Y - IJir•d suddenlv r;tsier on the h11d~d to ltr slim.'.

. Saturd;,,-.. \larch IHth. Capt .. ,.1. · 1 r 1 l'm·J Kent 142) 1R4, EPA. ~lEN'S !,EAGlE Ken Smith 124) 204. Oprr· .James Bunga)', ;,g,·d 4fi yr;u·,. liS t.• l'llt' ,or '<'l<'ra rr:NHI<.

'I ;:. : . ..

;\II mrchanism ~~ 101 awa}' from rlmt eo ntoisture.

Ft•r th~ llt•rk. Ladit•>: 212., !'llr.~. ~luna L~l'!rrc, HC:\F :lio. 4

Hoh Marks ti5J 193, CNT, 'Tt·am :\'amr: G. 1'. at ion~. l'lt1111p or r,t peopll' r:1t more. of leuYill.!.:!: to mourn. hi .... \\'Jfe. ~ L'O!lr: ... e. illld th11s ..:twnd more for fioy Hewitt (9) 192, Hawk. Commrmicalion~ Yil 45 Carl 1\rnt f49) I!J:l. EP.\. rlau~htel's. Shirk.v and .h•aucttt•.

(• 5 • 1 .. •· food. But th;1t's just the be~in-r~t·s. ..u~toms . . 1 •I 1 llo 1 l\mg ClUJ IRtl, Opcr· 1 son. (;t•offrey. also father and .lim Sharpcgge <18) 190, lleadquarlers 2 ........ 51 :l!) 1 ttions. · (' II 1 1 'fl nin~.

To date. ~len. ~mllh. RCAI" Xo. 2.

To date, Ladies. I SISler. ~lr<. ll. '· II' t')'. Jr 'I'll!' [ll'rl(i<•st <:!olhe.s <IIIII lht>l'l'· 323. Ken Alley Cats. . llcadquarlcrs 1 .......... 51 :l4 AI )loakler 142! tun. Cus- funeral will tal-.· !>lace from hi, h U (ore the bi~~p;.;( fashion IJ~irg:Jin<.; Chris Carrut ers (26) 189, SAF .................. 51 3::. 11ns. I•, te r<•.sidenc<•. ~;; <:amh

1'er . , .

u l'Olll(' m .;;;mali ~IZPS. .\ won1:m 280. Mr.;. Alley Cats. . Operations ................. 51 3(, Oscar Mallalicu 127) 188. ctrcct .,t 2.311 1un. :llonda1.•. I . · I I

Enid .Jones. EPA . Men: 388, Ken Smith, RCAF

No.2.

• " " . w lo 1s really OI'CI'I\CJ.~ il, t~.s to Oscar Mallalieu (38) 188, Odd EPA . ...................... c I :lo Headquarters No. 1. )larch 201h, to ,\lount Pleasant ray more for clothes tlwt arc Balls. I Radar ............................ 48 29 Norm IIebert t 51, 188, Cemetery.

.Mrs. Mona Leclerc (33) 174,, RCN ............................ 48 24 . USAF. ~~---------~ RCAF No. 4. I : Neil Mercer (39) 187, l!eJtl· Dli:'i\"-Dicd Mle1· a Ion" ill- '

HIGH TRIPLE Miss Joan Birmingham (21) HIGH SINGI.E 1 quarters No. 2. 'ness, in his 71th \'C<Ir. l1;1r~\' .1. For the week, Ladies, 535. 171, CNT. 1 1 Chris Carruthers (20) 185, Dunn. lie le~1·es' to mourn his

ilrs. Enid Jones, EPA. Mrs. Enid JoJnes (48) 170, For the week, 320, Bernie Operations. , wife: two sons, .James al home: .Men, 740, Neil Mercer. Alley EPA. Gorin ,Headquarters Nq. 1. ., t'red. at Argt~ntia: three daught-.

Cats. ll1rs. Gail Taylor (48) 164, To date, 324, Jim Sharpegge, ers. Phyllis at home: FlorPnce, To date, Ladies, 629, Mrs. EPA. :Operations.

1

. Pol'rtr'cal · t~I··s. ,.John Paul GauthiPr'. Que·· Midce Ellison, RCAF No. L ' 1 Mrs. Midge Elliston (40) 159, hec: Ida, '~Irs. Otto Brown!

Jlen, 831, Ken Smith, RCAF I RCAF No. 1. HIGH TRII'LE Grand Falls: lwo sisters m11l one t I M '1 F h (24 155 1 E d' ? brother and 14 ~~·;mt!chil(lrcn. : No. :z. . rs. "ae rene ) , For the week, 721. Lloyd xpe 'ency .. .

1

CNT. . Tibbs, Customs. 1 , Funeml \Vedne,t!ay mornin~ ~rom I To 1\1. M · N 11 (21) 5 I his late r~>idcncc, 61 Ha.J•wanl . P TEN AVERAGES tss am ewe 1 1, I To date, 786, John Bund- 1

Keil Smith 0:1) 23ii, RCAF 'CNT. , geard, Communications. LONDON (CP) -Eric Louw, 'A\'enue. / No. 2. 1 Mrs. Dawn Alcoe (36) 149, . S~uth African external affairs F:\RIU:LI.-Passed llcaccfull.v ;

Norm Dodds, ( 18) RCAF No. RCAF No. 4. 1 TOP n;N AVERAGES m1msler, charged Sunday that away :\larch 18th at 1 a.m .. James ' : 3 • 1 Mrs. Marge King (45) 147, Jim Sharpegge, 123) 206.8. Prime Minister Diefenbakcr Fancll in his 72nd n•ar. !PaYing • f E. Swain (II) 198, CNT. i llawkeyes. 1 Operations. was "pandering" to his home to mourn ti sons. 1 d;.mgiMr and 2 I

' Neil Mercer (27) 197, Alley I Mrs. Cynthia Mallalieu (38) I John Hungaarcl 127) 206. audience in spearheading at· sistt•r.s. Funeral will take place 1 Cats • 1 146, Odd Balls , I Communications. 1 larks on South Africa at last from his l;ne residence Top.sail

: week's Commonwealth confer- Road this mnming at H o'dock to ' ence. ·Topsail Church with Requiem

At the same time, Australian ~lass at 9.30.

Prime Minister Robert Menzies ' WALSH-P·lssed aw· v u !-

IN MEMORIAM THOMPSON

In I(wln~ memory of a tlear danghter anti >i>tcr.

. ~1:\IIY TIIO:I11'SON, who departed this life

:l!arch 19111, HHn. Your memory is our keep·

sakr, With which we will never

part, God h~s vou in his kcPping, But we ·have you in our

hearts.

-Sadlr missrd hi' mothrr, and· father, si~ter, :llrs. Kay Bnmdi~c and broth­er .Jim and son .John.

: \ t ! ·~~

~ '·

• Brautiful rnou~h to %1 in family rnom ar kitchen.

• frn ,·car~ cuar:1ntre It the heat )!rnrr.1tor~

• Full• appruvr~ bl t'tt<Jerwritcrs l.~oou tories.

*The Concoa Boiler ir1 conjunction with Concoo Baseboard Radiation makes the Ideal Healing System! Eliminating drafts and cold ~pols, be· sides being beautifying, this complete system can be installed in already-built homes as well as when the home is being built. TERMS CAN BE ARRANGED UP TO 5 YEARS.

WRITE OR PHONE

<:. A. HUBLEY LTD. PLUMBING & HEATING CONTRACTOR$

Kll-lG'S ROAD--DIAL 2916-3916-ST. JOHN'S

STIOWROO\IS OPE\ S.\'l'rTlO.\YS

IN STOCK said South Africa's withdrawal ; denly on ~!ar~h 18th .. (~~rtr~1le \ , from. the Commo~~ealth lo pro· I (Byrne) Walsh, beloved wife of, ~ teet tis ractal pohctes presented Thomas s. Walsh. daughter of i "a rather disagreeable vista of ; the late .Tames B\'rne and Ann possibilitie~ f~r the future." ! (Viquers) Byrne: sister of the ,

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RAINBOW FAT BACK PORK

TEA CANADIAN CHEESE

IS FIVE PO·INT APPLES

ALWAYS ONIONS

GOOD P.E.I. POTATOES P. ·E. I. TURNIPS

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GEORGE .NEAL LIMITED PHONES 2264 - 4440 - 3420

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. Louw satd m a press stale· .late Capt. Gerald Guy Byrn~. · ' mcnt that Dicfenhaker's alii- M.C. She leaves to mourn hu;. · ance with the Afro· Asian Com- . band, one daughter Rose Anne , : monwcalth group "was moti- C\-!rs. Douglas 1\lurphy) at S~ ·. 1 vated by considerations of poli· ·John's; also one sister, Kath ' tical expendiency." · crinc and one hrother, Frank

1 of Huguenot Staten Island, New ' HIR'l'H I York. f'uncra! ~!on day, from

----·. ... ________ ! her late residence. 147 Patrick 1 EDDY B t '·I d " ! Street to St. Patrick's Church - orn o ,, r. an mrs. • f . If h ~! t

B rt Edd M h lOth t i or Requtcm tg . ·ass a e y, on arc a

110 a.m. (No flowers hy re-

the Grace Hospital, a son. ·quest). 1 MURPHY:-Born at St. Cl~re's 1 LATHAN _ Died suddcnlv :

Mercy Hospttal on St. Patrtck's 1 • ,

1 :' I

Dll t M 1 M p t March 17, at Anchorage, A ask.,, i Y 0 r. anc . rs. e er William Pennelh Latharr, leav-

Murphy (nee Shcha Murphy of . t h' 'f Cathen'ne . . 1 mg o mourn IS wt e, Lewlsporte), a baby gJr. (nee Bradshaw) and two chil-

dren.

TV WALSH-Passed away sud· I REPAIRS denly at the General Hospital !

on Sunday, March 19th, Gert·/ rude, wife of Patrick Walsh, aged 60 years. She leaves to mourn beside her husband, two daughters, Gladys (Mrs. Alex Gellately), St. John's and Mary

REASONABLE RATES

GUARANTEED WORK

94123 at Sydney, N.S. one son, Mich-l ael, at home; also one brother ,\lid 12 grandchildren. Funeral I Electronic

Centre Ltd. will take place from her late / residence, 14 Southside Road East, to St. Patrick's Church for 1

Requiem Mass at 10 a.m. on 1

90 CM~PBEU AVE. Tuesday, !\larch 21st. lntermenl J \fter hour.. 'PHONE 7313 at Mount Carmel Cemetery .

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FIBERGLASS INSULATION '\'e have just received our first shipment of the ne11 product which

INSULATES BETTER .. WON'T SLUMP OR SAG

.. GIVES FULl THERMAL

IN WALLS

VALUE

Money spent on insulation is invested as it enh down fuel hills and

provides ,greater comfort.

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