12
,. CUSTOMER PROTECTION POLICY Alk about the Goodwill Warranty 011 tlsed Cars We Sell - It witI (;jI'c You Satisfaction After Sale, Terra Nova Motors ltd. USED CAR LOT THE DAIIJY NE ",.ter 51- EllEabeth Ave. All forms 01 Insurancr SEVEN CENTS 12 PAGES NO. 157 ,ST, JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, WEDNESDAY, JULY 10, 1963 ----------------------------------'---- " 0.\\'1' R, \ ,cp' _ VIce· Ad· London Crowds Protest Visit Qf Greek King Ha)'ner, chief o[ <aid Tuesday 23 ago " . will hare to be reo N N (CP) P I' "f h I r h" Will, hy sub· LO DO - 0 Ice contmgents 0 t e peace- Ime se- 'if to man· I curity force London has ever assembled Tuesday night turned bac\( , I'C'I'!ll !lill'al commit· I I' h B k' h I;:, wave after wave of demonstrators batt mg to reac uc Ing am , trio the commons dclence I Palace to protest the visit of King Paul and Queen Frederika of th"1 the nary needs HI"J HI, I IUlJ ,1 1 ;l. IS .. ' H:Io. .lAI... !\jL1 \1 14', l. (CP) -' ,Il'Har in was lin sterlinR, 7·16: \\ ICPl- at 92 lH! funds, Wcek Ina sterling up lilTS UlII,\ \,\Pl _ ,I'", swaycrl, hundreds ,t' ,hook LiDia 'cconds. 11 'e n[ the lI'or!1 'r in almost a lin', I:lrd sli::hl. r': YOlir to have flln thi5 summcr, , Ltd, 5t. ,leta'" To July 30 . Aug. 12.,/: . " Sept. ,ldvancc. " l'iFLD, ' " G and': : , , ., PAIRS: .':\, ,,' r' ) ' '-',.' .. .', ' , "", quickly as we Greece, 'thcm' and num· ! Th G k I I d' d' 'd th palace as guests of chrao I e ree roy a coup e Ine InSI e e Queen Elizabeth, I the three HnlilHx, 'f' h b k 'T f ISh f nll loan from Running Ig ts ro e ,out, In ra a gar quare w en a group 0 11'111 hal'e to be ,the Committee of 100, which mciu des, anarchists, tried to march hI' (II' 1967, II 'I h h II hid B k' h onti " suhmarine through admlra ty arc onto t e ma t at ea s to uc Ing am ;ho\lld \'1l111Pnse 24 I Place ,hi:", suhmarlll,es a r,;ht p'n{,l':d pUI'!l?se fng· Some 01 the black masked .. I:tll ;mti.sni>marl!l; and banner bearing demonstrators half dozen cordons thrown majesties the liberation of po· .. 1111",ilr and mrcraft) I broke through the lines 01 po. across Whitehall, threw the litical prisoners and the holding crowds hack nmid jeering amI of honest elections," ,. , I lice who were trring 10 funnel cat.calling, l\'1ore fights broke Demonstrators were handled 1'011 ,1\lfT1C the mnrchel's around the square out, roughly as police grabbed them >,'ntlr . ., oicl',1 nu\'nl chief i off in the direction o[ Pic· Police made at lenst 79 ar. and bundled them into n fleet o[ <Jid thrre are nlans for. adllly, I wailing prisoners' trucks. 'aoti . ,:Ihmal'ine installa· the marchers were Several gi!'ls were among , thl' Canadian Arctic. WIL\) SCE:<;ES 'Ir h't .,' f t 1 "s Ambaliclos, Bl'ilish·hol'n those arrestcd and onc I a po· 'I J' rekrrnre. 10 tInder· Wild s c e n e s ° s c I ' 'f ' G k' , I' \iccman in the face. , . IIl1oL'rice submarine among the hooting lraffic und I \1:1 c of a ree ImpmOne(, III , \ ,,' IlII which he I jeel'in" Silectators continued nn·: IllS homeland, and DIana S:'tYASII , '. ,nil IL'l: , ' .' . lin lites but )I). Pym, sccrelary of the Commu· The pohce confiscated and rc;c.ml1 I, conllllU1I1g, cl,hec fllor 10 ge 1• in nist.front Leaguc of Democracy, smashed bnnnel's carried hy the _---- Ice ,ma y rna a ( '. ' I G I 'k 'tl 'Iemonstl"ltors the demonslrators hv clnnging' ')I' .rcece. ,1 'C many In Ie ,( , " . . . I the arch's great'iron crowd, said, pohce I I harl'in!! access to the mall route, of moUl nmg aCIOSS thel! sh(llIl'l adllsed !lel ,to qlllel ,to the palace, I dm. I had replIed 'I keen I ' \\'I'Tn:, I... I.\P' _ , The demonstrators were pro· whcn my hushand IS released, CMIBRIDGE, 1I1D: A National Guardsman slamls wntcb on street here .Tuly 5, as mtegralion the 1.IIuisimw Cajun The d em 0 n s II' a tors thcn: testing \\'hat they claim is the· city. Some 400 guardsmen were ordeml to stay in C'II11bridge through the weekcllIl to keep the peace. Umltcd martial Jaw, Canada ','.iiI lor sclcl'icd for an intn Whitclmll, the IJI'oad I Greek go\,ernment's continue(! Appeals To imposed Jllne 14, after racial strife erllptell here, remained in effed, along with a nightly cllrfew, a ban on street demonstra· , \Iii! \(l Canada. the hnmc streel lined hy gOl'ernment 0[' i imprisonmcnt o[ gmt lions or marches amI prohibition of liquor salcs,-(UPI Photo), e,! their ance,tm's, Thc girls lice buildings, in an attempt to I prisoners from the CommulIIst - --- -------- 1 Women' K K I K I 8 11 \ Exchange were brought lip and, with a hehind hal'S were convicted of "4 ! criminal offences such os mill" I U U X an: '. I 'OTTAWA (CPI- An R del' and treason. I By TilE CA:-IADIAX PRESS 1 l- I · ' . 'training scheme started lasl hefore the hanquet began, 91.' Tuesday to 300 women-he said i ' :i yeal' between Canadian and Ja· II n ese ecess ,Tust a[ter 7:30 p,m" nil hour; President Kennedy ' year·old Lord Russell-who he· they represent 50,000,000 more-: B I I · maican army cadets will be Tta lks came famous as phllosopher to help solve the t:nitcd States' a t ten t e g r t 0 ' racl'lPncoautnecdndthiTsuSelsldtnamy,er, the army Bertrand Russell _ arrived at racial problem with a three· 'nc the palace to deliver 8 protest point aUack, ! , I about the royal visit. lie was in The women, black and white i A group 01 master cadets I,ll" S(JI'iet The Chmese embassy, ac·: the' palace less than a minute' and representing organizations I . fro III the Royal Canadian .'\roll' Chinm delegations reo knowledging that no lalks were! before driving away again, throughout the [J ,S" IV e I' c I Cue'ets will fly Lo Kingston. Iheir ideological peace held Tucsday, said they would I His 'letter, addresscd to Queen brought together in Ihe While: By DO:-l ;\JcoI<EF. I mtial the I Klan, They say, ordcr Is, I ' " nn Tuesday in the wake be today,. claimed that, polili. in one (If a, of: ATLA:\TA lAP) _ 1\11 Klux I an? ill other parts or the KI<1I1; , .. ;' July 21 for' 03 stingin; SUl'iel rebuke to The SovIet ,Commumst pal'ty cal pmoners were belllg de· I meet mils I he preSIdent has' Klan leaders said Tuesday the Illllllcd Slates, ! Cl'<ug, 30, saId the hlan \\111: of liammg R n d .• eelll,'.., China. They offered no ex. central commIttee, in a state. tained In miserable condition! heen to cnlij;t while.robell ann ·hoodrd orcbr' 'file' n!'w Klan mo\'c will l:;c: stage a street march ,July 20: They Will be accompamed, b, , but sources said men.t published hy Pral'da .. ae. in 'Greece,' TIc--ufg'elf the' queen l roots' slipporl lor his civil righls: is launching a large·scale cam·! one of non·viulence hut self.: in Savannah, Ga.. where l\e.! Capt. A. V, Stoppa of Re;;lI1a no rupture, cused the Chinese of deliber- "to commend 10 their Greek' progl'am in Congress, ) paign of white to, protection, the leaders added. 1 groes hal'e hecn conducting i and. Capt. H. E !llac!)onald 01 on In Health' ICP '- The process a federal budget OI'11'h,"lino to provide consul\otion within the ond Iwtween the gOY· ond Ihe pUblic before , , ore made, Prime Pearson said Tuesday, alsn lold a press conler· he belic\['s Finance l\lin. GOrd00 .' in I'ery good " and "1 think hc is good )'em yel." But Mr, made no reply to reo questions about 1\11', political health as fi· mini.ller. met reporters hll week's ahsence from Hill. recovering an operation to remoVe a from Ihe right side of his . He laid he had no for. announcemonls 10 make, hoped to continue meeting periodically. cloudy, not mueh in temperature 65, Temperatures ately aggravating Soviet Chi. I . They their methods will· demonstrations against segrcga· I Halifax. nese relations, It warned that ' include marching demonstra· tion, I --------'--- the consequences could be dan· Fl' , · g S G' t tions, mass rallics, economic re· "I certainly hope no Xegroes: The imperial wizard said the gerous,' The' government news. emmln ay's OV pl'isals and white voter-rellislra· throw rocks," Craig said, : Klan was expanding its activi· paper ,Izvestia also published lion drives, In recent months "1 don·t necessarilv mean: tes in the U,S. north and mid· the statement, the Klan has been generally in· wc'll take a violent stand hut I west. News of the suspension came actil'e. if the state can't protect dti·! out after the Chinese did not 0 t T G t "w d 11 "The thing we'l'e got to do is zens, I\'(!'II band together to pro· I "They're not In the open in sholl' up lor Tuesday's meeting U 0 e ar e shock people into reality," said tect ollrscll'es. I the no:th r:f at the mansion which is the con. Imperial Wizard Rob crt "The white people hat·c bccn economIC r e pnsals, . ference site In the Lenin Hill Shelton Jr, of Tuscaloosa, Ala, ,trampled on-a man can't even I said, "They IdentIfIed section of Moscow. OTTAWA (cPI-The ConserI" i ing the life of the hoard by Jan. at the stage of second n:ading Georgia's grand dragon, cal'loperate his o\\'n husincss in an, as Kl:\O orgalllzalions but. ar,c REPORTS TRICKLE OUT alive opposition will seek at I uary, 1969; removal of the reo -or approval in principle, vin F. Craig of Atlanta, made orderly manner:' : operatmg on the same prmel' ,The recess came .as the least three amendments to the I duction in the terms of the orig. He said "the word that a more assessment of I he pIes. first report.s began tl'lckhng government's Atlantic Develop. inal five board members, to out of New Brunswick, 1 be· the racial confhct: he found the majority of white! "We hal'e prettv hroad cover· as to had durmg ment Board revision, the Com. three years from five; and in. liel'e, is that Wardell must go," "The negroes are not going men "almost rcad)' to talie up, now in 34 states," the opemng seSSIons, mons was told Tuesday. sertion of a guarantee that thc' That was a reference to l\lich· : to he fatisfiec\ until we have arms," i 'Both Klan officials said their source said the Chinese This was inDicated by Hugh $100,000,00 board fund is just a ael Wardell, Fredericlon pub- open racial war in this country, SEVERA!. PLAXXED . fi;tht was not confincd to scgrc· agam proposed a world conler. ,John Flemming, former New minimum figure, lisher named hoard chairman ", One race will hal'e to dom- Shelton, also sairl thrcc to gat ion but aimed also al ence of Communist parties to Brunswick premier and former The bill also proposes adding by the previous government. in ate, " fil'e rallies a are planned I' preserl'ing "the constitutional settle the Moscow.Peklng dis. federal forestry minister, who six Liberal govel'llment . 3 p ·1 Under Ihe new bill, his term as CLAIM AUTHENTICITY during the next t\\'o months in form of (C'.S,I government and pute, but advocated ,a new 1'0t. renewed Conservative attack on! pointed board members to Ihe I chairman would bc cut ,.- two Shelton and Craig beloQg to Georgia, Florida, Xorth Caro· it from buckling undcr procedure . w hI: h could Liberal plans to alter the board I five named by the previous years dating from last Jan. 24, the United Kla,ns of America Iina, Soulh Cal'Olina. Alabama,i to a military dictatorship of the swmg the massIve Chmese pop- established only last year, Conservative government. Mr. Flemming said it is im· Inc, knights of the Ku Klux Louisiana, Texas and Tennessee. Kennerlys." ulation into the scales and give Mr. Flemming called for Allegations of political part!· proper in his view to he amend· China a dominating voice, The these changes in the amending sanship by the Libernl party ing an net for a board whch reaction could be SUI" legislation: were woven hy Mr, Flemming has not yet had 8 chance to mised as totally negative, Removal of the provision end· into his speech launching debate function. UN To Probe Veman Poison Gas Charge LONDON (AP)-United Na· Officials in Ihe Unit cd Arab tions Secretary General U Republic in Cairo, which has Than! has ordered an inquiry been helping Yemen's revolu· into claims that Egyptian bomh· tionary government fight royal· ers dropped poison gas on roy· ists seeking to regain control of alist tribesmen in Yemen's civil that primitive Arab country on war, the Red Sea, denied their forces Britain and the United States used poison gas, are reported launching inde· REPOHTS SORES pendent investigations. Britain announced Tuesday information that the Egyptian! were using "a certain type of bomb which causes nasty burn: to the skin." ' In Beirut, a, report came from Bruce Abourrahman Conde, a former U.S. Air' Force officer from California who is noW II colonel in the army of Yemen'! dethroned Imam (king), that there lVas no actual proof or' charges, ' DaJ Min Mill 58 71 62 69 62 Thant told reporters in Ge· morning it 11'35 calling Thant's neva Tuesday he had asked for attention to the situation. A cor· the t'N inquiry before he was respondent for the London Daily notified of the allega· Telegraph reported after a tour tions by the British govern· of battlefields in Yemen that he ment's chief delegate at UN of· saw villa'gers with sores Ihey fices In Geneva, Charlcs p, said were caused by poison gas Scott, bombs. The UN probe will he con· In the British c()lonv of Aden. ducted by Swedish Gen, Carl' next door to Yemen on the foot von Horn, head of the UN ob'l of the Arabian' relia· 'server teRm in Yemen. ble sources reported 'they had "Evidence sholVs the gas may have come from Napalm 'fire bombs whieh failed to, explode';" he was quoted as saying, "Some' deadly fumes,are killing ',the Yemenis, but we have no proof this is poison gas as sud!. .. : , 5:13 a,m, ght ... 1\ :30 p.m, QUarter .. Jilly 13 F Prol1llnel1l Star ",pI! below on, VI$lble Planeh I low in west, 10:58 ::tu rn , 11 :07 plter. L II' in east a,m. am, 11:00 11m '. 1m 5'02 . , , pm, " : ',,' .' J' ' ARNOLD penoDl'were kUled and 42 injured In bus accident 2 ,miles south of bere on 61.67, early .Tilly 7U1, .. Spectator. wateh 18 IiUJ is uprlghted at bottonl of 30·ft, embankment, The bus en route from 1\1emphis, Tenn, to St. Loul. 'wellfoff the road flipped over,and landed on its,top,and side 'heading In the opposile dlrection,":"(UPI Telephoto); , t . \ ' THE COUNTRY PARSON: i Brunei May Join LONDON (CPI- Membel'S o[ Malaya's delegation said Tues· day there's' still a possibility the oil·rich sultanate' of Brunei will join the federation of Ma· laysia to be set up Ang, 31. British sources agreed. The Brunei delegation refused com· ment: Discussing Brunei's last·min· ute refusal Monday to join the new southeast Asian nation, a Malayan spokesman said: , "Prime Minister Tunku Abdul ,( Rahman (of :\lalaya) is staying in London for a short holiday. Sultan Omar Ali of Brunei is also reported staying on. Inlor· mation discussions between the two leaders to narrow down their differences are still possi· ble," Iilformants said there was a , clash o[ personalities Monday- ;''It'5 too bad that we get. the various Malayan rulers and IIsed to our' own' faults ,so eas· Tunku Abdul Rahman on one I ily-and to those or others with' , side aud the Sultan on the other. such difficulty," , , . , , ' , I , I I , " I I , I -:

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Page 1: ,. Alk It witI THE DAIIJY NEcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · REPORTS TRICKLE OUT alive opposition will seek at I uary, 1969; removal of the reo -or approval

,. ~~

CUSTOMER PROTECTION POLICY

Alk about the Goodwill Warranty 011 tlsed Cars We Sell - It witI (;jI'c You Satisfaction After Sale,

Terra Nova Motors ltd. USED CAR LOT

THE DAIIJY NE ",.ter 51-EllEabeth Ave.

All forms 01 Insurancr

SEVEN CENTS 12 PAGES NO. 157

,ST, JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, WEDNESDAY, JULY 10, 1963 ----------------------------------'----

" 0.\\'1' ~lcINTO~H R, \ ,cp' _ VIce· Ad·

London Crowds Protest Visit Qf Greek King

nr~brrl Ha)'ner, chief o[ <aid Tuesday 23 ago

" . will hare to be reo N N (CP) P I' "f h I r h" Will, pa\'t~y hy sub· LO DO - 0 Ice contmgents 0 t e arg~st peace- Ime se-

'if r~!ladn I~ to man· I curity force London has ever assembled Tuesday night turned bac\( , I'C'I'!ll !lill'al commit· I I' h B k' h I;:, ~,IT{) wave after wave of demonstrators batt mg to reac uc Ing am

, trio the commons dclence I Palace to protest the visit of King Paul and Queen Frederika of th"1 the nary needs

;:t~I.~

HI"J HI, I F.~1:J IUlJ

,1 1 ;l. IS .. ' 11~. H:Io. "~ .lAI... !\jL1 \1 14', U~4

l. (CP) -' ,Il'Har in

"I~ was lin sterlinR,

n~ 7·16:

\\ ICPl-1·~2 at 92 lH!

funds, Wcek Ina sterling up

lilTS UlII,\ \,\Pl _

,I'", swaycrl, hundreds

."nr.,~~\, ni~ht ,t' ,hook LiDia 'cconds. 11 'e n[ the lI'or!1 'r in almost a lin', Dal11a~C,

I:lrd sli::hl.

r': YOlir to have flln thi5 summcr,

, Ltd, 5t. ,leta'"

To LI'trr~,'1

July 30 . Aug. 12.,/:

. "

Sept. •

,ldvancc. "

l'iFLD, ' "

G and': :

, , ., ~.

PAIRS: Ltd'~ .':\,

,,' r' )' '-',.'

.~ .. ~.' .', '

, "", quickly as we ~ Greece, 'thcm' and "~rcHt num· ! Th G k I I d' d' 'd th palace as guests of ~, chrao ~nti.s\lhmarine I e ree roy a coup e Ine InSI e e

~\,,~r!', Queen Elizabeth, I the three HnlilHx, 'f' h b k 'T f ISh f ;:I~llwnl\(" nll loan from Running Ig ts ro e ,out, In ra a gar quare w en a group 0

~a\\' 11'111 hal'e to be ,the Committee of 100, which mciu des, anarchists, tried to march hI' I~\;t; (II' 1967, II 'I h h II hid B k' h r.[~" onti " suhmarine through admlra ty arc onto t e ma t at ea s to uc Ing am

;ho\lld \'1l111Pnse 24 ~Ilr· I Place ,hi:", (,I~ht suhmarlll,es a •

r,;ht p'n{,l':d pUI'!l?se fng· Some 01 the black • masked .. I:tll ;mti.sni>marl!l; and banner • bearing demonstrators half • dozen cordons thrown majesties the liberation of po·

.. 1111",ilr and mrcraft) I broke through the lines 01 po. across Whitehall, threw the litical prisoners and the holding crowds hack nmid jeering amI of honest elections,"

,. , I lice who were trring 10 funnel cat.calling, l\'1ore fights broke Demonstrators were handled 1'011 ,1\lfT1C the mnrchel's around the square out, roughly as police grabbed them

>,'ntlr . ., oicl',1 nu\'nl chief i an~ off in the direction o[ Pic· Police made at lenst 79 ar. and bundled them into n fleet o[ <Jid thrre are nlans for. adllly, I wailing prisoners' trucks. 'aoti . ,:Ihmal'ine installa· re~~ong the marchers were Several gi!'ls were among

, ,~ thl' Canadian Arctic. WIL\) SCE:<;ES 'Ir h't .,' f t 1 "s Ambaliclos, Bl'ilish·hol'n those arrestcd and onc I a po· 'I J' ~ rekrrnre. 10 tInder· Wild s c e n e s ° s ru~g c I ' 'f ' G k' , I' \iccman in the face.

, . ~nrl IIl1oL'rice submarine among the hooting lraffic und I \1:1 c of a ree ImpmOne(, III , \ ,,' IlII which he I jeel'in" Silectators continued nn·: IllS homeland, and ~Irs, DIana S:'tYASII B~NNERS , '. ,nil IL'l: , ' .' . k~ lin lites but )I). Pym, sccrelary of the Commu· The pohce confiscated and rc;c.ml1 I, conllllU1I1g, cl,hec f~d fllor 10 ~ ge 1 • in ch~cl': nist.front Leaguc of Democracy, smashed bnnnel's carried hy the _---- Ice ,ma y rna a ( '. ' I G I 'k 'tl 'Iemonstl"ltors the demonslrators hv clnnging' ')I' .rcece. ,1 'C many In Ie ,( , " . . .

I ~hllt the arch's great'iron ~atcs, ~ crowd, ,tl~ey \\'o~'e, blac~. s~shes: ~~,rs, Am~atlClo,s, said, pohce I I harl'in!! access to the mall route, of moUl nmg aCIOSS thel! sh(llIl'l adllsed !lel ,to k~ep qlllel ~llt ,to the palace, I dm. I had replIed 'I wl~l keen qlll,~t I • '

\\'I'Tn:, I... I.\P' _ , The demonstrators were pro· whcn my hushand IS released, CMIBRIDGE, 1I1D: A ~laryland National Guardsman slamls wntcb on street here .Tuly 5, as mtegralion diffiel~lties pla~ue the hl;n,jr~cI 1.IIuisimw Cajun The d em 0 n s II' a tors thcn: testing \\'hat they claim is the· city. Some 400 guardsmen were ordeml to stay in C'II11bridge through the weekcllIl to keep the peace. Umltcd martial Jaw,

~isit Canada ','.iiI lor sclcl'icd for an s\\'un~ intn Whitclmll, the IJI'oad I Greek go\,ernment's continue(! Appeals To imposed Jllne 14, after racial strife erllptell here, remained in effed, along with a nightly cllrfew, a ban on street demonstra·

, \Iii! \(l Canada. the hnmc streel lined hy gOl'ernment 0[' i imprisonmcnt o[ gmt poiiti~al lions or marches amI prohibition of liquor salcs,-(UPI Photo), e,! their ance,tm's, Thc girls lice buildings, in an attempt to I prisoners from the CommulIIst ---- --------

;~:I~;t0~1.('~Il:~I~;1Cl~~~ ~;l~~ ~el~:dsth~~l~~I,ace ~:~l~~~~dh ~~~~~ 1 ~~\;~~r~~~n~n c~:;~:~~s 1~~s:~~~~ Women' K K I K I ~v 8 11 \ Exchange )l~ntrfal. were brought lip and, with a hehind hal'S were convicted of "4 ! criminal offences such os mill" I U U X an: '. I 'OTTAWA (CPI- An exchan~!

R del' and treason. I By TilE CA:-IADIAX PRESS 1 l-

I · ' . ~ 'training scheme started lasl

hefore the hanquet began, 91.' Tuesday to 300 women-he said i ' :i yeal' between Canadian and Ja· II n ese ecess ,Tust a[ter 7:30 p,m" nil hour; President Kennedy appeal~d '

year·old Lord Russell-who he· they represent 50,000,000 more-: B I I · maican army cadets will be

Tta lks came famous as phllosopher to help solve the t:nitcd States' a t ten t e g r a~ t ~~l 0 ' racl'lPncoautnecdndthiTsuSelsldtnamy,er, the army Bertrand Russell _ arrived at racial problem with a three· 'nc the palace to deliver 8 protest point aUack, !

, I about the royal visit. lie was in The women, black and white i A group 01 S~ master cadets I,ll" S(JI'iet The Chmese embassy, ac·: the' palace less than a minute' and representing organizations I . fro III the Royal Canadian .'\roll'

Chinm delegations reo knowledging that no lalks were! before driving away again, throughout the [J ,S" IV e I' c I Cue'ets will fly Lo Kingston. Iheir ideological peace held Tucsday, said they would I His 'letter, addresscd to Queen brought together in Ihe While: By DO:-l ;\JcoI<EF. I mtial illlc~ration throu~ll!Iut the I Klan, They say, th~ir ordcr Is, I ' "

nn Tuesday in the wake be l'esul."c~ today,. Frederi~a, claimed that, polili. Hous~ in one (If a, seric~ of: ATLA:\TA lAP) _ 1\11 Klux I ~01~th an? ill other parts or the Ilh~ o~lly a~lthcI~tlc KI<1I1; , .. ;' ama:c~,. July 21 for' 03 .m~~~l stingin; SUl'iel rebuke to The SovIet ,Commumst pal'ty cal pmoners were belllg de· I meet mils I he preSIdent has' Klan leaders said Tuesday the Illllllcd Slates, ! Cl'<ug, 30, saId the hlan \\111: of liammg R n d sl~ht .• eelll,'..,

China. They offered no ex. central commIttee, in a state. tained In miserable condition! heen holdin~ to cnlij;t gr~ss.1 while.robell ann ·hoodrd orcbr' 'file' n!'w Klan mo\'c will l:;c: stage a street march ,July 20: They Will be accompamed, b, , but ~ood sources said men.t published hy Pral'da .. ae. in 'Greece,' TIc--ufg'elf the' queen l roots' slipporl lor his civil righls: is launching a large·scale cam·! one of non·viulence hut self.: in Savannah, Ga.. where l\e.! Capt. A. V, Stoppa of Re;;lI1a \l'a~ no rupture, cused the Chinese of deliber- "to commend 10 their Greek' progl'am in Congress, ) paign of white resistanc'~ to, protection, the leaders added. 1 groes hal'e hecn conducting i and. Capt. H. E !llac!)onald 01

on In Health'

ICP '- The process a federal budget

OI'11'h,"lino to provide consul\otion within the

ond Iwtween the gOY· ond Ihe pUblic before

, , ore made, Prime Pearson said Tuesday,

alsn lold a press conler· he belic\['s Finance l\lin. GOrd00 .' i~ in I'ery good " and "1 think hc is good

)'em yel." But Mr, made no reply to reo questions about 1\11', political health as fi·

mini.ller.

~ear;on met reporters hll week's ahsence from

Hill. recovering an operation to remoVe a

from Ihe right side of his . He laid he had no for. announcemonls 10 make,

hoped to continue meeting periodically.

cloudy, not mueh in temperature

65, •

Temperatures

ately aggravating Soviet • Chi. I . They ~aid their methods will· demonstrations against segrcga· I Halifax. nese relations, It warned that ' include marching demonstra· tion, I --------'---the consequences could be dan· Fl' , · g S G' t tions, mass rallics, economic re· "I certainly hope no Xegroes: The imperial wizard said the gerous,' The' government news. emmln ay's OV pl'isals and white voter-rellislra· throw rocks," Craig said, : Klan was expanding its activi· paper ,Izvestia also published lion drives, In recent months "1 don·t necessarilv mean: tes in the U,S. north and mid· the statement, the Klan has been generally in· wc'll take a violent stand hut I west.

News of the suspension came actil'e. if the state can't protect dti·! out after the Chinese did not 0 t T G t "w d 11 "The thing we'l'e got to do is zens, I\'(!'II band together to pro· I "They're not In the open in sholl' up lor Tuesday's meeting U 0 e ar e shock people into reality," said tect ollrscll'es. I the no:th beca~se ~~ f~ar r:f at the mansion which is the con. Imperial Wizard Rob crt ~1. "The white people hat·c bccn economIC r e pnsals, . Sh~l~o!1 ference site In the Lenin Hill Shelton Jr, of Tuscaloosa, Ala, ,trampled on-a man can't even I said, "They a~e ~ot IdentIfIed section of Moscow. OTTAWA (cPI-The ConserI" i ing the life of the hoard by Jan. at the stage of second n:ading Georgia's grand dragon, cal'loperate his o\\'n husincss in an, as Kl:\O orgalllzalions but. ar,c REPORTS TRICKLE OUT alive opposition will seek at I uary, 1969; removal of the reo -or approval in principle, vin F. Craig of Atlanta, made orderly manner:' : operatmg on the same prmel' ,The recess came j~st .as the least three amendments to the I duction in the terms of the orig. He said "the word that .~omes a more ominoll~ assessment of I Throu~hollt Gcor~ia, he 5~id.1 pIes.

first report.s began tl'lckhng ~ut government's Atlantic Develop. inal five board members, to out of New Brunswick, 1 be· the racial confhct: he found the majority of white! "We hal'e prettv hroad cover· as to wh~t had ~appened durmg ment Board revision, the Com. three years from five; and in. liel'e, is that Wardell must go," "The negroes are not going men "almost rcad)' to talie up, a~e now in 34 states," the opemng seSSIons, mons was told Tuesday. sertion of a guarantee that thc' That was a reference to l\lich· : to he fatisfiec\ until we have arms," i 'Both Klan officials said their O~e source said the Chinese This was inDicated by Hugh $100,000,00 board fund is just a ael Wardell, Fredericlon pub- open racial war in this country, SEVERA!. PLAXXED . fi;tht was not confincd to scgrc·

agam proposed a world conler. ,John Flemming, former New minimum figure, lisher named hoard chairman ", One race will hal'e to dom- Shelton, also ~:; sairl thrcc to gat ion but wa~ aimed also al ence of Communist parties to Brunswick premier and former The bill also proposes adding by the previous government. in ate, " fil'e rallies a wc~k are planned I' preserl'ing "the constitutional settle the Moscow.Peklng dis. federal forestry minister, who six Liberal govel'llment . 3p·1 Under Ihe new bill, his term as CLAIM AUTHENTICITY during the next t\\'o months in form of (C'.S,I government and pute, but advocated ,a new 1'0t. renewed Conservative attack on! pointed board members to Ihe I chairman would bc cut ,.- two Shelton and Craig beloQg to Georgia, Florida, Xorth Caro· kcepin~ it from buckling undcr m~ procedure . w hI: h could Liberal plans to alter the board I five named by the previous years dating from last Jan. 24, the United Kla,ns of America Iina, Soulh Cal'Olina. Alabama,i to a military dictatorship of the swmg the massIve Chmese pop- established only last year, Conservative government. Mr. Flemming said it is im· Inc, knights of the Ku Klux Louisiana, Texas and Tennessee. Kennerlys." ulation into the scales and give Mr. Flemming called for Allegations of political part!· proper in his view to he amend· --------~ China a dominating voice, The these changes in the amending sanship by the Libernl party ing an net for a board whch

reaction could be SUI" legislation: were woven hy Mr, Flemming has not yet had 8 chance to mised as totally negative, Removal of the provision end· into his speech launching debate function. UN To Probe Veman

Poison Gas Charge LONDON (AP)-United Na· Officials in Ihe Unit cd Arab

tions Secretary • General U Republic in Cairo, which has Than! has ordered an inquiry been helping Yemen's revolu· into claims that Egyptian bomh· tionary government fight royal· ers dropped poison gas on roy· ists seeking to regain control of alist tribesmen in Yemen's civil that primitive Arab country on war, the Red Sea, denied their forces

Britain and the United States used poison gas, are reported launching inde· REPOHTS SORES pendent investigations. Britain announced Tuesday

information that the Egyptian! were using "a certain type of bomb which causes nasty burn: to the skin." '

In Beirut, a, report came from Bruce Abourrahman Conde, a former U.S. Air' Force officer from California who is noW II colonel in the army of Yemen'! dethroned Imam (king), that there lVas no actual proof or' th~ charges, '

Nl~ht DaJ Min Mill

58 71 62 69 62

Thant told reporters in Ge· morning it 11'35 calling Thant's neva Tuesday he had asked for attention to the situation. A cor· the t'N inquiry before he was respondent for the London Daily officiall~' notified of the allega· Telegraph reported after a tour tions by the British govern· of battlefields in Yemen that he ment's chief delegate at UN of· saw villa'gers with sores Ihey fices In Geneva, Charlcs p, said were caused by poison gas Scott, bombs.

The UN probe will he con· In the British c()lonv of Aden. ducted by Swedish Gen, Carl' next door to Yemen on the foot von Horn, head of the UN ob'l of the Arabian' Penin~\I1a, relia· 'server teRm in Yemen. ble sources reported 'they had

"Evidence sholVs the gas may have come from Napalm 'fire bombs whieh failed to, explode';" he was quoted as saying, "Some' deadly fumes,are killing ',the Yemenis, but we have no proof this is poison gas as sud!. .. :

, 5:13 a,m,

ght ... 1\ :30 p.m, QUarter .. Jilly 13

F Prol1llnel1l Star ~~alhaut, ",pI! below

on, VI$lble Planeh I

low in west, 10:58 ::turn, ri~es 11 :07

plter. L II' in east a,m. TM~s

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ARNOLD ~o.: ,F~ur penoDl'were kUled and 42 injured In bus accident 2 ,miles south of bere on blgh~ay 61.67, early .Tilly 7U1, .. Spectator. wateh 18 IiUJ is uprlghted at bottonl of 30·ft, embankment, The bus en route from 1\1emphis, Tenn, to St. Loul. 'wellfoff the road flipped over,and landed on its,top,and side 'heading In the opposile dlrection,":"(UPI Telephoto);

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THE COUNTRY PARSON:

i

Brunei May Join LONDON (CPI- Membel'S o[

Malaya's delegation said Tues· day there's' still a possibility the oil·rich sultanate' of Brunei will join the federation of Ma· laysia to be set up Ang, 31. British sources agreed. The Brunei delegation refused com· ment:

Discussing Brunei's last·min· ute refusal Monday to join the new southeast Asian nation, a Malayan spokesman said: , "Prime Minister Tunku Abdul

,(

Rahman (of :\lalaya) is staying in London for a short holiday. Sultan Omar Ali of Brunei is also reported staying on. Inlor· mation discussions between the two leaders to narrow down their differences are still possi· ble,"

Iilformants said there was a , clash o[ personalities Monday- ;''It'5 too bad that we get. the various Malayan rulers and IIsed to our' own' faults ,so eas· Tunku Abdul Rahman on one I ily-and to those or others with' , side aud the Sultan on the other. such difficulty," , ,

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~THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, JULY 10, 1063 ~ .' . ~" . ..... AltTISTS ACCEPT REPORT. ----------

~Filling· Man '8 Position Gives 1IION'l'REAL (CP)- The Ca· nadian Fedel'alion of Authol's and Mtists <CLCI announced Monday it hos accepted a con·

Woman Guilty, UnfieminineFeeling ~::~~~~:r£~~~~c\~:{fe~ie:!~l~ . . tlOn's 1,500 me m b e r s. Guy

Fournier, a federation official, i'NEW YORK (AP) At a into the field with considerable Anyone o[ Ihese might be into television news repol'ting said the federation has asked r~cent' meeting of President success. !\nd with such determi· considered a feathel' in a re· by the stage door: She used to the CBC for a new two· year Kennedy's commission on the nation, enthusiasm and long· porter's cap, hut Miss Howa .. d's be an actress. contract ,incorporating the rec· status of women, a tiny, blonde range planning that she has enterprise and special fem;~ine "They ask What an Elciress Is ommendation. . young woman arose to speak scored some notable television methods of 0 p c rat ion have doing covering ncws." sadly of women's occupational news beals over the heavily hardly cndeared hcr to her BOltED WITH ACTING Bifocal glasses wcre Invented opportunities inthe communicn· masculinc opposition. masculine col1cngllcs. Acting began to bore her and by Benjamin Franklin. tionsfield in the United Stutes. EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW "1 just don't undcl'stand theil' she decided to covcr politics

"If she becomes a succcss in By a combination of shrewd feeling about women," shc ex· for radio or television. The hearsed it all and when he camc a field consldere d to be a man's planning and sheer ambition claimed. "We're educated in Mulunl Broadcnsllng Company down I stepped out and told she Is made to leel guUty and Lisa got nn exclusive iutervluw the same way thal men nre. hired her-and she stayed with him there were many ques\ions lilifeminine," she said, "She is with Russian cosmonaut Yurl We're trained from childhood it a year, during which she thnt, i[ he would answer, would called aggressive, brash and Gagarin-nnd flew to Nova that it is impol'tant to be a nailed Khrushchev. help to make a better world. pusby. A lot of women don't Scotia to grab it. One of her success in what we do~to be "1 plotted the thing as if it He laughed-and called off a want to fight that kind of psy· more controversial coups was at the head of the class. to be were a war campaign," she press conference and gave me cholog\cai barrier." a two·houl' privnte interview the best. I related. "One morning I arrived a two·hour interview."

Lisa Howard, the speaker, is with Nikita Khrushchev when "But the minute a wo,non at the Russian mission hcad· She and her husband of 11 • news correspondent for the he was in New York. and shc does have SlIccess in any field quarters at 7:45. I wore plaiil years, Waitcl' Lowendahl, ex·

'American Broadcasting Com· followed it up a year latcr III . men decide is their own, they clothes and no make.up. Nobody tcutive o[ an industrial film pany. In network U.S. broad· Vienna with anothPl·. suggest she's neillecting her paid any altention to me and I producing company, live In a 'casting there arc only lime A couple n[ monlhs ago. she children." just w'llked in. mid· Manhattan a p a I' t men t. women with similar jobs. pcrsuaded l'iticl Castro to sit Lisa suspects thnt Ihe root of "Once inside.I hid bchind II Other members of the family

Lisa, compllrath'ely a new· I down [01' II no·qucstions.barred Ihe criticism is that she came door and waited 101' Khrushchev I arc two daughters, Fritzi, 14, romer in her 30s, has broken filmcd JIltcl'vicll'. hy the stnge door: She lIsed to to come downstairs. I'd rc· 1 and Anne, 7.

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Chas. L. Guay. Manager SoraK Inc.

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anyfGi;ng but Chevrolet" "We really appreciate the dependability of our two Chevrolet Trucks. Ou r '61 C·60 just goes and goes. We are also operating a '63 Chevrolet Fleetside Pickup and its off·the· . road ride, pep and pulling power are great. We wouldn't have anything but Chevrolet Trucks,"

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--

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Marcel Martin Transport Ltd., 8398 St. Michel Blvd.,

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WATER S'l'BEET PHONE S-5047 ST. JOHN'S

~apitol

Today

JUDY GARLAND - DIRK BOGARD- IN "I COULD GO

ON SINGING" . The Battalion Parade in July I vin Somcrton, L/Sea Twenty·six years a singing has come and is now in the Noseworthy, C/L/Cp!.

star, an Idol of millions with an Records, It was well attended Rogers and L/Carpls undiminished ability to belt a and commanded over by Major French, Paul Morgan, song into the hearts of all, Judy J. M. C. Facey and the follow· Reid, Garry Vokey Garlal1d combines her singing ing officers were present: Maj., Vokey, Paul Bishop' and dramatic talents in her role ors A. E. Hemmens, R. J. R. awarded the ,W.U."UUII:nISh of Jenny Bowman in the Stuart Noel, F. D. Press, Captains C. Officer Proficiency Miller·Lawrence Turman pro· F R D A Ed d 'I d St . ogers, . .' war s, ". an ar. ductlon "I Could Go On Sing· Kirby, I. Barnes, W. B. K. Coul'l BATTALION BAND ing," the United Artists release tas, J. V. Rabbitts, H. H. Hynes, • All ranks were sorry in Technicolor and Panavision G. S. Thomas, C. T. Scurry, L. ! four very valuable opening to-day at the Capitol M. Bartlett, Lieutenants G. R. i geants and a Lance Theatre. Locke, C. G. Russell, E. N. Jler· i resign from the b3nd

It also stars Britain's Dirk cer. E. Andrews, F. ~Iahoney,' month. S/Sergts. Eric Bogarde and. co·stars Jack Klug· C. 1". H. Murdoch. I mond, Frank Hammond man .and Aline MaMahon:. 1nspeC\ion was carried out Noseworthy, Lloyd Rees'

ThiS story. ~f a g:e~t smgmg by MajC1r Facey and thell Bat.: Corp. Gerald Bal'l1c,. start ~vho VISits Bntal.n to top talion Marching under :I\ajor A. I but say a good THA:\K the bill a~ the Palla.dlUm but E. Hemmens. i for a11 your years of oulsi whose mam purp~se I~ to renew From Battalion Orders wc see! service to the Brigade. an Old, love affair, gives Judy the following items: ; PROllIOTlO!'IS full rem and enables her to e~'1 CmIPA~Y PARADE i le.p.o. John Lee is hance hcr status 35 a dramatic From now nntil Camp only' eel in his rank as (hie! a:bres~. Rona~d Nea.me, ,;~ose those attending Camp will bc I Officer.' Scr~t. Dona!;] dlrect~on of f~:ms h~e The i required to attend parades. All, bury is made Stal! Ser" ~ors~,s Mouth and T?nes 0.: I ranks ~ltending the Senior i COl'pls. Herbert and Paul', Gl~ry brought ,,:,orld,:Vlde ac Camp Will parade at the Arm· al'e made Corporal; in ~Ialm, bandIed thiS delteate sub- oury on Monday July 22, 1963 band. Ject; I at 7.45 p.m. No uniform will he S/Sel'gt. Gordon J. . I.

~t s be~n a long,. ha~d way fO~ worn on tbis parade but kit, Jr. is appointeel Assistant Ju y, t e 'dFran~ls u~mth' °d I bags will be brought along and I master and Capt. Chari!; . Grand RaPI s, Mmne.so a, . Ir Camp fees paid. tin. the Bandmaster, is daughter of Ethel lohlne, plano (MIP PARAD· six months leave. 1).layer, and Frank A. Gum11.1' All ranks attending the Jun· AWARDS smge.r, But her .background ,!S ior Training Corps Camps will /L/Cp!. William S. genu me showbusl~e~. ~n~ 1 parade at the Armoury on Tues. a Bar to his 2nd. Cl"s. Could ~o On Sm"mg IS a day July 16, 1963 at 9 a.m. for I dance )Ieda\. C/~!alor . ShOWb~I~~~ t~~~iREE the purpose of being transport· I Sullivan is awardcd th,

" ed to Harbour Grace. Class Attendance j!"dal My father became manag~r All ranks attending the Sen· I Lieut. Allan B. Reid is .

of the Ne~ Grand Theatre III ior Camp will parade at the ed the Five Year Long . ~rand Rapids and· :-vas soon p.ut. Armoury on Tuesday 23 July I ;\Iedal. - , hng ~? my two sisters to ~:ng 1963 at 9 a.m. for the purpose Th C.L.B. Cadet' . duets, Judy remembers. My of being tl'anspol'ted to Harbour· placed 2nd in "B" .: ddeb~t at the afgDc 0d~ three twas Grace. Corps of 70 Cadets ~rll1g one 0 a sarna eur REPORTING FOR C,HIP the Trainin" Year

mghts and} !an on to t~~ stage Members going to Harbour ST. JOHN and sang Jmgle Bells. I re' Grace to spend Sunday will not The following ~eated chorus after chorus un· be admitted to the Camp on I "C" Com an hal'e 111 Dad marched on to the stage d thP Y 'b I and carried me off." Saturday night. Those wishing pa.£se e prescrI e[

I 1927 Mr Gumm moved to to join thc Camp on Friday atlOn and are awa:ded n . .. night may do so but must bc John Ambulance FIrSt

Lanccster, Callforma, to man· suitably equipped for camping. fr t nd B dg age another theatre and the CAMP DONATIO~S I Ica e a a e: girls enrolled in public schools As is known it takes quite a R corp~s h Fr~d R)'~n. where Francis soon became a lot of money to run the annual Wo~e. 0 n ear an leading light in school produc· d II h k' d . a,: ne '~.'Ha!;, • tions and this led to work with camp an annua y t e III rm<;ton, ~any au,,,p""',,,' the l\!eglin Kiddies, a group of friends and supporters of the ael Marlin, JO,hn . tots that played theatres in Cal. Brigade have helped out in no to~h~r \ace~, Ga;r) ifornia. She was given a solo small way in this respect. and, !Vllham N orman, Kcnnet~ . spot singing "1 Can't Give You it looks as if this year will be mg, Geo~frey Duffett an. Anything But Love Baby." no exception as already we rance. Elans,.. , . Then she teamed with her sis. have received some eight dona· JunlO~ T~amlll~ Lorps:,

lion which are gratefully ac· b w n ng th al a,J ters as "The Gumm Sisters." er~ I,. m 15 r., The act was never labelled knowledged here, and we hope Davld'~ mter, Dereck more than third rate by' book- that others will find it in their }lax SmIth, Gordon. ers and it never got nearer to power to follow this example. Garry Cook, Keith. New York than Detroit. All donations will be acknow· Garry Green, Fred ~Ial.

When they were booked into ledged through this column and Connolly, Wendell. ()fficial receipts will be issued. J St Glen Tllle< Chisago's Oriental Theatre, they ames one: • ',','

found themselves billed as "The C.L.B. Ladies Auxiliary. ,$50.00 Hounsell. RIchard h~ne., Glum Sisters," They complain. Colonel G !II Stirling., .. $25.00 PIONEER SQ{;?D ed to George Jessel wh() hcad- l\!rs. Dorothy O'Dca and All that now remain! lined the show and he had the IIIrs . .?"anet Lilly .... $25.00 have good weath~r mistake corrected. He also sug. Ex·Major A. S. Lewis .. 520.00 Camp. Last year It gested they change their name 1n Memory of W. Pike .. $10.00 that could b.e deSIrcd to Garland (Robert Garland, In Memory Cpi. Gordon haps we .wIIl have Ihe then drama critic for the New Symonds .. .. " .. $10.00 weathcr .thls year',.T,I;e York World.Telegram was a Mrs. George H. Press •. S 2.00 Squad wIl~ be leallno

friend of his) and a year later 1IIr. H. Barnes .... " .. S 2.00 day mormng July 12th. Francis changed her first name ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION the tents all erected to Judy. The Brigade's Athletic Asso· g~ounds c.leaned .up sO

The act broke up when one ()f elation recently held their an· Will. be I~ .readme;s.' the sisters married and Judy nual meeting for the officer for JU~lOr Trallllllg lads. I

Continued as a single, attracting this year to run. the sporting arrive on the mormng 0, side of the Brigade. The results 16th

enough. attention to have sever· of the executive officers were: FLOREAT SE)IPER Cl . nl mOV1e tests. There were no President: Sergi D. Rex; Vice J \' i

parts for twelve·year.old sing· President: Sergt. D. Squires; .. ~ ers. But when Louis B. Mayer Secretary: Corp. D. Rowe; OTTAWA (CPI __ heard her, be gave her an MGM Trcasurer: Sergt. S. Hunt. production of motor contract without having a PROFICIE'I/CY AWARDS creased 15.6 per ,;cnt screen test and without even A/CPO John Lee and AlW. to 60,948 units from j~.iO; having a picture of her. O. 2 Edward Somerton have corresponding mOIl:h r!.

She made the transition from been awarded the Warrant Of· year, the bureau o[ child to teenage roles without ficer Proficiency Certificate. reported Monday. The effort and without any dim in· LI Sergts. Gordon Downton, for the first half o[ the ishment of her popularity with William Russell. Darrell Vallis, up 23.4 per cent to the public. On June 15, 1945, C/Sergt. James F. Tilley, C/Cpl [rom 285,427 in the five days after her twenty·third William Frampton, Corp. Kel. June period of last ;·ear. birthday, she married Director Vincente Minnelli aged thirty­seven and their daughter Liza May was born March 12, 19-16. Liza made her screen debut as Judy's daughter in "In The Good Old Summer Time." The Minnellis were divorced in March, 1951. Judy being awarded legal custody of Liza.

The following year Judy mar· ried Producer Sid Luft and they have a daughter, Lorna, and • son, Joe.

In 1951 Sid Lult persuaded her to make a personal appear· ance at the London Palladium and she created a sensation. As the singer in "I Could Go. On Singing," Miss Garland creates a similar sensation in the Palla· dium.

That spring and summer she toured Britain and was acclaim· ed everywhere, and In the fall she I>pened at the Palace, New York, for four weeks and stay· ed nineteen,

ON CONCERT STAGE

The years that followed were filled with concert appearances, films at home and abroad and cutting long playing records. In November 1959 she fell ill with hepatitus and when she recov· ered she signed with Columbia to sing "The Far Away P~rt of Town" for the soundtrack of "Pepe." In 1961 under the guidance of agent managers Freddie Fields and David Begel· man, she did one niaht concert stands across America and made a successful appearance in Carnegie Hall. The concert was recorded "live" and the record· ing was a smash success.

"I Could Go On Singing" gives Judy . an opportunitY to combine her famous ability she displayed in "Judgment at Nur· emberg" and "A Child is Wait· ing.",

ACROSS 1 Virginia _. 4-andeggs 9 Biscuits with

41 Brave men t-~I2:tt-~~:~~ 44 Heats, u wine ~ 45 Crisp - r=,.".",. :;;~~\,"',: 46 Labor group

(ab.) 12 Prefix 47 E,tracted 13 Girl's name 51 Southern 14 Top card college (ab.) 15- cortee 52 Boy's nickname ~~'r .. "'~~;:~;:'·"."!~-' 16 Small carnivore 53 Musical drama 0==;"", 1>P,:F?<:FiI~ 17 Sherbet 54 Small chilri 18 Market pllee 55 Pen 20 Surfaced, as a 56 Songs of loy

sink (var., drmcd 22W.man'sname 57~dge of Ihlp's SPrison warden 24 Church councils plank 10 Assent 25 Direction DOWN 11 !{ewards 26 Pigeon pea • 19 Arikaran Indian

. 28 ExIst 1 SunK~n ~oad~ 21 Feminine naDle 29 Farewell ~ Culmmation 23 Governed !>1 311'aneakes and 3 Engines habit

32 Candlenut uee 35 36 39

4 ~tarted 24 Private eye 5 Brew . 27 Dmbampsu. 6 Century (ab.) tree 7 Unit 29 Like 8 30

Natural ea rough galll

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Page 3: ,. Alk It witI THE DAIIJY NEcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · REPORTS TRICKLE OUT alive opposition will seek at I uary, 1969; removal of the reo -or approval

LISe. C/L/Cpl. .!Corpls :.torgan,

Vokey, Bishop

The town of Fortune has ask· cd the Newfoundland Federa· tion of Mayors and Municipali· ties to make representation to the government to dispense with the services of the RCMP in Newfoundland.

In a resolution submitted by the town at the annual

meeting of the Federation now being held In Gander, it was pointed out that some 110 police officers and conslab[es police St. John's al a cosl to the province of $650,000 of which the city pays ~18,OOO.

The rest of the province is policed by ReMP at a cost in

~

IS ense • In

the vicinity of $1,000,000, thc Ilution further pointed out, have resolution stated. to engage their own police' at

Since the service of the st. approximately $4,000 yearly' for John's police are not available each policeman. ' .. ~: to any other munieipality, and' "This constitutes an addeil' the RC~\iP have too .big a terri· i and unnecessary burden", the tory to cover, spending at least resolution stated, "as their 75% of their time at Federal cost of maintaining the pres; matter and paperwork. the town ent constabulary for st of Fortune has proposed an John's and the RC:\lP is in alternate sy~tem. I neighbourhood of $3.00 pe~

The town su~gests that ad. I capita".

ATIO:"I AT GANDER-Citations awarded by the Canadian H1g11lvay Safety Council to honor communities which had dislilll'lioil of completing 1962. without one fatal accident were presented at Tuesday's session of the annual conv~ntion of . Federation of :\Iunicipalities being held this week at Gander. Left to right are Charlie Edwards Grand Falls;

Lall'rclIl'l'. l'orlll'I' Brook; Byron lIIurphy, Bell Island; Ray Mannln!;, deputy minister of Public Works and president of Xr\\[olllldl;lIHI Safely Council; George Hoss Stephcnl'ille; and .Tack Robertson, mayor of Gander. 'fhe mayors arc ac· i'lI~ till' 3\\,:\1'115 for their l'espective towns or city.- (New, StaH Photo).

Hydro Plant to Open This Year

An 8,000 horsepower hydro plant at Sandy Brook, about eight miles from Grand Falls, will begin production for the Newfoundland Light and Power Company later this year.

25,000 horsepower. Mr. Ainsworth said that the

Sandy Brook operation will en· able the company to meet the increased demand for electricity as a result of the rapidly ex-

ditiona[ men be recruited for The submission further resol. tho Newfoundland Constabul· ved that a policeman be stati'olt. Iry aTU! t~at these men be ed at each municipality, cOIJl' m"',e available to the provo munity and rural district are~ Inee as a whole for regular within the province at no 'cost police work. to the community or municl-Other municipalities, the reso· pality concerned. '.

.. - ._-------

The CLOUClY

ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND,

Daily News WEDNESDAY, JULY 10, 1963

V. A. Ainsworth, general manager of the company, said that the new $2.100,000 plant will supplement the power out· put from the Ra ttHng Brook development.

panding central region of the provinee.

Evergreen Victimized

Trees Are The new plant will boost the

total capacity from 17,000 to

Construction of the Sandy Brook plant was started in the spring of 1962 and it is expect· cd that the plant will be ready for operation by late October or Novemher.

Refugees In Halifax

:'\:llural rau,rs are Illa~'lng rOIl~h ~alllr wllh countle~s

pillr am[ fir Irees scwflllllldiand.

. hurc comt from . ~cattcrcll areas uf the

to Ihl' effect thai

The fomtry dll'lsion of Ihe lIrv:mU1CIU ul' lIesources toltl

1l.\IL\, ~EWS Tuesday Ihis wltheriug tHect Is

by sun scald lug 011111 indhurn-natural rauses.

.\ spokesman for tilt' llil'l· rXlllalllrd thai I'xcl'ssll'e IliIl bllrn the trees, amI

eSllrcially after a 01 hra,'), frost, causes

e\'Plr~rc,en til lurn hrOWll. . effect was first

hy many residents tills ycar when Irost

Ilrel'alcllt.

It has hal1llened before in ;llIhough Ihls

It 31'llcars that the des· is wider sllread.

by Nat-ure Two refugees from behind board of inquiry by the lmmi· the Iron Curtain who stepped gration department would be off a Czechoslovaldan airliner held at Gander, but the board at Goose Bay Labrador Sunday will now be set up at Halifax. arrived in Halifax Tuesday. The airliner was en route from The Czechoslavikian nationals, Prague to Havana, Cuba.

25.year.old Jirri Blaha and his The immigration department younger brother Zdensk, are said in a statement Tuesday seeking political asylum in Can. that the two refugees are ada. Czechoslovakian and not Yugo·

Resillcnls who have YOllng Illne and fir trees in their gardens ha"e notlcel! Ihat the leaves have turned and fallen off. thus leaving a bare ami seemingly deall tree •

The forestry division Ilolnt· cd out however, thai the trees do not IlIe, but wtll Ilrop theIr seeds as usual ami In most eases \l'lIl allpear in good eondltlon next year. Il res!dcnt of Clarke'S Heach, Con~eptlon Bay, has reported that a pine tree in his garllen turned brown over a month ago. leading ;,Im to think the tree was destroyed. Since that time however, the tree has "sllrung back to life" and is leafing again.

contrary to what was IloIIU' larh' thonght this browning 'cond!tlon Is not caused by an Insect.

It has been experienced before, although some years will produce worse effects than others, since it Is entire· Iy up to natural conditions.

~Iore heavy frllst alii! ex· cess \l'lml wcre experiencell in many locations this year than some years previous.

It is unfortunate that Ihls

I'on{lition occurs, hut since it happens by natural causes, tree growers can do nothing about it, the forestry dlvisloll stated. It was earlier reported that a slavs, as earlier stated.

------------------------------_ .. _--_.

Probe Theft The SI .. Tolm·s C.I.D. is in·

vestigating a SI.000 rohhcr), which occune{1 ill St .. Tohll·s ovcr the past WCl'krllll.

St. 'rJIIlluas' A 11 g lie a 11

Churl'll 011 Military roall was cntered by thieves \\'110

carried away SI,OOO in cash, the receipts from church collections.

The thieves hrolw inlo the church from the rear and smashed bricks in order to open the church vault,·

The Invesligallon Is COil·

tinning tOllay.

65 Vocational Teachers To Sta14 t Summe r Course Some (ij \'orational tcachcrs I

who harc gathercd here to he· gin a summcr training Ilro· gnllll wcrc wclcomed bl' Edu· cation ~linistcr G. A. Frcckcr last week.

The wclcoming cercmonv was' I hcld at the new Colleg~ of : Tradcs am! Technology.

Dr. Frccker spoke of the im· portance of skilled manpower, both in Newfoundland as well as in Canada at largc. He also outlined the program being undcrtHkcn hy the province.

lie told the teachers they were chOlllellgcd to provide eliucation as well as training

_I SO that illllh'iduals may take their place as productive

During Ilis remark~, Dr. "reeker paid trlhute to the late Frank Templeman, form· er director oC "ocational edu· cation, who had "given so un· sparingly of his time antI energy to the Ilevelopment of vocational education in New· f oundland".

Other officials who addressed I the group were P. J. Hanley, I deputy minister of education; G. B. "lalone, assistant deputy minister of labor; W. May, let· ing director of vocational edu· cation; K. Duggan, B.E. (Elec). principal of the College I1f Trades and Technology; and Louis A. Bown. principal of the Bell Island Vocational School.

numher of people from other parts of Canada to instruct in the summer program.

Tllese peollle, all of whom have been engagell in teacher education. are William Bel'· gey, E.A., Ontario College 01 Education, Toronto; Albert Kilb, technical director, Lon· don, ont.; Albert Reed, B.A., Norlh Bay, Ont.; Frank Potts, M.Sc., New Brunswick tech· nical institute, Moncton; alii! Donald Glendenning, III.Sc., technical and vocation branch Department of Labor, Ot,. tawa. lIIr. Glendenning is in charge of the summer pro. gram.

rOVIllCe Sch eduled I workcrs with hI their (om· !nnllity and society. The 65 teachcrs represent a

wide variety of trades and

The Department of Education has obtained the services of a

UNTD HOSTS USN-Cadets of Unirersity Naval Training Di· visions across Canada taking summer training at H:\iCS COl'll' wallis in Nova Scotia's Annapolis Valley hosted 52 U.S. Nary midshipmen visiting Halifax in Carrier Division 20 over thl'

I holiday weekend. Cadet Bruce Templeton, left, of SI. Johr.'~.

I

a student at Memorial University. acts as guide for lIlidshipm':n John Hightower, San AntOliio, Texas (Duke University).-:'ia· tional Defence Photo). ,

--- _._----------- -- _.. - .... _- -_._- .

I G~efs Dental Degree Kevin F. Walsh of st •. JoIIII·S

graduated :llay Hi from Dal· hous'e University, Halifax, with the degree of doctor of

denial surgery.

occupations.

O Get Nuclear Arms They will serve as instruc· tors in the 11 district trade schools and the College of Trades and Technology.

Shipments

Decline

In addition to the instructor trainees now in training in st. John's, 24 others are engagcd in I five·month program of teacher education in New Brunswick.

They will be returning to N' ewfoundland at the end of July and will be assigned as in· structors in the various schools throughout the province.

The son of Lady Walsh and the late Sir Albert Walsh. he received his early education from St. Bonaventure's Col· lege and attended St. Francis Xavier Unh'ersity in Anti· gonish, Nova Scotia.

He gradualed from there in 1959 with a B.Sc. degree.

Agreement on uuclear war· . lor the U.S. interceptor

at Goose lIay Labrador Harmon Field will be

In later", Prime l'I1Iui· PUrson said Tueslla~·.

The prime minister was ex· thai Canada anll the

States a re now dis· tile final' draft oC a

Drives After a 6,500 lillie car trip,

an ,\merlcan family Ilrove Into St. John's Tuesday end. Ing a cross Can alIa jallnt.

Pr9bablj' the first Amerl. ~an family ever to make the ~OOO mile Trans Canada High. , trip, Chuck and Arllenc

and their two chll·

nuclear custody· and· control agreement.

lie told reporters In ot· tawa that he hopes a single agreement covering provision of nuclear warheads for the Bomare anti.a[rcraft mlssle, Voodoo jet Interceptor, cr· 104 low·level jet bomber and Honest John artillery rockets

Here From dren, Brad, 11 and TorI, :20 months enlered St. John's yesterday at 5 o'clock.

Chuck, a feature reporter for the Los Angeles Tlml's. made the trip ·to gather mao terlal for a series of articles for his paper.

The Hlllingers left their

can be eonclmlel! "I'ery short· ly".

lie said lie might Ilrevlolls. Iy have givcn the Imllresslon that there was a delay in reaching agreement allll thai tMs had been cause{! by the U.S. However, there was no fundamental disagreement or llifficulty.

A six. week summer school is bcing provided prior to their cntry into their respective schools this fall.

The summer program is de· signed to prepare them for teaching and will emphasize methods of instruction, prin· ciples of vocational education, and organization of teaching materials.

Newfoundland had a 2.1.9 de· cline in manufacturers' ship. ments in March as eompared with a year earlier, aCf!ording to a report from the Dominion Bureau of Statistics.

The bureau's report said the decline in the province result· ed from decreases in foods and beverages and paper products.

Los Angeles fo Write Story home In a I.os Angeles sub. urb on June 21, and drove 1,500 miles to Victoria, Brit· ish Columbia arriving JUlie 24. wbere thcy stnrlcd east.

The family drove 'Ihro\l~h all provinces on tile Trans Canada highway anrl lllan to visit PrInce I~dwarorl Island

when they rcturn to tIle main· land.

• The Hillinger's very dusty

and very burdenel! Thunder· bini pulled up in. (ront of the Daily News last night. Sitting wide eyed In the back 'seal was Tori, at 20 mouths nhl, a ,'cry travelled young lady.

nlrs. Hillinger explained Ulat the baby has been gOlld ali the way. Although now, ~he said, "We're all a little tlrcl!!"

Chuck HlIlillger will have ;t lot of story material after. his trip on the longest coast to coast national highway in the world. He explained that they had countless interesting experiences and had . lieeD many places, from the Padfic Canadian coast, to the Rock· les, Prairies, the Red River Valley, the Great Lakes, and across Quebec and the Marl· times to Newfoundland.

The travellers haven't

. wastell any time. Last ni/lht they weren't sure whether they would stay In St. John's for the night, or go sf.raight on over the highway again.

When they get back on the mainland, they will cut down through the United States, and take the highways di· agonally back to Los Angeles.

--------Is . III jure.a III Toronto

William Mercer of Shears· town, Conception Bay, is in serious condition in a Toronto hospital today as the result of a construction accident.

The 21·year·old Newfound· lander was working on a build· ing construction site in Toronto when he fell 30 feet to a con· crete floor,

The accident occurred late last week.

. PRESENTATION TO NEWFOUNDLAND-Rev. Father L. Farrell, former chap]lIill to the 59th Heavy Regiment presented Premier J. R. Smallwood with a painting ',Golden Virgin of Albert" Tuesday at the Confederation Building. The pieture was done by prominent California portrait artis~ Marylin Zapp, at the request of Father Farrell. The statue of the Virgin standS in the Basilica of our Lady of Albert, in Somme, France. The basilicIl, located near Beaumont. Hamel, was struck by shells in 1916, and In 1961 it was dedicated as a war memorial. Father Farrell was impressed hy the statue of the Virgin. and he had the picture painted as a memorial for the people of Newfoundland in memory of the men of boti1 world wars. Premier Smallwood accepted tlte picture Tuesday on bchalf of the Jlrovlnce.-(News Siaff Photo)

WON'T CHANGE LAWS

Dr. Walsh plans to take up practise in St. John's.

Discuss TV MOVE SHERBROOKE, Que. (CP)­There's no question of changing the Quebec liquor laws to open taverns to people under 20, Car· riel' l?ortin, minister without portfolio, said Monday. He was replying to the Eastern Town· ships Association of Licensed Hotel and Club Empoyees who, in a memorandum, had sug· gested that, because l8·year· olds could vote and marry. they should also be allowed to enter taverns. Kevin Walsh

OTTAWA- (CP) -The gov_ ernment is awaiting clarifica· tion from the Board cl Broad· cast Governors on conditions it attached to I recommendation for establishing a CBC tele· vision station at st. John's, Nfld., . Transport )linister 11k­IlraifJt said Tuesday in reply to Dougias Fisher, NDp·Port Ar· thur.

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Page 4: ,. Alk It witI THE DAIIJY NEcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · REPORTS TRICKLE OUT alive opposition will seek at I uary, 1969; removal of the reo -or approval

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THE VA/L'Y NEWS Newfoundland's Only Morning Paper

YEABLY IIlB5CKIPnUN lUTES Canada ,. .. $12.00 per annum

United Kingdom ana IU 10relID counlrl.. $14.00 per .nnum

AUlhori.ed II lecona cl ... mill by, Ihl Posl Olllc. llfpartmenl, Ottawl and lor payment 01 POiIa.. In c •• b.

Tho DAILY NEilS I, l mornlDI I·ap .. .,Inbll.hed III 1894 and publl,hed .1 1111 News Bull~lna 35H59 , Duc~worlh st .. 51. John'., Newfoundland. by Robin'.D ,"Ii Company. LiI'lUed.

MEMIEBa OF

THE CANADIAN PIIESI

In new. d •• palcho, In Ihll paper credit· .d 10 II or 10 Ih. .I."ocJaled Pr... or

Th. CI.ldian Pm. II 1I.lu.lvel, .ntllied 10 Ibe use lor republlcalion 0' Hcutert and II .. Ih. local newl DIIbllrb· rd IberelD

All Prm Serl'lce. and lealur. artlclH In Ihls paper are copyrllhl.d Ind Ib.lr reproduction II ~.nll1blted.

• Member Audit Barn_

et Clr •• I.Un

WEDNESDAY, JULY 10, 1963 ,.---------------Changes In The Sales Tax It was inevitable that the Min- ation experts who can foresee

ister of Finance should bow be- the consequences of new taxes. fore the storm of protests What has happened is that aroused by the proposal to apply the new budget has been emas­the manufacturers' sales tax of culated. But it may well have eleven per cent to building sup-' been that too much was at~ plies and industrial and printing tempted too soon. No matter how machinerv. much thought may have been

Mr. GO~'don has acknowledged given' to financial and economic the need of changing these pro- problems by a party before it posals. He will apply the tax to assumes office, it must have building supplies and industrial ample time to study the effects plant by easy stages, starting at of its ideas i~ their new environ­four per cent and rising to ment after 1t has become the cleven per cent by the beginning government. of 1965. He has also made news- It might have been better if paper production equipment :Mr. Gordon had been content exempt from the tax and ex- to bring in a routine budget tended the period in which con- which was based on the esti­stl'uction contracts made before mates of his predecessor and the budget proposals will have give himself time to study relief. every aspect of the fiscal situ­

In the process of announcing these changes the finance min­ister has said that the com­plexities of business and tax­ation often make it impossible to foresee the effects of new taxes in advance and that hard­ships only become apparent when brought to attention after the taxes- have been announced.

That may be although, while the prospective victims of new taxation can hardly be consulted in advance, there should exist within the government organiz-

ation including savings a~ well as taxes so that he could intro­duce a well-prepared and well­considered budget in the fall. The thing to do now is to get on with the legislative programme, particularly that part of it de­signed to give new impetus to economic planning and develop­ment, and to consider the budget merely a preliminary to new proposals that may be usefully put forward at a later date in the light of more careful study and broader experience of the problems of the time.

No Interest In Boglands Eight years ago the recom­

mendations of the Shaw Com­mission on Newfoundland agri­culture led to what the Premier regarded as an exciting and stimulating challenge. This was the conversion of bogs into the good arable land of which the province is notoriously short.

\Vith federal aid, an e:qeri­mental reclamation sl:heme was £tarted at Colinet under an ex­)Jerienced Irish te::hnician who ~pplied new anl~ proven mf;'th­LeiS to the job. The ::ost pel' acre is said to be economical. ThE reclaimed and enriched soil h31; pro~uced luxuriant fodder crops and vegetables of high y:eld and quality. But a month ago Mr. Smallwoorl was com­pf;!lle~ to confess in1he House of Assembly to an intense dis­appointment. in the - public re­action ..

There W<lS, he said, no over­whelming demand for reclaimed bogland and there' is more in­terest in seeking government jobs than in farming. He agl'eed

• with Mr. W. J. Browne that cash wages were a preferred aim.

But while it is true that New­foundlanders do not take natur­ally to the soil although the basis of survival for. three cen-

, .

turies was a fisherman-farmer economy, there must be many young men who have a feeling for the land and might be en­com'aged to make a career out of well-organized farming. They would want some training and some special incentives and these should be available through a federal-provincial plan, possibly under ARDA.

There is another possibility in the development of a major farm project combined with an important welfare activity. At the moment a thousand young­sters are living in foster homes as wards of the Welfare Depart­ment. Among them are teenagers from whom a special selected group might be taken to set up in a farm school built on a re­claimed bog area. In time, this could conceivably become the focal point of a new interest in farming as an occupation.

This is no more than an idea which might prove, after inten­sive study, to be impracticable. But it does merit examination. It is one way, and by no means the only way, in which interest in a farming career may be fostered and promoted' to good economic and social effect in Newfoundland.

The Greek Royal Visit When Queen Frederika of again be the victims ,of demon­

Greece was in London· in April strations. In fact, Earl Russell for Princess Alexandra's wed- has even warned that they may ding, she was :much harried by incur the risk of bodily harm. demonstrators who demanded The King has left behind him in that she do 'something about. the Athens a serious political contro-

i, political prisone~s who have versy arising out of his decision la!]guished for many years in to visit Britain .

, ; Greek gaols .. On one occasion, It,has been contended that as I she became so, frightened that a constitutional monarch the ~ she had to seek refuge in a prj. king is not in a position to do 'I vate' home to escape from heck- anything about the political f lers; prisoners who were put in prison

Now Xing Paul and his Queen after the end of the bitter civil are irf:London'for, a.state visit war in 1947. But whatever the of'fou[,days an~.sei:urity offie- king may be able to do, there is ials are troubled that" they may nothing the queen can do and to

Bible Quotation

Bc still amI know that I alll r.od.­Psalm 46: 10.

• • • There arc times when shutting every·

thing out of our minds but God is es· sential to OUr mental balance or phy· sical survival. A panic.stricken mind' never produced anything worthwhile,

LETTERS T~-I THE EDITOR,

, . .' . . .

Editor Daily News,

Dear Sir,-Dcmocritus, a Greek phil· osopher who is said to have Jived in the ages of 460·362. B.C. was the first man to postulate the atomic theory: and While there is much to criticize , in Democritus' atomic theor)', not much can be said against his claim that "man's ego is but a fleeting pattern and al1 human affairs arc worthy only o[ laughter,"

But Dcmocritlls nel'el' dreamt of the tremendous amount of encrgy locked within the atom, nor did he know any, thing about nuclear physics. lIad he possessed such information he probably would have foreseen that man wou III use his ingenuity to release the energy locked within the atom to bring about his own dcstruction. Such a view on the part of Democritu5 would have been con· sistent with his appraisal of man's he' hal'ior, and if he were alive today he would sec his cstimation of human hp.· haviour vindicated in relation to outer space and atom bombs. III his da>·. Democritus could laugh at the affair, of his contemporaries, but today, if he were alire, he would have to regard the affairs of men with apprehension if not with consternation rather than with laughter, and attrihute their craz>' he· harior to the functioning of unbalanced minds.

What caused me to hark hack to what Democritus said about human hehal'ir,r hefore the time of Christ was the sham and ridiculous military exercise carrie!l Ollt in SI. John's on .luly 5th, Il i, almost unbelievable that men W{H' (,;,11 themselves intelligent human beings would engage in such absurd practice as that enacted in SI. .John's purporting to simulate conditions whirh would oc· cllr in the el'ent of n nuclear attaek on St. John's.

No military m'lIl. no mnt:er how high his military ingenuity may he. can el'P:1 visualize, let alone simulate or imita!e the kind of conditions whidl wouhl arise out of a nuclear attack on Sl. ,Tohn's or any other part o[ Canada. One would split one's sides laughing at the reports of those simulation exer, cises if they were lIot associated with such dire potentialities. because, hc it noted, the rescue squad is immune from attack hecause of its presence in Holy· rood; yct a one·hundred megaton bomh dropped on St. John's would de\'asta!e the whole of the Avalon Peninsula and kill a1l the inhabitants including the rescue squad at Hol)Tood. so that there would be no one left to succor the wounded and the dying-.

What the military authorili(·s hope to gain by engaging in such ridiculol1s exercises as those carried out in 51. John's is beyond thc undcrstandin:' of all rational minded men and lVomen. unless the purpose is to arouse and cultivate a spirit of jingoism and erl'ate in the minds of the people a mental state of the inevitability of war. Besides there are more wayS to brainwash Ihan by verbal propaganda.

A certain philosopher, who is not SO

well known as Plato or )(ant, said that the fundament of all science consi5t~

in the understanding of the thinking process. And if world leaders under· stood this truth they would probably make a rational approach to world problems and eeasc to depend upon 1 he intervention of an ultramundane pow~r to save them from a threatening eabm­ity which is arising out of their in!~r· national machinations. A realistic ap· proach to world problems. an approach based upon ~n understandng of the material conditions which dctermine mens thoughts and actions would solve international prohlcms and bring about a state of international harmony which would make preparations for nuclear attacks as IInnecessary as they are ridiculous.

If Dcmocritlls were alive today he would see his estimation of man vindi, caled in man's senseless efforts to pro· jeet himself into outer space and his striving to design bigger and beltt!r weapons with which to destroy, him· self, And he would have to paraphrnse the statement he madc in 460·362 B.C, by saying that man's behavior is as ridiculous and frightening as it is laugh· able.

Yours truly, W. L. Butler, Shoal Harbour.

harass her makes littl~ sense. But there is a subf;~antial body

of Greek left-wing sympathizers in Britain and whatever the rights or wrongs of the situation. a serious situation could ,exist if security officers :relaxi their vigilance. Everyone in Bl'itain will breathe a little easier when the Greek royal visit is over. ,

E~~~"'-i~' Never Had It So Good

, . . /

----------------------

,\ l' BOTTO~l Galt Reportcr ,

A good way to knock sense into a youngster's head is to start at the bot· tom.

l!o ., •

• • • S\1'l'cl are the uses of adversity; Which. like the toad, ugly and

nnlllnOliS. \\" ('~]'s )·et a precious jewel in his head.

-5hake5peare. A :'IiICE THOUGH'l'

Guelph ~Iercury

II 100'" as j[ Canadians will h<lve a chance to cnjo), longer retirement on their old·age pension, as tbe rcsult of some findings by the American :'.Iedicsl As,ociation.

Today's children and many of their parents are being givcn a life exp~ct·

anc), of 80 to 90 years. Htunan beings at present don't die as

a result of the passage of time. They !lie o[ disease and accidents. And the A,~LA. points out that as cures are found for more <IiBca,cs, the life span will be extended until deatll from old age may become commonplace. That is nnt the ca,c at the present time, but IIlcdi('al science is on the way to bring it ahoLlI.

So nOli" mony of us hal'c somethi~g worthwhile to look fonvanl to-just plain old age.

HEALTHY FEIDlENT Le Soleil, Qucbec

The (~lIehc: community is in full fcr· mcnt. It is no longer recognizable. So calm until not so long ago, it is now constantly agitated by the most divprse cf currcnts. All the values on which French·Canadians relief arc being reo cI·aluateci. if not wholly rejected by part of the population, :llinds are growing heated. So are temperaments. Violence is filtering into our ways.

It is a rcal upheaval that is going on You would think it was a case of a people serving its apprenticeship iii freedom, a puhlic trying to al'oid all res. traints. There is a confusion of ideas in every field.

This upwclling is healthy in itself. But if We can expect much good and much progress from it, we must equally be disturbed, for Who can say what will come out of it if we lose our comp03ure? "lore than ever, because too much is something among us, we must show jurlgment and modcration; judgment in a(h'ancing our claims. moderation in measuring the goals we seek to attain. l[ wc try to go too fast. if we try to obtain too much. We may start machin. cry which we shall no longer be able to stop tomorrow.

)\! * >II

SEEMS MIBIGUOUS La Tribune, Sherbrooke

Since the Quebec Liberation Front undertook its campaign of terror, the leaders of the various separatist move· ments have come' out against any shows of violence. However, certain state· ments by Mr. Marcel Chaput seem am­biguous. Certainly he does not eneo'lr· age violence. but he believes it inevit· able unless all pacifists rally around himself.

In his view there arc now only two possible outcomes for Quebec's prob· lems; independence or civil war-for it is to civil war that terrorism'leads In the last analysis, But these are false alternatives because they do not take the

. whole of reality into account. Quebec may very well remain within Confeder· ation, esperially if Conf(,deration is modified.

DISHONESTY (Christian Science :llonitor)

Estimating that more than S4.0QO.OCIl in cash and merchandise is stolen from employers in the United States cal·)] working day, :-<orman Jaspan, head ()f a management engineering firm. 11:" scribes this as "the most shocking wale of internal dishonesty in the nation·, history."

Historical perspectives on slIch a sub· ject are not easy to establish, Whe'her the toll is greater than a ccntury 01' two ago in proportion to the I'olume of trad0 is anybdy's guess.

What is certain is that any shrinb~e at all due to dishonesty is unjustified and injurious. :llr. Jaspan finds that thefts of merchandise are much greater than those of cash, that frauds drire 250 firms out of business every ye~r. and that kickbacks in purchasing ,,:.(, costly (0 buyer and seiter. Tighter mono agement can prevent many of th23c losses; so can a broader sense of fair play on the part of employees.

TilE SUPRE~IE r.WT

We often hear the statement (hat W2

get out of [ife what we put into it. This is true. In the spiritual realm. how· ever, we get out of life what God puts into it. For we never even begin til understand the nature o[ the Chri,tian life until we realize that what we hare come to call salvation is in reality a great gift from God.

'1'0 be sure, we are nerer 'saved" un· til we put OUr whole heart and soul into doing the will of God and following in the pathway of His righteousness, Bnt all the effort we might make would not bring us to that spiritual state of peace and power II'hich the soul has when it is at ,rest with God unless God had done something to us and for Us

that we could not possibly do for 0111'·

selvcs. What God does is to give us some-

By BORIS ~IlSKEW Canadian Press Staff Writer

Argentina's military controlled ~I election did little to guide America's second·largest country ward some form of political -and could well result in \'iolcntl ~ven 0il'il war.

The country's 220aO,OOo uc"pie' been promised frcc elcctio~'s . the overthrew of Arturo Frondizl, constitutional presidenl noll' , ' house arrest. but instead were to vote for army·screened

Tile army feared the follower; fermer dictator .Tuan­eight years ago hut still a potent hoI to pcrhaf)s a third of the would win the election and brin~ Peron from exile in Spain.

So the ar~ly refused to appro\', dirl"trs srlcctcri bl' the :-=ationai br Frr~t. a co,lilion of "rC'l inelllding the followers of Peloll,

ar A]

R!~KEn FI~a-;S by poinlin The front then direeterl it, ,iW,'J the spirit i

\'otrr.'-nearly half of Argentina;' purif\'ing t BO~.OOO total-to cast blank "~' ii!IIIttillg the I

the inr Howc\w. the !!lection result i, :' power. tkt many cast b~llots for one of said candidatcs instead while ahout 2 n1J' on! r:.<kc(l fines by refusing to g') to ! an palls. Voting is com1llllsory. weal

There were few other i.'sue. in ' was crowned . seeking the confused election campaIgn, '\\\'a1,

heart. Peron's pnplllar appcal and t!:~ • • • try's economic depl·ession. all h~se!1 their campnigns on pro:lli;~;

natienal rlCl'elOllment and social, " The Peollle's Radical Party of ..

Arturo Hlia, 62, held the lead I\'i~h

25 per cent of tbe I'ote-far sl:ort the .il per cent reqUired for i the pre,sidenl. Voters cast ballo!; electors pledged to the canrlida!c.'. The electoral collr~e meet .Jul)· ~l to name a presirlent

Blank ballots had run as hig:l a' ',,·0 ~-,~Joel

third of tbe \"ote in previolls ri,' ?tl'··IIIIII,n '1IIUW"U

hO;'cottC!! h,· the followers of II'hile onl,· 14 per cent of the heeded Ppron',s, call in this election, '

WORKERS BACK PEIlO"" This may indicJte a sethat·k fo: '

foll()wers of Peron and Frondizi, have the hacking of the workins hut it is lln<!er,tood that ,some Pern,',FII I'oterl for other presidcntial in hopes of finding some peace,

1I0wel·pr. the hoycott is not the' weapon of thc Peronists, Thr\': threatened strikes. demonstrati"l1;

'violcncc, The Confederation of has called a 24·hour :!eneral strike' TIl/eonos Aires for Friday.

Pari of the current crisis blamed on the refusal of arm)" t(l nego'iate a compromise with !h~

lewers of Frondizi and Peron, ;0,000 troops were assigned to watch ol'cr polling stations.

Peroni,t leader Andres Frarnini'

Falli to the pb

Knight, to pIa Comra, Writter

who leac the seve

capable anythi

1,',H'ned from his hiding pl~rc th,t I stil hlank votes arc the first steps in a 'I .. lreg·,,'Army paign to "retake power for the' the '

out three He s,,~'S Argentina faces chil 1\';:1 day A

and his predictions COllld he ri~ht' in ils lc" ,erne form of compromise i; The

we beli ed bet wren the military and

thin:!. and that something is Ihe of His hand. the world of Hi; anre. the power which become; when the life of tile 1V0rshipp(':' and life of GOd comingle. Somethin~ " place in the experience of ,alra:: ' which exceeds in magnitude and ;i.: cance el'erything else in 3 heliE' life,

The theme of the entire Bil,;e i' ,'. I'ation-that ol'erwhelming which occllrs when God gin, rnan ' spiritual gift of illumination. peace. and insight.

Salvation is a girt-the gift (It

Tnr·h ... ai nal

Lieut. C. D. W

Princi Colleg

England.

rOlln When

spoke Club 01

Desti: sessio

It is one thing to think of independ· ence as one of the solutions to the pres· ent state of affairs, and it is another thing to think of this indt)pendence as desirable and indispensable for the so· lution of all our prohlems.

"II we play ball with YOtl, Averell, can you get 1IIe into Disneyland:'"

Page 5: ,. Alk It witI THE DAIIJY NEcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · REPORTS TRICKLE OUT alive opposition will seek at I uary, 1969; removal of the reo -or approval

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:,If \\'riter '!I:ro1Ied

'\ ~!Hide

IW\\,

... ! II'rrr

. , :1P1'l't1l'c \'Iinnal

. '\'r~ p .. • ,! I'rrOIl.

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j. j';:-lIt':-\ in HI ., ,.~n AII'are

:1:1'1 til!' .. '1. all

• : ;... 11 \\t

, •• ,1'. Thcy

, .. ,·!d of Hi~

.. ,·!1 hrcomes "'il'~hipper nnd

Snll1cthin~

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, i

THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, JULY 10, 1963-11

arch Of Witness· Starts A IIolinessMeeting Here

Seeks !o Reduce! Large Audience. Enjoys Votmg Age C· I •. Ct· C·t'

The town of Botwood hasl tlOlr oncer In. I ~1t submitted a resolution to the J Federation of Mayors and Muni· . The lar;:e audience that at- I'.basses. The enunciation \\'a~ at i were other contrasts; the ddi· cipalities asking that the New- tcndcd ~Ionday nighl's pCI" 'all time~ precise, y~t thr. sing- 'I cate Polbh carol "lnfanl

,. RJ:I'OnT I witness to his in,,:ard ·transfor· \ t~pleal Newfoundland Salvation world. This is the first time tll(! foundland government be in· . ., I "rllfOlllllland

Con. mation; that we display I deep Army windup. . new program of training has duced to reduce the voting age formance by the Princeton ing rcmained smooth. It is easy I holy", the plainttve splrltua ., to lB. Thcological Scminary Choir in for a male choir to hecome over "Were yoU there when the, . this morning abiding social concern for the • •• . been used in Newfoundland.· U· Cl h .. d 'r' 1 'f' ~I L d'" d th ,.nnIIIlU':" ltd d' . MONDAY Th d t f In the rcsolution, prcsented Cochrane Street mted lUrch ent us,asltc an Slcn :c~ qua· crUCI led . y or. an f march of Witlie~s os' a~ nee y. .., AFTERNOON e Ca c s retnrn a tel' eight heard a well.balanced male it, in their enthu~iasm. That majestic Bach chorale, "NOli

from the 51. John 5 Durmg the CommlSSIOtler s. 2 p.m. to II p.m. weeks of work appointments at the Federation's al;nual con· choir in a programme of sacred did not happen with the choir let every tongue adore' Thec." ,.,.II~llIIlg rour decil and remarks he told a story of The afternoon series of meet· throughout the province to an· vention taking place in St. music which was chosen in we heard ~lol1day ni;::ht. The Those and several other an·

long along past the Chief Cascena of East Africa, ings .for the Home League for othcr year of intensive college Marlin's parish hall Gander, the good tast!:and performcd lI'ith director was always in tom· thems and spirituals completed <land on Le;\larehant a much. decora!e~ and . higlJ1y the province commenced at 2 study for the ministry. town of Botwood says that the unerring skill. plete control, from the softest a very satisfying programme. i~e rrince of Wales influenlial Chrlshan leader In p.m. from the Temple Corps A highlight of the evening labor force is being augmented The choil' is directed by 01' .• whisper to the gr2atc,( eli· Dr. Jones spoke brieflY on 1\ rr a capacity crowd parllament of that country who, where an overflow crowd heard meeting was the pr~sentation ycarly by people between 18 Da'vid Hugh Joncs. Profe~~or maxes. I the work of the Seminary. while

1\ r and friends during the uprising in that Mrs. Chesley Pippy 0 pen of the Silver Stars to the muth- and 21, who do not contribute of Music at Princeton Theolog-· I Therc were mony contrasts I two members of the chiliI', Ted in the mornir,~ holl· country a few years ~gO was the exhibition of hanr! made ers of the 'Servants of Christ' to the maintenance of our ical Seminal'Y. The m~mbers of I in the pl'Ogramme. There was Scott and Ted Wills. spoke, reo

. The holiness ser· attacked by one o( their memo work. During her remarks Mrs. session. This special order and towns. the choir.' sixteen in number. adoration in ;\Iendelssohn's spectively, on "Why I am en· " a typical Arm)' meet· bers. T~e chief ,!as knocked Pippy reviewed the remarkable silver star is given to tile The resolution also seeks to are ncarly all student~ in the!)l· "Lift thine eyes to the maun· tering the Christian ministry" , 'n~ the "rand Fal1s unconscIous had hiS two arms progress of the Army across the mothcr who has given a son or have the government amend the ogy at the Seminary and have tains." One felt a mystical qual· and "~Iy hopes for the Christ·

St ,John's Citadel cut off abol'c the elbows, and province In recent years. At a daughter to full time Sal· Local Government Act to allow already completed work w'lich ity in "Ocusus non I'idit", by ian ministry." Cil'r-tlpl Songsters. slashed across the back and three p.m. the platform was vation Army officership. A taxation at the age of 18. has led each of thrO' 10 at Ic",t Orlando di Lasso, while the The choir sang again last COlllllli~,ionrr Wisc· ,left to die in his IIwn pooi of g~aeed by Mrs. Fabian O'Dea, mother receives a star each In its submission, the tOlVn one university degree. Advent plainsong. "0 come. 0 night in Gower Street United

h" arldre,s spoke about '1 blood. Wife o( the Lieutenant Govcrn· lime a member of hl~r family pointed out, ':Our citizens are The sin:~in~ of the ebk Wi'S comc. EmmanuCI". made onc Church. Today the Choir will L oocratiun of thc The chief was found and or 4>f the Province for the Unit. en.ters the work, and she Iplds acceptcd. ami If ne.cessary• can. marked h, clear. cri;p tone, in . fcel the allsterit~· of the :\Iiddle : llo to Argcntia to sing at the : in the hem'! of the' rushcd to hosPy.al where his ed Wome!1s Rally. . !hls star .for as long as the son he drafted for mllttary ser~~lcc 'the tcnOi' sections and round. i Ages in which it lI'as composed! Na\'al Base there.

Thr Commissioncr life was saved. Thc would·be Mrs. Major A. Pitcher, wife Il~ an offIceI' 01' as long as she at or before the age of 13 . resonant tones amon~ !lIe· and first sung. Then there' (Contributed) . to ,Iatc that we ought murderer was captured and of the provIncial ~eeretary, IVCS. \ ---.. --_ .. -. - ... - ... - .. - .. ---.------.. - .. rc 'inlrl'csleri in AliOS· [ sent to prison for seven years. then presented Mrs. Colonel G. Eight of the elevcn Servants

nID ralher than Apos. Upon thc chief's recovery he H. Higgins to chair the pro· of Christ Cadel·Lieutenants' Pari· lament Petn tecosta I Asse m bl,·e:af . .. ",,,.',orl. The speaker inquired about the plight of gram. After prcliminary opcn. mothcrs reeeh'ed the Sill'el' ~ on by p0inlin~ oul ~he: the .fug!til·e family and finding ing exercises were finished a Star. Mrs. Brigadier W. Oak· A A GI f Ihr 'pirit in Pl'l1l1tng I destitutIOn, he prol'ed food and rollcall was made for the Icy. ~R), wife of t.he. former , t ance 0 MIS

o pllrti'in,~ thc heart.lledllcation for the live children many ~ome League member tratntng college prtnclpal, as· Tt en ,·n~ anu e soon . t',I. pcrsonalil.\·, for the seven years. Aft!!r the deleg.abons from across thc sisted J!rs. Lieul.·Commissionm· (JI 'P ' , . TUESDAY, July 9, 1963

Ihe indil'idual to prison term, the chief was at prOI'lnce. Many attractive and Wiseman in the presentation. Opposition Leader Diefen· with power. Commis· th~ prison door to g~eet the origin~l h~me league banners Thc Servants of Christ s~ssion baker said the government's

Wi'cman ~aitl th~t the pl'ISoner to welcome him home were m eVIdence. thcn received their promotion partial withdrawal of its 1\- Camp Emmanuel. the annu"l Mceting grounds. liege for a number of yea ... wili ,re one through 'I While promising him a job soon A teature of the afternoon to the rank of full lieutenant, per.ccnt sales tax on building Summer Camp ~Ieeting of thc Camp Emmannel, situated I and was made college admini· ,iluatinn ann release after. Truly a story of gr~at was. the presentation of the by Commissioner C. D. Wise· materials may mean windfall Pentecostal As~cmblies of New· at Long Pond, :\Ianuels, ol'er· strator following the death of through \\'eakness. The Christian con;passion. Pr~vlncial Hom~ LeagUe Awarll man. and appointcd to varions profits for dealers. I foundland. will open on Sun· I looking Conccptioi Bay and college president, C. B. Smith. was cro\\'nrd lI'ith many I The CommIssioner remarked which went thiS year to St. appointments across the PI'OV- Finance ~linister Gordon· day. July 14. A capacity crowd i Bell Island, has grown from its Pastor Bronsdon is a thorough ,eeking the hlcssing of that the Salv~tion Arm~ i~ the John'~ Temple Corps, the pres. ince. said dehate on the rel'ised is cxpected for this Summer. early beginnings (1947) of the Bible teacher. You will .njoy

. heart. fastest growing Chrlshan or· entation presented by Mrs. Cadet Joan LeRoux. repr!,· . '--f I'csolutions could not Camp, as all availablc space has' cam'as tabernacle and camp his studies. ,. • • ganization in East Africa with Commissioner Wiseman, Is senting the Heroes of the Faith "come too soon." been booked to date, with hali· tents to its present Garrigus The King's Men evangelistic

Fe;tiral of Prai~e in thp over one hundred thousand based on for aspects of work' session, brought to the andi· i ",e Conserl'ative opposition dayers from across Newfound· ~lemorial Tabernaclc with a team will be special guests. at of \\'alc~ Arena !nl'l1ed Sal\'ationisL~ with less than hi~hest attendance, program~ ence a delightful account of: plans at teast three amend· I~nd and visitors from the seating capacity of BOO. a large Camp this year. These young be like thp traditional I one hundred white officers to ml~g practical work and soul. the Training College activities, menls to the governmcnt's ~lainland and the U.S.A. plan· i dining hall ,eating 250, girls' men - )<i1es Thorne, Nova ailernoon praise meet. lead the forces. lavmg. . from the viewpoint of the Cadet! Atlantic Development Board: ning to spend their vacation at I dorm. men's dorm, and 70 Scotiai Glen Blundell, British

da),l ~OM U)·. )Ir. and • • • Mrs. WIseman then addressed in training. ~Iuch of thc pre· I reVISIOn. i Newfoundland's only Camp i cabin units. Columbia, ~nd Paul McInroy, I~Y Pippy \\'er~ among SUNDAY EVESING the WDman on the subject, supposed ideas of college Va!l': - ... ------.. -.----.. I EVENING EVANGELIST I Ontario-are talented musicians

present. After the (B.OO p.m.) Hands of Africa. In her lec- ished during the first Cell' Norman E. Schlarbaum. Dean and singers and will be minis· cmmonie~. the r,~a. An estimated thrl'e thousand ture, Mrs. Wiseman told of months of college when el'er~·· K · h t f C I b of :lIeu, Ea,tern Pentecostal I tering in each sen'ice.

('on~rm lland. Grand people jammed the Prince of stat:k conditions in . Ken~'a thing brought on new llIean· n I 9 S 0 0 U m US Bible College, Peterborough, i Daily Vacation Bible School Ciladel band under the Wales Arena for the Sunday Africa among the lepers. A, jng. I Ontario. Evan;:elist Scholar· I will be conducted each day-

ot B )1. R. Knight, evcning service of the Congress. gripping story was told oC how i . baum is a verl' forceful Camp ~Ionday through Friday from the taxin):: musical 1 It was elect~lfying to .hear this a Christian womim, accosted by I The Heroes of thc Fait!l sc::· EI f Off· Here speaker with a positive gospel 9:30 a.m. to 12 noon. Pastor Son~, Abound." This large audience ~lng the the ~ebcl uprising a few years I sion received lheir appoint· I ec Ice r s . message. Evangelist Schlarbaum F. V. Rideout, Victoria. COil'

- p\'e~ision and' founder's song (Willinm Boothi a~o In that country, was gi\'cn i menls as follows: i i was Camp Bihlc tcacher at· ception Bay, with his tcam of in (,olltra~t and l"Oh Boundles5 Salvation," el~ht. chances to give tip her I Cadct Ira Barrow to Wesley.: W .. r. Ashley was re-eleeted I O'~cill. guards; lIer! Wil. I Emmanucl in 1960. You are in. I teachers and workers, cxpects a

'. The Citadel Sor,g'l along with other nld gospel falt~ 111 God. After each refusal ville and Botwood: Cadet Doug· I Grand Knight of the Terra' Iiams, trustce. • rited to hear Evangcli~t Seh·: rccord registration of 200 for the direction of I songs. a finger was cut off. The 1'10' las Bl\I'ry to Embrce; Cadet' Nova Council No. 1452 of thc. The ahove wilh tru;lce,: larbaum carh cl'cning al 8:00 I their 10 day school.

Osmond broughl i,lc.;s' I :'irs. Commissi<lI1cr Wiseman. man lost all. her fingers. The I Malcolm Burry to Dildo an~ S:. : Knighls of Columbus for 1963 .John R. Simms and P. .1. i in the e\'cning e\'angelistic Camp Emmanuel, only 17 Ihe .Ic\ecticn "Arml,1 in her brief address dp,picted· h;.nds of Africa; went on ~Irs. ,Tohn's Temple; Cadet Shirley i here reccntly. i Wakeham will constitule the' mecting. i miles from 5t. John's, in':ite.i \l'ar." folloll cd b~ th~ i the plight of many seeking "Is~man, ~re hard at work· Dawe to ;\Iusgravetown and I The election of offil'cl's was! execuli"e of thc council for the I i I'isitors from St. John's and the Air \'arie "The Prais. i spiritual stability in an lIIn~· making thlllgs (or themselves, Bonal'ista; Cadct Lucy Day to: held in the Council Chambers ensuing ~ear. ,BIIILE TEACHER ' Conception Bay area to drive in

.. prescntrd hy the I tration from East Africa. Ap· ~ut t e need to stretch ?ur Youth Department and Camp Knights of Columbus building.. According to a spokesman a: Billic teaching classes arc I and enjoy the Camp mccting;..: . Templ~ Band. parently the' earth was scorch. an. s. to . t,~em in teachtng Wor.k alll! Carbonear; Cadet SI. Clare avenue. ; largc attendance was present., hcld each alt~rnoon at 3:00. The I' Prayer ~Ieeting each mornin~l . mipture rcadinli ed for lack of rain. One day ch~~shan III tng and demo~racy, Marton HIcks to YO.llth Depart· Othcrs electell to office I Grand Knight Ashley pl'csid· Bible teacher is Herbert Brons· 7:00, V.B.S. 9:00 to 12 noon .

. Lt. Commissioner Wise- e\'ery eye was on the horIzon ,. rs. H. Osborn. tha~ked Mrs. ment a.nd ClarenvllIc; Cadet were F. J. Aylward, LL.n., i ed at the meeting. don, Administrator. Easlcrn Bible Study 3:00, Young Peo· Citadel Quartette, un. watching the formation of storm "Iseman fo~ th; l~sPlrlng talk. Lorne Hiscock to Youth Depart:. deputy Grand Knight; Chas. I Pentecostal Bible Coilege. Pas. pic's 6:45 p.m., Evening Evan·

and ~inging in clouds that could bring the ment and Duckworth St. Corps. 1 J. Doyle, chancellor; .T. Eric. Mao\el' of Ihe Foulh Degree, i 101' Bl'onsdon received his B.A. gelistic Meeting at 8:00. You harmony brought James much prayed for rain. Soon the MONDAY NIGHT Cade~ Joan LeRou.x ~o Stcp· St. George, recorder; P. J. Bro. S. H. Stack, was asked to I degree at Wheaton Coilege. He are invited to come and bring song "I've Been Rp. clouds were overhead and B.OO p.m. henville and Provmclal He~~-I Kavanagh. financial scere· conduct the e1cction. lIe was 1 has been a faculty member of a friend. A warm welcome " Band.lm3n Lloyd Ab. mueh rejoicir.g commenced. Sud. The concluding meeting of quarters; ,Cade~ BOYCe ;\I.artm I' rtary; F. C. Shea, treasurer; assisted by Bros. P. G. Kemp, I Eastern Pentecostal Bible Col·, awaits you at Emmanuel.

by the Cit. denly I breeze of wind came the Newfoundland 77th Con, to Robcrt sAlin and BiShop, J. W. Mahoney, n.L., ad\'o· Stan Clancy, and Leonard ,',lUI" . along and the clouds sped away. gress got underway at Gower Falls; Cade~ Ella Peekford to \ aate; }'. P. O'Toole, warden; phy who acted as scrutineers. St h' · M t

Falls Band then People tossed about Ipirltual Street United Church when the Grace Hospital and Musgra\e. Edward O'Nei,Il, inside guard; A social hour followed the earns IP ovemen s to the platform Da\'ld indecision are like the clouds Servant of Christ Session for town; Cadet Jane Pryor to St.! James G, nrennan, Kevin meeting.

Knight. sons of the that show promise . but Irt 1961·62 and the "Heroes of the John's Temple and Grace Hos· I --------------.-..:...--------10 pia), the cornet easilY blown away. WP. must Faith" session marched in and pital; and Mrs. R. French to I Comradeship." This be indwelt by the Holy Spirit onto the platform mid flag Monday Pond; and Mrs. HiCk-I

C.S.I,.-CLARKE TERRA NFLD. CANADA STEAMSHIPS

II'ritten by BIM. to have spiritual stability. flying and I standing packed man to Mount Pearl. Who leads ~nd writes Grand FaJls Citadel Band chureh far up itno the third gal·.

tor the lCI'en piece band then rendered the lelection lery. Commissioner Wiseman in bis ' capable ilf pla)'inq "Love Entreaty." After opening exercises the charge to the Cadets stressed

anylhing In Sal. Commissioner Wiseman then Provincial Commander (or the that officer authority was based musie : spoke from selected verses em, Salvation Army in Newfound· on their personal divine call

~VIllIllIl~i10nCl C. D. Wise· I phasizing the fact that true reo land, Coloney G. H. Higgins, from God. They were to ~o out " a stirring me~~age ligion Is a personal experience read I leiter addressed to lhe and observe and learn the art Arm~' of God". In I and that we may glory In the JIeroes of the Faith Sess'o!l of ~oul.sa\'ing. A natural I~ad· · the Commission~r I fact that God Is ever seeking from the TerritDrial Command- er must learn to be led and hold

out three ferments of us. At conversion, went on the er, Commissioner W. Vo.r. Booth. the dignity of their office. . day Ai'my that \\':IS . Commissioner, we adopted into Brigadier H. Orsborn, train· A total of nearly twcll'e and In il~ incrption 98 a great spiritual family with Ing college principal then read one half thousand people at­

· Thr three point~ Christ Jesus as our elder brot· a report of the activities and tended the Congress gath~ril1gs • I\'e bl'liel'p in com. ser. "Static christianity is I reo the expansion program for the with a total of one hundred lind

regenpration bv treating christianity, the ser· new two year program in cadet thirty one seekcrs at the mercy Spirit: that every I vice was crowned with a great training now being generally scat. A Congress long to be

God ought of necessity l many conversions and the accepted tbroughout the Army remembered.

.. ,;"."

": '

NOl A SERVICES Bedford II sailing from Hali· fax for St. John's July 12th.

M.V. Dundee due SI. John's I Bedford II sailing from Hali· July 11Ih. I fax for 51. John's July 19th.

S.S. Gulfport due SI. John's I Bedford II sailing from Hall· July 16th. fax for St. John's July 26th.

S.S. Novaport leaving ~lont· FURNESS WITHY AND real July 15th, due 51. John's COMPANY LTD. Julv 21st. Sycamore due St. John's July

5.S. Highlincr leal'ing ~Iont· 11th; lca\'ing' for Halifax and real ,Tilly 19th, due St. John's Boston July 12th. Due Halifax July 2·llh. Jnlv 14th and Boston July 17th;

~1.V. Dundec leal'ing ~Iont·, lea~'ing . Boston ,Tuly 19th for real ,Jllly 23rd, due SI. John's' Halifa:, and st. John's; leaving July 2Bth. Halifax July 26 for St. Jlthn's.

S.S. Gulfport Ical'ing Mont· Due here July 29th. Sailin, real July 271h, due SI. John's for Li\'erpool July 30th.

• August 1st. Beechmore leaving Liverpool S.S. Novaport leaving ;\10nt· July 18th. Due St. John's

real July 31st, due SI. John's July 25th. Leaving for Hali· August 5th. fax ami Boston July 26. DUI

HARVEY & CO. LTD. Halifax July 28th and Bosloll * Fergus due SI. John's July July 31st. Leaving Bostoll Aug.

Sth. Leaving St. John's July 2nd for Saint John, N.B., Hali· Bth. fax and St. John's. At Saint

Newfoundland. Commisslo n e r • Fcrgus leaving Pictou. N.S. John, N.B., Aug. 3rd. Leavinl

ummaryof S.A. Activities 77th Annual Congress of Award an dthe General's Scout

,\rmy in New· or Guide Award. rank of lieutenant and reech'ed new awolntments and the Heroes of the Faith session, still in college, received their sum· mer appointments. They will be out on field work for eight weeks.

Wiseman's main addresses were July 11, leaving Charlottetown Halifax Aug. 9th for 51. John's.

gOI of( to a good Sunday activities got under· an estimaled crowd way with a March of Witnesses

thou;and people throng· when some one thousand offi· Torhay airport to greet cer~ soldiers and friends of the

lernlaticlnal Icaders of the Aro{Y marched past the review· Licut.·CommissiDner ing stand and on to the prince

C. D .. Wiseman, Train. of Wales Arena for the morn· Principal lor the In. \ ing service. Throughout the College ror Officers, Congress the feature band,

England. A two hun. Grand Falls Citadel Band, cam'an lhen made a I along with the various musical

along St. John's streets. 1 forces of the city were used. round of activities' The Festil'al of Praise was

when Commissioner reminiscent of the aftE'rnoon spoke to St. John's praise meetings usually held in

. Club on the subject corps when the bands and With Destiny." songsters and instrumentalists

sessions with offie. were IIsed to goOd advantage j~e~"foundl:and were held to bring blessing to the audio

~nding with a great enee. Witness in downtown An overflow crowd jammed

Prince of Wales Arena for the e\'ents were concluding Sunday servlcp.s. when at 3 This ~ervice was a typical Sal·

.'1\"lcOl1'lmi:s~ionel' Wise. I'atlon Army salvation meeting liang with ~Ir. George I with electrif~'lng singing, milch

Architect. tlll'J1ed prayer. gospel preaching, Ann lad ot a new four hlln. man v responding to the Word

dollar Training of God .. Officers expected to Monday, the concludln~ day

· .'or next Easter. This of the Congress, commenced \\'111 accommodate Corty with the dedication of "Heroes and ten of a staff along of the Faith" session in the

featUre to stream. Temple Corps. This was I: high· new two year Training light in the life of the cadet

Saturday night was when he is publically committed to bear for the Youth to the Lord's work before all

other things sever. the comrade 'officers and Guides received frlend~.

. award in the life A ' Units in lhe B 't' h E I t 2.00 p.m. the woman ~ px· QUeen's Scou~1 IS G Imd' hibition DC hand mad(' goods _____ or u e was opened by ~lr~. Che~l(!y

Throughout the Congress Lien!. Commissioner. Wiseman gave vigours leadership sup· ported by Colonel H. rl. Wal· lace, chief secretary for the Salvation Army for Canada and Bermuda, Colonel G. H. Higgins, prDvincial commander for the Salvation Army for

entitled, Date with Destiny, P,E.I., July 12; arriving 51. Due SI. John's Aug. 12, and Army of God, and 'Ye shall be ,Tohn's, July 15; leaving SI. sailing for Liverpool lame day. filled.' John's, July 15. (R) Herring Rose leavinr

An estimated twelve and one • Fergus le~ving Pictou, N.S. Liverpool Aug. 1st. ~UI 51. half thousand people attended Jnly 18; leal'mg Ch~rl.otteown John's Aug. 7th. LeaVing for all th main Con ress gather-I .. . P.E.I., July 19; al'Tlv:ng St. Halifax and Boston Au" ··atlt. . e'

th I g d d d WINS TROPHY-Trooper Frcd Tobin of Placcnlta, Nfld., IS John's, July 22; leaVIng St. DUe' Halifax Aug. 10th and BOl'

Illgs WI one IUn re an .. Iv I II Cd' f 1 thirty one seekers registered. I congr~tulated by Bng~dler B. F. lafcl olla l: :omm~~ CI. 0 r John's July 122. . p. t N S ton Ang. ~4th. The Congress considered to be Canadian Infantry Bngade Group a ter Will III ng Ie Jav~ III • Fergus eavmg Ie ou, .. (R) refrigerated tpac ••

one of thc be~t in recent years, t'hrowing competition d~rin? the recent 1 9I~G Track and FIeld i July 25; lea~i~g Charlotteto~n -------will long be rcmembered for Meet held at Camp Wamwnght, Alta. Tobm IS a member of the I July 26: arr1l'l.ng 51. John,S, QUEBEC (CP) - Forests hi the leadership of the New- Lord Strathcona's Hors~ . (Ro~al CanadIans) fr?m Sarce~ Bar- July 29, leal'mg SI. John 5, Temiscamingue, Pontiac and found.born international dele. racks, Calgary, now tralllmg III Camp Wamwnght dunng tbe I July 29.. . Gatineau counties In Wfstern gate from London, England. annual summer concentration.-.National Defeee Photo). • RefngeratJOn. Quebec, closed to the public

(18)

.. ___ .. ____ ..... Friday, have lIeen re-opened, it was announced Monday. Some

. .. . ..... -~

By Don Oakley Clnd John lane: , 25 forest fires In the :ueas man been brought under control.

Hamilton Hotel 123 • 1!5 Hamilton A,'e. Catering to Permanent and Transients. For re­servations Please' dial

8·563~t augle,1mth

-aDDY mow"n.

. Space Is the new ocean, President Kennedy has said, and we must sail on it.

An idea of how vast arc the ''territorial waters" of the solar system alone is given by, the following experiment suggested by astrono­mer J. Allen Hynek:

5; Saturn 9Y.:; iiltanus 19; NI~ptune 30; ancl finally, Pluto at 39Y.: .yards. .

of industrY (there are so many eom.pa.nies they . could not be named in this short story of the. Wizards of Space) is engaged in helping NASA meet tile challenge of space.

Better Li'ving Costs Less'

when you.' :go AII·Electric

Still, many persons question the wisdom of it al1. Though it will be much-debated in com· ing . years, America will continue to spend in-creasing billions on space.' .

Pippy, while at 3.00 p.m. the United Women'~ Rally was graced by Mr •.. Fabian O'Dea, wife of the Lieutenant Govern· or of the province. Mrs. Com· missioner Wiseman spoke on the subject "Hands ." Africa."

. Take a spool of thread, a yardstick and some -glue. Let one yard represent the astronomical unit (93 million mUes, the distance from earth to sun). On this scale, the sun would be a ball merely 11.1 of an inch in diameter. At 14 inches from the center of this ball, glue a speck o( lome material about 0.002 o{ an inch in diam· eter. That will represent Mercury.

Take this 39'h·yard·long t1lread into the bac,k yard and stretch it out. Then imagine all these speeks of planets, not strung in a line. but revolving at different speeds around the sun. Then imagine an infinitesimal speck caUedman attempting to "conquer" this solar system in his specks of spaceships. , Already, benefits are aecruing from space exploration, such as in medicine and in new industrial techniques. The manned space pro· gram alone is pouring millions into the "Space Crescent" in the South~Houston, New Orlean~;, Huntsville, Ala., and Cape Canaveral-as well as other parts of the country. More and more

But in any event, space is a challenge man· kind cannot ignore and remain true to the spirit that emerged from undreamirig primitive life forms. If nothing else, the exploration of space may help men to answer what is per· haps the greatest challenge of all: to live with

•. ./" I' ~ :

1/.J1tIt",JJ.,J- . iLIG" ..........

The concluding ·,ervice of the 77th Conl(ress took plac~ in th~ Gower Street Unit~d Church when the Servanb oC Christ seNion were promoted to the

Venus Is a speck 26 Inches from the sun; earth is at one yard; Mars 1'12 yard.; Jupiter

themselves in peace. . THE END

'I)"."" ""·'C'· I Cheap Reli~j,le F.1'rtftcitw. :.'

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I I '-THE DAILY NEWS, ST, JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, JULY 10, 1963

Worked Out Way Dark Wan Well Played Gamel

Says Losing Houk By LARRY FRIEDMAN 1 Yankce fir s t ,baseman, who

elected to retire Willie Mays at CLEVELAND (AP)-"It was first base in thc filth Inning

• wcll-played game, but they ~ot rather than try to throw out the two more runs than we dId, speedy DavIs explained' his That's all there is to it," move, '

That's the way American Leallue managel' Ralph Houk summed up the National League

"If you don't throw it to the plate right away, you're dead," Pepitone saId, "I hesitated and that was it."

Houk 'defended Pepitone's de-"Our pitchers pitched well and cision, "He made the right

. we out-hit 'fm," Houk said, plaY," he declarcd, "I'm not

5-3 victory Tuesday,

"Sure. those stolen bases hurt sure we could have /(ot the man ,us plenty. but those bo~'s they at home, If we don't get him, '". have sure can run," they go for a big inning." .. " TRIES TO EXPLAIN . All the American Leaguers Bobby Ricmardson, the Yan-

,': were surprised by Tommy kec second haseman who hit '::Davis' strong t h I' 0 IV which into two double plays and made

. :nailed Nellie Fox at the plate an errol' when the National went , 'In the first inning for a doublc ahead, was trying to explain . :. play, what happened on the miscue in

'JUST DID:-I'T KSOW thc fifth inn ins. ,. ""It was H ~ood pial' to scnd I "Frank Mulzone's !hl'oW was Fox in," Houk said of the fly ol'el' the bag IIn~ It. dropped to Icft field by Al I\aline. "We ou~ o!. my glol'e, nlcl~ardsoln inst didn't know Dal'i$ could Said, Unless you play b.lseba!, 'thl'ow Iikr that." I ):ou can't u~dc!'stand what a dif-

ficult play It IS, though, I was .loe Pepilone, the ~c\\' York i all the way over to the other

[ side fa)' a left,handcd pun hit, _______ . - .-_._- -- ---- tel' (Bill \Vhite l , It was a ]ong

I P tt rUII and a closc play' ~~n re y ~Ialzone said hc hesitated mo-

: " I mcntarily to gil'e nichal'dson a

G d C d·· I chalice to reach Ihc ba~ [or the

00 on Itlon force on .Davis, bul thought it was a wise move to throw to

BAL~'\.\IO~E C~p . - 1I1~n-. se,~~n~;'anted to set that man agel' Billy lI~thcock, 111 a nm!- rctired at second bccause Mays season a,Pprmsal. of the Balt.l- was coming up ncxt," 1I1alzonc more Ol'lol~,:' sOHI Monday hl.s said. I~a~~ \\'a~ III pretty good POSI- NOT IlISTURBED lion for the second half o[ the Keither Houk nOl' Pepitone !chedulc, was disturbcd hy the hooing,

"Wc wcnt through a loush "Wc !lC~ that booing in. a!! break (2~ losses in 36 gamcs) thc American League parks, and canle back to will ninc 0(' said the Yankees mana~CI" :'As our last 12 games:' Hitchcocl, soon as they see thc pll1stl'lPC5 said "I don't know "'hv wc they start it. But thai's why we can'i ):0 ahead and win a'lot of draw people into the park." games " "It doesn't bother mc when

. thcy boo," said Pepitone. "It

By IIA1\OLD IJARRISO:-l CLEVELAND (AP)- The Na­

tional League's 5,3 victory in Tkesday's major league All-Star baseball game worked out just the way manager Alvin Dark

hits with 20, Muscal ords are made to be I dan't mind having ken,"

Jim O'Toole of Reds, the Nat ion a I start:ng pitcher who the first American admitted his control sharp but, he said, "~I my curve was going

ANN HIGLEY, the new professional coach at the Hi verela1e Tennis Clllh, arrivpd in St. John's on },!onday and \'csterdav she startcd lessons 1'01' the Cluh mem hers, ~liss Higley (right), a 21-vear-old gradwlte of ~larsh Colle(-re or rlwsical Educatioll ill Liverpool, Ellglaml, dcmonstrates a point to some of the

wanted. "I told Gene Mauch (manager

of Philadelphia Phi1s) before the game that I'd like to have a two-run lead going into the eighth and then send in Don Drysdale to mop it up," said Dark in the crowded N alional , • ~:~e~e dressing room after the i Practice

That's just what happened. I Dark grinned, however. as he i'

added: "I didn't plan it that way, of course. That's what I, ST, BON'S wanted." \ S B ' . . Drysdale, the Los Angeles t, on s jun:or Dodger right hander, came on s~ccer teams Will .' in th!! eighth with the National I ~Ight at Shamrock Field Leaguers leading 5.3. mg at 6.45 sharp, All RAN ON THEIR OWN are asked to attend.

Asked ahout the three stolen !II $ If'

bases, all of which led to runs, LlTTI,E LEAGUE D,a~k 5ai~ both, ?Iays. and Bill [ The Littlc League r \\ IlIte, II ho accompltslH::d the I will practice today at ' bas~ thcfts, were runnmg on Park startin" at 6" thclr own, \' h' All 1 e "Willie always runs on his S ~l p. . P ay rs mUll own," said Da~k, "but in a reg- thiS practice; •. ular !!3mC I prefer [or him to GU \RDS wait for the hillers hchind him, • , Late in a game, that's differ- Guards junior baseball' cnt... will hold their first

W I L L I E MAY S I S STA R AS bl~~:k t~::ts A~~~icai~CI~:~guet,~ :~Cee t~! ~~~h s~~s~l~c An; Joe Pepitone for not making a letic Grounds startin;!

. play at the pla/e on a ground sharp. Anyone ball bv. :\1ays in the fifth which playing is asked to alit scored Tommy Davis of Los An- • " •

NATIONALS DROP AMERICANS geles Dodgers to put the !'Ia-

jnnior lellllitpla\'crs 'at thc niv~~~la~e __ ~~I.lrt~ \'e~_er clltV aiternollll.-(Staff photo),

• tional Leaguers ahead to stay. PONY LEAG([, " ,. _ "Davis is [ast:' said Dark. I . "He can rcally run and a throw' The Pon~ League

.... " might not have got him." All-Stars. Will ~old an

ny JACK IIASIl :llanagcr Al Dal'k of San I broke the hack or the Inlllng.[ In the .flfth, It _ was hiS 24th MAYS LDIPED ant practice tOnight at . Francisco Giants stuck with his It was the fir;t of three Na- consecullve . AII-~tar' game,. a i A toe injury su[[ered hy Mays Park starting at 6 ,

CLBVE.L~:-JD (API _. Won- :\alional Lc,I!!Ue starters most tIOna I LeJgtte double plays. record. ~luslUl flied out to rIght i in the eighth while catchin/( a I All players are asked, dcrful \\'Illte Mays drol'e III two of the way while Ralph Houk ~Iays walked the first time he field, 'flv hall didn't bother Dark. a speci~J effort to altH.: rUIIS, scored two and stole two. of the Yankees substituted faced startcl' Kell l\leBride of, The attendance o[ 44,160 was '~Iays had limped away from \ • • , bas~s Tuesday for th_c fa.l'orcd I freely, using 21 of his 25 men. I the Angels in the second illni1.lg, : far off th~ AJl:Star record ~f the fence and Dark ~aid: I UNITEU National Leasue. m a o.~ "Ictor)', The I'ielor:; meant the Na· i slolc sccond and sped home With 169.031, set 111 thiS samc park In. "When I see Willie limn I! OI'CI' the Amel'lcan League !II [tiOlnl League cut lIw Ameri- I the first run on a single to left 1935. 'fhlS game marked the I knol" he" okay If he reallv: U'I d" I I t II St

' bill' '. '. .' t 115 ff . ,. •. . m e JUnior ani ~e~::l!:';;;jh .. tIC 34 h A. .It' ase m game. can's lead in the sCI'l.es t,o by DI~k Gro.at fif 51. LOlliS. re urn to one A - tar a all' a ~ets hurt, he never wants any- cer teams 1"1'11 drl'll

HOlik wasn't happy, but he .. T

Orioles, who led tile American just makes you try a little . League by 31: games ~Ia)' 2R, harder."

before the slum!>, aI'e now in a virtual tic [01' third place, si~ games behind New York Yall­

wasn't rcally bothcred by the A crowil uf 44,IIiO amuscd Iy-W-\,. Il was lhe ~atlOna,1 s . TI~e . Amcl'lcans came hack 1.0 ycar. ." . , .:, one to know about il." the United Collegiat! cmse \'cs v (10m" c cw [,' 9- I It' . , 0 at : s arp, .. , u -"1~ • ..I".""

loss. th I b b· tll N hllh trIUmph m the last Sc\cn lie It 111 theu' half of the second Thc lca.ucs hale pla~ed two \ One of the plal'crs cnl'o"in" 7 00 h • f II

Y k Y k• t''' t lI' "ames and onc o[ the other~ was when Leon Wagner a Los An- a yea! s1l1ce 1. 09. n Of{ er a himself the most in the dress- , t d f tl ',.

"I was well pleascd with OUl' (or _ a~ e~ con 1!lgcn ~n Ie I; tie geles singled, Zoilo Versalles o( get thc playcrs' consent for thc i ing room was Stan Musial of ~ .rtques e or Ie

deBcI~slltoinnl <.oretllahllas NleO\~t, lyliOIlI~k.m~ruet ball club," Houk said. "I wish rustrlattel

t mll

etrldcan11

I ~tagute Bol;hv n i c h a l' d s on o[ the I\linnesota was hit bv a pitched I single game, the owners agreed 1St

Louis Cardinals' the all- rt. ••• , " u I had thcm a\l season. Wc'd win squal la co cc r. 11 s 0 - . II b II d 111 B'u '. 1 d ff t t 9- e' t [th n t . , ) I d . plenty," " . . I Yanks grounded mto 111'0 ra y- a an c rI e smg cOl 0 pu a p 1 cen a e e time ali-star vcteran who has "

las p aye SlX mOl'e sames. only SIX smglcs for the w~. killing double plays and first Ken Boyer's glove into left ficld, ~eceipts Of. $250,3~4.5!J .and the, becn' picked (or the squad 241 FEILDIASS 0; • bascman ,Joe Pepitone of thc Once agam in the third it i rv - radl~ reCclot3 mto the times. ., ., ,." The curl

kees.

• Yanks chose to make an tmas- was ;\Iays in the mir]dle or a I player pensIOn fun:!, In thc past Musial got into this game and Felldlans JU~lOr ar.c ~:\' at is ho sisteu olll at first base in thc two-run surge by the Nationals, I the players got onl:; 6~ per ccnt. flied out. soccer tear,ns, Will \\'orko~:~:~ ost succ, fifth while Tommy Davis of Los Davis singled and was forced, Dark used 19 o[ IllS playcrs, at the Felldlan ground, ,L asons ev

A Angeles scored from third with al second by Aaron, White \' 11'.inding . UD with three p~tcl!tial "I like these games," h.e sai~'1 at 7 o'clock. AU pl,!ei~/ fending

'.'

, ,

the lie.breaking run. grounded oul bcfore lIlays camc plOch ~lltters and three pitchers Told that )!ays had tied hiS I as~ed to attend the I:;f~.\. eeting r MAYS STARS through with a run.scoring sin-I who didn't work. OWl! rccord [or All-Star game dnn. '., soccer':

Mays, whl] has been slumber- glc to left centrc. ----.,~. aster's 1

ling in a slump, helped rcwrite Mays took of[ for sccond allil J I L d .. The exe thc All-Star record hook by top- stoic the base while McBride ays ncrease ea',' emier J. ping two of his oll'n marks with was pitching to Ed Bailcy of san···· lIy kicl thc two I'lms and the two stolcn Francisco. When Bailey fol. is won't

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hnscs. He also tied stan :\Iusi- lowed with a singlc 10 centre, her gu~ :~;:~~~i:;:;": :f;I~):I:.:;I' w:: ~~:F~:;'~~; w;th h;, ,eo""' By De f ea ting Fly eri •... tr:ae:: had allowed no scoring a::ainst At Ihe cnd of the sunny aftcl'- ckey's I him in ninc consecuth'e inning~ nof'.'1, :llays had a shinv .417 rec- B.ambr"lck W·,ns .. E·lghth 'csident o[ All-Star play, saw his strcak Qrrl to sha\\' lor his ,~II-Star cr- IJm Brow

. brokcn bl' an unearned run in forts down through the years as . C. Nt:

. the fifth ilmt made him the los· compared with his .271 mark [or ing pitcher. the cllrrent season. Jays increased their spread a triple to score Vokey and Ray i R. Dillon, 2b Bunning had walked Tommy Liltlc Alhic Pearson, at five- in Senior Softball last ni'~ht Noftall brought ~lackey home' J, Collins, ss

Davis of Los Angeles, first man feet-liye the fmallest' man cI'er using a big sixth inning for fil'e with a single, i J. Quinlan, 3b up in the inning, with the scor~ to play in an All-Star game, runs and a 8·3 decision IIl'pr Joe Collins got the first rlln Joe Quinlan, cf tied at 3-3. After Hank Aaron o[ opencd thc American third with Flyers at the Banncrman pqrk for Jays in the thirrl as he I.T. Bambrick, n Milwaukce f1icd out, Bill White a double, the only extra base Diamond. The win' gave Jays singled, took second on a I G. Fleming, 1h or thc all-St. Louis in[icld hit hit o[ the day. After KaHne 16 points and a four point I~ad I passed ball and scored on an \ E. BaileY, If a slow hoppcr to third. Frank struck out, Frank illalzone of over second spot Comets. error. In the fifth Jays made [G. Owens, c Malzone o[ Boston hesitatcd Boston singled to left scoring John Bambrick, ,lays frep. it 3·3 with Collins opening with \ Total momentarily, then threw to sec- Pearsall. Earl Battey continued whecling hurler, continued hi< a single and Joe Quinlan \Valk- FLYERS:

~ . 2 • .

4 ' 4 I 4 I ~ r

ond and Bobby Richardson the attack with a single to winning strcak as he picked ing with one oul. Bambrick's, B. Lane, ss droppcd the ball as he sped past centrc that (Irove in Malzane. up victory numher eight with· hit scored C01lins and Quinlan! W. Dicker, rf the baS. Da\'is continued to .lackson .~ot Pepitone on a liner out a loss. Bambrick allowed tallied on a miscllc. I T. Lowrey, d J I third base. to right and that was thc end of three Flyer runs oa six hits Three hits, including a doulJle ,F. Brockleh1ll'~t, ][ J I

el When Mays grounded to Pepi- the American League scoring. while striking out six battet'S h~' Collins, four costly err~rs \1 D, Vokcy, Ib J : .. tone the Yankee first baseman Dark said the kcy plays of anr! walking none. hy Flyers and a walk got five L, Mackey, p J .:" play'cd it sa[c by running to' thc game, the slolen bases hv Loyola ~!ackey suffered the .lays' tallies in the sixth to ~alt ,P. Grfen. 211 ; " l\teiaCners first for thc unassisted out. l\Iays and White. were done oil loss with seven runs scored away the decision. ! R, Noftall, 3b Many in the stands thought he their own without any sign from against him on eight hits and Collins was the hitting star I B. Jackman, c had a chancc to get Davis at the bench. The National's tolal (our free passcs. He fanned of the encounter with four Total the plate. of three stolen bases lied an ~evcn. safeties in five trips including

After pounding out seven hits AII-Stnr record. ! Flyers got al1 their run, in his big double. Reg Dillon also Hawks are the

tonight as the), and threc runs in the first. three Mays left the game in the the sccond inning to jump into had two hits for the winners innings the Americans wcnt ninth after humping into the a 3·0 lead. Frank Brocklehurst while no Flyer had more than quietly'the resl o[ the way while wire fence in left centre when was safe on an crror and one safety. the National added an insurance he went way back to drag down' scored as Doug Vokey stroked BOX SCORES

in a game slated o'clock. John "ois!\' umpire-in.chief wilt providing the bm

run in the eighth when White Pepitonc's lung fly hall in the a doublc, )lackey followed with JAYS: AB R H E singled, <;tolc second and scored eighth, He said afterward his on a single by Ron Santo of! injury was minor - a bruised Chicago Cubs, \ toe. STRUCK OUT FIVE Aaron Whitc, Groat and Jul-

Dick Radatz, the jumbo-sized ian ,lm:ier o[ 51. Louis played \ Boston relief man, then settled thc whole game [or thc ~ation­down and struck out fil'e men also lIIays and Dads werc in I

: ill his two,inni~g relief str.etch. there until the ninth. The only I From. the third to thc etghth American to go thc routc was 1

the NatIOnal (hi not man~ge to pcpitone. gct a hit off Bunning, ,lim B~U- MUSIAL GETS CHEER I ton of New York or Juan PIZ- The bi~~cst hand of thc day arru of Chicago. was for "~Iusial when the 42·' •

But Ray Culp of the Phillies, year - ~hl Cardinal outfielder lIal Woodeshick of Houston and came lip to pinch hit for Bailey hig Don Drysdale of Los An- -----­geles Dodgers IVcrc shutting the door in thc face of the Ameri­cans after thc third innins. Larry Jackso'n of the Cubs, roughed up a hit in tqe third inning, was the WInning pitcher,

Committed The proud Yankees, who are

pulling away from the pack in the American League race, did little to enhance their image in thiR contest, Richardson's error. the two double plays he hit into and Pepitone's debatable deci· sian not to try for the man at the plate helped the Nationals,

In the clubhouse, Houk de­fended Pepitone's decision, He said it WAS the right play and, if he had missed the man at the plate, the, Nationals might have gone on to a big inning,

'SEEMED 1l0T -, When NelUe Fox o( Chicago

and Albie Pearson of Los An­geles opened with singles orr Na­tional Starter Jim O'Toole of Cincinnati in the first inning, the Americans seemed on their way, But a fine throw to the plate by Tommv Davis, nipping Fox as he tried to score on a fly ball by Detroit's AI Kaline,

MONTREAL (CP) - Four youths have been committed for volunlary statement in con­nection with the planting or ter· rorist bombs that badly injured an army sergeant • major in

.May. The [ollr suspected members

or Le Front de Liberation Quebecois are Francois Gag­non, 19; Mario Bachand, 19; Gilles Pruneau, 19, and Denis Lamoureux, 20,

Judge Emilc Trottier did not set a date for the voluntary statement, which is a pre-trial stage in Quebec legal procee~­ings at which the defence can present its casc,

Charges against the four are conspiracy, cBusing bod II Y harm by negligence, placing eiIiTosives, and committing pub­lic mischief. AI1 charges stcm (rom the planting of dynamite time.bombs ill mailboxcs in Wcstmount, a Montreal suburb .

• JOHNSON OUTBOARD MOTORS • EVINRUDE OUTBOARD MOTORS • Lj~WN BOY MOWERS

FULLY-TRAINED

STAFF OF

~IECHANICS TO

SERVICE YOUR

MOTORS AT

ST, JOHN'S AND

CORNER BROOK.

PARTS AT ST, JOHN'S

AND CORNER

BROOK.

DISTRIBUTOR FOR NEWFOUNDLAND

CHARLES R. BELL LTD, CORNER BROOK ST. JOliN'S

Write, Phone or Wire for Information as to your nearest

AVAILABLE AT

THE GltEAT EASTERN O'IL CO., l WATER S.TREET

Page 7: ,. Alk It witI THE DAIIJY NEcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · REPORTS TRICKLE OUT alive opposition will seek at I uary, 1969; removal of the reo -or approval

nos's Junior and

will practice :l ml"Mk Field ~h:lrp. All

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In~ at 6 I playcr! must cr.

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art a;;ked to rilort to attend.

• • •

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1'HE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, JULY 10, 1963-7

GUARDS COP SLU'GFEST~ DOUBLE CRUSADERS 12-6

Currie Has ,First Hom er, Leonard's Bat By DEE MURPHY

Guards made their 1963 Senior Bas'eban debut a successful one last night as they doubled Holy Cross 12-6 in a real slugfest at the City Ball Park, It was the second loss of th'e young season for the Crusaders who dropped the schedule. opener 4-1 to Feildians.

A pair of "phHs" paced Guards at the plate while Aus Thompson pitched the win, Phil Currie ~ot the first home run of the year, a two tally shot in the second inning, while phil Leonard banged out four straight singles. ...."1

Both teams came up with 13 tance shot. hils in the contest with a Holy Cross opened the game homer, two triples and a pair with a pair of tallies in the first of doubles highlighting the inning but Ian Campbell's baiters' parade. doubl~, Phil Leonard's single

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Currie stroked a two and two and Currie'S distance shot in pitch from Mike Power over the· the second frame had it 3·2 for center fieid fence in the second Guards. The Crusaders forged inning with one runner aboard back out front in. the fourth

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[ERn COl'I.TAS play cd SOCCCI' allel t'rickct again st "isiting warships as far hack as Hno and saw his adilill a~aillst British sailors in HJ24. Yestl'rd ay ~Ir. Coultas visitcd the British Naval Frignte

I\IS \\'hirhrilld ami talked over thc "old times" wi the some of the ship's officcrs. (Left to right) Lt.

for two runs. The Guards' cen· With two runs ?n s1llgles by Pat terfielder laced a shoulder.high Hurley and Mike power for a scrving in an arc over the 4·3 edge. . I

r Chamhcrlin, ~[r, Coultas, Suh. Lt. God frey Day, Lt. Alec Monahan.-(Staff Photo). h d for tIle "car's first di!l- Guards took over on three fifth oar s . J • , til' D' k Y b I ' 1IImng a les as IC a s ey s

'Whirlwind 'Competes With ~I'nrt' "ltidt)· ror the ,·Isit·

In: nritl,h :\:1\')' Frigate 1l~IS II'hirillilul orencd last nl/:ht. .\ Itam rrom lilt' ship battled t~ a 2·~ tie with the Holy fm, ,cllior ~,quad at IIrothcr .:~an rich!.

ed by the IlAII,Y NEWS SIIorts Ilclmrtmcnt,

Today ~olf and howling arc on the schedule. Crew memo bers wlll bowl this morning and this aHernoon several officers from the ship wiI1 take to the 18 hole course at Baily lIaly.

Bowl ami Ken lUeeker or Park tones, six free alleys have been made avallable to the Sllip's company tills morn· In)(.

Locals SllOrts' limelight. Wrestlers schcduled for action at the Stadium will visit the ship and some free tickets will be made available to the sailors thrllu~h the courtesy of New· iOlllll\land Sports Enterprises.

three base knock was the big hit to make it 6·4. In the sixth Guards broke the contest wide sending 11 batters to the plate and scoring five times on four safeties and three Crusader errors. They also left th'e bases loaded. Junior Rumsey's triple in the boltom of the six got Holy Cross one run for a 11·5 count. Guards scored once in the seventh and Holy Cross added their other tally in the eighth. I

Haly Haly I'resident ,lames Chalker will be on hand this afternoon to host the ~olflng members of the crew at the Feildlans will providl! the Country Club. opposition for the Frigate's ~13tt" til remain in st,

JDhn\ nntll Frhlay, sports ac· tiDn for the 180 man crew of thp "ri~atr has been arrang·

Through the eo.opcrallon of Albert Downton of Plaza

On Thursday wrestling and soccer tcam 'l'hursday night

_. __ ._-------_ .. __ ._--. soccer will be in the ship's at the Feildoan Grounds. I

SENIOR SOCCER STARTS,li<\,i ...• Aus Thompson went nine I

innings to register the Guards I \'ictory. Holy Cross collected their five runs on 13 hits off Thompson who walked five and fanned ten.

IRISH MEET CRUSADERS !jt.~~L1ERIDDLE First Game Sch eduled Tonight

lne curlain risc, tonight for . -. \ and Tom Squircs were listed as i, hopee to bc one of the spares. I sutcmful senior soe~N' Crusader pilot Andy Samuci·'

elw in SI. John's with 'son has a very young squad 'ng champs St. Pat's again thIs season with three of

runners.up 1I01y Cr(\ss last year's regulars not in the . ncW homc, Buck. lineup. They are 20 Yl!ar vet·

. field. eran Harry Ennis. Harry hasn't The executive hopes to ha1'c""""""" had time to get out to prac!ice I

J. R. Smallwood to oW. but will lnce the boots later kick off the scason but in the season. The same ap· I

won't hI' known until today. ..•• plies for Jack Philpott last sea.\' gUHs inl'ited to the son's center half. The other

galre are Ank ~Iur. , regular missing from I~st sea· presidcnt of senior base. . , It d J' F't I son IS goa en er ,1m '1 z· league. .lim Vinnicomhe. patrick. Fitz broke his wrist in,

presl(icnt. ,lack Walsh, practice three weeks ago. of bask~thall lea~lIe, Playin~ goal will be junior

Browne, prcsident of AAU Tom Healy. He plared one C. Xfld. Branch. Jim Hi~.' '" ~ame of senior last season anI!

i president of Regatta in three iunior games this ycar ceo Bern Baker, Dresi. he hasn't a goal scored against

of Cil'il Sm'ice Softball, ~." him. Withers, representative While one Phelan will he

~oftbal1 and KC\'in BREN CURTIS playing fullbaCk for 51. Pat's, f · II h' ANDY SAMUELSON Ie ( c airman. his brothers Doug and Jim

e executivc has also in. "Sox" wiil play fullback for

RIDDLE ROCKS

PINS Charlie Riddle came up with

some great bowling at Plaza Bowl yesterday afternoon.

Riddle is well·known for his ahility at the ten·pin game and yesterday he came within ten points of tbe 300 possi· ble.

Riddle hit 11 strikes after sparing the first alley and finished liP with a great 290 score. Well rolled, Charlie,

NAFA Game Set 'Saturday

the Chul'l'h Lads Brigade boxes of chocolatcs. I their famous seven Year reign the Crusaders. Bah Woods is ank to take part in opening This season VOCM Willi was hailed by Guards in 1957. back for another season at right: The seconll game of the

rere:nonip,. hut again this won't! broadcast .one game per wl'ek I From the years 1950·57 lIoly half, Sal Kean will pia), ecnter Eastern Division playdowns known until later today as the)' did b~fore the· leag~e Cross won the championship, haH and Gerry Tobin leC! half. of AII·Newfoundland football

ncll' ptch,. which is PCi" muvcd from the .Ayre Athlet.c Guards took over next three The forward linc has 3 juniors will be played on Saturday. lorated. 11'111 he in lip G~ounds. They Will try \? stal't years. SI. Pat's won it in 1960, and two regulars from last sea· St. Pat's will host lhe nell

shapp for Ihe opcnin~ game. t~IS ~eason ~y bl'oadcaslmg to· Feildians 1961 and St. Pal's son back for action. :'IIike Kin· Island AIl·Stars in the first gra" has been cut. goal nIght s opemng game. again iast season. sella is outside righl. Mike of their two game, total goal

erc"ii'd. field lined I Now that everything is set . Illfaloney inside right. Kinsella series for the right to arl· bi~~rh,,, mOl'cd up from tasi for a bright looking 1963 sea· SI. Pat's coach Bren ~ur!lS I played one senior game last vance inlo the Division

PenpCIT~1! pitch for 01'. son there ar~ just two things has ~eleased. a strong .hn~up season while :lIaloney saw r~~· finals, of thl' fi~ld with a rail that will decide best season for hiS openmg game With all ular action and has a "oDd St. Pat's, after discllssions

bl'l'a pla:ed on thr othl'r. ever, th~ support of the fans but two of, last year's regulars. scoring boot. n I with the St. John'!. Football . net, donalrd hy Colonial and the standard of play from slated to kick. Jim "Chowder" Finlay. the League, have namell Buck·

will he placed on th~ the players. b h Crusaders top scorer last sea· master's Field as their home Baek etween t e uprights is While St. Pat's will he start. the top rated John Browne. son is back at center. Triekv pitch for Saturday's cneoun·

ing the season in search of Protecting Browne at fullback Pat Hearn is inside left and ter. The second. game of the their second straight title the are two youngsters in Kevin Bernie Bennett outside left. series will likely be played on Crusaders will be looking for Phelan and Ron Rossiter. Ros. Spares are: Tom McGrath, Mike Bell Island. their first championship since siteI' saw regular action last Hearn and Ron Baird. NAFA Eastern Vlce.Presi·

l\Uke Power started for the Crusaders and took the defeat. He went five and two.third inn· ings allowing 11 runs on ten hits and four free passes while striking out one, Robin Short finished up being charged with one run and three hits while having two strikeouts. i

It was a batters' night. Phil \' Leonard paced the swingers with a foul' for five perform· \ anee for the winners while Yab· sley, Campbell and Currie chip· ped in with a pair of hits. Pat Hurley was tops for the Crus· aders with three singles in five I trips with Gordon Breen, Rum· i

sey, Short, and Barry ~Iaunder i having two safeties each.

(Box Scorcs)

[' Guards: AB R H E D. Yabslcy, 2b 6 2 2 1 J. Grant, ss 5 1 1 1

. D. Tinklin, 3b 5 1 1 0 1. .Campbell, c . 4 2 2 0 J. Winter, lb 4 0 1 0 P. Leonard, If 5 1 4 0 P. Currie, cf 5 2 2 0 B. Campbell, rf 3 1·0 0 G. Lewis, rf 1 0 0 0 A. Thompson, p 4 2 0 0

Totals 42 12 13 2

Holy Cross: G. Breen, rf, lb 5 3 2 1 J, Rumsey, 3b 5 0 2 2 R. Short, 1 h, p 3 1 2 0 B. Maunder, sS 4 0 2 2 B. Robson, c 5 0 0 0 P. Hurley, cf ~ 1 3 0 T. Spratt, rf 3 0 0 0 P. Ryall, rf 2 0 0 0 R. Maunder, 2b 4 1 1 0 M. Power, p 2 0 1 0 B. Neville, if, rf 2 0 0 ()

Totals 39 6 13 5 Umpires: Kiss, W. Williams,

C, Williams, Power.

TO.NIGIIT'S GMIE Feildians and SI. Bon's are

scheduled for to· night's senior baseball at 7:00. Feild have a 4.1 win over Holy Cross so far, while St. Bon's stopped SI.

Enlrance to the pilch will bc t.he Go:r A I'e, gute. ~o

Will be admitted ria the . of ,rales Street )late. Ion ror the ::amc will he

for adl:1ts and 5c. for . A hleachel' seat wi;1

adult; lOr. with childl'~n admitted 10 the seats fr~e

only if they arc ac· romll3ni".1 by adults.

__ .. __ ... ___ ~ __ . season with Phelan seeing little Gcrn' Smith, organizer of the dent, Dee ftlurphy. said last

Grft"en Edges play. referee's association and ref·' night that the game will start ... eree.in.chief will do the whistle at 3:00 p.m. on Saturday, "in

Tom Angel will be the team's tooting for the opening game, order to allow the Bell Island

R 6 5 general, playing center half. Hc Thursday night St. Bon's meet team to return home on the

. Bon's stopped st. Pat's 4·2. Ron Butler is expected to start for SI. Bon's while Bili Wheeler wiil likely see mound duty for Feild. angers - will be flanked by Ed Shaptcr United. regular ferry schedule".

at right half and Pat MarshaU at left half. Shaptcr played with Guards last season. and DiPaolo Promises 'To

Siki Each per,!]n attending the me 11'111 he gil'en tickets at BELL ISLAND - (staff)-

gate an~1 for the chilrln'n After seeing Rangers score five. h night two fOCithal1s: times in the first inning, Green

C . dra,I'n for and t!IC got the winning tally in the \\lIlt have tickets on 12 ninth frame and upset the lead·

TRAOE UP 'new MfRe 60 I 6 H,.

MfRC "0 , 9.B Hr MfRC %00, 20 HfI

MfRe 3S0 I 3S HP MER( SOO , SO HP MEIIC 6S0 , 6S HP MfRC SSO , 85 HP MERC 1000 I 100 HP

ers of the Bell Island Softball League In a 6·5 encounter on Monday.

Jim Delahunty was the win· nin~ hurler with Dave Slade taking the loss, Rangers with 28 points arc on top of the league with Green next on 20 points) and Va1ley completing the circuit on ten points.

and played several seasons with Holy Cross. Marshall is a veter· an of the senior loop and is rated as one of the best half· backs in the league.

The forward line will be the same as last season which means plenty of scoring power. Bernie Marshall has the out· side Icft position, bard working Dick Maloney has inside left, Joe Browne center, Dave Ryan, the team's hero last season will play inside right and Steve Angel outside rig~t. Fred White

SBAA Midget Soccer Meet

Skin "Rep "There's more than one way

to skin a cat .. even if he is a 'hep cat· like this Siki charact· er," was the way Ilio Di Paolo replied to "Sweet Daddy" Siki's comments on their main bout event at the Stadium on Thurs· day night.

Siki promised a victory over Di Paolo yesterday and the Ital. ian grapier shook off Siki's words with a chuckle, "I'm not worried .about anything that Siki has to say. The tactics he's known to use when he gets 'in the ring arc my biggest worries. t like a good, clean fight but

Cat" slated to take on the popular Irish grapier, John Foti and like Siki, O'Tooole has promised a victory.

"St. John's wresling fans just don't appreciate m)l fine style," O'Toole complained last week. "r give them a good ~how and their money's worth hut still they don't treat me right. I've been in some placcs where the fans just loved my style and if St. John's fans appreciated good wrestling I'd be a real favorite here too."

Both the main bout and the semi.final fight arc two of three fall events with the Siki·Di Paolo match having no time limit and the O'Toole·Foti bout being a 45 mInute affair. To start the night "Magnificent" Duke Noble will meet Tony Par sis in a on fal, 20 minute time limit bout.

PHIL CURRIE PHIL LEONARD

MEN'S FIRST QUALITY

SUEDED LEATHER

HOBO no {l' r.,." "I D rv'i~'

~1EN-I1ERE IS YOtJR OPPORTV:\ITY TO GET A PAIR OF TOI' QUALITY SUM;\IEh CASUALS ,rf ,\ BIG, BIG SAVING. THESE SUEDB LEATIlER HOBJ BOOTS ARE SO LIGHTLY CONSTltUCTED THAT THEY'RE PEltFECT FOR SU~1I\IER STEPPI~G. WE HAVE TIIE~I IN BL,\CK AND GREE~ WITH FLEX IBLE FOMI RUBBER SOLES. SIZES 6 TO 11.

CLEARING AT

SPECIAL SUEDE OXFORDS with sturdy rubber soles and heels available in sizes 6 to 11, colors black and brown and sell·. ing at the July clearance price of

• • a pair

STORE HOURS

A special meeting of all play· this would be too much to ex· ers who have registered for the pect from Siki so I'll be prepar. St'. Bonia midget football series ed for any trick he mllY usc." has been called for tonight. All Thursday r,ight's main bout plajlers ,who ( have slgne~ up promises to be a real thriller must be at the School at 7:00, with both grunt· 'n groan 'men and any adults Interested in bringing ski11, experience and helping the group are invited to strength into the battle. Both . attend also. will be out for a win and the

Plans call for five' teams to sparks should fly when they play in the setup as 115 pupils meet at the Stadium on Thurs·

TOMIUY O'TOOLE

Back again as referee for the Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday: and Saturday card will be Tiger Tasker. The 8;30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m,

BUILDING I)awe Bldg"

MATERIALS LTD., Box 414, st. John's,

Street, 8w US!.

of the School have registered. day. night. . One game will be played each While the main event is a top morning at Shamrock Field. I notch. match, the seml·final

fight, also promises to prqvidc action apJ.cnty, Tommy O'Toole, who hJS won few fallS with his rough 'n tumble style of wrest· ling over the past few weeks is

sale oC tickets for the card will I d 0 30 open at the Stadium on Thurs. Fri ay-:"9: 0 ~.I1l. to 9: p.m. ,;. , :. day at 9 a.llI. I . l-____________ ........ _'""!"' .....

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Page 8: ,. Alk It witI THE DAIIJY NEcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · REPORTS TRICKLE OUT alive opposition will seek at I uary, 1969; removal of the reo -or approval

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-THE· DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, JULY 10, 1963

;;' Ii.

.t\nn Landers Your Problems'

Dear Ann Landers: 1 have been happily married for 20 years, My problem is an unusual one. My husband seldom lauihs.

He slta with a ha\{·smile while others are in ncar hysterics OVllf· something they find hilarious. Naturally everyone wonders If HE Is crazy-or If THEY are. This behavior has baffled me for years. Lately it has become downright maddening.

, I've considered an. the poSsibilities and h~vc

eliminated them one by one. His teeth are nice·looking and' in excellent condition. HIs hearing is perfect. He II very. quick to grasp an idea. Nothing escapes him.

He claims he does not have a superior attitude and moreover he can't understand why his placidity bothers me. Can you give me some insight?-WIFE OF STONE FACE, .

Dear Wife: Reactions to pain, embarrassment, lorrow and humor, vary-depending on early Iralning and condltioning. I see no reason for you 10 be unhappy with your husband because his reo atllon5 are of • lower voltage than yours or your friends,

This Is I\'hat Lord Cheslerfield said about lRullhter In "Letter To His Son":

"Lond laughter Is the mirth of the mob, who Who are only pleased with smy things; fol' true wit or g/lod sense ne"er excited a laugb since Ihe ere· atlon of file world. A man of parts and fashion I, therefore only seen 10 smile, but never heard to laugh," . . ... .

Drar Ann Landers: am a store manager with I • !icky problem.

A man Who has been employed by this firm for almost 18 years is a notorious Romeo, He is competent In his work and has seniority, which complicates mat­lers. I've had to fire three young women in the past 21 months because they became involved lVith him.

Currentl)' he is hot on the trail of a middle·aged tmplo)·ee. They lea"e logelher fol' coffee breaks twice • day and everyone knGws they are dating outside the store, The man's intentions are not honorable and I hate to see him make a fool of this nice woman.

She needs the job and I don't lVant 10 fire her. I tan't fire him. Yet as store manager I feel I should not allow Ihis affair to fiourishright under my nose. What are my responsibilities?-TORN.

Dear Torn: Your responsibilities are to ton· tlnue 10 manage the store aDd let the employec5 mlnage their own Iives-e\'en though thy are doing a poor job IIf It.

Firing the woman would not put an end to this affair. It would only add to her problems. Stand up Ind help her pick up the pieces.

* • * • Dear Ann Landers: I'm a girl 16 who has a prob·

lem I'm ashamed of. I hate my best friend. Ginger and I have been best friends since grammar school but in my heart I despise her because she has stolen every boy friend I ever had.

I don't know if Ginger goes after my boy friend! on purpose or if it just happens. But it seems we can both know a boy fOf years and when 1 slart liking him Ihen she gets interested, too,

In April this dreamy fellow moved here from Michigan and I was the first girl he dated, We got along :~reat and I was on the verge of getting his 1.D. bracelet. ,The next thing I knew he had asked Ginger to ,the wind.up dance which is the biggest blast in I junior girl's whole life.

Now they are going steady and I am not. Please lell me what to do.-ROBBED,

Dear Robbed: No girl can "steal" a boy friend. You lose out because the boys lose Interest. If It weren't Ginger Il would be somebody else. Examine your relationships and try to learn why they fei! • plft. THIS is your real problem.

III • • •

Are you going steady? Making marriage plans? If 10, ~end for ANN LANDERS' booklet, "Before You Marry-I! It Love Or Sex?", enclosing wIth your request 21i cents In coin and a long, se\{·addressed envelope.

Ann Landers will be glad to help you with your problems. Send them 10 her in care of Canada Wide FeRture~, 231 SI. James Street West, !liontreal, Que.! tnelouina a stamped, ~cU·addressed envelope.

NOW PLA YING'

Also-UP-TO-THE-MINUTE NEWS.

TIMES O.F SHOWS Plealt notel-One evening show daily

. 'starting at 7.30. Matin.e 1 p.m.

Admission Prices .for this Engagement Ev:ening-Adults 1.50, ,children 15c. Matinee-Adults 1.00, children 15c.

NEXT ATTRACTI,O'N "ESCAPE. FROM EAST BERLIN", WITH

. DON MURRAY..;.CHRISTINE KAUFMANN -SUSPENSJ.-THRILLS..:.EXCITEMENT. I

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Kerchief caps are takiug over ill the summer outdoor scene. The cap with the "little girl" look (left) is a softly brimlllcll white pique cloche, held in place with IVllile cMHon tics. For luncheon or evcning. small whitc pillbox (center) is

kCllt ill place by Ilolka dot scancs tied in a pussy cat bow. The classically rllie berct (right) goes to the beach. a~ a polka dot kCl'chid rail that is ~oft1y drapcd and tied jaun. till' under the chin. These caps offcr prclty protection.

Kerchief Caps Tllwart Summer Breezes BY HELEN HENNESSY

The gal in the old song may hal'e been a beauty with the wind in her hair. But some breezy day ride bare·headed in an open car ami see h v w beautiful YOU look. You'll hal'e enough knots in y 0 II " trcsses to do a Boy Scout proll·J.

Tricky scarves and turbans have been designed to prol~ct lhe hair dul'ing summer out· door activities. but top honors in this field go to the new kcr· chief caps.

One group of these cal'S creates a cover up for h air while motoring, shopping or sunning on the beach. Another clear, or opaque, rectangles ~r triangles.

Designs are planned ! 0 r differing architectural styles and are prefabricated. with an aluminum frame to simplE.,' installation,

A building supply house w,ll show vou the di[[erent style, of win;lows and skylights aVJ!I· able. variety he comes sheer enchan·

tment for evening I"hcn wllrn loosely dl'aped over the should­ers.

Jaunty visor caps (or t i1 p.

beach tie with chiffon, rna· dl'as plaid or gingham check:; sightseeing there are beret;. For motoring. shopping or pillboxes. cloches anel fedoras. All arc done in the best of summer fabrics - cotton Rod chiffon p I' i n t s with piqu~. light straws 01' sh,lntung· And all can be tied on securely '0

take yllu through a day of sports and fun.

Have A Home For Summer, Too BY KAY SlIERWOOD

The idea that two homes per family is not such all ex­travagance gains ground each year. In parts of the country which are near scenic, resort, and sporls vacation grounds, many families are investing In some sort of second home.

Tt may be a weathered ~ot­tage behind a sand dune, a soaring brand·new A·shaped mountain hideaway, a house· boat or, for the restless. a camper 01' Ira vel trailer, Sev-et'al homemakers I've' met this summer tell me they pay fOf' their vacation housing by renting when they are not in residence.

To qualify as "vacation" ,. housing. however, the place must present an absolute minimum of housekeeping. One homemaker 1 visited at her be a c h cottage on the In Ihis colorful model vacation bouse, modern materials offer Pacific Ocean has left the in- minimum malnlenance, lasting color. Spacc-sa\'ing slalnless lerior of her shell house large- steel galley sink Is circular basin set In counter • ly unfinished. with exposed beams and studs left to weath. arc built into a travel trailer, vocation housing because of er to a mellow brown, (No says another homemaker who their low maintenance as well redecorating). She Ii k e s vacations in hers from Maine as their color and convenience. straw mats . for the floor. to Miami. There is a place Plastic laminates, fiber gldss Furnishings are in soft "fad· for' everything and every- synthetic fiber fabrics wnich ed" . blues, purples, and gold thing must be put back in its won't mildew, foam rubber, canvas lind cotton. Further place fOI' the eompac~ly nOll-rusting metal tubing. vinyl sun.fadin~ won·t hurt them. planned interior to be comlor- tile flooring to mention a (ew. Driftwood and shells fl'om tile lahle. Formica was lIsed in rne beach are accessories. ~[an)' modern matcl'ial~ are model plan to face cupboard

Neatness and efficiency findin/! their way into modern doors (driftwood grained lam-_____ .. ______________ . ____ ._. _____ .__ inate outlincd the dool's in seal hrown.) The counterlop and little buill·in table IV ere (ione . in the same materials, the argument being lhat such 8 surface 1001\5 handsome and praclically take:; care of itself.

~!al'ine hardware makes an appropriate and good-Ion king

NEWFOUNDLAND'S FRIEND.L Y THEA.TRI change for conventional door handles in this installation.

----------------------------------------

TO-DAY -------------------------------------

Its Judy! SMR! MillAR '"' lAWRENCE IlIR~A~I.",.

JUDY GARLAND DIRK BOGAR DE

f[CHNICOtOR' , •• PANAYISION' fltIUU. I~r, UNIUD.utISlt

"I COULD GOON

SINGING"

ALSO-NOVELTY. EVENING SHOWS: .7 O'CLOCK--9.00

MATINEE: 2 P.M.

. HENRY FONDA-CHARLES LAUGHTON,... DON MURRAY-WALTERPIDGEON-PET­ER LAWFORD-GENE TIERNEY IN "AD­VISE AND CONSENT" - THRILLS-EX­CITEMENT-LAUGHS.

'j .;~ Spirit of the Lord is :., 011

me, because . . . he hath sent me to heal the broken­hearted, to preach deliverance to the capti I'en. . . . to set at liberty Ihem that are bruised. (Luke 4:18.)

PRAYER:' 0 God, may our words and our deeds help to set at liberty tho~e who are hound by seif. sin. ignorance, and disease. We pray in the name of Christ, nul' Redeemer. ·Amen.

Manners By MILLETT

. Weddings call for an aide t., keep a rec­ord for thank-you !lol~.for gifts.

When evening comes. k~r­chief caps go glamorous in nr· ganza drancd with flowing pastel chiffon-a pretty. s,lft look that's just right for dinner and dancing.

It's n rare woman who.,e hair can lake a beating from the elements and tl'iumpn. Lyric wl'iters may nrcam o! the beauty of windswept hair. If you're wise. you'll let lhe breeze ruffle YOUI' chiffon drap. cries while your carefully al·· ranlled tresses stay in plare,

The Clothes Poll

BY HELE!'.' HE:\,'IiESSY

I've seen trinkels maLic of everything from cardboard to live beetles. But it seems Olll' enterprising tcen'agel's have found another avenue to ex-

.. plore. When your daughter tell s

you she LOVES chicken and could eal it every Sunday. let this litlle bird warn you thaI she's "boning up" for summer. She'll get a whopping -jewelry wardrobe out of the leftovers.

The kids bave learned that home dyes and a touch of im­agination weare a magic spell Ol'el' such mundane objects as chicken bones and produce daz· zling necklacL~. earrings. bra­celets and pins. Wait until you see their sudden proficiency at store and sink! Here's how it's done: The bones are boiled and

then cleaned thoroughlv with strong detergent. They are then dyed alll' preferred colors in an enamel pot, following package directions and using a dye that contains the T·7 catalyst to speed dyeing net ion.

Bone up for slimmer!

You'll soon find that the household belle is coupling her sudden enthusiasm for chicken with a corresponding disinter­est in television. She'll be busy, instead, working with her bones to decide which to con­neel with what tn make an in· teresting doodad.

Hip bonc'. I'm told,. h~d a rlelieate frcc·fol'm shalle and flat surface. making them ideal for pins. Pin backs. necklace clasps and eal'rin~s ll1otmtin~s ran be bought in arls and craft~ stores. Four hip bnne~. centered with

a pearl, can be glued to sturdy cardboard backing to make a brooch.

Chicken neek bones are made to order for amateur jewelers. They have holes in the middle-perfect for a neck­lace. I looked, and it's true.

To make a Cleopatra neck· lace, leg bones can be dyed red, orange and yellow and pierced wilh holes at one end. Dad's workshop will. be invaded for a hand drill and the smal­lest bit. The bones are strung on 8 heavy black cord and a bead olaced between each bone.

All 'yoll' need supply are thr dye, dad's power tools and a "hick en in ever.I' 1I0t. ~Iake no "ones ~bout.it, t;le kids wili tin the rest.

1I0NEY~IQONING

lIIr. and Mrs, Ian McAllisler who were married at 51. ~lichaels and All Angels Church 'on July 2. are at pre· sent spending lheir honey· moon in Paris. England. lIIrs. McAllister is the former J eanet!e HudslJ~, daughter of Mr. and ·)!rs. :0;10 Hudson, 8 McKay Stret.j

• • •

lhe pruccctl~ was pa;l>ed to Mrs. Vera Perlin, ne'''n~. of the Newfoundland tion fOf Ihe Help of cd Children.

Music for the dance supplied by the bers. Some very prizes were awarded the event. These were cd by the following: do's, Pat's Beauty

RETURNS HO~m Long's Hill; Ayre's, BU\lTl~'·,Ic·.' W,s Sally Nickerson of the

city arri\'ed in SI. .Tohn's on Monday from Sackville, Nell' Brunswick, where she was at· len'ding an instrumental mus· k camp.

• • • AT CORNER BROOK

:'Ili5s Francie Tobias of the l'ily i, at present in Corner llrool. where she is the guest of ~Irs. S. C. Whitters. Whil{' ill Corner Brook. Francie was inter\'iewed by Doris Janes in her interview program on Ille C.B.C. She will also be a guest artist on a C.B:C. T.V. program on July 16.

• • • ATTENDING. WEDDING

Thompson's Jewellery, Mara-lIIartin Drugs, ald's Wholesale Drug,. dale Pharmacy, Atlantic Market and :\Iary's Farm.

• • • 12 YEARS OI,D

:llan)' happy return' of i day to J efirer FOglr'i!.· Poplar Avenue, 'II ilrJ ' brates his 12th birthdal" day, July 10. Gree,in~,' , from his' mom and dad, and :Ill'S. Arch Fogwill. from his sister Lynn.

0]\\ VACATION Mrs, :\!argaret Bowman

the city on Tuesday hy Tel' ~lrs. Charles Bell from Cal·

tdonia, Nova Scotia, arrived in the eity ;\londay to attend her grandaughter's wedding. She is the guest of Mr. and ~Irs. Donald Nickerson of 51 Cornwall Ave.

for an extended vacation (",===== Nova Scotia, risiting ::iI lives and friends.

• • • IN TOWN

C. S, Harris of Gander '"( ·1IIiI:D1IrES,DA'Y

• • • in the city on a brief bu!it!:i.~""----­trip recently and was ered at Karwood Ca bins .

• • • 2 YEARS OLD

MARRIED AT I.'\~lt\LINE St. Joseph's Church Lamaline was the scene of a \'ery pret­ty wedding on July 6. when Nora. daughter of 'II'. and ~Il's. William .T. Fleming, AI· l~n's Island, became the bride of Thomas. slln of ~Ir. and the late Anne Harnett,. Lord's Cove. Rev. Fr. John Hanton, P.P .• officiated. Following the honevmoon the happy couple will . reside at Carol Lake. Congratulations are extended.

David McDonald, Allancii Road, celebrates his 2:: birthday to.day, July 10, I~ love and best wishes are &

tended by his mommy, Christine. Brian and Pel!!

·11.11 ..... :1 ne • • • YISITING HERt:

Mr. and !lirs. John P. B(i 1I. __ rrt:v It: w rOll'iez, their son Peter .:: ~Irs. Sophie Josinski ~." .. :III,"'r-"un"uul'"

• • • OUT OF HOSPITAL

:\11'5. Peter Jackman. who has been a patient at SI. Clare's ~Iercy Hospital where she recently undenvent ~ur­I!ery. has returned to her home on Sudbury Street where she is now convales·

to St. John's from ~lassachusetts to 'pend week's holidays with ·rpl',;i,,~"'rJ:!IU~~.I.\"!.~ While here they are gueltt Karwood Cabins. L1. ...... ~JL""';J\

cing. . • • • 'ro.DAY'S BIRTHDAYS

~Iany happy returns ol the dav 10 Jennifer Walsh. Val· erie Winter, John O'Flaherty, Carmel Anderson and Paul LaRoque, who celebrate their birthdays to.day, July 10.

• • • BARN DANCE

A barn dance sponsored by the employees of the General Hospitai wa~ held at the Old ~Iill Nite Club July 1. Pro­ceeds from the dance were devoted to the retarded chil­idren's fund. Following the dance, a cheque representing

Chic Chat

• • • 17 YEARS Ol,D

Many happy return! ~I day to Elaine Cook. who brates her 17th birlhdar day, Juiy 10 .

• • • TO OTfAWA

Mr, and Mrs. Bill ~on and their children present in Ottawa on holidl! Mr. Mathieson is the marl!!' of the Newfoundland Hote:

• $ •

OUT OF HOimTAL Mrs. Hedley Drov~r, Ki!r

Bridge Road, was ''''''''''';'.2J from the Grace Hospital!'t terday with her infant bi: which was born on }loniJ: July 1.

• • • . ON HOLIDAY.. .. ..

~Ir. and Mrs. G eOl'~~ and their family, from Grand Falls on

·Fish'eries E Q-"I read reams of adl'ice

to girls who are too plump to wear shorts. But I hal'c the opposite trouble. I'm skinny and angular and look awful in shorts of any length. What can I wear to look attractive at beach parties and picnics?"­E.W.

to spend a week's , visiting friends and relati'! in the city. While here 1:[ are guests at Karwood [r ins. ""'or-'vll'"

A-Dear E.W.: The new tent dresses or pyramid shilts' should be a blessing for any girl with your problem, They come in cotton, denim and ter­ry. They're full enough to dis· guise any figure fault and they're mighty pretty. too. You can take your choise of solids. poka dots. stripes or prints. With good - looking beach sandals and a pert bow in yOIII' hair. YOll can forget th~t you need to gain a few few pounds. You'l\ lonk fine ~s you are.

!lASTRO-GUIDE"

• • • HAPPY BIRTHDAY lIIany happy return; of .

day to Cecile Fox, who (OJ

brates her 19th birthday: _day, June 10.

• • • ON BUSINESS

Mr. Gerry Chri;tml!: !leverage Sales, is al prEir.. out of town on bll<ine!~; ,. . . Y'S MEN

Thc Y's Mcn'~ Club hold their first summer ing at 6.3!J p.m. at the Feildian a hig softball gamc are welcome to ailrnd

-_._-_._--For Wee/nelday, Juiy 10

Present-For You and Yours •.. If you've carefully " " charted your course, you may

your heart's desire during ........ period. Frien ds you've

known for many years will give concrel~ assistance as well liS

verbal encouragement. Don't be bashful about accepting either.

I mschllrge your duties before £D­on to social pursuits.

: Past ... Fisl fights in the House Future . The nUtI,l'e: t of Representatives were not un- visitors t() Washington, D.C. , in the I3te 1800s, this :'car is c~peeted 10 ~, ~any members used \(> 'carry !cast on~·third lesa than ,: . pistols and somelimes a member in 19~Z, when the cil\' W3" thoroughly caned. A3 rate 7,500,000 tourisf5. The

, as 1911, one member was ac- hIS crime wave is thollEht II)'

I cnmpanied by two large dogs. I factor. I

The D4Y Under Your Sign I ARIES (Born March 21 t. AP,!'il 19)

Don',t expeu too much or y.cu II be dis. lpe:.llnltd under (lfetmt lunars. TA~RU.S [April 20 t. M,y 201 Soelal life! may intnJer~ wilh thl! ;~.

, but,oo nted to let oU stam now :am! then.

GEMINI IMIY 21 t. Jun" 21) Pu!h ahul witll a project th::tt may 11.n~ consIderable infh-!~ce on the hUtlte.

CANCER (J ... 22 10 July 21) You &etDt to be pulling ane W'S\' while JIO!D .... 01 .. JIIln. the other. Compro· mue LEO f July 22 to Aog. 21) Don't be a ttiek·in·the·mud. (Jet out and rain(le 'With il1ttrutinC people •

VIRGO IAug. '.2 t. S.pt. 221 0& Y4ur ben 10 maintain "arm';;nr ;1. tbe 11omt. althDuth k is difficult. .

.--- .... --.- .... ------~-~ -- -........ - - .. - .... ~

In 1 News,

Wor Toda:

-DllVl. Bun and

For MarinI to V

....... ;<031I1an S

-t;tlOnlIDg L

-,..'.-----~--------.

Page 9: ,. Alk It witI THE DAIIJY NEcollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · REPORTS TRICKLE OUT alive opposition will seek at I uary, 1969; removal of the reo -or approval

~ I~·i~:-.cd U\r,.

· 11. rr~siden; ~·.11l~ Associ!. :;1 <>! Retard.

''',Ing: :, .111!Y Salon. · " " nllwrinrl '·"\'l'I1~r~'. 0'. ":~<. )lrDon.

1 'r\lg~. Pa~k, \:';mtic Fi5h

. I' ",:': s olli~ry

,., ,:-n~ ('!! lh!

I'~\\"i:, M II il;) rrl~

"irlhrla), Ie, :. t',,: 1m:, rOllll

',n:l oatl. ~!r. · r,'~\\'ill. and

lInn.

nl1l1'l11an I!h ""b~' hy 1,\:,\

.d ,aratilln il \ "Iting r!h.

· . ,~ l~~nd"r ~'I!

i :\rid bu~me!1 '\:~l! was l'c~i!t.

,Ii rabim. • • Il

;~:,:,i. AIl.nct.l. • .dC; hi~ ~r.d I . .1\1ly H·. and

'.\ l:-.hr~ arc ~x· .",1:1\1\\)', clardy, " anel Petn

I. I' · .' ,'l1n r BriJ· ·,'1\ Prle:- and ·,r"ki mlltortd '''''11\ AdamI, : ,) 'pI'nct I

, "lth rel.tinl

,I 1)

- . .. ". Rill · l'lnldrcn art at • ~ II' a on holidl.!, ., l~ Ihe mana~et ':\ndland Hole\.

• •

· . . HTIIIlA r :'Y rrlurn~ 01

.:,. Fox. who l

\(llh birthday

• • •

• • •

'T.t ~ummer , ~.1\1. Wrd '·10" Grounds

"11 ~amc. 'r tn attend.

By

: he nun,Le-t "'n~IOn, D.C. (01

.' \ r~et~d 10 he at I ~ le~ than it ""tiS

: n the c:il~

1.001.2%1 , f ... S·h~ t' f'W'1 hnlth r.""',

'. II I. "10', 21) ~:-:'I~d .hout "f'"I"l

.. !!l:~ of Irn~i.Cn.

I NO'. 22 .. Doc. ~(";"C with unuS'Ull : '.,~ eTc:rrwhttt

'Doe. 22 tD Ju.

THE DAILY NEWS, ST. ,TOHH'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, JULY 10, 1!l63-"" T .

PREPARE FOR THAT OUTSIDE

WITH THE FINEST PAINT FROM

The Great Eastern Oil CO. t ltd.

• Uiling

on

eBC IlA Y, July 10th.

rather SPl'!'\; Scoreboard

Il-l'lmu:al Clock <_"·rn.rillll Prel'iew

Devotions Archers :\cw; and Direct

liN' With Willis Broalkasl

Seren! 'Ie

:>-,Il"'oru Alb\lm :\cws & Weather

;)-~llIrjl~\, Barr.ler '" On Tapp Hendezl'ous

9-llonll,nIOn o~s, Time

Ill' Illlez\,Il\ls Star Show an's Diar), :\1'11'5

"1.. T.·"" Canada ~Iatinee Canada Matinee

Regional News J:uundup

ic In The Air

PAINT DEPT.

Party 6.00--News Highlights and

Weather 6.03-National News 6.1O-Sports 6.20-News 6.30-Diclt Earle Club 93 7.00-Ncws Highlights 7.01-Dick Earle Club 93 7.30-News 8.00-Jamboree 8.30-National News 8.3l-Jamboree 9.00-News 9.01-Nfld. Soirce !I.45-News

IO.OO-National News 10.I5-Pick Of The Pops

\

IO.45-Sports 10.55-Lcltcrs & lIlessages 11.00-N ews Highlights

I ll.ot-Music In The Night I 12,OO-News .

1

12.05-I\IUSiC In The Night 12.30-News

112.31-lIlusic In The Night I I.OO-News Highlights I l.OI-Queen and Sign Off 1-.-;..------! V 0 C M Dial 590

WEDNESDAY, July 10th.

A.~l. 6,28-Sign On 6,30-News and Weathcr B.35-The Bill Allan Show 6.45-Worid Of Sport 6.40-Morning Meditation 6,50-The Bill Allan Show B,55-News 7.00-The Bill Allan Show 7.l5-World Of Sport

7.15-News Headlines 7,31-Dack To The Bible 8.00-Ncll's Headlines 8.01-Cream Of The Crop,

News and Weather 10.OO-The Night Show,

News and Weather 10.45-World Of Sport 10.55-News 11.00-RCAF Tower Torhay,

Weather Report 11.02-Big Top Ten 1l.30-News Headlines 11.31-The Night Show,

News and Weather l.05-Sign orr

C JON· TV WEDNESDA Y, July lOth,

4.25-Pastor's Study 4,30-ScarleH Hill 5.00-Sblrley Temp~e's Story

Book 6.00-CJ Jamboree G.30-The World Of Sport 6.40-News Cavalcade 7.00-Wagon Train H.OO-Local News 8.l5_N:atlonal News H,30-To 'rell The Truth 9.00-My Three Sons

lO,OO-Front and Celltre 10.aO-Ben Casey 1l.30-News Magazine 12.00-Explorations 12.3B-News and Weather l2.40-Pastor's Study l2.45-Slgn Off

WIN '~AT'

BRIDGE

By OSWALD JACOBY Newspaper Entcrprise Assn.

NORTH I\IA73 ¥Q32 +6 ",J97fi42.

WEST (D) EAST

'" Q I\IKI092

s

"KI08H "J95 '+ K Q J 7 5 3 + A 10 9 B 4 ",K ",5

SOUTII I\IJ8654 ., A6 +2 "'AQI083

North and South vulnerable West North East Soulh 1 " Pass 1 1\1 Pass 2 + Pass 4" H~ Pass Pass Double Pass PaSS Pass .

Opening lead-+ K

One' of the main differences I between malch point duplicate i and rubber bridge is that a duo I plicatc player can take any sort of wild gamble with the certain knowledge that all it can cost him is a boltom score 011 one hoard while a rubber bridge player might have to mortgage the family home to payoff his losses If he tried

I anything of this sort.

At duplicate, when East fol .. 'I' lowed his one spade response

to his partner's opening heart bid with a jump to four hearts Soulh decidcd that he was be­ing fixed. Iu certain circles. a

, psychic spade response is u~ell I aner partner opens with one 'heart and South decided that

CAPTAIN EASY ,-_ .....

\

I'L\' GST THEM FOF. I 1HIS.-eve"YEODY WHO

HAD ANYTHINCi 'TO DO WrTH IT!

. ."-

\ ... r;' . , '

,".'''' '" _ .. _._----------, S!·~ claims the ball hurts her hand!"

., .j;A Bv·LESI.IE TUm~ER

10MlioV, DON'T LISTEN TO ANY GARBAGE you HEAR ABOUT ME! DON'T BELIEVE

IOVI:RYTHING yeu HEAR!

By NEAL ADAMS

PEOPlE JUST GEr JEALOt:6 r:i'SUCCES5FUI­

MEi-J AND SPREAD Gl'ORIES ABOUT 'THEM l

By LEOl~ SCHLES1NGER W= CHIPPED IN SOM;; MONEY 5-50 'IOU CAN GO TO A MOYIE!

~~ ~~~==-.,,----------"----- .. -- ,,_. BY V. T. HAMLIN

, .

1 '. , , ,-.>

, , . . " ! :

7.20-The Bill Allan Show 7.30-News 7.35-Transportalion Report 7.3B-'fhe Bill Allan Show 7.45-World or SPOI't 7.50-The Bill Allan Show 7.55-News B.OO-RCAF Tower 'forbay

(Weather Hepor!) B.03-News (Nationai) B.OB-The Bill Allan Show 8.15-Sports Capsule

Missionaries' Work in Cuba Not Impeded

East had made such a bid.. So South took a deep breath and dived 10 a four-spade contract. East dnuhled and nllw South, stood by his guns.

iLLEY OOP ~=::==:::=;===::::::~;=:-:;--::::::;---------.--_ .. _.;;,;.: .. --.:...:., .... _--... ~;.;,.;.----' -'--' -" -,-"

IJ-T'ro~rall\ PI'el'iew ent Hill

!J.-~I,ustc 1n The El'ening :\e\\'s Hnd Weather

>-~'tOUl World Diary Today

''''''1101'," llulMin ii-JIIUSIC and Weather

For ~Iariners 10 Wed. Nile.

,-.... ".'110" String

!J.-(:umlin~ Little Vixen:

, Vizinczey 11)-.'11"';r. Program

and Sports Scoreboard

Off-O Canada­The Queen

Lewis Show. News, Sporls and W cather Reports

il-~llusi'e Fot' Millions Tunes &: Golden

Hits ~l1IPW' Highlights

Wiggins' Housewivli< Choice

News

~~~,;~amles(lI1 Comments

BakE,r's Notebook HiRhllahts Wlll8lnl' Matinee Highlllhts , NGlan', Weltern

dam~IGre"

U8-The Bill Allan Show 8,25-News and Weather B.30-Hlt Tune Of The Day 8,35-World Of Sport B,40-The BIli Allan Show 8.55-News and. Weather 9.00-Portals Of Prayer 9.03-The Bil! Allan Show 9.30-News Headlines 9.3l-The Bill Allan Show

IO.OO-News and Weather IO,05-Stork Club 10.1O-Five Roses Fiesta lO.l5-The Gary Parr Show lO.25-Anniversary and

Birthday 10.30-News Headlines 10;31-The Gary Parr Show 10.55-News and Weather 11.00--The Gary Parr Show ll,30-News Headlines 1l.31-The Gary Parr Show 1l.55-News and Weather 12.00-TheGary Parr Show P,M.

12.30-NeWs and Weather 12,301-The Gary Parr Show 12,45-Flshermen's Forecast 12,48-The Gary Parr Show 12.55-·News and Weather 1.00-News Summary 1.15-World Of Sport 1.30-News l.35-Transportation Report

and Travel Guide l.3B-The Gary Parr Show 2,OO-News Headlines 2,Ol-Prizes & Problems

On Parade 2.lO-Fivc Roses Fiesta U5-Prizcs & Problems

On Parade 2.30-Newl Headline. 2.31-Prizes &. Problems

On Parade 2.I15-News and Weather

· 3.00-BobCole Show 3.30-News Headlines 3.31-Bob Cole Show 3,55-News and Weather 4.00-Bob Cole ShQw

· 4,30-News Headline. 4.31-Bob Cole Show U5-News and Weather 5.00--Supper Club 1i.30-News Headlines 1i.31-Supp,er Club' MO-Robert GouletShqw 5.~FI8bermen's Forecast 5.48-Supper Club .

· IUI5-Newl arid'weather 8.00-Bulletin . Board . 6.1:1.-Movle News 8.15-World· Of Sport 8.30-Early Evenlna News

Roundup . 7.00-Flelschmann'.Rlddle

West opened the king of 'dla-MO~'l'REAL (CP)-W~rk .of monds .and (or somc reasun or

C~nad~an ~oman Ca.thohc ~tS- other East Ict him hold the slOnar:~s In Cuha IS not !~- trick. West shifted to a heart peded III any way, says Re\.: and South went up with dum­Gl11es Ouellet, superior-general:, 'Vhen th'ls held . th P' I my s queen. of the Community of e rles s I tple more things of Foreign Missions of Mont- on y a COlnl.c. to brl'ng home I were necess, , re;~ther Ouellet visited Cuba the four·spade contract. ,

. I South cashed dummy s ace and four other L8tm Amer can d d' d West's countries where his community of spades an loppe I

has missionaries. queen. A s:con~ spade was, He said missionaries in Cuhn won by East s klllg and East \

appear to be in good health and led his singl~ton club .. are obtaining enough fnod des-\ Sout~ studIed a whlle and I pite difficulties created by ra- rose WIth the aCC. When th,e tionlng king dropped South cashed hIS,

A shortnge of priesls hdS jack of spades, conceded onc: forced one change, he said. more spade trick and chalked 1

Their work now consists mainly up 790 points and a thoroughly of administer I n g sacraments undeserved top score. and teaching catechism. Catho­lic schools and CatholIc acllon groups have ceased ali activity,

The community has 19 priests and 19 Canadian nuns in two Cu~an dioceses.

To get YOllr copy of "Fun at Bridge" jllst scnd your name, address, and 50 eents to Os­wald J,acoby neader Service, care Dally News, P.O. Box 489, Dellt. A., Radio City Station, New York 19, N.Y.

By MERRILL BLOSSER FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS ,..-----"--,---rhr;........=;.=-. .. ',;.:~,;..;;.;.;~...:..:.."""'-'"<;l ''';'=-=='~'''':;;-'-:;';;;-'~-' ;,;;.:.....:..:..'-------~I

NOW WAATWASTf-\AT I!-lEN '(ou em COP( IT ALLWOR.D HE SAID Mour MY FOR. WOFD FRON\ f1!.,GE 2.~ O~ EYES,?," AND Aaour GUSHY. CRUSH I;\NaAZINE !. MY I.IPsr .. -ANDMY CQWLEX1ON~

James A. Garfield was only man in U.S. history simultane· ously president-elect, senator­elect and congressman from Ohio. CARD SENSE I: ~" ~[J 11~~~~~~ ____ 1-~Z~~

The asteroid Eros can come to less than 14 million miles from earth at its closest ap­proach; mueh nearer than Mars or Venus.

i-BARBS • By HAL COCHRAN

A young girl's diary Is filled with items she'd rather forget a few years later;

• * • People are more satisfied

. with their lot when there is a happy home built on It.

• • •

When-yOU -'coilsld~r' ail the little kids running around, a lot of time Is wasted on painting "Keep. Off The Grass" signs.

• • • General tightening stops

noise In your car, Uke leaving the . little kids home.

Q-The bidding has been: . I South West North l~ast MORTY MEEKLt 1. Pass 2 '" Pass 3 '" Pass 3. Pass

? You, South 11Old:

'AQ865 ,,109 +KQ7 ",K 9 4

What do you do? A-Bid three no trump, You

have no Interest III ra slam and every reasou to play the no­\.rUmp game.

TODAY'S QUESTION Your partner goes to four

no.truQlP, What do you do now?

Answer Tomorrow

.un.7'1J ! ." The narrow where two r cors could barely pass without colliding hav.e been replace.d by Ii wide ones where five or six can II collide ot·once.

I

SHORT hIBS

Fl<W! YOU1<e (COING TO HAVe l'D 6~ TO WINTI .. lfZQP. •• H~ AT IT

't-,' .. ~""

- ... "-'

I I i , I

I' I:

I

I I I I

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,

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IO-THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, JULy 10, 1963

--------- GLADY'S BEAUTY SHOI'PE , Acetylene and cor. Bond and Pres~ott Sis, Electric Welding Phone 8·4951-11·7898. Specl·

allzing m cold waving, hair FRY'S ENGINEERING styling, cutting and tillting,

,LTD. manicuring, facials etc., 14 Springdale St. Dial 8.203~ operators, no w,11t1ng.

I Contractors Supplies Buildinl!: Materia s UNITED NAIL

CHESTER DA WE LTD. I & FOUNDRY , For all your Building CO., LTD.

Requirements. HAMILTON AVE.

TOPSAIL cn. - SHAW ST, "Waco" 8-0161 9.1171 Steel Scaffolding, Ornamental

I Iron RalJings, Chain Link Fcnc· _____ I lng, Re·lnforcing Steel, etc.

_____ B_ar_he_r_S_h~op~ __ ALL SALES THE CENTRAL 8C\RBER EQUIP~fENT AND

SHOP-We arc now opera!,. • • J ing 10 chairs, you can be CONTRACTING LTD. assured of prompt, effic!. General Contractors, Engineers, eDt, SIlnitary service. N~ Equipment Rentals. waiting problem, 24 New TOPSAIL ROAD. Gowcr Sireet (Jpposite Ade. PHOlliES: 9.2000, 9·2009. !aide Motors Ltd. R Dry Cleaners

Bakery COMET

OU~ OWN BItEAD

Best by, "Taste Test" B~ked,by ,

EAST ~ND BAKe,RY, I LTD.

lleuuticians

CLEANERS For the Fastest most efficient Dry-Clean. ing and Shirt Service. Ph: 98017 - 98020

Dmg Stores

M. CONNORS Ltd. Prescriptions Pickup an,d

dellvery service. PHONE 8·2206

W S I Ii I Elect. Services e pee a ze n ________ _

Cold WaVis and I City Electrical all types of Balr' CO., Ltd. Styling. (Electrical Contractors)

LORETTA'S BE.-\. UTI SALON

DIAL 8·2302

Electric Repairs, to Ranges, etc,

PHONE 8·3767 86 Casey Street

For Rent Basement, Apartment,

267 Elizabeth Ave,~ opp, ~lemorial University- I

--------- Furnished or unfurnished,

LEARN TO DRIVE Phone 9 .. 0114 Female driver witb 15 years jly9,10,1l

driving expel'ienee, now ac· ••• ~."i;._ .cepting femaie pupils. wishing • to learn to drive.

Phone 916214

,

Crystal Palace N;~ht Club

Prompt Delivery On

r,oULDS ROAD OPEN 3 P.M. DAILY

The Crystal Palace gives the best Catering Service to

Weddings, Private Parties, DInners and Dances.

.. For Information contact

MRS.A.RYAN at 90024

jlylO,1mth

• STOVE OIL

"FURNC\CE OIL

• IRON FIRE~IAN DEATING EQUIPMENT

PARK LANES MOUNT PEARL

invites you to Bow] this Summer.

Open 9 a.m. Daily, 2 p.m. Sundays.

nINGO BO~ING-Cash JacJ..-pot. MOONLIGHT BOWLING-Tuesday,

Wednesday, Thursday, at 11:30 p.m. BIRTHDAY BOWLING"':" The new Birth­

day Party Craze-Bowling, Lunch, Gifts, 'Guidance by Bernice Cook­only $1.00 per child.

JUNIOR BOWLINGv9 a.m. to 1 p.m. daily, 25c. frame, free shoes.

FREE SUPERVISED NURSERY-In the afternoons. Morning and afternoon rune now available.

CALL

PARK LANES 9-i744 ",..-.IM ... , , ,,', ",' ,," .' , .. ~ .... --:,.. \: .. , ... ~ .. ~.

HEAP & PARTNERS (NFLD.) Ltd. Wiring Materials, Wire and

Cables, Motors, Startcrs, Lamps. Switches. I,ip,hting

Fixtures. ~tc WAREHOUSE: PRINCE'S ST.

DIAL 8·508H

James R. Tucker ltd. 27 Springdale St.

Electrical Fixtures and Supplies Well' Drilling Phone 85171

lr3,tf

G1ass

A. G. BARNES LTD. Plate, Safcty, Sheet Glass,

Mirror and PlexlglRss. 45 Blackmarsh Rd. Dial 9·3690

PALMER'S SERVICE STATION I T.V. Service

----

:Motor Cars

. English.1 Cary , ,Centre,' , ~fl,d'S O~y EXCIU]i~E!1gils, ,h

, Car Distribhtor' c.

M~TRO MQTORS.tTQ; , .MERRYMEETING R()AD~'

", phone 8.0378 8.03;11 },-, ... ".

Pianos and Organs

A. L. COLLIS & SON LTD.

Topsail Ril. lIial 9·5099 i We speciahzc in Washing, I

Simonizing, Greasing, i

Open lIaily 7.30 a.m.-1Z p.m: Wm. Sinnott, Service

Station nranager.

Complete servidng - Large stu~ks of acces:50ries always

available. Opcn daily from 8 a.m.

to midnight.

HARVEY'S IRVING SERVICE (Jim Harvey, Prop.)

Le:llarchant Road DIAL g·6056

RentaJs

HOUSEHOLD UTENSILS

Repl'esenlinr; thc worill's finest lInrllware-Sporting Gooll •• 1'1anos and Organs.

ST •. TOHN'S 1IF.. GRACE .\: HARRIS & HISCOCK Dial 9·Z161 Dial 5075 LTD.

. PROPANE GAS 11 169 Waler St. Phone 8,7352

T.V. Service SERVICE

TV Phone 8·6865 Day or night.

WEST END TEl.EVISION 'LTD. 705 WATER ST. WEST

Trucking

FRED SHEPPAHD'S TRUCKING Bonaventure Ave., St. Jobn's

Local al'lI long llistance. Vans, Stake, Dump, Plek·up and

Crane TrUCKS for hire. Dial 8·2109. Res.

Tires

INDUSTRIAL TIRE SERVICE

Atteriltion Contractors

I! For your Building Re-: I quirements, Paint and · Building Hardware see us.

HUSSEY'S PAINT AND HARDWARE

ME ANDERSOX

DIAL 9-0011

I N~-Co.

TAXIS SCOTS TAXI-Daily from

St. John's to Bonavista, I Bonavista to SI. John's. SI. John's call 8·2352; Catalina call 5555, 5336. jne19,lmth

Pipe SC)LlD AND

PERFORAm ALL TYPEl

FITTINGS

___ Ios_ur_a_n.ce ____ l~iIii"'.".iiiI .. l- Car Radios

",PRO" f A, an~~, "" A, :; I " PROP~NE .. '

RETREADING VULCANIZING

EXPERT SHOE REPAIR. We Repair Shoes all ::IIakes and

Sizes.

Call

JAMES CRAW

JOB BROTHERS & COMPANY. Ltd.

Water Snell DIAL 8·2658 - 8-4123

J. J. LACEY INSURANCE Ltd.

Dependable Fire Insur~nce, Prompt Claim Settlrments.

DIAL 8·7035

CROSBIE & CO., Ltd. Agents for

UNDEILWRITERS AT LLOYDS.

LOW RATES DIAL 8·5031

By Special ARRANGEMENT

wilh

"The Courtesy Cabs," ELIZABETH AVE.,

you may \lOW drh'c to YOIll

APPOIN'rnlENT WITn H, B. TIIO:USOX. O,D.,

OPT01UETRIST, 20 F ALKLAXD ST,

for your eye examination nnll glasses. JUST DIAL

910!!1 -91098

APPLIANCES, Cl;lEIVE:RS P~OPAN'E

',,' LTDT " , "'~Phog~ ,9-14706 " ,',

Service Station

BLACKMAUSH ESSO SERVICE

Cor. B1ackmarsh Rlt. and Albany Street. Phone 9·4880.

Tires, Tubes, Accessories, Lubrication, Washing. See PIlte for a job compl~.e, ':

:EMERSON DuMont Sales amI Service

Authorized Dul\IONT SERVICE DEPOT

For nil TV Service, Call

L. G. COLBOURNE ELECTRONICS

Cor. Freshwater Road ami Eliznheth Avenue

93279 jlylO,lmth

DAY or NIGllT

CAR RADIO SALES We can in~tall a ncw radio in any car (rom $55.00 up

Jack's Radio Shop

71 LOllll's Hili PHONE 8·7448

Radios

GREAT EASTERN OIL COMPANY, L~~ REPAIRS TO RADIOS. TV

AND ALL ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES

DIAL 8·300~ to 8·3005

Pick·np and Delivery Service Kenmount Road, Dial 93331

------------Well Drilling

Reasonable Rates.

WILLIAMS SHOE SERVICE 44. FLOWER IIILL

jne20,lYr

FOUND

ATffI~ . . ..-' PASSENGER,

S. W. SHORT CONXECTlO:\ n.1l' 8 ADELAIDE ST. 8.263. . PLA.CENTI.\ n,,,,,,',,,

----------------------- -.------..... ------- I Train "The Cariilou",

1963 RCA VICTOR TV ' With fabulous' "Nuvista" fori

better, clearer picture. , Trade u~ SDW At /

WEST 'END TELEVISION I 105 Water ' I., st. ,John·s. :

For TV Servi'c CaU 8.6865;

I FOn RENT-Modern three 1 CANADIAN' NATIONAl, I ~t. John's .12:01 p,m, ' bedroom bungalow. Fur. I' RAILWAY COi\IPANY ~lly 10th wII.1 make

, nace heated and wired for Via Placentla 220 connection. possession! TENDERS }'OR TIlE i Argcl:tia witll ),I.V,· AUllust lsI. <'hone 92870. I GENERAL WORKS REQUIRED Forte for Bay Hun. . jlyl0,1l,12 i IN TilE I Bay.

I .--.-,---. -:! ALTERATIONS TO J'ROVIDE: CONNECTIO:\ CORY

. NEW WALK-IN -;;;========, FOR SAtE-Plymouth parts, REFRIGER,\TOR, FREEZER BROOK-ST. JOlty· .- 57 60 ' SEUVIfI','

I to; motor a~d radiator, AND COOLER, '". " .. ' CARNIVAL

SUPPUES LTD. NOVELTIES, GAMES,

TOYS

; etc. Apply 59 Field Sireet, AT TilE Tram The CannOI! . 'Phone 8678.72 after 6 p,m, I NEWFOUNDL,\ND HOTEL, i St. John's .12:01 p,m,

wcd,thur,fn I ST. JOliN'S, I·TUly 10Ih Will make. ---,.---,--.--.---- ------. lIiEWFOUNDLAND i at Co:ner Brook. I

WANTED TO RENT by I ! Bana~lsta for I o.rts small adult family with i Sealed tenders, ~ddressed. to Brook to SI. Johns,

=j~IY9~,m~thl~y.t~f~' ~:::::::::' Wanted To Buy: Bungalow

and all the trimmings for Carnivals, Parties. Ganiel1 Parties, Fairs, etc. Plush and Stuffed Toys a Spec· ialtr. , 11 PATRIe!.\: STREET

one child, a modern, un. I ;\lr .. R. C. Gree~sldes, ~ble{ CONNECTIO!'I furnished, 2 bedroom, heat. Ar~hltect, Canadian NatIOnal BAY SEIl\'ICI ed apartment for im. I Rallways, P.O. Box 8100 ,(or PATRONS PLEASE mediate occupancy. Phone 13th FI~or, 935 Lagallche,lere CONNECTION G

GREAT EASTERN OIL & IMPORT

CO., LTD. Radio, Television, Washers, Refrigerators, Deep Freezers

Electric Ranges. Floor Polishers.

Gramophones Public Address Systems

Tape Recorders

REPAIRS AND SERVICE 5 LINES

DIAL 8·3001 to 8·3005

WATER Jan2B,ly

STREET M·3

847304. Street \\ est). illontreal, Queh.ec, SERVICE FOR and marked on the outSide i .TUL Y 10TH IS

Must be in a good resi· ,~J~·h~'1~01~m~th~~~~~~ FOR IIIRE- Small Tractor, I R"Ten?er,~ . folrl ~rlnt erraatl. '\n~srarkt'o'l ED. NEXT L

d I I I eql~lreu 111 ,Ie ;' ~. I". • I FOR THI~ SEH"ICE entia oca i~y. Rooms also T,rucks. Dia192692-;- Provlile New "alk·m HcfrIg· BE ANNOUNCED required: Kitc:hen, pan-I F R l Brown s Store, lIurphy s erator and Cooler at the New·, or en Lane. ' m29,eod,lm foundland Hotel, 51. John's,' CONNECTIOS Sl try, dining room, sit./ i Newfoundland" will be recch' ARY SOlTTH CO,\ST ting room, f'hree bed. WANTED-ComIcs, magazine, I cil up to 12:00 o'rJock Noon, TO R:\~(E.\

pocket novel., viOlins, gui!. Eastern Daylight Time, Tues· Train "The Caribou" ,rooms, den, and bath· i Large apartment com- aI'S, good shates and bools. day, August 6, 1963. ,St. John's 12:01 p,m, room, and garage. .Tohn D. Snow, 9 New Go',v· Plans Specifications, Instruc I July 11th will make '

pletely self contained, in er Slreet. jne19,1mth. tions t; Bidders, Form of cun·1 at Port aux Basque; Apply to 1.1 . 1 tract and Form of Tender willi TavernaI' for .

gooe resiuen tIa area. Le~rn to drive with a quail. I be loaned to hona fide Contract, ,South Coast Sen'ice Bus i nessman, fled and experienced in· 01'5 on the doposit or a certi'i S S C .\BOT STR \IT

P.O. Box 5141, Phone 91819 slruclor. 20 years experi··fied chequ.e, ma~c pa1'~h:~ t~i .• NOON ·Jl'SF. ence. Reasonable rates. For the CanadIan Nahonal R11.",a~ Iss "r \ t S1 't" "

St. John's, East. . f' (' d' 1 8-2399 t' a)o ral.· :In 20rmda sl?n!a ,. Compan)' for an a~oun CTqtbl~! I ern' r:ah;ador Srrriri., ,----------.-.---.-.- i J Y ,eo, I to Flft,· Dollars (S:JO.OO). , IS B "1'1 f --------.--.----- deposit" will be refllnded when cay IWI" '\~Ia: f rem.

1 '" t' aas n ,Iar )1',10 .. " plalls am speelflca 'IOn< are reo Jul 11 'I

1 lurned to the Railway in good Y , I., condition. . CONNECTION

PHONE 8·4815

Lost REQUIRED IMMEDIATELY'

I Plans, Specification;, Instrur· eORNER BROOI( " Lost, a pair of gel1t's1 tions 10 Bidders, Form of Con·, Train "The Caril:GU

I . I h : tract and Form of Tent!er may I St. John's 12:01 II.IIl eyeg asses '" eat er he obtained on or a!t~r Tlll;l! .Tuly 11th will makr case between Long's JOih. 1963, at the following! at Lewisport€ with S,S,

------~,- .. ~-----------\

Applications are invited from qualified persons (female) who are interested in employment as private and confidential secretary to Senior Executive of a well established organization in Westt:rn New­foundland.

The successful applicant will he employed in pleasant and at­tractive surroundings .. The usual henefits of vacation and sickness and accident insurance are provided.

Applicants must have extensive experience in secretarial work, plus the ability to plan routine, and carry out specified duties in any period during which the employer may be absent from the office.

Salary will be commensurate with ability.

Apply in confidence, giving qualifications, employment record, and references to: '

Personnel Manager,

P.O. Box 594,

Corner Brook, Newfoundland.

H'II d C II offices:- 1 dal~ for I an ornwa Hgts. • E ,,'n cr S1 Tohn's: Brook Service. • !"rcn n,..J e, . I , '

vIa Duckworth St. ClOd Nnrl.

Hamilton Ave. Finder Chief Architect, Montreal, Que. FREIGHT The lowest or any tender nol

please call necessarily accepted. F . hi' " rCIg l SI. Jo 111 S "

90615 Reward is offered.

jly9,lO.11

LOOK! l-L'Islet Wood and Coal Range with Hot Water Tank. Good condition.

$50.00 I-Norge 'Wringer Wash­er. Good working condi-tion """"".,,... $4( •. 00

I-Viking Wringer Wash­er. Good condition.

$3(,·00 Cull Chris Andrews.

R. J. Grouchy Ltd. 8-5006 Home number 9-3231.

n. c. GREENS IDES, thief Architect.

Monlreal, Quebec. jlylO,ll,12

porte Service pel' enville or substitute Dock Coastal Shed lOth, 9 a. m. to noon.

O N Freight for Green . F R RE T is now being accepte~.

t" k I Railway Freight Sh.e Large stOle on Duc - i a.m. to 5 p.m. but In worth Street, with full I guarantee movement IF size basement. JI.V. Hopedale (or

scheduled for July must be at Apllrtment on Duckworth

Street, consisting of kit­chen, dining room, sitting room, hedroom, and hathroom.

Apply to

J. T. O'Brien Real Estate Agent

and Valuator, 261 Reid Building, Duckworth Street.

Dial 8-3330.

Shed by 5 p.m. J ul)'

;'. . ~ ,

\

KI BCJ

1 st Priz 2nd Pri 3rd Pri 4th Pri 5th Prj: Holders tact 1 Henry ~

Ke~

THI

c ..

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Go­Pipe LID AND

RFORATED LL TYPES rlTTINGS

MES G. AWFOR

\L

. I' t St, ,101111 5 ""

.';pl'\·'N' pl'r :'1.· or ~ubstitute ~tal Shl'd todlS

a.m. 10 noon.

KINSMEN BOYS' CLUB

ewspaper BINGO SI~RIES NO. 77

I N G 0 :2(-; 36 53 62

:2b 40 50 72 ~ :2~i 38 61 - 74 :29

66

Consolation Prizes for "Frame the Card."

pairs Top Ql1ality Nylons for the' line "n".

or July 12. im Bingo Phone 8-7269 10 p.m.

on the day published.

Help Kin - Help Kiddies

NOTICE SPECIAL LEGION JACKET SWEEP

DRAWING. WINNING NUMBERS

lsi Prize, $100 ........ .................... 390 2nd Prize, $25 ......... ................... 273 3rd Prize, $25 ....... ..................... 257 41h Prize, $25 ............................. 252 5th Prize, $25 (claimed) ............ 483 Holders of winning numbers please con­tact ~Iallager, 'Var Veterans' Club, Hemv Street. ,

ECURITY It Is no mere coincidence that the men who build their business with

the Sun Insurance Group have a sense

of well being and security that Is the goal of every good insurance agent.

The oldest Insurance orfiee In the world, sound, vigorous and experlenc·

ed, continues to serve its agents and

customers with enthusiasm.

THE SUN, INSURANCE GROUP Head Office: 48 Yonge St., Toronto Imperial Insurance Office Planet Anurance Company, Ltd. Patrlollc Assurance Co., Ltd.

• London Ind County 1n8urallCe Ltd. o.treal, Toronto, Wimllpeg, Edmonton, Vancouver

The Oldest Insurance Office in' The World Founded 1710

Caldwell InSurance . Agencies :., limited

...... ~lulnlll~Id1q, . D~ekWOl1b St., NOd. Phone 8 2485

WRESTLING Stadium-Thursday Night

MAIN BOUT

"SWE£TDADDY" SIKI

Vs.

ILIO Dl PAOLO Two of thrce falls-no time limit.

SEMI-FINAL BOUT

JOHN FOTI Vs.

TOMMY O'TOOLE Two of three falls-45 minute time limit

PRELIMINARY BOUT

Tony Parisi Vs.

"Magnificent" Duke Noble One fall-20 minute time limit.

REFEREE-Tiger Tasker.

Tickets go on sale at the Stadium on Thursday at 9:00 a,m.

Columbian Club Special Entertainment

Scheduled for today, Wednesday, July 10th, has been postponed. It will be held on Saturday, July 13th, to start at 8:30 p.m. sharp. A dance will follow with an orchestra in attendance.

ANGLICAN BOARD OF EDUCATION

for st. John's requires

ONE TEACHER for Primary work. Duties to begin Sep­tember, 1963. Applications giving quali­fications and experience should be sent to the

Secretary, Bishops College, Pennywell Rd.

jly6,l0.12

WANTED-by the Amalgamated Regional High

. School, Corner Brook, Newfoundland,

ACADEMIC TEACHERS for subject teaching in grades 9, 10 and 11. One physical instructress for girls and one physical instructor f9 r boys. Apply:

MR. W. C. ROBBINS, Principal. weds,fris,ju)y

NOTICE Applications are invited for the position of

Assistant City· Engineer with the St.· John's Municipal Council

Among the duties of this position will be the responsibility of Chief Engineer and Superintendent of the Water and Sewerage Departments.

The salary for this position is open and' applicants should be graduate engi­neeIS' with a minimum of five (5) years experience in, design and construction . supervision. . Enquiries for additional information should be directed, or. applications for ..

. warded to the undersigned by July 30, 1963.

W .. D. SHARPE, City· Engineer.

THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, JULY 10, 1963-11

Wm. 1,. CHAFE TAILOR

4 HOLDSWORTH ST. ST. JOHN'S CLOTHES MAKE THE MAN

IF CHAFE MAKES THE CLOTHES.

WEDDING· GIFTS! SEE OUR SELECTION OF

HANDMADE LINENS, WATERFORD CUT GLASS, ITALIAN FIGURINES, AFRICAN CAHVINGS, ETC., ETC.

Shaw Gifts & Handicrafts THE NEWFOUNDLAND HOTEL. "N ewfoundland' s Gift Headquarters" ,

WANTED A BARBER

Must know how to give FLAT-TOPS, etc.

APPLY

Brennan's Barber Shop

PROMPT SERVICE

ALL WORK GUARANTEED

Sweets ShoJa Ltd. 213 WATER STREET DIAL 8·3289

CANALJIAN TIRE CORPORATION

THIS STORE WILL BE

CLOSED MONDAYS

For July and August

CANADIAN TIRE CORP/N. ELIZABETH AVENUE

Memorial UniVllfsity of l~ewfoundland St. John's, Newfoundland, Canada.

Positions O'pen

Stenographer, Grade! Commencing salary $2000.00.

Experience preferred but not essential.

Stenographer, Grade n Commencing salary $2300.00.

Must have at least two years experience.

Applications, in writing, stating age, ex­perience and qualifications should be ad­dressed to the Assistant to the President, Memorial University of Newfoundland, St. John's. jlyB,lO

;. '.: '. "

. ~~

" '. -. -. -. . ~ . , :.~ "<

ST. JOHN'S BIBLE CAMPAIGN .~

"WORLD ,1N TUR'MOIL" .~; Next meetin{!: TONIGHT at 7:30 p.m.

in the VICTORIA HALL (Gower St.)

Subject: "Russia's Bid for World Dominion-Its Real 11essage to the World."

jly9,lO,1l,12,13

1ro RENT-OFFICES

and WAHEHOUSE SPACE

Central Waterfront Location. Apply

F. M.. O'LEARY LT.D. Tel. 8,2119

wed,tf

:~

.. .'

R.C.A .. p~'

AUTOMOBilE INSURANCE

R.C. Anthony, Insurance I. ... · .. ·~I Imperial Oil Bldg. Elizabeth Avenue.: •.

TEL. 9-5079':,'

Building Lots New West End Sub-Division between Leslie Street and Sudbury Street known as Thompson's Meadow selling for $4250.00 with just 10% down pay­ment.

Apply ,

STAN CONDON 8-4913 8-7103

REAL ESTATE AGENT, Majestic Building, Opp. City Hall.

my14,eod,tf

ST. JOHN'S TROTTING

PARK GOULDS ROAD

Harness Racing

8-7848 8-5108

THURSDAY NIGHT ........ 7.30 :p.:1\l. MONDAY NIGHT ............ 7:30 P.M.

Weather permitting. ADULTS ........................................ 75c. CHILDREN ............................ ........ 10c.

No Parimutuel betting.

THE ANNUAL, REQUIEM MASS

at

MT. CARMEL CEMETERY

will be celebrated on

SATURDAY, July 13th at 10:30 a.m.

. ~~.

If weather is unsuitable Mass will be

at Basilica at 11.30 a.m.

, .

I

I· I

r

I

':11 • • I'

· i' '" . · I':· I

..•.• :.!i\t,., . I: '

,.: 1,1 .,

f''/ / ,

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. ' .

.,'

'j . I

I I

. ,

I 1 I 1

j j

.~.. . .'1'D'DAn,y NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, ·.JULY 10, 1963 .... '. .' .. .

,~ , ~.' ..

... , .... Nama ,Cr 20700 131, 'I 3 13 ;.. \.\ NE,"I 5DO 55 I -I, Nealon 600 12 12 12 New Alh 642 37 37 37 Now BId • 500 W. 6.... 6 .... + I, Norlh Cal I~ 24\,\ 23 23 -1\,\

TORONTO :1'oaoNTO Cl.OSING STOCKS

'" lb. CI.adll. Pre •• '1:...... lI1 .. k E.obl •• ..-Jul1 •

Nconex W 7700, 99 9$ 95 -2 N Goldvu. 1000 4'.. Il'. 4\1 - I, Now Hosco SSOO 158 154 158 + 3 N Kelor. 1000 8.... B',; 61i1 + "

, COmplell labulallon of 1'UHday' Iran" acUobI. Q\1!o\atJ4,nl in cen.ta un1e .. .......... I. z-Odd 10\. Id-Ex·dlYldend. x,-"x.rllhl.. .'" - Ex·warrant.. Net __ ..... 10 lrom previoul board • 101

Newlund .12715 181'1 17\, 18 N Myl.ml 1000 16 16 16 +\1 Ntk IUm 2200 16 '16 16 Nslo 500 6\.\ 6\1 6\1-'" Nor Acm. 71G1l. 15 14\1 U + \.\ Norheau 2300 37 36 36 + I .1., .. Ie.

~ Ura,; , Actr.

IollYaeOta II.IlIIco Ablltho AlllaI·JlI" AIa_ All' PII.~ "",10 Hur Afta' Arjooo. .to' A,cadll 11.' 10. .... 1' Bw ,\11111 BUf Aumlq •• Awnor Banl<eno Blo1cIleld BI" M.II Bull. B·Dlq .tlhlm j.enoD. .Ibll~

Net Norgol1 9000 5\.\ 5.... 5\.\ + ... III.. Hlp Low Clo .. Ch·.e Normelal 5720 320 310 315 + 10

MINES Norl.. 42800 42 40 42 +Z 1000 5\.\ 5\1 51'1 +" N Coldllrm 812.1 50 48 50 2200 46 16 46 ., rth"ale 97Z2 400 390. ;ItS, 3~ 715 715 175 ,,0. IL 'L

W N G Iderl 2166 26V.. 26 26, +.,., 17(~ 57 55 55 -I 0 4000 31 ... 31 31 - 1'.1 "'0 60 'I 61 N Ra.k ,~ • • Norlh Can 300 175 175 m 2\(~ 12 12 12 o· lie 500 1:\, 11'" 111'. IIlI 261" 2f>!i 2GI'.I ,,0"'. 30000 37 :\51'1 l7 0.'. ., "23 N Bordol.. " .~N ~ ~ O'L •• r~ 1500 tI 1\ 1\ + n m67 $10\_ 950 ~50 + :3~ O,emi,ka 4310 720 710 720 -5 2U'O 110 105 105 -. Orchan 1000 250 %13 248 -2 3600 14\, \I 1m,. 1'.1 Oro.adl 2500 10 91" 10 + 11 )7J0 ~I -19 51 + 1 Orm,'~y 1000 291'; 291 .• 291'; ' •. 'h Hn) !I 21 21 35000 1nl!. 16 16 - 'h

53\l 7\1 l\i m ~::r.::q 675 an5 680 610 -5 2;)0 7 6h 61,',;1 Pax InL 8150 23 22 22'~ -l\~ '10~ 35S l55 m ~ s 1'.)' ... "1 2:100 Uv. :2' , 12V. + I 1030 40 10 40 Pc. Expl 1000 111; 11\, 1\1'1 21J) . 20 21\ 20 reerle,. 13500 24 23 23 -t 10110 7 7 7 I' C z8 10 60 60 .,·,,1 7'," 1 ,,~,.. .J-I r c'" roW tl ,,,\,I... Placer 401) $27 27 27 + ,40

4::5JO 3J12 31 3.ah -n2 Preston 112 R71870 870 +5 2150 160 I~O 151 -10 Pro. Air 3~lOO 69 ,M 61, -13 400:) 81 ~ R B Purdex 21$00 . 13 1 t:2 . lacoo 21 20 21 ~II' Chlb 2000 18 18 18

Bldc<>p BII.k Boy Bouzan Br.lorne Brunsw" Cld,m.1 Camp Cblb C Tun C'Allorla

mon 11 lO', II Que, Llh 100 210 210 210 1003') 11', 11 1\ QM1 ~57 m 120 125 219200 65 no 61 + 10 Qun.ton 500 14 14 14 +I

C Au.lrall C )111.rt Candor. Clpllin (ullar C.nl Pat Cbe.klrk Cbut .. (11th Kay tblb M tIIlmo Cach WID Coin, Lah Comb MeL Ccmlill COlI Key C ·fI.l\ek C Dltcov C Fen. C Rolli C Marben C Marcns C' MOIUI C:~ Morrls"n C Mo!:hC'f C loiorlhld C Ramblr (~ lied Pop C' Recourl Con Shaw CD:1Wnt Cop ('orp Cop )1 •• Courvan towleh Cr.l,ml Crotnor Crowpal

""'s~ Da.rtn, D'Aragoft Deer HurA D'Eldona Delbl I'ac Delnll. ne.laon Dlclln ... Dome Donlldl Dunrainf! E' Amphl Ent Mal EIII sun

, Eld.r EI Sol Eureka FaradOl)' ftncoeur Galtwln Genu. GianI YK GF Mlnln, Granduc Gulf Lead Gunnar

.HIIIn.r Har Min Hullnu H of Lak. Headway Hellh Hilb B.1l KoWnger Ho .... y Hud Bay Hu,Pam IrllI! Cop 1['011. Bay I .. J ; ~.II. Jacobu! Jan E.pl J.lIc1o.

,Joburk. Joo.mll1l Joulel Ke;'I.y·F

: .~".lIIe .. Jrtrr Add :.~be :Jarl. To ... , )lOpan Lib Mn I •. Dulault LI ... aqul LlI\IIs LlIIII Am LtlJc. WCOI,rI

;Lond. , LoIIvl'l , r;,.,;. JbU"" !tIkdon

· MaeLeod' K ..... n

· !IIqn.t ,MIltra .. ·Jhlartlc

· ltIanol<l )IS ,Morelll.1 Mar ... Marilime

· Mortln 'Xllalch

· Xvbra. , Je!fttrre

• ·JlleK ..

1211 ~21 tzo ~ZO Puemo.t 59~ S10<o 10"\ 10' • + \1 21.0 ~,~ ~8j a\~ I 5 RAdIo.. 6200 18!, 47 4R 2230 11 11 11 I 1000 63 63 63 -2

100 III 410 HI ~::r~~k 1000 86 86 8n ,100 100 9:, 91 -5 I R I 2000 :0 10 10

Il20 1112 IH. II', -... •• m 1000 19 19 19 -1 l.o Rexspar

6000 1l 13 !~.-:.' RID "'I~om 1228 Slm 13;\0 13'. C3,1) .0 10 ,. Alh b 3000 23!i 23~, 23'h %!IOO 10 D\; 10 IlIx' 500 181, 181, 18'" - "" llOO 13\,,13 131> + I. ~~~::n 3000 12\, 121'.1 121. - ... 81(' sm. 1m 1m + I, Sherrill 1485 285 281 ZBI -4

1000 130 130 130 + 5 SI"ma z50 Sj5 555 555 _ 9000 N 8t; 8'" . .000 02,L" .0 OL ~O~O 16\\ 16'" 16'., Sll\maq 21300 39(; i7 37 :{' 5000 • ~l\ m; 14\\ Sf~ Mltler : \;0 181 I7h 181 1000 36 36 36 5 .•• 0. 13000 9\, 9 &'h- "" 1100 67 67 6- Slarr.1t '" 'L 2150 "Oil! 4;0 n SI.eloy 7000 6''; 6 6,. - "

••. Salem 6600 40 39 40 +~ 6500 i; ir~; ':/' Sleep R 1135 165 460 1&5 f~~ 62 60 62 Siurgeon 16;ro l~i'h 1~~ 1~ +1 4:0) 13 12 13 ,,2 ~uUI,"n 2010 182 ,181 182

2.~100 12 11 12 Tcck H 2500 71 7J 73 -1 ~2GO 60 ,. III Tcma~ 500 58 58 58-2

6(10 IS 11 1l Thom L SOD 65 65 ,S ,,;01) 20 :n 20 -1 TO~btll 2~00 40 39 40 + I 500 3B 3r.;8 ~or r L I 500 21'-> 21V. 2:''; .\10 133 Ill' 133 -s Torm•• ]000 11 11 11 +11

;~100 !!::l t2n 120 _.J OWR!: + 13 2 Trlb., IIhIIS 239 2Z1 233

saD ~2'i ~2''2 ~''i ~ 1~ Trln Chlh 6600 22 ~1 Z2 +1 10JO 201' 1f,0 19) -I b I 500 33.1 33; 33l ~5 ,~ 2' ".1 21 -I tJ t\~ e~ O!i ..... , , II Bullod 500 67 67 67

100 10- 10'_' 1(ll -3 n • tI. Ktno 1271 590 5tO 590 ,~ IIS7 1\ 10 11 l'n }'orl 500 II It :4 S:zo In Itl III .... 2 , 30(') 141 140 140 +2

11200 41 \3 II Urp CAQn "33"1"1 21 -2 t· .. III Urban 0... ..

",OIl ~IIS 430 ,..1 \'andoo l~HO S 5 ~ lOgl 18 17 17 - II \'Auze 2000 GIl 60 60 -2 8000 t4~ 3 14 1,1,-.·t h Un Mt.cIlf' 4630 :2-1 22 ~4 + 2

4:00 18 In 11._,RI \'Iolam 1300 183 m 17S -5 101) 123 123 60lI0 5 5 ~

.~lloon $1B 1B !.~ ~!t~ ~~:::ro~nne 2tiOa.roo 385 390 22, 1412 lJ 11 _I \\. R.a"er "000 IS 15 15 W3~0 lk 12~ 29 _ 1,-:' IV Surf 130M 19 19 131R9 ,m moo m,' 11 11 _ '-, IVlllroy 8600 139 131 + 3

Yk Bear 1200 1\0 101 110 +5

1~~~ ~~I; ~" ~8h =zll "nun~ IIG 8500 7\\ 711 710 +11 B ,'uken. 5000 5 5 5 + I

2500 8 R Z c :1000 23', 23 ~-1 9!OO 21!' 21 21\, -1 .e.ma "I 6.\ 61 63 Zulopa 17000 34, 31 33 +2 ~ OILS BOO ~II'. 11'. m. - Ii A.chor 31t5O n 10 10-1

1400 ISO 470 470 -10 A U D 2-00 31 30\, 301, - II 100 $3014 01\ 330~i + \I Jl~r S S ~\~ '.5 123 23 23

InOO 8\; m R'l Ball S!\ pr 225 125 23 25 - ~i 1000 2 23 23 'Bal. 1000 4', II> 4''; - 1'.1

2000 7'1 7\-1 j~~ +1 C"l Ed z35 S19~, 19~' 19~4 2200 225 220 225 ~ 3 CS ret. RIO m 440 440 + 10

100 230 230 230 +2 C D.lhl 1226 370 365 US 600 96 90 96 -4 C D,Ih1 w 100 130 130 130 +20

2.100 Eli 8 8 Cdn Dtv 500 410 440 140

~~~ !i~ I~: 1~::1 g rt:xl'~:' ~~~: ~: i: -I 1000 11 11 \1 -1 •• 77 780 1300 71'; 7l, l'.i 1:c.t Dtl 4116 7M , 2500 10\. 111 10 C DrRion 1000' 10 10 7101 + 2Ys

10300 f121i 1211 121, _ ~\ Do\·.Pal 23W 71 68 ~ 1500 :61, In\\ 1611 Dome 1'.1. 200 Slm 13~ m. 4100 ltin 430 410 -20 Duvan 2000 9 81.; 9 7000 9 81\ 81, _ \,' Dynamic 4300 20 181'.1 20 +. 13!J !IOO 8:111 900 + 10 ~arRo ROO 220 220 220 300 210 210 2lD + 18 Glacier 4000 12 10 10 - '"

Gr Pia Ina 325 512 12 12 630 10 ,91\ 91,' '15 31 31 31 -1 mo 90 90 90 +4 Grldol •

7000 HI; 16 161': ... \\ Home II. 650 SI!~'. m. m. 5000 21 20~, 21 + I Home B 381 S121. 121< \2\1. 1000 61\ il'.l 61';+'" H B 01 G 374% II~I' 141. 1M. + 1\

200 212 lOS 265 -10 Mod,1 8408 299 29~ 29~ -, 300 J2H' m. 2m Mdeo. 1340 30 30 3D

2910 435 425 430 -S N Ptl. 43400 250 20S 2S5 + 54 210 $5511 55\. 551': _ II N D.\'I.. 9900 26 25 26

1 N •• rlhe,1 111100 52 46 50 -I 1000 11 :1 11 -. 6140 159 '49 I" + It 1100 30 30 3D NC 011. ••

600 92 92 92 Northld 1000 15 I~ 15 +3 2500 AD 79 79 +I Pamoll 700 40 40 40 3500 16 1~'., 1~1I _" I'ermo 2910 31 3D"" 30'h -I"

moo 20 18 18 -2 Pelrol 1000 60 58 511 -2 22000 20 18 20 +2 Place 3000 52 50 51 +1

Provo Gas 3500 \53 m 153 i~gg 1:1'2 1~ I~ Quonlo 16250 19 181, 16" - 'h 2000 14 131.. 131, + 1\ Ra.ger ;: I: l~O l~~ +3 2500 I4l 112 113 +1 sareee '.700 12 11',L 11',L ... " S7~0 3'1 3D 31 -3 Spoon.... ., . n 76000 14 12\. I' + m Slan ... 1I 1000 3 3 3l 33

8615 6&1 6fi!1 685 Triad 011 200 1M 16~ 166 noo 299 29S 299 +27 U Casnov t 200 149 149 149 +1 400 25 241\ 21" _ I, Un 011, 2900 129 '211 m

IBooo 161m m, IV,lol.. ~oo 510018 0\51106 600IIB +1 zl5ll 30 30 30 W !)fcalta ~ :900 7\0 6BO 100 + 10 Wilshire 200 203 203 203 ~OO 3CO 3GO 3tO Va. Can 1000 7 7 ,7

3000 31 31 31 _I RASKS 9000 31 3. '31 M •• I 1033 Stm 661\ 6M. - ,~ llOO 118 135 138 + NS IOS5 1701. 7~" 70% +'"

1000 a, 8 8 _" C Imp Bk 1~07 56412 611< elY<

15400 110 132 110.3 Alun,lnl I 1~~~Sf2~\ZL~8'h 28" + '. 115:' ,11;' It, 11;;' +... C Brew 4470 110;\0 1M, 10% + 1'.

620 325 315 325 + 15 D .. eo zl~ S:lll IlV' 1\0/.

;: ~onY, i:1I ;~I' ~~nd Bake I :~ WI1 1;\0 I~;i H\ 1750 225 22l 222 -3 I.v Syn A 60' S561< 561> 561, 2000 I 5 5 + "" Pembina 1000 ,m 6 81, - II

,2200 5 5 5 SimpSOn. 213 135 341> 34% + 1'. 600 76 76 76 SI.dm.. .30 113~ 13~ 1m

sOOO 1ft 18 18 W.lnwr ,500 21 28 26 8900 107 1M 1ro -8 W.lktrs 870,157 .... 57% 57',1, 1500 8 8 8 .W .. lon B 360 . sm~ 191< 191<

500 37 37 37. Totll Sale.. 2.188,000. 6500 H M ~ -2 1000 '1';\ 8'h II; -l ' 2600 11 11 11 1711 ,4G;, 19'h 49\, - ... 6000 27 26 11 +2 500D 8 7 7,-2 2000'23 2.1 23 -I

,3500 58 55 55 -2 500 711 7V. 7'10

1220 ,181'. m. 181, +2' .• 3000 9' B'h AI'.I - I. 1000 76 76 78

21656 52 50 SO -2 , 2110 115 III 114 -I

MONTREAL MONTItEAL CLOSING STOCI[S

JliJ The Canaetlan. Prul Abitibi 4$1< IJom Tar 'I'"" A.be.to, 25;\0· Frli.r m4 Bnque . C Nat 27\.\' Gt I,ak.. %DI'. Blnk Mont 18l', Hud Bay MIn 55 ....

,

······ .. ·O'W'/N ST. JOHN'S THE FAMOUS

IIlnk NS ?O\\ Imp 011 Rnquo PC 50 I.t Nick Bell 5~" MA .. Fer Bra'll 315 NorondA Bid, Prod 261, Pallda.h C Cemenl 38l'o Price C Sleam,hlp 51 Royal B,nk C Bnk Com 641> Shawl. Cdn Brew 10.... Sle.l C Int Power 151\ Tr Ca. I'L C 1.1 rwr pr 41 ,Walker CPR 3Z~ CANADIAN S.alram. 511'.1 Con. I'ap

NEW YORK

.. o~. 67 15 3m

41,<.! !6" 75 47~ 2;1,~

2m sm 38'h

NEW YORK CLOSING KTOCKS II, The A_sodded )'reSi

Belh Steel 30'h Monly IV DoU Warn.r (51. NV Cenl C and 0 62\. R,dlo Corp COIUI Edison 86 South Pac G.. Eire 80'" Sid 011 NJ Goodyear 3m Uld Alrcrall G1 Nor, Ry \3 Va.adlum Int T T 5{)3t~ Westnls!

Toronto:

37 2112 701.'11 3m Ei~~

46% ]J~~ 361,

MOST ,'CTIVE TORONTO ~TOC"S 87 The Canadian Prul

stock 8aln HI", )40,," CIOI' Ch',et lSIlUSTRIALS

CPH Con Ga. Sh.1 Con Bldg Tr'.1 MI

m44 533 :121, 3m + I'; 9845 Sl1~' 11!\~ ln~ - I,t 6174 118'.', 17 .. 18'" +1. S800 $0 9'» m + lit 1610 11~ 11\'0 1m

DIU NAt Prl. Un'.phee Quonto

43400 m 2O~ 255 +~I 40100 19\\ 47 47 -3 16250 19 IBI> 18'h - ;,

W Dovl .. Am L.duc

9900 20 25 26 9.\00 • 51, Sl~

MIN}:" Bnuzan Trlbag Norlhca! Kenvlll.

219011 65 6(J 61 + 10 116110 239 221 233 + 13 !Ill00 52 46 50 -I

N Senalor 76000 II 12'h 14 + II': 60873 2m 2<\, 21 + I

IIIUTUAL FU~'DS '11 The CID,.dlaD Prelll

IIld A,k All Cdn Com U7 5)4 All CDN Dv 6,79 7.-14 Am.rlcan Growth A.67 948 Beaubran 34.15 37.08 Canada Growth 5.14 5,62 Cdn Gas and EnrrJY fiJI2 7A~ Canadian Invellolmcnt 10,ltj 1t liR Cdn Tru,l.ed 4.71 5:15 C •• olund 43 60 45 76 Champion :Mutua1 It03 fi:6e Commonwcallh Inter. 9.1!! :xO,Oi Commonwe"Uh tnt Lenr 7.i:! 8.46 Corporat. 1.ve,lori 1051 11.19 Dlv'rslled 1M ~ 22.l0 Dlvr.lrled I.e B U3 I 09 Dividend Shan 340 3.73 Dominion Equly 19,50 18.89 Dreyfu. Inc. 17.25 18.75 European Growth 6.9'Z 7.56 Federat.d Growth 4 80 5.34 Flrsl 011 and Gas 4 3' 4.98 Fond. Coill!Clll A 6.4B 7 05 Fo.d. CoII.cm D 5.46 5'.81 Fond. CollecUI C 6,67 7.25 Group I.c. 3.68 1on2 Growlh 011 a.d Gas 9.16 991 In\'esiors Growth 'j',M 770 Inve.lon Inti 4 57 4:07 1.\, •• 10" Muluol 12'.95 13.97 M,,'.al AceumulaUn, 3.9G 1.26 Mllu.1 Incom. 5,46 .1.97 N .'merlcan of C,nada n.30 12 35 One WIUiam stret 14.0j 15 3; Provld •• t 4.99 t.43 Pulnam Growlh 8 77 9.58 Radl"on 4.67 5.13 1I0,.nl ,. ;,8S 6.39 RenBrt'h Investing 10.66 11 55 Savings In\, •• m •• 1 6.32 691 1962 Exc. Fund Cdl 5.51 5.76 TV Eleelronlcs 7.~9 RI6 Timed In\'.tment 5.3~ .... 6.97 U.Ud Ace.mulollv. 6.290 6,B1 W .. tem Growlh 4 61 5.07

S

i MONTREAL MONTREAL CI,OSING STOCKI

., The Canadian Prell Montreal Smct ExchaDIe-Ju~,. f Complele tabul.llo. 01 Tu •• day Ir ••• •

IctionS (Quollollon. In cenl. unl". marked S. z-Odd lot, xd-Ex·dlvlde.d. sr-Ex.rlght., xw - Ex·warrants. Net thange 11 from previous boa,rd lot clo!lln sale.)

Nel Stock lales Hllh Lo,,' cton th'"

Abitibi 766 Sj5I/. W. mI. + 1\ Alumlnl 1776 nm 2m 2m + 1'. Alum, 1 pr no 5221i1 2m :r.W,-l Alum 2 pr 660 517 47 47 Argu, 100 512'h 12'h 12"" + iii Ar 270pr 320 55" 53 53 Ar. C pr 1500 S91h 9!~ 9" + ;l Asbestos 50 S25~iI 25% 25%. + 41 Bank Monl :120 $66~' 66'h 6611 - Ii Bank NS 15S S70~' 701> 701'.1 Banq CN 470 sm. 77\'> 7m - V. B.nq PC 15 550 50 50 Hell Phon. 23:3 1m. 5m 5m + .,. Bow 5\\ pr 30 ssm 51'A 5m - I. BoW ~1f.a pr 30 $510/4, 51~', 5t~~ - :'I,~ Bowater 100 $51'. 51, 5~1 + v. Br •• n 477 315 315 315 + 5 BA 011 112~ S27 271< ' 2711 + V. BC Forell 900 $19H 19 19 BC Pow 1300 S21% 21 211. + % BC PhD.. 60 »50/, 55~ sm Brockvl pr 100 S7~, 7~~ 7~1· Brown 178 1131\ 13% lev.. - YI Build Prod 25 $261'.1 261'.1 26'h + \" Bulol0 100 . 605 600 500 -5 Cal Pow , m 1221> 22'h 221> - ':, COn Cern. 650 Sl8V, 381> 381> + I~ C Dom su, 200 529 29 29 + I< CI Fndry 680 523\4 23 23 - V. C Safo IIOp 50 $96 96 96 -1 CSL 260 m 51 .51 - '" CAE 1135, SIIW. to'. 1MI Cd. Brtw 18045 5101'.1 10;. 10'h + Ii C Br Alum 100 510~ lOll. 10\\ +0/. C Cel 175 pr 225 $37 37' 37, C Chtm 3575 SW. 9~' 911 + .,. C Hydro 1000 $171. ,llYo 17l'o - ,_ C Imp 'Bk C 722 16m' M% 64\>.- 1'. C Pow 2025 IHU 15\1. lSI< CPR 7755 133 :121< 32\\ + ~ Cdn Pet pr 1000 sm. lIIi 111. - \I, Ce.1 Del 200 78S 760 780 Con MS 835 S26... 26% :lIm - I~ C GI... 1025 SIJ 42'h 421'.1 - 'h CoronaUon 100 $61> 61'.1 61'< - '!o Cr Zell A '25 ml< lW. 251< + II. Denl,on . 100 Sl1% 11;\0, 1m DI.\ Sea, 200 1M\> 54 541'.1 + ""' D Brldg. 1195 S19 II~\ 19 + \2 D Fndry m 565\1 65\> 6518 - '" D Gl... 925 $17J1o 17\\ 1m - ~. D' Sleel' xd' 833 $12',\ 121> m. Dom Tar 3450 '1M> IS 181'. + I .. Dom Tar pr 200 S23 2J 23 - 1'. Dom Text 235 120"" 20\> 201> + V. Du Po.1 318 13B'I> 38 381< + ~\ Dupull Fr A 500 '10% 10", 10% + I< FI.etwood 100 5!ro'l> 2~ 2M\ - 14 Fraser 400 $311'0 31\1 31\1. - I,

U.S. Dollar MONTREAL (CPl The

United States dollar in terms of Canadian funds was un 1-2 at

$1.07 31-32. Poulld steriing was

Up 1-16 at $3.02lh.

Markets By TilE CANADIAN PRESS

'1'ol'Onto: Market higher; ex·

tremely light trading. New York: Market higher;

gcneral recovery.

Montreal: Market

strong; fairly active

continued

trading.

ATTHEi ~~tfl~ SIGN i .bi TOJB I

~fDO- 001 1

I THE FALL AND DECLINE OF LLOYD CEOHGE

Brinco TORONTO (cPl-Brinco

bid $4.00 asked.

Lord Beaverbrook $5.50 $3.90 DOUGLAS HAIG

John Terraine ..... 10.00 THE FORMATIVE

Bowaters LONDON (APl-Bowater Pa·

per Corp. closed at 37s 9d Tues· day on the London Stock Ex­

change. -----;---

CENTURIES­A Naval History of England

G. J. Marcus ....... 12.00 50 NORTH-

1.1 tllli pr 25 $51 51 51 Canada's Atlantic Inter PL 650 $as~·, R41,~ IW,4 .\ 1 Bid I •• ur Fin 35n $14'" 14 \4",. + ~. aU egroun I Loblaw'" 200 5m m 7'. +" Alan Easton 5.50 I Loblaw B llOO $B~~ a~·. alA - 114 Loeb M 600 S18~ la~i 18~4. + 1/. MB I'R 4041 $23\, 23\\ 23\\ - I, THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY Maritime T 1112 $21 2M. 21 + 1'. M ... F 4665 515 1m 15 Hi OF ,UPTON Miron 8 pr 697 5012% 121,( 12l,{1 - "k

~l~::~~ ~ ~;g ~;~ .im ;~~i:; ~ SINCLAIR ... "." ..... 8.50 Monl Trs! 25 $91 91 91 COOD NlCIIT Moore C m ssm 51'. 51~~ - ;; . ,

IF YfOURCROPS ARE . BACKWARD

We suggest a few applications of Nitrcite of Soda "The

Magic Grower", (md note the all around improvement in Q

very short while. Stocks are available ex our Warehouse, get

our Quotations.

[fA£mJ --...... •..•.• PHONES 8·5143, 8·5144 QUEEN STREET

NS IJP 75 S251f.J 2:W,l 2:;1,~ l.IRS CALABASII OgilVie 950 113~' 13,. m. t\. 1" • Page JI('r. 500 S20~!1 2G~/1 20!l4 \1 1 '11' C 1 6 "5 Pow Corp 25tn $91. 91. 9" .1'1 lam a ln .. " .~ Price Dr ISl5 $36'i 36'" 36'.. AROUND TI·IE GLOBE QN Gas INn $3 8 9 ~l' QN Gas pr 10 $1011 106 10~ +4 IN 20 YEARS QUe rhone 130 $l7'h 401, 47\'0+ h Royal Bank IR7; S75~8 7t 73 -~, I \1]!1' 550 StL Cem .~ 1100 $10 19 19 rena 'V lley ......... NEW YORK CLOSING ~TOCKS SIL Corp A p 20 SI0D'!. 100';' 1001/. ,HONG KON, G By Tbe A".elated Prm Salada F 13~O S9tB 9~. 9~8 ~~ 1- _ Nt:w York stotk EI~hanle-Jul,. , Shell I. wi 9011 641 615 545 -5n xd - Ex dlvlde.d. xr - Ex·righl,.

Balll{ Of MOll

Appointments Shell 011 665 $18 17\4 18 +." Gene Gleason .... 7.50 xw-E.·warra.t.s. 1M chan~1 iJ from Shawln Ind 1630 475 475 475 previoul day'. clon Slmp,onl 180 534lO 341> 3m +~, THE PRIEST IS NOT Nol Southom. 250 S33~. 33';, 33\, - 1" Stock laln fil,h Low Clo!!! Ch',fe: 51 •• 1 Can 5165 $21\', 20% 2m +'" HIS OWN ACF Ind 1200 961, or, 96!l Slel.b~ A 210 $22\\ ~2\1. 22\1 - I< Addrc,. 7300 5211> 52 52;' + 'HI

~~~·~omCAn 423~ $~';,," ~i. :~11 + Ii Fulton J. Sheen .... 5.75 ~~:~g"lh i: ~ !~t ~~tt /i~ I T Fin ,\ 1615 $13 13 13 + lO LUTHER Amerad. 2300 69\0 5BI'< 681, - V. Tr C Corp 175 S\1% 11~1 11~",-;~ Am Can 5200 46~.'. ~5% 45:::,', - ~e Tr Can PL' 700 52M3 281/, 2a~. +;~ F L 4 25 Am Cyan 5100 60 5SY.. 59~/1 - ~iI 1 Tr m rL 1000 511 Wi 1m + II 'ranz au . Am Mol 7900 IB')t 18\\ lfi% + " 1

~:I~bU~ W ;~ m~ ~m ~m _+~ SCIENCE AND :~~ ~~delt 3:;~ llli ~~ ~~ , Weslon A 10085 5!7~ IN !ill I'TISTORY I '1lmm TTeolb 15100 lzm 12m 121'. + II ! Weston B 200 sun~ 19~1 1041 +;1 :-J. . 19100 2a~4 28~~.1 2A~9 I

CANAIHAS E C 4 9~ Amsled 2101l 37 36 37 ~ I I Alpha A 325 $Sl. 511 m + 1\ rnest uneo . .J A.c.d. 6500 50 4B~1 49'1 ... 1, , Alsof 22fl(j :29 21 28 -1 Armco SU 24()O 5."i~~ 55 5jl~' + ~'t i

Am.... 3000 5 .1'h n \'NHO \VAS THEN Arm.l~ Ck 2700 R4 B2', Bm + JI, ' Am: A ~'o1.v 500 229 %29 229 -1 ~ Rahcock 2,U'1I j71.~ 5fi~4 5j'1:J -!" l~~ Arnl 11000 S i l THE GENTLEMAN ,neth Sleel moo 30'. 301, 30'1, + '" AtlR8 Ttl 11117 265 260 265 ,... [I RO<'ni 3700 .1558 351 ~ ;)5'11 ~ I .. Balema. 1000 I'i. m m + u, Charles E: Israel 4.9;) Borden 800 63', 62", 62'., - '. B(!l1echa" 2000 15 15 15 -2' Borg Will" 4100 4t.i~~ 4j\,il 45~~ - Iii:

:~~lteBon 23~~ 3~~\'J 3~~~'a 3~~~ 0' k & ( Ltd ~~~ns~~l~on 9i~O l;~t1i if· 1~:: ~~'~ BOUZi.lD 3000 62 &2 62 + 12 IC SO. filley Brit iOO 15~' .. IS~~ 15~M C ColUcries 100 S911 91. 91~ - I,. ., Budd Co 4101) 15::18 15 '/5 15~. + I.I!

Cdn Dev 2200 4~O un .t~o Burl Ind 5!OO J.t,l::z 34 3~1 ~ .!. ~8

Cas"'nl 300 4~5 49;1195 The Booksellers Rurrgh. 7000 2m 28'. 28'. - Is Carbec c 1200 51ti 6~·'2 61:.11 -1 Calumet 400 12h t.P~ 12:J.-iI Cassiar 100 $11;4 11~:' 1111. + ':-~ Can Dry 700 23 22~~ 221.. + lIB Ce .. lnnd GW 187 185 1B7 -3 PHONE 8.5001 Cdn Brew IDOO 91\ m 9'. Com 011 G 100 70 7,) 70 CPR 14500 3D\" 30 J01, + ;, Comodore 2700 4;0 460 470 Case JI 5:100 ~;~ !HfI 9!~ Cmdore wts 100 160 HiO 16 Cater Tr 6300 4S% 44~iI 45',4 + '4-C D1\' Sec A 10 B5 f~ 11:5 Celanese 4900 4Bh 47~1 17i' +:.~ C I'aper 1040 m~, 381> ~8!l - \\ RUNOFF IMPROVES Che. Ohio noo 62% W. 6218 + " CQ YeJl 500" 4 4 Th Chry~ler 3B500 6:.1.1 /" 6n~ 6l1.1. + :l~ Cop.lrm 7000 14 12 14 +l OTTAWA (CP,- ere was a Cltle, Sv 4000 67\. 6m am .;.% Crusade 2000 8 8 8 noteworthy imp 1" 0 v ement in Coca Coil 3300 95 91', 95 +1 Dcer Born 15000 62 iiI 61 + 1 CBS 1:i]OO 6Z1t2 e:n. 62'11 + % Dolla Eleel 1700 170 16~ liO -l rlll10ff in the Prairie region dur- Coml Solv 2100 2m 22'f.t 22\> _ "

JAMES II. ~1. EAGER

The Bank of :'tlontreal has all.

nOllonced the appointment of

James H. :I!. Eager 3S manager

Of its Confederation Building

branch. He succeeds A. Rich-

III 1959. he was manager of Ihe

of )1., which he Ica\'cs II; to St .• John·s.

:I'lr. Bell, the D L.... ~ooo 19 IS IA -3 ing June, the water resources Co. Edi. 2100 B6" a51,', 86 .;.'. D Ollrlolh 1100 5mi 2m 271\ - 1-, branch of the northern affais Conlal.er 1100 27'f.t 27'.. 27'~ +' i. ard BeB, who becomes manager al:cr. has been ill Dum'gml 3500 65 .3 II CDn C.n 4000 47~\ IN 47", - ~. t SI d' N B ff· . 't Dumont 1!l1100 22 19H, 22 +2 department said ;\ionday in Its Co. 011 1300 61 £0;. 61 + '" I a Ie lac, ,. • I 0 Ice SIDer 1 S Elder 500 101 101 101 monthly report on stream flow Copw &11 400 3,T, 3H1 3m +Il April. 1960.' While ; ~:~tlY E. 51~~ ~~. 3m 3~;;!\ conditions. Runoff during the g~;::e r~~d 3r~ ~:;; :~;,; ~~,. + 'I Born at Dartmouth. N.S .• )lr'l Wa'S treasurer of Ihe Ft Bellance 1000 2S 25 25 month varied from above to be. Cr ZcU 2100 5IJ~:: 50" 50' ... l: Eager joined the bank at Wolf· paign to raise fUl1d. to: Fox Lake 15Il00 2' 25 26 IOIV medl'an I'n most regl'ons of CD"!:rl." Wr 8:'00 m', 21'. 21', ,H, ville and slIbscquenllv <erv('d· fire victl'ms and ",,' Fundy 2500 51.~ 5~'J :l~iI ...... 2600 fill" 633., 6.1;/1 + 1'8' .... ., G Aulolr.. 200 310 37n )70 the country. Above-median flow DI'I S •• , 900 50,. 4~" SOE + T at a number of branches in the I of the Safc·ty COlll1C11 0' Glen I,ak. 500 16; \60 165 Dome)! 4100 28'. 27'. 21'. - '. At! t" ' f dl d f 19'3 Gold Ai' 2000 31 ,0 31 H was gencral throughout the At- Dougla. noo 231; 23~; m, + !\. an IC provmces. , oun an or 6, Inl All •• d 300 125 120 125 "s lantic pl'ovinces ex C f P t for Dow Chem 4400 601, 59\. 59'. - >" .. -----Inspiratn 600 210 210 210 +1~ Du Pont ]000 244. 2431;4. 2-14 ..j..:I. Int lIelium 7600 I~, 1Ifi 110 -5 Nova Scotia. E .. t Nod 5100 10&% 10;',', 1081>+ 11\ Philip Mor 1900 79'\ 1~'. !9" ~ '. i Fatal accidents in Ir l

Int drfd, 4000 12 IH~ 11~ _ ~ Eaton MI, 7000 J6~'l 35·1/" 36~1 +;4, Pit Plate 5~O() j31~ 53~:I ;)H~ - 1~ 1 h Jubilee -4150 345 :n.5 3'~ .4-20 El Paso 04800 19 la~,i, 18~.{ _ ~8 Pro Gam 3900 7i~& j6j~ j71~ - I,,' S owed a 2 per l'C'llt Kcel.ydF 1000 32 32 n -4 BIRTHS Flrest. 9200 341.\ 34 31~, + '" Pullma. 3100 29 26':, 281, o\'er the precedil1~ Kent Avlat 100 $5~r. ~, 5011 Ford 19100 52~R 51% 521;1 ~ ~~ RCA towo 70~A 69~:' ;O-~~ + ~~ 1961. Kiena 2250400 400 400 Frueb Tra 8200 29~8 29~k 291~ + 18 Ralston 2800 34~:.! 3·;,I,s 3~1:4 Kodiak Pt-te 500 120 110 110 -1 Gen Dyn 13100 261.<:1 2!i~iI 26~:' + l~ RCPllb Stl 5800 31i~!I. 31i 3&1.~ 4- 1:2 Konllkl 100 4 4 4 _ '" DROVER-Mr. and ~Irs. Hed- G.n Elec \1700 8010 79'. 30\>'" '\ Rev Tob 10000 39'~, 39 39 -', Lelanll 300 S61L 6"", GIL _ I', I D (01- GeD Fdl! 4iGO 83th R2~:.i. 83~!'I or 1~ Rich :'tIer 3iOO 5j=' ~ :;'11~ 3·H~ - ;.~

, " ey rover nee Ive Benson), RO)"1 D I '-'00 '0" ", " I Lint'!llde 4000 3 3 ,3 _,~ Gen 1t!lIJs elOO 35h 351.8 351.8 +~. U .''i "(l.'" .• 11.>1 ..... :1 1

MeKlnn.y 1000 17 17 17 -4 2 King's Bridge Road, St. GMC 17600 10;·,;0 701 .... \-. Sears n ,31l0 90'. '9'. 8~"'" "I Mtr Chp 1000 1'j1,4,a 17K 17~ _6l.L J h" h t Gen Tir~ 8; .200 241, 2.t.~' 2·PS - :J g , Shell 011 11,100 4H':! 43 4P·4 -1 : Md Cbb 1000 22 21 21 +1'" 0 ns, IVIS 0 announce the Ga Pac Cp 6700 SZ 50'\ 52 "1"lsheralon 1900 8;, 8'. 81.+ li' Md.psa 2100 155 151 lSI -4 arrival of their son. Hedley Glidden 300 4m 41i, m. l' '. Sinctoir 7600 46'\ 45'" 46', + 1\ I Mn Corp 100 $t8~, 18~1 un, + Hi Bl . h Goodrich "800 48 47~~ 48 T V. Socony 6200 701 ~ 6918 6!)\;' - I,~ Monpre 3500 8 8 8 _ I. aIr, at t e Grace Hospital on Goodye.r SSOO J4l1 31'. 34'. +" Soulh Pac 6600 36\\ 3,'~ 36'" +l,: MI PIJ 7100 66 £4 66 +2 July 1, 1963, 8 Ibs. 80/4 oz. Grand Un IBOO 17'f.t 171. m. _ <, Srerl' R 23000 lSI., ll", I",. 1

Nat Aut l'nd 900 150 150 150 -10 Gt A P 1000 41j 4j1k 46 + % Std nrilnd lOUIl j4;1i 74 1, i .. 1l.4 I

NfJd Lcht 175 St1()!,; 1]0 1101h+!At BOURGEOIS Gt Nor Ry 2500 531 51~~ S3 ..;..Fh Sid Cal 6joO 661~ 6J~~ fiS·::; I Nw Amul.t 400 12 I:',~ 111,2 _ II - Born at SI. Gull OU 11100 47i. 46" 40',' """ Sid I~d 8100 60l< 59',., Nocan. 1000 7 7 7 Clare's Mercy Hospital on .July l!omslk 4500 5:% 501. SOl, _ % Sid :1.1 219011 £9", 6Bl. Na. Rare :!100:'J3:12 32 -1 6 b b b Uud B M 200 5l1.~ 511/" 5H~ _ l,S Stu.d Pack :;900 fi~4 6~'~ Openl Expl 2000 l4'h J41" 14\; _ "" ,a a y oy, 9 Ibs. 6\-2 oz .• to 1nlcrlake SOO 211. 241< 24', Sw,ll 1300 ~3'. 3~', 091. - ", OpernbJII 200 7JO 710 710 ~{r. and ]l,lrs. Francis "Bour- Int Bus 8700 4131.4 43r1,'f 4~O~K+41i1 Te~acn 10600 7:1~:: 721,~ 72:J~ '" ~, Pnramnq 10(1() 161t2 16~2 16~~+ I1h. 's h . Int nBrv ~200 591i1 59tH 591A +1 Te:oc G Sul 8700 1.'5 U:'I U~I P t SII I '~ 32 3" 3" geOls. tep enVille (nee Kath- Inl Nick 3000 62 61',' 61'.,' Texlron 2M" 36 3,\1, 36 ... 1, P:Ud •• ;·r 0000 1Y.i It,,;'. leen lIIurphy of St. John's). lnl p.p 9000 3" 29,. 20', _ I. Thiokol 3~00 2m 23,; 23'; - '" Peace Rhrer 1500 320 30j 3()~ -20 Int Tel 9700 51 15 5{):J~ 50~~ _ % Timi-len 900 68;.j 681/2 681'2- l~ 1

PiU Gold 500 6 6 ! John~ M SiOO 4i% 46~i. HR +114 Twent C 1400 3WS e(\~~ 301"8'_ 14 i Pow cp 1 stp 50 147 47 47 _ 1.~ Kellnecot 5900. 7JV~ 7218 731'.2 +H~ Un Carb 2500 105 lC-l~, 105 + I.~..: i

I' II ' I ,l , DEATH Krc.". 1000' 2 .... ~ .. ".3" 23'" _ I·~ utd Airc noo 4>'1/~ 4j\8 .t6\:iI ; 0\v cp W P 700 0;. 0 .. to\.,_I,~ ",'.>1 n .. Uld 1

QUe Cobalt 300 325 :!2!5 325 KroehIcr HOD Jil l~~" 16 .j.. \~ Corp 4800 tll~ AI,~ n'4 ~ 'A Buby Foo 100 m 325 m +5 Lib McN L 1700 15 IS IS + '. tin Frull 3700 27'; 26", m. I Rub)' Foo ... 29011 30 30 3D KEARSEY-Passed peaceful. Loew'. 4500 m. m, 18\; _ % tiS Gyps 1100 8.1'1. 8m 83'i + '. '1

SII Colum 700 :'50 :H~ 345 -5 Mad S Gar 2300 1'~8 1'tfl lSi. US Rubb 2!OO 45!·" 45~8 451"8..:.. 1~ Sl,lrs Exp1 5400 210 200 201 + 1 ly away after a short illness, Marsh Fld 1300 35 341. 34'. 11:S Sicel 2282" 4H', 46:, 47 , •. "1 Saocun dev 1130 25 21 25 Emily Susan Kearsey, aged 65 Martin 1900 19'. 19')8 19'. _ I, hnad Cp ,00 le1, h 1331 • .;. 1,

Merck 4600 95~~ 94~~ 93 + H4 ,~ Un Tel 19iOO 2i-!~ 26 111 2Pi + PI' I ~~~~r ~:: ;: ::V. ~% :i' _I years. Leaving to mourn her )(pls Ho. 3000 101'h 1021. 101'h + 1\, I WoollI'th 8110 01 70', 71 + \, Silver Sum %4000 73 19 71 -3 husband, four daughters, Betty Min. M II 10700 59 .. 5611 59 + V. - , Sl1vr-r Twn SOOO ~6 35 35 r.1inn Ont 600 211f.& 2H'4. 21'r. _ % Total ules: 3,830.000. j S Dulault 8000 12 11'," 12 + I (:lIrs. Ray Gloede), Glenview, )Ioh.sco 4200 9 m 9 + % ' • SpartAn 3500 31 50 50 -2 III.; Florence (Mrs. George ~Iont Ward 10200 371's 37 37 - v. Certain pedestrians. called 'I Sid Gold 1000 7 7 7 Nat "'vlol 00 273 '" 27\. m. + '" jaywalkers, get ,their name ·rocb. 14000 IY.i 8 8V. +"" Ryan), Oshawa, Ontario; Ethel Nal Cash 4000 701, 69'A 70~\ + 'f.t Tlb Expl 5000 e ~ 6 ('I E F M L d J f Nal Dlst 59011 251, 2m 2S;; + I;' from the' jay bird. \\'hich, U. Ob.bkl 1000 51 51 51 +1 "rs. . • ac eo , • r., 0 Nal GypS 1700 4l1'o 46", 47\\ +1\ US1I lly ru ft thO I' . U prln 1000 32 32 32 +1 the city; Joan (Mrs. C. R. Bak. NY Ce.1 5500 211. 21% 21\~ + II. a ns a er IIlgs I lag· I'

U TolI"" I 815 fir. 16 16 - l' ) 0 h t Nor Poc 2100 46~i 46 46l\ + % onally. 1'.1 M.r SOIl S5 5 5 er, s awa, On.: three sons. OUlb Mar 25600 \11'; 11;\ Ill< - 1. 1

Total S.les: Indusrlalo 159200, MIn .. Bill and Jack of the city, and Porke Da 9400 26 251, 2m - I~ I and Ols 312.100 Pe.n RR 23000 19~ m. 19l. + 'h Ancient Romans r~prorlnc~d

Eric of Mobile, Alabama; also I'epsl Cola 9000 51* 51 51ll +1% artificial pearls in lar.,"e lIum· I 31 grandch·ldr Dd 10 g t PUe'r 3100 51'h 501'.1 51 + ','

1 en a rea - rhelp. D 6100 62 6111 62 + ',; bers, grandchildren. Funeral from

AMERICAN,

Wm. SI~:\\lTi Service Statiun .

PALMER'S L Topsail 1I0ad

, GREASING , WASHING

• TIRE REP AIltS • WHITE GAS • OUTBOARD MOrOA • ACCESSORIES

OPEN DAILY 7:30 a.m. to

PHONE my17,lmth

Siook Oell I'hOn. Br .. U DA 011 Bu.k Iml CS Pele C Javtlln Cd. Mar. Creole CrOWD CP D.v·Pal Dome Pet Ford C xd Goldfield Holll'Rer

Nel Salu' Rltb Low CJGlle ChlJe

300 511'.1 511. 51;. 5500 3 211 2'!J - %

100 25R 25'h 251> + I< 1600 1!l :!81. 19 + \.

5000 4\1 4 4\. + 1-16 28700 17\1, 1511 ·17\\ +H'

28 Bonaventure Avenue to the

Basilica for Requiem Mass at 8.15 8.m, on Thursday. Inter­

ment at Holy Sepulchre Ceme-

tery. " FISHERY SAL 2300 31. 3~t 3~ 2700 411< 4O~ 4\\f. +114 000 13~ 1m 13'!o - lO !JOO \0 9·16 ""' + I 16 1600 12'h 121'1 12'h

200 12'1> 121'.1 12\\ - .", I~OO 2 IV. 2

100 2.11< 2.11< 251< - '" :100 93\\ 921, 93 600 m 2\1 11. ~Iuctd t Freiman 100 SSI'.I 51'.1 ~'h - %

Fr I'ete pr 100 290 290 290

In. N Am L Shoro Musey F Mead Joh. Min Corp Mob'b C Nal Pel

2500 13'!J 13;\0 13% +14 18500 25% 2m 25 +~_

Amp!le .supplies obtainable St. Anthony.

Quick ·despatch from steamer this week. .. CAN DIE'S

Available exclusively from the following . Drug Stores: '

}BCITEL DRUGS ELIZABETH DRUGS : ..... " ...... ,.y DRUGS KENMOUNT DRUGS

;..:...-----------_ .. _--. Plan Now. for Summer' Pleasure Afloat

~,t ,,' .'! r.'·· 10. . 1\ t" .

, ~ .. ",:

" ~,' Boats,. ~,-= __ '_ Outboard

Motors Trailers, and I

. Acceslories .' .

Charles,:, R .. Bell" Limited , '\ ,

;.\VA~,si·WEST .. / ,.n .' • . .

.: j '1 ' f

PHONE 8-U3l ..

~,l, ,

'.. t' '~~ ••.

fj;'{.:,\, .St"" • ,..;. . J~. ,,.

· '. ' .. : . "

, , .. , , .

.. . \

Front • A 1000 '20'~ 20" lOI'o + % GL Pap.r 500 '201'0 2 0\1 20" Gunnar 100 190 890 890 -20 Hawker·S 2.10 1m 611 . 6\~ HolIlII •• r 320 27"" 271'.1 - II Homo II. '60 11\\ 111'.1- '/, Rome B 200 121<, 1211 - '!o Hud BI, 45 ~5'" 55'" HSC 425 14% 14'h + I> HUlky 011 650 IV, 6% + 1'. Imp Tob 3150 13'10 13'1> Ind A.cop 5660 24% 241. I A. 450p. 165 91\1 971'1 Int Nickel 1100 6611. 67 + ~\ 1nt UIIl?OO 2m + Ii

. , -;. "

... O"fHr~ 1

1ff!!J !Rf!!:i

NJ Zinc Pae Petl Preston Seur,y It She Wml Technclr Trnl Lu:t. Tr Cont WI Ulah d S Wr Har,

500 1~\ 16\1. 16% +2 100 % % %

46200 2 7·16 2 2 7-16 +7·16 1000 30'\. 30 3011 + '!J

W 700 6;1 6!i 6% 100881

3200 1m 111-< JtI~ 1200 13 811< 83 +1

30100 1m 181,1. 1m H\ zoo U,,", 11% 11~' - ~.

700 3' 37~~ 37;~ 2200 1m 14\\ II" + 14

2600 13e16 ~(13-I6 + \1

Tol.1 IIle.: 1.200.1)00.

SUMMER SPECIAL

$1.00 Ladies' Summer Dresses (plain) Cleaned, Refreshed and, Pressed

'"ughes~Maynard Cleansers Ltd. ; . BL.\CKMARSH RD. PHONE 9-2186-7

J. J. EVILLE A. H.' MURRAY & CO.1 LTD.

Hamilton Avenue, ExtenSion PHONE 9·S3GO

NOW AT LOCAL PRICES

MOLSONS CANADIAN LAIGER and EXPORT ALE

FREE HOME DELIVERY. TELEPHONI: 8·2011-5 LINES

NE~OUNDLAND BREWERY LTD. (Not Inserted by Board of LIquor Control)

51. John's

CONSULT" US FOR

ELECTRICAL WIRING INSTALLATIONS and

RANGE REPAIRS City Electrical Co., Ltd,

(ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS) PHONE 8·3767'

~---------------------------Jc----------------------------'--" .. ' ..

I' f

Ask ahautl On Used .( Give You;:

erra:.~ ··.USI

oml tl31

(CPl-'I

won Cc Wednesday

its plans to Developme

voting down ~ Conservative

f Reuters

Maj. Ric: his single·el

over the

..ierlmaJ:IY tn "

Ii him in ; from p,

said he flel

higher th.

ground

from Na the Am

him in th made TS­

trainer, wei

27. and the

and fiv

who gaVE Warsaw

test pilot' il

.' ....... ,

s ·Ra1'lld1(V. l

1