14
--, I -·-1 ·, ie'r Pro- :·_"It:; of •. 1 r. Ring. :111:1 superb · toldcrs· ."1\t llOW! . UH II .l an 30th, dut '.:ry 1st, nl II sailing ;, ry 31st, due :lr)' 2nd. !l'ock sailing :nst, due · :ry 2nd. .,-,, II sailing :t:ory 7th, due . ';y 'll h. -A .1" commiUee ·.d here . '\ ccl:end . ' aim is ·:tdcntand 11. Chief ::ncth : ·.- of Toronto ·nt and Rev. ::·3t Unitarian __ I . '' -d :,• RUN' DOWN? use '{our CREDIT NEI;D A TONIC ? ? TAKE I? THE DAILY For parts and Repairs 1 -- "RICK'S Nova Motors Ltd. TASTELESS. _ NEWS,- ST.· NFLD., WED., FEB., 1, 1961 (Price: 7 Cents). .., THE Vol. ·68 .. i No. _26 ''Santa Maria'' Entry. To Recife Still Uncertain _;,*_ . itude Of· New sident.· May Settle Issue · By WILLIAM L. RYAN · Brazil (AP) :_ The U.S. Navy dickered lNiusiveiV Tuesday with. Portuguese rebel. u ...,,l"ue Galvao aboard the Santa Maria. that the nearly 600 captive passengers landed today were ' , one point Galvao was reported to o.1hri!Oie1nea to scuttle .the ship if an effort . . \ to se1ze 1t. question in ·dispute appeared t.o be the passengers would be brought in to e from the Santa Maria at t.he Recife or be transferred to another_ ship . in the miles offshore, a possibly ·. ·, ---tr------------------- Chimp· Rod<ets . 420 · Into Outer Space CAPE C*NAVERAL, Fla. {AP) - A wrinkle·. faced little chimpanzee nicknamed Ham was plucked alive from the Atlantic Ocean Tuesday ' after a 420-mile ride through space aboard C1 rocket. · ,- 'The survival of the cheerful ape • · ed conclusively that a man could duplicate a similar flight and return to earth unscathed. One of the Astronauts may un 1 from the capsule for t:l dertake a somewhat similar flight j minutes of the 16-minute nH1t some time witjlin the next two and then contact was lost. I or three months. During the time radio signals _One . of the six were . received 'the chimtl Wltnessmg the space \aunchmg pushed \'arious levers and per- of the furry black chimp, Air I formed other . behavior tasks Force Capt. Leroy G. Cooper• assigned him. said after the The steeper rc entry patlt "Nothing succeeds like sue- resulting from the g rca t e r cess. I am extremely happy height probably subjt!clcd the capital of Brazilia Tuesday, NEW DELHI, India-Britain's Queen Elizabeth (left) chats with Madam Pandit of India here Jan. with the shot" chimp to more crushing forces· may settle the issue of what Queen's arival' from Jaipur, where Prince Philip bagged a tiger.-(UPI Photo), The smart little ape, stiJJ en- than he was expected to have· happens to the passengers. -.---- ____ closed ·1n his 2,400-pound space to stand. Qundros made no mention of capsule, -was picked up bv a Some time. this year,' the Na- the Santa Marla in his lnaug. T ' thd I p' . Th recovery ship, the u.s.s. Doh· tiona\ Aeronautics and Space saidt.c must have Bra· ural address Tuesday night but ·rofop" . ' I ' . . raw as .o· se r;,lllil! .... at ner. Administration plans to put 'a clearance - last weekend he . said: "Hen- · ' . . . .,.. After a physical examination man in a "low" orbit around an assurance that rique Galvao Is my old rriend. aboard the Donner, Ham is the earth in which he will Maria will not be Being ·my friend, he knows I scheduled, to be !!own hy hcli· travel at 17,400 mile!! an hour. him if he steams will not turn over the ship to copter to a hosoital ship at Ham made a brief appear- Portuguese authorities in - any T u N E f ' . t. . I n c . . Grand Bahama Island for fur- ance for . reporters before the lit.\ two destroyers at A Recife radio·. station re- , . I · . flown back to Cape Canaveral. wrinkled his face In a toothy, II!! Ad m i r a I Allen manner., . . A e c I v e n e s s 0 n 0 !her checks and then wfl! be shot. He waved his arms and conferred for ported that Gnlvao told Adml· 'ROCKET MISFIRED little-old-man grin. Galvao on the ral Smith "I will sink m:v. ship Because the rocket misfired, The little space ape was ;; miles southeast If·. the Brazilian . government By I'E1':&R BUCKLEY men arc remaining on Dlngo. provinces. ----- the chimp was shot 155 miles dressed in a nylon suit. He .was tries to- seize· it." · ._ Canadian "rress Starr Writer lese duty.- · . _ · · !l!aj.-Gcn. .Joseph Mobutu's' p up, 40 miles more than planned, strapped in a pressurized, co- tile admiral said The station said Smith asl:ed LEOPOLD, ILL E (CP) - . Rikhye, who gave reporters a troops ;we soldiel'S Joyal to a reel F:oi Is and 420 miles down range, 130 coon-like plastic couch fastened was not "as· def· Galvao what ha·would do u he United Ar1>b Republic troops two-hour briefing today, said of jailed i e r Patrice Lu- PI miles past the target area to the floor of the capsule. all concerned. would faned to rei:elve clearance· from were flown ·out of The' i:ongo the withdrawals: mumba in Oriental face each ai'US . where a fleet of planes and A clear plastic face plate en- be." He told reporters Brazil.' Galvao replied: - Tuesday, begi1:ning a series of "This ·.reduces us almost to other along this frontier. TOROt>;TO (CP) ships waited to make the re- abled him to see what went on some things .. would, decide ·rigb_t away to withdrawals . that threaten the the . point--. of· If . Rikhye' said UN military men a " . 1 d- X-rays of I covery. He also travelled at a around him. Electronic depices IL!d to be kept se· go! to another place:" _ effectiveness· ·o.f the United th.e force·-'is cut any-. mofl! we here drawing up plnns for • wrajpc con· ?f 5,000 miles an hour, were to his 'body to · present. · ·. · · · t ·· · · -. -- ·;···· . : .. -. . lions:: •force; c m ;: . thls · .. wJlknot',pe abl!! .military_ posts manned. by Cake· 1oil:d . __ Chn;_hnas BOO. miles over. the_ schcdl!led m_easure -h1s heart beat• body KEY When where; ,on civil :war. 1 • .- · .' DISCLOSES BUFFER PLAN· UN soldiers. He .added· the postslto esca c fp a h qt a limit.. . . . . . . . tcmperato/e job perform.' of Brazil's new Galvao replied, "Accra; and we lndm s .. Lt.-Gen. R1k- Rikhye; who Is flying to UN would be establlsMd "as 1 pit 1 f P t. e, Hos Ra_dto stgna\s were received ance durmg hiS btg adventure. Qundros,'. who would need .American protection hye, mthtary-' adlnser_ -to' .UN headquarters in.-Nc1Y 'York to- as we can get enough troops to at 0 p j. . · ---------- . at· .the' new and " · · Secretary General Dag Ham· day to report on· the future send into the T c an 15 ene, po ICe 581 Q d B . marskjold, said eventual course of the UN Congo com· - ues ay •. · ,., . ua ros. ecomes · withdrawal of more· than 5·000 mand referred to- the "rapidly · .. For. centuries the Khyber 11 DeTputy tchlef 1 _Geoi.,?d Ell 1 wttd odf , · , , . 1• p • · UN t f G · M .. .' · .. . p th · th f · te oron o po 1ce 1:a1 a oa e _roops-o . umea, oroceo determratmg" mthtary sttUa· ass was e pa way o mva· re , 1 t 'd d - ae I remler :. and Indonesia as well as the tion but also disclosed a plan sionforwould·beconquerorsof 1 'over, shpalrlc ' ' U AR . ld k th UN I d" Th k f K I d car gas s e s were I den m B I d . . . . - rna e e to set up a buffer zone along n 13. e Boo o now e ge th 1 · f th 1 h· h p • ' forCE! "largely incffec- the potentially-- explosive b?rder Alexander the as rail resl ent>- tlve.. between Equator and Onentnl eth itrst of many, A d B'l · h h b · The Guinea contingent of 500 . n ,Y 1 .omovJc _ . _as e en ,_ : planned to :iail for home later \ i char bCd \vtth cons _mmg to es- thls week while the 3,000 Mo· ' cape lawful . BRASILIA <Reuters) - Janio fonso Arinos d'e Melo Franco Quadros took office as Brazil's said he did not think' the liner are awaiting final withdrawal ' r nt parce) sent to· Bllomovtch president Tuesday and pledged would be returned' automatic- lAP) - Israeli Plnhas Lavon,' defence minister orders. se . .a I 0 I by .from Montreal. The to pres e r v e civil liberties ally to Portugal upon docking Ben-Gurion re- involved in a controversy about The removal of the· four I · label t 11 1 bdy a throughout tire nation. at a Brazilian port. He added toppling his relations with Egypt. · tingents would cut the lnternn- · woman u a c ec' s owe no More than 1,500 guests, In-, the issue would ha'le to be de- government Lavon, qow secretary • general tiona! pollco force . by nearly B · . 'D ·one. of tha.t name at the address. eluding representatives of 55 cided on a basis of :International Affair." tlon, was cleared by an official one-third .. Canadian signals de- · · · t ' authiJr of a book countries, packed the House of law. resignation was of the Hlsl!idrut labor federa- tachmenls -totalllng.some 250 o·gus o·cumen s·?nspacewluch.soldZOO,OOOcop- Congress to witness the cere- · President Izhak Inquiry .. Full detans have nevt>r v:as commttted to the many. In his Inaugural address Tues-. . ' !he premier In- been made public, but the con· · · · · m D_ecember when Besides financial headaches, day night Quadros.' made no · ihe tabinet of hls de- troversy_ Is believed to have \ .PoJe15 Relea·se ·· · · ' atrtsts he was. to Quadros inherited the delicate mention of the San1a .Maria. grown out of' the smashing of · .' • . .stand trtal !" connl!chon Wllh a problem posed by the captive Quadros, who at 43 is the- what he an Israeli spy. ring In Cairo Canadian EDMONTON tCPl - The Ed- they found evidence that prison- Portuguese liner Santa Maria same age as Ken-. to ;-zvlla!er asked while Lavon was defence mln- ·.OTTAWA.· (.CP manton Journal snys-police.lmvc ers 1n Kingston Penitentiary had ana ha ct _. off the Brazilian coast. nedy, succeeds Juscellno Kubit- Bt orm .a new gov- ister In 1954. ·There_ were reports th rltl ·!i '' l I- r.ollsh au- evidence that two federai peni· made keys to open post office e now as een ' ec are sane .. As the pres!dent sworn scliek, who was not eligible to . n Gunon replied: that a. security leak was respon· K 0 f ave. rc ease tentlary printu 1 g shops were mail boxes. ottawa . police said S d m• new Foretgn Mmtstcr AI- succeed himself. . . slble. - 1 ° Monb1!al, Pollsh·box;n used by inmates to priiit false they arrested .a man who had. a ---------------- Lavon Aff01r Is Disagreeing with the official h 1 ;veen. heldtlim identification papers -later, used key which possibly could AUCKLo\.ND (('p) ·- New Fl • M k report, Ben-Gurlon offered- to . 1 mon s, t pas b g s ch qu . n : an 'I b · -c d P t 1 · . ' .. · 0 f SnOw ' ' . . resign 'last - December after the ,External Minfster' Green ? s 0 u e es on a a ' Y. mm ox In a: OS I Zealand' cahmet mtmstcrs can em R11 n g a e s report was submitted.' said, Tuesduy. ' , bona\. , . eqmpment Is r,epmred m . pcm-1 no longer take ·refuge for a A I ' He :told. tlle Commons ' that The pemtenhnncs are .New tcnhary. brief holiday even In the mast Valon .. .- . · ', Koyer, arrested two· hours--he· Wcstmmster, B.C., and Kmgs. The. Journal says the· _identifi., remote corners ol the country. ' N t - TRIAL DELAYED fore his scheduled- dcnarture 'for ton, Ont., the says. cation papers racket was uncov· The minister of internal af. __ ex· ·REGINA !CPl- Trial of_Re-- Camida following a :io-day·vislt Last c!ty touched ercd.when police checked the fairs, F. L. A. Golz, disan- 'M •d s h' active snow- ·ginli': lawyer 'Dr •. C, 'Shumt.. to; his. homeland -In AuguSt was of[ a nahanni when of _a man arrested pearcd recently into the' wilder- a I en peec . · but the. brunt at !her. on · three · cha.rges -of released· Friday' and W.lli be re- tn .a forgery case. idcntifi- ness on a fishing trip. · Avalon aouth perjury• was ad- turned ·to Canada this.wcck. . Parae· h .. _te'To cards showed' hlm to But he 'lias urgently _ . n nsula "(IS jo!lnted· Monday. after the taw· ·At the time of hls arrest -t.he . an mspector of the .federal de_· w:mted· on official busine6s, a . . . ·•tatherrn · · yer pleaded not· guilty and. his official Po\Jsli news. agency PAP S t. M • partmcnt of justice and an in- forestry · department observa- . ICP) - Fore:try: ·of repudlab,ng. the prin· an yesterday CQ)Jnsel. requested _time to 'said Koyer was 8 iJriember of the Q n a a , vestigator for the depart- lion/plane- spolb!d his . camp Mtmstcr ,John Clple of tax as be· continuance documents relating to- the case •. home army, an · 110 RECIFE', Brazn (APl-Two ment. Both cards were prmted from, t!le ·air_ Wi_thin a Brunswlck 5 I tween , the and ·less leUve sno d spell and Dr. -was charged· derground movement Frenchmen parachuted for, the on glossy stock and bore a coat hours. Gotz deeply tm·! 10 the fed,?ral cab!nc_t, ,sa!d I .. b!ing antlcwflurry per· . lnvestlg_atlons . by the founded ,. by the . government- captive liner Santa Maria Tues- of arms_ and photograph. mersed in affmrs of state. I a new. 0 P 11 0: 15 m . It was the. ftrst ttme he has on tbe lpated. . commission Into the_ ln-eiclle In London, -:and had ad· day. Only one of them made it. . · _ . . · the t Ian t 1 c pm-1 takeJ1 the Commons floor for ;. faillscJeAvalon .Penln· sale of sharFR 1\'!e- mltted -mu:rderlng ·a·number of -Charles Bonnay, a. Parisian The newspaper pohce 'M . I' C' I , mces: . !full-dress speech •. though .he·has I l!!nniei ar and, in the tats Exploration ·eompany by left-wing . ."unwelcome· living in Neiv York and \VOrklng found thP.t. glo_ssy Side of the (;!n s .. tty es It IS 10 no a)ls.wered questions . stieet:al aalesmen· employed by ·Western to the home army." _ . for ljle French picture magazine pulled each card. apart and ·h . to the syf!lpathet!c. athtu?e government poltey m easi and Bond ami Share, Company of . Mr. Greim said thnt news of Paris Match,' fell Into the Allan· cnrd was the· back of a photo- . 3 fiC=-e taken by Pnm: Munster rploting . suP PIe mentary es· ______ __:_:._. th'e releasE• was ntalned. I . tic near the-liner A: launch from graph, The .. showed MONTREAL (CPl - C . K and . hts g?vernment, hmates through the honse. . _ . . ; . .co _ n a . . · . . persons watclung a soccer game . · · he· sald in hls matden- speech A large number of cabinet ____ from the.Ca· a. U.S .. dcstroy.er raced to bts played by the. ·:Penguins." A Herz,· ol the· Data. to the Commons. ministers, includihg Prime 'Min- nadmn Embassy 10 Warsaw. and took him. uboard the check showed the New Westmin-' pany of Llmrt.ed. For the Liberals to ask At· ister Diefenbaker, sat in on his · POI.ES . _ naial vessel. · · ster Penitentiary· had such- n I ll'!onday men 5 ate !antic MPs to ioin in a non- address, which was interrupted 11.23 12. (I IS'' '4' 15' Nfld. ,Skies· ' 1 •. Sun•et today·, •. 5:02 p.m. Sunrise -- tomorrow ·., •• '7:2'7 a.m. MThe Moon . rites .•.•••••• 11:07 p.m. TIDES Wlb · '7:58 8:29 p.m. LOw ·_ 1:40 a.m.., 2:01 p.m. The mlmster recalled· that _- Gtl de la l\larre, a stunt para- tcain -. ' mng to look women s. f'd nc t' n the f tl b 1 f ··· Prime 1\'!inlster ·Diefcnbakcr in chutist from· Paris working for · · . · Pointed· toes and· an overall Ccon 1 e 1 ° 1 mo_ 1 0 ° v 1 _'nm•nt' t'n Crequen Ytr Yb app ause rom f · 1 · · D ""b 1 · th · D' 1 h t · 1 •' \" · · · h J' ht · · · · 1 - d' onserva ve ;; c ' , onserva ve cnches re errmg t!ar y m cce.., er. o e a mas p o o, agency, n I'CW ,,estmmster, -t c Tour· 1g er appearanct' are. tn mg 'e r th g vcrnment's rec- · ' ·_!he arrest, had noted the co- Iande(] near a lunch going lo ·tlte nal says, a search uncovered in widespread acceplml"ce, he said, - 0 d \n ° with that re· of. Polish Santa· Maria. and it .look him the prison print two . dies said 1%0' lhe g economic prob; M. e . ' lD ' alloWtnl( the nboard . the !mer., ' . I of a coat_ of arms _wluch matched:! first ' hme l)len I ems . w:is "unmitigated gall:" Ill . r consul m Warsaw to, tntervlew The . Frenchmen . parachuted _of. arms on the false colors as bnrmshed ohve 1\lr: Flemming, the rorrner ,. Koyer. - . . . . . · from hght planes. . tdenhftcahon cards. · · and vanous shaMs of green. New Brunswick premier sworn Sti•ll . ._ ' in as Canada's lint forestry ;- Chlorine Gas Kills .One, Sends 50 To Hos;pital SeriouS NEW llOADS,--La.· (AP) ·- · It drove about 1,000 from De&il!y. -chlorine e:as-first · or home-'i· and .'schools and' made the' war )))!sons-spewed from ·a uninhabil:!lblc several ·s q u a r e train wret!k 'fl#eL·day, -killing a miles o{ southeast Louisiana. baby and aendlilg about 50 other · persOilll to ' hospital. The . gas came fmm a . rup. · tured tank car contalnlng liquid Borne on ahlftll(g winds, green chlorine which was burled be· eloudr ·. of vapor qHically poi· neath a · pile o{ 15 cars of the 80iled JO of the 50. 1 Kansas City Southern Rnilwny Scorn of fatm animals died freight; Eighteen cars were tlc- ·and civil defence workers with children cyllapsed trom the gas N t H 1 yet carbines and masks closed off a and ll-month-old James died 0 ea S'( Ward Young, a mine worker. section of the higl:way •nnning later ·in hospital. : Of. at' Little Bay, Notre Daine Bay, along the.·tangled wreckage. _ Victims- whee[:ing, coughing •• ""' injured in a'rock slide over the' More than five hours after the 1 and vomiting frnm the Premier Smallwoo:l said yes- week-end, is reported still.: In train stacked up at Labarre, fum9s -- quickly- jammed the terday th5t to date he has not serious condition at the Sprinl!· volunteers begnn throwing soda 24-bed St. Joseph· Hospital here. heard from Primn Minister dale Cottage Hospital. .- ash, a neutralizing rigent, into In all• the hosp'l.al treated 50 Dicfenbakcr regardin!l the rc- Two other men hurt in, tbe tracl;sitle ditches tlwt tan two persons, sumption ·of the Dominion· same slide arc reported imp rOY· · feet deep in !lt;ecn chlodne. ! As quicl;Iy as I hey rccovcrecl, l'rovincinl · Fisral _ ConFerence ing .. They were not 'as. seri- FAMILV JilT 'IIAHD 1 officials tr;msfermd l'ictims ·to which was convened sometip1c ously hurt as Young. Thei· Worst hit 1\·as a family JHllt'ocd 1 ' the NnliQnal Guard armory lor ago anrl, after is due j names arc Ronald Keats ar:: national guardsmen Harris. Father,- mother and lour food and shelter. · · to mecl again. Jack amidlt the lethal patches · of railed. floating 11as.. Louisiana '•' lo! I ,, . ' --.. ":'. :.•· . ' ' . "' " ,.· , ... .. ·l ' . I. , .. ·. .. \. . . . ·r , ., '. ·: {. ' ' ' . .. : ! ! •. .·':c- .. .! ., ·1- i 'I i.' ,. -i I _,, _.; ,;, 1.: . 'I (< i ' ., I. I . , . I' 'I. •. ; : I - J' '. ,, "' : .·· . .. ·. I ',. ··' :; . '!

Nova ''Santa Maria'' ;,* Entry. To Recife Uncertain sident ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19610201.pdfafter a 420-mile ride through space aboard C1 .· rocket

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Page 1: Nova ''Santa Maria'' ;,* Entry. To Recife Uncertain sident ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19610201.pdfafter a 420-mile ride through space aboard C1 .· rocket

--, I

-·-1 ·, ie'r Pro­:·_"It:; of •. 1r. Ring. :111:1 '!in~d ~: superb

· toldcrs· :· bhie~

."1\t llOW!

. UH l'el~r II .l an 30th, dut

'.:ry 1st, nl II sailing ;, ry 31st, due :lr)' 2nd. !l'ock sailing

:nst, due · :ry 2nd. .,-,, II sailing :t:ory 7th, due . ';y 'll h.

~cr~J -A .1" commiUee ·.d here

. '\ ccl:end . ' aim is ·:tdcntand

11. Chief ::ncth ~!cl~allltbl. : ·.- of Toronto ·nt and Rev. ::·3t Unitarian

.I~,_ __

I . ''

-d :,• RUN' DOWN?

use '{our

CREDIT NEI;D

A TONIC ? ?

TAKE I? THE DAILY For parts and Repairs 1

--"RICK'S

Nova Motors Ltd. TASTELESS. _ NEWS,- ST.· JOHN'~, NFLD., WED., FEB., 1, 1961 (Price: 7 Cents). .., THE Vol. ·68 .. i No. _26

''Santa Maria'' Entry. To Recife Still Uncertain _;,*_ .

itude Of· New sident.· May

Settle Issue · By WILLIAM L. RYAN ·

Brazil (AP) :_ The U.S. Navy dickered lNiusiveiV Tuesday with. Portuguese rebel.

u ... ,,l"ue Galvao aboard the Santa Maria. that the nearly 600 captive passengers landed today were unce~ain. ' ,

one point Galvao was reported to h~ve o.1hri!Oie1nea to scuttle .the ship if an effort . . \

to se1ze 1t. question in ·dispute appeared t.o be the passengers would be brought in to

e from the Santa Maria at t.he Recife or be transferred to another_ ship . in the

~AIIcmtic miles offshore, a possibly hazar~ •

·. ·,

---tr-------------------

Chimp· Rod<ets . 420 · A~iles Into

Outer Space CAPE C*NAVERAL, Fla. {AP) - A wrinkle·.

faced little chimpanzee nicknamed Ham was plucked alive from the Atlantic Ocean Tuesday ' after a 420-mile ride through space aboard C1 .· rocket. · ,-

'The survival of the cheerful ape der:nonstrat~ • · ed conclusively that a man could duplicate a similar flight and return to earth unscathed.

One of the Astronauts may un 1 from the capsule for ~ome t:l dertake a somewhat similar flight j minutes of the 16-minute nH1t some time witjlin the next two and then contact was lost. ~

I or three months. During the time radio signals _One . of the six Astrona~ts were . received 'the chimtl

Wltnessmg the space \aunchmg pushed \'arious levers and per­of the furry black chimp, Air I formed other . behavior tasks Force Capt. Leroy G. Cooper• assigned him. said after the ~aunching: The steeper rc • entry patlt

"Nothing succeeds like sue- resulting from the g rca t e r cess. I am extremely happy height probably subjt!clcd the

capital of Brazilia Tuesday, NEW DELHI, India-Britain's Queen Elizabeth (left) chats with Madam Pandit of India here Jan. l~5th, with the shot" chimp to more crushing forces· may settle the issue of what foll~wmg•the Queen's arival' from Jaipur, where Prince Philip bagged a tiger.-(UPI Photo), The smart little ape, stiJJ en- than he was expected to have· happens to the passengers. -.---- ____ ---~-~--~--· closed ·1n his 2,400-pound space to stand.

Qundros made no mention of capsule, -was picked up bv a Some time. this year,' the Na-the Santa Marla in his lnaug. T ' w· thd I p ' . Th recovery ship, the u.s.s. Doh· tiona\ Aeronautics and Space

saidt.c must have Bra· ural address Tuesday night but ·rofop" . ' I ' . . raw a s .o· se r;,lllil! .... at ner. Administration plans to put 'a clearance - last weekend he . said: "Hen- · ' . . . ~ .,.. After a physical examination man in a "low" orbit around an assurance that rique Galvao Is my old rriend. aboard the Donner, Ham is the earth in which he will

Maria will not be Being ·my friend, he knows I scheduled, to be !!own hy hcli· travel at 17,400 mile!! an hour. him if he steams will not turn over the ship to copter to a hosoital ship at Ham made a brief appear-

Portuguese authorities in - any T u N E f ' . t. . I n c . . Grand Bahama Island for fur- ance for . reporters before the

lit.\ two destroyers at A Recife radio·. station re- , . I · . flown back to Cape Canaveral. wrinkled his face In a toothy, II!! Ad m i r a I Allen manner., . o· . A e c I v e n e s s 0 n g· 0 !her checks and then wfl! be shot. He waved his arms and

conferred for ported that Gnlvao told Adml· 'ROCKET MISFIRED little-old-man grin. Galvao on the ral Smith "I will sink m:v. ship Because the rocket misfired, The little space ape was

;; miles southeast If·. the Brazilian . government By I'E1':&R BUCKLEY men arc remaining on Dlngo. provinces. ----- the chimp was shot 155 miles dressed in a nylon suit. He .was tries to- seize· it." · ._ Canadian "rress Starr Writer lese duty.- · . _ · · • !l!aj.-Gcn. .Joseph Mobutu's' p up, 40 miles more than planned, strapped in a pressurized, co-

tile admiral said The station said Smith asl:ed LEOPOLD, ILL E (CP) - . Rikhye, who gave reporters a troops ;we soldiel'S Joyal to a reel F:oi Is and 420 miles down range, 130 coon-like plastic couch fastened was not "as· def· Galvao what ha·would do u he United Ar1>b Republic troops two-hour briefing today, said of jailed ~-rem i e r Patrice Lu- PI miles past the target area to the floor of the capsule.

all concerned. would faned to rei:elve clearance· from were flown ·out of The' i:ongo the withdrawals: mumba in Oriental face each ai'US . where a fleet of planes and A clear plastic face plate en-be." He told reporters Brazil.' Galvao replied: - Tuesday, begi1:ning a series of "This ·.reduces us almost to other along this frontier. TOROt>;TO (CP) • ships waited to make the re- abled him to see what went on

some things dis~ .. ~·r would, decide ·rigb_t away to withdrawals . that threaten the the . point--. of· ineffectivene~s.· If . Rikhye' said UN military men a " .1 d- X-rays of I covery. He also travelled at a around him. Electronic depices IL!d to be kept se· go! to another place:" _ effectiveness· ·o.f the United N~~. th.e force·-'is cut any-. mofl! we here wer~ drawing up plnns for tai;i~/ • wrajpc parce~ con· sp~ed ?f 5,000 miles an hour, were attac~ed to his 'body to

· present. · ·. · · · t ·· · · -. '· -- ·;···· . : .. -. . lions:: •force; c m ;: . thls · rcpubll~ .. wJlknot',pe abl!! to,,~ll~!l!!r!i!ob;!~ ~onal .military_ posts manned. by Cake· 1oil:d . ~e ~:-edl __ Chn;_hnas BOO. miles over. the_ schcdl!led m_easure -h1s heart beat• body KEY When S~~~-·-· as~ed where; vergl~~ ,on civil :war. 1 • .- · .' DISCLOSES BUFFER PLAN· UN soldiers. He .added· the postslto esca c fp a h qt a _P_riSone~ limit.. . . . . . . . tcmperato/e a~d job perform.' of Brazil's new Galvao replied, "Accra; and we lndm s .. Lt.-Gen. ~ndm;Jlt, R1k- Rikhye; who Is flying to UN would be establlsMd "as ~oon 1 pit 1 f P t~om t. e, )nAdrt~ Hos Ra_dto stgna\s were received ance durmg hiS btg adventure.

Qundros,'. who would need .American protection hye, mthtary-' adlnser_ -to' .UN headquarters in.-Nc1Y 'York to- as we can get enough troops to at 0p no~ ~· ~nm.,na j. msa~~ . ----~--- · ---------- . at· .the' new and " · · Secretary • General Dag Ham· day to report on· the future send into the area.'~ T ~ c an 15 ene, po ICe 581 Q d B .

marskjold, said t~. eventual course of the UN Congo com· - ues ay •. · ,., . ua ros. ecomes · withdrawal of more· than 5·000 mand referred to- the "rapidly · .. For. centuries the Khyber 11 DeTputy tchlef1_Geoi.,?d Ell1wttd odf , · , , . 1• p • · UN t f G · M .. .' · .. . p th · th f · te oron o po 1ce 1:a1 a oa e _roops-o . umea, oroceo determratmg" mthtary sttUa· ass was e pa way o mva· re , 1 t 'd d -ae I remler:. and Indonesia as well as the tion but also disclosed a plan sionforwould·beconquerorsof 1 'over, shpalrlc carnh~des a~ ' • '

U A R . ld k th UN I d" Th k f K I d car gas s e s were I den m B I d . . . . - \~ou rna e e to set up a buffer zone along n 13. e Boo o now e ge th 1 · f th 1 h · h • p • ' Con~? forCE! "largely incffec- the potentially-- explosive b?rder 'name~ Alexander the Gre~t as 'ri~eday;rst;e ho~p~~a;e 1~n1.c 14~r- rail resl ent>-tlve.. between Equator and Onentnl eth itrst of many, A d B'l · h h b ·

The Guinea contingent of 500 . n ,Y 1.omovJc _ . _as e en ,_ : planned to :iail for home later \ • i char bCd \vtth cons _mmg to es-thls week while the 3,000 Mo· • ' cape lawful c;ust~Y: . BRASILIA <Reuters) - Janio fonso Arinos d'e Melo Franco

Quadros took office as Brazil's said he did not think' the liner are awaiting final withdrawal ' r nt parce) w~s sent to· Bllomovtch president Tuesday and pledged would be returned' automatic-

lAP) - Israeli Plnhas Lavon,' defence minister orders. se . . a I 0 I by atrm~tl .from Montreal. The to pres e r v e civil liberties ally to Portugal upon docking Ben-Gurion re- involved in a controversy about The removal of the· four ~on· I · label sa~d t 11 w~s 1 se~t bdy a throughout tire nation. at a Brazilian port. He added

toppling his relations with Egypt. · tingents would cut the lnternn- · woman u a c ec' s owe no More than 1,500 guests, In-, the issue would ha'le to be de-government Lavon, qow secretary • general tiona! pollco force . by nearly B · . 'D ·one. of tha.t name at the address. eluding representatives of 55 cided on a basis of :International

Affair." tlon, was cleared by an official one-third .. Canadian signals de- · · · t ' ~llomovlch! authiJr of a book countries, packed the House of law. resignation was of the Hlsl!idrut labor federa- tachmenls -totalllng.some 250 o·gus o·cumen s·?nspacewluch.soldZOO,OOOcop- Congress to witness the cere- · President Izhak Inquiry .. Full detans have nevt>r -1 1~s, v:as commttted to the ho~- many. In his Inaugural address Tues-.

. ' !he premier In- been made public, but the con· · · · · plt~l m D_ecember when p~ychl· Besides financial headaches, day night Quadros.' made no · ihe tabinet of hls de- troversy_ Is believed to have \ .PoJe15 Relea·se · · · · ' atrtsts ~md. he was. unfl~ to Quadros inherited the delicate mention of the San1a .Maria.

grown out of' the smashing of · . ' • . .stand trtal !" connl!chon Wllh a problem posed by the captive Quadros, who at 43 is the-~ ~porters what he an Israeli spy. ring In Cairo Canadian EDMONTON tCPl - The Ed- they found evidence that prison- $~O,~OO- l~ldu6 at~~ _Ro~l B~: Portuguese liner Santa Maria same age as Pr~sident Ken-.

to ;-zvlla!er asked while Lavon was defence mln- ·.OTTAWA.· (.CP manton Journal snys-police.lmvc ers 1n Kingston Penitentiary had ~ ana ha ~anc l 1~ ~ ct _. off the Brazilian coast. nedy, succeeds Juscellno Kubit-Bt orm .a new gov- ister In 1954. ·There_ were reports th rltl ·!i '' l I- r.ollsh au- evidence that two federai peni· made keys to open post office e now as een ' ec are sane .. As the pres!dent ~~s sworn scliek, who was not eligible to

. n ~. Gunon replied: that a. security leak was respon· K 0 ~ f ave. rc ease Tadcus~ tentlary printu1g shops were mail boxes. ottawa . police said S d m• new Foretgn Mmtstcr AI- succeed himself. ~ . . slble. - C~yer

1 ° Monb1!al, Pollsh·box;n used by inmates to priiit false they arrested .a man who had. a poH~e ----------------

Lavon Aff01r Is Disagreeing with the official ct:'~~yanfowr~~e·ahraldy h1;veen. heldtlim identification papers -later, used key which possibly could op~n AUCKLo\.ND (('p) ·- New Fl • M k report, Ben-Gurlon offered- to . 1 mon s, t pas b g s ch qu . n : an 'I b · -c d P t 1 · . ' .. ·

0 f SnOw' ' _· . . resign 'last -December after the ,External ~ffmrs· Minfster' Green ? s 0 u e es on a a ' Y. mm ox In ~na a: OS ~ I Zealand' cahmet mtmstcrs can em R11 n g a e s report was submitted.' said, Tuesduy. ' , bona\. sca~e. , . eqmpment Is r,epmred m . pcm-1 no longer take ·refuge for a

A I ' He :told. tlle Commons ' that The pemtenhnncs are ~t .New tcnhary. brief holiday even In the mast Valon . . .- . · ', Koyer, arrested two· hours--he· Wcstmmster, B.C., and Kmgs. The. Journal says the· _identifi., remote corners ol the country. ' N t - TRIAL DELAYED fore his scheduled- dcnarture 'for ton, Ont., the .ncwsp~pcr says. cation papers racket was uncov· The minister of internal af. ewfou~dland __ ex· ·REGINA !CPl- Trial of_Re-- Camida following a :io-day·vislt Last w~ek c!ty p~hcc. touched ercd.when police checked the fairs, F. L. A. Golz, disan- 'M •d s h'

active snow- ·ginli': lawyer 'Dr •. M.~ C, 'Shumt.. to; his. homeland -In AuguSt was of[ a nahanni mvcsti~ah~n when ~redcntials of _a man arrested pearcd recently into the' wilder- a I en peec . · but the. brunt at !her. on · three · cha.rges -of released· Friday' and W.lli be re- tn .a forgery case. HL~, idcntifi- ness on a fishing trip. · •

Avalon P~~ssed aouth ~un;;elllng perjury• was ad- turned ·to Canada this.wcck. . Parae· h .. _te'To call~n cards showed' hlm to b~ But 1~hen he 'lias urgently _ . n nsula "(IS jo!lnted· Monday. after the taw· ·At the time of hls arrest -t.he . an mspector of the .federal de_· w:mted· on official busine6s, a . . .

·•tatherrn · · yer pleaded not· guilty and. his official Po\Jsli news. agency PAP S t. M • partmcnt of justice and an in- forestry · department observa- . ~TTAWA ICP) - Fore:try: ~ent ·of repudlab,ng. the prin· an yesterday CQ)Jnsel. requested _time to ~tudy' 'said Koyer was 8 iJriember of the Q n a a fl~ , vestigator for the p~stal depart- lion/plane- spolb!d his . camp Mtmstcr Hu~h ,John Fiemm1~g, • Clple of tax e~ual1zahon as be· ~ol continuance documents relating to- the case •. -~ailed home army, an · 110• • RECIFE', Brazn (APl-Two ment. Both cards were prmted from, t!le ·air_ Wi_thin a ~ew ~ew Brunswlck 5 rep~esentatx~e I tween , the ~ealthy and ·less

leUve sno d spell and Dr. Shu~latcher. -was charged· derground tesl~tance movement Frenchmen parachuted for, the on glossy stock and bore a coat hours. Gotz ~as deeply tm·! 10 the fed,?ral cab!nc_t, ,sa!d I wealth~_ prov.m~es .. b!ing antlcwflurry per· f~llowhlg . lnvestlg_atlons . by the founded ,. by the . government- captive liner Santa Maria Tues- of arms_ and photograph. mersed in affmrs of state. I Tuesd~y a new. 0P110:15m 1~ . It was the. ftrst ttme he has on tbe lpated. . sec~rltlcs commission Into the_ ln-eiclle In London, -:and had ad· day. Only one of them made it. . · _ . . · ~weep10g the ·~ t Ian t 1 c pm-1 takeJ1 the Commons floor for ;. faillscJeAvalon .Penln· sale of sharFR ln~Columbla 1\'!e- mltted -mu:rderlng ·a·number of -Charles Bonnay, a. Parisian The newspaper s~ys pohce 'M . I' C' I , mces: . !full-dress speech •. though .he·has I

l!!nniei ar and, in the tats Exploration ·eompany by left-wing . ~artisans ."unwelcome· living in Neiv York and \VOrklng found thP.t. glo_ssy Side of the (;!n s .. tty es It IS du~ 10 no sm~ll me~sure a)ls.wered questions an~ . e~· stieet:al Counoil~re aalesmen· employed by ·Western to the home army." _ . for ljle French picture magazine pulled each card. apart and c· ·h . to the syf!lpathet!c. athtu?e P!att~ed government poltey m

easi and m~king Bond ami Share, Company of . Mr. Greim said thnt news of Paris Match,' fell Into the Allan· cnrd was the· back of a photo- . 3 fiC=-e taken by Pnm: Munster Dl~; rploting . suP PIe mentary es· --~-er_to~n_a..:.V.::ttl::a:te::.. :,:S:a:sk:a:::too~n:_. ______ __:_:._. th'e releasE• was ntalned. I . tic near the-liner A: launch from graph, The .. ~;holograph showed MONTREAL (CPl - C . K fenbak~r and . hts g?vernment, hmates through the honse. . _ . . ; . .co _ n a . . · . . persons watclung a soccer game . · · he· sald in hls matden- speech A large number of cabinet ____ .;._,_.;..,;,;;;,~--------~- tele~ram 1uesda~· from the.Ca· a. U.S .. dcstroy.er raced to bts played by the. ·:Penguins." A Herz,· ol the· Data. S~oe Co~· to the Commons. ministers, includihg Prime 'Min-

nadmn Embassy 10 Warsaw. rescu~ and took him. uboard the check showed the New Westmin-' pany of Ca~ada Llmrt.ed. ~~HI For the Liberals to ask At· ister Diefenbaker, sat in on his · POI.ES CCI·~PERATED . _ Am~ncan naial vessel. · · ster Penitentiary· had such- n I ll'!onday men 5 s~~·es ate be.,~n- !antic MPs to ioin in a non- address, which was interrupted

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Sun•et today·, •. 5:02 p.m. Sunrise --

tomorrow ·., •• '7:2'7 a.m. MThe Moon . rites .•.•••••• 11:07 p.m.

TIDES

Wlb · '7:58 a.m~ 8:29 p.m. LOw ·_ 1:40 a.m.., 2:01 p.m.

The mlmster recalled· that _- Gtl de la l\larre, a stunt para- tcain - . ' mng to look o~ke women s. f'd nc t' n a~ainst the f tl b 1 f ··· Prime 1\'!inlster ·Diefcnbakcr in chutist from· Paris working for · · . · Pointed· toes and· an overall Ccon 1 e 1°1• mo_1

0° v 1_'nm•nt' t'n Crequen Ytr Yb app ause rom f · 1 · · D ""b 1 · th · D' 1 h t · 1 •' \" · · · h J' ht · · · · 1- d' onserva ve ;; c ' , onserva ve cnches re errmg t!ar y m cce.., er. o e a mas p o o, agency, n I'CW ,,estmmster, -t c Tour· 1g er appearanct' are. tn mg 'e r th g vcrnment's rec- · '

·_!he arrest, had noted the co- Iande(] near a lunch going lo ·tlte nal says, a search uncovered in widespread acceplml"ce, he said, v~t -0 d \n ° with that re· opc\'a~ion of. ~he Polish ;.uth~ri~ Santa· Maria. and it .look him the prison print sh~p two . dies ~lr. l!~rz said 1%0' m~rkM lhe ~ion'sm snc~i~: g economic prob; M. e . ' tl~s lD ' alloWtnl( the ~anadmn nboard . the !mer., ' . I of a coat_ of arms _wluch matched:! first ' hme l)len Jta~. ncCCJ1~ed I ems . w:is "unmitigated gall:" Ill . r consul m Warsaw to, tntervlew The . Frenchmen . parachuted ~he- :~at _of. arms on the false colors s~ch as bnrmshed ohve 1\lr: Flemming, the rorrner ,. Koyer. - . . . . . · from hght planes. . tdenhftcahon cards. · · and vanous shaMs of green. New Brunswick premier sworn Sti•ll . ._

' in as Canada's lint forestry ;-

Chlorine Gas Kills .One, Sends 50 To Hos;pital ::::~~~~,:~ ~i:~;~ SeriouS NEW llOADS,--La.· (AP) ·- · It drove about 1,000 from

De&il!y. -chlorine e:as-first · or home-'i· and .'schools and' made the' war )))!sons-spewed from ·a uninhabil:!lblc several ·s q u a r e train wret!k 'fl#eL·day, -killing a miles o{ southeast Louisiana. baby and aendlilg about 50 other · persOilll to ' hospital. The . gas came fmm a . rup.

· tured tank car contalnlng liquid Borne on ahlftll(g winds, green chlorine which was burled be·

eloudr ·. of vapor qHically poi· neath a · pile o{ 15 cars of the 80iled JO of the 50. 1 Kansas City Southern Rnilwny

Scorn of fatm animals died freight; Eighteen cars were tlc­

·and civil defence workers with children cyllapsed trom the gas N t H 1 yet carbines and masks closed off a and ll-month-old James died 0 ea S'( Ward Young, a mine worker. section of the higl:way •nnning later ·in hospital. : Of. ,._0,.,..Jt~ren"'e at' Little Bay, Notre Daine Bay, along the.·tangled wreckage. _ Victims- whee[:ing, coughing ~ •• r~ ""' injured in a'rock slide over the'

More than five hours after the 1 and vomiting frnm the <~crid Premier Smallwoo:l said yes- week-end, is reported still.: In train stacked up at Labarre, fum9s -- quickly- jammed the terday th5t to date he has not serious condition at the Sprinl!· volunteers begnn throwing soda 24-bed St. Joseph· Hospital here. heard from Primn Minister dale Cottage Hospital. .-ash, a neutralizing rigent, into In all• the hosp'l.al treated 50 Dicfenbakcr regardin!l the rc- Two other men hurt in, tbe tracl;sitle ditches tlwt tan two persons, sumption ·of the Dominion· same slide arc reported imp rOY· · feet deep in !lt;ecn chlodne. ! As quicl;Iy as I hey rccovcrecl, l'rovincinl · Fisral _ ConFerence ing .. They were not 'as. seri-FAMILV JilT 'IIAHD 1 officials tr;msfermd l'ictims ·to which was convened sometip1c ously hurt as Young. Thei·

Worst hit 1\·as a family JHllt'ocd 1' the NnliQnal Guard armory lor ago anrl, after recl!~:ing, is due j names arc Ronald Keats ar::

national guardsmen Harris. Father,- mother and lour food and shelter. · · to mecl again. Jack ~lcrccr. amidlt the lethal patches · of railed. floating 11as.. Louisiana

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Page 2: Nova ''Santa Maria'' ;,* Entry. To Recife Uncertain sident ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19610201.pdfafter a 420-mile ride through space aboard C1 .· rocket

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' ·, ·fHE OAILY NEWS,

l E .. (Oyne Addresses . Dinner;"Depqsits a.lld Circulations Inc ~1. ·_.·. '''h. ' ·. o' . . r. o' . ·.~:g· "h' . ·. . ·--n.\,·c· ' tu·.' ·r· e o· n.. '_rfl'h' . 'e owe you my warmest thnnks and I lmv enjoyed a wonderful . pursued economic projects, I I' proflt~bUlty of the enterprise. ow~e~ business~~, •. £\ .l ~ for Inviting me·t11 eome on the reception. What I hnd not rca· am therefore going to spend a It ••. 1 matter of ·regret to vanatlo::s in

· · occasion of the Annual Meet· lized in advance was the gener· Jew moments tall:i!l1 about two us that on)Y 15, loans have· been or tightness of

C. d • '' · . · c · . ·~· ' · l B k lng of-the' Newfoundland· Board ally cheerful temperament of \nstitutionil, the Ba~k or Can·· au~ori~d _to ,mdus.trlP.l enter· effe1:t only th!

a·n Joy za· n en r a a· n of Trl!de. It is I particularly Newfoundlanders. W.here I 1da a.nd the lndustr.al Develop- pnscs m ::-iew"ound;and In th~ ~an.es who can · U

1 . . . . • . pleasant break froni the below· come from, most people wear mmlt Bank, and about .recent past tw? ~cnrs. The slOlvr.·~ss [ ~ook to oth~r ~'"'" ....

C'l .. ·· · · · · · : · · · ·zero cold of an ottawa wlnt~r worried looks, as a sort of r~- I deve!OpJllcnts in r~lation to m deve.opmg .our· business In .ng In varymg •• ~.James E1 Coyne, ~e Gov· Hotel. Mr. Coyne's spe~ch, en- interest. to economlt and finan- to find a welcome here, a8 I qulred costume. 1 don't mean

1 short-.tcrm commercial bank Ncwiuunclland IS not. due to nny In til! ~c·;reg;1 tt

.-nor of. the Dank of Canada, titled "Strong Roots For New cial Canada pertinent to. the did yesterday, In brilliant 8un· just central · bankers-their 1 credit and the supply of longer- reluctance on the part of the the banl;s' ~~ . nliht . addressed. ,a large Growth,~' was • very compre- l!ank of Canada. The follbwlng shine, and equable ~mperature, chief. job is to worry about: term funds in our capital mar· ~an!t to lnyesligate .and )lel!.l v~stments in aMherlng o£ the Newfou:tdland henslve .and thoroug~ report of Is the full text. Df the addreu: and· breathe the· bracing . air trends and developments and: ket. finance proJects wh1eb eould than BlJard of Trade and . their progresses, problems, workings, This Is the first time I _have of Newfoundland Your hospital· how other people are using the • The Industrial Development be the subject of an appJ'catlon securities ros! ·~eats at the Newfoundland and all other upeel! of · vital been In Newfoundland, and r lty hns always been proverbial, .money supply-and . 1 don't 1 Bank. Is 11 wholly-owned subsi· for the kind Df financing we The banks also· ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·~~~ m~nth~eruff~ng~~ M\ldiacy~~B~~C~~a.~n~~~.P~Qsth~is~din~~

'··· misfortune who command the These two banks h3VC the not yet wide enough under· including uol'l'rn .... ~. ;-, sympathy of all-1 mean that in same Board of Dlrectors, the standing of the fncllitles which ada treasury bills r· other centres people of busi· same Executive Committee and the Bank docs prov:dc. Pero by $410 m!tlion. '!he .

ness, of go1•ernmcnt, · and . of the same chief executive offic· hap5 we shall sec in future an lhc . ~unks have betq

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many other occupations seem to er, but the mal or' work of man· increase in the number of new 1 ndd11!on to be Vlli!llely unhappy and dis- ngemcnt of the Banlc. of Can- industrial projects coming for· loans to ~w••um. sntlsflcd. What I have been ada is carried on 'in Ottawa an<! ward In Newfoundland. I hop~ more to tl1eir at:uck with here Is the predom· the major work of management so. If there ar.c other sources crnment bonds aM , . lnant air of happy confidence. of the Industrial Development of fmance for such projects, se.s, and also to a~a

GREAT PROGRESS. Bank is carried on by the Gen· \rell and good. llut If an ~ut· ily 19 their perool14! This Is only fitting, consider- era! ~tanager and h!s staff at. side source of funds, parttcu- Lue conbUllltr credit

lng the great progress the econ· the. operating head office in IJ~rly for tern• loans, can be evidence that they hl omy of Newfundland has made l\lontrcal and by the reglonnt[usclul, we are ready and anx· leudmg resour~ea ll'JJr:• since the war. The pre·wnr offices throughout the country. 1 ~ous to help. Our interest rate ~l.np~e '0 n~ect the days are gnc forever, In New· The two banks have in com·1•s the same here as elsewhere I cxeu!t rcquJre~erus foundland as in the rest of mon the aim of cncouragiilg in canada, and Is presently ~n the . Cilllllal Canada. The feeling every vis· and assisting th eexpnnsion ofj6\2%, but t~e rate of interest 1 ra~es t mtmst on !tor notices of a peop!'e deeply the Canadian economy on a 1 is rarely nn Important element 1 term oans are .......... .

' · · · ih r·t b'J't ! · d today than thev rooted In their long history on sound and sustainable. basis. i m e pro I a • • Y o an m us-~ th •

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this continent Is matched by the growth and development of tr.al enterprise-all interest man shago, but a feeling also' of new·ness, of Canadian industry a risinrt payments by all Canadian man· lower 1 an they

' · new growth bursting upwards level of employmen't and a ris~ ufactaring establishments in ago. r~e of and upwards on every hand. Inc. standard of living for all. 1958 wns less than ,1% of total ~o~res~tn mg

0 '.

ALL LADIES'._ COATS Ladies· ·oresses -.Sizes 7 to 19 ~-·····--~&!J . . . . . .

Slightly.· Soiled . ' .

SLACKS .. and' .

STRIDES·

Sizes 10 to 18

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SATIN REVIRSIBLE .

;~ fiDI:RDO· _1 w .. . ". . . -~: .. ...$6·~8 • ' .. • ' . ' '· 1:,

Gowns. & Formals Ladies'

CAR COATS · 'o~e group at $3.39

· Another group

.331J3.0FF Ladies'

SUITS Reg. $20.00_.

NOW· ........... :.$2.98

NEW TOWELS . · Size· 20 x 40 . .

Going at ........ 59~· Each'

TERRY TOWELS.

FACE CLOTHS ............. sc. \,

FACE rowELS ........ ~gc.

I ,

Ladies'·

SKIRTS large · variety

1

normally $3.98 '" $9.00

. Now cut In HALF

50%.0Ff

IMPORTED SHEETS 84 ~ 99 Only $1.98 Each

. CANNON SHEFI'5 . . Size.63 x 90, .... $4.15 Pair·

SUITCASES F~m.· ... ,$1.98 to $6.9~

. WHIPPED canoN. . • . BLANKETS .

Slzt 70 x 90 .. ~.$4.44 Pair

PRINJEp P.I.~STIC BE()SPREADS . ifilliii~Ja $5.-,B NOW : ...... ; ........ ; ... ,.$·1.98.

MEN'S WEAR . ·~:sed .· · ·.._ .

WOOL· and RAYON MEN'S SUITING$ . (for, Men'~ Pants) ·

·_$~.~o .. ~QW ............. $1.00 Per Ya~d.

. MUSUN Reduced to 19c. Yard ·

~~~.~SH~~:c~v~u~·Novi .;:.49~ .. : : . -. ' ... ~- \ .,• ' .:.·:··. . ·~ . .", .~ . : . ~ .. .

MEN'.S SUITS- 2 P_air Panrs ·:·~· ... ·$16·50

MEN'S DRESS PANTS NOW ............ $3.98_ . . ·-··

' . : .. MEN'S BLACK RUBBER COATS ... ; .... $5.9~ :.. - . . . .

. ' ~EN'S WHITE SHI~TS 15~ to 17 .... $1.00

, 1 80~5' SUITS··3~ to .34 N()W · ......... ~$3.98 ' . . . . ; . .

·J •.. M •. ·DEVINE . :·I.THE :·B.IG .6

' . ·339 WATER STREET, ST. JOHN'S i'On~~ A N~m~r, Now An Institution".

,1,

The new roads schools hospl· Canadian citizens from one end ! expenses. Our Jendmg officers 1m ere" rates up to tala houses ne~v industrles and of the cou.ntry to the other-' ~re frequently in Nl!wfoundland las~ sumhmer, partly of modernized' old industries arc 50 far as such goals can be as-1-the occasions are advertised a\lve cd aracter,. Wilt' extraordinarily Impressive: sisted by monetacy and credit

1

in advance--and the availability rthcvet~se when •t It Ia customary In Canada t~· action It must be recognized of our facilities .is advertised 3

• tnhvehs:orha were · · ' · ' · d' II · N ! dl d pa) e tg er talk about the Importance. oJ: however as I have sa1d before nmo lea Y m ew oun an · t th 1

the export Industries but I am that mo~eta..v and credit action I We ha1'e continuously undPr cep h e 011/fer · ' ., t d th 'b'l't f o e Jnd pure ases o lny glad to learn that one of New· is not enough, that such action s u Y . e possl 11 Y 0• P. n b 1 In the past two foundland's largest exports I.!; can only complement and-assist a full·llme branch off•ce In St. I k •• - C · h · J h • b t h n t yet felt it mar e... m anadt dwtndllng away-1 mean t !: more direct measures wh1ch 0 n s, u. a_v~ 0 proved. A my export cf people. With th!;' are taken by governments, busi· could be J~shfu;d. by the vol· of the new issue hl.ghest birth rate in Canada, ness an dprivate individuals- 1 urn~ of busmess, either current ing& Bond in and the lowest de:.th rate, measures specilica~ly aimed :1! I or m pro~~ect. followed by lwo you are nevertheless retalnln(: Increasing productiOn and •em·\ BANK OF CANADA sliort-term issues iy the Increase· In your popula: ployme~t, and. nt other goa}s of. I ·The Bank of Canada does ernment of Canada in tll)n Instead of s~elng so man)· economic, social and pohtkal not have thP. satisfaction of par· and January u well go off to the m:unland. I hope organization. t!clpatfng dirPctly In the bus!· 11umber of sucms!ul there .will be an exchange of In the case of the Bank of nc•s life of the communitv In . muni!!Opal and population between Newfound· ~anadn, t?e c~ntral fea:ure of th~ wa:v that is open to the In· 1 sues. In the land and the rest o! Canada- 1ts operations IS to prov1de the dustrial Development · Bank. crnment bond there not the old one-way move'?ent chartered banks over the years The Bank of canada Is a cen: tendency towal'd1 and not complete Immobility. with a rising volume of cash tral reserve bank not a com· rising prices and If there is any opening here fot reserves, on the basis of which mercia! bank do~ not take de- rates. a central bqnker, I would hi! they may expand their loans posits from 'the public and · JIORROWING delighted to become one part and investments. The rate of cannot make a loan t~ llnY From time to timt of a barter trade of this natur•! e.xp.ansion of credit ~nd the busine~s enterprise. Its chief I~ sai.d. that provinces myscl~, . • .. .

1 hmmg of such expa~swn will method of operation is to buy c1pahtle~, and

A r.smg popula!lon, a nsm., always be matters of JUd~ment. Government securities in the corporations, are standar~ o~. education !ncl_ud· At no time since . the ~ank of open market when it wishes to tain a!~ their lng scientific and te~hm~a I Cana'da was estabil_shed m 1935 ·" d th cash resei'Ves of mentss 1~m~e~lh~:e10~a:~:::~ training and an lncreasmg Ill· hare the total Jcndmg resources ~.pan . e ddi Such sl terchnnge of people, ideas and of the chartered banks decreas· tthl e balnt kmg systkem. bin tat nn. ed with some n•n1n"'" 1

i 1 t d 'th th Jd · 'f' t t on can m~ e s or · e . mater a ra e WI e wor cd by any s1gn1 1can amoun 1 ' 1 th h rtered banks 1S a very cons>IUtnto~ 11 a whole, offer both the need for any significant period. oans 0 e c a 1 dlt of savings and the opportunity for (ontln· There, have been times when ~nd~ p~o~~~:d sh~~~:~m ;::ket which from ~me. It uoua economic progress. Oh· the rate of increase. was mod· do j ec g t tl of 'tern rary be attracted mto Tiously, jobs must be found 1n eratc or ne~igible, and_ there s:~:r:n~ ain ~;e mone:C mar-' sues in Canada. Increasing. number. To some have been times when 1t was ket ~t a;sists the .GoYernment can take place extent all parta of Canada, and rapid. Although the central f 'c d In th management ent sources ol nowh'ere more than in New· bank in Its actual operations 0 f t:na \ue d;bt lri which and different u ..... -.:

foundland, developmen~· of facil.itates . the expa~sio~ of ~onne~ti~~ it acts ~s an agent, funds. The larg~ natural resource mdus- credtt over the years, 1t 'Ylll at the fiscal agent of the Govern· all e~ses tries will continue to be of fr,e times be found on the s1de of ment The Government itself Is question of av~\\i~:=~ hlihe&t Importance. B~t large- depreca~ng , too mucli exp~n- rcsp~nsible for deciding on the but of the '

. scale resource industr1ea pro- sion •too qutckly, and warnmg terms timing and flerieral borrowe~ to PlY~ duclng for export are not against both the .futility and meth~ds of handling new Gov· t~rest a equate 1 enough. No-one would ~ant to the dangers of excessive cr~a· ernmcnt loans. The Bank can him th.e volume 0 ost Jive In a communily wh•ch ex· tion of new money or excesstve 1 to a limited extent exercise a he deSires. Thde m ••

th. 't d •d · f d't I · · t J . ed borrowers o n .. ported every me I . pr~ uc1. expansln o ere 1 . t IS 1mpor · steadying influence in securl· 'ilbl~o and imported everyt~mg 1t con· ant that the central bank 1 ties markets, more particularly funds -~r~ u.navatn lll1 sumed. An incrcasmg dcgre~ should speak and be heard on j in the Government bond mar· At k•ll tl:e mt of self-sufficiency Is the· mark this point, since th'ere is no lee! althou~h it cannot for that th~re d wlli 1 h~~e of success In evecy developing lack of other voices throughout i pu;pose compromise its basic w 0 0f not c t

II d f . d g'1 n 1· 1 .. ~ . . . rate o mteres nation or we · e me re o ' the country con muous Y .a-o· i function of prov1dmg the bank· t' f a In order to have' a well-round1:d !ng greater and greater resort i in~ sustem with a supp!J• of thebothperla 10d11 0 and

· J'f b d d' · dl · 1 ~ ' • of o en en commumty 1 e, n roa lVt ~· to ere t expansiOn. . ' cash rcserl'es wh1ch Is adequate S ti Caniaditn slty of employment opportulll·\ The Industrial Development • but not exc·essive · orne h mes ties at least for the younger Bank w:is established by Act I From some of 'the discussion ~ho ave toNew gener;ttlon as they reach ma· of Parliament in 19<i4 because in recent months one might get ~n~o!De go ~reJ turlty, and a strong element llf it was fou.11d that there was a the impression that bank credit 1omgn cen ~btain s,tabllltr and continuity which particular gap in the Canadian was being restricted In Can· .. ar.l ;ur~) ~hich highly.speciallzed export indus· financial structure which did ada and the money supply was ~tgn u~d 5 in tries subject to the vagaries of not seem likely to ~e f~llc? by bci~g decreased; and that 1 ~i~e: when the foreign markell can rarely pro- privately • owned •nshtuhons. credit·worthv enterprises were f th c nadian vlqe, The job of the Industri~l De· unable to obtain their require· ~ ~if!:rent from

ECONOMIC AcriVITIES vclo:;ment Bank is to asSISt the mcnts in capital markets or a:7'he time of I am sure the editors of your development of new or grow- from . the banking system. Sud1 borrowing maY

own vigorous newspapers would ing Industrial enterprises whic~ conclusions would not be in b cause of a ........ n

agree that a community should need additional flxed·term cap!· accordance with the fact!. ~~ true cost of have ltll own newspapers and tal but are, because of their rel· The total volume o~ bank de- the borrower ill not .. be confined to reading atively small size or Jack of an posits plus currency m clrcula· reasona of papers produced severn! h.un· established earning record, or tion in Canadil has risen believe, becaus• dred mil~: or a thoUlland m1l~s for any other reason, not able stronillY since Ialit summer and availability of fundi away. The same Is true, m to obtain the necessary capital for the year 1960 as a whole at ratu of inletlll varylnl!: degree, of all kinds of from outside the business by showed an Increase of more free market establllh~ economic and cultural· nctlvl· selling a bond . is~ue or a stck thn~ 5%.. During tb~ same propriate to .th• ties, whether we think of C~n· Issue In the market, or to raise pcnod the corresponding In· 0~ the canad1lll ada as a whole, ~r of any_of 1ts funds In other w3y1 from pri· crease In·the United States was jThe recent ehul• .. provinces or reg1ons. vale sources. less ·than 3o/o. The Increase wlthboldini \a1 °1

!n a discussion of ec~no!Dic All the facilities of the Bank over the past four years In paid to foreien development. and diverslfreatlOn, have become better known· the Canada has been over· 20%, as announced in the you will naturally expect a volume of its loans has grown compared with lesa than 14% 'December 201b bY eentral banker to talk about nt an acceler:.ting pace. Over in the United States. of Finance, lillY the role of money, credit and ·the past five years the annual There was no sh~rtage ·of parent attractivtnetJ capital. Unfortunately, as cen· number of Joallll made to new bank credit for busme5;1 pur· DOrrowing. ,,1

.tral bankers see it, In recent borrowers has ,quadrupled, .and poses In Canada at. any time in Apprehensions '"'" years people have come to ex· this progress is con:inuilli!. the ~ast year. ;ourmg 1960 the expressed by sollll pect far too much of monetary New Joan approvaiR durmg the banking system substantially the time that 1J .mtnagement in promo~lng first three months. of the pres· expanded its loans to bWiiness this the 'canadill crowth, overcmlni ~ecemons ent fiscal year were . running enterprises in the loan. ~In ket would ba and preventing lnflabon. The 20% ahead of the correspond· category. of up 1!! $1 :rrullion. not yet been underlying theme of my re· ing pericd last year. At the last The larger customers of ~e events. If at m.arkl today, as of other &tate- fiscal year-end the Ban)t had banks have found some of th~!r should develop, I menta and reports I b~ve lnade loans outstanding or committed requirements through new II· that with the, over the ·past few years, is that for 1966 industrial enterprises, sues of securities, and ba~e all concerned. money and credit .and capital of which 44% by number wer<! thereby reduced their reliance found for ~vortOJtlllli. ••

are not anoullh, . that easy for amounts of $25,000 or leas. on bank eredit. On· the other eulties. It is money, so-called, · · Is . of no BANK LOANS hand, those business enter· sfre of the Bank value In itsel! and may be very The Bank now has 13 offices prlses which are not In • posi· facilitate tbe flolf dangeroWI, that the elements throughout the country and a tion to· sell bonds or stock Is· investntent In of real ~portanee . ar~ such · staf fof 263 persons, Including sues, and which In any case re· maintenance o~ human factors as lmagmatlon, credit officers, engineers, l11w· quire working capital funds tiona In Canadilll Initiative, resourcefulness, ag· yers, accountants, Insurance which aan only be obtained lcets. · · tis ereS&iveness, the development specialists and other employeeJ, from their banks, have been . To return of Industrial aklllJ, .th~ exercise both men and women. The In· able and are now able, aubjeet theme, the ""'1110

'"'

of frugality, and forward plan· dustrinl Development Bank does to rules of sound banking prae iri adequate ••••->··" nlng In the way we regulate our not mnke the usual kind of ticc and individ~al judgment! sary but not • t affairs, both of ,a b.usines. s nat· pank loan for current operating I of credit offic.crs, to obtain tlon to eDJIII'' t]Ja are and of a governmental nat· purposes. It makes capital loans U:e current working-capital will operate at 1

1 ure. With these qualities, many for a fixed term. Wherever pol· loans J;cqulred to enable them that all partll of tb a nation has prospered .and ~c- sible It. makes a special lnves- to carry on and expand their participate veloped without possemng neb ligation of the Industrial po· Gperations. New enterprises are and . natural resources and without tential of, the· applicant's enter' able to obtain loans u new p!oyment Will 1 heavy resort to foreign borrow· prise including the phnt la;;· customers of the banks-the the countrY as ing or domestic, manipulation of out, the methods of accounting hanks are taldnll on new ac- particular . t money. and cost control, the markut counts all· the 1ume-and old bank doet no. 1 INDUS1'RIAL lliVELOPlllENl' pot~ntial and •~lllni or.tlets, customers are able in appr~ th• total volVDI

!lANK I . and all other matters which priate cases to obtain !ncreu· be· used, 0~.~~~tllel Thla !J not to deny that the may be lmpqrtant in the' final ed lines of credit. · . . · any t.UrtCI~~"'

well-directed provision of credit judgment as to whether the I am confident that the banks of econol!lic and capital Is hil:lhly desirable business will be ~ble to oper· will continue to llive priority to I kind of ;~nou.uc ••:"'ti; to mitt In carrying out well· ate at a profit, This ls the fU:l·l the needs o! smaller b~lnes~es, partlcula: ed. 0' conceivr.d and . industrious!~ damcntlll question-the future whlrh means largely Can_adian· (Conunu

'

'ldenE Mil

Page 3: Nova ''Santa Maria'' ;,* Entry. To Recife Uncertain sident ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19610201.pdfafter a 420-mile ride through space aboard C1 .· rocket

::: ir capital he Canadian ; ., als shoUld

· .1~ skeptlcblli. i·:ons iclnablt dd i:t blllk 1 time to

ST. JOHN'S; .NEWFOUNDLAND. ' . ·: . ' ~ ...

_ .... ,!uTat the N~wfoundl~nd Hotel Hote~~t.he Nfld. Board of Trade held dinner mcetmg witit Mr. James. E. C~yne, Governor of ~he Bank of

as the guest speaker; ·From left to riglit above are:-Mr. F. W; Rus· . rrcsident of. the· ~.~ld. B.qilrd of Trade; Mr. James E. Coyne, and Mr.\.

Smith, the Prest,cl~nt-elect, who was ;;worn m for the· Nfld. Board of Photo Service). ·

·dent Victim' · Is Released . .

Funeral For Accident Casualty

rt.t Gcrmnn·born wife of a Newfoundlander serving In . Arm)', ~Irs. (Cpl.) Cyril Norirs, has been re· . The funeral of 63·year·old from hospital in st. John's. i\llss Alice Aylward of Topsail

Road will take place to-day to The woman. her husband and tiny infant were Involved Corpus Christi Church, Kil· hrad·Oil collision on the Trans-Canada Highway just be· bride. clri;tlnas. The child died fro1n his injuries and Mrs. The woman was struck 'by a·

has bcc11 in ho~pital ever since w'ith her injuries. car. early. Sunday morning near I 'tl 11 · 1 'II Crummey's Service Station on .!hi coup c w1 1 1e1r c u 1 were driving to. St. John's th T .1 R d d

corporal :-.lorris' parents. · . e opsa1 oa ' an was dead ___ .... - -·----.. :. . I on am val at the hospital. · · A sister of the woman, Mrs.

en Eag.leio Spend··~~o~i~;nlnw~~~~~~~utlsnow

Mill~on Monthly The driver of the car which

struck the two women was ar­rested and will appear in Court next week.

Board· of Trade:· .. •

"F~cing ... The· , ls.sue~' Russell · Gi.ve~ Speeth Honourable Mm1~ter, .l\11.'. stimulating f1,1rth~r thinking on

Coyne, Yo~r· Worship, guests SO!Wl of, these issues; I have and memb~rs .. of the Newfound- tnken. Ibis year!S the.rne as the land Board of ~ra.dc- , subJt~ct. for iny. iiddress. . .. The theme .of th,1s _Years An.. . Our-~ay. of ,carrying Qn bnsi· nual M~et!~g ?f the .Board of ne~ .. 'ir!.,Can~~a·,ts known. as the Trade 1s Facmg, the Issues.': ~ree,;.or• competitive .,.e nte.rm·i•~ No-one will question that !herq sysi~IIJ·, This . system is by no are m~ny !~sues. which must, hfl means perfect, but by the stan' faced m lh1s troubled world of dard of economiC' progress, its today. In the hope, therefore, of most important product, it has

r far surpassed : .its rivals. Of necessity, the business com· mu~ity )s made: up ,of many vaned .interestS" with differc'nt' economi.c Q);>jectj~~s.;~ccause of these dtverie ··obJectives, it is very vulnerable ·to

Harbo··r Freezes· Ice formed on the harbor of

St. John's last night for the first time this winter.'

From the Narrows to the Dock site a thin sheet of "slob" or "sish" covered the water, reminding oldtimers of. the days when you could cross the harbor on foot, with or without a gaff;-

..!--------· Police Blotter Eight arrests were made by

city police yesterday.

Resume Search ~Today

WtDNESCIAY, f:EBRUARY 1, 1961

Greene: Continues; · ·{· "More Can Be Done 'For .Nfld.'~~

. . . .. At the opening of yesterday's • mind, did not amount t~·m~~ll session of the Legislature, the indicative of the party's losing Leader of the Opposition con· support. · ' tinued his address which he be- Referring to a · stateme~

RCAF Se~rch and Rescue air· gan on MondaY.. made by the Premier. that' craft plan a full-scale search for THE LIBERAL RALLY: 'Newfoundland could riot afford · the ·.missing C-118 USAF plane "The Premier," Mr. Greene to have a Tory Government 1n today, Yesterday the weather said, "Left t? go to New York Ottawa', Mr. Greene'· stated prevented the search from con· before the dmner in honour of many figures . and statistics to: ti?uing .for the aircraft, missing Mr. Pears_on, maybe he has prove his point that ·Newfouild'' w1th 23· persons aboard since never forg1ven Mr. Pearson for ,)and has been far better' o1f" last· Thursday, not supporting him on the Lab- with the 'Tory' GovernmeiiF

Already search' pl:ines have our Legislation passed here . . . "But of course,"· he said, .o•wi flown 576 hours and covered but\what he did do was ;:o to can't afford to be better off!'~· a total area of 111,618 square meet the real leader of the Lib "That which ihe Premier said~ miles, Flying Officer Kelly, eral Party-~!r. Joh'! C. Doyle. must.go down in history. as one' RCAF, Torbay, told the Daily The Rally, m the speaker's . (Coritiriued .on Page 14) ! News yesterday afternoon.

Damage To 'John Guy'

Greater· Repairs to the Bell Island·

Portugal Cove ferry John Guy will take longer · than at first anticipated, a· spokesman at the CNR clrydock said Tuesday. · · The vessel bas been surveyed

and it has been discovered that the damage reported is· more extensive than was anticipated.

The one and a half million dollar ferry had ·difficulties on the ferry run last week and was ordered to St. John's for re­pair,s.

-----

. •

Premier-·.· . ·To . Addre.ss i . . . ' i

·P-ress Club· ... · ·~~ Premier J. R. Smallwood has consented to address the

annual dinner of the Newfoundland Press Clull Feb. 13th. The dinner this year will be held at the Old Mill and iJlo

vitations ·are being printed now. . : '.' .':; · . The annual dinner will start at ·a: p.m: · Precedl!111 ftnl

there will be cocktails from 7.30:to:a.oo p.m. . ·:, Shortly after the annual.dinner, the .Press Club will con·

vene the annual meeting and election of officers ·will be held, It is hoped this affair can be arranged about :i'wcck after tl,le dinner. .

Three men were arrested un­der warrant for ·assaulting po­lice, one arrested under war­rant for the Family Court, one for theft,· and four for drunk·

and many bti~iiiessmen · appear to face the woild with a chip on their shoulders ·and an acute sensitivity· to criticism of. their way of life,. There is some justi­f!catjon for this.~ a~. quite fre­quently, the businessman is pi~­tured as being , selfish to the point of not wariJing to do' any­thing unless there is a direct and immediate return in' the form of financial gain. In act· ual fact, the businessman is usually a leader in ·community work and the hardest worker in fund-raising ·drives for' uni­versities, welfare agencies, hos· pitals, school boards, etc.,. and the largest contributer, as a group. to such c~~~~ita~le funds. Autopsy

One of the most Important accomplishments of Canadiam in the past 20 years has been

Tickets for the Feb. ·13th dinner are being printed now and will be available from 1 Press inembers in· ·each new~ media: Anyone wish in~ to reserve tickets can ai~o· call 65775 1nd their tickets will be delivered. Prices are $5.00 single and $8.00 double.

An orchestra will be on hand after the dinner· for a · ~d~~~ ~

--' en ness.

(Continued on Page.14) 0 d . d Fires -.. -·-.--. l r ere

qu!el day Good· Troutmg! _ · Yesterday was a for local firemen.

Not one call was during the day.

. '

rec~ived . . .

An autopsy has been ordered on the · body of a 57-year-old

Good trouting Is being report· resident of Freshwater, Car­ed by winter.. fishermen who bonear, Charles Butt.

ltd. Gorman Harbor Development

Contract Is

Gets Job

' ' r ' I ' I I • ' I i t

Forsey; ,&~·Don't· · ~ondemn have been visiting their· favor- The nian died suddenly and, ite troutirig waters 'in the past as is usual in any sudden death two weeks. · ·

Many fishe~men have· be· en case, police have ordered an

.Worth $2,096,813 . ! was awarded in Jan~ary, 196~ to the McNamara Construction of Newfoundland Limited. Thik work is being carried out at th~ west end of the harbour, extend:· ing from the Canadian National Railways' property eastward to

OTTAWA-A $2,096,813.70 contract has been awarded by the Department of Public Works to T. C. Gorman (Nova Scotia) Limited of Halifax, N.S., for the construction uf a marginal type wharf along the north shore of St. John's Harbour, Newfoundland, in connection with the $13,000,000 moderniza­tion program which was started in 1958. This was announced jointly today by the Hon. W. J. Browne, Solicitor General of Canada, and Mr. James A. Me·

For· Our ·Few Mistakes"· autopsy. ·

trying "new" ponds on the RCMP said that there is no Trans-Canada Highway and re· J.susplc:lon of foul play and the . . . suits there appear fairly good. matter is routine.

Mr. John· A. ·Forsey, Liberal Member for Humber East, spoke yesterday in reply to the Speech from the Tliroile.

He rose 1 immediately after the Leader of the Opposition had spoken, and made. some comments upon certain portions of that speech.

Concerning Mr. John C. Doyle, Mr. Forsey said that "This , house has stood 'year after year to reference~ made towards Mr.· Doyle, but I thmk it is being unkind to' the man who has done much for. the development· of· 'Newfound· l~n!l." .Mr, Doyle, is riot only the friend of the Premier, he point­ed out, but .also of Mr; · Cros­sart • , . "The brains of the P.C. Party." ..• "The Leader of the Opposition may. get a rap over the knuckles." · ·

"The Leader of the Oppos!· tion spoke at length on the neglect of our fisheries. In the days thst we are spending mil· lions on Edu·callon . we must realize . it is not so much doing sohlething for the fisheries as for. the fishermen .... the

' fishery should be made somr.· thing that educated sons of fishermen can be proud of." Basically, Mr. Forsey felt that the future of our Island de· pends on the future of the fish· cries · and logging, and we

lsi, but since we decided · to shduld concentrate oq bringing make a. better, top ranking pro- these to higher standards." 'duct; and keep it ahead we have THE HIGHWAY. PATROL: had· to change our plans." The We Jeel that the people of New· .time of operation has now been foundl~Jld, deep down, would extended to mid-August. rather be policed ,bY Newfound·

It is hoped, Mr. Polk said, landers than by the. R.C.M.P. said that it. gives to have . the Botwood terminal The Highway Patrol, Mr. For­

to be able 'in ope'ration by the· next .90 sey said, will embody many worl:in:es of the days,. while' the one' at. Corner things and I think it is CHEAP

. Brook, (the· largest in . New- AND CALLOUS of the Leader foundland) and .the terminal of the Opposition when he said point .in Clarenville, will . be that the R.C.M.P. take a dim working by August; view ot cabinet members speed·

who have been asking for elec· tricity. It was the end of Jan­UarY, he added, and they· ·w.ere still no closer .,to. getting pow.e~. He thought power utility com· panics should he made· face res· ponsibility and go where need­ed whether the harvest would be rich or poor. ' ' :

Concerning · Corner Brook, Mr. Forsey said .he would ask the government to bear with the Council. They did have a .few misfits but 'this· would be ·remedied by the next election. 'rhe Council. were doing thm )lest and \lad some :very fine men.. He . thought' it'. was ' the government's ·responsibility'· to close the gap and bridge the stream.

The Council at Corner Brook may have spent unwisely and extravagantly, he said but the government was · the principal planner in putting the · four towns into one to form the se· cond city. Mr. Forsey said Cor· ner Brook residents paid high­ly for hospitalization. They have tried· to set the example of self:help. · ·

Perhaps, he added, too much responsibility had been left in the Council's hands. Corner Brook had received more aid per capita than anywhere else in Newfoundland.

Several severe cold spells have, made"·· ice solid and safe on just about allpoilds but run· ins which are soft and danger· ous. . ~··.

Nothing . Yet On Brownings

Concerning Adoptions

The Dept. of Public Welfare Grath, M.P. for St. John's East, has advised that. persons con- on behalf of the Hon. David J. sidering the adoption of chi!· Walker, Minister of Public

~~ould make direct contact Works . with the City Welfare :Depart. The firm submitted the low·

No clues have yet been turn- mcnt in St. John's when they est bid of three in response to ed up. on· the whereabouts of wish information concerning the advertising for public tenders. two men missing and_ PfC~!Jincd procedure:, of adoption. The high·. bid. was. $2,697,000. drowned in waters arc\un(l· St. · · Persons" liv.ing outside ·of St. The work under this contract John's. . ' John's shoUld make the prelim· is scheduled for completion

A resident of Duell worth. St.. inary contact' with their district within one year. Peter Stamp presumably drown· welfare office. The new wharf will be about ed when he jumped or fcli-over Almost 100 children were . 2,300 feet long and wlil be a wharf at Quidi Vidi. Police adopted· through the Depart· I constructed of reinforced con· bclie~e his body has been car· ment last year. crete with a concrete deck slab, ried out to sea. supported on concrete beams

A resident or Blackmarsh Ro' ad Work and piles .. Before the new wharf Road, whose empty boat was structure can be started some found outside the Narrows; A A · . of the existing water front presumed to have fallen. t rgentla buildings and wharves have to board and drowned. His be · demolished. This work is is still missing. • A road reconstruction and also included in the contract

A watch is being kept on the paving job at Argentia Naval as well as dredging some 190,. seashore in the vicinity of Station is now out on tender 000 cubic yards of material two places in hopes of recover· which is due March 7. Certain from the harbour bottom in ing- the bodies. station road-ways, varying from order to giv.e the depth requir·

$8 Million Per Year

17 feet .to 42 feet in width, wlll ed for shipping, which will be . be resurfaced and another will using the new facilities. In con· be reconstructed to various nection with the work, the con· widihs. tract also calls for the reloca-He then spoke a word of cn­

co'uragement to Howley and mentioned the, new ~oad survey might result in the town ·get­ting a. closer link with the Trans Canada Highway. Here Minister of Highways Hon. Dr. F. W. Rowe irtterjected to give Finance Minister Fleming the reason for the survey. He has reiterated earlier state­said the Deer Lake to Hampden ments made in connection with part of the road was the most tlie- annual grants the Federal difficult part of the existing Governmetn is paying the New· route. The road service in tbe foundland Government. area breaks down in winter; If , In the course of. a speecli in the .. survey being made comes the ·Commons Monday,. ·Mr. up with an alternate route then Fleming said" that the eight Howley would be closer. to 1t. miJ!ion dollar per year grant

The . resurfacing and recon· lion and maintenance of ex· struction work will cover ap· isting roads, sewers, water proximately 22,100 linear feet mains, etc., together with the of roadways and will include supply and installation of a drainage, grading and the con- new sewer and drainage work. struction of granular base, con· Work is proceeding at pres· crete and bituminous · paving ent on the constl'llction ·of the course. I main terminal pier, marginal

The estimated cost range Is wharf and other work under a $100,000 to $250,000. . $3,802,374.68 contract, which

(Continued on Page 14) ! ''

Blubber . I

Prices Same · 1

I

Prices paid for seal fat th~ year arc expected to equal those paid last year, a sealing firm in St. John's said Tuesday. The prices will be neither highe}­nor lower than last year" .;

At least three seal hunting vessels will prosecute the seal hunt this year. They are Bow· ring~s Algerine, Earle Freight­ing Service's Kyle and thil Arctic Sealer, a Halifax vessel which will carry a Newfound· land crew.

There is a possibility that one or two other firms will senil vessels to the ice also ..

Employees Meeting Tonight

The. annual general meeting of the Nfld. Government Eni· ployees' Association will tak~ place to-night at 8 o'clock in the Confederation Building. : · Guest speaker for the occai· ion.is Hon. J. R. Smallwood. :

Presentation of reports and the election of the Board of Directors for the ensuing year will take place. ;

"We· are to spend $1,000,000 ing over the highway, ~tnd thnt per month In Newfoundland all is why they are .getting the through this ·year and· over highway patrol! · $14,000,000 _altogether. ·The COMMENTING briefly on the speaker then ·gave some details St. John's ·Housing Corporation of the refining processes to be as It came up for mention in

. Mr. Forsey praised Premier· to Newfoundland ·will be COJ1· . Smallwood and' sdd he was tinned aft!!!' l96Z.

happy to work with hllD. He· He WB!I replying to questions said governments make mis· · concerning the recent Domin· takes but that was no reason !on-Provincial Fiscal Cotiler­

BOYS QUILTED RUBBERIZED "We 100% by Balti· used, Including .the separation Mr.· Greene's, speech,· the mem· for came to Canada of the ·crude oil and the varioiis ~er for Humber East said that for. wholesale condemilatlon; · ence.

3 market 'for our. tests, · surely, the Government is not llldGwc found a very . ·In conclusion; Mr. Polk said, being blamed for the. high .

overnment here, "We've'put a lot of money into building costs. These are. things Labor Fe'derat·I··On Call)-·. so we. are Newfoundland and we are. here over which the Government baa ~ ..

a refinery that·is to, stay-~e are. going to grow no control • : • it ~ho~ld a~so be Produce 15,000 bar· ,wtth Newfoundland-we like compared With tlie s1tu~hon in .

!lith We ma<le a com· like you and we hope that you the rest of Canada, for I' Is the N BWW . Pu .. ·t· B the Government wlll'Jike us!"· proble~s of the contractors·· ppe ogus

Production by January - · (Roy~l. Photo Service): :::. bUild, and the people who · . ·. . . . . f. .· .

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. CORMACK AND CORNER ;...._--·------. BROOK .

Mr. Forsey pleaded for .the .farmers In the Cormack region

Offers . help·· for loggers' vote

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;;,& . . THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., WED., "

~ ...... I

IN THE NEWS -'THE·_ DAILY NE,WS:.

• I ' . tl

·;· . By 11Gee, I Don't See How

. ' ' .. ~.: ,: . NeWf~unciJdnd~i Only· Morning.- Pap~~

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... --~· . 'The DAILY' NEWI'j is I morning paper ' ·established in 1094, and 'published at

tile News· Building,·. 355:359 ,Duckworth Street, _St. ,,John's,,' ~el}'£ini~dlahd, ·by Robinson & Compan)'; Llinlted. ·

. . IIJEMBER OF ·.

THE CANADIAN PRESS ..

I

NOTES AND COMMENT We, arc interrupting· the series-soon

tu be concluded-on the present state of the province to write a paragrapll or two

- about'the cantroVefli)' over the name Of ' the Universil)' which has lately acquired

some 'heated overtones. It Is~ to begin The Canadda!' Press· ~. ~xclusl~,ely with, :a pure!)' academic (no pun In·

entitled . 41 the use for ·republleatlori of· - tended) ar~;;:ment for one very good and all news deiPatches In thl!qiaper credit; · sufficient. reason. The student bod)' can· ed to It or to the ·'ASsi>ciated. Press or not alter the name of the Institution. A Reliter• ·and also the loql· _news publish· vote on the question Is. supei-flu<nis. If

'riAJu,y IUBBCJUPrrON ·RATES d th in ' - ·c,. • ,.( ' · · every stude'nt wanted to change the Uni· e ere • . . . ,

·nl"' . . . . ' ' . ' r.t•t • Danada ;.: .... ::.: ............... $12.00 per annum .. ·,~·· ' . ' . . . ;; . .

,~!,, vaiila Xin~®m'arid all . . . ·. ' ... ·~';·:· .· . f~ :tMiuntri~ ... ;:$i4:!JO Per annum. ·

,il\•' . Authorized u ·lecond claas mall, ~1~ · · .. !'1lit . Offlei Dipartment, O:ttawa. ·

All Preis Services 'and featul':! articles In tllis paper are copyrighted and -their reproduction Ia pro~lbited:· ' ·.

Me~ber 'Audit Bureau.

of Circulation, : - ..

versityis. name, it would not have any . practical -effect. The present name is established b)' ·statute and can only be altered b)' amending the measure known as The Memorial Universlt)' Act. This sets fonth that "there shall lie a Univer­sity which shall be called the Memorial University of Newfoundlnad._. , ." That

!""" ____ .;..._.;.-.;,· ---:--.;..:._.,;,.._,;,.o~---.-.~--~--- Is the law of the land, a law that can i:.~:, . _WEDNESDAY·,· .FEBRUARY ·1, '1961 · 1 only be changed by the members of the (•if · • House of Assembly. It is reasonable to

_;f; ,'-Kennedy.· Lays It· On ·The ... Line j~;:,: ~lsident ~Kennedy's. State of the.· world: 'issues provided that the ,,,iU:irlon message ~o Congress was a Communi~ts reveal a sincere desire '"frank recognition of th:: main prob- · to narrow the areas of · disagree· , lems of domestic and international ment · and . work towards peace

;·~'lffai:rs'.~d a hi~id exposition ofthe through negotiation. . -:· .. mean~. which he will propose or However,' he made it distinctly .:·lil.dopt for their solution. · · and forcefully clear that the Unit· .,..l' He admitted the· existence of. eco- ed States ·wm not tolerate Commu­;·,i;~o~c p~rils a~d he d~clare<l with nist infiliration and subversion in

candour that the next four years the Americas. He had also a plan to ,, will be a testing time for the. people meet the Red challenge in Latin liof the United States and the sys- . America by. ~iving aid on a realistic

•· tern of governmerit they cherish. ·He basis to the underdeveloped coun· ~~~:~id bluntly that this. was a time tries and -~heir peoples, ;,;.,£<lr national unitY in which all the The Kennedy address has been :.iltesources of' the' nation . should he . referred to as a crash programme. .bharnessed ·in a spirit of bipartisan- But tha.t' b inconsistent with the '';:·ship for th!'! task in hand. . 1 _ President's statement that he would .:~~ .. ,. Discussing the rtb:,l on Americll,'s . not be rushed into precipitate and ,,,,~old re~erves, he ass~rted .Positive- · ill-consideted decisions. But it is :'•~ly that the dollar• would be protect- . unquestionably a comprehensive !"'ed and 'that he would not. be .pan- plan which is founded on exhaus­~~11fcked into 'expeaienCies to achie'v~ tive studies by experts in all tlie -Jn that end~ No basic policies would be various fields· and· it· represents a ,,. 'altered and no artificial restraints ·:positive response to the challenging ~'1 !ii.rould be· imposed on trade. He was problems .of the day both at home 7·~~onvinced ·that • the,' currency c?uld ·and abroad. .

assume that .there would have to be· a powerful and Insistent popular demand before such a change would even get • hearing In the Newfoundland legi~· lature.

• • • It was on this -date, 128 years ago,

tluit Peter Brown, one of the four mem­bers for Conception Bay, rose In the House of Assembly to propose that the name of the island be changed, History, so far as we can discover, falls to record 'the substitute name he had In mind. It was probably ln·ughed out of the House,

· At an)' rate, there is no record to show · whether the proposal aroused at the time an)' outburst of patriotic indig·

·nation, But it may be said that the idea- , thnt the word "memorial" might be re­moved from the name of the University has different implications and should, therefore, be taken ·more seriously. The original Universiay College was estab­lished as a national war memorial. When the College was raised to the dignity of

·a degree-conferring university, its ortg. ina! symbolic purpose waa confirmed by statute. Any suggestion that its title should be shortened by deliberate or~it;.ion of the word "memorial" might seem like desecration. Actually, It is high!)' doubtful if an)' such thought ever occurred to those responsible for the act that stirred up the rumpus. At the worst,

Wayfarer what they did might be regarded:ns un· intentional bad taute. ·

• • • It would, of course, be particular!)' an

example of bad taste if their suggestion had its origin In the desire to shock that

is characteristic of man)' universit)' stii· dents all over the world. The unlv•!rslty · , age is often a period in which a sort of Iconoclasm is prevalent. It is a way youth has of asserting itself and . ex· pressing its own revolutionary notions •. Sometimes . this takes the form of ill· mannered and boorish antics of the kind that the present Home Secretazy of . Great Britain was subjected to at the ' time llf his Inauguration as Chancellor of Glasgow .University. Why students should have thought it ·funny to make this middle-aged and distinguished statesman the taf~ct for paper bags filled with flour is beyond logical anaJy. sis as_ are so many of the pranks of. uni·

. verslty youth . • • •

It was orily just before the war that a mnjority at a meeting of the Oxford Union-the debating society of Oxford Universlt)'-declded that they would not fight for King and countrY. The press was horrified. Angry reflections on the decadence of the youth of the time filled the correspondence columns of the Times. But it was not vecy long afterwards that a great man)' of the young men who, perhaps with a desire to shock their elders, had given ex· pression to this unpatriotic sentiment, were gallant!)' flying In Spitfires and Hurricanes In the Battle of Britain. W W 'T D I The average university student today was rong ay 0 0 t not much more than three years of age B)' BRUCE BIOSSAT when the second world war ended. He Some bright fellow is going to win has grown up in a'new kind of world and the hearls of the citizens of the free rna)' offend established tradition out of society someday by devising an accept­sheer thoughtlessness and certainly · . able substitute for the strike as a work-without malicious intent. If, therefore, cr's economic weapon. ' some students have made an unaccept· At best it is a wasteful device. After ,able suggestion about' the amcndm~nt 3 major strike, the cost in lost produc­o£ the name of the Memoml Unlverstt)' lion and lost wages is usually totted up. of Newfoundland, we doubt very much But seldom if ever does anyone try to that th?Y re~lized how much an older figure how long the affected workers gcnera!ton ~1ght be hmt ~nd offended have to toil before their new gains­b)' the1r action. There Is ·room, th~re- if any-balance their lo.sses. fore, for a measure . of understand~ng When big industries and the flow of and toler~nce that wtll take the sbng basic goods are affected, the produetion out of thts controversy and allow It to loss to the nation can be serious. In the

1,r~e protected ·~It}'iqut such. devices. _ ~ome of the thmgs proposed can .~,b· Foreign policy was expounded in be done on executive order. Where . ,lrequally forthright and lucid terms. .legislation 'and Congressional ap-

be forgotten. great 'competitive race with the Com· ----------~---------------- munist world, we can ill afford such

he was taken out of the pia)'. slowdowns .

'.Qle g~eat deterr,ent of the Polaris proval are involved, it is possible ~':'J}iissqe· ih nuclear submarines will· cr.ly to wait and see whether the i1' De developed more, rapidly but the legislators are as responsible to the .! United. States .will be prepared to Kenneqy programme as he is to the

:• '"Seek constructive ~elutions ,to all urgent reqtlirements of the times. 'll;IJ~

I • .

-The··. Next. Fiscal· . Conference '·

,. : It wa~ reveal¢d in 'the .House of · sive eq~alization with higher pay-Commons yesterday. that the th_ird ments. })rop.ortioned to national

min the present series of Dorilin~on--- ·growth_ ... No province. came away ::;"''Provincial fiscal conferences . has _ happy from the October confer­~~~~en ··propo~ed for _th~ end of Feb- . ence. Whether. the fed~ral ~ove~n- -v~;:tUary. If' this date_Is !!Ot ac~eptable' ment _ h,as decided to Improve Its !n?i.~ all the provinces, an alternative ·offer for. the new tax agreements

·vue-Of a month's deiay has been sug- :'to _take effect on-March 31, 1962, is ~;~~~e.sted: In the a~no;-m~emen'ut -~as ·unknown -although the size of this ·'::i~.~1d. that the prmc~ple -~f equahza· ~;ear's estimat'es and prospective w~!On had. been retame.d m the fed- · • . : .. -· · . ~Meral government's proposals; ·How- def1c1t ·make any gener~l mcrease "~'~ver;· the objection on 'that score" in ):la)rments to the provmcesmost ~rhwas· that it would .t:ot be progres- unlikely.

·l,mprovement . In · . ·Roads

To The Editor THE UNIVERSITY QUESTION

Editor Da!l)' News, Dear Sir,-1 was very glad to see, or

read, rather, that at least some of the . war veterans: have taken up the issue of removing the word "Memorial" from the New University,

Mr. Herb Wells has expressed .the opinion bf man)', when he wrote to the effect that these so-called s~udents just do not realize what happened to men in either World War 1, World War 2, or, in Korea. ·

It was also good to read in the Satur· day edition of the DAILY NEWS, under the he'ading of "Best Loved Hymns", the well knqwn "0 Valiant Hearts", which was dedicated to the "Young Bloods of the Memorial University"!

Possibly, they don't read newspapor~, but in an)' case this page would, no doubt, not be in their reading "musts."

It Is about time something should be' done, besides stressing the need !or higher education. Surely, first and fore­most, the right material should be

,; ' · · · d pclked to educate. .1m . From 1936 "to 1948, about 380 within the highway system, an Last ·summer I had reasori to com·

Some of the services are not too Beyond this, too, there a're instances smooth. and their "a's" are a trifle harsh in which the strike weapon is in fact on the eardrums. . abused,

Why not let them listen to "The Rains Fundamentally, it is conceived as tile in Spain" or some such record In order ultimate pressure devices' which workers to improve their delivery, can apply against employers whose re-

TEACHER. scources are presumed to be so ample they could h~ld out indefinitely at the

FOOD AT HOTEL Editor Dail)' News,

Dear Sir,-The Newfoundland Hotel under its present system, will never be­come renowned for the qualit)' arid va· riety of the food H serves. -

At a special dinner there the . other night the potato was the instant variety -and there is no substitute for the real product. Also, man)' Newfoundlanders are used to condiments-pickles and/or sauce-b~t the Hotel ~taff apparently never heard of chow chow or mustard, etc.

With so man)' outsiders eating at the Hotel, it would be right and proper if fish were served occasionally as a main dish. After all, we get a great deal of our economy from fish and ·should not be ashamed of serving it.

DISMAYED. DINER.

bargaining table. Jn fairness to the general public, it

should not be used to cripple a commun· it)', to endanger their health or their militar)' security. Most unions are care­iul to stay within these bounds.

But occasionally some step be)'ond. The strike of three unions against the tugboat and ferr)' operations of 11 east· ern railroads is such a case.

Jn essence this is a small strike over a small issue. They want the right to fix the size of crews on railroad tugs, the companies wish to retain the right to determine crew sizes flexibl)'. Only 660

' workers are involved. To press their demands, the unions

have not been content to tie up ferry and tugboat activities of the affected r;~il lines, This alone, of course, has dis· rupted commuter transport and food supplies for thousands of New Yorkers.

_:~ miles .of ney; road . were· built iri, . snow-clearing, it ·has a r-ecord of . plain about the antics of a number of _·" '~e,wfoundland,. Ih, the fqllq\Vb:'l~ remarkal;Jle. accomplishment and Memorial University students,. They ~:~twelve years,' about 1,500 miles wonder is, having regard for the were entertained one afternoon at Bow­",?;"were construcfed, · · physical . difficulties that · -underly ring Park, by the Cit)' Council at the , ;;.;_In the twelve years._before union,· the entire highway problem, that tax-pa)'crs expense, I presume. From.

-tJtrength !for ~odaq The strikers have' gone further. They·

chose to picket rail lines not directly involved in their operations, with the express purpose of putting the squeeze on New York's food supply and forcing its commuter transport to suffer major crippling. The net effect is also to_ handicap long distance rail operations. the total expenditure on new roads the roads are as many as they are there, some of them inva~cd the neigh·

,,.,was· about $4. million. In the next . anq as good as they are. . . bouring properties, swinging on trees, twelve yea.rs, includind the contr_ i-·. Jt has been always the op1mon and, in m)' case, trampling on a small

"' garden that I had worked hard to get · bution of $30 million by the ·fed- of this · newspaper that the con- started.

eral governrilent, tlie total outlay · st~:uction of a paved ·· highway Unfortunately., I was not at home on new road construction has been · _across' tlie_- Island ought to have when,this invasion, took place, and my of the order of $140 million, . ·. been ·included in the· terms of husband, being a First War veteran,

.; ' lit 1949; at' the: time. of union,- the· · Union. _The·· proVision of basic com- crippled, and with ·a bad heart, was un· ~~~i.i,rinl :Son~vista_and·other import- . muriications remains a national ob- able to cope with them, -~cant roads were .restricte~ to: sum~ ,liga.tion, _even ~f Cjlnadi~n govern~ I rang Dr. Gushue later that evening, ·~1ner use. Today, almost' every ·road .. ments -sfn<;e 1949. have failed to ac- when i discovered the damage done to

' ly EARL L. DOUGLAS.

KEEP TO THE CHANNEL · This is a clear abuse of the strike A Mississippi riverboat captain once weapon. B)' hurting tile general public,

advertised 'for a pilot. A rather· drab by shutting off essential transport, the)' looking individual showed up and the are attempting to coerce both their em· captain proceeded to subject· him to lie· players and the public authorities into vere questioning: . . a favorable settlement.

"I suppose," said the captain, "that Whatever the basic merits o! their you know where all the snags in· the cause, the unions involved deserve 'to river are?" lose this round in their battle. The)' have

"Not at all," replied the- applicant: forgotten their real responsibilities and whereupon the captain said: "How . do have thought only of their own narrow

Auld Lang (From the Files of the Daily

JANUARY 31, 1931 Air Stamps: The new and

tractive air mail stamp issue brought before us by the , local air mail service to. 'be north this winter. There is a mand for these stamps and tt~ being bought up rapidly by tit lectors.

• • • To Give Talk: The weekly

the Holy Cross Literary be held 'tomorrow morning ; speaker being Mr. L. E. F. wlll take as his subject, "The Our History."

• ill t .

Obtains llf.A.: Our hearty lations to an old comrade of University College, ~!iss Alice on her M.A. at Columbia. She u of the "O.M.'-," to win this

• • • Popular Flying: Since the

the Newfoundland a1·iators, Fraser and Sullivan in their · . 'plane on Nov. 19th., many ~

foundland have been watch~( movements with interest. l!c] have seen St. John's from t!e their arrival and nearly allli:l would like to make the trip lii.l.

FEBRUARY I, 1911 Moving: WhiiP some sedic~

Department of Natural RCJ0\11~ understood to be ready to lt~f! Harvey Road building it ~illlt sat)' first to construct a vault very valuabl erecords.

• • • Bad Storm: A bad storm 1111

raging along ra'ilway lines John's to Port aux Basques inc but was reported to be Western section. Also weather compelled the S.S. Glencoe to Valleyfield yesterday afternO<:l lain reports slob ice in ail ·

• • • 'FI~ Epidemic: Schools in tlt

Falls area have been closed Wednesday wllich means the, demic ·has the entire nation in It struck with the greatesi central· Newfoundland towns, ]y Grand Falls.

• • • · Snow Costs: Costs of sn01

last week were $3,453. the ion of which was attributed and cartage. Also at the '

. ing a permit was refused Mr .. erect a forge at Kenna's J!ill.

Jr rorli h · · - -· d d h 1 · · : my garden, but the only satisfaction 'I · t:i~~n t e 'provmce is regar e •.'rig t Y cept lt, . . . got from him was, how did I know they :.~,~ wrpngly,, as an. all-weath~r road. . But the fact remams that the were Memorial Students!

you expect ine to employ' you?" little cause. The replY, ot' the applicant was: "If • • •

you are looking for a man who knows ADDED sPACE ACHE What lr, ::The Minister of Highways, Dr. ·Provincial Gover,nment, whate'-:er . My neighbours reported that they c~l'red Rowe, .did: not include . all it( faults;· .has recognized the im~ wore jackets marked M.C. and that the

these facts in his defence of·the: portailce .: of road communications Park was alive with them, .girls and -:~~lOverriment's' ~ighw:ay PC?licy iri ··.to: the e,conomic ·arid 'social needs of mane ens.· :o;JPI speech in th~ debate on the Ad- Newfoundland and has made a I also rank Mayor Mews, who was very 11•dreu: He .did. show the diinensions. \great cont~ibution to the supply of -polite; or is "genial" the word, but he ·,olof highway · expansion. They are these needs •. - · also sai~ somethillg to the effect that . ,h""P~ssive. . . . . . . , . . - ' . . ·. This is not' a matter. for criticism "boys will be boys". However, 1 wonder 11,:ifNewfolmdland is .not the easiest but one for thankfulness that this of he would have felt the same way If

• • I It had happened to his garden r . 1:1plac, in, .the world :in 'Which . to fundament.al · contriputio~ .· to the : So, Jllr. Editor, if this is what edu· 1/ibui)d roads.:: To .begiJ1 with, we. 'future 4~v~lopinent of the province cation is going'to do for savages, Wh)' h11J.ave a problem unique in Canada. · has been,:ffi.ade ,on .the: scale that· waste mi!Uons on them? Why not put_ -~gu~ r~a? ~y~tern· ~\1St fo~lb"Y' the _- has . bee~ . achieved ·and _ contem- . all this money to some good use,. ~uch

penmeter . of a deeply-m,dented: ;plated.· ... ··:~. : . ' . . as homes for the aged, and liospitals, eeui Jn. many .p}a.ces, good' :rba\i~ · ( .. :· · , . , .. · both of which are so badl)' needed in

.,;~building· materials are· lacking: · · · DUN TO. HIS C_RE~IT this province. · _.,,,.,. h' . t \..:.. "t' · d t · Cyril ·Ray m· the· Spectator . Thanking you for space, ~i:'li~IC mer~. mus .uc: ·. ~ansporte a " · l•ba'le bever t'ltlderstood wh)l so many . Yours trul)', n1 b.Jih.c;~. 'J,'hese11r~ facts that,t:an- ."s~ops ttiit:W~l R.ei:epf_a 'chequ_e ask for. . MRS, DOROTHY O'DEA. 'ott \Ot. be. overJ~ked.. , : .' " , . . . . , ont'l adft.ren to. be wntten :on the back, Squires Avenue, ·t ... 'lf, N~y w1U -contend t~at. m all -· Pro•umably, an)'one .'\)ISIIb!g. a phoney st. John's.

~CUJXJI1~anc_IIIS tlie h11tory of · chequsla.tikely to pau a phoney addreSI tiioi~~_:~~~~~~~~ · has set up ·a perfect •• well .. And. there • are those who ask

ef.!icilrn(:y ·and economy. for ',"ldllitlficatlon"-c-as though a man would be' a iniposSi-. , whcl had pinehed a chequ~·book and was

.:~!-~: But if th• KOVenuntnt :is; prepartd to forae a signature wouldn'.t of major fault Jt is that alto have pinched some sort of identlf!·

. a _ . ' . . . eatloQ., 1 wa• .llad. to hear from a cal·\ not build more ro~ds, at the . · leaaue tbe other day that,. ask~d for

QMU, ' of other aemces . that "ldefttlficltlo'n~· after offering a cheque been ~rred~ . . tor a bill' of £30_odd at a smart West

I' coa:rparativt. and an.. ~ rbl!l, lit Jhowed a aummons for not ... ]1 .. 11; · . · the · ~ppint~, . :_ hi .. (lald.IIJnltctrlclty blll, and had

BAD GRAMMAR ON RADIO AND TV Editor Dall)' News, .

where the snags· are, I'm not your fel· · As if the)' didn't have enough · po· low. But I know where the channel is tentlal problems to worry about, astron· and where the' snags are not, and that nuts rna)' have to face the possibility of is where I calculate to do m)' sailing." acquiring kidney stones in space. Dr. B.

We are enjoined today on all oides Dwight Culver of AcrGjet.General Corp.

s Are to emphasize the posltivs. There i!l a predicts that prolonged weightlessness

·large amount of truth in this counsel. will release bone calcium into the kid· · t •ndon f hfdd A news story from JJV

1'oo much we think o &J!a)ls, e~ . ne)' s)'stem, causing the formation of _ splendid exmaple of British, rocks, a hundred or more things which stones. t a

lady who arrived. late a could destroy our happiness and wreck "The spaceman would return .to earth· · h t her I. J d ,lained to her host 1 a .1 our health or our future. Too 1tt e o In extreme!)' poor physical condition," had lots his cap. This. made 'r

we think of the- broad channels which he says. "He would probably need lm· th pr~l! J • In hi ble for her to travel ~~ 'e · God provides for man to sal m. t s mediate surger)'." in the famil" Jimousme, so sc

'channel we have depth. If we keep to • • o • h 1 h 11 t h 1 · take a bixi . . the c anne we ave a p o w o s none _ EXHIBIT A . .

other than God. who made the channel. It is hard to imagine a snowstorm God has a-divine destiny for every o~e adding fuel to a fire; but the one which

of us: The channel Is msrked. It has Its . descended on the_ inauguration did just twists and Its turns. It Is not altogether ·that, Those· who back President Elsen· cas)' to negotiate, But_there are ~o snags · bower's suggestion that inauguration day there. An~ the purpose of.that Ptlot who be moved up 80 days will probabl)' seize made the channel Is that we sail on to its as n clinching argument. triumph, · · We were not made for defeat. 'INSPIRED ALL'

f New York Times LEGISLATIVE HAZARD

If> Parln Jour .

1\IERGE RAILWAYS Fredericton Gleaner

we do not agree in gen~11

with socialism or state tradtn' alization. · But there are every rule. In the case _of th! ways, half the nation is tn efficiency due to useless dupiicate runs, duplica\e cate )'ards, duplication

. der a free enterprise move would be for the

~~ <-·-•· _ places· brou~t llu ch~e courteouslY accepted, ', • I.. I'. 1

;Dear Slr,-If our children are to take· a pattern from some radio and television announcers, then practicallY everything they learn at school in the English de· partment will be wasted, The grammar of ·nome of 'these sports announcers is atrocious and If tlley are to keep their jobs, they should bruoh up at night school. When an announcer soya "he just come up with a strike", it is time

Representatives in the , French Na· tional Assembly are not sufficiently adept to cope with their new electronjc

-voting maellines .. rrt.. Ripert, deputy !rom the Bouches-du-Rhone, learned that because of his ineptitude with gadgets, he had voted "no" to · an amendment that he himself had proposed.

- In the eloquent WQrds of a superb in· augural address dir.tlnguisbed for ·us style and brevity ns .well as for its men!)' content, Preident Kennedy has ae· cepted the challenge and responsibility he so eagerly sought with a pledge bf · energy, n demand ior sacrifice, and a . promise of hope that must have in­spired all who heard him in this country . an>;! 'in every land of freedom.

over the public!y-owned . rdeD would ·be, imposing 3 bo rnipl CPR's · shareholders which intolerable. The only 011r be for the nation to takNR and merge it -with the C ·

from Pa&e 21. .•• rn>u•· d, ·it baa Lung

ban d that aovern· recd11Jzde do exert an· iln· cJn an e both on the influ~~ economic acti V· Jevel o ticular types o[ on par

. ~.

Page 5: Nova ''Santa Maria'' ;,* Entry. To Recife Uncertain sident ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19610201.pdfafter a 420-mile ride through space aboard C1 .· rocket

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r.

• ir.cc: the

I il"iators, ill their Gipsy 1., many in : n watching :.,rest. Many

. - fmm the 1ir ·:!rly all claim :he trip a&ain,

; ,, 1, 1946 •me sections qra:. Re.1ources ~<I) to mo1·e

:·1~ it will be ··::d a vault to lnis.

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r;[ r<rlltt>n.~··

Ia·.c at I

, !hat her 'I:l::s rnade it .i ,,i1h proper

. ·us' nc, so she

·--­~ \JLWJ\1'5 . ;:i Gleaner

' 1961.

oro.ugh· Pictu1~e.- On The adian Central Bankl from Page 21 ' c.v<IOIIIY 1s ui sucll a mK~uuude op~ra~• at less than full capa~-

band, it has lung as to be capable of being itnanc- lty, 1\'C are not producing the', gniled that govern. ed out of the annual produ1:t1un maximum poaslble supply ol

[C(I nd do exert an ·itn· and , the saving out of lntome goods and .·services for use. to­Cfll ;uente both on the· of the cou,ntry aa a whole,· with· day, either. fO! consumption or

·el of economic actlv· out involving . the bulldln1: up for Increasing oiu' , capacity to 1«~ particular types of of a large foreign deut. , · . provide .- higher rate of pro· 0 Measures ol suc11 various ductlon ,lind a higher standard

can Increase or kinds are being utilized In one of living tomorrow. The na· their own spending. country or another today. All tion as .. a wliole suffers real

1ncrease or reduce of them. have been utilized _in economic loss, and it Is avOJd· tJil revenues. Decisions Canada _at one time or another, able economic loss, In addition

and taxing, ffr but not· by the central bank, . to the personal loss and frustra· services, will result certainly not in · any specific t(on o! those particular persons or decreases in gov- wuy with a view to specu'ic re- who •are seeking work and un·

1 debt. Both the nature suits. No doubt some t~eoplo able to find it. It seems .-, me 11penditures a~d taxes, would be opposed to some or only common. sense, when con­rt'aled borrowmg opcr· au of such possible lines: of ac· siderlng the economic, Rocial • h&ve broad effects tion. But if the community ~• and personal problems of tiD·

conditions and the a whole wishes such things to ·employment, that no price Is too 11 opinion !n financial be ;done, there are .-a~encles great for the community • a3 a 1nd on var1ous sectors wh1ch can do them-outside the whole to pay in order to achieve

activity. !leld of central banking. · full production and reduce ttn· · i to controlling I want to emphasize the lm· -employment to the lowest pos· financial and other portance of other fields 9f ecu· slble level. The practical qu~d· governments at all nomic policy, ~n order to refute Uon · Is, what are the best

'if theY wish take as strongly as 1 can· .tht · sug; measures to take, and how is to encourage or dis· gestion that the Bank of Can· , the cos~ of those measures to

forms of eco· ada. is in any way· oppo1ed· to be shared by -the various groups carried out by the Idea of full employment, or and lndlvldilals that make up

:.dh·iduiilS andl private operates with a view to restlict· the community, Dedsions on\ such ·tng economic. growth or ·pre· The~e are, of course, both in· . to take account of venting increased. employment· flatlonary and .non-Inflationary

and often con· In the . supposed lntere.~ts of ways .of attempting to achiev. ;;;nsideratiutns, and art monetary policy or of 1mti-ln: ful! employment and a satisfat•·

influenced by the flalionary endeavours. to'ry rate of growth. Inflation · or uutlook o! differ· . . EXAGGERATED IDEAS 'I! -a· vicious and highly disrup.

and ol the commun- The seeking of. full employ tlve 'way of. distributing the wbole. it is important ment, the overconiirig of unP.m• coli(& . of such ··an ef!ort. ·It clear in this conne1'· ployment by non-Inflationary l!llounts to. taking from tht! distinction between means: must be for all of. us an weak In' order to give to the

&nd central' bank~. economic objective of the VCr)l s.trong. • There arc more equit· GOVERN~IENT CAN . highest priority. We should not able and more efflciimt ways

DO . allow exaggerated ideas about of sharing the real costs and can regulate the the in!luence of . monetary ultimate benefits of constrnr.·

olcredit, the distrlbu· policy to distract' us from pursu· live_ economic Bl!d social policies the conduct of lng,:the most practical and ef· A ce'\tral bank must be oppos·

· 1ctil·ity and the pro· fect!Vci measures . outside the ed to inflationary methods or c1 tmployment in Dar- monetary field to . ensure the. lllusory short-cuts which involve industries or areas, if restoration or a high ·level· of excessive monetary expanstun. !til to be desirable. in employment· and the reduction. But the adopti~n of any policy

Ult ol all the circum· or unemployment 'to the mini· or any combination ,of policies Gorernntents can ·en· mum level. Equally, we &hQtlld directed towards ·establishing

11 discourage eltports not let the sound admlnlstra· and inalnlalnlng ·full employ­or activity in· par· tlon of monetary policy and ment, 11nd maintaining a high

l.~~in~lustri'es which provid~ pu\;Jllc acceptance o! a soUndly -•rate ·of steadily continuing ero· 11 which compete with administered monetary policy nomic growth, Is not in any way

They can influence be jeopardized by natural COD· prevented 'or limited . by the &nd' size of urban cern about a high level of un· 'centraJ:bank, or by a sound or the distribution employment which has not been money policy: Economic growth 'througJ.out the caused by monetary policy and and a hlgh'level of employment

Gc!ve,rnnlenlls can ·in is not . curable by monetary cannot be manufactured out of rays encourage or dis- P!llicy. · · · thin air by monetary measures the growth of saving, Large-scale unemployment Is but· there Is no financial ob·

consumer credit, or an indication of failure on the sticle ·to the · carrylrig out in a the rate of house part of all of us collectively to non-inflationary way of any pro

or the direction o£ ·make the most effective 'use of gramme which is physically pos· capital development. the resources ·of' modem tech· sihle, if the community ·is will·

~n tnsure that the total nology and·soclal . organization. ing to make· the appropriate If apending· within the When the economy as a whole arrangements and -put Into ef·

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! degreti and in some circum­stances such action is unavoid· able. It is clear, however, that

i there has been a very large and · [ rapi~ ~xpa~ion .of c~nsumer i c~cd1t u1 tin~ c~untry 5mcc the · · i Wotr, G;i th11 mcrease com~$

Paran1ount Tomorrow·. -

' out of the RVings of other peo· GLEN,N FORD : pic which otherwise would be available for financing Canad1an DEBBIE REYNOLDS development under Canadia:i "IN GAZEBO" · · ownership and control. · • : ::i

1 INCREASE IN CONSUfriER "The Gazebo," Metro-Fold·

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j DEBT . wyn-Mayer's laugh-packed f!hn

We used to think we were version of the Broadway lljllr·

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more conservative in this regard der-mystery • comedy· · bit, -;re. , . , than the Americans, that we did unites Glenn Ford and Deb)>ie ' :' not engage in high pressure Reynolds, following their ·pre· ~clling techniques and were not vious comedy success,' "It Stllr!· r.usccptlble to the urgings of ed With a Kiss." · ·

I those who would have us live Co-starred in "The Gazebo" is · · · beyond our means. Evidently television's popular Carl Rein· :: the salesmen have been very er, with leading supportin:t. successful in overcoming our roles played by John l\icGiver, sales resistance in this field. Mabel Albertson, Doro Merandr.,' · : · . The rate of increase in consum· Bert Freed, Martin Landau, cr debt in _this country in recent Robert Ellenstein; Richard Wes·

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years, and indeed ever sine~ sell - and "Herman,'~ a pigeon, ! ' the Second World War, has who is a scene stealer if there · '· been greater than the rate of ever was one. increase in the United States, An Avon Production -'for and the amount of consumer MGM, the comedy was produced

. debt in this country now repre;- by Lawrence Weingarten, who : ent approximately the same pro· produced ''Cat On a Hot Tin '[ portoin of personal income attcr Roof,'' one of last year's oUt·

hx as in the United States. standing. films; and was direct·

.. ''

MR._ JAMES E. COYNE, Governor of the Bank of Canada, seen talking to Sir Leonard Outerbridge and Mr. George G. Crosbie, Nfld's representative on the Board of Director~ !Jf the Bank of Canada at the reception held for him on Monday at the Old Colony Club.-(Musical Cloclt Photo),

I Any programme for increas· ed by George Marshall ("It

ing Canada savings, especially Started With a Kiss" and "The the personal saving of Can· Matihg Game") ft am the scre~n adians, and· ensuring that these play by George Wells. It Is: iu savings are put to uses which CinemaScope. . :· 'will be of most benefit to tile Ford is seen as Elliott N'ash. nation as well as most reward· who has a succcss.lul career! a~

feet whatever div~rsion of phy· sica! resources and c;hangcs m the d~tributlon of real incomes may be involved in such pro· grammes. These are the r~al factors involved, which cannot be avoided.

REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT The problem of regional de·

vclopment in Canada, of the existence of varying rates of

however shared certain' objcc· lives in common· and desired to form a single polical body in order to further these commo!l objectives-a single political body as seen by the outs1de world, although internally much of the original political distinc· lions between the different elt mcnts in the confederation have been retained.

economic activity in differ~nl One of the operating prin· regions, nnrl varying levels of ciples of our confederation is income, saving, spending and that the various regions deliber· investing in the various regions, ately foster trade and commun· is one which goes to the verl'' ications with each. other, in heart of the Canadian confr.d addition to whatever trade al!d era lion. Canada was not in the communications it may be feasi· beginning a natural geographir· ble and profitable to carry on al unit or a natural economic .with the outside world. Another unit, and was not· expected to and equally important principle develop, and has not in fact de- is that each of the regions veloped, in a way that might should develop its own ~co­bavc been appropriate for a na- nomic structure to the fullest tural economic uni't. The bas1c possible extent, and be assistf!li fact of Canada as a nation is by the other regions in so do· that represents a coming to- ing. The bonds linking the getlier of various peoples livin;: various regions together, and in widely separated regions, in· the boundary around the whole, flucnccd in important ways hy constitute one strong basis of dlfferent geographical and eli· nationhood. The maintenance of matic conditions as well as dif active, vigorous and indepen•l· fcrcnt historical and psycho· ent local units constitute• logical factors. These people another essential basis of na-

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tionhood. Inter · dependencl! ing to their owners, would be one of television's tqp mystcr:• and mutual assistance canm't strengthened by a changed at· writers; an adoring actress wjfe, be' fully effective without imJc. titude towards consumer debt Nell (Miss Reynolds); a charll! pcndcnce and sel! help. Con· and consumer credit. I bcliev~

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ing home in Conncdicut-~n,: versely, the vitality, rcsource[ul· Canada would benefit from a a dead man buried under hi~ ness and adaptability of eacn ~f return to the more frur.al, con· gazebo! · the constituent clements must servative practices and habits j What more perfect place· I<· 'be.supportcd by the unqucsllon-

1 of mind that we used to think 1 bury .a body. than under Ne,ll';;

mg response of the nation as a 1 w,cr~ characteristic of Canadians ; surpnse . gtft for him, ; a

whole, and of the more fortuu- 1 in all parts of the country.. wrought·tron garden house pur· ate areas at any·particular time, 1 I have said on a number of portcdly once used by Geottc to opportunities for assisting occasions that as a m•tion we IV to dally with his mistresses: those areas which are contend· were in effect living bevond our This has been Elliott's frantii: ing with adverse circumstances means because we we~e incur· thought when he invited black at any particular time. ring obligations to the outside mailer Harry Shelby -:- )rho

As l have said, the proviston world by importing into Canada wanted $25,000 for some "in­of credit ,is not the only factor, goods and ~ervices for consump· nocent but.incriminating photo· nor the most important factor, lion as well as for capital d~· graphs of Elliott and a pllblir in successfully expanding ceo· vel~pmenl on a scale much stenographer - to ~is liQmc nomic activity in a particular greater than any volume of ex- after Nell had departed for}he region. Opportunities must be ports we were able to achieve. theatre. He hadn't been able to developed for profitable ex· Canada's net international in· raise the money by selling 'thP pansion of employment-increas· debtedness, including both di· house despite his secret ; at· ing industries, and encourage· rcct foreign investment in Can· tempts to con~ince Nell that 1t ment to men of ability energy adian industry . and resourc~ \~as in bad shape by stuffing and ambition to go into new development and the debt incur- sponges down drains, join,ing c~terprises, to expand indus· red by foreign borrowing by plul!l~ing pipes that s.bou!~n't tnes, and to take risks, whether provinces, municipalities and be JO~ned and s~ort-c~rcmhng personally or collectively, in corporations; has increased by electncal c~nnechons. Murder, order to build for the futurr. $13 billion in the past 11 years he had dec1ded was the !lillY The required opportunities can -frorro under $4 billion at the way o~t. . be developed by the people of end of 1949 to nearly $17 bil· He f~red h1s gun at the shad· the communities concerned or lion by 1 the end of 1960. o~ed figure that. came . to~ard their governments, but not by There are those who say it 1s h1m .at the appomted lime'• of the banking system. all right to go on increasin;; meeting, then proceeded to

So far as the supply of credit one's debt, that the future will bury the body on the spot wb_ere is concerned, I believe the Can take care of the debt and tnat concrete for the gazebo's found· adian economy as a whole is the economy will tie strengthen- atio_n was to be poured the fol­capable of generating sufficient ed in the meantime. It is claun lowmg mornmg. Shortly after, capital to finance all the capital ed that we could not have a Elliott learns that Harry Shelby development that can be absorb· satisfactory rate of development has been murdered in a New ed into sound sustainable without relying on large annual York hot~! roo~ . growth. I hope it will be found imports of foreign capital. 1 Who hes buned urtder th~ as time goes by that those r~· think that argument falls down gazebo? gions in Canada which are least on three grounds. First, uur . Before this COJ?ledy-of-errors abl~ to provide for their own own rate of saving under condi· Js r~solvcd! Elliott .beCOjllP.s cap1tal needs, will be drawing tions of full employment is frantically mvolved w1tb )h~ an increasing proportion of adequate !or a high rate of de· contractor w~o has put up :thE their requirements from other velopmcnt. Secondly, relianc~ gaz.ebo; Matilda, the nosey Canadian sources rather than on foreign capital has Jed to a ma1d; a lady realestate agent from foreign sources. kind of economic development and a couple who want to buy

HUniAN CAPITAL in Canada which I believe has the house (and plan to ~ove The over.-all rate of saving in exaggerated both booms and !h~ g~zeb.o; two thugs ~nd, ~?:t

Canada as a whole is large, and recessions, has resulted in high. mhml~ah~g of all, h1s As.sts,. is in fact larger. than the rate er peak levels of unemployment ant D1st~ct Atto~e~ f;1end in the United States, although and higher average levels of un· (Carl Remer) who IS mtr1gued personal saving as a proport1on employment than if we hat! by the movements of two ff!J'ms of personal income after tax is pursued a more steady pace, -Nell's and the one under the lower in Canada than in the and has also contributed to a gazebo. United States. It is the rate of higher level of costs than we Thus ensues. a c~ckeyed laugh corporate saving which is much oth~rwise would have develop· adventure wh1ch mvolves. not . higher here. If properly em· ed. Thirdly, and in some ways only murder and bla~kmall but p!oyed, the total of our own most important of all, continued even an atte~pt to kidnap Nell savings as a nation would pro· relia,nce for many years on very before love triumphs ove~ at!. vide us with a rate of economic large imports of foreign capital Not to be overlo?ked Ill the development greater than that is resulting in the faking over ma~lst.~om of mer;,1~ent offer· in the United States-insofar as by foreigners of a higher and ~d m ~he Gazebo .u a spark!· development depends upon ·in· higher proportion of all kinds ~ng m~sJcal.produchon n~ber vestment in tangible physical of- Canadian economic activity, m Which Miss Reynol~s. smgs ..... ,_ assets. Economic development the selling off of our natural and. d11ances'ttto af nebw s~~Sg es· ; : :.,-·. · also depends, of course, on non· resources as well as the subord· pe.cla Y wn en o;, er, orne· .,- ,. ,_. material factors,. on· increasing ination of more and more thmg Called Love. .

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-I·N .. _··T .. ·-o·· the quality and value of ·wha! sectors of secondary industry to It al! adds up to top mov1e :. ; . might be called our human cap· foreign management and ~on· entertamment. · I · . 1

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.·VALIANT· •,· .

1/u tloor inliide ': • ~ ·the price Is ·low* · · ~o1s ottd drives like lrince; tlli prlcer ' .

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0 Gettmg in~;a Viili.arit's ~··breeze ;: : ,; physicli.Ily.:an~ financially: -Forpl,ain old fashioned in-and-out W comfort, yo~ just\ can't beat it. wi~· a,ny.,other compact. Bar none. Getting into a Valiant is easy on

the walle~, .toor F?rst off, Valiant's, priced down among the lowest of the compacts. Then, as an owner you~catch yourself salting away the green stiift' at a pleasant rate. When you do pull into a filling ltation you find a couple bucks ·go· a long; long way. Getting into a'Valiant, you discover what makes Valiant King ·of the· Compacts._ The·, qombshelter rugg~d- · · · · ness of Unibody · construction. The steamroller steadiness ·n;;:.=~ of Toi'sion-Aire Ride. And the, 'zip ,. • .! The door is wide and the. price is low at your Valiant de'ali3r's. Right. how's the time to prove· it Stop by and see for yourself • \

•prices' sttJrtiJ4.4.oo. less than last year '6. 1 ""{. rr 1· • ' . - . va Iante

·MARSHAL( MOTORS ·. LTD. THE ROYAL GARAGE LTeu ~ WA:I'ER ST., ST. JOHN'S, Nli'LD. 64 •. 68 HAMILTON ST.

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ita!. It is interesting .. to note troL A better flow of Canadian that the new Chairman of the aavings and capital funds to No Need. Council of Economic Advisers those regions and those indus-·

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in the United States holljs iUCh tries which need further 'capital t 0 Worry. a view. I myself believe that for sound development would · ·. . .. , the rate of economic . growth, help build a healthier economy. LEOPOLDV ILL E <CPi ~ both nationally and regionally, · STANDING ON OUR OWN · Capt. ·Gerard Rondeau of. St. :; ': .

., will be fostered by th~ accumul· ' FEET . Felix -de Yalois, Que., Rorilan ation of human wealth and cap· .The fundamentnl questio!l Catholic chanlaitt with ~7 -Ca· . ·; · · abilities in· the .form of higl:trr · which we must decide one way l nadian !!ignDis Unit in The >• ·' .. standards of health, ·broad bas- or. the . other for ourselves, is , Congo, needn't . worry a~out · ' · ·' ed general· education and voca· whether, we are prepared as a [ his personal safety on his iiext · : ,· 'i'.'·. / · · tiona! and scientific trainirig,. as nation to live by our own ,exer· ·trip to the C~gol~e Interior. :' , :: :., ·· much as-and of course In tions, to save out of inc(lme Wing Cmdr. Ken hDobbiJ! odl ','.:_;;·_.>, .. ··; addition to ·the· . building of what· we. think we need for Ottawa has everyt ing flJ(e ;;.;; ,. , . : more plants and the installation future. growth and development, up. · · of more machinery and. equipt· and to fin01nce and control our . Father Rondeau was men· ment. own development to such a de· tioriing · a forthcoming· trip: 1:1 . However that may be, most gree that the Canadian interest' Luluabourg, in· central -Kasal

people would agree that a furth· in .'Canadian industry shall in province, where a Canaoian .:_'i,·. · er increase in total. Cal)adian future increase, instead-of con· signals team: is. operating, for \_;: ··. ·.· saving would be desirable and tinuing to decrease. Adherence I the United Nations. · -; 'i:' ·- ··. that, in particular, it would be to.such principles is.not in any 1 • Th~ jovial wing comman\ler :_'. -. '-desirable to· h11,ve a. substantial way prejudicial to full ·employ-~ mter]ected: .. increase in personal saving as ment or ·to a steady rise in the "You don't have to wor~, distinct from corporate savmg. staqdard· of Jiving. '.'here is Pa.dre. I phoned .the nattve

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The net. rate of personal uv- 'nothing foolish or sacrificial cof c?tef · llt Lulua~ourg; and ~ld ing is what is left over. after our own best interests ih pursu· htm he t?ul~n t boll :VO!l:·Jl~; subtracting, from· tbe savings ing policies which may be call· cause you re il fryer lfr1~~l. made each year by &Orne per- ro living within our means, or · _, · sons, the dis-saving or reduction 'standing on our own feet, or ·PREDICTS FAST Tl'llt'.~ . ::(:·;' of capital or . new borrowing some other hQmely phrase based . WINN!P~G !CPl:-"'A ln)'i! ;ur- '. ·. made by other persons for the .on hard work, frugality, self· !me exe~utive predic.t~. W1'!1'o'y· purposes of financing their cur· respect and pride .in· maintain· le~, stamless ~tee! al1'1ipe~s .w:n rent expenditures on consump· ing our independence and be· ~lse across North Amer:c). tn tion. There will always be II lng master in our own house. little more than. an hol,ll' ilf: lh_e certain number of people living R is a personal question for. 1970s. Grant_ M~Conach1e, pre~t· on their capital, particularly old decision by ali Canadians. It is de~t · of. Canad!Dn Pacific.; :Air· people and those who have re-' a question Which I believe goes lines, said Monday that p~sen· tired, or young people and de-. to the heart of the. effort which· g~rs inside the, supersonic c;raft pendents who are being sup· our. predecessors started so will know what s going oti'..,ou~­ported out of previously estal1-. many years ngo, and to which side ~ough a closed Cll:cmt Ushed fmtds. This is · to be the people of Newfoundland televisiOn screen in each :o!les.t. expected In the natural course contributed so much even be· TJ:te ·needle • nosed plnnes~wlll of life. On the other hand, fore, the final step of confeder· climb like rockets to cr lng there is also a form \If dis-anv- atlon in 1949,-to develop ana a\t~udes of 70,000 feet l!lld arry ing, represented, especially by safeguard a nation extending th~ll' passengers to · the1r di!~tln· consumer credit, which amounts across the northern half of thl~ allons at a speed of 2,500 11111cs to mortgaging orie's .future in· continent which, while living in an ~~~~· ... _ --~-- -·-­order to consume today at a I the ~realest friendship and !'independent, vi.:;orous and.>il'li· hir,hcr rate than one'~ prcsP.H'·/ harmony with our neighbour; confident in air aspects ot,-,na inc11mc can finance. To 5omr to the south, wo.:ld yet remain fionPl life. ·'

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. ·. . THE .DAILY NEWS, ST.

~·--~----~'~--~--------~-------------------------------------------·----------NFLD., WED.,.

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... .. • ~en · marriages, suicide a~mpts, . physical. ills seem . . their lot. Here IS the · story behmd

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The Unhappy Beauties ~~ BY .. DJ.CK KLtiNER 1 front·page nc!"s with a \'arying _,. NEW YORK-<NE:Al..,.The Big I crop of miscms:

nr;..m of the ·.American, teen, 1 ·MariiYJl Montoe broke up, with aucf girl <and her mothl)rl ·Is to her husband, Arthur Mille~ .. 1row up into a beautiful, glum· I Brigitte Bardot attempted sul-.orous star of t~e entertainll)en~ cide.. . . ' · wof).d, But this dream aecms a Ehzabeth Ta.ylor su!fe.red from bit'., tattered around the . edges a mysterious Illness. . .

'lattty. Most oUhe e\•ldence ,ill· Marilyn; Brlgl,tte a~d L1z are di1:4tts • that most of the beaut!· the per~onlflcallonf of . The Big rU1.;,.11amorous stars .oro an. un· Dream. Liz has one of the .most happy group of girls. beautiful faces of modem limes.

In· 1960, three of the most. Brigitte has a figure which· is beautiful and glamorous made . merely perfection. And Marilyn

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Homemakers • • •

MOPFUL CLEANS FLOOR A newly-developed nylon mop

holds six limes Its weight in

NOVEL' and appropriate for Valentine's Bay: two hcnrt-slmpcd cakes have been joined together In frosted bliss.

water. Dip this into a pall of hot BY GAYNO RMADDOX soap or detergent just once, and Play cupid in the kitchen, Join It soaks up ennugh to wash an two heart-shaped cakes together enUre· kltch&n floor. and frost with loving ,care for

-o- Valentine's Day. Heart-shaped PLASTIC ON SHINGLES cakes are simple to bake in spe-

Now you ean shingle yoQr cia! pans of aluminum foil. Two bouse or garage with ataln l!nd pans, in Valentine red, c om e wealher-r e 1 I s t a II t shln&les packaged together. · which have a baked-on 'loa tic To make do ubi~ cake: m i x, finish. These can be scrubbed bake in layers and cool, one clean with soap or detergent white and one cholcolate· rens­~uds, then hosed down with clean ing the foil pans for the se~ond water. baking. Join the like layers with

-o- frosting. To unite these· hearts, .KNOTTY PROBLEM cut a curved segment from the

1 When workl~g with w.ood· thai roundest pnrt or one heart, so

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contains knots, ·remember to that the same part of the other ·seal the knots which may heart fbut on the opposite sidel "bleed". .Spray two coats of will slide into it. Frost the cakes shellac on the !mol~ a~ a seal, completely with feathery strokes, Handy to Hprny Is shellac In an then outline cnch heart shape aere>sol can. with ·a frill of frosting in a con·

1 trnsting color. 1

i FASHION TIPS Here's another !dell for a Val· I FOR SNOWY DAYS 1 enline's Day luncheon: delicate·

S~ort coata with raccoon col· ly pink shrimp Crcol~ on white Iars, cut double-breasted style, rice: are (IO!Iular for·. snowy days SJIRIMP CREOLE These come in red, green or (Mnkcs 4 scrvlng&l camel color. 4 l11blespoons sweet (unsalted)

' • • • margarine GLAMOR CASHMERE ' 2 medium onions, sliced

Now the black cashmere ·swea· 1 green pepper, 'sliced ter takes to lrrldescent sequins 2 tablespoons flour sprinkled all over the surface. ¥.! teaspoon 'salt This is a luxurious swenler Wl_th '!4 teaspoon pepper'

..... Jl'ft"'D' Ud llusbaad Nci. 4 bid .aellllal te IDIUe about •l silk chiffon !lnlnq, 1 teaspoon oregano · f r ' · • • • i No. 2 can solid pack tomatoes

.-dOll IIOIIpltal wil~ lhe " 11 lrtalecl llfl .IIIJaf.trlou- ·in ec· MATTE JERSEY BACK· 1 small can tomato sauce W;. · . · . . · · . Matter jersey Is e fabric mnk· 1 cup raw rico ~ •ctresset,. Her .pic. diagnosed as nervo\lll eo!ldltloilll, inll a coml!back both In blouses 1 pound rawl shrimp• friJSh or 'ftN almott aur• to r• she's a compu.llllve jewelry· eo!· and afternoon and eocktan dres· / frozen or B-ounce •eeled

1 bllldaome profit, chiefly lector.' · • ' · · !es, !Some women dote on It ami d~velncd shrim, un· lt8t•• II ·her pres111oe •. : Men Tilt t\u-ee, thin, btvt every- and as far as they're concerned, cooked' .,..._. alllt:e jwlt uemed to tblui a Jlrl c(lll]d deQently wa!lt It never w.ent• ot~\ 1 Heat margarine in frying pan.

C. .- at btr. · -Plllll 1 history of chroolc un· Add onion and pepper rings nnd . · ttiflttlJ, the II on ller happine.u, The B!i Dream . , CAP F~R· NIGHTIE cook until tende~. Sprinkle flour

hllaband, she hu b e e n has turned out to be 1 bla: l!lght· The flannel. n!g~tgown now in p(\11, stirring until. it is blend· . 101M lll!happJ fDn'llll- mare. . eonte~ with matchm~ dust cap. cd in, Add salt, !JCpper oregano,

tile liP had a netVMIS · _;__ The outfit Is eyelet ·trimmed, nnd tomatoes and tomato s a 11 cc. \;''JIWM.t·iito the llel ~ltd eout!J INeJt: .. Tilt ·kt•llea' cbelct.> you have a cholee of whit~. red, Cook over \'cry lpw heat while

crampe ' tblt ll pale .hlue or pink. you prepare rice and shrimp.

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Cook rice in boilfng salted water until tender, While rice ls cook­ing, clean and cook shrimp by boiling 2 to 5 minutes. Reserve enough shrimp to garnish 4 serv­ings; shop remaining shrimp. Drain cool1ed rice and mold In· to balls with an. ice cream scoop, measuring cup or lea cup. Un· mound onto platter or chop plate. Keep hot in warm oven. Just be· fore serving, add chopped shrimp to .sauce, and spoon around mounds of rice. GarnLo;h with whole shrimp.

We The Women

WilY IT'S liARD FOR MEN TO UNDERSTAND WOMEN

RUTII 1\UT.LETT

No wonder !lien find it hard to understand women-

What man, having found exact­lv the suit he wanted, would walk all over town just to make sure no other store had something he might like just a little better?

What man would walk into 11 store and buy something, know­Ing chances were he wauld re· turn It the next day?.· ·

What mnn would be upset if he got to a party and discovered thnt another inan was wearing a suit exactly like his?

What man would· ever look in­to n closet flllcd with clothes and say pitifully, "I haven't got a thing to wear"?

What man would rather ask directions than drive around for lmlf an hour lookir.g for a street or highway sign?

What man would buy a gift without the [oggie~t notion lor

._So~ial-l).er~onar ( :(,lttmn-

ACROSS DOWN J-isthe !Rigid

capital of 2 Oxidizing Ontario enzyme

8 This province 31Jnkeeled hasa-ma 40vertime(ab.)

No dress or ,uitlooii ttl· on you a' it do~> on person. You. alone· adj ue indi~ idualily of st)l! u garment.

~f 412,582 5 r'iber-knots square m~~s 6 Large plant 1~~~m~~

Sprou-type colognes and per- 1 13 Click beetles 7 Siouan Indians ~~$f.;;.J , 14 Papal cape 8 Samoan warrior r. ~~tmJ

fumes cull for the ll~ht touch on 1 15 Seine 9 Trieste wine a,: the release. A lillie of either 16 Green vegetable measure , scent goes a long way. ' 17Feminine tO Clothing maker 30Artists frames 45 PWlt!~'

· appellation 11 Changes 32 Handle 18 Go by liner 12 Rent, . 36 Weapon

whom he was going to give it to? 20 Self esteem 19 Mississippi city 37 Expunger btl. What man would ever think he, 22 D:inks nlade 21 Mammal 38 Washes llg I . I Wilh malt 24 EcclesJastlcal ~0 ldollted

could subtract years from h1s . 2.3 Colorodo resort, cowtcils 'llnsert a new age and get by 'with it?

1 -Park 26AerUy lining

What man would, without any . 25 Greek. letter h • t 11 d' hi 'f , 1 27 Ontano s arne a a , 1scuss s WI e s1 produces

shortcomings w i I h his men 1 much-friends? 29 Slippery

Wh'nt man would bother to try I 29 We~te':D cattle to make his wife think that she I ~~ l~~al JDSect · actually thought up one of his \ ~4 Correlativ6 of bright ideas? neither

What mnn would snend half a 35 Sho~t·napped I . h ·b . fabne. day shopp ng w1t out uymg any- 36 Ruddier

thing and riot consider his ·time 39 Rlp wasted' 42 Golfer's term

· · \ 43 Ca~ucl·tn What man's favorite topic of monke~ conversation is his children and\ «Senior their doings? · . 40 Javanese tree

What man would .X chan •e a I 411 Powerful , • • • o i e•ploslve

present hiS w1fe gave him-he· : 50 Song !or one cause he would rather have some- 11 51 Gets up thing else? . 53 Slight draught

. . kl 55Rlver(Sp.) What man ever wmts to brca j 56 sootluayers

bad news to his wife until she is 57 Water, for in a happy,· relaxed frame .of 1 imtancc m'Ind• · , 59 Was \\Tong

· · 60Longa~s What man ever complains that I

·his wife never talks to him?

(:old or Grippe 1 SPIRIN

T.N.REG•

o Reduces fever • Relieves that headachy feellnO • Relie,ves aching muscles· o Soothes sore throat . ma~es you feel better rasH

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'•1 •. We can nn)'time

.\rj•ing ."ldcdto · win ler

dll!RSELF !::..·-aged woman · a tccn-a~er

!i111: lierse\1. : .! of most ol atlcmoting

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I Y ''GLOVE'' h md lotion,

1 :onn\y lotion :: :11otion y~u

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Outlook's Sunny Men's Rainwear ..

Shoeing Children

' 1961 7.,

Gaile· Dugas On Fashion

The Fresh New LoO.k ·Of Resort· Wear

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Page 8: Nova ''Santa Maria'' ;,* Entry. To Recife Uncertain sident ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19610201.pdfafter a 420-mile ride through space aboard C1 .· rocket

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· -S.t. Pat~ s .. · ~.Forfeit As ~USad~rs 'Take Fourth ·HockeyCI'oYin Since '34

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. :: .· :rh':' High SF~~~ At~letic Association announ­ced. yesterday mornmg that Holy .Cross are the H1gh Sihool•Hockey.champs·fo; 1960;..st, The announce· ni:enffollo.Wed· the~St.' Pat's statement that they . Jould b~ forfeiting' ibe:decidiitg g!lme of the league fi. t' . . . . pulS;•·... . . . . ' .

~· · For Holy Cross it'Jneant tht'lir fourth St. Jahn's Iiockey championship · since· they won the Boyle Trop~ in 1934. · .. The Crusaders won the Midget Hockey title in 1946; the Junior crown m 1947 and ~ere Section "B" champs· in 1948. All three titles were won at the Forum.

St. Pat's and Holy Cross b.oth had one victory i~ the School finals when a controversy over the suspension of. several players involv,ed in a mixup. i~ the first game· arose.· Following a re-scheduling of the thrrd game and a ruling by· the League on the suspensions, St. Pat's made chc announcement that they, would be forfeiting. ·

On· ·How.e's Injuries Dee Murphy, SP,orts Editor, D~ly News.

Dear Dee:-Llke yourself I'm a t~n of the Detroit Red Win~s. I ~as very angry following the

. ~~~rtscast of ,Howie Meeker on CJ9N several weeks ago when he.- cited the Gordie Howe ln­Jtiey as a publicity gag.

'r wrote· Jack Adams, general manager. of the Red Wing~. ask· ing him about the Injury and I fiiJired , his reply .would be of lrit~rest to all NHL fanS' in g~neral and those 'or Detroit in

Close ·call For TorontG ·.::·

•' :·'TORONTO (CPl Frank Mahovllch, Carl Brewer and ~~d Keli~ of Toronto Maple Leafs visited a youngster In Yi6soltal ·Monday. · ~' ;rwo 'hours after they left, l~e hospital completed Its diagnosis of the lad's Illness -'.:!and passed the lnformatiOJI along to the Nation~! Hocke"l League club in a hurr)l . 'lt turned out to be hepa·

litis; an infectious liver ail­ment Its incubation period IS a1 month to six weeks-just ·long ·enough to make itself ap· · pilrent a b o ut Stanley Cup lime. . ·~Although the hepatitis virus

,Uiiually is carried by water, ((' is somttimes transferred (rom per~n to . perEon . ·".Dt. Hugh Smythe · of the

partlcular; i am enclosing !he letter ·for you to use i.f you wish.

ADAI\JS' LETTER

Dear Mr ••••••••• :,

In reply to your · leiter of January lAth re Gordie 'Howe's Injuries. the only thing I can figure Is that Howle Meeker Is kidding you. Knowing Meeker I . cannot figure him to make the stupid remark that Howe's Injury was a publicity gag.

After the fh·st head Injury \\lith Kennedy some years back, Howe was In the hosplta1 for two weeks and had a delicate brain operation performed by Dr. Schrleber-posslbly one of the finest neuro surgeons in America. Any time. they bore Into your skull, it's going pr~t-. ty far !or publicity In my book. r The latest· Shack Incident •••

both Sid Abel and myself were fifty feet away fro\n it. Howe did not hit the ice until Lefty Wlison; the trainer, , laid him down to give him first-aid treatment. If this, again, was for publicity purposes, then

I Howe was out for practically two weeks and Is a· long way from being one-hundred percent even. now.

Hope this answers your ques· lion. Thank you for your inter· est in the Red Wings .

s~ .,~erely.

JACK ADAMS.

· Leafs•. medical staff said \hat A1i a -precautlonnry measurP he probably wlll give the three players injection~ ·Jf . (amma. globulin, which ·con· tlllns · antibodies against the · disease.

This was the reply to my let­ter and knowing, you're a Red Winil fan and that there are many more of us In Newfound· la:td I figured that your read· ers would be Interested In the letter from Mr. ,Adams.

Yours 'truly, A DETROIT BOOSTER.

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ONLY

FOR. TWO WEEKS Takes only 5 minut~s ASK FOR A MINI-LOAN

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CO\IftF'O!tATION L.l M IT e: 0

CAMAIIAN, COAST·TO·COUT

DANIEL A. STONE , 164 Water Street

•':41t. ~·s,·Nftd.· Phone 8-0133 , ..

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Harbnur

-· HARBOUR GRACE , Stan ~~oom continued 1 mg II'IZ7.ardy for

I Grace c. of E. at the Stadium here allernoon as he limes and set up the in a 4·1 victory Grace Convent in lion Bay High semi-finals I .

I The. win moved c o! 1 the fmals against

l..'C for the Soper's lion Trophy. The best games finals will op10 Wednesday afternoon.

Graham Goodwin ~et up f?r two first pericd and m the middle stallll \Villim~s scowl for the

i ncrs With ~lnores as lh! · man. The third goal I game for ~loom

Goodwin in the ~ctond

HOCY CROSS won the 1960-lil High S~hool Hockey Championship 'Y~~terday when St. Pat's announced that they were (orfeiting the third and deciding game of the finals. l\1eml.Jers of the winning Crusaders arc (left to right) Imeeling:-Nick Antle, John Murp1Jy, J1m.Finlay, Pat Densmore (captain), Geny llolrlen, Erl Colford. Standing:-,Jim Casey, Peter Densmore, .Jim Srruires, Roger Maun­der, John M!lcCormack, Carl Stapleton, Bob Wells, R·llll Baird and Pat Hearn. Missing is coacldtev. Br. French.

(Royal Photo Service)

Leo llyan 1lrcw the a goal hy Ted Pike in on d pnio<l to m<.kc the Convent >qn;d i ~hutnul hid oi I he c. or

11o:1c penall~. a nriror. ~am~ w~nl In lhc squad whn ln<t the lim of the ~rmi·fin•h H ----------------------------~-----------------------------------

, Meeker Raled Tops In Lo·cal. Spo~tscasters

RATED TOP SPORTSCASTEik-Howie Meeker, for· mer player arid. coach with To~onto Maple Leafs of the National Hockey Lejlgue, has become Newfound-. land's most popular sport~caster. He moved to St. John's in 1957 to coacll a hockey team and gradually edged into radio and television sportscasting about a year ago •. Now be is sports d1rector for three TV stations-at Grand Falls, St. John's and Argentia­and a St. John',s radio station. (CP Photo')

By JOE DUPUIS actually become a competent ST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CPl- professional but without the

Howle Meeker is finding a dulcet tones of a commercial niche he likes as Newfound- announcer," says George lliae-' land's most listened·to and con- donald the cmnpany's· radio troversial radio and television operations manager. , sportscaster, Macdonald says Meeker's big-

He is sports director for gest asset is his knowledge of the New(oundland Broadcast- most sports.. "He made himself log Company's three teievis~on an· expert,· too, on the New­outlets-CJON-TV, St. John's, foundland scene, and it's this CJOX·TV; Argentla, CJCN, inside type of information and Grand Falls-and for CJON constructive opinion, that has Radio, St. John's. made· him' such a top-rated

For Howie, it's the reallza· sportscaster." AMF; •staff of Champions .CHECK-The approach runway. tlon of a boyhood dream. The Meeker also does a popular Before rolling the first ball · for stickiness or for any execs· only difficulty Is that sports- TV .report each Saturday of the check the end of the approach sive smoothness. [ casting Is a part·t.ime~job which St. John's bowling leagues. runway for stickiness or exces-tak~s up four hours of a busy Last summer he· co-produced sive smoothness. NEXT: FOUR STEP • , 14-hour da". . nnd was master of ceremo11ies h b 1" • b DELIVERY ' f T e person ow mg JUSt c- ' ' ' ' '

Meeker, best known for his or 15 outdoor television shows fore you may have had a for-boisterous years as a fleet on everything from scuba div. elgn substance, such as chew-.winger .. with 'l'oronto Maple ing ',in St. John's· harbor to ing gum, sort drink or water on Goall·es T.ra'ded Leafs o£ the National Hockey archery. in· the barren· New- his or her shoes and left some League, spends his winter~ found!and hills. Jiis two-minute traces of it. i coaching hockey, a task he radio squibs on tips to sports- Take the normal stride to TORONTO (CP) - Two Na· I caine here to perfor'!l three men ~nd. fishermen I .help en- the foul line without the ball tiona) Hockey League teams, To- I years· ·ago. He also operates· a hance the Meeker image of ami slide to 'the finishing ronto Maple Leafs and Boston. ·~ports· shop. . polished professionalism. · spot. If you find· something Br~ins, h~ve trade-! sec~n.d·!

The· cqmpa!ly experimented - When hockey playoffs rolled amiss, don't attempt to correct strmg goahcs Toronto manab"r· 1

with Meeker several months be- around, Meeker was at mike- it yourself. Ask the proprietor coach Punch Imlach announc'd ' fore giving him .. 'one· of the side doing what Macdonald or mana"er to (;llrrcct the situa· 1 Monday. I chojce air spots about. a year calls · "the greatest between- lion. He o has the proper mater· 1 Ed ~hadwick of lh? Leafs goes; ago .the five minute' noon radio ·period commentary in the ials-fine steel wool, powder, Ito Brmns fo~ Don Sommons. ; SJHJ~ts show. He was ·an imme· country," · etc.. . , lmlach sa1d no cash w9s m- . dlate .hit· 1 One of ·Meeker's casual ob· •Ailcr lacin-g your shoes, take I 1olvcd. . .- 'I

As be. gainc,d. confidence, and servances ()£ a pint:sizcd winger a look at the soles to make ·1 Chadwick has been playmg a· wider audience, he . moved on a ·hOt-scoring playoff streak: 1 with RochesteL' Americans, Leafs' I Into · television with a five- ''He's killing those guys, and · ' I American Hockey League farm\ minute early evening' telecast. he's hardly got enough meat· on · 1 team. Simmons started the sea-IIi ~ss than· a. year, every pro- him to make a suitcase . for. a back to t_he days whe~ he w~s 1son with Bruins, hut was shlp-feslonal survey .gave his shows canary.", an Ontario member of Parlm- ped to their AHL club in Pruvi- · top rating, two to one over all Although he's not sufficiently m~,n~. • ' dence two months ago, · others. glib to describe hockey action, I m trying to. make N~w· Simmons, 29, broke into the

.Howie's reputation as a play~ he did a crc~itable weekly 11lay- foundl~n?t;rs rcah.ze the. temflc NHL with Boston in 1956-57. · er and. coach of the Leafs help· by-play this yea; on local sot- potcntlahh~s which. _c~lst,here · Chadwick,, 27, was ·Toronto's ed bring· him listeners. ccr plny-ofls.. . for re~~cahonal _fac_Jllhes. regular goalie in 1956·57 and · But his voice, which . crack- Meeker, through his pre-TV He 15 an ad-hbbmg sports. 1957-58 ed and. ·wheezed annoyingly, ,game lectures on basics o£. the caster because "I'm not much . ------was ·almost his undoing. "It was sp'ort; is credited . more than of n writer." Fe;v things escape PETERBOROUGH, On!. rep J

· terrible," he. admits. By replay- anyone else with promoting en· his barbed 1tongue. Attorney-General Roberts o£ On-lng tapes over and over again, thusiasm among New(ouhdland- Will he make sportscnsting a tario said Monday the federal the jaw-jutted athlete corrected crli for Big Four football. career? . government should. _cm~ark . on many flaws until.'.bis voice Howie· Meeker says he's not · 1·a program of defiCit fmancmg I mellowed and began to take on interested· in being just another "If I can convipcc myself that to bolsl.eL' lhe economy and pro-~ warmth, . spo~tscastcr. "I'm a campaign- I'm improving, I'd like to stay vide more jobs. Speaking to a,

"On his own initiative, he has er,•: he says, possibly a throw- with it," he says. ' service· club, he ~aid no one I .

· HiUv~ew Dart~

lleayue Action I . 1 F11rt Malon and Xcr.i. I oncer came up with •

1

victories in Hill~iew League action last nigh( lon blanked while Pioneer shutout Hamilton. Pat Dunte

1 double 11, Tom Wbi!t

·1

double one and George . Jr., with double nine i for Pioneer while Jim 1 with double len and ! eight and Charlie Cock double 18 were the Avalon,

Belle Isle edged Dock 2-1 as Paul ; double one and Gem, clocked double 18. T::: Jr. had double 16 ftt

I Dock. Harry dbuble four and Gem

I with the same doublt va Scotia. taking two It~

I Bedford. Manney Haclol ·

, double two for Bed!orl

Mannev Hanlon had · three da.rt score of tle with a 140 while Gem scored ~ 120. Jim · Joe Sampson had two with single tuns

. by Tom Powell, Bob ' Dunne and Leo Holden first round of the leaP finish on Thursday nigh'.

For Wednesday, Fobruary I

Present-For You and i Yours . . . Accept the gencros·

ity of others. We must learn to graciously as well as to give

the need arises. ·oon't be :uialytical. There are some

we must accept on faitb. can bring a lift to your and there is a strong pas­that some financial ben·

efit may be involved •

n:AR. NEW. HO~·ES-for the rich· tllree­of' American trainc

great runners be has I Johnstown, Nashua a1

young.

' ans als .01

victory for Roy,1i B1 l!argene Flyers coup

1 !5-8 Hickman's win o at the Prince o:f. W<

ja.st. night mo'led Hi into 'iecond spot in 11 HockeY standings. Ro)

points -are· first wl with ·17 poinis h

second with Flyers 1

back. Pepsies own ' ·and are the celler-d'

Batten was the indh·1 of the night wi·:h th and eight as!1ists

as he moved wi· of ·Doug Squ

in• the indivic race. Squir•!s Jc

point! while Batten Don Yetman

baclt o£ him in I I · Stan Breen, also of H

is fourth trailing nine points.

art,er··f GRACE (Staff) and Upper Isl!1nd

wins as· the C•)iice! Intermediate Hlit:key

its quarteJ"-fina here last r

walloped Hoil w?Ue . Upper Isl;md a 7-2 wip over B:rigus

again ·it was •G as tlie pace nettc with five 1:oals he got help froru

sniped foi1r u seated Parsons, Lloy.:J Sq niarlters.

Peter B·rme Holytood, ·

better as the ,._ · .~ctoria. no ~t 'Penod ·goals, t limes Ill the middle .I

for six mar~ar5 i ~tanza. · Ho!Yrllod 1 tn the' first und •

o£ thi!_gaine:i"seven 1 .to. Holyroili~. • "'III'Iu· '-' Gorilori",

Sharpe, John D Clarke, Ed Crane a

. Upper : Jnarksli11~ri w)th 'Ed

l! . aS the ncllll. .

Page 9: Nova ''Santa Maria'' ;,* Entry. To Recife Uncertain sident ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19610201.pdfafter a 420-mile ride through space aboard C1 .· rocket

r ~ . ' I;

·· •tlwin set tir.<t P~riod .:ddic stanza ·r;•d for the ·"re:; as the !,in! goal inon·s 1 itr- ~('rond 1 rev• the assi1t

"I Pike in the · " nnkc ,it 3-1

···qu;H] ruined ·i lilc C. olE.

0 minor, or· " lh~ ··I lhr firM

:,n;l], ~·4.

- l Darts J\ction

·' n and North up with three

Hillview ·n last

l'

·::-r:· · anj me double '': i ng two legs :.cnney Hanlon

for Bedford.

~ NUCLEAR 11 •CPl -

:mittee for the :rm Hazards

its o~position of nuclear

:d other sing !Item.

•I said the J~ to 7

! tl' Jt · tlebat 0 ,·er the! ·'( ccisi\'e.''

natne the_

n..na-Soal' .. ' ""'· !hit :~'lee shft' ·.m:rica's fi~ illpn>b.ab~~.

oooo·( - tJ\ 0 "'I .... nn ... :1d1t> be~ · .. :;.c. tau aJ, ·. ,... eanavet .. · ...

,-Sign '· ll 1• oct. 211

. ' lltd :~ rrhb

' .

. NFLD., WED. FED. 1, 1961 ' '

NEW HOPES-Jlm Fitzsimmons at Hialeah Park for the rich three-year-old stakes with' Ilittlng Away. of American trainers hopes 'thJJt the colt can join the

j!tlt ntnners he has handled, standouts like Gallant· Johnstown, Nashua and Bold Ruler. Opt.imism keeps the

young. ·

an's In Se-cond As als Defeat Flyers

!HUN MOVES UP IN . SCORING 1iclon• for Royal Banlt

]brgene Flyers coupled !S8 Hickman's win over at the Prince of. Wales

. night mov~d Hick·· second spot in' Jller- .

standings, Royals · are first while with 17 poinfs bold'

1110nd with Flyers one llci. Pcpsies own one ud are the celler.dwel·

was the individu. night with three

eight assists for he moved within of Doug Squires

in the individual Squires leads

1\'hile Batten has Yetman two

of him in third Breen, also of Hick·.

fourth trailing Yet· points,

DAVE BATI'EN

stanza, Four of the minor penalties In the went to• Peps!es. ·

BIG PERIOD

St Pat's Need · One 11 ~ r 1-

~ h .;.;. . <1 . ; .

''·,'.'i'!, 0· J· ~ t!@ . ; ~E!i ' , . ' ' . ~ . . .

. ' ' . - . . .

Win; Defeat Feildians 9-5 !

By Dee Mluphy.ol the NEWS St. Pat's·need· one victory to enter the Junior

Ho~key finals against their arch rivals, Guards,· for- · th~ 'Menlorial Cup. The Irish defeated · Feildians 9-5 at the Stadium last night in the second f1xture of the senu-finals, St. Pat's topk a 6·5 decision in the semi-finals' op'euer.

Orville Hong and Frank Brocklehurst paced St . . Pat's to the win. · Hong accounted for three Irish · markers while Brocklehurst tallied twice and set

. up .two more goals. Mike Murphy backed up their performance with -a pair of scores and a setup. Mike Donov:n got their other goal. · . ·

Eldon Drodgc was tops for Feild agal~ With two tallies while ]~ob Mercer, Earl Wicks and Leo· Drodge snipped singles. It was a 1·1 game after the first period· with St. Pat's out front 3-2 after two periods. Nine goals were scored in. a wide open third frame with St. Pat's getting six of them to take .the win. ·

~w.~~~~,.~~~~~~QP·~~~~ i

Pace Second lr1sh Wzn ; 1!'111,..~ .... ~&4'l ..... ~l'e>~"ta~4W"llMF~ i '

I . I

' :·· · ..... ·· ;ott ::·.-,

......

· After St. Pat's got the first -------~---~ !•'lUST EDITION-With lt,e opening of the 70th basketball scaso:u goal Felldlans led 2·1 'until.13 · · · · this ancient photograph i.; ·appropriafc. It shows .Dr. James A. minutes · of .the middle. frame handed Bill Picco's pass from / ; Naismith, inventor of the game, with the original basket and bal,l. ,· ten feet out".at 13.39 for a 3·2 .when two Irish markers within st. Pat's edge, : l!scd in December, 1891. Goal was a peach basl,l.et. A soc~ef,. 37 seconds got1 St. Pat'i. out Orville ·Hong made it 4-2- for P I ball was employed. A. G. Spalding anti Bros. dcveiDped the·. front to stay. · · St. Pat's at 1.52 of the third. FRANK UROCKLEUURST ORVILLE IIONG 1 first basketball put in action in 1894. :o

Bob. Mercer backhanded the Tom Conway fed a pass out of the three goals in the last dual star of the game. The top ----------------- .. ·-·- ----·- - · --- ... <.o puck behind Irish goalie Dave from the corner with Hong minute of play coming ai 10.09. 'Feildian saw over 16 minutes of I ,· k · d .;1 Do\Vden late in the first period left unchecked 111 feet out to Dick Power set Brocklehurst ice _time in the first period St Bon 's Ta e Lea J; after It had been blocked by a blast a high drive into the right free and he drew Summers to playtf!C both on defence and as • St. Pat's Jlefender to get Feildi· corner. Eldon Drodge got make it 8.4. Leo Drodge got a center. He gave a top two way I 0 '~ ans even at 1·1. Mike Murphy Feild back within one goal of the fifth Feild tally at 19.24 game. Orville Hong broke out . · gave St. Pat's the lead at 1.47 the Irish at 7.34. Leo Drodge in· with both teams still having a ' for St. Pat's being dangerous I B I k p • Of w I ., of the first when Frank Brock· tercepted a st. Pat's .clearing man off as Eldon Drod?e's shot II all night and displaying lop an rl~ce . a er~ lelmr;st and Bill Picco exchang- pass and fed the centcr!ng_pass . was stopped and Leo htt on the two-way hockey. ~I J cd pa5scs to have him beat from the corner with Eldon rebound. Frank Brocklehurst did Feild cage cop, "Fox" Sum· slapping It' home for a 4·3 en· Mike Murphy rounded out the plenty of puck currying for thu mers, on a clean. break from counter. goalgctting at 1945 with St. Irish with lllike Murphy also LESTER WALSH GETS . TWO IN 5 • 0 · WIN center lee. • QUICK GOALS . I Pat's having a man advantage, standing out ttp front and John By' BILL BUTLER the upper right cornC':, witll'1~ TAKES LEAD Orville Hong'a two goals Again the puck came from the l\itzpatrick turned, in a good de· Daily News Sports Writer two seconds remaining in th'! , Felldilins took the lead at :ovithin 21 seconds gave St. 'corner for 'the bang into the fensive chore. Leo Drod~e and middle stanza. · . ;o: .

1.29 of the second frame. Earl Pat's enough for the victory. nels with Brocldclmrst send· Eldon Drod!:e worked well f?r St. Bon's took over first place In the third it was the .sa111~ • Wicks 'took a pass b'aek from At 8.49 · Hong poked the pass- ing it out. Feildians up, front. wht~e BtU, in. Junior Intcrcollcgia~e Hoc· old story, as St. Bon's outs hot :.

out from Tom Conway over PENALTIES Coultas was' good m hts own J key yesterday afternoon, as the PWC squad· seven 'to one ' Leo Drodge and drove a screen· . ,,, · · 1 · t D d th t th the goalllne' and at 9.10 he Four minor penalties .were zone. th~y blanked PWC. 5-0 at _the and scored the. lone goal of tli.~ 1 ed 8 ap sho to ow en a e countered on the rebound after called in the fixture with three . REFEREES: Terry Trainor Prince. of Wales Arena. The stanza .. Lester Walsh· was the . Irish goalie bobbled and drop· r . . ..., ped Into the mesh. Summers had made a good i:UVC going to St. Pat's. Three goals and Charlie Field. I win for St. Bon's gives them marksman as he took' E.a

oti Mike Donovan's blalit. Thl~ were scored with players in the LINEUPS; 1 five points and i two point mar· O'Brien's pas's and scored froritq Ed Abbott' and Mike DoJIO· van got St. Pat's ont front with had it 6·3 for St. Pal's. sinbin. ST. PAT'S: _Goal: D. Dowden; i gin over Bishop's College, Both close in. _ o;~r.

d f h . After taking a clearing pass · Feildians held the first per· defence:. B. Ptcco, D. ~ower~ D.l have a game left in the second PENALTIES · . goals within 37 secon 5 0 eac from Leo Drodge, Doug HousP. 1'od edge with the middle frame Phelan, D. Jlyun, J. Fttzpatnci•; roun. d. Four minor penalties . \ver}f',' other. Abbott hit umissistcd 1 as he poked the puck through broke on the right side and belonging to St. Pat's while forwards: T. Conway, 0. Hong. 1 Lester Walsh was the big gun called in the contest, wLn:

centered the puck to Eldon play in the final period was Ill. Donovan, F. Brocklehur:;t, for the B!uegolds as he fired Prince of Wales drawing thrh"l: Summers' pads from 8 scramble Drodge !or a goal scoring shot even. BoUi teams played an im· l\1. Murphy, E. Abbott, B .. Ben- hoine two "oals while Brian of them, one had an effect ~if at 13.02 and Donovap back· b h d s

at 12.39 of the third period for proved game over the semi· nett, D. Connolly, R. Cole. · Gibbons, Bob Walsh and Stan the scoring, as t e secon t. the fourth Feild tally, Frank final opener with more passing FEILDIANS: Goal: H. Sum· Cook sniped singles. St. Bon's Bon's marker came with P\YCi; Brocklehurst got' this one back and combination. mcrs; defen~e: B. Coultas, D. scored once in . the first and a man shy. . ,; U for the Jrish just over a min- The encounter was rough in House, E. Wtcks, G. Martin, A. third periods and added three STARS ute lo.ter, Jllike :Murphy center- spu~ts and often turned into Piercey; forwards: G .. Critch, in the second, while Gerald De- Stan Cook of st. Bon's Wast ed the puck and· Brocklehurst scrappy hockey, Defensively W. Youden, D. lllorl'is, L. vine in the Bluegolds' nets re- the star of the· game as' ~I!'~ drove it home at 13.52 !or a both. teams were 'weak with Drodge, E. Dredge,. G. Dewlml!, gistered the first shutout of the came up with a great two way' 7-4 scoreboard. the blueline corps often .ru3h· B. 1\!ercer, D. Martin, J. Brad· year. display of hockey, While Ed BOTII SHORT ing up the ice leaving their bury. IIOLD EDGE · O'Brien also loo!~~d good on de·

ru the big gun for The third period was the big · with five goals one for Royals as. they scored notched four mar· three unanswered gQals .to

scored three break .. a· 2'1 game.open.- Both got two ta J. teams tallied . In "the second

Both teams were shorthand· goal undefended., STOPS: . St. Bon's held the edge In fence. Up front the winners got ed when Brocklehurst notched STARS. DOWDEN: ............ 13 3 7. 24 . ·pJay throughout the game, as a good game from Lest# his second. score. It was o11e ·Doug !fouse was the Jn'divi· SUM~IER~...::::::.~_9 __ ~2_ they held the puck in the Col· Walsh. Prince of Wales h~d

Jegian's zone for minutes at a Barry Janes and Wayne Grinies · · ... · · ; · · r d t f t1 fino as their. best forwards, while

Henderson • ac· stanza· after· Royals got th'e . the other . goal, lone firsl,Jleriod score.

.curling Notes pl•r' a'tes'Are Year's Team i~r~:£~/~~;~~~l;is~rt~~~ fe~~~m~~~cker was the top dt

Harry Youden. Gordon Goobie got two of ~ H1trdi11g scored twice the Royals' markers with Joe

with . Doug Slaney, Jim Byrne and Doug Quinton get· Squires added single tallies.

· • · 1 would have ptled up a much REFEREES: Terry Trainor -- · I larger score. · . · arid Joe Smith. · , ·;~

TO· NIGHT'S GAMES NEW )"ORK tAP>- For te1m enough and waited long enough I Brian Gibbons opened the LINEUPS: , .

goals. · Joe Kenney scored the lone ELDONIDRODGE jumped oul .• front Flyers' -marker. Three of tlie _ _;. ___ -'-·-----

Mlx~d Bonsplel

7.00-8.30

of the year of 1960 it's the Pitts- for the honor. It 'bad been :;5 scoring for st. Bon's at.7.30· of ST. BON'S: Goal: G. Devine; burgh Pirates, 2 to 1-'and more. years 'since their last previous I the first as he took a pass from Defence: S. Cook, H. Hamlyn,

The underdog club that won world championship when Bill stan, Cook and heat Winsor D. Gibbons, D. Kelly; forward$: the National League pennant I Mazeroski hoisted a towering cleanly. In the secont\ period L. Walsh, D. Furlong, E. and then .. conquered the power· home run in the ninth inning of Bob Walsh made it 2-0 as. he O'Brien, B .. Walsh, N. Corco~,

J. Burgess bitting New York Yankees in as I the seventh game to give Pitts· poked home Cook's rebound 11t J. Burke, B. 1\!arshall, 1\I. Ca~): first period and were five "minor penalties in the

IG-3 after the second game :went to the losers. '

·And UIC Cop . '

rt,er-Final· .Vi~ctories . GRACE (Staff) -·Vic· finals open here this afternoon.

mil Upper Island Cove Harbour Grace C. of E. and tin! as the Conception Carbonear u.c. ·will start ·a

lntlllllediate Hockey Lea· best of five games series with its quarter.finals at a game set 'for 4.30 p.rn ...

here last night. · c ''llloped Holyrood, . Meanwhile the ~oly ross.

thilt Upper Island Covo Juniors and jhe Jumor C~eBc~s 17·hin over Brigus · will faceoff in an cxhtbltton tilt

again ·It was IG~rald scheduled fo~. the Stadium at U the pace setter for 8.30 p.m. tomght. With !i~e goals' but he got help from Roy

•nipedscf~~~ ~~~~s~ Guards ,Play Lloyd Parsons, Clu~·

' and Lloyd SquireS St. B'on's. In ltngle markers. Ed and Peter Byrne scor· .

• victo~~~ th~ofc'h"~~· Senior . Hockey Ptriod goals, tallied · in the middle frame

for six marlters in tltc ~Iilli .. Holyrood got a 111 the first and' thtrd.

lhe games seven penal­.to Holyrood, ' t:larke, ·Gordon· ·'Janes.

Sharpe, John Drover, Cir.rite, Ed Crane and AI

. the Upper Island r ~rl£men with Ed Hayes

as the goal·

Guards and St. Bon's provide the. Senior Hot:kClll action at the Stadium 'u"""""· The two clubs will faceo{f contest set to start' at 8.00 St. Bon;s hold i four point edge over Guards .In the team stand· bigs as . ihey. have. sevel'i points while St.' Pat's in second spot with ten trail league leading Fei!dians ·by 12 points.

NAHA Registerations

Midnight today ·Is the dead· line for. the registration or players for the Junior and Senior · Provincial · hockeY' playoffs, All seven centres must have their player llst

.. postdated today and-. senrt them to N AHA registrar Ted Withers of St. John's •.

Withers said last night that he bas 'received the lists from Comer Brook, Gander and Bucbans and tbat the others are expect.ed within the nerl day or ao, The l!sts must be processed and circulated to the· centres • by February 10 and will likely be released to the press around February

.12. .

·SKIPS: R. Levitz C. L. Byrne D. Thistle Mrs A. Ryan

Mrs. M. McGray thrilling a world series as you·n1

burgh a 10·9 victory and the, 3.57 then Cook set Lester gan, D. Hyslop. .· R.- Johnston 1 see in a good many years was series by u 4·3 margin. 1 Wal~h up for' his first of two, PRINCE OF WALES: Goal:

Mrs R. Ryan sports writers and broadcasters . . . • as he carried the puck over the N. Winsor; defence: P. Crocku,, the overwhelming chc.ice of the After a dlSappomtrng 1~"9 Prince of Wales blueline and D. Hutchins, I. Sparkes, B. Ro-

Dr. Josephson L. Goldstein taking port In the annunJ As- sea~on; p}~ls_b~rghh h~d fbeenl ft~· passed to Walsh who faked th~ berts, D. Sharpe; forwards: ~· Mrs Pippy Mrs D. Wills socinted Press ·year-end poll. ~;~0 ~ t 101\h a to~b our~\ tn defence and drilled the puc\: Janes, J. Andrews, W. Moms, Miss J. Winsor l\lra W. J. Jlfoore The world baseball champions . · t. u th WI B s u or~ t e .~r- past Winsor. · W .Grimes, C. Grimes, S. ChUX::

outscored the, Philadelphia Eag. mma wn . ~ ucs 1 w~n ° · lC COOK SCORES chill, R. Chapman, J. Jones, 11· J. G. Fltzpatridk les, who won the Nntionnl Foot- front earh lll dthct Nkattlohnal ~.~t~ Stan Cook t'Ontinucd hts ~ousins. · • '

Mrs E. Brakefield-1\toore ball League championship, by gue seasol'\ an s uc ere. ·"1 1 great work and was finally re· STOPS: ··

H. S. W. Winsor Mrs L. Goldstein Miss L. Wilkins

H. P.·Carter P. Pollard

Mrs 111. Thomson

more than 2-1 in. the point scar-I only ~ cou.pl~ .01 lapses unhl the I warded himself as his slap shot DEVINE: .............. 2 ll 1 1!. · ing on the ballots of -34 writers end. The> fmts~ed seven ,games I from the PWC bJuelinc caught 'WINSOR: .............. 7 5 6 1~ and broadcasters. In first place' ahead of the ~hl~aukee Bravzs. .=..:.~ _ _:_ _ _:...· -----'------

~i~e:s· ~~e~:n~~~~~ ~~:r'yEa!\~~~ 1 NEWS Is. Se~on\ d . On. Mrs R. Hearn and nearly four hmcs as many Pr ct·"lce Corne·r \,'

as the United States Olympic a , . · . . . ' · . hockey team. · . - · · ·

A. Knight

G. B'earns D. M. Lowe E. Brakefleld-JIIoore ·

M. Thomson 1\lrs Graham

D. O; Bal'fram W. J. Moore

M.rs N. Gushue

The tally was made on the I' - 4 0 w· 0 ' . CBC. basis of three points ror each . 1· n y·er ·:· : first place vote, two for second I ~n ope~ prachce for the S~. • ' ' . an11 one. for third. The Pirates PatS· Semor B~sketbali te.am IS

scored 67-36:16 for n total of 2?.9 shlallded tfot: tonllghtl. g ·It wt111t.b~ The DAILY NEWS moved in· VOCM slated for action. The . ts e a ne sc wo ym s ar m., 1 • h p th d ' playing for 8.30-10.00 potn · k 01 . at 7.30 and· all those wishing {o to second place in. t e ress- ree · squa s Jlre

A. Cox F. Hue The . hoc ey ymptans.. sur- try for a berth ti'n the squad Radio hockey .sertes at the the Super-Ace Taxi . Trophy .. S. Cannon c. T~bin prlsing winners over Russta and ·should attend, 1 Prince of Wales Aerna last Kev. Norman, Harry. :Brown D. Groom 1111.11 c. J~ Doyle Canada at Squaw Valley, Cali~.. night with a 4·0 shutout vic· and goalie Robin' Picrcly were Miss B. Armstron·g : · last , winter, edged ?~t Ohto _ ' tory over CBC. It was ·the first the top performers for the los·

Miss R Chafe States National collegmle bas· The Feildian senior hockey win of the season for the Morn· ing CBC squad . while Ches. , Jretball !Champions 91·85 for third team will drill at the Stadium ing Paper and leaves .them two Sweetapple, Joe Antle and Phil

J. E. Butler R. Templeton place. The. OJYmpic team had tonight. All members of the points back of VOCM, .CBC ls Currie were tops for th~ NEWS • .T. Bel\ Mrs R. Tapper ~~a~:t~~- for first place and Ohio squad are to be at the Stadium in the cellar. . Miss M. Garland The Pirates· worked hard nt 6.15 Jl.m. Scorin. g (_\vice in_ . the first

Miss G. Rumboldt Miss N. Sharpe llliss A. curran period .and once in the sec9nd Pee Wee ·And.

' • Mrs Allan . Mrs A. Cox and third frames the NEWS 'squad put up a top defence for goalie Dec Jllurphy and CBC Bantam· Hockey Mrs. McNamara.·

·Mrs J. J. Murphy Miss G. Pottle

V. Clouston w. Pound

Jl!rs C. W. Cornick

Mrs K. Hibbs · 111rs O'Leary ;\Irs Ward G. McNamara A. r. Earle Mrs R. Templeton Mrs R. !llcGil!ivary C. Cornick.

I 10.00-11.30

F. Bishop W. Watson I<'. G. Kielle~· W. D. Gunn Mrs C. W. Reid ·Mrs M Elton Miss B, Fitzgerald

Mrs K. Allan

, were kept off the scoresheet. :\!urphy made his "top stops on Liberators blanked, ,Jets 2.-0

. Kev Norman, Jo.hn Power and and Black Watch' ,edged Gun· i Harry Browne to t~ke the sh.ut· ners 3·2' in Pee Wee Hoc~ey

· I I rmt that moved htm out front action at the Stadium;~esterday in the goalie race. afternoon. Randy Willtam.s had

Phil Currie ·and. Bill Butler a goal' and an as~ist· for Liber· fired first period roals. ior the ators with Randy Piercey get· NEWS with .Toe Antle hitt,ing ting the other score and Gera~d in the middle stanza and Bill Gibbolis setting up both tallus. w cscott scoring in the last Don Butler scored twi~e and ' ir;mw Chcs Sweetapple and Pat Crawley got the other· goal

· Charl.le Richardson picked up for Black Watch· as they came ! two assis\5 each with Alf Nose· back in- the second .period to

· I worthy setting up one goal, take· the win:· Jim Whelan al!d .·. i The NEWS held the big edge Paul Walsh scored for Gunner! • ·in the latter stage of the first to give them a.2-0iead early In

·· : ! period, the complete middle the second with Frank Rmg H Sta k ·! s:anza and the opening minutes ·huvi.Dc·an assist.

J. i\kCarlhy l\1~~ A. 'Lu~~ ·• , : of the last frame. CBC 11pp!ied · Yesterday afternoon the ~ive · ~~: ~.Q~~~itz s. Herder. • · : i tl1e pressure to tile NEWS in Bantam coaches drew for I etr

Miss B .. Bourne ; ] the opening and closing min· teams with Max Keeping get·. W. Downey • ': ules of the game. . . : .tlng /.:rci;cnts, Andy·Joy draw·

, • , .' Dt e ,• 1 Rcft•rce Ted Withcr,q had an ing Eagles, Edgar Squires get-,J. K._ Cl~uston i\hs A .• T. J ;nn 1 easy ni••ht wiill the twn teams . tlng Vikings, Wilson Bullet ~~~·s McCarthy ~f' · ~· B ~o.ss i .pl;)·ingoa fast ami de~n ganie! pickill!! Caril~ou. and Dee 1\!ur·

I M!ss i. S~tlon • 1,55 • .~ gm 1 . ;1tlll 1111 penallks \Vt'l'~ t•alled. ! phy drawing rerra N,ovas. . . . ! ~itss Jl. ~ orbcs M1ss B. lotllies: ~ , i 'I'ih' ;~anw fim,hed tltr first 1 ll'm1ay Nnrth Stars and :if)lt·

TAJ,L ORDER~~~~htst!Pinr; In J , • : • ~ • ... ,.,, ·, • " t">tlnd or l!tr league. · : fit'<•.; will play in a 4.30 Jl.lll. New York. lllt·fl~e ~onl Smith, I~· ·'; ~lllit3e Y· gln~~~t:t'~ l raiTI'lNG 'I'IIEIR KJCl,!'--Th l',c soccer' players aJ>pcar to ; ''fht' scennd rum d of. lht• <I'll·; Pee We~ gam~ while Cresenl~ . St. Jlonawnll1te II h_Jgh ~cor~r, C ~ · e.. , . . · .· .. • •ach uthn elm in 3 ~;tme in S;,11 Francisco. .\clual· . son >Wings into o 1cralton nr~l 1 and Vtkmgs Will hold BantK:n ::~s ~:n~n:euurmg t,mplre ~~~· i:· J~~~~~; ri~~~~s ,~.' ~~~-~~~ J :~ ~11~;~~~cc~truggling fur t~c hall, hidden amour, them. I Tm·HlPY nigilt wilr the CBC and I pract:ccs at 5.15 11.m. ·

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TTIE DAILY N ' '•

I KNOW WHUT YD'RE A·UUGHIJJ' AT! rt.LADMrr I I-DOl< LIKE A HOG HERD· ER AloJ' l'M A-<!;OIIJ' T'5TAY

THETAWAY, 'r.'-L C':JW­eoY& SPENt' MORE TIME IIJ TH' BRESH IR'(IJJ', 85 COW• BoY!>TMNIN

HIM i01HE: f~~~~:!....:..~ CAl'>ARETS TRYIN'

T'LOOK LIKE CONBO)IS!'

NFLD., WED .,

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'1000 16 16 16 +2 camerlna 240 120 120 120 CPR 223l Walker fo3.4 GL Paper no 4334. 4lS~ 4J&! " I Butt 1.1d xd l~.iOO 319a: 18s8 18~il -r 1M 1 GldfJd 912 $41~~ 4H-1 41\2- u cs Pete !itOO us 30S 305 -10 Scagra.ms 133 .. CASADIAS I Handy A z15 SWJ,.~ 12th 12~l ~·tdil C." 12300 Ut., 1~ 1 11 ]~- I~ I nollingtr

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2300 s 8 8 c Superior 24~0 $13~· 13!f.l 13% + l.i I Imp 1nv " 150 $11~8 11'k 111!.1 ..... '"I CPR ~00 2l 2:2. 1 ~ 3,..,_ J~ I !'lb!;;SC)' r 21:1691\~ :1! 4838 4848 ~74 Cent Del , 3fi8-4 ~lO 530 531) ":""5 lImp Uil ; 828 $.185"R .:JBt'-1 3~~~- ~~ Cao;~: JI 5600 tort~ 10'"-J lOs~- '• i ~~leadC ·'r'p•hn

vv .... Ch::.rter on llf'lO 97 97 97 -2 lnd Accep 75 St.P( 4W.: 4P4 + t, Catf.": Tr 81rA 31)1•l JOV. 301'4- 1 • I .. m 0

1530 22~_, 22th 221h + 1h: C Ora&on 2553 H 14 14 -1 11 Ac 4SOp t5 $93 9l 9:::1 Cclanl..coe 101M 7:~-, 27 2j':~ -1 1": ~~olybctrn 300 38 l~ :15 c Mic Mac 1400 210 20o 210 +10 1 Inl Pap 2226 i3~1f.z 34 34 + 1~ I Chance \' 16300 13'11 4~:\• 43 111+ t., 1 ~ilt PPte 1001) 12 12 1% C West Pett 600 lln 305 320 + 10 1 Int Utll 11RO $4.0'1. 39:i• 40 ~ S 4 I Che!>. Otio ·uoo ~4. 3 ~ t.'l fiJ='~t + 't I N.J Zme xd

5000100

-d 7.1

. 757

'!7

+ ~ Dynamic 12150 72 67 69 -2

1

Jnt Utll p 150 $4.6t, ~6111 46th +g~ Chr;o:sler 9000 3~7A-J9 1 ~ 3!'f'~- ~~ 1 Ppoe PPetr: v v Far1n 1300 400 385 385 -20 Inter PI. M5 S63~, 63 63~1 r s;, 1 Citlts fo\C 3900 !'iJ'• 52~• 53 + 1 • • at• ete w

SOO() 9 9 9 - I,J: Fr Pete pr 500 :Ji5 1315 .. 375 NE\V YORK CLO~ING STOCKS lrDII G p :r60 S111Z 111.~ Ut.~ I t:.:~."·. Cola ';!100 811 • 110~1 ~1 1 '~ ~ ~~, Pantep.r-c 4000 12 11 11 - 1'.J Gr Plains 60() 970 970 970 -to Br The Canadlao Pren ll..oeb :\1 z2j sa~.~. s,.. a~~ ens 8500 :t71':! 361 K 31 - I~ I Pow Corp 3S51560 550 560 +10 Home A 3:!91 9'5 935 935 -S Dcth Steel 45 Kennecott 821~ MB PR 605 Slli:lil 11)1~ 16~1 + ~. Cotl'll ~oh· 3.3U.O 231 t :!.1'" 23 1 ~- :..,I' Pratt-J.

1800 15S 154 1531 -2 nome B 625 880 815 875 -15 Borg Warne 37 Monty W 29 j Maritime uo ste:~" 18Si 183• Cnn ·r,,t xd 137(1.0 66l.,. 66~~ 6£SA + 14 Sher Wmo;

~~ ,) ~a

s·~o 2(l 3~101) ~:, 9~lj ::'j•, 1M lh

6'00 ::. 13\01 S"t 4~Ull 11' i

];I)() l3J l:l lfil l)l, 111,

1~fll 33', :1·, nur, !:, i., j!. () !! • !:!,

l6! 0 11\1 I. 41)11 f..', 3U()

ill~

tOO 6~

Oka Rare O'Leary Opem!Jka Orchan Ormab7 Pardee Param1q Pardee

1400 24 2' 2t · H B 011 G R83 $117~ 1Hi 11\f. + 11 C and 0 63:~4. NY Cent .. 17'!-R i Mau F 3500 Slt~.i. 1H~ tt:s, J. t,l Containrr :l~Oil 2i1 l :!7 27' - ~tl So Pen O • 2100 20 181h 181h-1¥.!ll Jupiter 2:00 205 205 205 -15 Cons Edkon EG~I Radio Corp 55~~ 1 Mass 1'1 5th:p 30 S102'f. 102~~ 102.s' ... q Cent Can 8;oo 401 • 40 40 -:a.,.· Std Oil 1\)· 10000 ·'ill.:! 7\i; 7~ Lt Pete 10000 8\1 R 8 El 1\uto El 48 Std Oil NJ 46~1: :Milch n ,6. 200 $10 10 10 Con Oil l90fl 57~~ 56 561(- 1 ~ 1 T~chnclr

Pallno M Palo PaJll'asl Pee Expl Perron Pick .Crow

Rio 'Rup Rlx Albab Roche Roekwlll Howan Cons Ryan or San 1>nt Sand Hlv Satelllle Sb•rrlt\ Sl1!11a Sit Mlllor 511 Stand

2100 20 18\-1: 18~ -11 Long Pnl 2700 47 4.5 •7 '+1 Gen EJec 70~~ Utd Aircraft 413~ 1 ~lolson A i:l:> $2:'i14, 25 :=!S~f. + ~ 8 Copw Stl 1000 l61 s :l61i_:i63t- 1 ~ \\r Uau

SOil 3SO :150 350 -:30 Majt,rans 1000 t 2 3 - 1 ~ Good,venr :1634, Vanadium 201 11 Molson n r.10 $2.'i 25 25 Crane Co 1700 52 50~~ 5~)1, -11 ,

1300 245 244 2U -16 Medal 5597 193 190 195 +9 Gt Nor Ry 49Y.o~ Westngse 47% Mont I.oco tEIR Sl33.i 13~~ 131'2- ;..;, Cr Ze-11 li300 55\l 54'~ 561.4 +11"l CHIAS'G OFFERS 500 m• 1711 17'h- 11 Mldcon 1000 lO 28 28 M •.; In\ T T 11\i Mont Truo\ ziO 160li 601> 6011 Curliss 90011 19 lt'h 18'•- '• TAIPEI lAP> -

2500 12 11\-2 11t,..1 - 1h Mill City 3000 111 17 18 - !-2 Morgan 25 S37 37 37 + ";-'. Dee>rf! 60110 59 :iiJ :l,_ 5834 ..... :~, !(lOll t2 12 12 -1 Nat Pete soo 167 167 167 sat rue z5l1 $15 15 15 nou~l" 17800 33'• Jl'< 33'• + '• Chiang Kai • shek 1120 63 63 63 N Coni 15011 21 21 21 :-~ s 1 car .200 111'" IW. n•>- •1 now Rhtm 9500 75 74 ,,, + 'i fered 100·000 metric

100 $\5"' 1!11t. 1SH,- \~ NC Olh 12o0 185 180 180 -7 I ~la Wire oz50 $11 1l 11 tlU Pont 4900 20i7 ~::04'6 2053 -~o -1 tOOl! 38 38 38 -2 nkalla 1000 l! 35 31 : Nlo \Vir• B 20~ SIO~i to to Ea>l Kod ;ooo 112ii 111'• 112'• + 1i as "the firs:

t2000 555 ~50 550 Pac Pdr 4907 $11% 11 II' 1

Noranda 177 Sll"• 41'4 ll•i-11 El Aulo L 400 43 47'• 4B - 1' cncy r eJ j e [ for 1~150 129 125 125 -3 1'-Ml'!'-1 ~;r.'!''!' ~!& · %- 1 ~S J.P '3Sl Slfr!!J 16-'is 1638- 18 F:l Paso HOOO 2914 !!9~· .:!9 1 ~- 1 ~ ::oo 151> tm 151~- I'll P-MI?-1 .,.~?? &>- ~ili %- I Ogll•l• 8000 14011 4m 40,~ Ftmln ~100 39'• ,.,, 391< +J stricken o eo I' I e

1800 &6 66 66 +1 Permo pr • 2000 52 52 52 Oglh·lc Pr t0$138 us 138 FrUeh Tra t~9oo !!3,~ 213 ~ ~:! 1 "- s1 China .. " The :->a'lionali.~i! 1000 t70 170 170 + 10 PttroJ 350() 59 ~9 59 I MOOT ACTIVE TORONTO STOCKS Pac Ptte 800 Sll'i 111'4 u~~ + ~· Gtn F.ltc 4')00() 711-i 703~ j~tl - I B

!!lBO IRS 880 880 -15 PhU\Ips 2800 43 40 40 _,, B7 The Cana.dlan Pren Lage Jlers z.25 S25 23 25 Gtn Dyn :12~00 l:)t: 44:1~ H~11 'T" 1 11 chie£tain

'1200 50 49 50 Place 3000 ·:~s 35 36 +1 I I!'JDUSTRIAL5-i PJacrr I25 $15:\.l 15~( 15~, Gen Fd~ 15tT0 74l4l1l74~1l 74lt1- 12 ments and 2850 64 ' 62 62 -3 Ponder 3060 43 42 4l +1 Dom Tar 27234 $1518 tnt 15 Low Corp 2S S:l2 52 52 + • 4 Gcr{ ~11lls 2800 :J4~R :IJ•s J.p,.- 311

1 •

2150 17~ .17¥.1 17~~ + ~~ Provo Ga~:; 3470 :!12 109 210 -tl Ma.ss F ll085 $11~4 JHl 11~1 Price Dr 1285 $15~4 45 45~~- s1 Gen T1rr liMO f.o'il 60 603!1 ... 1' agenCJeS to

!liZ 8!5 860 860" -IS Ran~ or soo· 100 9!1 9! -I S)L Carp 6t9J 120 19•; ~o ·- •, Prov Tr ~ 2~ 146 tG 46 + \\ mtc I06oo w. 44 , 41,- '• to persuade Chinese 1656 101h 10 10 -1 RoyaUte 153~ 650 650.650. Ang Nlld S494 SS!~ i~f 81:4+ 1,4 QN Ga.! un , :Jo S~6 56 46 Glhlden 1100 10 :19~ 11 39J,._ 1 ~ '

1lE50 35 31 34 +3 Sapphire , 5100 Sl Sl 51 -2 Roe A \I 4593 iSh 5~ 5~"+ !;..1 Que Pow 'Z6 Sl91h. 39th 3!1\12 Gondr1ch 50no 56:~ S:it" S~H'! -Pt~ !eadel'S to oprn up 7500 · II~ 11 II ·- li Sarcee '1481 71 1 ;t 74 ·OILS Reitman A 120 $15 15 15 Goodyr mao J6'• 36 36'• + '• for deli veri' of !oo! ~ 10011 16~ .1~ 16th . Secur • P'r~• 1700 420 40S 405 · -t 5 C Husky 23000 $5\i, ' 51,l + ~~ Rop Av c J61R ~5!~ 5¥. S3..& ..!.. !~ Gr Paige 2.>00 2 2 • 1

2000 6": 6V.l 6Th¥- ¥.t south U :!300 13 12¥,~ 13 Dev 'Pat 1R.'l~5 7~ 63 n "t 8 nonand ~ .\ 40~ $30 • .c911 50 ~ v~ 1 Grand un 2:100 29 21P-l z:;~ .. + 1 " mosa and o! ,r:· ~ 11:if 2000 14: 13lf.l 14 - ~1 Sooon~r 1000 11 10"r2 10'"-' Dynamle 1215() 72 67 &9 -2 Salalla s 305 stn~ 13~4: 13L4 1 Gt A P -7900 .J.2,1 .U7 ~ 4:::.~ T

3• l!lll••••-•••

3800 145 134' 1~ +3 Stanwell 'i!S44 42 4l 42 1.1 Pete 10000 8~'.1 8 8 'ih:m·ln 2307 S2G18 2111,2 28'f.t .A- 11 Gt Nor R lRO() .~934 4S3 4 491,..l

5000 5\\ 5\1 5\> Tidal 5400 60 58 60 + 2 c Del' 79at ~90 41 5 180 -5 Snawln A 30 I:!'J •. , ~9'' :91> + \1 llom,lk 4300 m; 46'' 47'' • I

2500 22. 22 22 Trlad 011 600 211 210 210 -5 ~lt:'IES Shaw 1 pr tiD 41111 m:, 41ll llurt Bay 14011 47 IG'i 46'•- ' 6265 405 395 400 J.5 U Canso •vt 2:JflQ 100 97 99 -1 Latin Am 72500 57 47 .&9 +2 Sher w 100 33 35 l3 Jntt·rlnke 1800 ".!53 A 25 25

!DO 525 ~5 425 +I Un Oils 5900 127 123 125 -3 Dldeop moo 14 10 13 +3 Sicard 400 $6\l1 Gl> G•> lnt Bus M 4400 64B 636 636 ·-11

9000 4110 40 41 -5 IV Cdn . 0G 270 IOZ lOll · IOZ +l Zutapa 19315 28 24 m.; 1 2\i Slmpsons 160 $30 29'l 29'( + 10 1nl llan· moo m, 47'1 48 -· . 3000 3 -29 29 Westburne 900 43 4h 48 -1 c Astorla 4.6500 10 9Vl 10 + 1~ Southam 1175 ~25 2.5 25 Int Nick 5700 62~~ 62 6~l~.,.. 1

9400 125 ]22 123 -2 W Dtcalta 700 00 96 9fl -2 Martin UOOO 4.2'f.l 40lfo~ 41 -2 Stet' I c:an 595 $72th. 72 ';'21~ Jnt Pap 12200' 3~'" J" :1: 31

BSOO 6'h 6 .61}.a +.V.z. W Naco 1175 341h 33 341h t2V..J Steinbg A 10 \5 SlJ 23 23 ! lnt 'fe1 lHOO 4S:I~ 4jtJ ~s·~- ='~ 2000 5 -1 4 - 1l.a WlndtaU , 500' 10 10 10 Texaco Can 50 563~4 6.11 ~ 531~ + 1-2j.Johno; ~~ 4:!00 61-:" 60'' 6Q!l 11 --l' 3210 800 790 790 -10 Yan Can 7000 3 3 3 -\i: Tnr D•Jm 15 s6314 631 ~ &:J14-1l~ I Kenerot 11900 azsa Ill szt, · ::.'

~00 2751,2 2~~ 2~tt -2 MOntreal ~~~N~~~t 60\.1 6114 + 1i I Tr C~tn PL 1535 S21:5~ 2t:lll ~P~~- t" I KrJ•sgl! 1~gg ;~": ~~1~ ¥~::- , U ~"' • ,.n t. Triad !.'!00 210 21() :nn 1\ruehlf'r 1

1,, 3 "-. JS:1 11 _ ~ 1625 14& 146 146 -2 Nova Sco a 7w ,.68~6 681,2 ll4!r2- ~ Un Ste~l 7; 0 SGS$ n~'~< ti~k I.Ol'W'! ~0000 l8711

24100 24. 21 23 +2 commerce 283 552\f. 61 Sll,~- ~ Viau 300 sn 13 13 Marsh Fld 1000 5Rb 57'~ SS'~ J.. 1' 5000 2:\1,-;. 23 23~...:. 'h Imperial, 169 $71\4 '11~ 7HI + '~ Walk G w 1265 s~n7~ 40~~ 401' + 1.~ ~ta.rtin Co 11700 fi:i fi:l'i'H ~' 1'"

1800 17! 170 173 -2 Royal !liB 174 73~1. n + 1 Webb Knp 5011 255 m 255 lkK•• 1600 ll 30'o 30'o>' '• , 200 135 135 135 Tor·Dom 1012 SGl 83 63'," + ~~ :\IUTU1\L FlJSDS Wrston 9 50 Hfit~ -'li 46'k .t. ~, Mt>rc~ 660() ~2 Ho~, RP•

1000 16 .16 16 JNDUSTRrALS ' BJ Tbe Canadian Pres 11 80 $:'17 37 J7 -1 :\lp\~ linn 4GOO 156 1523•1j1, .. -31 ~ IDOO 45 45 45 -3 Alumtnl " 1Rl2 $34.~1 34lj;, 34'1 + ~4 Rid ,\~1;: Zellers Ll~ttd , :\li 1m :'II M 19'\00 75 73.;,• H\11• P 8200, 52 (9 51 -2 Aulo , Nlld 16345 SB~~ 7!~ 81~ + .,, All Cdn Com 7.34 7.98 Anacou son w . .: -tn~ 1'1-5 "Hrtn Onl 700 33 33 l3 ,.. t.,

1400 28~ 28~ 28~-H) ('BreW' 2790 S4.51'1: .CI''4 451'3 + ~2 AU Cdn Dh fi59 608 An.: !\fid 2610 SB'l 7~ 11 81~ti- J.s Mnnc;anto 9800 45~.4t~, 45 , 3650 , 8 7 8 , 0' ~ta1nes •130 $6!'a. 6~i 611 American Growth 8.15 s.aa All 1000 4h o11~ 4!lot :\lCint Wiird &600 29 tlP4 29

1000' 19·. 11 ·•19 + 'Jh Dosco 200.$11'~ 1111 1J1'll-ll I Beaubran 29.4:1 11% Au!! Tel 60a0 52 48 so ~at A,·iat 3700 :Wll 28 2R Canadian - Inveslnltnt !til 9.99 Augu~tus 133!1 l.l .1:1 :13 Nat Co1111h 11600 73!it'- 7131 73

I Champion ~lutual 5.54 6.09 A\·alon z115 · Sil)"' 711 712 Nat Gyps BOO ~a&ll 58 58

We build in a hurry! AND SAVE YO~

Canafund 37 76 J9.64 Bateman ll:iO 6 5t.l Stoz .. 1: NY CcnL 6!1n0 1B1R li11 18

Commom\talllJ fnl~rn. 8.21 9.o3 llellchu 2000 22 21 n -3 ~brrl OPUac 2 ,~~,000 41:!''4 ~~- 41:~ _: ;: Coromonw'lh Inter. LC\', F 7.0'l 7.71 DMRY\'l 500 16 lli 16 'V "' ~ 1 Corporate tnve:stors 9.23 ]0.091 C Collieries 200 $6~4 li~l. fi'~- 14: Outb :\[ar 6200 :!3TI 23:'.oi 23:1 .. - ~

FAST DIRECT FREIGHT- SAILINGS · ' '

FRO~l RALD!AX, N.S., TO ·sT. JOHN'S,· NFLD;

LeniDI 8altl1% Die lt. Jeba'

M.S. "BEDFORD II'' (XJ M.V. "WOODCOCK"

M.S. "BEDFORD ·u, (xl ·.M.V. "WOODCOCK"

M.S. "BEDFORD U" (x) M. V.' "WOODCOCK"

i •

JAN. 30 .JAN. 31 FEB. 7 FEB. 9 'FEB. 16 FEB. 17

(x) Refrigeration Space Available.

~]~T/,~~,t~c:~o~.:~L~IM~IT~D lhck'l CoVt, st. John'•

. Phon•• 20S1

FEB. 1 FEB. 2 FEB. 0

1'EB. 1i FEB. 18 FEB. 19

II, H. COLI,.S,tclal lloprostnlalho, IIDYII Bank aldl·• St. John's, Phz 2207

CLARKE -;ALL~ WINTER

SERVLCES ·to

NEW F·O UN D LA N·D Direct Service

. HAliFAX ·.to ST. JOHN'S S.S. !'{OVAPORT ............ : ......... :.Feb. 4. S.S., NOV APORT ....... : .. ; .............. Feb .. 13 S.S.. NOV APORT ............... -: .......... Feb. 21 For information llld Heservat!on, contact our near eat oHice- . ' ST. JOliN'S. NFi.n ret MD . awo

or 2151 Telex 0141 - %511

llAJIVJ!l' STEAMSHIPS ·

' J.TD. ~GEN'M!

Dlverslped Inc. Sh.~· Ser n -'00 4.35 c Drtdt:e ]600 H4'• 14's 1\.11 Tl't~ rark(' na 8900 36t2 37,8 :lll • Dividend Shares 3.15 3.~5 Cl Inv Tr z::!O 518 111 18 Prnn RR l19M 13'e 13 Jll" Dominion EquJty 15.50 13.8t C Kodiak :tno 91l 90 90 + t Phelps D 4i01l ;il SOI4 .::.fr'il- 1

First 0!1 and Gaa .1.9-t 4.20 Cannr3ma SOil 20 20 zo. Ptulcn 5~00 lB'i 181,4 18'1.- 1 ~ Fonda Ct~UectU' A 5,52 6.00 Canuba 2ooo 21~ 2'-2 '2\~ l'hiltp :\for 4~00 U 8314 s:P 2 .l..

1 •

F ondo Co11ectii B 5.JK ~ 7J C II• Q •Cl'.O R R 8 Pit Plate 12700 74'i 73 73•~- 1• · ar r •- Proc Gam 1'00 1n UlLf 1121 ~- 1 ~ Fonds COllectu C !i 56 6 04 Casshlr tsoo .SH'• 141,:( u~l ..:- tt 1 .,.,)

Group Inc. ~.56 3.B9 1

Chtmanor 7500 201 191\ 201 .,. 4 RC.o\ 128.00 5G~·~ 55'• 5j::'- 7'· Grouped Income Acr.um. 5.50 6.01 Chipman 2:iOO 411~ .-~.; 4'/J. Pllllman 2900 35, 35 J5~- ~>; Growth Oil and Gas 1.19 7.~6 Rlcveland 1500 6 fi. fi Rcpuh Stl -tfiOO .\9 3 t :i, 5q -r • Investors Growth Lund 6.15 ·6 till c Div Sec A ztl 75 75 75 Rey Tob 8900 100•4 99t..~100 Investor• Mutual 11.72 11.7~ Crus"'llf: JjOO 108 100 lOa no)'al Out 200!J· 37~8 37li :!7l.l- t

Keystone H 00 16.12 Dallen 200 55 55 55 -5 Scare;: !t 5600 551,.;, M1M 5.:; - 1t

Mutuol Ac<Um. Fund 7.87 8.60 0 Eng 200 117'1 1111 17'% Shell Oil 5100 4!',4 43'• ll'• 1 Mutual tueome. Fund S.Ol 5.48 D Lease 8700 78 70 75 t5 Sheraton 1200 17~_. til.= 17':-2 1 North Am. Fund of Cda. !).16 9.96 East sun 100 161 161 161 + l Sinclair 1(:1000 4tl M 431

/'.Z H + ~~ II Prl!!f et Rennue <Mutual) 5.36 5.8!1 Falcon 32S $40~4 (0 40 + ~-: Socony 17000 46 4~H1 ~6 R + ~4 nadlssnn , 4.J4 4.77 Fleet r.ttt 300 50 50 50 Spero: R !liOOO 2.]!'1: 221n. 21 - ~ t-Sav Investment Mut. o'Cda. 5.36 5.85 FundY 2000 4 4 4 Etd firnnd UM 561• 561it S63..i, ' Supen'b:ed .Amer. l'und 7.26 7.:!3 Gold' Aa:e 1000 · 46 45 46 + .c Strl ... Cat 7500 50 49~:.1 50 + 1 4 ! Supcrv!Jed Exec 55 :19,71 . llastbfo 21 oo so B3 89 -1 Sid 1nd 8000 50!\ 495~ 1~::--+: 7 SUpervised Exec 56 32.58 IlaUhm 4500 3 21,1 J + Jh Std NJ 5:9flCQ 46~1 4 7l!l

4

Suprrvlsed E<ee 57 5.58 Inv I'd 6 pr 25 $51 51 51 Sun Oil ~600 !im 53 5311 + 1• Supervised Exec 58 5 89 ~.95 Israel l500 ll 11 11 t 3 Texaco xd 7100 ' 92\-l 99th 90h -2~f !;upervi.!cd Growth Fund 1.71 1.73 Langl.s 3000 48 48 48 -15 Thlokol U50U 4131 423 S (:!~it- ~~ Supen1sed Jnctme Fund 3.98 4.02 LHh Corp 8900 46 45 46 'fhlokol 14SOO 43 421• 42 i- 11

x-TV t.:lec!ronle 8 08 B 81 Lowney 150 $27 27 27 ; 1 Timken 1000 52\i 52 52 - \i Timed Investment FUnd 5.70 5.16 Melch pr z25 S!11h 12~S: 12.;1, Tldewtr 4ti.QO Z3~ 2.1'h l'~ + ~~ United Accnmulatlve 15.S7 17.02 Merrill 2500 58 53 58 + l Twent R 103<10 · 46\i 4Sii 4!1~1-11.\t x-u.s." funds. ~loly> loOO 57 57 57 +l

Monr~re 500 6 15 6 Nalil'e II 500 10 20 10 + t Mr Dalri" zl!4 171'. 7 'I'J. N J"orma 1~0 8 6 6 - ~'i nd Ltgnt 25 149 !9 ~~ NIV Amulet 5000 16 16 16

commercial~

• and communlll·

Get a bt tt" buildltl

• Non:1etal teo 2&5 285 2.85 ,j..lQ N A IASb 500 71/1 jl~ 7~~ 1- 11'2 NQ row 25 S29':1 29!1 2.9:8 - Ll Opern Expl 3000 9 · 9 9 P•udaob 100. 13 13 13

~IONTREAL CLOSING STOCKS

We are pleaeed to announce

the appointment of

Pennbec 100 9 9 9 Pow CP 1 pr 40 !44 44 44 +I Pow Cp ZP lD $63 63 · 63 Prom 511 13~ IR R 8 Que Cobalt 1100 m 210 21o -10

Nrt Que Phont 80 $37112 37 37 - lh Atock 8;1u Rlcb Lnw Clue Ch'l" 1 Qut, Ph wt 100 Sl71i 177. 171'1 + ~-

01 The C.nadhln · Pres• Montreal Stork Excltan1:'('-Jan. 31 Complete tabulation ot Tuesday trans

actions. QuotJtiOU!I In cents unless marked S. z-Odd lilt. xd-Ex-dlvidt'nd. xr-Ex·riJtltJ, xw-EX·Wilrtanl!:.

Abitibi !GaS !41 1> 40!1 41 · Bol>!rval :r.oo 12 12 12 A bit pr 12.1 $2311 231,'. 231,i Ruby Faa w 100 21 21 21 -15 I Acad Ml m 120\1 20',1 20\1 SIL-' Col 1100 515 515 m -10 A.cad All ~ t2:i $20 20 2.0 ShOJI Save !i'Z!i $i% 7H1 7~ - "' Algoma 719 S34 34 J~~ 34.14- ~~ sauc:nn 3'i'OOO 111 !14 112 + 17 Alum 1 pr 45 522~~ %2: 22~i Sl!coe 1000 123 123 12.3 +2 A1umlnl 12~7- $35 ll' \ 341>- \4 Std Gold 1000 B B B Alum 2 pr 140'$1£1> 4611. 461(. + V. Sullivan · 100 145 145 m -10 Ang T 41 p 145 $401'.' •lD'I•. 40\1-211 Tacl1e 2000 7 7 7 An2:pr 100 125 $521h 52th 52V.. *'h Tttan tiC 5 5 S Arllll' 130 IJ7 36~1 37 + t 'fr C · COJ1' 130 1321h :r.!'h lll> AobesiOll 57 $27\1 271(, 271/• + V. U l'rln l&o 125 12!1 m Alias Steel 220 $2411 241'• 24\> + 1'. U l'rln rts 9400 'fo 1/, 1,1,- II Bank Mont l99i $61% AA1r 61;, + ;; Vanguard 5o00 B B · B - '\ Bank NS 101 11i8Y, 681> 68\0 .Virl!lnla ziDO 6 fi 1 5 Banque ·c N z" 5$61/tl ~61-a .561a Wetdnn snoo 3 :J 3 llatb p A 60 $43 43 43 Unllqlrd Bell PhOIIe 2!G5 119 4Bfo 49 + 1.1 Advocal• 300 341 330 3lS + Bowaler IOl $7% 7% 1;1 +' 1,{, Alto Tnk A lOll $26\i 2Gli · 26\1 Bow ~11!1' p 80 !481', 46\> 4BI> c tlom Sug llo $17'.2 17¥. 171% r '' Brazil. l)3 42G 415 415 -1! • Cdn Dev 600 lB5 4!0 ISO -10 BA 'on 18D3 $321> 3111 31l'o "' \o R. 1ngersoll 170 'Slo 40 ~a' BCE 411.. pr 2S $42~ t2~ 421h.+ 1'8 c l'nprr S95 U4 n~A 4~~~ + J..' BCE 5 pr 1110 41B 48 48 coo Gas 91:1 117 161o 17 nc Forest 100 M21it 12~ 12~ ~8 Denison ::wo $11 11 11 - 1 il BC Pow 1993 S38lf4 37!~ 33 + l'!B Huny F 1'25 $1~4 191~ 19~~ + 114

DC Phone :ZS $48 49 48 - 1;4 Giant YK rl5 $l2 12 12 Brown • zso S13\> 13 1~ 1311, liB ou G 300 Sill> 11'1 lila+ 'I Bmdt A 100 fl'h 71> 7'i•- % .IoU•t !SOD 25 25 25 -10 Dnild Prot'l 500 SH~) 34\~ 34~- "• KeliY D A 150 57 ca mcv 98 1

MR. PAUL S. DEVLIN (formerly Managtr of our Chnr/ollrl••un Offwl

as Manager of our

St. John's Office

We are also .pleased to announce

that

MR. J Al\IES ORGAN

who ~ow relinq~isbes the appoinln1e~~ of Manager of St. John's Office WI

continue to· he associated with the Corporation,' in St. John's, in an ad· visory capacity and to . reprrsenl · u! with his 'many clients.

Cnl Pow 400 !2411 2~1}, ~II\- ;; Lnt.n Am \COO 51 51 lt + 2 · Can C~m 180 $2~ 2'SJ~ 2R~ + lh obCo A 150 $35~1 35 35\'8- 1.~

I R:m C~m pr 67 $26¥1 2fi'lh: 26Y.J ' LobCo B 115 !36:~., :lfi\'l 3D:s., .A- ~ s

1

Cl To'ndry 1:.!:i ~1~~, 19:!• 19~~- t~ Moor~ 100 $47~'2 4.7~4 ~1 1 4 ROYAL .. SECU

C.SL 173 54.51-l 45 ~ 4~ -I~ PcntlJhta :!M $11~4, ll:tt lt~~.f ~.

I lU:iL rr 12 $lfl~~ 10'-l 10112 Sherrill £00 400 400 ~an r. o\\·1atron 530 $22 '2 :!2 + l.f. Stt:•!P R 100 790 i!'!C 790

l c; natlk c 1J2R s;gl 6H:, 6111- 1,~ T F'ln A 210 S10'II 4fl 1 , 41 ~ - ·, ! ; c: Brnn~r 100 S1!lll tAli. fill~ · Un Ga• ziM a.al:m!l~" J!i:<.• J 'edn nr('W 1303 ~till 447.., 4:11'] .Jo. A, Un l\.C'nei k J;m1i.5 !175 975 -<:7 ; Cdn Ctlan 115- S2l1 ~ ~l~4 2J~~ +Ltf. I c:y nhU s-.1~~: Jndll .. tria.ls J26,90Q; 1 C Chrm :'&0 U~J 6~1 6\l mlr e~ and oils lW,!iCO ·

CORPORA-TION I.IMITED·

Separate

Page 11: Nova ''Santa Maria'' ;,* Entry. To Recife Uncertain sident ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19610201.pdfafter a 420-mile ride through space aboard C1 .· rocket

:oia!~, tilth Lt~ ~4t~ i-16 . 100 19'i 41\j

l:\0~ \11 ll' t!lt-:~ :tn:a :u,'1 :!00 1 PI 11a,

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:oo 130 130'1 111\11 31 JO'i

< y 1000 Jjlno llla j"Qrl ]II 1 l·tc

:;. a hurry! "0 IJAVIi YOU

.1 or••Y WITH

j'!);;x)Lr£1}1 .. ) ;.1-:JI:..::.•:~~

J11orclal, lndUII.I11

·HJ communitY•

ot 3 better butldlnl

mlcoUy. Call Ul .,.!1'1

r bo:ts and ft1u• ·

illOUilCC ·

: "r

;r:,VLIN . _.:!r.'o!tn lWif~)

:~nnou11ce

i{GAN

1 ppoi u1111e?t • 1 J lli ('C wtll .,[ "·ith the · • ;11 an ad·'

:.·pn·~cnt · ~~~~ .

ContintJing . I • • -..' ·

BIG SALE~USED K~RPUA~CES , '' ~·

~lECTRIC WASH~S;FROM .; ........ $39.~0· .. 'ELEc\a.Jft:RANGE.S :FROM : ..... ,.\.'.$35:00. ; . .. '. : \ . . . . . . : . . . . .. · '

wooo-coAL .RANGes ·.FilOM .:J39.5D· ol~ HEATi:~s .. FROM ...... · ...... ,~ .... :~$35~00 ·· .Pi~ce·s·· . 8edroo. m .. ALS;urnitu~;·,-.·. ;~,n·•:d· ·... l ·ot.her

. . , • • 11 ~any. ·aA.· ·R· G. ·j.'I·N·· S .. ,:· .. ·.~ .. ·· . ·

' . : . . .. ft. . . : .. · : "'" = ~- ,; . :

.JH' G:R'EAT '.·E-ASlER N .. 0 .. t. CO~, lTD .. · .. wAReHou4~~~···t •. LaeiT . sTRei:r., ··, •• ' ~ I ', • '

. .· ' '. .,.... ~ I ., <'II J ' ., .., ' ' l~ .;.. J _;,10- ~

lsi.

News of the Mornln11 News and Weather

Clock Devot1o01 Prcv1ew

Playtime. News.

Reports at Uundom

7.~U.:...News and Waterfront f>lrectory .

7.311-Breakfast with .Bill 8,01).... Tor bay Weather 8.05--Breakfast with Bill 8.25--News 8.30-Hit of the· Oay 8 35--Sportsci!Bt 8:40-Breakfast with Bill 9.00-Mornina Date 9.15--Lindas Firat Love 9.30-Mornllli Datt ·.

10.00-NtWI 1t'.t15-Stork Club . · 10.15--Jim Atui:he ·shr ·• . 10.55--News 11.00-Jim Am~he Show 11.15--Western Jamboree P.M. 12.00- Western Jamboree 12.li0-News ... ,.

9.2~err;: Wiggins · ~bnw 9.58ane Gray Show. · ; • to.oo=:.Newa, tn a Minute

. . tC.Ol-Martln's : Corner' · · 10;15--H_ousewives Chole4.. 10.30--'NaUoilal N~:wa. ·• 10.~3-What's Cookin'· ~ •' , ' . 'I tO.~Huuaewlve.e Chotr.e io.45-Homemakers ·News. 10.5o;:-Housowlves Choice. · 11.10-Kit~hen KlaUer.· 11.35--Nfld ... Qub tt45--Moneyman. P.M. ' 12 . .ill-Town · and Count:J . l.OO..:..News.

·1.05--Weatber ForeeasL 'Editorial ·

1.35--Don Jal.'lieton'• 1.4U...:Sporta. 1.15--Art Baker's NotebOIJk 2.00--Newa Highlights 1• · 2.03-Jerey Wiggins Sbllll 2.31-JettY Wiggins Show 3.02-Western Jamboree. 4.00-News In a Minute 4.05--Rancb Pirty, • 5.00--News in -a Minute 5.01--Bob .l..ewls DaJ.lte P.UIJ 6.0~.News Wlh.lltllita . . Cl.Ol~Wealher . · · . .1 8,U5-Btilletln 15oai-d. 6.10-Natlonal· New• ;. fl.15-Sporta · . 6.25-EVer Battery New• 6.30-Club 93 . 7.0Z,....,Club 93 7.45--Don Jilmleson'o ,New& 8.01-Best froin the Weal· 8.30-NaUonai Newi· · B.S1....:.Best from. 'the West' 9.00-.News Hlghllabta. D.o!....:.Nnd. Sol~e. · · 9.40-Salt Lake 'Choir. 9.4~News.;t ' · . 10.0l~fficlal'D:etectlve. 10.3~Natlonal New• 10.45-Sporta · · 10.5~Letters and . Messages. 11.00-.News· Hlcbllghta. " 1l.01:.,..Ml181c In the Nl11bt ' 1.01:;-Sign Off. ·

CJON-CJOX TV . WEDNESDAY, February 1st.

1 0.4S:.:..Cartoons, • ll.OO....:.IlGmper Room, , 12.00....:.Local and National News.

2.00-Stalle Sevail. 2.36-Chex Helene.

· 2.C5-Nursery School Time, · 3.00-Natlonal School Time, 3.36-Memorlal University Wo­

mens Show. . 4.00-0pen House, UD-The Verdict ls Yours. 5.0o-Junlor Roundup. · Uo.:-carioon. Carnival •. 6.Z5-World of Sport. ~.ae;-News Cavalcade. 7.08-Seahunt.

· 7jO....:.Burns and Allen. · :8,00-Talent Showcase;. · B.l~Natlonal News. : 8.30-Gunsmoke,

· IMIO....:.The •Rebel: . ·.,. · 9.36-My Three Sons. lO,OII-:-Firit P,erson, · ·: 10.3~Pem'Cinllo; ·

· 11.36-Winston Churchill. · . tz:oo....:.News Headllnea.

.. .

• JACOBY .. :oN BRIDGE

'BRIDGE0SIN · IS · OPTIMISM

· Take a look · at the South only. You respond one

spade. to.:your ·partner's open· lng . bid. He raises you to two spades; What Is your rebid, 1f any? · . Your hand certainly rates a

You have 12 high card . and a good flvc.card

spade suit. If you feel con· servatlve you can invite game . by bidding three spades, but if you· decide to take the bull by the horns and jump right to game no one can criticize you. poor South. North wa·s one of those trap bidders. North had opened one · dhimond quite properly and had merely bid two spades at his first turn to rebid.· Incidentally,· two spad~s is correct, but needless to. say he would· have bid two spa drs · with a weaker hand. ·

Anyway, ow:hcit South jumped

NORTH (D) . 1 .lt.H3 'f76 +AKDB2

.... AJ WEST .102 'fKQ1083

EAST .87 'fA054 ·+QJ8 . +103

.. uau ... 10754 SOUTH jfiAQ88S 'fJ2 +754 • ... KQ3

Bolh vulnerable . Norlh Ead · Soulh Weat 1 + Pass 1• · Pass 2 • Pass ~ • Pass

. 5 • Pus Pass Pus Opening 'lead-¥ K

! . ;

to four spades No~th sprung the trap on him. He said to ~lmsclf, "I have ·a maximum two spade· raise. My' partner has . jumped to game. 'there may be a slam." Then North bid five spades.

Needless to .say South passed, but the damage had been done. West cashed. two llcart tricks and · shifted to a ·club where· upon South had to los e 3.. dl~mond trick, and game and

· rubber.

CARD. Sense Q.-.The bidding has been:

North · East South West 3 'f Pass 1 • Pass 3 "' Pass 3 + Pass· 4 'f 'Pass 1 · You, South, bold: ·

12.311-Ramblln with RllCQrdi 12.45-Fisherman's ForeC:ut l2.~Ramblln wllh Recorda

. l:I.Os.-Jillllywood Star Play. ' · · '"house, ·. · · · . •

.Kl043 'f52 · tA9765 ... 8-l: Wllat do. you do?

tlii-Sportscasl· 1.20-Ram blln with Recorda 1.45--So .The ·Story Goe.e: 2.00-Jim Amecbe Sitow 2.55--News · 3.0~Prlzes and Problema 011 4.00-Western ·Jamboree~ , . 4.30-Bob:s Bandwagon, 4.55--Newa · .. 11.110-Bob'a · Bandwa11011 5.30-Supper Serenade 5.50--Flsherman'a Forecut ·· 6.00-Bulletln Board.· 6.10-Movie Ne.wa •. · , , , 6.15- -sportscast and Travel · . .Guide. · . ··· 6.30-Supper Serenade · , 8.45--Ne\1• ·. 7.00-Shillealallh Showtime.

. 8.00- .cre'am 0! The Crop · o:411-Newa. . · , ' . ' . 10.00-VOCM ·All Time Rlt

Parade . .to.ao-:.E~entlde · Meditatloiil. 10.~port8. · ll.OO.~Blll Top Ten> ·' · . ll~Club liDO · &11~ Newi. l.OO.:..New• Iii. 1 \mlilutt ·aDd

Slcn Off · .. , . ' : r ~ • .

' ' .. A-Pass. You have told your full story. · ·

.TODAY'S QUESTION ·You hold:·

.AQ87 ¥5 tK65 ... KJ943 Your partner operis one heart.

What .do·. you respond? Answer Tomorrow

·aARBS • ·'By· HAL COCHRAN When· folks get full credit

for, what they do,. tliey . usually 'don't need credit for what they buy.· ·

You can't blame· a man for getting . impatient with his wife generally speaking. . . ·•

'

' ' '

----·--~----~----~ ' CJON. ' . Take all ,the friendly advice~ · on ho,w to treat your cold, and ·

• • J .•

WEDNESD.AY, Feb.ruary' lat. ' . Program.

r~llruduclilf~o;r Marin en .. to Wedn~·

then. see your doctor. · • • • ••

·A· fireplug Is an . ingenious device th1t ·helps . the forget· lui motorist swell a city's rev-enues. 1 • •

. O~ZIE NELSON STRUCK . . .

. HOLLYWOOD (APl - The Writers G~ild of America · •.ton· day announced it has gone on strike against ABC's Stage 5 pJ'9(1uctions and Oziie Nelson. Tbe guild claims .Nelson has r~ filsed to slllll a collective bar· gaihinl! arreement. Stage 5 oro· du~s the Ozzle and Harriet tel· evislon show. .

BUGS BUNNY

IFYAaRING THAT MUP IN f.IERE:,.l"U HAVE i' CLEJW IT UP

6EFORE PETUNIA GET$ HO\\E~

FRECKlES AND HIS FRIENDS

OH,THe IRONY OF lr-­ME,?POTIE65 ~q.

ARCH FQe OF AU.. . LIVING GeRMS •••

;,.--;.---=""""'·-=-----..... Yow'L!..I-IAVE To"liPTt£' 1-lA'R:HECK GIJ<:!.,TbOr WHEN '/OlJ GeT MY

·COAT!

1 1VE DEDICATED MV LIFE'lD

6f£K/NG our AND STOMPING ON . GERM-:3 •••

': "Why not stay for dinner? We're having leftoveni1" ! , L--.. - --·------------ .... : --- .. ·- . . ..,,,..

AND NOW 11VE BECOMe INFATUATED WITH A GERM THAT 14A? BIG BUJE EYE'S AND CUI<Cr' BLONDe HAIR.

:·•P .. -~

Bv LEOi-1 SCHLEStNG~:P.·;,~ . -

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Page 12: Nova ''Santa Maria'' ;,* Entry. To Recife Uncertain sident ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19610201.pdfafter a 420-mile ride through space aboard C1 .· rocket

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.. ief.Training Welf~re '.to

it Gander chief .. of, training ·and ·for tlie Department: of'

l'ra;sport, Mr. Darrell DeBow will visit Gander on Feb. 7. Mr DeBow, formally of Moncton, is e:;pected to, visit the di!Ccrent branches of "the 'alr services, namely, air traffic control, tclr.· communications and the meteor· ological department. Mr. DeBow is also expected to take note of the recreational program of the cow,munity, and is looking fur• ward to his Gander visit; ,.

-----

Gander Bowling · .Schedule·

C.B.G .. ~ander ;~~2.45-~t;;,nuc School Broad \Gander Airport . ' . -;-:--:-. . . . ! 3.00-'-Atlnntic School Broad· s t i II- Has •

GREAT':EASTERN. OIL & IMPORT

CO •• l.TD. Radio, ·relevlston. Washers. Refrigerators, Ueep .Freezen

Electric. Ranges, . Fluor Pl!listlel'!,

. Gramupbimes . l'ubllc' Address Sy~ems.

, Tape Recurders· · · · lt1WAIRS AND· SERVICE

6 UNES . DIAL 3001 to . 3005

WAt.E'R\STREET' ian21i l v · · · _ ____...

~~~DNESD~Y •.••. ~bntary 1stJ ?.15-~~~~crgarten of the Air. BUsy Period~ . l 7.00-Top of the Morning, . i ~ 3.30-Nell:s and Trans · . . . . · I l· 7.30-CBC News. : ·1 1\Ialinec. \

For .. Fast .. •'

Taxi Service:

Nfld.

7,35-Top_ ·of. the. l\lor!ling, ' 4.30-Drama in Sound. GA.NDEH-'l'o look at the 8.00-CBC 'News and Weatllcr. 5.00-Announcers Choice. ramp .at Gander Airport last 8 .. 15-Musical Clock.· 5.30-Fisherics Broadcast.· Saturday evening, one woultl 0.00-l\!orning Devotions. 5.45-Music from the Albums. think that we were havin.~ a 9.15-Program Preview. . 6.00-CBC News. revival of past years. At one I. HOTEL TAXI . 9.20-0rgan Stylings, 6:05-Program Preview a!}d Re- time there were six aircraft un I . ..

. 9 •3~CBC News.,. peat of Public Service the ramp; and two of the six l D~ I 2 >1') 11 241 0 9.36-J)irect Reports. Announcements. were giant jets._ Besides the G a · ~t-"1-

. 9.45-Records at Random: 6.15-Star Time. DC 8 and B 707 there were two ! lO.OO-Archcrs. . 6.30-This is your Community DC' 6's one Viscount and an . --~p-eQ~-Uf:_EoEm~N6'5.30Rt-Oo A2 Da.m. 10.15-Iris Power. 6.45-Light Music. Astcc. Satnrd•lY evening wa; 10.25-For Consumers. 7.00-CBC N.ews and Weather .. fairly busy considering present 10.30-Nfld. School Broadrast. 7.15-Ranclom Chapters. day traffic, with 19 landings. 10.45-Music in the Morning. 7.30-Come Bf\ Gay.· The record number of landings AUTO PA~TS (Whole) 1'1.00-lllorning Pops, 7.45-Doylc Bulletin. for .ariy one -eight .hour period 11."15-A Man Called Sheppard 8.15-Roving Reporter. here is 52. This record was ~s· 11.30-N{ld; Schooi Broadcast. 8.25-:-Rawhide. tablishcd on. a graveyard shift 11.45-Parade of Stars.. 8.40-1\!usical Program. . (12·8) in July of 1956. All pres- Armature ?.M. · 8.55-Wcathrir for Mariners. ·1 cut records in passenger and . 'F,;j;;;nii ~ Works 12.00-BBC News. 9.00-Introd~ction to Wcdncs· , airfract traffic were establislw.t

11i

N1t>T·ICE. " .

OIL IIURNER SERVICE_: · · Furnaces, Ranges and

Space Heaters, dependable service at reasonable rates,

· · · ·George Royle, Phone 47793. Watch 1 this paper for · jan3t,lmth ~

particulars of Auctio~ :to · :omw nu~ •. 1100 RUG cLEAN be hel~l on MONDAY, · EHS-Rugs and · Carpet FER 6t.l{ ~ 1·· made to look lil(c. new

' · · ., Von Schrader process adds · . j years to .life of rug~ Clean

JOHN·M;,WALSH, 1· ed in home··or at·our plant. • 'Phone 91033. New Method

Auctwneer; , Rug Cleanprs, fr~shwatcr __:_:._:___', Road.,

PROP.ERTY . FOR RENT OIL BURNER REPAIRS . . - · 1; and maintenance. Furnaces,

·.THE · ·\ ·Space Heaters and Ranges. · · Phon't! 91884L. dec7 .1m

Ro~fal ·Trust , . , , I . "':

·~· -FURNIT!JRE REPAIRS-Re·

COMPANY

· pairs to spring-fiJlcd mat· tresses, €hcstprfield suites also rebuilt. · Fifty years' experii!ncr. Keats Mattress

· 79 ·Goodridge Street Factocy, 16 Mount Royal ., ' · · h Avenue Dial 92753 or 2656 .,70.00 per m_ont _·;

1

_no_v_ao_,tr _____ _

Unfl!~nii;hed ground . floor. FOR ALL o;ooUR Exterior 1 Apartment co~sisting of' . two 1 and hterior Pair.tmg,

I

bedrooms, dmmg room .. hvmg J. Paper Hanging. Cleamng, room, kikhen .;and bathroom. Roofing, . etc. 'Phone L. Available imntediately. \ Howell, 739 'H or 3752A.

For further particulars apply, I TilE CENTRAL B!\RBER · SHOP-We arc now operat·

ing 10 chairs, yon can be assurer! of prompt, effici- · ent, s~nitary service. No · wniting problem. 24 New Gower Street opposite Ade·

. I

THE r.DYAl TR!J:T ·

COMPANY laide ~Iotors, Ltd. ·

1 Wall Washing P.O. Box 130·1 \VALL WASHING - 1Vall1

cleaned IJy oew machine.

12.10-Noontimc lllelodies and . day Nlte. tn the summer of 1956. That, !~=~~~~~ iBa!rick WEDNESDAY, Februar~· lsi.. , . Public Announcements. 10.00-Celebrity Concert. summer it was a common sight RCAF BOWLING ALLEYS 112.30-Farm Broadcast· 11.30-CBC National News, · to sec hundreds of passengers Street. Phone 5196

lll , · L

7· · · · N i 12.45-:-Popular. Selections. Roundup and Talk. jammed in the old terminal Jial

7191·2

fehl,3

SENTENCE EMBEZZLERS BlllLDING MATERI.ALS PARIS lRcntersl - Two men

accused· of embezzling $1 ,200,·

ens . eaguc . . p.m.7' . 011 l on ·ob· 1··. B II t' 1.., 05_,1 ; t l\!'d 'I building. I game. . . . I .. v- Y .e 1 u e m. ·.:.. ., us.c a 1 n1 c. --------

1\lixed Lcague-9 p,m; Odd ·I , 1.15-l\Iustca. Program. --Balls vs Hawkeyes. 1.30-CBC News and Weather. C CN V

. 1.45-Tommy Hunter Show. j T GANDER GARDENS ALLEYS 2.15-?viusical Randezvous. - ·

Result, perfect: saves paint. -New lfethod Rug and Wall Cleaners, Freshwater Ro3d 'Phone 910~3.:

PERSONAL . 8 p.m. 2.29-Dominion Obs.' Time

Caolshots vs S.J.A. No.: l. . Signal. . ,

ooo from the American Express i CHESTER DAWE, LTD. CENTRAL NEWFOUNDLAND Company last year when sen·. SHAW ST. nitil TOPSAIL RD I WEDNESDAY, February '1st.. tenced to prison terms by a . For all your 'Building 1

AMAZINGLY quick relief for discomfort of. mouth sures, canker s~oots, dental plate sores, tender gums, with Fletcher's Sore-Mouth Medi· cine, $1.00 at all druggists ..

eachers No. 1 vs. Slowpokes. 2.30-Musical Randczvous.

1 ATTENTI.OM··· : ~.. . . ~ . r"·

! BOYS :::£ you are interested in' making money as

a Daily. News CaiTier, v..lease fill in the

Application Form \1-nd mail ~C\ our office.·

:~If ·nd ro'ote ·, avirllab1~ in· your. ~rea Am-. mediately, your application .will be placed

: on· file. . Th~n· should 'ari ·opening ~ccu;, · -. . ~ ' .

.-:we will get in tou~h with you . l •• ;. • ~: ... :. l: . ..o. •.. -~-- "'.,. ·r·----------------, I >.• r 1 ' I '

I

TilE DAJLll NEWS I ·. P.o.:sox s2o, s·r. jouN'S · :

: · RO~Tli i\l'PLkATION :

f !IIAME ·.: ..... ." .... ; ... ~.:: ....... : ........... ~ ..... : .. :~..................... ·I t I : A!JDRESS ............. :: ...... : ........... , .. ; .... ,....................... I f PHONE No. :: ........................ - ............... :............... l

l-------~---~---~J --- . .

7.00-Stage 7• Paris • court Monday. Requirements cal! 2.30-Chez Helene ' B0161""':91171 I 2.45-Nursery School Time

' 3.00-National School Telec'ast 3.30-Life with Elizabeth. 4.00-0pen House 4.30-Thc Verdict is Yours 5.00-Junior Roundup 6.00-Jamboree Time 6;30-Naws Cavalcade 7.00-Sca Hunt 7.30-Burns and Allan 8.00-Local News 8.i5-National News 8.JO-Galc Storm Show 9.00-Gunsmoke

· ; 9.3tMy T'uee Sons 10.0 First Person 10.30-Perry Como 11.30__:_Winstoh · C.hurchill

The Valiant Years. 12.00-Ncws 'Headlines 12.05'-Hollywood Star Play­

house,

,· •'

~ander Gardens Schedule · WEDNESDAY, February l11t.

4.15-Figure Skating Club. 6.00-Junior All Star Practice. 8.00....,.Senior Hockey: DOT vs .

Airlines. ' . 10.30-Eiks Club Skating

Party .

' .

SEE THE NEW. WILLYS

JEEP (2 and· 4 Wheel Drive)

AT

McKINLAY MOTORS LTD.

Lentarchant Rd. Ph: 4193·4

ElECTRICAL APPLIANCES

llAINE JOHNSTON COMPANY, UD.

Agency Department 243. Water St. Dial 2102

YOUR FRIGIDAIRE DEALER .

HEAP & PARTNERS

~~~~~~~~~~ (NFLD.) LTD. Wiring Materials, Wire and · Whe're ·To 'Stay cables. Motors starters, · l Lamps, Switches, Lighting

Balsam Hote . Fix~ures, etc.

I iV AREHOUSE: PRINCE'S ST BARNES. ROAD

S~!u;.ted In •.he Heart of the Ci1 •.

Quiet, Comfortable A~;nos­

· JIAL5085

FIRE INSURANCE pher~ .

ln. 1 CROSBIE & CO., LTD. For heservation~ and

f I · · Agents fnr orma Jon. UNDERWRiTE~q AT

.

Dial 6336 · MRS. JOHN FACEY n"csldent 1\lanagercss

m3l,tf

LLOYDS. LOW RATES

DIAL 5031

HARDWARE STORES

Prompt Delivery On • STOVE OIL • FURNACE OIL• • HARD COAL • SOFT COAL • !ROll ~<'IREMAN .

HEATIJIIG EIWIP~IEI'IT

Help Wanted­Salesmen

REPRESENTATIVE FOR .

NEWFOUNDLA"ND Nationally known manufactur· crs of exclusive patented light· . ing products, have an ·opening I for an experienced Sales Rep· resentative for Newfoundland. Successful applicant will be ful·

· ly trained. You will caJI• on Industrial, Commercial and Institutional accounts. Liberal commissions, Bonus, Group Insurance, Has·

Dry Spruce Slabs Birch Junks Dry Splits Hard Coal

Dry Fir Slabs· Grate· Coal

North Sydney Coal

-PHONE93030 jan12,1m

l 9 57 PLYMOUTH

pitalization, etc.,-CAR NECES· , SARY.' Excellent future with Baird Motors Ltd

' AT

The O~d Mill · . you may enjoy · NIGHTLY . and/ or DANCINc

. The fine.;t in FOODS and BEVER!l

. at price; . rfl ¥0U CAN AFFORJ)

. ~o cover charge ~lon 1 . · Sat.: Orchestra D~ttn Broadca~t ... Door p~ Sun.: Cmemascope Sl(l

See for your1elf wh

!he 'Old Miil1

is St. John's Most l'opt!iar l'ii!es~~t

.'·. B:·oukfield Itt!. Tel.

"1 -~ ~>He is ah\'il\5

about the c~ld-!o going to han• •lJr RE~IODELED and ed !''

And if YOUR holl.'e i<

and uncomfortable. lhe; not hal'c it made more fort.able by "'•··"' uu!.!.~ and INSUL\TlOX. now you c;,n hal"c anr Improvement you · easy monthly terms. now.

Connors' Snack·

Open Daily 8.30 1r. 11.30 p.m. with a of Sandwiches. . Fries, .Southern Chicken, Hot R0.1st Sandwich, Fish and i

Hamburgers. ers, !lot Dugs. Shakes. Fresh )filk, and Coffee.

HARRIS & HISCOCK, LTD. General Hardware

Distributors for Sunbeam Electrical Appliances, ·

Sports goods and Spo~l.! wear for all occasions. ·

DIAl 5016

earnings unlimited. We are an 1 · ·

old est:•blished firm with cove;· 1 MERRYMEETING ROAD [ oge across Canada, and there lS 1

an excellent opportunity to ad· DIAL 8~0378 • 8-0379·

TO-XIGHT

8:00

SENIOR HOCJiEI

St. Bon's rs

Balcony . ' .

IF YOU MISS THE

·BIG ·.PRICE. SLASHING ' '

.. SALE

AT THE

ARCADE CHURCHILL PARK .. ·. "

WE'RE. CRAZY TO BE SELLiNG .AT SUCH LOW, . . · : .: LOW PRICES.

' .

' , ..

Boys' English Grey Flannels Boys' 3 pee. Coat 'n' Legging '(Fit up to size ·ts) ........ 1.98 . Sets ..... : ............ : .................. 4.!18

Men's Melborne Flannel Girls' 3 pee. Coat. ;n, Legging · Pan~ .... : .......... : ................. 1.9~ Se-ts ........................ : ... ; .... · .... 4.98

Men's Dungarees • ................ 1.98 .. Gir!s' Suo Pants ..... ." ............. 98c. · Boyi Dungarees .......... .'.' .... : .. .1.98. · · Ladi~s· Sno Pants ............... 9Bc. Girls' and ·Ladies' Orion. .. . Child's Winter Bonnets .: .. 49e.

Pullovers .......... : ........ : ... : .... 1.98 Boys' Heavy Sp~rt Shirts : .. 98c. .Girls' and· Ladies' · Orion Boys' 'Vhite Dress Shirts . 9Bc.

.Cardigans ... :, . .' ............. : .... , . .1·,!18 Ladies' Winter .. Slacks' ...... 98c. Ladies Better Dresses ........ 2.98 · Children's 'Under. Pants ... ; 15c. · Men's Work Shir\8 .......... : ... lise. Boya( Fan.ey Cardigans·· .::'9Bc.· · Men's Dress Shirts ........... ,. 9Bc. · Men's. Heavy· C~digans . : 98c. Ladies' Wool Sklris .... : .. :.,,.2.98 Men's Heavy Duffle CoatS ,.4.98.

.. :wALK, SKI, USE·. YOUR SNOW. SHOES, OR GET A . \ .

TAXI.~·: BUT ·DON'T MISS THIS BIG MONEY SAVING .. ' ' .

SALE' AT THE

I, ~ARCADE CHURCHILL PARK

ERNEST CLOUSTON, LTD.

vance. Reply to Sales ~Ianag~r. Verd· A-Ray Industries · Ltd., 1285 Hodge Street,· Montreal 9. All. replies will be held confidential. P.ersonul interviews will be con· dueled in St. John's, Nfld.

CARD f>R. T. A. S. BUIST

1\I.B., Ch.B.,

McCLAR\ 'AUTOMATIC WARM AIR. CONDITIONING

210 WATER ST.

· febl ,2,3,4 D. Obst. R.C.O.G. has commenced practice in

General Medicine

Gen. Admission

DIAL 4183

RADIO-TV REPAIRS

GREAT EASTERN OIL COMPANY, LTD. . REPAIRS TO RADIOS, TV ,

AND ALL ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES

DIAL . 3001 to300;.

GROCERS. (Retail)

l. HEALEY Cross Roads and Water Stree1

Dial S026

1 INSURANCE AGENTS j · ~NO BROKERS

JOB BROTHERS

. A ·WELCOME .WAGON .·

HOSTES~ .. Knock at Your Doo1

with Gifts and Greetings from Frietidly Business· Neighbours and Your

~ivic 'and Social Groups 0· the occasion of:

New Comer to the City, The Birth of a Baby, PHC.~E !<4865 - 90943 ·

and 3582.

& CO. LTD. Water Street

Dial 2658-4123

REG. T. MORGAN lNSURANCE LlftiiTED

Temple Bldg., P.O. llox 168, 341 Duckworth St. Dial 80370 or 7756

DRUG STORES

M. CONNORS. LTD., Prescriptions Pickup and delivery service .. Phone 22Ufi

\YLWARD'S DIAL :t0070 P 11 Arm,., CY

Cor. ~lonchy & Empire Ave.

and Obstretrics at

92 LeMarchant Rqad in association with

DR. 'HORACE D. ROSENBERG I' Phone 2516, 2868 , .

I John M. Walsh 1 ·1' CONNECTION soUTd

SERVICE Licensed

Auctioneer 15 HENRY STREET

. Train "The cariboo" St. John's 1:30 p.rn . Thursday will make. . at Port aux Basque'ttt l\l.V. Bonal'ista on Coast Service.

I CONNECTION BAY SERVICE

nUNl Regular 8:30 a:rn·,

ing St. John's Fndalo ' 3rd., will make M.V. Hopedale at Placentia BaY ed Run. · Vcss~l, 0111 mitting will sail !r

Ch S . h R' 2:30 p.m. . " ' op uey Wit ICC, CONNECTION' soUl••

IWlDY KllOWAUe . . - .

. :. E~etter living· French Fries . or ·Mashed Potatoes, Brussel Sprouts

.· t:osts less when you go .A.u;.E!ec:tric:

~'7J~d!'aM'-. ' LII=HI "POlflt!il I . u:~ ll lit- Y ' I ... I I l y 6

. • ' I ·U

'

Che Cf i<eliohle E. teclncil> . r.· !' , In ·~n' Arour>d St. John'!: ll • 1- . '

· ,or·corn, - · Homemade Rolls or · French ·Bread,

Tea, Coffee or. Milk.

$1.25

sERVIC£ Regular 8:30 3:rn' .­

ing St John;s frJdll• 3rd , will ~ake S Argentia w1th 5· ' on South Coast Bay, Hermitage regular port of rection weather

,

·I 21 16 22 26 18 28· 17

PO c

MA LAST

SAM SUND

' Tenders . are the following

scu-vice Copper · Cast Iron Manhole Catch· n: asU'I

· ·.Valve .Hoxet Curb .t;xte:nl Hose ·

· .. ::·~ llydr~ts ' .

Page 13: Nova ''Santa Maria'' ;,* Entry. To Recife Uncertain sident ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19610201.pdfafter a 420-mile ride through space aboard C1 .· rocket

' ' .\T

~Drd Mill u may enjoy ''f 'l' -~~

' DANCINC ·'" hnest in . ;m\ liEVERAGt :i\ Pri~e~ S UN AFFORD

· :· ehargc Mon F \ \rehcstra ., n ··I · .. Door 'mcll\ascopc Sho, n:· rour~cl[ why

-'Old Mill• · :.;t .• John's

. :·,\Hllar Nitcspol ·;:\ ll<l. Tel.

:11 ,,. '~:. cu•nJnamir ,. •·nlrl-so

' h :t\'r our I:U:D and

' I .onnors ~:d~- • Bar

'"rui and Flarin : Ill·\ L 61iSOJ

. P.<ilv 8.30 a.m. · • m. ·with a full .uHI'.viches, ' ~;outhern

:r, Hnt noast i ,.;, Fish and

I\' . ". . ...

• ':\SSENGER SOTICES

: TlllN soV'fll "E!tVICE ~ 'b I" "'f nc Carl Ol

:, 1:30 p.m. ·: Hill make

· J''X Basques · "' the

111 ~,·ista on · . ·t·\·jcc.

KINSMEN Boys-_ Club· · '

aper-_ BINGO SERIES . No. 42

TO·DA Y'S NUMJ~RS ..

I . N · 21 32 16. 40 "" ' . . 37 ..... 26 35 18 3~. 28 17 33 .. -

G 50 49

. 58 52 5.6 46. 60 57

71 74 72 68 73 as·

· Kin ._ Help Klddlas ..

AT POWER'S COURT

. ' ' . . ' ·. •.· ..

MANUELS '

T· NIGHT ' $1000 Bank in 54 Numbers was won by Hubert Butler, of·Kelllgrews, ·

50 numbers.

SAME AGAIN ' '

SUNDAY NIGHT .'I

at 9 o'clock .

PLENTY OF PARKING SPACE

I ' .

• sT. JOHN'S MtJN.ICIPAL. COUNCIL

·.TENDER'S fenders ~e r~q~~s~ed for .thtr·~upply of ·

· ule followmg matenals:~ I • ' o

Sorvice P!pe Fittings · · · · · Copper Service Pip¢. · Cast Iron Pip«! and .Fittings

. CONFEDERATION CABS . CONFEDERATION ·GROUNDS

· · 8 a.m. to 12 p.m. Confederation Building PHONE 94071 PHONE 95011 Ext .. 524

· · .dec21,1m ·

EXTRA SP-ECIAL ROOSEVELT AVENUE, GLENDALE •

MC'dem 1pllt level home situated· on a large piece o! freehold ground, contains . 3 bedrooms, a living

. room and dining room combined, large mod~rn kitehen and bathroom, hot air furnace,. oak lloormg, l)ouble lawn, landscaped, driveway and garage,. lea tban 5 yeilrs old. Priced for quick sale. Low

• down payment. ,

For appolniment to Inspect call

CARTER ·REAL TIES . LTD.

WANTED IMM.ED11ATELY Experienced Stenographer

. Apply

'Nfld~ Tractor & Equipment .. Co., Ltd.

WATER STREET WEST feb1,2,'S_. __________ ......_~

-... -·WANTED • • •• ! .,j \ J. .' " J • • ::! . i, • '

: <:-.··s·ALMON NET '

TO BUY

ALSO

LOBSTER POTS ' '

· M~st be in good condition.

Write tci BOX 206 In care of this office . · giving. details. and price.

. SIII2'J,3l,e0d •

, NOTICE \'

Law Offices

of

Halley, Hickman & . Hunt are now located

at

32-1 DUCKwORTH STREET

PHONE: 5~79, 5170,6389,80124. · Jan31i,feb1 I . . . . . \

CARD PARTY ST. THOMAS' MEN'S SERVICE CLUB

TO..NIGIO', FEBRU~RY 1st

CANON WOOD HALL

· Supper . Served . . . . ' . '

Admission 75c. jin2afebl. ,

. ·:.NFLD. :eowj\NMENT E~IPLOYEES . . . . ASSOCIATION

} ' . . . , '

·. ·Annual ~eneral M.eeting. • · ' PLACE: Confederation Building. l . .. TIME: 8 p.m.. . . . .

.. 'DATE:-WEDNESDAY, February 1, 1961, · This · meeting will take the · fo~ · o~ a. Supper Meeting to be hel~ 111; the Cafeteria Confederation Building, be-

' ginning .at 6 p.in .. · ' . . · · · '- . Gu.est speaker: .The·. Honourable Dr. J• R.

Smallwood; Premier of .Newfoundland. .::: ·;Age11da:.:·: ~· ·... · ·

. Manhole Frames and' Co:ven Catch Basin Frames· and Covets Valve Boxes · · · · · ' ··· · -··

. Supper:· . - · Address by .Premier. .

Curb Extension Box~s · · Hose.·· ··_ .. ·. ·

· H dr · . . Y ants.

Bwiness: · Presentation . of Reports and election. of Bqard of Directors . for ~961.

.: A full atteridance of members is requested.

. . .. . . RAYMOND SNOW, , . · Secretary. . ; s~catio~s for the foregoing are avail· . . '

' ~ eat the office of the City Engineer... , . I·L~===------~======== enders are to be submitted in sealed .

~velopes addressed to the City. Clerk and1

·

lliarked "Tender" · ~The item for. which · . ~.~~ is beirlg ~aae mus~ 11)~ in:dicated .

· 11te envelope. ' · · . - .

will be received up to 9.00 a.m. · · · Y, Febrqarf22; 1911:

or any. ~:DOt~_neoenuiJy,,. '. . \, ' • • t "'l' I -. • ' ' . . . •, ~ "' '~

. ' I'

, ~ a.. roRAN, · . ' Qty.' Clerk.,

I I

::.WANTED Female . · Office Clerk Knowledge of ·typing required.

A,pply stating qualifications and . . - experience to: ,

.. •. :~MAMMY'S LTD. . ALEXANDERSTREET

feb1,2

----~--~-------------

· L. 0. A. Th~ Annual Dinner of the

Loyal Orange Association of St. John·s will be held in Wesley Lecture Hall, 7.30 p.m. WEDNESDAY, February 8th, 1961. 1

A limited number of tickets are now available from members of the committee or by. 6ontacting the Secretary-Treasurer, W. LeGrow, Phone number 90144.

TO MY PROSPECTIVE CLIENTS AND FRIENDS

I have leased the ground floor of 15 Henry Street (formerly Jewish Synagogue) an~l am prepared to receive ar~icles of furm­ture ·and other ~oods wh1ch you may desire to have disposed of by auction. Auctions will be held at regular dates which will be advertised. , Picasej· hone me at 90811 when you want to sen goods to my ,auction room.. .

I • •

JOHN M. -WALS" . LICENSED AUCTIONEER.

feb1,4

'

IMPERIAL ·OIL.

\

LIMITED· Requires

CLERK-TYPIST (femole)

for employment · at . i~s Elizabel·h ·Avenue Office. Interested· applicants . are requested to contact

. MR. D. A. MARTIN by phone (94151) for an interview.·

.jan30,31 ·

{Under the Sponsorship of The 51. John'• Rot11ry . c~~ .

.The .. Canadian Opera Co. {Fifth National. Tour)

Will Present I

OFFENBACH'S . (SATIRICAL .. :oPERA)

"Orph~tis In The, Underworld" ·

· · AT PITI'S MEMOIUAL HALL on

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 6th, 8.30 p.m. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 7th, 8.30·p.m.

TICKETSi $2.25 Available from any memb'c~ of The . St. John's Rotnry Club or at Chas. llnt(lln & Sons Ltd.,• Water Str~ct

feb1.2,3

' . ' ' "' - ., .... ~.·

.,- THE W. & NCO'S MESS OF THE ~~ ·,, .

CHURCli LADS' BRIGADE: I . . . . . nre . sponsonng a .

CARD· PARTY . in . ,

ST. MiCHAEL'S PARISH HALL, Casey Street

on MONDAY, Feo. 6, 1961 at 8.00 p.m. Good Prizes Admission: 50e. Refreshments Served Canteel) Service. Patrons are . pleased asked to bring tlleJr

own cards.

CLOTHES MAKE THE MAN IF CHAFE MAKES THE CLOTHI:S.

Wm. L. CHAFE · . TAILOR

4 HOLDSWORTH ST, ST. JOHN'S

WANT.ED Femmle Office Clerk· · Typing essential ·

To commence work February 20th. Hospitali~ation and pension plan.

Apply .

,-.,,·;:

··.-· . ,_ .. :: ..

-~ ' '' '

; -. '_t

__ , .•r 1-, "

COLONIAL GARAGE and ·· DISTRIBUTORS LTO.

HAMILTON AVENUE jall3l,febl ----

. AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE US F & G 11111 A na~e extremely well known to Newloumlhmd car owners lor rriany, many ye:tt·s - invites vou to j·Jin their gruwiurr number of auto insurance customers wlw now kno1v there ~ a

difference. Join us this vear. We guar· antee you'll never regret it. _

'., ··:

;, : ·'

'

US FIDELITY & GUARANTY Co.J J. K. LACEY, Resident ManaJ?;er ;

211 WATER STREET PHONE 70~5 :

WANTED· ·Full-time and part ~ime

Sten.ographers and Typis:s Also one girl to answer telephona,

Apply In writing stating · age and experience to G.P.O. BO)( 912;

(This is a Nsw Company) · jan30,3l

t

·.NOTICE' To Boll Island Readers

The

MR. JOE MILLER

is now delivering

Daily News To Carriers and peale~s on 'Bell Island

. · Daily •.

• Mr. -Miller m~y be contacted at: Telephone 2718 on Bell Island.

ST. JOHN'S MUNICIPAL t;OUNCIL

Tende;s are requested for the supply of. .. the following equipment:

3 Refuse ·Collection Units 2-5 ton Dump Tru~ks

· 1-1, ton Pickup. 1-l/z ton Pickup ·

;~:.~ ~ . -. ' . ~-· . ; ~ ~

' ' ' . ' ' .

I •

! ~

Specifications are available at the office . I of the City Engineer.

Bids in sealed .envelopes q~ar~ed "~ender for Trucks" must b~ deliver.ed at the office of the City ·Clerk- not later ·than 9.00 a.m. WEDNE~DAY, February 15, 1961. .

. The lowest or any tender not ne~essarily · accepted~ .

I . E. B. 'FORAN,, · · · · · city·CI~rk/ ·

,_: · .

• ! '

; ;' !' .,

i ·. ; :-f . . ;.;, . . '~.- : .·

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i ' ' '

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. 'I ,

r

. I

I . :·. ' '

'L ' : ''

., .)

, I,

.. , , I

1,

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-' .; •. :1'

Page 14: Nova ''Santa Maria'' ;,* Entry. To Recife Uncertain sident ...collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19610201.pdfafter a 420-mile ride through space aboard C1 .· rocket

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. s· . . 'J hn A b 'I ' Boardof Trade'j ·. t •.. · Q . · · ·m u ance. ·,(Continued from Page 3) . ,' ;, · · the evolution · of a · social·se '· ' C · ' · ' •g . St t• g· · curity system, based on th~ .. ;) . . . am pat n . ar tn wealth-generating . capacity ol

\ · · , . . . · . ' private enterprise. The Govem· ··,.The 1961 Fll!anelal Campaign !lf First· Aid Training throuch·, ment pas been the Instrument

for:· the St .. John. Ambulance out ·tha province. of social progress, but business :As!Hlclatlon :hi Newfoundland . :To accomplish its 1961 ob-· is largely responsible for devc· ~aeia under way today and .Cam· jectlve the campaign committee loping the tax dollars requin~{ pa!gn Chairman Ray Simmons will conduct intensive hous·e to to finance these welfare sche· '

\

:Jtiif\hat .this year's appeal will house canvasses in St. John's mes. ·~lch the 1961 programme·by and over two hundred -New- 'The Jlrofit motive Is th~ '_fHE DOOH OF :bei11K the biggest ·peacetime foundland communities. Con-· spark that gives life to the free·· OPPOHTUNITY

DAILY NEWS, ST .

HAY OATS ETC. -Due This CAR GOOD BRIGHT HAY· .. ef~ort in- the· fl[ty-yeitr history tributions will also be sought enterprise system. It is the

·~i·the Newfoundland organiza· from hundreds of local buso measure of the health and cf· Arthur tvleighen · $7.50 · -~1i~il: 1 . . • , • iness firms and private indi· . ficiency of a business, but a ·THE MACKENZIE No. 1 FEED

CAFETERIA

OATS """ 3 BUSH. SACKS

POULTRY and DAIRY

GRIT (COMBINATION)

::,, '.l'he campaign Will be offi· vlduals in business and the great deal of misconceptmn KING 1 EC 'tii,U1 opened in radio addresses civil service. Special appeals still prevails concerning' th~ . \ OHD ;toti!ght by H!s Uonour . the have been. made to individualS., profits made by business. . }: W. Pickersgill .11.50 ·Lieutel!ant Governor, Camp· industries· and groups .all over The problem is, that business· W.S. ItODDIS, O.B.E. CONFESSIONS OF

PIONEER FEEDS SHELL and

·bOit-Maepherson who is himself the province and the pre-cam· men appear reluctant to cr.· A a:.Knight of Grace in the.Venc· p_aign response from volunteer pound their case and stand up 1\~r. W. ::.. ttotldis, ·u.IJ.~;' HAPPY MAN erable Order of St. John of chairmen and canvassers has lor the principles of our. sys Head Postmasce<', Souumtnptun, Art Linkletter ...... · 3.95 ·JeniSalcm. ·I'll~ Honour's ad· been very .encoura·ging accord·. iem. The danger is, if we <I<> ~ng1aml, will rcur.e trum uclt\'l'! HOvV I MADE 'dress will be broadcast'at times ing to l\lr. Simmons .. · . not make our case, there· will uuty m tho 1Wt1sh l'ost ufltc" $2 OOO O •

.. /fo•be announced by the various . Most notable support 'in pre· be many who will feel we toduy, l•'coruary 1st. Mr; HoUUI~ • , ·, 00 IN THE ratllo stations. · . · campaign returns has come therefore have no case to mal;c Will oc remembered by many STOCK MARKET ·•\Target for the 1961 Cam: from members of the various· and we will.lose by default. as the last :>ccrctnry for tnu . Nicholas Darvas .. 5.25 ·p~jcn will be $30,UOO-the lar- ·orange Lodges, single employ: In my opinion, we can help oltl· ucpanmcnt of l'osts and A OU ' · teat ··amount twhich the New·: ees of city firms and certain perpetuate our present· free· 'l'clegrapns, J~cw~uunuwnd. A!J T RIST IN AFRICA foifiidland Council has ever .at· businessmen wlio have forward· enterprise system in Canada by the spe~ml representative oi Evelyn Waugh .... 3.25 : .i.iimpted to realize, in" peace· cd substantially increased _opposing those who would in· the llqmlY Pos"nastcr lienetul, THAT GREAT i ,~m_~; since it was formed here cheques with letters commend- crease bureaucracy and de· Ottawo~, he remamcd uunng the LUCIFER Jii.'~~10 by tommunity spirited ing the associations 1961 plans. ·crease the incentive of th~ in· early !lays of the transttlon P~t· ·el\liens. This year's target is Doctors across the province dividual by the indiscriminate iod, suoscqucntJY returmng to Margaret Irwin .. .' 5.50 $5,000 more than· last year's are endorsing the campaign distribution and extension of England w.1c.e ne was nppomt· TAKEN AT THE quota and $12,000 more than the with handsome' cheques in re· welfare payments. We must ai· cd to the responsible offa·e . 1960 eampalgn returns. cognition of the associations so continue to oppose ail form; from whic11 he now retires. W1ll FLOOD : ,' i.lr. Simmons said that the valuable contribution to the of excessive Government l'~ll· Itodd1s was active in Postal and John Gunther . exlra money Is needed this public in the fields of first aid trol leading to increased nation :relcgraphie duties as wen as THE CLASSICS year to 'finance the ambitious and safely. alization. In addition, it is our m. s~mce to t;rewf~undlahd RECLASSIFIED

5.00

,programme contemplated by the Lists of early donors will be duty to :ccognize a~d oppose c1tJZcnslup of hts lime. St. Association as announced by published as the campaign pro· the doctrmes of socialism and .John's Rotarians will have happy Richard Armour . 3.50 Jhe President of the Nc\vfound·. gresses an,d it is hoped . that comm~ni~m,. which strive for rec~t.cc..Oil> 01 the· livel.Y P_ost A CANDLE TO land Council Hon. Sir Leonard canvassers and chairmen will the ehmmallon of our way of Offl·;c_man and Ius contniJutto~ LIGHT IN THE SUN Outerbridse. CBE, DSO., last complete their assignments life. . . to tnc1r Sunshmc Camp octLvJ· .\veek. Highlights 0 ( the pro· early in February. r.lr, Sim· S~me o! these doctrines arc tics. The annual Christmas Scali Patricia Blondal .. 5.00 Jtamme include the establish· mons said that, one thing is so mtermmg!cd that one lends campaign o_f ~ile Newfoundhwd T1:iE NUMBERED · " · t ti th I t 'th t T.B. Assocmtwn would be ut·\ ll.e~t of. first aid posts alon~ certain and that is that St. 0 ~c. 0 er a ~05 WI ou rc· complete \VI.thoutl'od and hiq ACCOUNT

the. highways of Newfound· John Ambulance will only be cogmtlon. Prem~er Khrushehcv ' land; First Aid Training tor as successful in completing its has said, "the battle for mans\ I'ost Office men in their annual A11n Bridge '· 3.75 ~acliers as par.t of tlie gradu· programme. as the campa.ign is· min~.s can b~ won w!tho~.t specialized s~r~ice at Christmas THE NYLON PIRATES ate .course at Memorial Uni· in returning the necessary funds war. .Thc~e ts .creal s1.gml!· to the.Assoc1allon. He travelled . 'l l versity and an intensification to pay for it. cance m th1s conf1dent athtud~. widely in Newfoundland in th~ N1c 10 as ·. ,,.. Of course, we readily agrrc course of his official dulicl, Mousarrat ............ 4.25

there is no imminent danger of everywhere. lca~ing an atmos· LOVE AND

·'STEAMSHIP ·MOVEMENTS Canada becoming communisti<:, phere of fr~endlmess and good· MRS SARGENT but Khrushchev and the othet· will. Will Roddis was altacl)rd '

'· r· communists of the world are to Newfoundland and her pc:~· Vir~inia Rowans . 4.95 'CLARKE STEAMSHIP CO. pool Feb. 15, '.lue St. John's very familiar with the route by pie and has maintained h1s A SILENCE OF DESIRE •Novaport leave Halifax Feb. Feb. 21. Leaving for Halifax which a country can 'travel bond through corrcspondcnre I

4th, arrive St. John's Feb. 7th, and Boston Feb. 22, due Hali: from democracy to comm~nism. ·during the intervening year. Kamala • : '"N.,vaport leave Halifax Feb fax Feb. 24 and .Soston Feb. 27 I spoke earlier ab()llt the ',!'heir many _friends in New·, Markandaya ........ 4.50 leave Skme day, Leaving Boston Feb. 28· and progress we bad made in Can· f~undland wtll. extend be~! THE NIGHTINGALE 13111, arrive St. John's Feb. and Halifax Mar. 4, due St. ada through the creation of our wtshcs to Mr. and Mrs. Rodd1s 16th, leave same day. . John's Mar. 6. Sailing again present social . welfare system. for a long and peaceful evenin;l · A~nes Sligh , · ,•Novaport !~ave Halifax F,eb. same day for Liverpool. This system has relieved . the in Linden Lea, Charmouth, Turnbull .. . .. .. ... . 4.50 21st, arrive Sl John's Feb. 16th, Nova Scotia l~aving Liverpool suffering of millions of our Bridport, Dorset, where the;! -leave s&me day. Mar 8, due St. John's Mar. 14. people. This is a fine achieve- will make their home. .. :.•Novapurt leave Feb. 21st, Leaving for Halifax !!nd Bos· ment. It is impossible to re· ari:ive St John's Feb. 24th, ton Mar. 15, due Halifax ~ar. concile proposals for expanding leave aame day, . 17 and Boston 1\lar. 20. Leavmg social. security measures with· ique threc·day conference to

Dicks & Co., Ltd. The · Booksellers

•Novaport ,leave Halifax Boston Mar. ~1 an~ Halifax out undermining the freedom consider the needs of the March 1st, amve March 4th, llf~r: 25, du.e St. Johns Mar. ~7 and Initiative of the individual thril·ing Bai Verlc Peninsula. Spin 4425 or 2008 or 3191 ~e~ve same day, . Sa1hng agam same day for LIV· and the capacity of .the coun· This conference brought to-.. Nov~port leav~ ~allfax Mar. erpool. try's resources to sustain such gether Federal and Provincial lllh, amve St. Jolin s Mar. 12th, FURNESS RED CROSS measures and bear the cost. The Government employees, · rc· leave Mar. 13th. . NFLD. CANADA STEAMSHIP solution is not to be found in ligious lcadm, labour leaders, · *Nova~ort leave ~alifax Mar. M.V. ~lue Peter Il sailing dividing but in multiplying the businessmen and indust~iaiists

17th, amve St. Johns 1\lar. 20th, from Halifax Jan. 30th, due St. national income. Those who to discuss the development

Premier To Speak Today

le~ve same day. Jo~n's February 1st.. . pay attention to the problem problems of the area and to Re!rtgerauon. " M.S. Bedford II sa1brtg from of division frequently make the 5eek a solution to those prob· Premier J. R. Smallwood ad· FURNESS WITHY· AND Hallf,ax January 3!st, due St. mistake. of trying to distribute lems before the situation be- journed the debate on tbe Ad·

COMPANY, LIMITED Johns February 2nd.· more than the national economy came acute. The point I would dress in. Reply yesterday and Nova Scotia ·leaving Boston *~I.V. Woodcock sailing from produces. like to make is that here is a will be the first speaker in the

Feb. 7, du~ Halifax Feb. 8, Hahf~x Jan. 31st, ~\te St. As you know, plans are. now government actively seeking debate today. leavl?g Halifax Feb .. 1.1, due ~t. Johns February 2nd: . being made final to merge the the advice o£ all sections of the The 'Preml'er I• not clos•'nb" Johns Feb 1~. Sallmg agam !1~.S. B,~:dford U sa1hng from CCF ,the socialist party of Can- community bef9re proceeding " aamt: day for J.•vcrpool. Habfax February 7th, due st. ada with the Canadian Labour further. This is a very cncour· the debate. Mr. A. M. Duffy

~_!!.wfoundland lcav(ng Liver· John's February 9th. Co~grcss to form a new p' oli- aging sign a'nd is an indication house leader of the United by the Government that they, Newfoundland Party, has not

Greene tical party.· Advocates of this intend to utilize all available taken part in the debate )et

T• (. Gorman new party are already going all human resources in an en· but will speak soon. ·. out for nationalization. In so dcnvour to solve the acute ( c ti d f p 3) doing, they completely ignore problems facing this Province. BIRTII

on nue rom age . (Continued from Page 3) the results of the experience of Businessmen, I am pleased -----------of the most ~alve statements of the Murray Agencies Transport nationalization in England and . d t II . • C L' 't d . other countries under labour to say, greatly contribute o a time.' ompany · 1m1 e · It is · ex· the success of this Conference, It. is sometimes suggested peeled that ·this work will be governments. A prominent Lab· but there are still many instan·

th,at_ It is the Federal Govern· co.mplcted early in l!i61. our M.P. in England recently . ]' meilt, not the Provincial that · The construction of a 617· said, "Nationalization has not ces where we JUst. d.o. ~ot tve Ia. )eing unfair to Newfmmd· foot marginal \vbarf for ships changed the Jives of the work· up. to ?~r r~sponstb;hhes. In laJ~d. ·The Honourable member ·or the Department of Transport ers in the industries affected in umverstlles, 1"; particular, stu· fo.~,,,Placenlia West Sllid on and the provision of a boat the way they expected. It has dents. are subJected to many. November 12th., that the whut· basin for small boats, with a been a. disappointment to· the .theones and pressures but rare· YeS )D his districl are in a bad total berthing 'area of 9{)() feet trade Union movement." fy do th.ey hear from a SUCC~SS· state. of repair, The Leader. of west of the Department of Labour candidates In the last ful busm~ssman who explams th~·' Opposition continued, oil Transport wharf, have been U.K. election almost unanimoUS· the ~orkmgs of our freC·Cn· w~.nt to the trouble to find out completed.. In · ad'ditiol'l, work ly regarded nationalization .JIS tcrpns?. system a~d th~ op· thlif$232,718.00 worth of work has been completed on two an election liability. This, pot~umbcs that sbll. exist m has ,been done .In .that district. other contracts for the removal however, as I have said, does bus mess for those. 'Y1.th. the ne· Thl.~., is the sort of standard of . the sunken vesselS S.S. De- .not deter those theorists in ~essa!Y ~ourage, IDihah~~c:;dd that ,.the Government of New· sola, a 6,000 to a,ooo· ton ves· Canada who would impose com· •magma lion to s . · · · Through our neglect,. the ID· fo)Jndland should set up in set, which sank in the harbour plete state control on us. These hercnt human desire for ~ccuri· dealing. with the Opposition in 1916 following a fire on theorists, as I call them, be· ty may.•override the more ven· Districts." , board.· cause mo.st of. them. have ,no turous attributes with which

,ST •. JOHN'S EAST: ·These The vast modernization pro· practlca1.expcne~ce 111 govern· our forefathers built this great PllOple have asked for very, gram. has been undertaken at ment busm.ess or mduslry, must country, · little .. They find employment in one 'or Eastern Canada's major be neutralized . wherever .~hey I feel that businessmen arc 11\e .. City, but .could have better harbours to provide new and may be. ~ound-m trade umons, not taking an adequate part in roads to. get there. There is a enlarged facilities for the some unlvemhes.. governments ~r. political activity, and politieal v~ry.' good need for work on·t~e .2,000 ships which annually usc elsewhere, _If. we arc to retam work at all levels. I feel that l'OI,da th~e, but they have been the harboitr. When the lm; our comp~bl!ve f;ee system an.d, :the benefits of the efforts of to) d .. that although their , need. 'provements have been' complet; our i~dlv1dual IIbert~, for .m busincssm~n are often denied ~ gr~at, the. need elsewhere 111 cd, the port will be able to so~ial!st and commumstlc _co~n· t th . ntry just because they 1ee~ter. "ram sure that iflhe handle an additional 250,000 tr1es, the' liberty of the md•v: a~e ~u~~~essmen. lll!lliSler a.nn!Junced the Go~ern· tons of ,general cargo yeady; dstuaatlc.is secondary to that of the Those, wh. 0 for goo_d, reason. , m.e.n~. \YIS Jo do some paving and this capacity can be en· n •. Dcr e., my delight would onl.Y largcd without further major Reverting for a moment· to .can.n?t actually ·par.llclpale m ~ th f h h · · . pollhcs can do thetr part by tfl)l~l at o t e member ·far additional · installations; At t e formation of a ~ew pohti· striving to solve the problem~ St;,,John's North!" · present the general cargo cal· p_arty in Ca~ada, apparent· through discussion among

'!'HORNE-Born at the Grace Hospital on January 31st, to Mr. and Mrs. Bob Thorne, a baby girl.

DEATHS

AYRE-Passed away at Gen· eral Hospital on H\Ionday, Jan. 30th., after a short illness, Lilliim 1\!ary Ayre, daughter of the late George · and Isabel Ayre. Surviving is one sister, :Mrs. George Dawe. Funeral will take place at 11 a.m. today, Wednesday, February 1st., from Carnell's Funeral Home, 28 Cochrane Street to the General Protestant Cemetery. ·

CHAFE -Passed peacefully away on' February 1st, at his residence, 152 New Gower St., Arnold •Victor Chafe, aged 61 years. He leaves to mourn wife, Molly; four daughters, Geraldine, Virginia (Mrs. Fred Casey), St. John's, Mar ,Ill ric (Mrs. Tony power) and Mar· garet (Mrs. \Vm. Frizzell), of the Goulds; also five brothers, Arch of St. John's, Alfred of Kilbride, John of. the Goulds, Bert and Andrew in the USA, and one sister, ~Irs. Chesley Lynch, . Topsail Road, and ten grandchildren. Funeral notice later. ·

.GENERAL REMARKS· IN himdled annually is 285,000 ly, leaders of th•s party ,plan to ·themselve~. through .participa·. ~()SING: 1t is often claimed. tons ·incoming and 70,000 tons use the compuls?ry chcck-o,ff tion and support for Boards of tb~phe Provincial Governm~nt outgoing. Coal; fish, newsprint .from. '!aJlour umon mem"'~s. Trade and Chambers of Com· ~· progressed· (n the last 12 and petroleum. are the' other .to obtam funds _to·support the1r. merce and by resisting the urge y~rs, but of c~urse, after .. all pril)cipal commodities handled, political amblbons. ~bus, It to Invite Government to solve JARVIS ,.... Passed peacefully th!LGovern!Jient s huge spend· w,hlch bring the annual port' appea!S that labour umon lead· our problems for us, thereby away at the General Hospital i~,Jf there were not some pro- traffic }otals to about 650,000 era wtll·continu~ to pr!!SS Fed-. introducing the rigidity of Gov on Tuesday, January 31st., Eliz. Jr,~s to show the ~onourable t~ns Incoming and 150,000 to'ns era! and Provmclal Govern·. ernment control. abeth Jarvis, aged 81 years, ~mbers shpuld be O)ltl Bllt we 'outgohig. · · ments for m?re fav?urable Ja. As businessmen, we cannot wife of the late John Jarvis of IUIIest more . · .. more done hour- I~gislatlon whlle; at .the afford to stand on the side the Middle Battery. Leaving to flit. the ·unemployment,· for the St. John's ·harbour.- is, 7,000 same time, a~tually campalgt.l; lines and watch our democratic mourn five daughters and two Tritils Canada ·uighway, .and . feet long.and.between.1,000 and under! the gmse of the new and free-enterprise system fall sons. FuneraL will take place there is not enough done. for 2;00o feet wfde: It has a. nar· )J~rty. to .unseat ~hese Govern· apart for· lack· of widespread from Carnell's Funeral Home, tli~· 'fisheries. Economic plan· row exit to. the ··Atlantic Ocean ,men,ts. How. l)aiVe rsn they leadership or knowledge: If we 2B Cochrane St., to St. Joseph's llittg has been rushed into with and is proteCted frofn the At· ,get.. I am certain a large pro· don't face up to the issue~ that Church . for Requiem Ma&s at ~'forethought ... witiJ care-. hiritlc gales· Jiy. cliffs between portiOn of the .Canadians who are before us, then our liberty,: 9.30 a.m. on Thursday, February ful' Gcvernment thinking and ;so~, and. 600. feet high, It . is ·ar~ now members . of trade our way of life, our p?ecious 2nd. Interment at 1\!t. Carmel plannlnr;, THINK WHERE practically ice free. · umons.: will not f~ll for .t~ls hetitnge, will be ·lost for all c_e_m,...e_te_r_Y·_· -----..--NIC.WFOUNDLAND WOULD : · .. : . · : . · deception, but Will excr.clse time. at._.,DA Yl" , . Plans and apecificatlons were th 1r fre d f ch 1 1 th ~ v d f th D · e e om 0 0 ce n e Bciore I hand over the ·Chair

· · · prepare ' or· e. : epartment secret • ballot and continue to to your new Pre~ident, I. wou'l.d ·S·hool ca· t• of Public Works by· the Founda-' support the. Liberal or Conser- ll.kC tol···ncerely thank yiiu (or "' U 10n tion of Canada · Engineering tl p t h h • . . ,va ve ar 1es,_ w o ave, over ·the opportunity .you have given

. . __:_· ' CoiJlorabon Limited · of Mon· the i 1 b h . .!DI~ivers treal. .The compimy will·act as · years, g ve~ a our an ?n· me ·to serve as your Presid'erit.

ourable ~lace m the Ca1,1adtan To the Executive 1\lanagcf, cl'nsultlng engineers· during the way of hfe. . Anthony Ayrc without whom :construction under. 'the . dlrec· . These, then, are som.c· of the nothing' would 'have been possi· lion of U.e Department's Dis· th t b trict Engineer In St. John's, Mr. •ss.ues a . we, as usmessmen b!e, goes my deep appreciation

REPAIRS

REASONABlE RATES GUARANTEED WORK

PHONE .. 94123 and. as citizens, must face. As ·for a job W!!ll done. In the short

G .. E .. Knieht. _busmessmen, Wll mu~t ~ave the space of' time he. bas been with 1 , courage of our convicttons and the Board, he has been an . in· we mus~ on all occasions, stanri spiration · and a driving force up ,for our free way n[ d~ing for us ·all .. Carry on the- goou business. · work! My thanks also go to

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il jii.St b41-,.,,j .... ,,,JIIilt' tb! children

se~onl and traf·

fie on the road is very heavy. The road from · the school

joins Waterfor~ Bridge !toad nn· a !light curvo and at' the bot. tom of an Incline •.

Th~· Newfoundland Gnvcm· 1\!rs. Turner for another fine n:ent recently sponsprcd a un- ycar's.-work.

. '

90 CAMPBELL AVE. '\fter hours • 'PHONE 7313

PHONES 5143. • 5144

Capitol Tomorrow

JON IIALL IN ''~"ORBIDDEN ISLAND" IN COLOR

staclcs as the ·:c_hiscra,". or devii'J "Gunmen From sandstorm, durmg. a Jailbreak · l~riJen for he screen fhght; hoshle Indtans whos~, E. r.~."ltol<:, :·:~e: ., chief, Mangos Coloradas, en· c!.:c~"! ;, .. ·.,, .... ·· .. · gages him in a bloody tomJ· · ha.vk fight and, of course, the gunmen lying in wait in Laretk to finish off the man they one<: had framed for murder.

In "Gun men from Laredo, Knap(l starts off as a youn;;

SPEND A LOT 0~ HERE'S A lit,

rancher ambushed while drivin:; Cut soap biUs to a Jon Hall, one of the screen's his cattle to Laredo. The fusil as many other practical~>n

most popular outdoor adventure lade of gunfire ends with h1 do. Simply stars, returns to the sea in Co wife and foreman dead, · ano for about 11 a lumbia Pictures' "Forbidden Is·' Knapp wounded. In a later gun regular-size can land," opens tomorrow ·at tht fight with one of the Lared' and leftover Capitol Theatre in Columbia killers he slays the man and '· 8 pound;; of Color. He plays a professional framed on a murder charge. ing soap. skin diver who finds murder Obsessed with hatred and au · r,ru;y.tt~·follo;ll> buried in the uncharted water.; overwhelming desire for rc tJons are on every And for just 25¢ of the· South Pacific, dives fpr venge, he breaks jail and, with you a special "sc'ent a million dollar emerald and a beautiful Indian girl as his our" kit ... to locks grips with other skin div- guide, fights his way back acros> colour8powJds ers in a desperate no-holds- the swirling inferno of the des· from Jasmin, vR'~".'ap.\,Jxl

battle. The underwater crt into the angry muzzles of Lavender. Send 2Si thriller features newcomer Nar. the "Gunmen From Laredo." name and address Adams in her motion picture Knapp is said to acquit him with the name or' debut. I self with distinction. Miss Davi. you prefer to:

Hall plays one of several pto· as the fiery and beautiful In Limited, 550 '"sah'e'arb~rooa~i:tl!l fcssionai skin divers recruited dian girl, and Coy, as the prin West, MontreaL for a nautical expedition to re- cipal villain, are reported equal- . cover a fabulous jewel buried ly adept in their roles. --------fathoms deep in the Pacific, i11 the hulk of a sunken ship at the bbttom of the ocean. When one of the divers suspects mur-

and dies underwater, the organizer of the expedition di· verts suspicion to Hail. Il!ore killings follow before Hall and Miss Adams unearth the truth.

"Forbidden Island" was film· ed on location in Hawaii, with its spectacular underwater se­quences photographed in 'Flor­ida's famed and beautiful Sil· ver Springs. In Columbia Color, the many sea scenes, both on and under the water, are said to be breathtakingly beautifuL

Long ide11tified .with tropical island adventure films, Hail is said to be perfectly cast as the skin diver. A beautiful blonde, Miss Adams reportedly rr akes an auspicious motion picture debut as tbe heroine. A Colum­bia Pictures' release, "Forbid­den Island" was written, pro· duccd and directed by Charles B. Griffith.

ADDED ATTRACTION "Gnnmen From Laredo"

corrosion. Keeps cold water cold. Holds heat in hot watc.;r pipes - Saves fuel. Makes all pipes look neat. Stretch tape takes paint easily, does not catch dust. Ideal for . weather strip­ping and many other uses. A young Texas rancher hlts

the most desperate vengeance trail in Southwest history to get the "Gunmen From Laredo,'' in Columbia .. Pictures' outdoor ac· tion drama filmed in Coiumbill Color also opens tomorrow at the Capitol Theatre, the new film feautres Robert Knapp as the embattled rancher, exotic Ceylonese beauty winner Jana Davi as n fiery Indian girl, and Waller Coy as one of tbe gun-

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men from Laredo. ' King's Road-Dial 2916-3916-St. John's As the rancher, Khapp battles

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