12
) I' . l('t\, '1' - . " .. ; 1 , 1 .. ; ' .. • " t "-."- ... ' ."..,., , '." D. d. THE ';SA5IED USED CARS" lit Nova Motors Ltd. . THEDAILYNE Water StJ i::lizabeth Ave . ,\ II forma of Insurance .. _ ...... _ .. -. --------_._----------------- -----_._-_. __ ._ .. _- _._._- .5. Tries To Head Off Laos' Crisis hHlllC (ltn lot's , " ... . , ' , .' \ ',\'1.\. \\ ;" .,' :1,' .....,r ... i PRES. BEN- ZVI LAID TO REST I ,JERUSALEM <Reutersl - I Yitzhak Ben·Zvi, second presi- __ .. dent of Israel, was buried Wed- ., 1 nesduy on a hilt in lIar Hamen- : ouhot Cemetery, west o[ ,Jeru· I salem, beside his father's tomh. Harriman To Hold Talks With Gromyko By JAMES CARY WASHINGTON (AP)-President Kennedy announced Wednesday he is sending a top diplmatic trouble shooter to Moscow to head off the mushroofing crisis in Laos. The defence department, in an accompany- ing display of force, ordered 3,000 U.S. troops and some jet planes into neighboring Thailand for manoeuvres next month. A 21-gun salute was fired as a plain wooden coffin was low· ered into the grave. Ben·Zvi's body was wrapped in a Jewish prayer shawl and Israel's blue· and-white national flag. Kennedy told his press conference State Undersecretary W. Averell Harriman, now in London, will arrive in Moscow this evening IIwith a short message for Premier KhrushChev from me explaining the pur- poses of his trip." I ., .. ' :',.- . "1 "'. ",,'. '\\, " ... : .. , One - hundred girl soldiers placed wreaths on the grave of I the president, who died Tues· . day of cancer. He was 78. lie did not e:{plain further' Laos from military morcs hl" Geneva accol'lls that established 1 ..' the message's contenls. But it I pro-Communist fOI'ces enddil- the present government. .' lIIarble slabs placed 011: had been repoI·ted earlier that gers alt Southeast Asia. I lie agreed that if it should . : tomh, With a. Kennedy Was considel'illg an a!l- i . . i fall tn the Communists .. · lule be.mlllg mscnp·. peal to Khrushchev to He emphaSIZed Laos !s, would he a danger to Thauand ,. I tlOn: Here hes of: stave off renewed civil war in I a sovereign power whose neu-, borders, and increased Reo state Of. Israel \ Itzhak Ben- Laos and the explosive East- 1 trality was guaranteed by 14, pressure on Cambodia. South · may IllS soul be bound up' West crisis that would follow. 1 countrles. including the SOI'iet: Viet Xam and I1Tala..... to bend 11l the hond of life." Harriman wlto has just com. t union, Communist China uncl! tit em tOll'ard Ihe Cummunist I, I' .. pteled mee'tings on Laos with! :lorth Viet Nam through Ihe! world. . The whml of .sH·ens across French Foreign :\linisler Couve I' --- • I had Signalled Ihe oc· I de Murl'iIle and the Earl of S II · gtnnmg of the funeral for Ben· 1 Home British forei"n secI'e- Ac c uses ov R ets .., Zv! .. who de:'otcd his life to 1 tary, 'will confer i; :lIoscow I , I . NEW YORK: FIremen pour water on burning. home In the blaZing South unJhng Ihe tribes of Israel. I with Soviet Foreign :\linister; Sh t ' f St t I I d A '1 20 f b h f' : . 1 Gromyko Kennedy said. 1 sec Ion. 0 a en s an, PrJ as a s?nes 0 tres. st?od 51- i ,', I Of 0 b t whipped the Island. Thousands of homes were Without electriC power for !l10 mtnutes 10 Iflb' l AS I?ANGER., S ru C Ion · ute and wurk hailed through- 1he preSident made It clear , telephones or both as lin'as and poles were burned -(UP I Photo). : out the country for the dura-ll he feels the threat 10 the non· 1 . , lion of the funeral. aligned coalition govcrnment in 'I' CP Irom p.Rculers : to out' proposals for joint nc- _ .• _ ....... _. I LONDON IAP)-Britain has. tion" to uhtain pcace in La05- I accused the SOl'iet rnion uf. where an uneasy truce hdS \ " ," .•• \ . ," '1 0 - 1 ::\ ':llltry ( \..:(1.. L Fanfares, I blocking efforts to prevent a' ruled since fightinl( in the re- I new eruption of full·scale fight. i newed cil'i\ lI'al' stopped Sun- ing in Laos and rapped the Rus- ida)'. ! sians for trying to blame The He said Britain has been United States. i trying to obtain for the Inter- Foreign Secretary Earl of: national Control Cummissioll- I Home s aid Wednesday Ihc 'which Ihe 1962 Ge- Geneva agreement that ended neva agreemcnt-the right to the Laotian civil war last July travel anywhere in Laos. lark Royal Wedding hung in the balance. But he said the commission 1" ::11',"> Ilhroughout the great church 'IS :. ' .. ,: ·"Id Th,' ahbcy bells pealed uut Ihe couple look Iheir vows m '. ' .... the organ thundered Bach's! front of the Archbishop o[ "','" ... ,:11:,". I'n'hllll' and (ugue in E flat I Canterbury, Dr. Michael Ram- ".' "".'" thl' gUI'sls assemhled. se)'-a broad figure in The 14 - nation accords in- -made up of Canada, India and tended to take Laos out of Ihe i Poland-was denied permission cold IVaI' were hailed at that' to go to territory controlled by time as a triumph for I pro - Communist Pathet Lan diplomacy in East-West rei a- i forces. I lions. Red China was among; Home said a proposal to. 1end I' the signers, an Anglo·Soviet peace appeal to ' , .. ,\ r:,·h nn one side were the hridc's a clOUI of gold cope . . : 1\"':' l'l'lalil'l's. Queen Elizabelh and lIe was assisted bv the has- tl1l' British, Danish, IcaHy simple Church 'of England , :','.Ii,',\ 1;IWK and italian roynl families 1 ceremony by half -a - ';"",'11 -llw women in shades of clergymen, including the aa' l _ ".\ 'l\1nisr and yellow. the men in bey's dcan, Dr. Eric Abbott" ", :' ., .. ,' III hl:ll'k nnd grey formnl morning wearing a crimson and gold! . -",' .::,' ,,' 1ll,',',1 dr,'>s. cope made more than 300 years I ...... , ". :",' (;,Ili\lc Ollllo,ite ware the bride- ago for the coronation of King 1 :,". ,": .VI,·:;. family. Scottish lords Charles II. ! ", "-,\ :b,I.I· led by his parents, Chief bridesmaid Princess i ,. ", nil' Earl nnd Countess of Airlie. Anne, 12.year-old daughter ,If I \ (' .• ' j, as second son of Lord the Queen, followed the couple I I "The next few should the Laotian i!overnment failed : show whether the ( I I tn materialize because Gromvl;o i settlement. is to' he allowed 10: on in it 111,,- : survii'e or not." Lord Home: gations that the U.S. is respOll- :, ; told the House of Lords. He said i sible for the crisis. :, I the military drive of pro·Com-: He said the charges "seemed I, i' munist forces greatly jeopar.' to he -lnd , dized the peace pact. ' to prejurll!e the issue before 'I'C , I Home told the House of Lords i had tearnec1 the International " that Gromyko "failed to agree \ Commission's \'iell's. .--- II I iPM, Macnlillan I · i""" :":, " ','1','1: ".! Airlie. is striclly speaking n into the abbey's ancient chancll ... h: .,< Ihem commoner. o{ King Edward the Confessnr 1 :.,... . '.\ :':r llis royal bride was two to sign the register while the I' minules late {or the abbey choir sang anthems. , . .,' T M t Mil. ... h1l' III l'crcmoIlY, ill accordance with 0 ee ay I'· ''',i 'er tradition. The Queen wore an outfit of i . . '" !;,I '. r:: I ":ld,'11 Itcr anil'al oulside was nn· palest green silk organza tOPil ed I S 'd f' d . . . d II - , .. f ,,: I':" nOlll\ced bl' great fanfares of by a close-fitting hat of white TATEN ISLAND, N.Y.: In ml st 0 fire- estroyed home, an umdentlfle ,{, , "',,' :' , 'I 1111'11' trumpels. illld the abbey choir lilies _ Ott - the k - I p:inCC3s I Staten Island family try to salvage what they c:an early April 21st after 'I(·nl·<' : sooal friendships and build good I'. ,... "",;, ' ":,,:\ I:. sail" the hymn Holy, Margare spar c m prImrose ..Y . relations with the two other 1\" · -., ,.':.. .. 1Ioh' 1I01y as she walked embroidered silk and the Queen I a raging forest fire erup.ted here Ap ril 20th, covering a 1 O-square-mlle I tel' Pears?n announced Wedoes- countries in the so-called "ABC .:" . ! , , . I , , , . , . I I, I: . (I I' , " i " , , I , i i I I' II I I i j. I ! , ' 1 . ;!' ; , ' , I " I ! 1 i ,I I , I i , I : 1 , I ·1 j , I , , •. -, .",' :! .. np the aisle-her great Mother in dove-grey beamed I All I' d f' h d 'N Y I C' d I day he wJlI fly to London May triangle" - America, Britain !:\ I bridnl \'eil a casea!1e of mag- happily beneath a.' spray of area, po Ice an Ire ea quarters In ew or ( Ity remaIne on, I for lalks with Prime Minister and Cannda. I, I" nolin colored Ince, falling man- osprey feathers. I alert April 21 st aClainst possible new threats from brush fires.-(UPI 1 Macmillan and go to Hyannis On wednesday, )11'. P(:arson ill f' : ,' . . , ...... ' tilln fashion from her head and ! Port, "'lass., on :\Iay 10 [or a atso: '. : ... ,: r.: 1:11' in n wide six-foot Princess Marina, mother of: Photo). ! meeting with President 1. Kept an eye on the first I'i:·'. ; .. _. " !:', ",-.1 'Ill" 'rain on the crimson carpet the bride, wore a striking tuniS-I .-----... _------.- .... ---- ------- --. -.-. nedy.,. meetings of his new cabinet "'''' .. ,' I'" ", 'l\r hehind. style dress in coppery beige, If'! S I F WIllie. detailed arrangements committee on trade, economics I", . \ ',-, ""'r ,,,,:.11l'1I i, T:\I\E vows with a gleaming copper pict:lrel »' allt core Sees Hope or are shU '0 be made, 'Ill'. and employment. which ap- 1(. " .. :, ,: .: hr,1:\d.: There was dead s i len c I' hat. I Pearson announced tr3vet peared to be shaping up as a I;.: . .. , 1______ 0 P b program for the two big meet- key body in the nelV Liberal "I,': · ••• t "NT'" r l '1 l'd 'n ro e' ings little more than 48 hours government's attack on domes- ... : ::, i':'r" 4 P Prem :e .... 8 12 M -I Z after taking office Monday 2S tic problems . .. .;:" h:uc.\c;tc,' .L " .' REGINA (CPl - The Cana· 1 e one prime minister. 2. Announced that Lucien I',' ,"\::.::"" 11\,," NI. dian people Imve the right to, He promised during the April I Lamourel1l,. 43, l\IP for the ,,, !'.l"cI'::o,i of ,orc,I'lI' know . the cor e ?f Royal I 8 election campaign his first I eastern Ontario constituency o[ r. R M. I Pohce secur-: Que. (CP) -, "The provincial ministers ... 1 moves would be to have per- i Stormont, will be nominated as ;;":Ct' (["""11 1'1'.;. ,t a vor ee t., ng Ilty mvesligalions, Saskatche-I The provinces will be asked ['II': will he invited 10 submit 10 my I' I deputy Speaker of the Commons \'0:+ >,1 '1':;;;"'1' Premier Woodrow Lloyd I ideas 10 include in a nalionall departmcnt at Ihe earliest pos- R I F th when it opens May 16. Mr_ smd Wednesday. .' i fisheries development program, I sible date their provincial aspect II e ease a er i Pearson announced T u e s d aY .. . .1 new Fisheries Minister H. J. I of a program or proposals I'that A I a n l\Iacnaughton of n" DAVE DAVIDSON SMALI.WOOD i Commentmg In Robichaud said Wednesday night. which. when implemented. ':an I Montreal Royal riding J1,\LiFAX (CP1-The prem- Newfoundland .J05-lon a r.ecen! arhcle 10 s He said he ho es that an (:x- give the fisheries or the fishing WELLAND, Ont. (CP) .- John, will be nominated as Speaker. 'iers of the lour Atlantic provo eph Smallwood, II LIberal, smd I magazme on the actlVllles of I' P, industry the 'prominent place it· Smagata, 41, father of £tve chll.! 3 Chose Alexis Caron rt4 :'olP (l\'i> :" . . ..... "'I('rntlt\t'nt inccs fnvor 'a meeting among in 51. John's Wednesday he the RCMP's security and infnr· :xc constal -I' deserves in the expansion of 1ur: dren who were burned to fo;: neighborin" Hull 1953 , r nnl'csnntntl'ves o( the nelv [cd- hadn't heard there was to be a mation \Jranch he sal'(1 reportnd IcstrICted to Canadwn fishermen C d' I'Sunday was released from the 1 d f " b f'h "'-1' !L; U I ,.. ,.... II ana mn economy. . ' ., . j an a ormer mem er 0 e mi\!'I\ with lhh 1I\lar cral Liberal government and Dominion - provmclOl confer- activity . of the RCMP. on -will. be acllleved by lJ1s gov-. lontano Hospital III 1 Quebec legislature, as chief the prol'inces 10 discuss prob., cnce but said. he attend unive!sity campuses "justifies It would rep!ace the, DATA WOULD HELP ,so he could allend government whip, and James lems of mutunl concern. such a meetmg, leavmg the ccrtmn alarm." eXlstmg zone of three mlles from 1 The fisheries. minister said hiS Chlldl en s funeral. E. Walker MP for york Centre . O.n to Ottawa. . " .' . which for,eign fishermen arc II data from the provincial minis- . Weiland police held .Smagatn in ontario'. as deputy whip for Liberal prem- 1 woutd be happy to attend The whole thmg comes I barred. leI's, would hel his departmci\t m custody after £Ire the 13Q Liberal MPs in the new ier Louis Robichaud of New any conference that Mr. Pe3r- to the McCarthy procedures m, i "P then transferred him to Hamil-I Commons. ..... ,:1; Rrunsll'ick says a "summit con. son calls and happy to leave the U.S.A. IV hie h received I lIr. Robichaud, in his first I p.reparc a full .and ton Monday for mental exam ina- : ------ . ference" of the premiers will he that date to him," ],11'. Small- fairly total condemnation from 1 pUblic 'address,' told the Fisher-I slve plan of aclton" to be suo· I tion. The police said Wedncs·. BELLEVILLE, Onto (CPl- , held "shortly." wood said. a large section of Canadians." ies Council of Canada:. ,. milled to cabinet for appro\·al.. day no charges will be laid. : All application by Belleville res- ., .. ti '. ident Charles Delong to unseat ·\pnn, u. 7:03 )I.m. Robichaud said Prime Pea r son hod tele- 'phoned, congratulating him (In "he results of Monday's provln- 'cial election and at the same ; lime saId a meeting among Ihe I ! prol'incesand the federal gov- Executive Assails Corporation Tax Mayor A. McLean Haig for al- leged conflict of interest . was dismissed Tuesday by Prince Edward county Judge Wilrre'd S. Lane. Costs of the action were assessed against Mr. De- long. MI'. Delong's application H" un. I ernment would be held In the. By STEWART MacLEOD accumulatcd profits of compan· •"near future." No dote was set. MONTREAL (CPl-In a preS- ies shoulu' be heavily. p.llI. ! entation that clearly fascinated More . shares should be spread April 30 ! 9 nl y Premier \\raltcr Shaw of .the royal commission on taxa- through Canadian . households, Star . :rmce Edward was 1ub- lion, a company executive of- and these shareholders shouid 'loll.. ntlr the I !OIlS about the .1Y1.sdom of r,n fered Wednesday' a radical plan have· a . bigger· voice in future '''utt Pl1nfls meeltng.. .He for clipping' the "Yings of man- investment. . httll'ttn the 1 in Charlottetown ne ogement and turnmg over more Unless more . Canadians were lllll Sun I \\.os m, favor of Domlnlon·oro- Investment control to averalle allowed· to take part in copitill ., I' \'mcinl talks bllt didn't think It Canadians. investinent "our· people ,viii In . was n good Iden to have th,lm Frank S. Capon, vice'presi- have to 'rely, more and more' on tilf1' . l1.m. i too soon after' the April B dent of Dupont of Canada, Lim- socialistic. handouts." - In.! . 3:t).I I.m. ' federal election. Ited and a chartered account- 'ENCOURAGES 'SPENDING I'.lt JUPHer. " appeared before the six- .He.· told' the· commissil)n, -. O. "The new government at 01- miln commission as a private headed by ,Toronto charterild ..:. ,': 1 I.m. t h I I ''''t$ awa s ou d f rst have the Individual "and an average accountant' Ken net Ii Carter, l.;n 1.\f1 I chance 10 get .Its feel, on the Canadian , ; .. very milch con· that the corporation tax now l ., 8:47 p.m. ground and get its Icgislnti'le ccrned aboul the future' of lUI' results in industrial incfficieney, 111 •• 8:42 P.m. program roiling," the Progres- .c.ountry. lavish .spending and astronomf. -----.:..-1 51vc Conscrvativc prenticrsaid' Corporation taxes should)tc 'cul salaries. .. . In an interview. . . eliminated, said Mr. Capon. 'rhe Because" firms paid roughly " i. 50 per cent of their incomes to! said, "I guess I 11m a rebel I not received and since she must alleged conflict involving the revenue department, I there, too." also pay income tax on' most 'J( I' Hai.g'o position as. of looked on $1 as being worth 50 Before the hearing started, it, she is subject to double MOIra. Schuster Lim I ted,. a cents. Mr. Carter said he arose an taxation . at a time when .he coal c0!'lpany. whIch ·"Expense.account. living, m- hour earlier in the morning so needs the money most. had busmess. WIth :he cluding travel,' club member- he could read the brief a third Estate tax must be paid olf Bay of H(gh SeMol ships, company p I a n e s •. nd time. "Every time I read it I in six years, B.oard, B,!llevII!e General Hos- cars, lavish offices and all the find myse\[ more in line with petal and the CIty, other p'araphenalia of business some of your thoughls," he told The 700,OOo-mel]lber council life. today arc .based on the Mr. Capon. also said that one-hal{ of the i premise that the :Mt'cost after SEI!\){ AMENDMENT estate left by a deceased hus- taxes is Tlie com m iss io n also re- band should be regarded as ; Mr. Capon said many of. hiS ceived a brief from the Na- belonging to the widow "in \lielvs would probably .not be tionalCouncil of· Women which recognition of her contribution shflr.ed by his company .. WIlen caUCCl for amendments to the to the marriage partnership:' TRAIN JjERAILED Commissioner Don a 1 11 .. Grant Estate Tax Act so pensions and said sonie of Mr. Capon's views annuities won't have to be taxed direered ffoin, those. expresseu at their callitalized value, . GRAND .. FALLS. Nfld. (CPl- Heavy snow drifting near Gal! Topsails in central Newfound- land late Monday caused a mi- nor CNR derailment and layed rail tramc throullh" Only $60,000 now can be district for four hours. A plow· deducted. for taxation purposes. attached. to an eastbound o!X- ... The same calculations would nress went off the ralls; dpia'/' hold true when the wife dies ,ing traffic but causing no IQju- hy the Canodian Institute of In 'effect. said the brief,!l Chartered. Accountants'· I a st means' that a widow, must week ,in Ottawa, . Mr, Copon estate tax on capital· she, has first, the council said, (·r.ies.:·; '. . ... l' , . .' , , ,

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Page 1: ~S .5. Tries To Head Off Laos' Crisiscollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · Harriman wlto has just com. t union, Communist China uncl! tit em tOll'ard Ihe Cummunist

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.5. Tries To Head Off Laos' Crisis • •

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.....,r ... i PRES. BEN-ZVI

LAID TO REST I ,JERUSALEM <Reutersl -I Yitzhak Ben·Zvi, second presi-

~~~;:-+ __ '~.~rk.t~:J:~"!~,,~k .. ~t:II ~ dent of Israel, was buried Wed-., 1 nesduy on a hilt in lIar Hamen-

: ouhot Cemetery, west o[ ,Jeru· I salem, beside his father's tomh.

Harriman To Hold Talks With Gromyko

By JAMES CARY

WASHINGTON (AP)-President Kennedy announced Wednesday he

is sending a top diplmatic trouble shooter to Moscow to head off the

mushroofing crisis in Laos. The defence department, in an accompany­

ing display of force, ordered 3,000 U.S. troops and some jet planes into

neighboring Thailand for manoeuvres next month.

A 21-gun salute was fired as a plain wooden coffin was low· ered into the grave. Ben·Zvi's body was wrapped in a Jewish prayer shawl and Israel's blue· and-white national flag.

Kennedy told his press conference State Undersecretary W. Averell

Harriman, now in London, will arrive in Moscow this evening IIwith a short message for Premier KhrushChev from me explaining the pur­

poses of his trip."

I .,

.. '

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",,'. '\\,

"

... : .. ,

One - hundred girl soldiers placed wreaths on the grave of

I the president, who died Tues·

. day of cancer. He was 78. lie did not e:{plain further' Laos from military morcs hl" Geneva accol'lls that established 1 ..' the message's contenls. But it I pro-Communist fOI'ces enddil- the present government.

.' lIIarble slabs wer~ placed 011: had been repoI·ted earlier that gers alt Southeast Asia. I lie agreed that if it should

. : t1~e. tomh, alon~. With a. ~m~lIl Kennedy Was considel'illg an a!l- i . . i fall tn the Communists .. the~. · \~ lule ~tone be.mlllg Ih~ mscnp·. peal to Khrushchev to h~lp' He emphaSIZed ~hat Laos !s, would he a danger to Thauand ,. I tlOn: Here hes p~.es(dent of: stave off renewed civil war in I a sovereign power whose neu-, borders, and increased Reo • th~ state Of. Israel \ Itzhak Ben- Laos and the explosive East- 1 trality was guaranteed by 14, pressure on Cambodia. South · ~\'I. may IllS soul be bound up' West crisis that would follow. 1 countrles. including the SOI'iet: Viet Xam and I1Tala..... to bend

11l the hond of life." Harriman wlto has just com. t union, Communist China uncl! tit em tOll'ard Ihe Cummunist

I, I'

• .. pteled mee'tings on Laos with! :lorth Viet Nam through Ihe! world. . The whml of .sH·ens across ~he French Foreign :\linisler Couve I' ---

• I

c~llm.lry had Signalled Ihe oc· I de Murl'iIle and the Earl of S II · gtnnmg of the funeral for Ben· 1 Home British forei"n secI'e- Ac c uses ov R ets

• .., ~ Zv! .. who de:'otcd his life to 1 tary, 'will confer i; :lIoscow I , I . NEW YORK: FIremen pour water on burning. home In the blaZing South unJhng Ihe tribes of Israel. I with Soviet Foreign :\linister;

Sh t ' f St t I I d A '1 20 • f b h f' : . 1 Gromyko Kennedy said. 1 ~re sec Ion. 0 a en s an, PrJ as a s?nes 0 r~s tres. Pe~ple ev~rywh.ere st?od 51- i ,', I Of 0 b t t· whipped the Island. Thousands of homes were Without electriC power lent\~ for !l10 mtnutes 10 Iflb' l SE~~ AS I?ANGER., S ru C Ion · ute and wurk hailed through- 1he preSident made It clear ~

, .;~,. o~ telephones or both as lin'as and poles were burned -(UP I Photo). : out the country for the dura-ll he feels the threat 10 the non· 1 . , lion of the funeral. aligned coalition govcrnment in 'I' CP Irom p.Rculers : to out' proposals for joint nc-_ .• _ ....... _. I LONDON IAP)-Britain has. tion" to uhtain pcace in La05-

I accused the SOl'iet rnion uf. where an uneasy truce hdS

\

" ," l~ .••

\ . ,"

'10-1::\ ':llltry ( ~ \..:(1.. ~ L

Fanfares, I blocking efforts to prevent a' ruled since fightinl( in the re­

I new eruption of full·scale fight. i newed cil'i\ lI'al' stopped Sun­ing in Laos and rapped the Rus- ida)'.

! sians for trying to blame The ~ He said Britain has been United States. i trying to obtain for the Inter-

Foreign Secretary Earl of: national Control Cummissioll- I Home s aid Wednesday Ihc 'which sup~rvises Ihe 1962 Ge­Geneva agreement that ended neva agreemcnt-the right to the Laotian civil war last July travel anywhere in Laos. lark Royal Wedding hung in the balance. But he said the commission

1" ::11',"> ta,"'~tl'ic~. Ilhroughout the great church 'IS :. ~ ' .. ,: ·"Id Th,' ahbcy bells pealed uut Ihe couple look Iheir vows m

'. ' .... ".,~ .,:\~(" ~\ltl the organ thundered Bach's! front of the Archbishop o[ "','" ~ ... ,:11:,". I'n'hllll' and (ugue in E flat ~s I Canterbury, Dr. Michael Ram­".' "".'" ~",:d thl' gUI'sls assemhled. se)'-a broad maje~tic figure in

The 14 - nation accords in- -made up of Canada, India and tended to take Laos out of Ihe i Poland-was denied permission cold IVaI' were hailed at that' to go to territory controlled by time as a triumph for I pro - Communist Pathet Lan

diplomacy in East-West rei a- i forces. I lions. Red China was among; Home said a proposal to. 1end I'

the signers, an Anglo·Soviet peace appeal to '

, .. ,\ r:,·h nn one side were the hridc's a clOUI of gold cope . . : 1\"':' l'l'lalil'l's. Queen Elizabelh and lIe was assisted bv the has-

tl1l' British, ~or\\'egian, Danish, IcaHy simple Church 'of England , :','.Ii,',\ 1;IWK and italian roynl families 1 ceremony by half - a - doz~n

';"",'11 -llw women in shades of ~\lr- clergymen, including the aa' l _ ".\ ~>lll1 'l\1nisr and yellow. the men in bey's dcan, Dr. Eric Abbott" ", :' ., .. ,' III hl:ll'k nnd grey formnl morning wearing a crimson and gold!

. -",' .::,' ,,' 1ll,',',1 dr,'>s. • cope made more than 300 years I ...... , ". :",' (;,Ili\lc Ollllo,ite ware the bride- ago for the coronation of King 1

:,". ,": .VI,·:;. .~r""I1\·~ family. Scottish lords Charles II. ! ", "-,\ :b,I.I· ~l1d l~dic$ led by his parents, Chief bridesmaid Princess i

,. ", '.:~' ~\''''1l' nil' Earl nnd Countess of Airlie. Anne, 12.year-old daughter ,If I \ (' .• ' ,~H' j, Ogil\'~', as second son of Lord the Queen, followed the couple I

I "The next few day~ should the Laotian i!overnment failed : show whether the ( Gene\'~ I I tn materialize because Gromvl;o i settlement. is to' he allowed 10: insist~d on in~ludin~ in it 111,,-: survii'e or not." Lord Home: gations that the U.S. is respOll- :, ; told the House of Lords. He said i sible for the crisis. :, I the military drive of pro·Com-: He said the charges "seemed I, i' munist forces greatly jeopar.' to he lIn~ubstantiated -lnd I:~ , dized the peace pact. ' to prejurll!e the issue before 'I'C ,

I Home told the House of Lords i had tearnec1 the International " • that Gromyko "failed to agree \ Commission's \'iell's.

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iPM, Macnlillan I

· i""" :":, " ','1','1: ".! Airlie. is striclly speaking n into the abbey's ancient chancll ... h: .,< Ihem commoner. o{ King Edward the Confessnr 1

:.,... . '.\ :':r llis royal bride was two to sign the register while the I'

minules late {or the abbey choir sang anthems. , . .,' T M t Mil. ... h1l' III l'crcmoIlY, ill accordance with 0 ee ay I'·

''',i 'er tradition. The Queen wore an outfit of i . . '" !;,I '. r:: I ":ld,'11 Itcr anil'al oulside was nn· palest green silk organza tOPiled I S 'd f' d . . . d II

- ~ , .. f ,,: I':" nOlll\ced bl' great fanfares of by a close-fitting hat of white TATEN ISLAND, N.Y.: In ml st 0 fire- estroyed home, an umdentlfle ,{, , "',,' :' ;~.. , 'I 1111'11' ~ trumpels. illld the abbey choir lilies _ Ott - the

k-I "d·all~Y. p:inCC3s I Staten Island family try to salvage what they c:an early April 21st after OTTAB\Y\'AJA~(ICEpS)~pErLI'mSOeN 'I(·nl·<' : sooal friendships and build good I'.

, ... "",;, ' ":,,:\ I:. ~oftl~. sail" the hymn Holy, Margare spar c m prImrose • ..Y . relations with the two other 1\" · -., ,.':.. .. ~""!::111.! 1Ioh' 1I01y as she walked embroidered silk and the Queen I a raging forest fire erup.ted here Ap ril 20th, covering a 1 O-square-mlle I tel' Pears?n announced Wedoes- countries in the so-called "ABC .:"

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, , •. -, .",' :! .. ~!'!Il')' ~ltll;.i). np the aisle-her great Mother in dove-grey beamed I All I' d f' h d 'N Y I C' • d I day he wJlI fly to London May triangle" - America, Britain !:\ I bridnl \'eil a casea!1e of mag- happily beneath a.' spray of area, po Ice an Ire ea quarters In ew or ( Ity remaIne on, I for lalks with Prime Minister and Cannda. I, I"

nolin colored Ince, falling man- osprey feathers. I alert April 21 st aClainst possible new threats from brush fires.-(UPI 1 Macmillan and go to Hyannis On wednesday, )11'. P(:arson ill f' : ,' .

. , ...... ' ~Il" tilln fashion from her head and ~ ! Port, "'lass., on :\Iay 10 [or a atso: '. : ... ,: r.: 1:11' ~prcndin~ in n wide six-foot Princess Marina, mother of: Photo). ! meeting with President K~n- 1. Kept an eye on the first I'i:·'. ;

.. _. " !:', ",-.1 'Ill" 'rain on the crimson carpet the bride, wore a striking tuniS-I .-----... _------.-.... ---- ------- --. -.-. nedy.,. meetings of his new cabinet I'I,!~;: .~ "'''' .. ,' I'" ", 'l\r hehind. style dress in coppery beige, If'! S I F WIllie. detailed arrangements committee on trade, economics I",

. \ ',-, ""'r ,,,,:.11l'1I i, T:\I\E vows with a gleaming copper pict:lrel »' allt core Sees Hope or are shU '0 be made, 'Ill'. and employment. which ap- 1(. ~';:": " ~ .. :, ,: .: hr,1:\d.: There was dead s i len c I' hat. I Pearson announced hi~ tr3vet peared to be shaping up as a I;.:

. !~.:::,).( .. , 1______ 0 P b program for the two big meet- key body in the nelV Liberal "I,': · ••• ::~ t "NT'" r l '1 l'd 'n ro e' ings little more than 48 hours government's attack on domes- ... :

~ ~"':.:: .,:~''',: ::, i':'r" 4 P Prem :e .... 8 12 M -I Z after taking office Monday 2S tic problems . .. ,\.:~ .;:" h:uc.\c;tc,' .L " .' REGINA (CPl - The Cana· 1 e one prime minister. 2. Announced that Lucien

I',' ,"\::.::"" 11\,," NI. • • dian people Imve the right to, • He promised during the April I Lamourel1l,. 43, l\IP for the ,,, !'.l"cI'::o,i of ,orc,I'lI' know . the ~ cor e ?f Royal I 8 election campaign his first I eastern Ontario constituency o[ r. ~~~(:":;. inlrtC~lr R M. I ~anad.Jan ~ou~ted Pohce secur-: ~IONTEBELLO. Que. (CP) -, "The provincial ministers ... 1 moves would be to have per- i Stormont, will be nominated as ;;":Ct' (["""11 1'1'.;. ,t a vor ee t., ng Ilty mvesligalions, Saskatche-I The provinces will be asked ['II': will he invited 10 submit 10 my I' ~-------- I deputy Speaker of the Commons

\'0:+ >,1 '1':;;;"'1' ~I~d "w~n Premier Woodrow Lloyd I ideas 10 include in a nalionall departmcnt at Ihe earliest pos- R I F th when it opens May 16. Mr_ smd Wednesday. .' i fisheries development program, I sible date their provincial aspect II e ease a er i Pearson announced T u e s d aY

.. . .1 new Fisheries Minister H. J. I of a program or proposals I'that A I a n l\Iacnaughton of n" DAVE DAVIDSON SMALI.WOOD AGREE~BLE i Commentmg In ~n mtcrv(e~v Robichaud said Wednesday night. which. when implemented. ':an I Montreal ~Iount Royal riding

J1,\LiFAX (CP1-The prem- Newfoundland pre~ler .J05-lon a r.ecen! arhcle 10 ~1~~lean s He said he ho es that an (:x- give the fisheries or the fishing WELLAND, Ont. (CP) .- John, will be nominated as Speaker. 'iers of the lour Atlantic provo eph Smallwood, II LIberal, smd I magazme on the actlVllles of I' P, industry the 'prominent place it· Smagata, 41, father of £tve chll.! 3 Chose Alexis Caron rt4 :'olP

(l\'i> :" . . ..... "'I('rntlt\t'nt ~n\l\\,

inccs fnvor 'a meeting among in 51. John's Wednesday he the RCMP's security and infnr· :xc ~slve constal I~-mll~-zone -I' deserves in the expansion of 1ur: dren who were burned to deat~: fo;: neighborin" Hull si~ce' 1953

, rnnl'csnntntl'ves o( the nelv [cd- hadn't heard there was to be a mation \Jranch he sal'(1 reportnd IcstrICted to Canadwn fishermen C d' I'Sunday was released from the 1 d f " b f'h "'-1' !L; U • • I ,.. ,.... • • • • II ana mn economy. . ' ., . j an a ormer mem er 0 ~ e mi\!'I\ with

lhh 1I\lar ~1 cral Liberal government and Dominion - provmclOl confer- activity . of the RCMP. on -will. be acllleved by lJ1s gov-. lontano Hospital III Hamllt~n 1 Quebec legislature, as chief the prol'inces 10 discuss prob., cnce but said. he woul~ attend unive!sity campuses "justifies er.~~enl. It would rep!ace the, DATA WOULD HELP \~edne~da.y ,so he could allend government whip, and James lems of mutunl concern. such a meetmg, leavmg the ccrtmn alarm." eXlstmg zone of three mlles from 1 The fisheries. minister said hiS Chlldl en s funeral. E. Walker MP for york Centre lem~eratures .

NI~hl O.n ~1'n ~"

d~~e to Ottawa. . " .' . which for,eign fishermen arc II data from the provincial minis- . Weiland police held .Smagatn in ontario'. as deputy whip for ~el\'lv.elected Liberal prem- 1 woutd be happy to attend The whole thmg comes c1o~e I barred. leI's, would hel his departmci\t m custody after t~e £Ire a~d the 13Q Liberal MPs in the new

ier Louis Robichaud of New any conference that Mr. Pe3r- to the McCarthy procedures m, i "P then transferred him to Hamil-I Commons.

..... ,:1; ~R Rrunsll'ick says a "summit con. son calls and happy to leave the U.S.A. IV hie h received I lIr. Robichaud, in his first I p.reparc a full .and comprehe~- ton Monday for mental exam ina- : ------

. ference" of the premiers will he that date to him," ],11'. Small- fairly total condemnation from 1 pUblic 'address,' told the Fisher-I slve plan of aclton" to be suo· I tion. The police said Wedncs·. BELLEVILLE, Onto (CPl­, held "shortly." wood said. a large section of Canadians." ies Council of Canada:. ,. milled to cabinet for appro\·al.. day no charges will be laid. : All application by Belleville res-., .. ~\ ti

'. .I~ ident Charles Delong to unseat

·\pnn, u. 7:03 )I.m.

~fr. Robichaud said Prime ~linister Pea r son hod tele­

'phoned, congratulating him (In "he results of Monday's provln­'cial election and at the same ; lime saId a meeting among Ihe I ! prol'incesand the federal gov-

Executive Assails Corporation Tax Mayor A. McLean Haig for al­leged conflict of interest . was dismissed Tuesday by Prince Edward county Judge Wilrre'd S. Lane. Costs of the action were assessed against Mr. De­long. MI'. Delong's application

H" un. I ernment would be held In the. By STEWART MacLEOD accumulatcd profits of compan· • "near future." No dote was set. MONTREAL (CPl-In a preS- ies shoulu' be heavily. tax~d.

~:~j p.llI. ! entation that clearly fascinated More . shares should be spread April 30 ! 9nly Premier \\raltcr Shaw of .the royal commission on taxa- through Canadian . households, Star . :rmce Edward Isl~nd was 1ub- lion, a company executive of- and these shareholders shouid

'loll.. ntlr the ~Ioon I !OIlS about the .1Y1.sdom of r,n fered Wednesday' a radical plan have· a . bigger· voice in future '''utt Pl1nfls III~medlatc meeltng.. .He s~ld for clipping' the "Yings of man- investment. .

httll'ttn the 1 \~ edn~sdny in Charlottetown ne ogement and turnmg over more Unless more . Canadians were lllll Sun I \\.os m, favor of Domlnlon·oro- Investment control to averalle allowed· to take part in copitill hi~tn ., I' \'mcinl talks bllt didn't think It Canadians. investinent "our· people ,viii

~1lr~1 In . was n good Iden to have th,lm Frank S. Capon, vice'presi- have to 'rely, more and more' on tilf1' . 8.~6 l1.m. i too soon after' the April B dent of Dupont of Canada, Lim- socialistic. handouts." -

r~1:! In.! . 3:t).I I.m. ' federal election. Ited and a chartered account- 'ENCOURAGES 'SPENDING I'.lt JUPHer. " an~ appeared before the six- .He.· told' the· commissil)n,

-. • O. "The new government at 01- miln commission as a private headed by ,Toronto charterild ..:. ,': 1 I.m. t h I I ''''t$ awa s ou d f rst have the Individual "and an average accountant' Ken net Ii Carter,

l.;n 1.\f1 I chance 10 get .Its feel, on the Canadian , ; .. very milch con· that the corporation tax now 1.~ l ., 8:47 p.m. ground and get its Icgislnti'le ccrned aboul the future' of lUI' results in industrial incfficieney,

111 •• 8:42 P.m. program roiling," the Progres- .c.ountry. lavish .spending and astronomf. -----.:..-1 51vc Conscrvativc prenticrsaid' Corporation taxes should)tc 'cul salaries. .. . In an interview. . . eliminated, said Mr. Capon. 'rhe I· Because" firms paid roughly

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50 per cent of their incomes to! said, "I guess I 11m a rebel I not received and since she must alleged conflict involving May~r the revenue department, th~y I there, too." also pay income tax on' most 'J( I' Hai.g'o position as. pre~ident of looked on $1 as being worth 50 Before the hearing started, it, she is subject to double MOIra. Schuster Lim I ted,. a cents. Mr. Carter said he arose an taxation . at a time when .he Bel1evll1~ coal c0!'lpany. whIch

·"Expense.account. living, m- hour earlier in the morning so needs the money most. had busmess. deahn~s WIth :he cluding travel,' club member- he could read the brief a third Estate tax must be paid olf Bay of QUl~te H(gh SeMol ships, company p I a n e s •. nd time. "Every time I read it I in six years, B.oard, B,!llevII!e General Hos-cars, lavish offices and all the find myse\[ more in line with petal and the CIty, other p'araphenalia of business some of your thoughls," he told The 700,OOo-mel]lber council life. today arc .based on the Mr. Capon. also said that one-hal{ of the i premise that the :Mt'cost after SEI!\){ AMENDMENT estate left by a deceased hus-taxes is insignificant.'~ Tlie com m iss io n also re- band should be regarded as ; Mr. Capon said many of. hiS ceived a brief from the Na- belonging to the widow "in \lielvs would probably .not be tionalCouncil of· Women which recognition of her contribution shflr.ed by his company .. WIlen caUCCl for amendments to the to the marriage partnership:'

TRAIN JjERAILED

Commissioner Don a 1 11 .. Grant Estate Tax Act so pensions and said sonie of Mr. Capon's views annuities won't have to be taxed direered ffoin, those. expresseu at their callitalized value, ~ .

GRAND .. FALLS. Nfld. (CPl­Heavy snow drifting near Gal! Topsails in central Newfound­land late Monday caused a mi­nor CNR derailment and d~­layed rail tramc throullh" ~he

Only $60,000 now can be district for four hours. A plow· deducted. for taxation purposes. attached. to an eastbound o!X- ...

The same calculations would nress went off the ralls; dpia'/' hold true when the wife dies ,ing traffic but causing no IQju-hy the Canodian Institute of In 'effect. said the brief,!l

Chartered. Accountants'· I a st means' that a widow, must pa~; week ,in Ottawa, . Mr, Copon estate tax on capital· she, has first, the council said, (·r.ies.:·; '.

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Page 2: ~S .5. Tries To Head Off Laos' Crisiscollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · Harriman wlto has just com. t union, Communist China uncl! tit em tOll'ard Ihe Cummunist

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=-TilE IlAILY NEWS, ST, JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, APRIL 25, 1963 ':-':'; ,~ ,

~ngo Paradox ,. .-

Colonialism Lingers C;apitol

Today

And Maybe It Should "TIlE INTE,RNS" Probing into the private and

professional lives of young doc­tors interning at a great hos­pital, the Columbia Pictures' rclease, "The Interns" now playing today at the Capitol Theatre,

lIy WARn C'ANEL they want to?-nfter genera, l.EIll'llUWILLE, Congo Re, lions of not bcing allowed to."

lluhlil" puhlic (NEA) - Thc Says an Israeli diplomat: wllnl hall ~pl"l'atl across thc "Frequently Congolese come lnlll~ry dt~' that this particular 10 my office and Ilsk me to scml butl'1tcry had a supply of meat. settlers, Doubtless they do the

I Aud ~,\, h)' 1\ a,111. the sidewalk same with other nations' rcpro­~nll mIlch "f the street were senta\ivcs, It is very hard to \'1'011,11',1 with 1'3!:CI' Congolcse, cxplain that one is not a colon­raeh holding a fbtful of francs izer without hurting their feci­~tlll waiting iml1atiently for thc ings," ~Il'n' ", "p,'n, In large mcasure, this is tes-

1l w"~ only l'oinridcncc that timony to the heritagc Belgium the \\,hit,' woman ani\'cd as Icft bchind in 1960 when she the Imtdwl' was opl'niuil his pnllcd out of the Cong(}-a 11001'1', nut ill tlmt moment thc country totally dependent on 1,1 ad; l'roll'd grew silent and whitc man's gOl'ernment, tcch-

I \'.1tled hl mnk~ an aisle fOl' nique and supervision. ""1', And it is a story man U,N,

Aft,'r Ihu'l' ~'l'at's of inde· pCllpc-both at headquarters l'l'tlll~tll'l' 11\ thl' Rt'11Uhlic of herc and in thc spccialized the 1','11;:11, whitl' pcople still agcncics-like to tell at length. ):11 fint, l\,lnnialism dOL'; not I "It is shameful and true," rii" Iw l'n,l'lalll:ltioll, 1t'~ rem- sal's one thoughtful technical , , . nUlls d,'~ mllst of lhl' Cungo's 'c~pert. "But it is no excuse hft'l i Ill' lI'day, for snddenly, throwing out

"\"'I1,~,'1t's,' ckl'h'(lnil's tech- el'erything Belgian. Only now, lIirian, ar.' as l!lHlII as nny· aftcr 30 months hcre, arc U,N. \II,d)<' ,a~'s 1l1l' r,x.'s Intel'- personnel beginning to thinl: lI.1li,\nal TI'lI'I','mlllnnirat ion s thcre may be somc merit in \'1I\I1n mi»ion dtirf Santiago finding out how the Bclr.inns llllii.1n.!", Ill'\\' w;litillg for his were running things as a means fll1-t .-la,s of ~r:td\l:ttcs tll cume of helping the' Congo to learn I'a," fr"111 EUnl\ll':tn training to take responsibility," ~('Im"", If the opinion of the Congo-

"Th,'~' ";111 l'l'\'ail' anything lese counts for anything, he "hl' '1111'st't'n is. hOWl'IW. do has popular support on his side,

TYPISTS SCHOOL: The students walk for miles.

Most of the Congolese qUericd by this reporter have a grcat respect for the Belgians-or say thcy d(}-and look to Brus­scls as their ideal of gOI'ern­ment and civilization, Sal'S Ed­uard Kapope, 23, and just back from a fellowship in public ad­ministration in the U,S,:

"It was a very enlightening experience and I learned a lot. But it is going to' be rather difficult to try to introduce American government proc~d­ures into my country which is much more at home with the Belgian,"

This is not to say that Bel­gium's way has been the right way, At independence, there were only 23 college graduates In a popUlation of 14 million. Local farming was set up around a service center staffed entirey by Belgian technicians whose departure has sent this rich country into desperate famine.

Sincere U,N, people say, too, that many of the Belgian tech­nicians who stayed on' have sabotaged U,N. efforls to put the Congo back on its feet by mlmdvising and misdirecting.

The fact remains that the U.N. civilian operation has a seemingly herculean job ahead of it.

Not the least of its problems is the virulent black market in both goods and money that infects the country, U,N. cigar­ettes, ostensibly on sale only to U,N. personncl, are avail­ablc at every strcet corner.

Most cruel of all is the un­derground in pharmaceuticals that leaves World Health Organ­ization hospitals and clinics in constant short supply because of an unpoliced back door.

And for all the steadfast, quiet patience of its civilian operations chief S. Habib Ah­med, the ,U,N. is also beset by raw nerves,

Specialized agencics ask ir­ritably why headquarters hasn't provided more transportation and bctter housing facilities for technical experts, Head. quarters personnel snap back that the quality of experts could stand to be improved. But with fewer than 1,000 U ,N. experts trying to do the job vacated by 4,000 Belgians, the collisions have been sur­prisingly minor.

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Less undcrstandable is the U,N.'s attitude toward Ute press which shows Itself in part by a refuSal to provide U,N, plane scats-when they arc empty­to correspondents who want to sec inaccessiblc provincial areas,

"Well, for one thing," a head· quarters official told this re­porter, "we are not a nation

SINJI: From ~ouseboy to factory manager in three years, and so cannot count on the pa· triotism of correspondents to help us in the reporting of a situation. We are faced in many cases with represcntatives of pUblications that arc openly hostile to us,"

But for all the U,N.'s internal rumblings, the biggest obstacle to making the Congo a self­reliant nation in her public services is the Congolese,

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LISALA • • STANLlYVILLI

LULIJAIOURti •

Sometime this year, for ex­ample, the first 20 Congolese doctors will be coming back from their education in 'Europe. What can be expected of them?

"They arc under moral obli­gation to go into the public health service," says a teacher at Louvanium University. "But I suspect that many will go into politics instead."

On the other hand, there are some hopeful signs in Congo­lese response to U .N, help.

In the School for Clerical Skills run by the International Labor Organization in an old apartment, clerks and typists from both the public and pri­vate sector take two afternoons each week to learn office skills and procedures and grammati­cal French. And as the class often runs well into the even­ing, many of the students have to walk the several miles to their homes.

Also hopeful Is the experl­ence of Maurice Alhadeff, in­dustrialist, entrepreneur and patron to some 3,000 Congolese throughout the cDuntry.

Alhadeff's shirt factory is staffed and run entirely by'Con­golese undcr the foremanship of a mnn named SinH, who, at independence, was a houseboy, Alhadeff's plastic factory is run entirely by Congolese who, un­til three months ago, had never seen an Injection-molding ma­chine, Alhadeff's art atelier, completely Congolese, turns out statues, woodwork and paint­ings sold all over. the world,

It is a factory-wide pilot­projcct in self-reliarice for the Congo. Unfortunately it ends at AlhadcIf's office where other Congolese - policemen, sales­men, government functionaries and just plain folks-wait in line for the hand·out they know he will give.

"What can you do?" Alhadeff asks, "I'm their father."

According to filmdom, "The Interns" is one of the out­standing motion pictures of the year. A wild New Ycar's Eve party of interns and nurscs, and the birth 01 a baby, are sharply contrasting dramatic highlights in the film.

The large cast of stars in­cludes Michael Callan and Nick Adams as the interns; Suzy Parker, Hayda Harareet, Anne Helm and Stefanie Powers as the girls; Buddy Ebsen, Telly Savalas and Kay Stevens,

Callan, dancer - turned· actor plays an opportunistic young doctor who romances an older woman, to help him make a valuable contact in the medical world, even as hll has an affair with lIIiss Helm,

Robertson, on the other hand, throws away his career for love of the beautiful Suzy Parker, who plays a fashion model who has become pregnant. Mac­Arthur, Robertson's friend and fellow doctor, is responsible for Robertson's expulsion from the hospital and from medicine when he reveals his room­mate has stolen drugs to help Miss Parker halt her preg­nancy.

Nick Adams, of "The Rebel" TV fame, plays a money-hungry young doctor who is changed by a brief encounter with a beautiful, but incurable, pa­tient. Haya Harareet, the Israeli actress who flashed to world prominence in "Ben·Hur", is seen as a European doctor who must fight to overcome the pre­judice against women surgeons on the part of the hospital chief of surgery, Telly Savalas, Stefanie Powers, as the student nurse who falls in love with MacArthur; Buddy Edson, as the hospital's medical super­visor, and Kay Stevens as a flip nurse, also star.

"The Interns", base dOll Rich­ard Frede's novel, was written for the screen by Walter New­man and David Swift. The Co­lumbia release was directed hy Swift for producer Robert Cohn,

Bugs Bunny's Creator ,In

Retirement HANEY, B.C, ICP) - The

father of Bugs Bunny lives in quiet retirement in this Frascr Valley community, still getting an occasional chuckle from watching some of his famous brain-children on television.

Charles Thorson now is 72 and has lon,~ since put his cartooning days behind him.

From his fertile imagination came such well-known charac­tcrs as Little Hiawatha, The Lady Known as Loo, Elmer the Eiephant, Toughie the 'figer, Sniffles the Mouse and many others. He also was part of the team which creatcd Walt Dis­ney's Seven Dwarfs.

Mr. Thorson's cartooning ca­reer started shortly after 1935 when' he quit a Winnipeg photo­engraving firm and headed for Hollywood with samples of his cartoon work.

He stopped at the Disney studios whel'e he was offered a two-year contract to create character models for animated cartoons,

The contract began a happy association between Mr_ Thor­son, Walt Disney and other stUdios and brought hours of laughter to millions of people.

At different times he worked lor Metro G 0 I d w y n Mayer, Warner Brothers' Merry Mel­ody studio and the Terrytoon studio_

"My job was to create a character sui tab lefor the story," recalls Mr. Thorson. .. After creating the character, I then had to supply model sheets showing different views of the body, and action sheets showing the character's differ· ent actions, such as running, jumping and falling .

"It was a pleasant job_ I enjoyed It."

When completed, the sheets were. given to the animators to create the film from the mod­els.

Mr. Thorson never attended art school, nor did he take- any formal training in art. He says that drawing cartoons seemed to come naturally to him and he started to uketch cartoon char­acters in his childhood,

During his early years in Winnipeg, where he was born, he turned out cartoons for the

RESCUERS HONORED Winnipeg Free Press and other PITTSBt:RG H (CP) - Two newspapers.

Quebec youths. who rescued' a His father was Stephen Thor­man and his wife from drowp- son, one-time mayor and police ing in the Trois Pistoles River magistrate of Glmll, Man. One in June, 1961, received bronze of his brothers is Mr, Justice medals and awards of $350 each J. T, Th,)rson, head of the from the Carnegie Hero Fonn- Exchequer Court of Can~da, daUo n Tuesday. Laureat Veil. His other brotber, John, lives leux, 20, and Jean-Paul Le- In Calgary. vesque, 19, both of Riviere Trois -------Pistoles, were _ cited for the r~s- Orchid corsages have little cue of Mr. and Mrs. Onil Lar- odor since the odor dies after viee. cutting,

stamp phm,

Cario, Ininois~ I 't L' • 1 1 sn ,ICl{enl

CAIRO, lll, - (NEAl-This, amon~ mc,cilants, Who welcom.! Right nn',I', r«d'r.tl once·prosperous city at the I cd any program which could h~\'e the k"i!l~ tr.at ' juncture of the Ohio and ~lissi· bolster sluggish h!lsine~s, lic:(ing thr rr~ib::;· ssippi rivers has bcen taking an I The Cairo plan generally dif. bal'c de'te::,:e:1 lIP\J . economic licking for the past 40 I fers from commercial plens in' licKin~ I:;<H C,iro ' ........ ,...,..,..,,...,....,...'I"'"'T-r-.,.'...,.....,., ,the amount which a mcrch~nt

! must pay for his stemps, The ~ cost in commercial slamp pro· \ grams can run as higl; as 3L~ : pel' cent of a store's gross sales, , Thc Cairo plan is set up on a 12 PCI' cent fee, This figurc may be I'eliuceli to as little as 1'" pel' cent within a ),car or two, F()~'(;!!T 1\ ~n!'J1I

The lower CO,it is possible be,· "iO\ntl-:,iL .1.'1' ~ causc the program is nonpron!' ick 'n"'m~I.' .1,'",\ i: ' After overhead, the money plicl the, oidt~,: m,_';]]!"::·' r:':'.i

" by the store~ is plowcd dircctly Mnc21l \';:,,' 1',:,':,:", : into premiums for the custom· Eon, d:cd \\'l"i::e;i:",-, , crs. tnl nfkr ~1 r~·:~-..ti'1Y'''' 1 Cairo W(lS once a hooming: in ~r~).ntrc:d. \1:': .j(~.~~ ~ ril'er towo with a population of i bJH:J"tlll "I i,lh,.'­n~arlv 20,OCO, :-io'oV, parked in i1h:llncll I:,,' 'miC,; thc h'enrt of a 'distresscd area," Afnca at tile a~e of 1, its popuiation has dropped to 9,300,

Its merchants depend heal'ily fan)r ~:1l011~ a~(ifnl; CAIRO STAMP: Capitalizing I "nd qirel' tlll'" 'It'. on a national mania. on business from surroun( ing i" I ') , ,,' ,,'

i communities, ~Ionthl)' retail I ~S« __ l)' tll" Homa:; years, Now, its citizcns are lick- ,slles stand at slightly morc ing stamps to bring it back to· than $1 million, Now the Retail I ,~~~ health. :lIerchants Assn" hopes to dou-, i

Cairo (rhymes with pharaoh) hie that figure with the stamp i

is capitalizing on the nation· plnn, . widc trading stamp mania with Other rommunitics hal'c its own cooperative program! shown intcrest in the Cairo pro .• Stores since March I hal'e been i gram. but the most electrified' offering 'Cairo Stamps," If sue-I of all hal'c been the commerdal : cessful it couid set a pattern: stam!) men, I

for othcr cities which eOlild i ;\\'I,I];e to the l1o"ible threat; giVe nightmares to commercial I that , !lei; an, indeprmlent pla,n I trading stamp men, poses for thell' l1iltwn\\'lde busl· ,

The idea began with the ness, representatives of scverai: Cairo Chamber of Commercc, stJmp plan, haw deiccntled on , and found strong backing with thc t01l'1l recently to woo mcr­the editor of the city's new,-. chants to their programs, How I

papcr, "The Evening Citizen," i successful they have been is not! They found an eager response: elc;:r at this stage. :_. __________ _

liThe best in beer

oI~e! light! satisfying! FREE HOME DELIVERY

ST. JOHN'S: Phone 8·0251 (5 Lines) GANDER: K. J. Griffin Ltd" Phone 8·2387 GRAND FAJ.I.S: Bond Beverages Ltd" Phone 2146 BELL ISLAND: Tom Murphy, Phone 2186

THE 'BENNETT BREWING CO., LTD.

TON-Can cntering the

sydneY recent! agent; G, C, Conno

HOSP -ReS(J For ER BROOK -

dclogates to the District Labor

executirc member! unions hare end(

calling for ~

Joseph S:T Wedncsday, he "II

to take part i conferet

premier said hc that a meeting 0

premiers with the verrlment was immil

would attend ; and leave the

would be happy I conference that ~

calls and happy to to him," ~Ir, SI

·alis hili

A sultcasc, In the -car, Is beUe\'cd

the life of a 2 boy liere Wedne!

The tot was thro\ father's car WI

after it ~ In a two·ear

Elizabeth avenue Young Kenneth .J­-his mother's arl

car. - driven colllded wit~ at the Inters

Pond road art

The threc occupa~ , Were- 'thro,wn- f

with the Imp was fOUlJd lyl

a few, yal the wrecked a

. had 'b~en _ seat of ihe cal

on hnpact; l1oelliletlt' escaptd

with only ii" on· the: he

. Was conveYI Hospital., 1

reported in .SCI

, 23·year:ol! leglt~ald· Jones, an

wife Stella' at ·the' 'hOi

"oraUon. and 'aU

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The ,.Daily News '" ,I1INI? OF WE:.T

THURSDAY APRIL 25, 1963 ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND ------~-------------

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1010 oncesslons rea ene •

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Wabush May Build In Quebec in hydro development and investment as a re­sult of the $600,000,000 'I I.:

I '.III.lIlian :'\utional Railway's William Carson received her millionth ton of • ~h' kiT" ~1'1'\'kl' in 1955 when n container fillcd with sugar was loaded "", 11n hant! to srl~ the historic event were (I·r) K. G. Anderson, night

. ~:;.:;". railway', port supcriutcndcnt; Capt. Norman Hinks of the William

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!lO~1'11~~lL DISPUTE

ll{\~ollition Endorsed Work .stoppage

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Be Happy ~ Atteno Mee'~'

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all othN' rrrorts to settle a has· pital I'mpillyees' strike fail.

The lIl·tinn would ha\'e to be ratifil'(1 hl' indil·j(lual ullioll 111,·mhcrships.

1'111' 1 t II mrm hers of Local ~RH of Ill\' National Union o[ l'uhlil- Emplol'res ctC, struck W,'strm )\emorial Hospital on April 5 to back up demands fIll' higlwr wages )\embership of thr union is made up most1~· "f nurses 'Iidcs and maids.

Work normally cal'1'icd out by the striking workers has bccn proddrn h)' nurscs and admin· i~t rat iw pcr,;onnel.

demands would have on opera· tion of other hospitals. in the province.

Also included in the labor council and union representa' tives' resolution ,Tuesday night was a decision to ask the pro· vincial government to abolish the board oC directors OC the Corner DJook hospital "as now constituted."

The resolution asked that the group he replaced by what the labor group call "a group of citizens who arc prepared to act in a more responsible manner and In the best interests of the community."

by GERRY McNEIL QUEBEC (CP) - A

$50,000,000 difference o( opinion is shaping up between Quebec and Newfoundland and the' Wabush Iron Company appears to be caught right in the middle.

If Wabushbuilds a $50,000,000 pelletizing plant in Pointe Noire, Que., as planned, New­foundland threatens to revoke special mining concessions granted to Wabush iron ore de­velopment in Labrador.

If Wabush is forced to build at its 'Labrador site, observers say it will face the extra costs of hauling fuel to north from Sept-Iles, Que., on a rail line designed fr-,r heavy loads going south.

Both Wabush and Quebec evidently ex­pected the plant, which will grind ore into pel­lets of blast-furnace size, to be built at Pointe

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Fil'I' days after the strike start rd. the pro\'incial govern· ment appointed a one·man royal commission to look into all financial aspects o[ the sit· uation.

Dr. "P.aymond Gushue, Pres I· drnt of the ~\emorial University who was appointed commission· 1'1'. was al~o to report on tho rffecl that granting the wag~ I hour genera! work stoppage II

No Comment 'Lesage From

-alise Saves llil(l~s Life

llrbrls from both cars scat· trrcd the road.

A )lOllce spokesman said he eouhln'C nnderstum)' how the yonn~ chilli and thc othe'rs' were 1I0t killed or more serio ously hurt.

The .Iones family are res I· , dents of Foxtrap.

O'1.cary is from Goose Bal'. "

QUEDEC-(CP) Premo ler Jean Lesage said Wednes. day It Is no t In the public interest to make any state· ,ment at the moment on the

.. issue of bundlng a pelletiz· lng, plant at ~olnte Noire ncar Sept·lles on Quebec's lower,' St. Lawrence north

.- shore. ' Jle was, asked about thc

, sltnatlon by Opposlt!lln Lead· er DlInlel Johnson. He refer· rell' to, a statcment by NewfOlindland Premier Joey Smallwood threatenIng to reo voke thc mining rights of 'Wabush Iron Oi~ Company 'If It allowed Its ore to be pro·

, ccssedoutsldc Labrador. The Wabush deposit Is 10'

cated' on ,the Newfoundland sIde' of the disputed Quebec·

, Labrador boundary •.

Mr. J.esage said that upon hearing that the American and Canadian Interests plan· ned to build the pelletizing plant In Quebec lUI'. Small· wood "seems to have gotten into a holy ragc."

"The companies In question arc meeting this week. It is not In the public Interest that I say anything •• ,"

JUr. Johnson then asked If Quebec Is negotiating wUh Ncwfoundland for transport of power from Hamilton Falls, whlclt Newfoundland wants to develop, Mr; John· son noted that lines would have to rlln over Quebec territory If power Is to be carried from the falls. They have a 6,OOO.ODO·horsepower capacity,

Noire. When Sept-lles, do­

minated by 'Iron Ore Company of Canada, asked in a private bill for permission to annex Pointe-Noire, Premier Lesage turned down the request.

He said developments expected at Pointe­Noire, Wabush's gulf port 335 miles northeast of here, would not allow him to place it under the thumb of a competi­tor .

But last week, Premi­er Joey' Smallwood of Newfoundland bluntly told Wabush to erect the plant on Newfoundland soil or risk its special concessions.

In the same speech, Premier Smallwood said he expects the lO-year, $1,500,000,000 Hamilton Falls hydro develop­ment to get underway within a year.

There has been no reaction from Wabush or the Quebec govern­ment to the statements yet.

Wabush has declined to comment. Premier Lesage, who returned from a two-week vaca­tion Sunday, also de­clined to comment when asked in the legislature about the situation.

Some observers won­der whether the situa­tion will bring the argu­ment over the vague Quebec Labrador boundary line to a head. Both Wabush and Ham­ilton Falls are located near the line, though Wabush pays taxes to Newfoundland.

Both Quebec ,a n d Newfoundland want the

Smallwood, .Keough Would Quit

If Feed· Mill .• Is Not Successful Because o[ the absence' ofperlinents would coiltinue. Pouch Cove, Torbay. etc., had

. W .• 1. Brownc from the House Farniers tnking' the 'piglets un· been chosen on an experimental 'of Asscmbly Wednesday,' the: iler' the new 'plan' connected basis. He 'could not see why , bill to ratify the feen' mill pass.-with' the' feed mill would have the experiment would not work. I'd all but one section. This to feed them and raise them Answering questions on the

: was held over to' allow 'l\!r;until- required ,weight had .been bill, the Premier said the com· Browne's comments, as request· attained.: Then the pigs,. about pany was a hard negotiator. It

, ed Ill' Opposition Leader James tcn from each farm.would be would erect' storage facilities ,I. Greene.p'lcked 'up alive by the plant at strategic places for consum·

1 trlicks .. The farmers merely ers to get supplies when need· Premier Sma)lwood said he lind to' raise them. He said ed. SOlJ1e mixing plants would

and ~lines. Resources and Agri. 100 men 'in the east' end- be set up as well. The price cultlU'r ~\lnistcr Hon. W. J. ---------'-------:.---.:--------

I Keollgt. would resign if the : mill and ils ~dJUDcts were nol i successful.

Sprrially ralscd Illglets, filly I\. sows nnd [onr boars, IIn'el

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.Pleased With. Opening ,Of· Salvage ·.Fish Plant

'" I 'n' ""h nl'flll" hren hrougllt herr. 'Already n't:,,'~r ,J'hn I~i'. 11 ... \\ tile)' hnd produced 300 young, )toss Dat'bour,Liberal Dona· Ing for clectrlclty. h.~· ~.. nn, 'rrlnus!)' ~u average or elevcn. 'TIie vista South, lold' the House of lIfr: Barbour Buggested the " "'" ,d 111\ rt'lras~d M'crnl1c elsewhere was seven, Assembly Wednesday he was district also get a new regional I" II NIII ~lIrr ah,rn·a. the I'remler ndded. 'These happy. to reporl tile '1'ors, Cove hospital and a vocational train· Iti~ t: ~~I1'~lnrd a ~1I~ht piglets were very special ·but. Trading. Comp~ny had opened ing school. There were four N.t~ ".~r~. ~o far showed, they had' too, a .. salt. !Ish pl~nt at Salvage. regional high. schools in the ~b\~l\ ",,,, \~l1\p!rtrb' I much rump and too liItlti Thc plant, ,opened Wednes· area al\d many rooms had been -In tht I1Ilshap and , hock. Jlowever, breeding 'ex.. d~y, was receiving lobsters and added to smaller schools in the

Mav Re'p'-'I'ac"e- C-uban Doctor' .,' :f~h~t~~e'~k~~:~~la~tg.,~~~ p.::~~~;~!:t~~ f~~~!~~~~~ ~ J 'was' employing between 25 and Mr. Barbour said he had seen . tr':lI:i~n~ a", . ' ' 30, people. He said thc women with his own eyes longllngers'

\0;:: hct'l'tn ~Ctng car· o!£lclals found no basis (01' In the region would be going gear beIng ripped apart by . ~ll:h drN~r :\~wrountl. charges made against, him' by 'back.to the flsh flakes to dry foreign ·trawlers which close

Ll tb l'n'l~rnl Dnd a the resIdents. Dr., Aude was 'the fish on wire flakes 100 ft., In on the shore at night. 14\'1',,,_. In Ih StMes as moved when the department lie; long. ' In the autumn the plant 'He advocated a regional Un· ~irll stll'r rort S3un· came fearful for his' personal, ')\'ould resort to artificial dryers. employment Insurance office In :'?dr. Ion for Dr. safety. ' ,Spenkltiil In the Throne Newfoundland, Some people '~dt~tih~ d ,. Speech~, debate, Mr. Barbimr said unemployment was a curse,

I "'~l Ih~ nl~d~lor would MONTREAL. (ep) _ Organ., said his district was the big. he added, but in his opinion it \~l:l !in('t the IraIst~t\on iz~ crime is, Canada's, biggest g~st Jlshlng dl~trld In Can· . was· a 'blessing. In the past

t.~llll~ or~o\nl of bUB,IDesS, Claude' '~agner" 4ep. ada,.and he, welcomed."the two ycars $36mlllion had:eome ~"l:I by the ost\lItiu ut)' chlcf crown prosecutor lor national fishery development to 'Newfoundlanders through

Saunde ~!Idenls of Monh'eal dIstrict said 'lIUesday.progrilin; 'lIe hoped eledrlc· UI payments. Because the reg· dt~rttnt~t fl Il't!a, a "The' traffic in nilelt' alcohili, and,' 'ity ,WObld be supplied! to, the ional office, was in Moncton A s\lOkesmnn drugs has, reached' th~' POint 'remainIng centres now' with· there were delays in processing ~ \"11 where, If the, profits were taxed, >ollt 1t.:: .. Th~ewere, 4~eom. payments. That was why he

"1~l\Q trb~slerrcd government·. deficits: would' :b~ .: ,m.~n!~I~s,ln.Bonavl~a. So:utb. urged a local office be' csta!J. . n ~ health wlped.,out:" I. ,,', .Iand . .ten ·ofthese'w~re.walt. lished.'

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would be competitive, the Pre· mier said, and added he did not think the new mill wonld get all the available custom· ers, any more' than the cement plant or gypsum plant sold all their output required here.

The Premier said it was jnst as easy here to raise 110gS as In any other part of Canada, The poultry Industry had had a phenomenal growth In the past 'few year~ producing half of the seven mlIllon dozen cggs consumed here annually.

The Premier said fish meals would be added to the feed mill production to provide needed protein. There were no pro· tclns in grains. Newfoundland had lots :of fish meal plants.

,Allowed' to I

Cut Timbe,. Fred Edgecombe of the Bat·

tery here was granted permis· sion by council Wednesday to, cut a number of pieces of tim· bel' from' the . Windsor Lake a'rea to construct a landing stage at the, battery.

The tiRiber will be cut in any area of the lake in easy area of the main highway, and will con· sist of about 15 pieces suitllbl~ for small beams' and 20 pieces for ra,iis.. "

Counclllor- Geoff Carnell stated: '''I take great pleasure In Moving that permission' be granted to Mr. Edgecombe."

f.' .

takover of 11 private . '1

t ~ • , $50,000,000 pelletizing plant. But observers say Quebec mav have an edge in bargaining posi­tions.

publicly - owned power companies and the giant, 20 per cent. S2,OOO,OOO,000 Manicou-

There have been pre- agan-Outardes develop-liminary negotiations ment. on the vast development But Newfoundland but observers here did British - Newfound- and Consolidated Edi-not expect it to get C A land Development Cor- son ompany, an m-started for several

Poration owns 80 per erican private utility. '.,·ears. cent of the Hamilton are believed anxious' to

Falls area and Hydro- Hydro-Quebec cur- see Hamilton Falls de-Quebec, this province's rently is up to its ears veloped quickly.

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NEW SCHOOL-The new Gander district vocational school which is nearing I' completion. The school is situated on the Gander Bay Road near the Trans: Canada Highwa\·.-(~ews Staff Photo). . '

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Says, Paper Co Inpanies Should Be, Press urized "

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I Harold Starkes, Liberal, the final report of the lum· as the site [01' a central pro· i

I LClI'isporte. was the fjrst speak.: ber conference committee. cessing, packaging, stOl"lgC .: er in the Throne speech' de·: ~Ir. Starkes neclared. He hop· i and shipping point for the salt " bate in the House of Assemhly; ed stamls of over·mature tim· . cod industr)'.

I Wednesday. He hoped pressure i bel' could be released for the I ~Ir. Starkcs spoke or the I' i would be brought to bear on: llSC of saw·mill operator~: transformations in his district ,.1 the paper companies to main· i The spool wood plant at Loon; since' Conrederatlon. Nell' !jl tain logging camps for a certain iBay. the only one of il~ kind: and extended roads had be,-n II percentage of their cut. illcn' in Newfoundland. was making j added and twenty·tlVo settle· .j' Who live faraway from the cut· I a fine contribution to the com· i mcnts had been connccted. I',

I ling opcrations £ind it ,difficult, pany and employcd 200 perscn~ 'I' There were only four ll'lL II to commute such long distance. [at certain times of the year. with the exception «if Ex. .,1

he said. I Therc w~re, too many loggers i plo:ts and Black Island. Fif· !I, lIlr. Starkes said there was a I In the dIstrICt for the amount. teen settlements are Iinkl'd

rumour in his district that t~lc I' o~ WOOd, t? be cut. He saw the! with electricity and many. new :!I CNR woultl, he closing Its i cx~ra 1'.,01 k for the prnpos~d I schools have been buill. 11: . '

I station at Notre Dame Jet. Such' Hurd mIll as of great bencfIt. i • I a step' would 'reduce facilities I Farmers in part of thc dis· I Praising the vocational school I : ..... 'and would mean a great hard·: trict. were do!ng very well and I program Mr. Starkes thought I I ship, on all travellers in the I receiving fair returns. Tl~c that people i~ thc, caterin~ busi· :: ' area, he said. The service ren. feed mill wouln be of benefit ness should 1I1lprove their SCI'· , I, dered by CNR, he said; has been to them. vices for the tourisl~. Food II dc-elining over the past few The lobster fishery adds' im· I should be distinctive and weill: years and he thought the con· measurably to the district's ee· prepared in the Newfoundland ' templated action ~hould be onomy and is. carried on in way. Fishery development, he, checked. every commumtv. Many men f It Id b d' th .'.

The lumber )Jroducers ill are in the eodfishery and he e ,wou e assure slRce . c ;" the district were looking for· hoped, the new nevelopment l changeover of, government tn

ward with great interest to plan would consider Lewisporte Ottawa.

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BOYS' WINDBREAKERS

ONLY $1·94 THREE STYLES TO CHOOSE FROM

TWO·TONE NYLONS 'N' GABARDINES

TWO-TONE CORDUROYS

Also ALL TO FIT 2 - 6 YEARS

CORDED COTTON TO FIT 7 -12

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JACKETS

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Page 4: ~S .5. Tries To Head Off Laos' Crisiscollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · Harriman wlto has just com. t union, Communist China uncl! tit em tOll'ard Ihe Cummunist

, . , ] • THE DAILY· NEWS Cross: in the Deep'

Newfoundland's Only Morning Paper

tr.UL \. ~\·BSCRII·tION nATES ,',uda . $\:.00 rtr :lItnuni

"nll'" "ln~d.nI an" .n '''"lIn l"Ountrln SlU'O rtr annun,

.''IIItttC'rUtd It 1I'rond "tau nUlU by Ill{" !'Nt \.t(tlrt Ptrar1mtnt. OHawa and fOl"

'&.I ","n' of I'NII,' In cl.h.

The DAILY NEWS I. a morning I,apcr t'fltabilihell In 189~ and published lit the Ncws 8ulllllll)l m·J19 Duckworth St .. St John'ft. Newfoundland. by n()bln~on lint! Company, Limited,

MEMBERS OF

TilE CANADIAN rRES~

The Cnnadlan Pre.. Is cxclullv.ly entitled In the u •• ror repubUeatlon .r nil news despatches In this paper cre,Ul· (Ill to It or to the Associated Prell! or neutc .. and al.o the local newl publish· ed therein

AU Pre-55 Ser\'lce, nnd fcnhlrr nrtlclclil In thlM paper are copyrighted and (hrlr "produeUon It prohlbUed,

!\1rmh,r AudU RurtAY

of ClrculaUon

THURSDAY. APRIL 25, 1963

Pearso~n At Prime 1\linistcr L. B, Pearson

hRS takcn office in Ottawa as head of the Libcral Go\'crnment. l!l a broadcast addrcss to the nation Tuesday night hc said "ll will not bc an easy time but it will. 1 pledge you, be a time to excite the dal"ing. to test the ~t nln~ and to gh'c new prumises to the timid,"

The Helm ing high on Mr. Pearson in view of the important matters brought up by the provincial government for special federal support. These include completion of the Trans-Canada Highway with the federal government paying ninety per cent of the cost; and the national fisheries develop­ment programme.

In all moral revolutions, from a lower to a higher condition of thought and action, Truth is in the minority and error has the majority,-MarY Bake~ Eddyq,

• • • BONDS OF MATRIMONY Stratford Beacon,Herald

In Trento, Italy, a jealous husband who tied his wife's leg to his own every niJ!ht so she would not deceive him, was jailed for cruelty, We have heard of the bonds of matrimony but never of the knot being tied at the kneecap,

WIIAT'S SO SHOCKING? Edmonton oumal

A seven·year prison sentence handed down in Calgary District Court Tuesday is reported to have brought "stifled . gasps from lawyers and others in the court.

What was so shocking about it? The man sentenced was convicted o[

living on the avails of prostitution, Un· der our parole system, it is most un· likely that he will serve anything like seven years ill prison,

udge Arthur Heaumonth summed up the case well when he said: "A human heing cannot sink any lowcr than iiI" ing off the al'ails of an unfortunate prostitute,"

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OF BOWRING Gosling Library rec~

plirnentary cop, a C~rng story in rc

BaWr ~e assistance, g By EARL L, DOCGL,\s of thor David Ketr

" aU hOurs at the

TI'IE manY bing various r ." S OF CRISES searc C r. records , or

Be preparcr! for the crises of h BoWTlng fal They are sure to come. Certain). to. t s~ (A bibJiogrl do not come every day or cven l bUS!O~ ~f the book ! year, Elderly people can look b en f the number h')' d ael idea 0 d )

tt ~Ir tv~sdan sec that there II'fre rna e, am perlo s of stress and sir. essentially an acc'

t f d .. . aln 'Iy business enterp mde~,~. o. eCllslon, and that these' fa:~rlng stOry also e I e mto Jetter channds or Bth Newfoundland I

God providcd that ercn in Ih ~eographical, e~on' of .His only hegotten Son there e 'I aaBinst which periods of crisis. The fir:;!, of SOCia, ev:nt5 and ach was hit temptation. Thi, harrOl" . took place,

, dl' .In, th perlence tcste 11m and prenar d' instance, the au 01

for his great ministry, A ~u;~, carly in the i

times as he taught and ,,"or~ed "r which must , Bowring confronted great crisp,. The as they arril'c one of his entire life ran::, the i' way bcak in was betrayed. On his lin"", in' first unusual sight II

ane he fairly wrestled \\':1 '1 God . Cishflakcs .,' this cup pa£s from n1P. 1,"\l'I';hel;I' the family would n whnt I will but what tl", I "'Iilt." on of wooden I

Times of crises "~(o Ill,: 'mll' erected hugger·nn

of testing but they CI)II"':Ulc· a ' the wharl'es on ~t on our pnrt of crossroad. We lanes that became. m th I h almost impassable III

e pace w cr~ the pl.,i" \l'llh',lit' At night fore our feel branche.' ":, il'1,,".· , ' ' l' ltd were un Ig Ie, . , se\'cral different ro'lfh. ,.'. itilr. 'b'! the Governor's housc take? We may not he "i"1i murh"b I:;,ftilapidated wooded bui to make our decision'. 1i,,1 a d,c'; author contrast lI'e must make, . self·made inhabi

Don't dally or turll .. " i'l Iro:n John's with their . f .. (as Chap pc

experIences 0 cri,i.<, I! \"Oll cc" , with the face them you \l'ill n,,' ~rl)l\. E',~: ~ledlJjea gentlemen 0 Mr. Pcarson has the good

wishes :md hopc of most Cana­dians as he embarks upon his IIrduoufi task. He has promised a "sixty clays of action" plan which will certainly be a crowded period, fill', Pearson will journey to London to see Prime l\'1inister Macmillan next week and on re­turn will confer with President

How soon the promise to as­sist in these matters can be ful­filled remains to be seen, as a nation the size of Canada has many weighty problems with which the government must grapple. However, we believe the urgency of Newfoundland's cause will be high on the Pear­son priority pl'ogram. The sup­port the new Prime Minister's party received here should make Newfoundland one of the favourite provincial children of

the federal family,

The Criminal Code of Canada pro· vides imprisonment up to 10 years for the offence. Sol'iety must take an ex­tremely grave view of it, fo], numerous reasons, In some countries, a whipping in addition to a heavy prison sentene~

is provided.

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

you face the-m and I",; tl1\'l'r, garrison or the Nal'~' hope, for lVe live in ~ 1'.lIrld :r":: the GOl'ernor's d in almost every an'n 'r,' h:tl"e I:'! the amatcur theat portunity for a second '·:"!lICP took place. and the

Timcs of crisps an' ~'" d \r~ of a public readin/: 1'1

grow without them. the Bowring Stor

I)ltOBLE~1 SOI.VEIl Cape Breton Post

VISITING SAI.ES~IEN NOT TAXED

Editor Daily News.

, .1, F, Kennedy and open Pm'lia­~ mcnt 1111\' 16, ., .

The Rio Grande, celebrated in song and story as marking the boundary be· tween Mexico and the United States, is not 'as impressive a stream as you might 'believe in looking at its long

Dear Sir:-I understand that there is a stipulated municipal tax on sales· men coming here from the mainland and elsewhere, and I also understand that not ONE CENT is collected from them-WHY?

'-. ~ ' .. ~ . -

Parliament's opening May 16 will not. it has been stated in Ottawa. interfere with the NATO Council con\'ening on Parlia­ment Hill 1\Iay 22 to 24,

I\ewfoundland's represcntative in the fecleral cabinet is Hon. J. \\" Pickersgill who ha;; been \lamed SCl'retar~' of State and H\1u~e Lcadcr, He will also be the cabinet member dealing with th" Atlantic pro\'inces,

X~\\'foundl;md'~ hopcs are rid-

Given the support he deserves in Parliament as he sets about governing Canada, Mr. Pearson should be able to bring to the nation the inspired leadership required at this particular time. He is well qualified for the Her­culean task falling on the shoulders of the Prime Minister.

Water Street Traffic To nk'ntion Water Street traf­

fic :l~ntn is almost akin to f1og­,:ing a dC:ld hOI'>e, Traffic sug­gests movcment. On Watel' Street thcre are so many more

..... course on the map,

The same as many another wayward river the Rio Grande has an annoying way of changing its course sometimes. and this happened at EI Paso. with troublesome diplomatic consequences to the U,S, and lIIexico. The laUer country claimed thc land which the change of course put on the north bank. and the Texans, you wlll not be surprised to learn, claimed that any land on the north side of the river belonged to them,

The problem now has been soh'ed in a way thnt should satisfy everybody, On the controversial property an interna· tlonal university will be. built for the benefit of both Mexican and U.S, students,

• • • NO CURE YET FOR POTllOI.ES

{Quehec Chronicle·Telegraph

I am a resident agent having been here my lifetime, and I hal'c to pay a municipal tax of approximately $110.00 yearly to show 1I1~' samples, while an agent' from outside can come here two or three limes a year (sometimes more orten) and can take a room at any hotel or elsewhere, show his sampl~s, take orders at NO TAX COST-WHY?

Signed: LOCAL AGENT,

~IYTHS IN AUTOMATION

Editor Daily News, Dear Sir:-All dowll through the ages

mankind has been ~ victim of myths, . legends and superstitions: all of which

arose out of fear and Ignorance, Every age has had its own myths and legends which became a pait oC its educational , system, and taught as truths, Today we

. ~\ops than goes that often noth­ing clln mo\"e at all even with a gl'ccn light. The street simply cannot cany the prcsent volume lind lhe only real hopc of im­pl'(\\'('ment seems to lie in the completion of the waterfront road which is also proceeding at

II !lnl\i\'~ pace,

line of traffic. The movement in and out of coves and other inter­sections is bad enough when good drivers ll:re at the wheels and intolerable when bad and selfish drivers are in control.

This traffic stagnation is like­ly in time to lead to total stagna­tion, And the answer may have to lie in the provision of to\a~ off-street parking, The Council is said to have a plan. The trouble is that apart fron: hav­ing satisfied a Board of Trade committee on this Sl!Ol'e, Lhe Council has made no public dis­closures of its programme. But· if action is not soon taken to re­lieve the situation, the disabilities of the downtown area· will be intensified to a stage, which may lead to rapid decline. That would be bad for everyone, the Coun~ cil as much as anyone else.

One of the amazing things about our clvilization Is that no one has yet come up with the answer to the pot hole, As sure as Spring follows Winter-although sometimes we secm to wait around for it for a long time-we can be sllre that pol holes will develop in our streets and highways,

The~e comes as a terrific shock to the motorist. Even driving over the same route day after day" it. is difficult to keep track of these traffic menaces, They seem to shift from place to place to bedevil the motorists pleasure, That bump when car and axle seem to meet Is never a pleasant sensation,

are just entering into a new age-the age of automation, and true to his· torlcal tradition, automation hns given rise to a new fallacy which in due time will become a myth: the fallacy that automation demands greater skill to operate its machines than that required to operate the machines it has replaced,

While I have rend technical books, nnd have been aWlIt'ded 4 diplomas hy technical 5chool~, I have also gone through the mill of practical experi· ence, and· for thiR reason I am not writing about something I read out oC books: I am expressing thoughts de· rived from personal contact with reality, and for this reason 1 know what I am talking about.

But e\'en if thcre should be A diversion of hea\'y truck tmf­fie to the new rnad, bad driving habits and inconsiderate drivers will remain an obstacle to a bet­let' flo\\,. DoubI~ parking con­tinu~~ with little restrictiun, Cars

.. backing into the rare openings . near parking metcrs hold up a

We cannot blame the roads depart· ments, Somatimes they fill the holes twice a day. But the next day the' bump is there again, Apart from being hard on the vehicles, and on the passengers' nerves, the annual pot, hole contest is an expensive one,

Years ago J operated many types oC machines, . such as steam shovels, drag· lines, derricks, cablewnys, and the like; and In ·Iater years I operated machines which are classed as helonging to the age of automation; and I found that

No Longer Luxuries

The mnn-or woman-who Invents· a much less skill is required to handle binder that will adhere to the sides of modern machines than that required to these pot holes and keep the fill in handle the old machines-some of place will win the undying gratitude of which had no fewer than 9 levers to motorist and clvil oIficial aUke. But . manipulate simultaneously, or, at least,

A lament has come from the recoil with dista'ste from the the discovery of that magic formula in spilt seconds, This required, light-

"

.. d seems as far away as ever, ning·like co·ordinating responses of III SOl' Star rOl' the reduction nourishing food of the past, mind and muscle. , tl t t f t I' k Th . Revolutions arc not about trifles,. but 111 Ie s a us 0 roas c l1C en· e ,real luxury today is . a The machine to which I .iust refer·

f Bprlng from trlfles,-Aristotie,

rom an epicllrean delight served good old-fashioned meal of corn- red required the handling of 9 levers on special occasions to a common ed beef with pease pudding and • • • to operate it, despite the fact that it

d' I hi I I could grab', only a half ton of grave!. IS' W C \ appeal's on t le table vegetables that are truly palata- ALL DELIGHTED , I But there is a machine in use today

WIt \ undue frequency. It has ble. Rarely can any of the in- Ottawa Journal in Vlnglnla wl\ich can grab 173 tons of ccased to be a luxury. gredients be found to compare President Kennedy was of course gravel in one mouthful. And all that is

Bllt whal is true of chicken with the quality and flavour right when he said at'8 recent press necessary to do to operate this mach· I\pplies to an even greater ex- they had in the past. That seems conference that Sir Winston Churcblll ine Is to press' two buttons, and, presto,

t b i needed no formal sign of American af- automation takes over arid does the' rest,

tl'emc to turkey. Here was a 0 e one tem to be put down on £""tlon. Yet I't was, as 'II', Kennedy tl e d b

't id f f d t' ~~ .. ~ dog or a cat could operate such a. noble bird that graced a table \ e 1 s e 0 con e era Ion. sal'd, "a grael'ous act" for the U.S, Con· machine if it were given a little train·

\

' only on great festive occasions. gress to make Sir Winston the first ing, Christmas and Easter were the Ge\1nS' 0'./ ' .. TI1'ought allen to be granted American citizen· In spite of the fact that machincs are t t bi f t h' h 'J fI, ship. The'title of course Is purely hon· more complicated today' than they were

~Oo(: WO 110 a e eas s on w IC . tur- orary, . with no obligation. on Sir Win· 50' years ago, less sklll Is required to ~: k~~' made the prime contribution 'To be .what we are, and to become ston's part to take the usual oath of operate the machines oftoday and keep

, to the festive board. But we are what we arc capable of becoming, Is the renunciation of' "all foreign princes, po· them in retiair than was required 50

perform, the less it is dependent upon human skill for its operation, From this we can formulate the following syllog· ism:-Aulomation implies self·actuating mechanism. Self·actuating mechanism is less dependent upon the mechanical ,kill of the operator than is manual· ly operated mechanism, therefore the claim that automation demands great­er skill to operate its machines than that required to operate the old. man· ually operated machines is fallacious, I don't know II'hat others think ahout this, But to mc. the argument is a self·evident syllogism,

All this talk we hear ahollt the need for education for the successful opera­tion and maintenance of equipment. emanates from book worms and lounge lizards who have never had a day's training in practical experience, I'd like to take a look at the inside of a tech· nical school that is equipped with the necessary facilities requirer! to train a man to dig ditches with a back­digget' 01' a drag·line, Such skills can only be acquired on the job, and no technical school, no matter how skillful its teaching personnel may be, can teach a man the art of operating such machinery, Yet, not long ago 1 heard one of our educational authorities stressing the need of education and technical training by reminding his listeners that ditches are being dug to· day with machinery, As if education lI'ould help a man to dig ditches with a hack·digger or a drag·line,

Aside from the fact that aulomation makes the operation of machinery more simple, It al~o deprives a lot of good llIen I)f a means of livelihood, who, if given a job would be just 'as good work­men as those emerging from technical schools and universities (1 have work­ed with university graduates, and, . ,), hecause ali of them when they get a job arc required to do no more than press a hutton or move a dial-and as I have already said, a dog or a cat could. do that if given a little training.

Employers insist that those seeking jobs must have a certain level of edu· cation before given a job, But after they get a job they are usually assigned to a job that requires no more skill than the ability to handle a broom or a floor mop.

Automation not only rob6 a man of his skill: it also makcs a robot out of him, hecause al\ he has to do is sit in his easy chair, &nd if anything goes wrong with the mechanism under his charge, a red light wiil flash on here and· a green light will flash on there, signifying that the defect has been automatically rectified, so that the man in charge can recline in bis easy chair and meditate abstractly on some prob· lem pertaining to introspective phil· osophy-or smoke cigarettes and resume Jlrofound study of the comic strips, which is the more likely thing. he will do, because neither the average man nor .the average woman is given' to ihinking in terms of profundities; and no amount of tcchnlcal training will induce them to do so,

~ told U\at turkey is cheaper tod~y only end or life, tentates and powers." years ago, many of the parts required 'lilan nl""at and 110 p . I u . -.Robert Louis Stevenson for renewal had to be made by· hand· • " s eCla a ra Sir Winston has on occasion calletl : d 't· H d d tools, and this called for keen dexterity-~ now sUt'roun 5 1. OW, in ee " • • • himself ,"half American and whollY , A I' on the part of the mechanic in his giv-~,,~ the mighty fallen! - bil ty is a poor man's wealth, British" so It's not quite right to think • ing the parts the required shape and

Aside from a handful of inventors, de, signers, and maintenance technicians, automation is tending to create a so· ciety of Industrial robots, because the more functions' a machine can auto· matical1y perform, the more independ· ent it becomes of the wit and the mechanical skill ·of its operator, For this reason, automation tends to make a man "50ft by effeminating his mascu· line attrihutes, depriivng him of his mechanical sk!l1, dulling his wits and making of him an unthinking automa, tlon and a slow-witted dullard,

1 Tea rooms once flourished -Matthew Wren of American citizen going out to a finish. But today, all one has to do

~b,\1 servin" sl""ple meals I'n • • • . 100 percent alien. . h h' d tit ~ Jill"''' Without the Bulstance of natural ca. IV en a mac me nee s a new par, 5 pu Iwhkh ~e enjoyment of ham and pacity, rules and precepts are of no ef. The standard' American description a junk of metal into· a machine, turn ~'IJl1 was augmented by home- ficacy.-Qulntlllan, . of Sir Winston is stili Bernard Baruch's: a dial, press a button, and, presto! the t d ''The greatest man of our age," As long junk of metal emerges from the other ma e bread hot from the OVEln, • '. • as the U.S. Congress reserves i~ honor· end of the machine fully panoplied, like lupplemented hI! home-made We are all capable of more than we lfics for men of his stature, ·there is Minerva from Jove's .forehead, So the· jam and scald cream. All this is do.':"'Mary Bak~r Eddy. ..! no need to worry about setting danger· operation and mainten'ance. of machin: JOn., ~t superior places cold •.•• r. _,. ous. precedents. Americans are rightly ery today is duck soup compared to turkey is served ad nauseam. Me~ are often capable . of lI~eat~r jealous of American citizenship', Taking what Is was 50 years ago, But d ba ed . thbll· things than·they perform, The)' are s~t In a Winston Churchill, however, doesn't Simplicity of operation lies in.· the

10 ,e s 18 e pu c, Into the world with bills of cr~dii) and' ; 'dilute the breed. And Sir Winston? He very .conceptlon of the word "automa· ~ tociat that a generation, fed seldom' draw ,to their full 'extept.~, ... "was '''delighted to be so honored," So ' tion,", It is logical to. assume that the on hamburgers and chips would -Horace Walpole are we all that he was, more automatic functions a machine cilll

. (You will note, Mr. Editor, that no

reference h's been made to the two most important aspects of automation: unemployment and the' fact that auto­mation poses a. threat to the stability

I '

a succession of cI'ents aff!

firm's enterpriscs -

Bt'ble SI. .John·s fircs, thc the transition in

Q liP~~ation from sail to ~ uotation groll'th and decline [ industry with its I

AmI the peace or (;,,11, \\hitli a\l understanrllng. shall krrp hearts and minds thrnll~h rhri!t

the expansion 0

underwriting. al describes not onl fortunes of a fl

but contributes I

In the sprin!! of ,all"""11 Lt, ,·.1 ~·~iIlU;l1' and a haII of peace of God which (,IHillr!'; [lIr(\[: .J~'ry

If Toronto Spoke F

Quebec Chrunil'Ir.'!\'II'!I'Jph Lord Altrineham. ('!' i' of

more outspoken obsenl'I·,. ila' ..... , .. , .. .,., that the destruction of Iii, \\'ol[e ment here in Quebec [,it,. ··may

a challenge 'to An~lo·(·.1""1l in North America:' Ti.:' Ii·,~d,t pressed in The Guardian ,,[ \.I,r.dr;'!&' is an interesting OIH', !',nidar:y that the tendency in ('::n:,,13 ha; to associate the tlrsll'''' :'lIn (,f monument with the "pi'rati'! ment.

The Scparatists, (If been too open in tll(' ,,:l1lil:e c; aims, The rest of (',i1wla their intention is to cl" :,10' a .. state of Qucbc(', Bllt ',\ hal Canada may Ihink sc· l' <I <:,:1-111

may be sO!1lethit1~ '1111\' ,~;:fcrcr.1 , what may he in the 111:11.1' IIf Iho~ are pressing this ;I':" ;:lli,1 ment.

Perhaps Allhil1('halll ri:hl. separatist mo\'ement ""lrl '.~ork. se\'eral ways, It (0111<1 I., nothing thDn a decoy, makin~ ,I 1'1 denel dcsil'e to form a ,cp"ra: I" ,late in bee, in order to force I :'t· re.t 01 ,

ada to al;commotiatc :1,,'lf to Canadian aspiration'. 1:- Ihi, the separatists would i'c • in whittling away the ,., ~hts w~Kb people of other PI'Ol'i'" .. , hehH!

theirs, Or It may be tlw! thl' .

seek to force the dil'i",,,n of tl!! try, taking a mueh wi, iI'" ,hatl. that now represented h:. Iile . Quebec. They might I,,,'K at the and Cjlrve away ail tit "". areal French.speaking l1col'i:' hare

Altrincham makes iI It lie in saying that these r,·,'pl" halt d I 'I t' N' ; I 1'''1' be e ass ml a IOn, 0\1' '.

their aim is to assinlll;1IC the , speaking peo~les of Car,lda, as

,,"tJ

those who claim othel' 1110thrr . the' Is it poss.ible that 'lIl(' d,,~ In '

ure Toronto may he a 't ? CI y, tU We wonder what \\,otlid be '

action in staid To)'onlo to thought. In that English.canada

, ' t' I't IS ~r.I to Ignore thiS ques IOn, . utb Iv that there would he too rn • \\!rl

actlon, but if the idea Cl'e r

penetrate into the Toronto suspect it might help to aro Us: Canada to face up to what 15

plae.e in our nation toda)'. - l11utl

You can never expect to~. • f gll'lnl yourself. III the matter a

self to' others,

of capitalism, and threatens to about its collapse when the b processes of automation reac

finality. . of . I m~y' discuss these aspects mation in a subsequent letter, ed you continue to extend ~our

Yours truly, fLtiL W, L, BU '.

Shoal 'HarDour, .

• • • KENNE))Y of a Presiden

)Ianchestcr add! to our understandi F, Kennedy, We early life, his fami!

. years, the years in and finally his ri~

office of fecI the enUn

of the carll' administration alll

e: BES, ~N I

Inserted b: --

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THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND. APRIL 25, lDe3-1

At Your Li brary ~:~::nc~ep:raa~e t"~,:,~~;~~~::,:~S~":~"~~~A~~"1 too l'~·:·::·:~iil~~~::~::;·"·~,iljl\i(;. • .' II' 1I11\1'RIS!i I sharp change of Washington's the other, Courtney Galvin, an with a possible 200 new jobs, ilities, Mr. Saunders felt that: "t1. • I!: j .. II .. : ';j\ ~.I'~:\,~\ \l~:;t~~~. ~.1~;~~~11~~ I ~~~r s~!OO~;e th:ea~~~~~n tf~aSt~~ ~~~~f.w~/~~~!y~~~.:e~O~~h~~: For Fishermen ~~!\:er~l~ena of~~~: B~~O~e t~e;~: S~rt~:C\o~;i~al~OO~ ~~~~~~~!~ : 'Ii;' \.'j I :I.'j;' · 1 ,,~,"r ~;.:r\ in 1'~~0!!·! challenge of Big Steel and the·Slot Irishman. region. This was disclosed yes· and Old Perlican. . • li,j'\; !. ".: ~,."nc ',,,;,lall\'c !!il'cn! what it disclosed of the Presi· The duel between these two The fisheries council of Can. terday by William Saunder, Other topics which the speak. • ',,1 i :'il

.' .': ~~: i;"ll! I\I'ir who, dent's drive, wit and control. equally matched in desire, reck· ada wants thc federal goverll' (Liberal, B. de V.l making his j er dealt with included truck- :: M.V. WILLI.AM CARSO : :ld : i' :'! I"~'" _, at the Lib·: The biogruphy reveals the lessness and gulle, is played out ment'to set up as soon as possi· maiden address in- the Throne ing - he thought the restric· • ,'h:! ~! l

:"11" h.:II·;UWII; ~"\I": l'omplexity of the Kennedy against the faseinatinr. back- ble a sepal'ate unemployment I Speech Debate. 1 tiOIiS on the large trucks arc • ; ,!,: . ; ,"Ir.-~tn- \' f.' r refcr.! personality-an individual who grDund of San Francisco-its Insurance plan for fishermen riO th 'It h d k' I a hardship to the truck owners. I. will be taken out of service for annual .• '-1'" I . ·1 . • 1>"1'1'1' • t . . d Iiti I fl Id t h Id r i't . . ., 'IS 1'1 V 3r wor -In" can· Th G t' d I • • i . ;. I -: :~··.'t Il,lI\Tln, fal1lil~' _ IS po rlClan an po can, C s ropg 0 s 0 pr vacy, I s and place It under the Junsdlc, I. .' • ". e overnmen s roa s pro·:. lest trip from Port aux Basques and North ." .'. 1 , • t' ,,' .. ' • \ hlhh,'~ral1h)' -commander and scholar. backstreets, its law·courts and tion of the federal fisheries I' ~~~u;i~~lser~,ld l\;;t~ea~~IJe;~e!~.~n I gram had cut isolation during i. Sunday, April 28. . ..•.• >-r "

· ~·;·::~".'f thr \l""k ~irrs: • • • conference rooms. department. ,j. • . . • I, last winter : .. and on~ of the I •. ... I .!' ;'r .r ... I t'tr nlllll\,rr of NASII'S NONSENSE • • • The Gill Committee of in- bUI Ihey .need assistance .to main breakwaters needed I'e. i. While M. V. William Carson is in drydock. the ships : .. ~. :!; : .. ::

: .• rl ,~ !. , There was a yonng bclls of old Which, a little magazine put quiry inlo the Unemployment I proteclA t~lr rboa~1 a~d cqUlP' pairs, which he hoped are forth • "Co bet Strai,", "B~rgeo"_ and "Baccalieu" will alter- .. ;,:' : : I:: . ,~''\'f' ~'~~:;.l1' ~n ~\""llInt Natchez out by the Consumers' Assod- Insurance Act, said in Quebec mhent. 1 edw oun . an cdr:loncde coming. :. nate on the followln9 dally schedule. ,;1.,. 'I':; ; i ;,.".'.r'~·."."tt,·r,·' '·llh'rlll'i~r. Whose garments were always alion in Great Brltnln, reports that fishermen for Ihe most I s o"I'nl proced urhes, IS rca I rra . i Earlier in his speech, :lfr.·. L P B 1 00 "'" ' .. , ' apIa) e an t c member clt' v or' aux asques .............................. : p.m .. -:4 •. I; "

, ~;~;;n~' ~"\r\ .11", l1l'k"': \\'Iin patehez. t itn itsbAprdil 3rfd !~sue o~ tnint~; Phart were I s[elfh·e,?Ployed and 1 that tI;c fishery development I HsaUndts laudceld kthe hspeaker, : Ar North Sydney ........................ ,'............ 9:30 p.m. :~: :.i ; If .,. \f,dl'\\nl!I~lhl hac'- len commen arose een ran s 0 run·resls an ad contro 0 t elr own cm· '11 b I f" b' on. eorge ar -e w a comes i h d . J"

.;'~ ... ~(r$llhh .. ,1 "I:,'nl1I11il' On the state of her clothes nylons. It found that while ployment and unemployment to. pr?gram WI . e a [C Inlte en·. from Carbonear. He spoke also.: Lv Nort Sy ncy ................ : ..................... 11 ~oo p.m. : -.:: ;v,i'!' ". "3111': lillii'll Iht She drawled, "When ah itchez, . none of them were completely a considerable degree. I' efll to the fishermen. 10f the depressed times before i. Ar Pert aux Basques.............................. 8.30 a.m. • 1.:11; ( .... i!:

· _:~.:';, ,,,:l1t, all.! lrhi,·I·C· as scratchez." proof against runs Dr "ladders" The Committce felt th~t in· The fishermen of the Bay I Newfoundland's Confederation.' • LOCAL TIMES • i.l ....It · :,\', r: .... · frol11 Out 011 " .... 'l'ick (Cern stockings of this type lasted on surance coverage for fisher· de Verde 'district produce good : • : :,ji' .: . , ·,·,:In.'1· th.· allll",l' rr· NOVEL the averagc about half a~ long men was not satisfactory and fish and they seek little help PI 'V I ':. N . ;. . . .• ' .. (Aill 111 1l1.· ~tllI'Y In The San 1 .... scans Niven as f.ully fashioned stockings. recommended nn income. sup- in ;ddition to this Mr. Saund: ans a ue I. I . i •• '

,,"1\", :nll'l h'\\'r Busch has created two strong preVIOusly t~stcd.. .. I plemcnt to those chrOnically ers pointed out, the), lVork I • • I ,,;.J: "i·;;, .• ;,~,~ 1:.\\lnnc ~nd rl'11Ill'act~~s as adversa.rdies\v· 0lvnl'tCh' deOnltthc\rVI'tahrtJcelpeos tin thiS Issltlse under-employed. twice as hard as those in some Is $248 200 I :: .. : . '1",11:1 ';,','! . . '. ':"., .1ml\· III .aura I nrnum, a WI 0 r r s on carpe 'I other districts. I - .. I"'"

:~~.:: ': •• ':".;~;n 11116. money and status and thc in- Ironing machines, frame tents C '1 B' f . · · I ' : :iJ Ii,' ;: . . ,~,,::.:;~:'~:.I:;! q(llt "1~1\1~~ Idli::ence to lise them, and' and cigarette smoke. ounci ne S i Part ~fE!;~s ~i~t~~~~~as very ~uiidi~g pla~s estim~ted by I ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• :: H:i~' .''1' :;, f;::,,:' 1II'Ill.l 1I.\t.i'·~: Carbon ear Br/·els Some briefs discussed bV', good grazing ground. In his acting city engineer EriC ~Ier.: ; I;' i"

, . " ,,' II "",it'll hlllld·: i~. speech, the member expressed cer at a value of ~248,200, were. j .' ! : \>:~.:.::; ':~t:;;;;.'rlllll,~.'r· ~I~~~~~ here Wednesday , the hope that cattlc raising will pas~ed by counCil hcre Wed· i

· ~'r ,,~,'II" ,':I ,1twt~ CARBO;>iEAR _ The scaling: friends and neighbours present Councillor Geoff Cal'l1ell i increase. "Years ago," he said nes ay. . .'.' "",..,,"" mudd)' ".·lll·P 5.S. "K"le" fl'nl'shed dl· •.. 1 and the lovel~' gl'fts reccl-I'ed ' I "butchers f.rom mallv places I The plans were £01' the can· · ,.,' ,d... . .• J 0 moved that a letter of con· i • .' 1 struction of four bungalows, a;

· ,'_,,..: '~'i"I".;.'l., ill l\'t't. rharginll her cargo here last I was certain evidence that Norma gratulation be sent to Senator went there to pick lip beef b t t t d r \ • '11,"11 thl' k I ff' I I b I I'k d ' ttl " asemen apar men, an our "r' .' " \l'r~ '. Tie 0 IC anum er of s well I'e . Higgins. in commemoration of ca c. signs .

... ,,' ::~: c:':''': . ~lltl pells stands at 17,337. with the Mr. and Mrs. Pilgrim will be his 50 years service as a law· "--- Plans were also passed for • "i ,:." .. :~\. hl';""1 ta~ rr~\\' sharing 5248.62 each. The returning to Botwood in a day ycr. To TI'cket Cars alterations to a dwelling on : .~ ...• : ... , 11.,., •.•• 1 1I\I'll1 p~\ts hal'e been taken to Bow- or two, where Mrs. Pcnney is Councillor Carnel1 said that ' Elizabeth Avenue, interior alter-

-"'r ,:::",': ,'\'~itr;l~t~ Ihl.' . n tI St T h I th t Ii r th U"t d ." .r::· ., .. ,.;,' ",h~bit;1I1Is nntl ro ler;~, •. ~ 0 n s. ~~urc~ ;c~ool aO d h e hUS~1 ~d Senator Higgins has contributed ations to a dwelling on Hamil·

,. ': ...•• ".:. ::"'11' "nil· IIRID/\I. SIIO\VER th t f th Sn I e.r . n much to the city. ton avenue, the side extension " on . a 0 e a vallon Army. • • • Residents of Young Street to a dWelling on Kings Bridge II

I·'·;.·...... ~. """1'1','11 ,I." ~Il's. CAII'in Pilgrim, (nee He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Councillor Alec Henlry madc who vi 0 1 ate the parking road, and the extension to a " .. ' ..... "<:::' t!", 111111'\' :\orma Penney), was tendered Fred Pilgrim, of this town. a motion that a letter of sym- regulations and park on the dwelling on Bennett avenue. I .' "'.,, ,,":, ::,11 ..r 11ll' a hridal shower at the home of If I'ariety is the spice of paUlY be sent to the remaining north side of the street will be In the metropolitan area!

· ".,: ... , :",' \~\~. :lnd her mother. :III'S. Ches Penney, life, then those who attended family o[ the "Dean of News· ticketed by police in the near plans were passed for the con-I ,"; ';,"C ... ·:·· .llllllt'l· h,'rr r~ccntly. the concert staged by "Prin- papers", P. J. O'Reilly, who future, city council decided struction of a motel and service I

· • "t ..... ;: .. ,; 1!\I'"lrh'~I; There was a lal'ge cro'l'd of cess Anne" Lodge, L.O.B.A. passed away here recently. Wednesday. station on the Trans Canada ' .. ,';"" ,.,; :h.' ",i,l· last week enjoyed a real feast. Councillor James Higgins dc- . . Highway. a two.ear garage on ~ .' . ~ .', ...... \;,,~ 1',':'111. ""0 Remove Fred Rossiter junior worship- scribed the old news writer as T!le deCISIOn came ahout fol· . Portugal eOl'e road and a bun·

' ....... r,,'"nn: ~"'r~ 1111· .1 ~ (ul master of "Carbon?ar" "a character in' his own right." lowln~ a [Ictallcd ~tud.y or the i galow on Bells Turn. . .' , ,." .... :; ,'I \,'11' L.O.L. No. 13. acted as chair· "His passin~ represents the area by .the trafftc IIlSpcctOl' I Plans fOi' an extension to a

,'.. • 'A man. T e programme containcd passing of an era." Councillor erc.v I( eou. w 10. rec m· i warehouse on Torbav road and i .. ' .i!':\'~·1in.:: ~ d C h "P R I I I 0

'. t"," i'::"'· thr se UI·u solos, duels, choruses, rcci- Higgins said. "we haven't many t~el.l~ed that the pilrkm~ pro-, for a second storey extension i • . ..• ,: t· I'", b"nk tations and skctehes. a large such characters remaining." I hlb.llI~n on the north sHle re.: 10 a dwelling on Old Petty:

.. ,. "'".:'.''' :., 11';\11" l'ity Council's acting ritl' en· audience attended. During nn • • • I mam In effect. ; Harbor road were passed by! .. '." :" ,to·a.lI. ::inrrl' F.l·il' ~Ierrcr said here: interval candy was sold. The: . St. ,John's Municipal Coun- He also recommended Ihal ~ council. I

•. ,' '''.; ,~"":::'.' .,f lhe \\'rdncsday that because of com·: proceeds are in aid of Carbon-· cillor James Fagan suggcstcd motorists who violate the regu-. I .~.~ :,~'·:.~;:;',::;,,;,I' .:;'111~~ plaints of used COl'S plnce(! nn i car L.O.L. No. 13. here Wednesday that the num· lations and continue to park N f dl d I·

'.'Y .. -'''·''::1''·~ .. 111<1 III land llll'ned by B. Trask at the 1 • • • erous traffic isl~nds here bc there be ticketed by police. , ew DUn an ,iunl'lion of Allandale road and The Easter meeting of the used for plantmg purposes, '

. ".' ." .... ,,:-, .• :l.': "I1I~' Ih(' Bonal'enture al'enue, the cars United Church Women was which as councillor Fagan said, . ' ... G t 5 A d '; -; .... ·: ... ".1·· .': :\ 1;\lnt1u~ will he remol'ed in the ncar held here recently. Mrs. F. W. 'tl{oo,vUnld. beautify areas around' ., e s war s . , .. ''"::',:,,,~,'. I., a futurc. Bradbury, the president, con.

,.,' , ~.1:: ~i','.·i~1 II~ ~aid that :'Ilr. Trask was dueted the devotional theme • • • • • . ~rantcd permission sometime of which was "What doc's Easter Councillor Alec Henley

a~o to constrnct a private gar- mean to you?" brought up the topic of 0111 age at the rear of his property The special Easter program· city streets, which he described

hy bul did not do so. me was presented by thc unit some as "practically impass. • 1<1d, nrll' . Complaints received by Coun- of which ::Ilrs. Georgc Hall is able."

"",h"'I'.lIdin~ of ell wcre to the cffect that used presidcnt. Rcv_ F. W. Bradbury Acting city engineer Eric · ~. \r~"r.:: W.' 1"3m rar~ were heing placed on hl~ screened the film strip "The ::Ifercer lVas directed to look '. rIC.' ··t( ':" t.I:1\lI~. Ihr 1311d. Upon checking, ::Ilr. ~ler- ::I!an on your Doorstep" and into the matter. . ''1'' .:'( .. 'or' 11\ lnn. eer said that this was so and Mrs. G. E. Hedges and Miss • • •

1-' "-.'" ~"n,r In also ~Ir. Trask was placing the )Iiliie Jeffers units combined Councillor .Tames Fagan -0":.'·' .. tr: •• ' ,,! rr";i· tlsed car~ on the streelll. to serve supper. made a motion that a leUcr of

· .:~ ~ t, .... : :~r ""lhtl"~;m Cily engineer advised that I congratulations be sent to the ' ••• '. :1,' ,':\rly ,L1ys. ~Ir. Trask agreed to remove Kiwanis Service Club here for,

.... 1.'-",:.:,·.", 'il .,nd Ihe. thc$c cars. i TV7.,·ll Tf1.ru ,.,l their work in producir.g the'

I ,.." j .1. J Music Festival which con- i

eluded recently. 1

· C··· Ii ,n omputer' A letter from Thomas Burke,

Jr., 133 Bond Street, fOJ' per-

P . mission to erect a load in/! zone rOUramlng' in front of his grocery store ~ . was referred to the next traffic

A 28-year-old Naval Lieuten· ant, D. N. Macgillivray, of st. John's will undergo a course and on the job training in com­putor programming at the U.S. Navy's Fleet Programming Cen­ter San Diego, California be-. ' ginning May 13 . . Since 1961, :\Iacgillivray has been executive officer 01 the Halifax-based frigate Lauzon.

meeting of Council.

CANAL TOLLS To take a 6,5oo·ton tanker

through the Suez Canal costs about $6,200; to take thc same tankcr through the Panama Canal costs about $5,650.

Four Newfoundland towns and a city have been chosen as being some of the safer places to drive in Canada .

The city of Corner Brook and the communities of Gander, Grand Falls, Stephenvillc and Wabana will be honored with special citation awards for not I

having a traffic fataity during: 1962. I

The awards will be presented I at tlte ninth conference of the Canadian Highway Safety COlin' t

cit at Halifax, May 6, 7 and 8. : ,

The west coast city was one' . of 10 Canadian cities of 20,000 ' ! or more population to receil'e . I the award.

The other four communities . : were among 77 Canadiall com-

• (NE.A Telephoto) 'munities with less than 20,000 'ISITOR - Prmccss. Grace of. population to be awarded. Monaco flashes a smile on ar-rival at her mother's home in! SI. John's was the only award Philadelphia. Grace. her hus.; winner last year showing the band, Princc Rainier, and their I greatest reduction in traffic fat· two children expect to be in .• lities during 1961 for cities i the U.S. for six weeks. lof 40.000 people and over. I

TO-MORROW

A NEW JOY HAS COME TO THE SCREEN ... AND

THE WORLD IS A HAPPIER ~LACE TO LIVE IN! ~~\ '

tt .. __

I'tLl£t - . \ . / '\0:", _. I

JACIOE GLEASON ~n *01801 *PronQun •• d G~~-GO

Also-l'P-TO-THE-~IINUTE NEWS

TIMES OF SHOWS

EVE0iING SHOWS: 7 O'CLOCK - 9.00 MATINEE: 2 P.l>.l.

LAST TIMES TO~DAY "LOLITA"

"\

NEWrOUNDi./~ND/S FRIENDLY THEATRE

NOW PLAYING .. ALL THE YOUNG LOVES AND SENSATIONAl' SCENES FROM THE SMASH BEST-

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He was born in st. John's and educated at Bishop Field College. lie later attended Grove School, Lakeland, Ontario and entered the sea cadets there.

.: .1

HE BEST IN THE HOUSE" 'N 87 LANDS

ll({(/{fbJtrrlu n __

.. .... It.I.an 0IIlI DafMI •

~ .. If '"CWIIAI cur_ ----.-~

hy th, Board or Llqllor. Control)

He entered Memorial Unil'er­sity in 1951 on a navy league scholarship and joined the Uni­versity Naval Training Division. He transferred to the RCN un­der the terms of the new regular officers training plan and at­tended Quecn's . UniVersity, Kingston, Ontario.

He was awarded the Queen's Sword at HMCS Stadaeima, Hali­fax, as best third year cadet, and was promoted to midship­man. He has taken courses aCloat and ashore in Canada, including naval schools over· seas.

He wl11 be accompanied to California by his wife and three daughters.

FORTUNE, NOd. ICPl-The deep sea dragger Hermitage was damaged early Tuesday when it hit a breakwater wnlle being towed into this south coast seaport. The HermitaJe was on its way to Gaultois with 100,000 pounds of fish caught on the Grand Banks when it devel­oped engine trouble. It was taken In tow by a sisler ShiP, the Gaultois, but was caught by high winds and veered into the breakwater, damaging her bow.

TREATED TO LAST ••• with tal SOTII

. • t • • ...... . ,-, .. " .

\. .. ,:: :' '.'.. ",

(ClASSES A, • , Q tengths '0 80 feet Lengths 10 80 feet

nMBEfIS:-I.C. fiR, WESlElN H""LOQC. IIIRCH AND OM. from 2 Inch plank to 16" x 16". Leng\hslo 40 feel.

ftfAUD AND UNTRlfA.TED. $AWN AND DRESSED TQ QItIII. 1'ENTA TREATED POLES _ UNGTHS Tei 60 1'1'.

I'RCIlIAILWAT "ES A. SPECIALITY.

III'OUIDIAID HAIDIOODS ASPHALT AND . A • .~ .... J

CREOSOTE DIVISION ~ ~1Me~~ CLARENVILLE NEWl<'OUNDLAND

All materials to C.S.A. and Treatments to A.W.P.A. Specification!

Also-UP-TO-THE-~nNUTE NEWS

EVENING SHOWS: 6:45 - 9:00 MATINEE; 1:30

NEXT ATTRACTION SPENCEH. TRACY - BURT LANCASTER­IUCHAH.D WIDMARK - ~[ARLENE DIET­RICH in "JUDGE~IENT AT NURmIBERG' - SUSIJENSE - THRILLS..,.. A TRULY GREAT MOTION PICTURE .

Join the Fight Against Cancer-GIVE NO W ···jt

~:~'"§~~~7':;>

HOUSE-T.O-HOUSE CANVASS APRIL 22nd to 27th;!t!:

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Page 6: ~S .5. Tries To Head Off Laos' Crisiscollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · Harriman wlto has just com. t union, Communist China uncl! tit em tOll'ard Ihe Cummunist

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I-THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, APRIL 25, 1963

Provincial Tourney Starts The bi~gest bowling toumament ever held

in st. John's is, scheduled to open at the new Plaza Bowl this morning with pin splitters from aU ~c\\'fll\mdland and Labmdor competing for single and tcam honors,

Sponsored bv thc St. John's Bowling Council and Dominion Ale thc Provincial Bowlin~ Cham­pionships will sec 140 kc~lers hom st. John's, "\'01'11,1\·, ~IOIlllt Pearl, Conccption Bay South, 'larhor Grace, Gander, Burhans, Grand Falls, Tilt Con', Corner Brook. Goose Bay and Labrador Cit,· competing for the All-Newfolllldland honours.

Starlin,!!; this morning thc to.lI\'1lamcnt will 1'\111 1mtil Satllrda\' with 12 hours of kegling slated fI,1' the first two days and ninc homs on Saturday.

12 TEAMS ENTEHED

division dropped to decide the finalists for Satm­day's games.

TROPHIES

All tropllies for the championships have been donated by Dominion Ale. Each member of the winning team will receive an award be­sides the team trophy with awards also going for the highest average, three fl'lnnes and single frame. In the singles both the chmnpion und the rumler-up will be presented with trophies.

It will be a colorful affairs with all the cntrics in the tournament wearing team shirts.

OPENING CEUEMONIES \

Form Provincial Bowling Counci

A meeting to form an All-Newfoundland Bowling Council will be held on Saturday. delegates from the 12 centres that are taking pa rt in the Provincial Bowling Championship' ,t ~Iaza Bowl will be invited to attend tile meeting with the founding of a council to include alia foundland and Labrador as the main item on the agenda. '

Bowling Tourney T earn Scherlu MEN: Thursday. April 25, 1963

-10:00 A.~I.-Alleys 5·6 W. Pearl vs Hr. Grace 7·B Burhans Vs Torbay RCAF 9·10 Gander vs St. John's

11·12 Grand Falls vs Tilt Cove 13·14 Labrador City vs Goose

Bay 15·16 Conception Bay South I'S

Corner Brook

-7:30 P,M,-:;·6 Mt. Pearl Vs Tilt Cove 7·8 Buchans vs Goose Bay 9·10 Gander vs Corner Brook

11·12 Grand Falls vs Conception Bav South

13·14 Labrador City vs Torbay RCAF

15·16 Sl. John's vs Hr. Grace

Friday, April 26, l~63 -10:00 A.M.­

Alleys

7·8 Corner Brook \'s TOl'bay RCAF

9·10 Conception Bay South vs SI. John's

11·12 Labrador City vs Till Cove

13-14 Buchans vs Gander 1:>-16 lilt. Pearl vs Grand Falls

-7:30 P.M.-13·14 Corner Brook vs Goose

Bay

15·16 Conceptilm !lal' Goooe Bay .

17·18 LahralilJl' Citl" I'l! ,Iohn·s '.1

19·20 Grand Falb \" RCAI' '

21·22 Buchans I! IIr 23,24 jlt Pearl 1'5 G" : 4n:e

-3:110 \»1._ 5·6 Goose lIay 1'\

7·8 Corner Brook \5 John's

COMPU

BLUE BREWIN

248 197 288 7: 15U 169 174 5 286 198 196 6 173 268 230 G 251 1138 212 6

11081070110032

lIospllal:-O 5 18:1 191 141 179 180 138 4 127 \71 164 4 223 179 216 ~ 175 :!QO 235 ~ 887 921 894 2; -

All 12 centers huve cntel'ed teams ill the l.adies' and Men's team events with Tilt Cove ha\'h\~ nil singles cntl'ics lind Goose Bay, Buehans ami Gander with male singles entrics nnh-.

Opening ceremonies m'c set for tcn this morning with Mayor H. C. n. Mews, Deput~1 Mllyor~ill Admns, O. L. Vardy, Board of Trade President l\-1ichael Hopc, Frank Ryan, Howic Meckel' and thc executive of the Bowling Coun­cil taking part.

All teams ancl single entries are requested to he at the Plaza Bowl at 9:00 a,m" howcver, as photographs will b.e taken, Today and Friday the kCJ:!:lcrs will roll from tcn in thc morning IIntil dosc ,to tcn at night. On Saturday action will get IInder way at nine in the mOl'lling; and all thc champions will be known hy six that evening.

-1:30 P,]\[.-13·14 ?tit, Pearl vs TOl'bay

RCAF

13·14 1\It. Pearl Ys Goose Bay 15·16 Buchans vs Corner

Brook

15·16 Tilt Cove vs St, ,John's 17·18 Conception Bay South vs

Torbay RCAF 19·20 Gander vs Hr. Grace 21·22 Buchans vs Grand Falls 2a-24 Mt. P.earl \'5 Lahrador

9·10 Concepti0n Bal' ~t!l~t~~;; Tilt COI'C •

11·12 Lahraclor rill' IS r. 146 227 160 259 ]71 116 224 154 341 218 186 197 t 123 244 162 970 &79 1166 21

The ll'allls will playa rouud-robin scries with l':ll'h {'In\! pla"ill).! threc frames against the 11 "tlH'r Il'a\ll~ a 1111 tIll' entry with the most points ,1\1 ~at\lnhl\· will he declared champions, In case lIt a til' ill IJoillts the total pillfal1 for thc 33 frames \I ill he \ISt,d to hrcak the deadlock.

.. \ction in the t\\'o singlcs will differ from the tram pla~·. 'l'olla,· all cntrics in thc singles will !I,ll t('n lmnll's with thc two low ladies and the thrl'l' Inw !Hell being eliminated,

The evcnt will end with a dance and prcsell­tation of trophies at the Carol Boom on Saturdav night. .

COMMITTEE

.15·16 Buehans vs St. ,John's 17·18 Gander vs Tilt Cove 19·20 ITl'and Falls \·5 Goose

Bay 21·22 Labrador City vs Corner

Brook 23·24 Conception Bay South vs

Hr. Grace

-4:00 PJ!.-9·10 :1It. Pearl vs st. John's

11·12 Buchans vs Tilt Cove 13-14 Gander vs Goose Bay 15·16 Grand Falls vs Corner

Brook 17-18 Labrador City vs

Conception Bay South 19·20 Torbay RCAF vs Hr.

17·18 Gander V5 Conception Bay South

19·20 Grand Falls Vs Labrador City

21·22 Tilt Cove vs Hr. Grace 23-24 5t. ,John's vs Torbay

RCAF

-1:30 P.'I.-5·6 :lit. Pearl vs Corner

Brook 7·8 Buchans V5 Conception

Bay Suuth 9·10 Gander vs Labrador City

11·12 Grand Falls V5 Hr. Grace 13·14 Goose Bay vs St. John's 15·16 Tilt Cove vs Torbav

City

Saturday, Aprll 27, ID63 -9:00 A,M,­

Alleys 9·10 Goose Bay vs Tilt Core

11-12 Corner Brook vs Hr. Grace

13·14 Grand Falls vs st. John's 15·16 Gander I'S Torbay RCM' 17·18 Buchans \'s Labrador

City 19·20 .\It. Pearl I'S Conception

Bay South

Grace '. flHIYtne 15·16 ~1t. Pearl I; 8,,(', • ,,·l --

WOllIEN: Thursday. ,\prillj

-10:00 A,\I.' , Alleys 17·18 )IL P";Jrl IS T('r~it

RCAr ' 19·20 Grand Foil, I'

Brook . 21·22 Lahrarlor Cit,' Ii i:

John·s itUj,Jlall 2:1·24 (onc.~ptioll B2I

1'ilt ~'()\'r .

RCAF' - UO PlL--12:30 PJI.- 5·6 Hr. Groce IS Coree

-4:00 P.M.- 13·14 Corner Brook vs Tilt Brook

201 HJI 156 149 142 114 206 202 186 152 222 124 289 196 170 997 953 750 2

260 249 234 263 147 271 197 \64 214 195 180 208 249 '2fl~ 273

1104 1005 1200 ~

1 n tIll' second step those rel11ainin~ will bowl fin- frallles with the two low ladics and four low l\wn heing dropped. Stcp three will see another fin' frames heing rolled with the low two in each

John Constuntine is the Tournament Chail'­mnn with Alf Smith as tIle Tournament Stntisti­can and other members of the Bowling Co'uncil will assist these two.

~-------------------------------Grace ... /,11..0.,,'.,·_1

_______ 5_.6_G_o_os_e_B_a_y_v_s_I_Ir_. _G_ra_c_e ___ C_o_v_e ______ , __ <_C_on_ti_nucd onP :.:3::.;1;]: IHliinnp 234 t77 221 175 182 1113 179 217 119 208 214 253 220 318 302

I

All items are planned for d

three .• 1 a,· selling I lilt we cannot

/!uaranter that quantities wili

last. Please order

carll' and aroili disappoinfnwnt

Thursc1:n·, FridaV;

Saturchr. April·

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COAST TO COAST-NO OTHER SALE CAN MATCH IT ! Top Flight Values Assured by EATON'S Vast Buying 'Powel'

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Glides to the job on two easy·rolling wheels and a swivel caster, Fealures include: Powerfull h,p, motor, toe·touch switch. Cloth bag takes throw·away paper bags for easy dust disposal. Comes with combination floor and rug hrush, upholstery tool, dusting brusbes, floor brush l'rcvice tool. hose, two wands, tool caddy. 49.95 EATON'S Trans·Canada Sale:

With attachments

NO DOWN PAYMENT

EATON GUARANTEE •••

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1047 1015 1078

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1195 1260 112 ,Iuo::_n

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BOWLING SCORES

COMPLIMENTS Of:

BLUE STAR BREWING LIMITED

IIIl\t)\\',\\\) Tl'ESDAY'S GAMES

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0"- 0'-',: ~~" ~7"ll p, \lillon 225 198 183 606 1307 1062 11073476

Frihllans No. 2:-0 :; :,,: :.q 74~ 1\, Pownton 241 132 235 608 ."" 'j: ~: t I;H\ F, Knight 253 165 211 629 ::17 :,,~:H :;~~ .1, Williams 348 222205 775

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204 189 262 655 195 239 219 653 262 245 250 757 228 200 240 668 210 230 253 693

1099 1103 12243426

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THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND. APRIL 211, 1963-7

2-0 Decision Over Cubs I

Has First . Me tsRoad Win 8-KANSAS CITY ATHLETICS By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS and Camilo Pascual won his lined with a rib muscle tear. inning double as lhe Pirates Veteran Carl Willey's thrcu- first game as Minnesota Twins Kaline, who got the Tigers edged the Phillies. Bob Bailey

Eighth in a series of form charts on major league clubs. hit pitching and rookie Ron beat Washington Senators 6·4, even in the seventh with a hit a three·run homer in the

Hllnt's first major leaglle home In NL night games, Pitts· two·run double, won it with his fourth inning in support of Pitts· PITCmNG run brought New York Mets a burgh Pirates whipped Phila- homer in the 15th. Detroit ~nd burgh starter Bob Friend, who 2-0 victory over Chl~ago's Cubs delphia Phlls 6-4 and Milwaukee Los . Angeles matched single ne.eded. relief ~elp to get his Eddie Lopat professes to see seven depend­Wednesday, the Mets first roa.d Braves edged Houston Colts runs III the 12th. The game 'Nas third vIctory WIthout 8 loss., abIes. Diego Segui could be a big chucker. Dave victory of the season and their 4-3. played In 47·degrce cold bcfore Warren Spahn brought hiS . k h d k f' ld f fifth in the last six games. At Los Angeles, the Dodgers ~ crowd of only 1,575. record to H with the 330th vic- WIC ers am, E Ra ow, Ted Bows Ie sure 0

Willey. ,formerly with MilwulI' lead Cincinnati 1·0 after 1\'.1 STRANDS 10. . . . tory of his. career as he beat the startin~ spots. John Wyatt is the bull pen work-kee Braves, allowed only three IlInl~gs. .,. Pena, winnIng hIS thIrd WIth· Colts. EddIe Mathews and Mack horse as "ood as any you'll find. RA TlNG-B-scattered singles, struck out WIlley scored IllS hrst vIctory out a loss. stranded 10 base Jones homered for lhe Braves, 'I'>

!lve and walked one In nis as a Met and HUllt. a 21·yeal·· runners while two others were Jones' shot in the seventh ;n, INFIELD standout performance. Bac1led old second baseman, hit his thrown out at the plate in !.lIe ning off Dick Farrell proving by three doubleplays, he faced homer off Bob Buhl in Ihe fifth sixth Inning. The Athletics 30t decisive. Carl Warwick homered Best part of the club. Norm Siebern, Jerry only 20 batters. . inning, l' th~ only run. they nee.ded o~f for Houston. . Lumpe on right side rate with any. Ed Charles is

In other day games. 51. LoUIS EARNS ~II RD '\IN. . Mike McCormIck. mak1O~ hIS LOS ANGELES (AP) - Five a winnincr player at third base Shortstop Dick Cardinals took undisputed pos· 51. LOUIS rammed 111 all ,I s first start for the Orioles, In the balk calls and the temporary I'> • session of first place in ~he runs in the sixth Inning gml seventh on Wayne Cousey's run· banishment of the entire Cin· Hower should be recovered from ban~ed-up thumb. National League with a 1·3 brought le£ty Curt Simmons !1 is scoring single. A four • run c\nnati bench virtually over· Both have fine speed on bases. Wayne Causey is ~~~~tt~l;iC;;: ':hft: ~~xi ~~a~ ~~~~ ~~~al~~~n~!~:or:ith~~~~O~I~ ~Irn:~pe; g:p i nt~et K:~~a5 M~t~; ~~~d~~~~k a a~Js J~~~:;esp~~~s~ an excellent handy man. RA TING-A-New York Yankees 6·4 In 12 lowing nine hits. live of them scoring, three • hit pitching as tne OUTFIELD innings and Al KaHne's homc doubles. Pascual. who had lost thr~e. Dodgers walloped the Reds 7-0 .' run brought Detroit Tigers. a The Cards got all their runs struck out 12 while recording Wednesday nighl. The setup calls for platoonm)!;-Bobby Del 4.3. IS.inning triumph over the off Billy Pierce in the sixth on his first victory. The Twins The umpiring team headed hy Greco Gino Cimoli George Aluski Chuck Esse~ian Los Angeles Angels. three singles, a walk. a sacri· moved ahead to stay in the lil'st Augie Donatelli stirred up a • 'I 'd 1.1 'J' J'. T' b 11 f

In American League night {ice and Dick Groat's two· run inning on Lennie Green's lead. wild rhubarb in the second in. on n~ lt 51 e; nanny unenez, ose ada u or action. Orlando Pena scattered double. off double and Bob Allison's ning. calIing three balks on :ne southpaw work. What they really need is a pro due-10 hits as Kansas City moved Hoyt Wilhelm allowed only single. Bernie Allen homered Reds' starting pit c her, .Jim tive every day long hall hitter Numbers don't make into first plnce by beating one hit in 3 1·3 innings of relief for Minnesota and Ed Brink· Owens and finally ordering him f I k f l't RATIN' G C Baltimore Orioles 5·0. Cleve· and Mike Hershberger singled man connected for Washington. from the game. up or ae a qua I y. -land's Gary Bell and .Jim Grant in two runs in the 12th in Bell. making his first ~tart The five balks brought the combined for a four·hit. 2·0 leading the White Sox over the since last .Tllly 17. allowed only Donatelli team total for the CATCmNG shutout ovel' Boston Red Sox crippled Yankees., The Y~nkces, f~ur hits before he ~i~ed in the Young season .to 32 of th~ 67 The soft spot. Joe Azeue and Haywood Sul-

s.cort;d two runs m the m~th to, n10lh a~d Grant fInIshed ~Ip. balks called In the Nahonal !ivan neither a fireball will divide the chores. They he It. the last after WIlhelm I The Indians runs were supplied League. The balk record for an ,'. d d', . '11 d f . I had relieved .Iuan Piz~rro 1ud' by Woodie Held with a fifth entire season is 76, don t hit much an on t sCl11h ate e enSlVe y. one of his fluttering knuckle- inning homer off Earl Wilson. Johnny Roseboro. Ro~ Fairly Trade may be required. RATING-C-

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balls got past the catcher. 11 was Hel~'5 fourth homer, and Frank Howard hIt home SUMMARY-SurfrisiJ1a optimism pervades Roger Marls of the Yankees Each has clmched a Cleveland runs. 1'> k' h f' d" ' "

,pulled up lame after running Victory. One Dodger run scored on a camp. They have a rea shot at crac mg t e Irst IVIS-lout a single in the second, Roberto Clemente d rove in balk and another was set up hy ion if Maanger Lopat's appraisal of his pitching is I Mickey Mantle remained side- the winning runs with a scvcnth a balk. accurate. . , !

i . : ~

(Continued from Page 6) 7·8 Mt. Pearl VI St. John's 9·10 Grand Falls vs TlIt Cove

11.12 Labrador City vs Club Cop Eastern Title will:-H::GN:Ns;~ls , ..

Conception Bay South

-7:30 P.M.-17·18 Torbay RCAF vs SI.

John's 19.20 Hr. Grace vs Till COI'e 21·22 Mt. Pearl vs Conception

Bay South 23.24 Grand ~'al1s vs Labrador

City

FrIday, April 26, 1963 -10:00 A,M.-

Alleys 5,6 CornCI' Brook Vs Tilt Cove 7·8 Torbay RCAF vs

Conception Bay South 9.10 Hr. Grace vs Labrador

City 11.12 Mt. Pearl vs Grand Falls

-1:30 P.M.-17,18 St. John vs Conception

Bay South 19.20 Corner Brook vs Labrador

City 21.22 Torbay RCAF VI Grand

Falls 23.24 Hr. Grace VI Mt. Pearl

-7:30 P.M.-1>-6 Till Cove vs Labrador

City 7.8 SI. John's vs Grand Falls 9.10 Corner Brook vs Mt.

Pearl 11-12 Torbay RCAF Vi Hr.

Grace .

Saturday, April &26. 1963 -9:00 A.M.­

Alleys 17.18 Conception Bay South vs

Grand Falls 19-20 Tilt Cove vs Mt, Pearl 21.22 St. John's vs Hr. Grace 23.24 Corner Brook VI Torbay

RCAF

-12:30 P.M.-11·6 Labrador Cily vs Mt.

Pearl 7.8 Conception Bay South vs

Hr. Grace 9-10 Tilt Cove VI Torbay

RCAF 11·12 St. John's vs Corner

Brook

-3:00 P.M_

In Dominion Ale Darts Club League blanked Caribou Lounge 3·0 and coupled with

a 2·1 loss by Hillview to UNF copped their seventh strai)!;ht Eastern Division title in Dominion Ale Provincial Darts Associa­tion on Tuesday night. Cluh now will represent the Eastern Division in the All-Newfoundland playoffs a.~ they seek their seventh Provincial championship.

Ted Morton studded double four and fielded a tUll for Club while Art Lafosse clocked double 16 and also posted a tun with Dave Wareham hitting double 16 for the other Club finish. Ray Squires had 140 plus a tun for Lounge with Jack Brown hitting 105 and 101 and Charlic Reelis haVing 108.

Walter Chafe with double nine and Vern Rvall with double eight were the finishers for UNF who also got t\~'o tuns from Jim Fillier while Dick Carroll studded double 16 for Hillview and Wally Tizzal'd hit a 140.

The standings with fom gamcs still to he played in the Eastern Division:

P Club" ..... " ..... " .. "" .... 36 LOlln~e ,." ........ "" ............. ". 36 Hillview". " ........... ", .. " ........ 30 Mt. Pearl,,, ............ ".. .... .... 33 Columbian " ... " ... " ... , .... ........ 30 UNF " .. ' .. " .... .... .... .... ........ 33 Canadian Legion ' ......... " .... "" :30

'Darts Meeting

W 27 22 18 18 16 9 7

L 9

14 12 15 14 24 23

Knights Increase

Advantage A meeting of the Eastern Division darts league is slated for tonight at the Rainbow Room starting at B o'clock. All delegates are asked to attend this important meeting.

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Knights of Columbus American League came up with two more victor-

W L Pct. GBL ies in their billiard tournament 9 5 .643 _ against the Firemen last night. 7 4 ,636 I:' Al Andrews of the Knights

f' ' " I

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LOS ANGELES (AP) Little I is softer and much slowcr than Maury Wills, who stole a last year, whcrc Wills coppcd

. , I ' ,;11 i

". "I' ' , record-shattering 104 hases last 61 of his bases. ,. iii

I , season, has yet to steal his first The stadiunI. and the new onc this year. crushed rock infield. arc the

Last year's most valuable, pride and joy of Waltcr O'Mal­player in the National League Ic)'. the Dodger owner and boss. is not getting panicky, nor is Thcre are other factors, how· I

he offering any alibis. ever, why Wills has no sloien

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! i: But he did say Wednesday bases as against thc four 'he i ,

that he is still cautious about had at this same date in 1~62. an anklc he sprained when Los For one, he missed six gam.cs Angeles Dodgers opened scnson after a collision with Chical!I!'s

Ii' I: i

,piay at Chicago. Dick Bartil at home plat~ when I "And I am having a little the ankle was hurt. 1 trouble getting a good slnrt and He hus been on base just1!l pivoting," the Dodger shortstop times th~s far, a ~ d been added, caught trYIng to steal Just CJnce. . You won't hear it from Wills, but other ball players can off~r part of an explanation. ' ;

I Dodger Stadium's new infield i , I

Probable' Pitchers.,

I'

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I:

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Hits Are By THI, ASSOCIATED PRESS \ Probablc pitchers for today's I" ii",

major league games (won·)ost ',~ rccords in parentheses):

1

American League Ii

ReSpOnSleble' Kansas City. Wickcrsham I , (I-Ol at Baltimore. Barber (3·1\ I I' ,

IN I, ~linncsota. Kaat [1·\1 at

PHILADELPHIA (AP)-Don Washington Stcnhousc 11 - ,0 1 fl

Dcmetcr attributes his Natiunal ! tNI. ' League balting lcadership to I Los Angeles, Lee 12-0) at D~- ,! his becoming a two·strike hit- i troit, Aguirre 13·01, ,il tcr. 1 N~lional Lca~Ut II

Demeter is leading the league' St. Luuls. Sadeckl (0·11 11 ,i' with a .440 a\'erage, has the S?'1 Francisco, O'D~II (2·01. mosl hits by any playcr in the New York, CraIg (0·2) at 1< 'I majors, 22, and Is second in Chi~ag.o, E,Ilsworlh (Z'\). I,ll' , ,

runs batted in with 13 and in ClIIclllllah: Jay (0·3) at Los home runs with four. Ang~les. lIhllcr (1-0) INl. ,\ ,

The paeko{)C.all.trades of Phil- MIlwaukee. Burdette (2-1) at I" !' apelphla Phillies-he plays out. Houston, Nottebart (2-0) (N). :':: i' fied, third or first-also credo , I ' its his early season success to Marr.·s I""',,, steady work, a shorter swing '(, ' and a wider stance. I!: ;

:o.1anager Gene Mauch, how· L I.

ever, says Demeter's sudden 'ame \

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I 171 ~~~ It;~ 584 I'.C. Clllb:-2

;, ~17 :11:1 ~:,~ i62' K. 8\shop 170 224 172 566 17.18 Grand Falls vs Hr. Grace 19.20 Labrador City va Torbay

RCAF

Three subjects to be discuss­ed are: (1) Appointment of two delegatcs for annual meet­ing at Corner Brook. (2) Sci· ection of playing site for semi· final in SI. John's (3) Pre­paration of brief to annllal mceting.

Kansas City Chicago Baltimore New york Detroit Boston Cleveland Los Angeles Minnesota Washington .

8 5. 15 'h' won the first game over Wilson 6 5 .545 H1 Andrews of the Firemen with 7 7 .500 2 a 240-213 score. The winner had

emergence as a two strike-hit· ter is the big item in his im­proved hitting.

Demeter, who came here from Los Angeles Dodgers in a trade for pitcher Dick Farrell, wound up last season hitting .307 with 107 RBis and 29 home

NEW YORK (AP) - New Yor.k Yankees' Roger Maris pulled up lame again in the second inning of Wednesday's game with Chicago White Sox and left the ga me.

'I ' i,

::: :7R ~1l2 ,02 I 5, Murphy 188 209 157 554 :S7 :7~ ::0 ,SI; L. Pillon 175 120 203 498

, :M 1% 2Rti ,511 i .1. White 239 257 216 712 21.22 Conception Bay South vs

Corner Brook (h\:~IP~ l:ti{lllH 35791.1, Dillon 273 206 165 644 23-24 Tilt Cove vs St. John's

1045 1016 013 2974 136 ~I~ 174 525' ~Iounl Cashel:-l C.Y.C.::....G 17~ il;S 2iR tH9 11. Hannon 96 156 177 429 B, Ollver I~~ 1 ~n IRI 510 R. Hannon 226 167 239 632 J. Byrne ~S 179 IRO ~R4, G. Hannon 139 145 187 471 E. Hartery 1~3 l~n 184 536 i D Lacey 278 215 210 693 F. PiUman 926 flSI nOi 2714 ! G: Maher 147 141 139 422

155 170 117 442 170 216 210 605 273 225 149 647 206 135 138 479 885 836 736 24~7

~I~ .. _._ I 886 824' M2 2647 SI. Joseph'I:-1 li7 ~23 215 815 i Celt:l:-2 F. Maher 199 217 164 580 253 ~'Il2 Ii2 629 I R. Bursey 186 IB6 253 625 E. Collins 173 180 198 551 191 ~06 200 597 P. Walsh 171 130 194 495 G. Coish 1B3 222 188 593 200 :!22 tr.O 582 111. Walsh 271 1B4 340 795 H. Crimp 175 160 306 641 2.'0 237 257 744 D. Dooley 3'12 281 311 9U H. M~ .... 246 212 202 660

. 1I'i3 II9\) 10M 3367 B. Cooney 212 2411 2117 714 Postal:-O So. 1:-1 12121006 13M 3573 L. Meaney 246 151 176 573

I ~ ~~6 2.10 629 CLB:-l S. Warren 87 117 192 396 lfi,q 236 211 616 G. Chancey 200 218 169 593 P. Walsh 181 203 155 339 ~ 100 200 64B R. Crane 206 219 188 613 J. Rya n 210 210 224 644 ~9 191 186 596 F. Nicholls 165 175 179 1119 D. WhltUe 220 205 192 617 ~I 20R 19B 857 M. Kirby '201 213 237 651 -

logo 111:11 10053146 C, Andrews 130 254 130 514 Cru.ldera:-l l\.~ 1108 1079 11032890 Walsh 186 209 239 634

. '-. Ronayne 218 142 213 573 194 338 284 796 Palrlclans No. 1:-3 Peddle 2116 261 2M 771 210 ~8 215 681 D. Gallaghar 229 Ui5 253 677 Woods 235 175223 633 m 248 2~ 743 M. Marlin 2111 3002112 773 Samuelson 171 183 200 563

184 164 560 M. Speams 225 225 226 676 1068 9701128 3164 I 2U 279 212 724 A. English 155225 247 627 LelloD:-2

(1,\: ... ~71303 I I 143504 E, Kearsey .' 192 214 333 739 F. Rodlera' 274 280 192 727 "". 1016 1165 13113492' D. Bishop 225 2!i8 239 720 'YO 197 270 675 ~lount Cilhel:-O R. White '241 228 116' 58'; ~2 210 196 638 R. Hannon ,181 181 156 528 C. Rlehardson 146 191 216 ,553 88 195 270 663 G. Horwood 15', 140 114 404 L. DeLace~ 28,8 228 262 728 m ~~ 2801•• 664178 D. Lacey ',' 224 137 217 1178 '112411841025 3313

tea "" H. Hannon : 131 223 127 481 . -IOIt 12013241 G. Maher 168 181 140 589 Mental HOIpltal:-3 ,

- 8M 872,754 2480 J. Shea 171 129 175 4711

: ~40 202 651 • 175 280 659 ~ 111160 623

,8 100 187 663 1214 230 207 671

21S 10361016 3267

____ • G. Walters 191 172 79 541 Felldla •• 1-3 C. Dunphy 58 200 262 620 G. Williams 214 223237 674 C. Yetman 127 205 208 540 O. Steele 143,181 197 521' F. Shea' 185 201 220 600 B. MArtin 146 178223 1!47 832 9071044 2783 J. Lalle 200 200 174 574 Y,M.C.A.-O

928 1009 1079 3016 , DEFAULT

. "

Patricians Presentation

Mmnbers of the Patricians Inter·associatlon baskctball lea­gue will be guests of a, dance and presentation of trophies at the school allditOl'lum tonight starting at 8.30 .

6 6 .500 2 a total break of 148 with the 5 6 .455 ~\2 latter coming up with 94 in 6 a ,429 3 breaks. 5 9 .357 4 The nightcap was a 174-108

runs.. The Yankees right fielder ~ B ,333 4 victory for Ed Be~r of the Mau~h S~yS bemg ~hlc ~o get apparently suffered a re.inJury

has~ hIts. WIth two strIkes IS the I of the hamstring muscle in nis ' major dIfference ?etlVcen the left leg, first hurt in spring Demeter of pro~lse and the training April 1. He missed the Demeter of fulfIllment. first two weeks of the season,

Curling Notes

ST. JOHN'S CURLING CLUB CLOSING BONSPIEL

THURSDAY, APRIL 25th

7 • 8.30

Knights over Charles Sheppard of the Firemen. Beer's )lrcaks totalled 35 and Sheppard's 108. The two wins increased the K of C lead to 135.

• • • TONIGHT'S GA~IES , COLLECT $2 800 000

8,00. A. Harding (K of C) vs i TORONTO (CP)' _' Ontario F. BrIen (F). 'residents collected more than

9.00 W. Bcer (K of C) vs 2,800.000 from$ the motor vehi. J N(jrrls (F). cle accident claims fund in I,he

10.00 J. Grouchy (K of C,) first eight months of its opera· vs D. Costello (F) tion. Transport Minister James

returning to the lineup April 19. Mickey Mantle, the other

member oC New York's poient M,and·M combination, also has been out of action as the result of a groin muscle injury March 10. He Is reported ready to return to the lineup. '

The event will bring to a close a most successful year ill F. Snow, W. ~Ierecy, W, Win· inter-association basketball with SOl', C. F. Dearm, T. Dunnr. vs thc music being supplied by the L Bowering, A. J. LIISh, R. Silhouetes orchestra. Templeton, G Knight, J. E, But-

ler.

A partial boundary for four states (Delaware, New Jersey, New York and Pennsylvania) is provided by the Dclaware niver.

Allid announced in the legisla· ture Tuesday. He said ther'c were about 2,400 claims made by innocent victims of traffic accidents. most caused by mo· torists without insurance.

With two out In the second, Maris sent a slow roller nown the third base line and beal it out. to first base. He wa~ re, placed on the base by Jack

Koufax Out LOS ANGELES (AP) Pitcher

Sandy Koufax will be out of thl! Los Angeles Dodger IIne·up for at least 10 days, the club an· nounced Wednesday. '

A Dodger spokesman said Koufax injured his left shoulder Tuesday night in a game against, Milwaukee Braves at Dodger Stadium. " Koufax left the game in the seventh Inning after giving up nor uns and only lwo hits. The Dodgers won 2·1.

Club physician Dr. Robert Kerlan said x·rays showed l~ou· fax had injured the shoulder joint. Koufaxhas been ad \'ised not to use his left arm for two days •

8.30 • 10 C. R(jckweli, R. Levitz

Herrick, V. Clouston. • • •

vs J,

The winners of the sllven o'clock games - Snow vs BoW· ering, Piercey vs Lush and Winsor vs R. Templeton return to the ice at 8.30 with L, J. Goldstein who holds the bye.

TO SINK SHAFT ESTERHAZY. Sask. (CP)­

International M.! n ern I sand Chemical Corporation (Canada) Ltd. announced Tuesday it w!ll begin work this summer on a four-year, $9,500,000 project to sink a sccond shaft into potasil· bearing formaU9ns near Esler· hazy; IMC, said In announcing the new llroject It's present dO· erallon Is seIling all the potash it can produce. '

If rum is your drink ...

Wood's Old Navy • lsyourrum

(Not inserted by till! Board of Liquor Control)

Reed. ,"

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-TilE DAILY NEWS. ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, APRIL 25, 1963

! 11111111 11'1: 11 n I nlll""lIrtl1ll' 11111I11I'IIIlltlll.1111111111111 nil lit 111',r lit I" "

__ .~--___ ,.' __ .-.'_ ~.~--~-',.,-,-, "'''''''''''-'-:''';t--~ t"- ~.~... , ... ~- ....... ~ ... ~ .... ' ~I" ...... ~;r. . ..-. .~~'~

~ , Ann Landers l~ , . .\nswers Your Problems' ~

De:lr .. \nu Lmlliers: I sec "Formcr .. \dmircr" was shoe!;· l'I\ whcn shc read you thought it was :111 right for a child ~o han' :I funcral for n pct ellt or dOll, Well. I h:ll'c nnothcl' ~hnck for her,

1It'rt', in our beautiful cil~' of Gr~M Rnpids, we h~\'e a ~et C1!ml'lery, This pcl cemetcry II:ls some 100'ch' hcadstones and expt'nsin' monuments which 11:\\'(' hcen creclcd b)' 10l'ing rl'l'r1c in 1l\e1l\or~' of thcir rcts,

(lnt' cno n\l\'a\'s tcll wh~I'l' thl' lre$h \:ral'es are because 01 thl' wre:lths and bouquets Jf l\(lw('r5, The people II'ho bur), Ihrir pels here :\I'e not crazy, TlIr\' nrc normal indil'iduals \\ho el\.i(l~·cd Iheir I,eg a!l d want to ~i\'c thcm a nice fin"l re~hnl! rlncr,

I feci ~Ilrl'~' fOl' nn~'onc 11'11'1 1I,'e~Il'1 klloll' the wondcd'il \\wlrl 01 animals. They ~r~ mi~~in: "IlC of lifc's ~reatest j(>y~,-~IJl'n IG .\:'\DER

flrar ~Iich: Thrrc is ~Otl1p· thin!: hr:ll't,warmilll! and 10l'e, ~. aN>lIt ;'\ y(lun~stcr's hllleral r.,r hi~ rl't. Rut pet hmcr:lls hr1(1n~ 10 :\ l'hilrl's world.

,\llult~ whl' cl'ect headslones 1(11' dead animals should I"!'

rt'ad !'L Paul 10 thr ('orin· 'hi:\n~: "Whrn I was a chil~ I ~""l;r as a child, I felt as :1

rhild, I thou~hl as a chi 1 d, ;\"W that I ha\'e hecomr a l\\an I ha\'C Nit aW~\' thc thin~, (lr :\ rhild," I :lid. humhly ",\mcn,"

• • • nC.1r ,\lIn l.andcr~: ~I 0 ~ t

pl'I'l'lc ,dIe tn ~'Oll ahout their troul'lt~ I want tn writc to Y~ll ~"olll 1l1~' hlcssin~s,

1\\ ~ 1I'I1mall, .\lIrl I 1m deeI'll' in t.wt. If you think 1'111 n Irt'lIn~rr Irt I11C a~sur~ ~ ou I am n~t. 1 hal'r IOI"l!d thi~ wnl11an (or ~l yrars, The l'I':\n ha; hrl'n n rocky on~. Wr'\'e han a~ much trlluhle or l1\~rc than m:1I1I' of lIur fl'iend~. l'\'t ~onc hroke. There has hr~o iIIncs.<-anrl traJ:cdy-but nc,'er !lnce did I duuht that I ":1~ a luck~' lIlan becau~e I 1,.1I this kwcl h~' 1111' sid'. WI' hal'(' ~r\'cn wondt'r(ul rilll· llren, .-\nd thry are wonderful "el'au~r (If hrr-llot mc, Sh~ hn~ httn the ~trcn~th ane1 the ~lthlin~ Ii~ht of Oul' lamil~·.

lIer h.1il' isn't J:oldcl1 a n ~'

more and hel' hands are work· 1I'0rn. But to mc shc is thc most beautilul woman in the world. I wouldn't tmde hcl' for Venus. That's love,-EL PASO

Dear EI Pasco: You bet it is. How blesscd you arc to hal'e these wonderful fcelings, And she is blessed, too-to lie so apprcciated and loved.

• • • , Dear Ann Landel's: There comes a time in a woman's life when she passes from bcing a "maiden" to an old maid, I think I'l'e reached the cross· roads, Please tell me whnt to do,

For threc yem's \ lived in the S'lmc apal'tment buildinj! wit'l )\t', Charmin~, We first met walking our dogs, It was quite romantic. He invitcd me out to dinner, That was the firsl nnd last menl he ever bough I mc. From then on he fell in 10"e with my cookina and has been a slcady boardcr e I' e r sincc.

Six monlhs ago I decided th~ al'l'IIngement II' a s too con· \'enicnt for him so I mOI'~d across 10ll'n, ~oll' he comes OI'er Cor dinner Ihree nights 1 ,reek and Ihe other four nillhts he phoncs to "check." He Is insancl~' jealous and bCCOm~5 Curious if my line is busy be· cause he doesn't want mc lall;· in~ to anyone else.

He says uothin~ about mar· ria~e hut wants to makc sure I am ""sa,.jn~ mysclf of him." word?-GYPSY

ncar GYIlSY: The word 1., "Good·bye" nnd I hopc you uSP. it soon, If this moochcr were interested in marriage you'd he his wifc by this time instead of his short· order cook. The ~uy isn't 37 years old and a hachr.· lor COl' nothing. Gel with it, Petunia.

••• Does almost evcryone have

a good time bul vou? Is so, send for ANN LANDERS' bool;· let, "How To Be Well·Liked," enclosing with your request ~5 cents in coin and a long. self· addrcssed, unstamped enve· lope,

Ann Lalldcrs will be alad to hclp YOH with vOllr problems, Scnd lhcm to hej, in cm'c oC this ncwspapel' cnclosing a un· stamped, sclf·addressed env~· lope,-tcl 1963, Field Enter· pdises, Inc,

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

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~.95, $5. 75, $6.95 and Up

LADIES' 'HANDBAGS

In a .variety of styles and colors

$2.98 each

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• 1:'1"111

~Social-Perso I Column--

Any penons wishing 10 place social note. in the

Social Column may do so by calling 8·2177.8·9, or writing to the DAIL\' NEWS Office, Duckworth Street.

,. ::., '---------..: j 1I0NEYMOONI~G

;\11'. and Mrs. W. King of thc city were weekend guests at Karwood Cabins following their wcdding on Saturday.

; RETURNS JlOnlE Mr. and Mrs. Berkley Evans,

and thcir sons Bruce and Kcith, returned to their homc in Stephcnvillc by CNR over the weckend, after ~ visit with reo latives in ~lount Pcarl. Thcy were guests of ~Ir, and ;\Irs. Urbane Noel, 78 Park Avenue.

ANNIVERSAIty

card party comm' f litE! up a two mernb

YWCA cluhs and Ers which :llr5, r I'cnor, Bridge ;nd be pland, and will be served . ' --Thc board of ' YWCA will be the Unitarian "Sa' n " . \e ~er catnpaJ~n, h ... Share a Loaf'"

Ayrc's 5upermark Strcet. April 26, et

)11'. anti ~Ir; 1\"1 f E ' • Ii:

o . astport arc in It! buslncss, and are Le~larchant Lodge,

fRO~1 c.\I,i~1.\ ~I rs. .1. II, Bell '

C l'f' ~, a I orma, i, in St night at Lejlarch;nI

Coming In with sllrlng like a brcath of fresh air arc smooth, small hair styles. The eoiffnrt·s reflee! Ihe Emllire influence seen In fashions this season, ill a vpry young vcrsion from Ihl! Charles of the Ritz Salon in Paris (left) the I ... ir 511'00115 lo\\' at the sides inlo perky wing \riOt the front forelock scooped back (or a slight pompadonr eflcd, New, too, is thc small pllflcd erowlI and sidcs (rlghO, In this style, a shiny ribbon 01 hair is parted hallway down Utc middlc. The sides softly from the lace,

~Ir, and jlrs. J. Penny of the city celcbratc thcir wedding anniversary today, Apr. 24. Con· gratulations and best wishes are extcnded.

-I:" 1I0SPIT,\L )fiss Joan Power,

)11'. and )[1". ChEster Wcxford Street, \Ia: . the ?race HosPital;: cvcnlng \\'h~re she surgery, I\' r join ' fricnds ill wishin, her rccover)"

ending in a chlnlike glliehe.

Alicia Hart's Swing To Spring VISITS IIERE

'Small~ Cuts Ro:u te Bouffant Styles ~Irs. O'Quinn, Joan O'Quinn,

Augustus O'Quinn, and i\laurice O'Quinn, of Searston, visited re· lativcs in Ihe city for a week, and wcre guests at Karwood Cabins. They motored back across the province last Thurs, day.

FRO~I con~Eil ~Ir. "', .J. House If

Brook, i, " ~ue;1 tb, Le~lardtanl l.od;e.'·

BY ALICIA HART

What you do with yOul' hnir this spring is just as impor. lant as the clothcs you buy gnd the make· up you wear,

Elaboralcly b a c k • eombwl or teascd hairdos are 9n tile wane, It's a good thing, too, Not only is leasing bad fot' the hail', bul the "big" coiffures created more than onc doubb t a k e and innumerabl~ churckles.

One cvening we watched OJ

Engagement Announced

~Ir. and Mrs. W. W, Mac· Donald of Vinelan~, Ontario, fot'merly of St. John's, New· foundland, announcc the en· gagemcnt of their daughter, Elizabeth. to Jlr, Julian Paul 1\Ioore, Mr, Moore is the son of Mr. and ;lh·s. William J. Jloorc, of Alexandria, Virginia.

jliss MacDonald, a graduate of The College of Our Lady of Mercy, also graduatcd from the Baldwin School, Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania and frolll Vassar College, Poughkeepsie, New York.

While at Vassar ~!iss Mac· Donald was presidenl of the Vassar Collcge Glee Club and vice prcsidcnt of the Vassar College Orchestra,

For the past two ycars Miss MacDonald has becn worki ng with The Hospitality and In· formation Service for Diplo· matic Residcnt!; and Families in Washington, D.C.

chic young woman take he:' scat in thc theater, Shc was wcaring a black hat with a crown at least nine inches hig'l Thcre was a wavc of muf!led laughler as she remo','cd he: hat upon requcst only to ~x· pose a coif almost as high as the hat.

Bill smuothness and I e ~ , clel'ation are herc for spring, The largc, ol'erstuffcd hail' d last season has gil'cn sway tll small, sophislicnted h air stylcs, Many ncw \'ersion3 are reminiscent of lhe Empil'e

.. I tl"H"1111111t1'II:,,'11:ltl'1I1111'111 II'IIIIUIIIII'~ • = = •

~ We The ~ - . ~ Women ~ ;; ~ ~

ELDERLY HAVE RIGHTS, TOO

By RUTH MILLETT

Onc of the bcst ways lor older pcople to grow still older is NOT to live thcil' own livcs.

And onc of the best ways for them not to live their own lives is to let their grown children make all the decisions for them.

I know one woman who has a simple formula for living her own life.

She sums it up thus: "I listen to all my children's ad­vicc-then do as I please,"

That's nol a bad formula for any parcnt whose children are grown and leading busy lives of their own.

For too often grown chil' dren force thcir parents into settling down to grow old long before it is nccessary,

~Ir, Moore, a graduale of the University of Notre Dame in South Bcnd, Indiana, is a can· didate for a doctorate in psy· chology at Temple University in Often all Ihe children are Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, doing is trying to avoid worry.

1111', Moore, a jet fightcr, pilot, They will worry aboul mother is a Lieutcnant in the United lil'ing alone, tnking a paid job

t States Navy Reserve. or whatevcr It is she feels perfectly capable of doing.

Miss MacDonald's father was for many years managing direc· And so they try 10 get her tor of The Great Eastern Oil to do something m'ore suilable and Import Company Limited from Iheir point of view. It which he founded in St, John's, simply means they are asking

period, with its simplicit)1 and clegancc. This moldcd line r!· I'cals the natural shape of the head.

With the eentcr parI, normal· Iy only haJ[way back, the hair softly frames the facc ancl 1';

topped with a small puffed crown.

The hair framini! the faC,) may he IUl'lled forward in a guiche or may SIl'OOP low at the sides amI look like ~et"\Y wings, The laller gives a mo~~ yououthful look to the classic

her to stop taking· chanccs. to Ican on them instead of trying to stand alone.

That is reall)' asking 1hc older person to gil'c lip and quit living, You can't mai~· tain Independence or really live YOllr own life if you arcn't free to take a few well·calcul· ated risks,

So don't think YOllr parent i; headslrong if he listcns pal· icntly to your ideas ahout how he should Jil'e and then docs

Empire dcsign.

Anolhcr version of the mid, d Ic'parted Empire is ideal I'll' cvening wcar. It is a fac~· fl'aming style and reaches its peak with a soft. milded crown which YOIl may surround with a jewclcd circlc!. The hair al the hack is wavecj closc to tlt~ nap of the neck.

As yOu can see this is no~ a spring Cor the untamed, 'm· cut look, Evcn the more boy· ish stylcs, such as the Oliver. al'e neatcr and cut to mold to the shape of the head.

cxactly as he pleases . That spirit of independen,~e

shows he is still young.

TO CORNER BROOK :llrs. Jim House and her

daughler Janice, who wcre visiting relatives in the city last weck, returncd to her home in Corner Brook over the wcck, end.

YWCA CLUB NEWS The YWCA membership com·

mittee held a most successful tea Friday, Apr. 19, in the YWCA rooms Harvey Road. The guests were wclcomed by 1\1rs. E. Pittman, president of the YWCA, who gave a short talk on the methods of member. ship and in which branch the

Help him stay that way by moncy would be used. Follow· Ictting him live his own life. ing the tea a musical program·

me was presented by Mrs. 219 KILLED Pcggy Pittman, and the Roach

TORO:'-lTO (CP)-The annual sistcrs, Ann and Franccs. ~Irs. report of thc Ontario fire m3r. Pittman duly thanked thc en· shal's office of the attol'lley.gen· tertainers on behalf of the cral's department says 219 per· YWCA. sons were killcd and 611 injurcd by firc in the province during The annual card part)' of the 1%2, comparcd with 173 ~er· YWCA will be hcld in the sons killed ami 543 injured in Cathcdral Parish Hall, Queen'.; 1%1. Road May I, at 8.15 p.m, The

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

-RETUR:\,E\l 1I00IE JIi" Judy .\ndre',I' '

Hill, I'rtul'neli home' by T.C,A. after Eastcr holidays Ilith Quebec.

ON Bl'SI~ESs

)11'. II'. B, Ilali Qf OnL, i, in Ihe fil) 01·'

anI! rcgi,tcml at Lodge.

CO!\'l'f':m'::-;n: Dr. F, B, IIdln.;O:tl\·.'

visor of S~ho()1 the CBC in Toronto Douglas, School ganizer with the fax, arrh'cd in 51. day to take part in tie School Broadwh encc, which opens this ' in the Confederation Other delegate, ' thc four Atlantic will also be attending

fRO~1 'fOnO~TO

:III'. L, Donegan of is in S1. John'; on ' guest at Lc)larchant

The story behind Fleischmann'S

fast ri8ing dry ye88tl

ji.~'1fMt

'fo E?A~ Ol<UQOU5 HOME'MAPE BREAO 01< ROLl$

D£.P£NO ON FJ.EISCHMANN's FAST RISIIoJG N e wf oun dland. .;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;_;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

A September wcdding is

~usr 1.00K A1"/HE GI?AIN~ IN ORDINARY YgA,SJ: "ri:)U

CAN S!:E THE.YRE IRREGULAk'.IJOW COMPAglOTtlESMAIL FltoJE G/V>.INS 1"-' FlfISCHMAtoJN'S. YES YOU CAN SEE I , -.

Fl.EI5CHMANNG GQAIN~ ARlO FINt::RAND 8ECAUSE1HEYpj; planned. .

~111111.1111111111111111.1I11I1 nllllllill 1111 II' 1111111T11I11T ".

! Thought Forll ~ The Day. i ' i ~ •

THE GIFT OF TilE SPIRIT

They who have the gift of the Spirit go through life rich·

ly endowed, for they live in the conscious realization of the power of God working bchind the pattern of evcnts,-Patience Strong,

. ....

BIG CLEANING PROBLEM 1 SAVE TIME, WORK, MONEY! To banish the heaviest, greaaieet iirt, IIClUb or wash surfaces with • 101utiOll of 2 tablespoons of Gillett's Lye to a gallon of water.

. Gillett's does this bea", clelIDinl quickly and efficiently, yet costa far le118 than ether cJeanse1'8 that do only half the job. Gillett'.

. ac:tuaIly attacks grease and dirt, ~uoutof~ck8andaannU. where ordinary clennse1'8 can't 1IIIlch. It reacts. witb grease a'ld fat to form a soap solution that makes BI1Ifaces spotless and san· Itary •. This is just one of dozelll of tipe that save you time, work and money contained in a fret fIO.page book. Write Standard Branda Ltd.,-'560,Sberbrnoke Bt. W.~Montieal . ,

G-E RANGES

FROM $149.90

• 25" Master oven • Push button switches • HI·speed units • Reinoveable oven door • Oven timer and minute

Minder • Focussed hent broiler • No·drip cODk top

See JACK CAHILL at

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8'081 172 DuckwortH 51.

FINEFa iHEY ARE FASTER. ACnNG AND NbTlCEA8CI" RISING.

AND NOW FLEISCHMANNS AJ(E GIVING YOU R)UR ENVElOPES FOg TH£ PRICE ·O~THI?Ee:.l" 50 WHEN YOU BAI<E An·IOME'.,

. USE. ft£15CHMANN3 FAST ~N6 .~ -FAST"EJ<. BEQ.USE. 'THE' G/V>.INS AI(E FINER.

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NewS Clock

_.)IUO,IC" Blessings

ers News and Direr'

Reports LPrevl(!\V Commenlary

Fer~uson Show Consumerl

Ncll'~ rket with Mu: School Braadel Heart Prollr~1

Choice

Album .--"V'" NelV~ anti Wea'

Harmer In the lIet

f-Dclmltlion Obs, Time

:-,"'"SI"al Rer.dezvDu~ nut for Melod: Drninie TtI!s i

News Cnnade IIIntin

Regional News n~,Hnl1 J'''''nrl,,"

Roundup in till /llr

_~'i'h"'r;"' Broadr.lsl from thc Alb

News'

~PI'nIf".m Preview I'arllame!nt 1Ii11

In the Evenir : Ncw~ nnd We

Arp Recital Today llulletln

ly YOll for Marin Showcaae

~11,1Z~ll'l Forum String Qr

National New, Roundup and Spea Personall)!

Frontiers Intern.lIona

Sporta Score~ Off-O Canad Queen

.. \ ~V"~UI\., April 2

On and, Weathel

Allan Show MedltaUo

of Sport Allan Show

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ll.IO-Caslno ll.l~The RU6s Clarke ShOW I1.M-News Headlines

~~Ih. Ill.al-The Russ Clarke Show [.._----- , 1l.IIO-The Russ Clarke Show

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r~r\ H:'\,: Ik ,,~t ~: , f~\"':l ~h' .\\bul",!

. "ro.

111.II~Newl and Weather : P.M. , 12.00-The RUIB ~Iarke Show , 12.1O-Caslno 12.1~The RuS! Clarke Show

: l2.30-News and Weather ; l2.35-The Russ Clarke Show ; I!lA5-Flshermen's Forecast nol8-The RU5~ Clarke Show

, 12.:I~New. and Weather I.IlO-NcIV. SummarY U5-World of Sport 1.30-Ncws 1,3~Transportation Report

and Travel Guide 1.3B-The RUI! Clarke Show 2.00--News HQadlines 2.ol-Prlzes and Problems on

Parade 2.10-Casino 2.1~Prlzes and Problems on

Parade 2.30-Ncws Headlines 2.31-Prlzes and Problems on

Parade 2.5~News and Weather :1.00-The Bob Cole Show 3.1O-Caslno 3.15-Bob Cole Show 3.30-News lieadllnes 3.31-Bob Cole Show 3.I15-NewR and Weather 4.00-The Bob Cole Show 4.30-Nrws Headlines 4,31-Bob Cole Show 4.55-News Rnd Weather 5.00-The Bob Cole Show 5.30-News Headlines 1I.31-Bob Cole Show !l.45-Flshermen's Forccast lI,411-80b Cole Show 5.55-News and Weather 6.00-Bulletln Board 6,12-Mo\'le News 6.15-World of Sport n.30-Early Evening News

Roundup 7.00-F1eiFchmnnn's Riddle 7.1:1-Shll1elagh Showtime 7.30-Ncws Headlines 7.31-Back to the Bible 8.00-Ncw5 Headlines 8.Q1-Cream of the Crop

News and Weather 10.00-The Night Show

News and Weather . 10.4:1-Worl(\ of Sport

"<11:,,) ",,"r, 1 10.55-News .... 1\ ... , •• f'I:' 'IAnntt$ I 11.00-RCAF Tower Torbay

~h''''m~ , (Weather Report) h':UI~' ' II.02-The Big Top Ten

' ..... I'tl~'." ~t: III. ~IIAl'lrt: l1.30-Newl Headlines . ~ui~~~; \rll' i 1l.31-The Night Show, News

h~~::j1 ~~,\ ~i'r~'kin~ and Weather "''''"Ill.

" 0) , 1.05-Sllln on In'::tlrr,

1~lrr"alwnll ~ . ~.'t\! ~""~"hllard

':"I." 011 .. \\ r~nldl_ I., I{.lfrr,

It M Dial 590 l~II,"· •. \~Til 25th.

PI lIn

r.~l ~~d \\'rllhrr , ,'llin Show

MrdilAli,'n "I SNrl

,\Ibn Sh,'\\'

CJON THURSDAY, April 25tb.

6.30-The Bob Lewis Show 10

News, Sports and 9.00-

Weather Reports 9.10-Mulic for MIIllons 9.3G-Top Tunes Ind Golden

Hits 9,40-Wln 117

: 9,aO-Nfid. KlaUer IID.OO-Newl In a Minute I IO.DI-Portia Fac!!. Life ID.1l1-Jerry Wlnlnl House·

wives Choice . 10.30-NaUonal News IIO.3l1-Uoulewlvel Chole. 11.1lO-News Uighllghts 1l.05-Robln Hood bulletin l1.15-LUe Can be Beautiful 1l.30-News 1l.31-Nfid. Quiz 1l.411-Bob Lewis Town and ,. 1.00-

CountrY, News and Weather

l.05-Wea!ber. Forecast l.lI1-New. 1.311-Don Jameaon Comments UO-Sporla l.45-Art Baker', Notebook 2.00-Newl Highll,hts 2.01-Jerry Wigllins Matinee 3.00-NeWI Highlights 3.Dl-John Nolan'. Western

Jamboree 4.00-Newl Hlshllshts Ulil-Ranch Party UG-Natlonal New. U3-Ranch Party 1i.OO-Newl Hlghllghts II.Ot-Art Andrews Dance

Party 1I.IlO-New. and W~ittier ' 8.03-NaUonll New. 8.l0-lPDl1l,

6.20-News 6.30-Dlck Earl Club 93 7.00-News Highlights 7.01-Dick Earl Club 93 7.30-News U.Oo-Jamboree 8.SO-National News 8.31-Jamboree 9.0o-News Highlights D.OI-Nfld. Soiree 9.4l}-News

lO,OO-News Highlights lO.OI-National News lO.II}-Pick of the Pops lO.4l}-Sports

.i .

, " ;, r.. .i, '. .,

lO.5l}-Letters and Messages 1I.00-News Highlights n.DI-Paul Hershon's Music in

the Night 12.00-News Highlights l2.01}-lIIusic in the Night 12.30-News l2.33-lIIusic in the Night l.OO-News in a lIIinute l.Ol-Queen and Sign Off

CJON·TV THURSDAY, April 25t11.

lO.4I}-Pastor'. Study 10.5D-Women's Newl 11.0D-Physleal Filnes; Pro·

gram 11.l0-Cartoon" 11.lli-Romper Room 12.15-News and Weather 12.30-5lgn Off 2.00-l\Iayor of the Town 2.3O-Chez Helene US-Nursery School Time a,OO-National Sehools a.30-Loretta Young Show 4.00-Take Thirty 4.3O-Senrlett "!II S,OD-Yogi Br.ar 'S.30-Razzle Dazzle 6.00-CJ Jamboree 6.3D-The World of Sport 6.40-Cavaleade 7.00-Douglos Fairbanks 7.3D-The LUCy Show 8.00-Rlple)"s BeJlev~ It or

Not U5-NaUonal News R.3D-Hennessey , I D.OO-Mlckey Spillane ., ' 0.3D-The Defenders

lO.30-Phiydate 1l.30-Gunsmoko 12,aD-New5 and Wealher lUO-Pulor's Study 12.45-5ll1n Otf

• BARBS· By HAL COCHRAN

lIUndlng one's own business is • good way to keep from un· dermlnlng It.

• • • Some Eastern college gals

have taken up pipe smoking. The female of the species will be ,sicker than the malli.

• • •

Check on the prices of all fur eale.. Only the animals arc lupposed to be skinned.

• • • Dad's pay checks look pretty

good until mom goes grocery shopping on Saturday.

HALTS STRIKE CHICAGO {APl-The Broth·

erhood 'of Railroad Trainmen . has' been restrained' by a led·

eral . court from striking at 6 a.m. today against the Sante Fe Railroad. 'Judge Julius Hoffman of U.S. district court issued II temporary restraining 0 I' d e r Tuesday. The' unIon 'alld the carrier have, had numerous, dis· cusslons over revisions ,the un· ion wanl. In work rules. The proposals were first made to the foad In, 1966 •.

Bl':ST BID GETS SET

By OSWALD JACOBY All hands In the Association II

of American Playing Card Man· ufacturers' intercollegiate totlr· nament this year were not dir· ficult, but each did illustrate some point of play.

Hand four was a problem for the defense.

W cst opens the three of clubs and it is up to East to win with tbe ncc and lead back the queen. That isn·t very dif'l ficult. He is looking at aJ1 those good diamonds, hearts and spades in dummy.

West's play llkcwlse should not prove difficult. He must overtake his partner's queen with the' king and lend the eight or seven. Eventually he will get in with the ace of dia· monds and two more club tricks will set the contract,

As stated earlier the hand is rather easy for a par contest, yet many players, missed the winning defense. It seems that West would not notice that his eight and seven of clubs had acquired enough Importance so that he could afford to over· take his partncr's queen.

The bidding par on the hand also Is Interesting. North Rnll South must get to game if they I'

want their par, but there 15

NORTH (Dl .K95 'I AQ7' + K.T10B4 010 109

WEST Jlt\lh

'" I

.86 .107432 'IJ963 118U +A:I .U52 I,oKU732 40AQ

HOUTH • AQ.T "KIOS • Q70 oIoJ6H

Bolh vulnerable Norllt Jlast South west 1 + Pass 2 N.T. Pass 3 N.T. Pass Pass Pass

Opening lead-olo 3

good reason for thi5. Their hands warrant a game bid and the game contract would make I except against a club opening.

A good bridge player should not expect to make all his game contracts. Players who wait for sure things won't get set, but they won't win often.

For 64 poges of eMy·to,llnder. stand bridge tips, order your copy of "Win at BrIdge With Oswald Jacoby." Just Bend your name, address, and 50 cents to: Oswald Jacoby Reader Service, ,care of The Dally News, P.O. Box 489, Dept. A, Radio City Station, New York 19, N.Y.

CARD SENSE' Q-The bidding has been:

South West North East 1 ... 1 + 1 If Pass 2 ... Pass 3 ... Pass 3 If Pass 3 N.T. Pass

1 ,You, South, hold: #

.Av65lfKJ3+Q9U ... AK6 What do you do now? A-Pasrr. You are happy with

this contract. TODAY'S QUESTION

Instead of bidding three' no· trump your partner bids (our diamonds over your three hearts. What do you do now?

Answer Tomorrow

TIME NOT RIPE , UNITED NATIONS (CPl-C'a­

nadlan Ambassador Puul T1;ell1' blay told a. United Nations com· mlttee of outer, space legol VI('

pertS Tucsday the time is, r.ut ripe to adopt restrictions on J5'~ of IIrtillclal sutcllltes 85 spies in the slq,

TIlE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND. APRIL 25, 1963-n

PP..ISCILLA'S pm

MY MOM SAYs IT'S EAS't' FOR A GIRL 1"0 I'<NOW WHEN OS\4E'S

IN LOVE I

By AL VERMEER SWEETIE PIE By NADINE SELTZEB.

1

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\ ';:'~':, . \~:/

'.

_ .,.' ," '" ", "Co back and scrape the barnacles off the .tubl" ,

CAPTAIN EASY

'FIANCEE VISITS INJURED PiANiST ... •

I OLlGHT TO HAVE BEEN A REA~15T AeoUT THEM ...

il'i{itV1~~ ilUT IT WAS A GOOD IDEA WHILE-IHASTED!

TMIN' OVER A CASTLE AN' LININ' UP A I.ITTLE r-I',·:;TP.G ARM\, DO~n "1A~E YO'J A K!JIGHTl

NO,SIR!

' .. I..

FlmCKLES AND HIS FRIENDS

PeoR. FELLOW. I·!!, RAISED HOMING PI6cONS IN HIS

APARTMENT!

HE HAS 'THE GUY KNEEL, TAPS '1M WITHA5WORD AN' S;VS:I DUB THEE I(NIGlffl"

By NEAL ADAMS

!ly LEON SCHLESINGER

I iURN ON iHE SHIELD WIPERS ... D"~'""''' ••

BY V. T. HAMLIN

", "

By MERRILL' BLOSSER

~,

• • . '

\

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:t:~!I'~~~f~~~::J MORTY MEEKLE ", BY DICK CAVALLI

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SHORT RIBS

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U-THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, APRIL 25, 1963

DR~ PRUITT'S BODY The Pople's Protector B K th 0 H By J. C. GRAHAM I found government melhods to y enne • ay Canadian Press Correspondent be fairly efficient. No resent·

Copyright 1963 Distributed by , WELLINGTON (CP)-In the ment had been shown at his br Kenneth O. Mar Newspaper Enterprise As~. six months since he was ap· investigations.

, . . pointed, New Zealand's om· However, he ·said: "W~ find XX"1I [ "Hell pro\'e it. Rispin and budsman has received 334 com- many cases of real dIstress

"R"lIn Matt:' Bradlr~' said [Jack Clague and I are going plaints for investigation. Of cansed by what appears to the whl'n the dctl'cti\'c identificd lout to talk to Belle and yon'd these 26 cases were found to sufferers to be cold, impartial hlnudf on the phonc. "1 was I bctter come along." have' some substance. and often implacable applica· ju~t ahout to call you. Rodney "Isn't Johnson coming?" The ombudsman, modelled on tion of the rules. We try to ~I('('ann phoned from New I "No. It would be pretty em· Scandinavian custom, 15 an of. resurrect humanity from the York. ltc's ,{lying here to at· i barrassing for him, considering ficial with the dllty of inquiring files." tl'nd Chers [uncral t.omorroll'."1 his close friendship with the into complaints against govern. Cases laid before the ombuds.

"I'd sa~' that's nughty nice " Pruitt·s and all," said Bradley. ment actions, His task is to man have come from one end of ,,( him." said ~tatt. It wasn't embarrassing for seek remedies where no other the country to the other and

":\icl'! He's coming in to cat I Johnson ~o go ou: of his way to, means of redress exists. complaints against New Zea· 111,· oul [Clr not ha\'mg the mur· I present mformahon that ~Iatt New Zealand's ombudsman land government activities have d"n!r in th~ jug. Washington·s· e\'entually would ~ave ~Iven Sir Guy Powles was apPDinted also been forwarded from Bri· still holding liP those con·: Bradley. the detective deCIded. last year as a' move to check tain Hawaii Fiji and Australia. tru~.". , . 1 And that i.nfo~mation might get the ever.grDwing power Df the '--' ----

"I thmk \\'~ 11 nab hllll. :lIar-· Belle Prllltt 111 a lot of trou· state and to ensure that the be tl'l\Iorrow,". ble. ordinary man had means of Steamsh,"p

"113.\·l' ~~'" .soh·cd It7:' Th.ere "How soon can ~'ou be remedying grievances against \\,;s dlsb~hd III Bradley s \·olce. there?" Bradley asked. bureaucracy. . ":\ot )'~~: ~Ir. Bradle)·. but lIlatt looked at his ,wrist Althongh the proportiDn of M

1 \'r Just- . watch. It was ten of seven. "1 cases so far found justified is ovements ":\o~ )·et· ~ kllO\~' )'on. pm-ate haven't had clinner yet. Give small, the fact that grounds

dt-t~t1I·"$ .. t \'r l1l1'cd em be· me an honr and a half." for complaint have been upheld !.In'. They fl'. a11l'3Y" Ju;t about At 8.35 his taxi pulled up In in 26 cases is held to vindicate h. turn U\I Important mforma· front of the Pruitt home. After the setting up of the new office. IIl'n when ),011 put thl' heat on paying the driver, Matt noted It has been pointed out that "'111. You don't know an), mO.re that two cars were in the driv~- the mDst valuable effect is not a\l"l1t whl' kllll'L! Doc PrUItt wal', another was on the street the action taken In these spe. thin I do." , in 'Cront of the house. p,.nd be· elfic cases but the constant

"1\ut ~Ir. Bradlc),-" fore he reached the SIdewalk reminder ~f the rights Df the ,"SI.IUt up and liste,n to me. a fourth car stopped in front individual.

C.S.L,-CLARKE TERRA NOVA SERVICES

• S.S. Gulfport sailed from Montreal April 20. Due SI. John's April 25.

• S.S. Novaport sailing from Montreal April 24. Due St. John's April 29. .

5.5. Highliner sailing from

LEARN TO DRIVE Female driver with 15 years

driving expcricnce. now ac· cepting female pupils. wishing to learn to drive.

Phone 916214

-

REDDY KlLOWAn ®

ELECTRICITY is CHEAP in ST. JOHN'S

r

LI~*'-i liM." .... tiM""

I Cbeap Reliable EI.ctrlclty I In and Around St. JDhn's

Rentals

Floor Sanders. Belt Sanders. Power Saws. Electrical Drills cle. Rcasonable Rates. Call 8.5(,16. 8·7352.

1 \'t' lllSt talked WIth ~.hff Joh::· I of the curb. Dr. Stroup got out. TACTFUL CHOICE $,'n ~n thl'. Ilhunl'. H.e·s come: "Bra~le~ didn't te~1 me yo~ Sir GUY Powles. lawyer, ad. "1' WIth an Idr~ Il'U t11~leS het.! were 1~l'lted to thIS party, ministrator and diplomat, has 11'1' t~31\ anythlllg ~'Oll \'e ~ad I :\\att. s.ald. as he waited. for !he shown himself to be an excel­),'t, i'Dmrhnw. ~r s g~tten \\'llld Ph,~'Slc15t to c~tc~ up ":'Ith hU1~; lent choice to inaugurate the of a 3·n tr)rl'lslon plc\\lre tube, . Bradley d,l,dn t IllVlte me, nelV office. He has displayed thlt has lust heen patented. i saId Stroup. Belle calle~ and both tact and common sense Hi" idra is that Pl'uitt de\'eIDp, i said she wanted someone III her and already tbe position has

Montreal April 27. Due St. U-RENT John's l\Iay 2. I 169 Water Stroet. St. John's

rd it in "iolatinn ttl his pltent I corner when the fight started. gained esteem a~rtrment. It srr.ms that .Pruitt ; Sh~ said J?hnson go~ c?l~ f~et. Rcviewing' the complaints ~u';':I'~tl'd 3 smullI' de\']ce to, He s bucklllg for RISP.1ll s Job snbmitted in the first six Nisl,in a fell' ),cars ago-" I when the old man ~etJres and months. Sir Guy said ,that 143

• iII.V. Dundee sailing from I' Div. Harris & Hiscock Lid. ~Iontreal 1IIay 1. Due St. JDhn's :llay 5. Insnrance

• Refrigeration.

FURNESS, WITHY & COIUPASY, LIMITED

Heering Rose leaving Hali· fax April 19, due St. John's April 22. Sailing for Liverpool

J. J. LACEY INSURANCE Ud.

Dependable Fire Insurance, Prompt Claim Settlements.

DIAL 8·7035

Board Available In Private

West End Home For further information

Dial 847115 FOR SALE

DRIlliNG MACHINES Model 71 Star, mounted on

1956 Ford. Continental Red Seal power unit will sell with or without driling tools and accessories. Real good shape. $4900.00.

Model 71 Star, mounted on Red, same as above. Fair shape.

1$4200.00. [

CARD

Dr. J. Arch. McNAMARA 182 Patrick Street

has resumed practice

TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN

I will not be responsible for any debts contracted hy my wife, Philomena· Hynes.

(Signed)

ALBERT E. HYNES, Woodfords.

Model 50 Keystone, tools and; equipment ready to work. Also I old Keystone wooden rig, ready, apr25,26,27 to work. Both for $4100.00. ----------

Bucyrus Erie 22·w on 6 x 6 G.7I!.C., Hercules Die.sel for power, 40 foot mast. cngine room, Cat heads casing reel, new %" drill line. 1;2" sand line. Excellent condition. $6600.00.

Bucyrus Erie 24·L on 1954 E.Q.U. !IIack, powered by 326 FOR RENT cubic in,h Buda gas engine., I casing reel. 600 ft. new 3!~" 3 bedroom unfurnished I

dri11 cable, 600 ft. new 'i2" sand I • line, will dri11 from 6 to 24 in! self contained holes. Rig is in real good shape.:

ia buy at $7800.00. Apartment. Write : . i

Prompt

FOR BJ,ACI,Ll:n AYE,

Thl'C:l hedr~m lo\','.

TOrS.HI. ROAD' :\Iod, ~:. three . hun,alow, 1 •• ! lu)l, j. ...

VALJ.I:, YiEW New three

:lai'l'.\".

sm'fIJ .\ \'E. Tll'O .\parll:1ect

1m\" COT.O~L\L ~lRm

TrH'C'~ !'-tl)tn' .

W,\I.SH "fit'. Two ~t{lfr"

CILlUI.TIlS "I lI'as the nnn II'ho ga\'e 1 I. snppos~ he's afral~, to take of the 334 complaints were out. .'olll\;<In th.t news. :\11'. Brad-! SIdes agalllst Bradley. side his jurisdiction. He does I"~':" s.1,id ~I~tt.. .•• : "Johnson sang. t~ Bradley, not act where ?ther means of . n",: t tr; "to gl ab credIt. I and got •• Belle PruItt III a lot of appeal are available, anel has

same day. Sycamore dUll St. .Tohn's CROSBIE & CO., Ltd.

April 18, leaving for Halifax Agents for

KEN W. SCOTT, R.F.D. No.2'; Rent $11 0.00 per month I

aprl9,5i Bangor, IIIe. ! Phone 96454~! ! '

~.\Id Illadlc), One t.lung I hate I trouble. saId :\\att. no power to inquire intD com-I" a. fclloll' who tries to s~eal' "Sang?" plaints against local bodies. en-dlt Irom somebod~' else. 1'>ow "You'll hear al1 about it soon Of the remainder 74 were

and Boston April 19, due Hali- UNDERWRITERS AT fax April 21. Leaving Boston LLOYDS. April 26 for Halifax and Sl. LOW RATES John·s. Nfld. Leaving Halifax VIAL 8·5031

--_._---------------- Uunr.alnw fl1~r.~~r. PII !.oml FOR SALE

~'ou listl'n to me .. Johnson stud· enough." 'still under investigation. Of thc IC, 311 the .nc\\' paten.ts and .he • • • 117 fully investigated, 91 had May 3. due St. John's, Nfld.. At Harbour Grace-A piece·

May 6. Sailing for Liverpool JOB BROTHER~ or parcel of land situate on the'

no~n()lJlJt Thrl'P :-:t()t(lr ,t •

COHXW,\I.1 .. '.m. :lfodem hllnrJ!n,'

An~rtmrnt.

>I'otted thIS. So. ~\'e re gDlllg Matt used tbe brass knock.er been rejected as WIthout found-,wer to Belir PrUItt ~ house .an.d on ~he door and Belle PruItt ation and 26 had been fonnd to ):,'t the facts. I don t cal'e If It I admItted them. She escorted hal'e some substance in one

same day. ,south side of Water Street,' Beechmore lea\'ing Liverpool & COMPANY, Ltd. I mcasllrin~ tl:ereby 51 feet.'

is the cT~ of he.r husband's fun-I the two men into the front way or another. April 25, due St. JDhn's May 2. Water Strel~ . more or less snitable for build-' Leaving for Halifax and Bos. DlAL 8·2658 - 84123 I ing site. For particulars apply ~ ton May 3. due Halifax May 5. REG T MURGAN ! to:-

c~al. \\ e 1'1' gomg to hnd out i r?om, wher~ Bradle~ sat o~ the The ombudsman does not ":lout that 3-D PIcture. tube. ! dll'an smokmg a cI.gar: RI:pin have power to reverse decisons 'Then . w~'U ,ha\'~ ~om~thlllg to I and. Clagu.e sat m straight of government officials, but he ~t1ck III Wl ann s face when he 1 chJlrs at fight angles to Brad- can bring a goo(l deal of pres-sho\\'s up tomorrow Can YOIl I ley. sure to bear

Leaving Boston May 10 for •• , Saint John, N.B., Halifax and. lNSURANCE Ltd. FRA1\'K C. ARCHIBALD, I' 51. John's, Nfld. At Saint John, Temple Bldg, P. O. Box 168,! Archibald Hotel, !

COll\,W.ll,(, .\IT. ~lo1rrn I'nnrah

f !'.-rllilld T{lJl~,\lI. Pllxn

Tllp'!' hndrnc:r. ln1\'.

mnc,!". ("R

makr an arrest. Bacon7" I :'Just sit do,,:,n. ge~t1:men," ERRORS RECTIFIED "SUI'e, I can ma~~ a~ arrest I saId Be!le Prllltt, pOIll~mg to Sir GUy reported that 13 of

N.B, May 11. Leaving Halifax 341 Duckworth ~t~ SEE HARVEY'S FOR: apr22,25 -.---.------ I·

for St. John;s, Nfld., May .. 17, DIAL 80370 or 8·.7a6 I. Top quality Oil and Coal ?on a f~lol~~' charg~, said ~Iatt. two cha~r; at th~ OPPosite end the 26 cases held to be justified

But ~ ou d better he sure of I Of. t~e d!~ an, facmg Clagu~ and had resulted in departments )'~~r fact~ he fore ~'ou "arrest RI~P~~;, Would anyone hke a rectifying their errors after he

dfue S.t. JOhn1S ~!ay 20. Salllllg Elect. Applicances • Fast-same-day service CITY CLUB i, or Ll\'erpoo May 21. • Free spill-proof fill I

L' 'ill SI. .John"

ll~:le •• Pnlltt fO~ mill del'. drlllk. '" had made preliminary inquir-Herring Rose leaving Liver· TNE S connections I

pool May 9; due St. John's May HEAP & PAR R Low-cost burner service T Ie Regularly Quarterly I

". r can arr~. t. he.r ~o~,.fral1d. ~radley spoke. We r~ not ies. He had made specific re-Th~t s a felon). Isn t It. drlllking. Not any 01 us,. commendations in five eases.

15. Leaving for Halifax .and (NFLD.) Ltd. EASY CREDIT TERMS ~Ieeting will he held on I

Boston May 16, due Hahfax Wiring Materials, Wire and 80151 80152 80153 . TO-DAY THURSDAY "If you can pro\,e it." said :'Speak for yourself, Corblll," In the remaining eight cases,

~talt. . sal~ Stroup as ,~~ and ~~att tODk specific remedies conld not be May 18. Leaving Boston 24 for Cables, Moturs, Starters, " i A "1 ,)wti t 5 ' Saint John. N.ll .• Halifax and Lamps, Switche.'l, Lighting . pI I ~;) 1 a p.m.

Thp fact that proof ~Ight theIr seats, " 111 ha\e one, applied, but he had made reo ht" needtd stopped ~radle~. , Pl~,3~e. Belle.?" commendations of ,principle on

St. John's, Nfld. ~t Saint John. . Fixtures. ~te 1 I Bv Order N.B. May 25. Leaving Halifax WAREHOUSE: PIUNCE'S ST. I,

1 thought a trial PIO~ cd I ,,'I: ou, Matt.. the general issues involved. whelher 3 p~r50n was gllllly I Just had dllln:r. It would In general he said he had or not," he ~ald tersely. ! be wasting the drlllk."

for St. John's, Nfld. May 31, DIAL 8·5088 due St. John's June 3. Sailing for Liverpool same day.

"B)' proof. I mcan subs tan; (To Be Continued) The battle of Adrianople, in • Refrigeration. Drug Stores

tlatin.~ e\'idencc that a fraud 378 A.D., marked the ascend- M. CONNORS Ltd. has been committed. I wouldn't Base of Monks Mound, a pre· ancy of cavalry forces over ad\'i~r an)' afl'ests Dn pure historic Indian earthwork ncar those of the infantl'Y. accord· !:Uc~~\\'Drk. :llr. Bradlc)·... said East S\': Louis, Ill., covers 16 ing to the Encyclopaedia Bri·

NFLD .. CANADA STEAM· SHIPS LIIIlITED

Prescriptions Pickup and delivery service.

:\latt. acres. tannica.

0l}1\ BOARDING HOUSE WITH MAJOR HOOPLE

I ",--

, ..

,,'

WONOER IF 1. COULD /QE:T A ~EPRlE"5: UNtlL 'I. ~,{~i,,nl

M'I WOf::O, WHAT A CAlAMI,'1! MARTHA HA'E> I-\!:R 'DRAiTED BROTHER TOM ~COllTtN6 UP A ;:roS FOR ME, AND TrlE ci.on NO MO~E: LOVALIY TO ME:­

COMPLEiE: MY AlYrO­SIOc:.RAPI1Y! ~P. M,"I "'TLIl'

!-lAS A13S0LUTEL'f FEELING fOR "0-\ E:

LITERARY ART! -'_"f-";;, AN tN:SUFiEO BEAR! HI% r<=O'T.o.I''''

TO FIND ME GaME MeNIAL. Ai: A LACKEy'5 ~ALFIRY 'i~ALt..Y UNSUITED 'TO A MAN OF MY TALENi!S

_._-,

MR~. \-lOOFL!:o UP Tf\' ~KULL AND

CROS660NES 0'I5R HI~ OlNN&R P~ATC!I=ROM NOW ON He ~AS 'i0 PAY 60ARD. ~R. CUT NOiCl-\c!:> tN 1-\10;, 6EI.i: WHtLE: WOf:a~­l~cS MEN S~i!

IF TAAi,'DOEGN'i OO~E:il<tCK.

\':>~~t:.:L.L. Fi'ENi OUTHI~ROOM. AND MOoJE HIM

INTO iH' COAl,. StN .,;,U\"CE:!

• Woodcock sailing from Hali· fax, N.S" for St. .Tohn's Apr. 15. • Woodcock sailing from Hali·

fax, N.S., for St. John's Apr. 23 • Refrigeration.

PHONE 8·2206

RADIO·TV REPAIRS -ffl1lllll!III'lIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1IUltlIllll1lll1l1lnll!IIIIrlrr'

Paramount To-Morrow

1111,111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111:11111

JACKIE GLEASON IN "GIGOT"

After Jackie Gleason made his dramatic debut as a pool shark in "The Hustler," the famed comic was besieged with offers to play straight dramatic roles. Bypassing many scripts because they were invested with sex and violence, Gleason came up with his .own idea about a poor. simple janitor in Paris, which' Pulitzer.prize winner .John Patrick fashioned into "Gigot." The 20th CenturY·Fox comic· drama, which represents the comedian's first starring role, ,opens tomorrow at the Paramount Theatre.

Before his popularity on tele­vision, Gleason was a nightclub comic, WhD had made several Hollywood, films, all of which. received little or nD acclaim. However, his overwhelming suc· cess as a TV performer, first Dn a Variety show from which "The PDor Soul" character that is "Gigot" was born, then on "The Honeymooners" and his portrayal in the' smash Broad· way musical I "Take Me Along." made Gleason one of the most demanded personalities for Hollywood projects,

Gleason has already complet· ed three films and is now be­fore the cameras in another. He scored in "The Hustler" and has been mentioned as n strDng "Oscar" candidate for "Gigot." Viewers will soon sec him 'as fighter Anthony QUinn's man· 'ager in "Requiem For a Heavy· 'weight," and he is currently filming "Papa's Delicate Condi·· tion."

"Gigo I," a Seven Arts pro· duction, directed' by' Gene Kelly and produced by Ken Hyman, was filmed on locaiion in Paris In DeLuxe Color.

GREAT EASTERN OIL COMPANY, Ltc'. REPAIRS TO RADIOS. TV

AND ALL ELECTRICAL APPLIA"lCE·"

DIAL 8·:\001 to 8·3005

Beauty Parlours'

GLADY'S BEAUTY SHOPPE cor. Bond and Prescott Sis. Phone 8·4951·8·7898. Speci· alizing in cold waving, hair styling, cutting and tinting. manicuring, facials etc., 14 operators, no waiting.

Want Ferry Whistle To Stay

SAINT JOHN. N.B. (CP)­After listening 10 the sallie old ferryboat Whistle for mDre than 30 years, the residents D[ Digby, N.S., and Saint, ,101m rather hate to see It go.

When it was learned that the Princess Helelle. which has plied the Bay of Fundy since 1930. was to be replaced by the 6,800·lon Princess of Acadia, they had an idea.

The Digby Boat Club and Digby Kiwanis Club asked that the familiar old whistle be in­stalled on the new ferry.

The CPR. which' ·runs the ferry as part of its Mal'itim~ rail service. says it's willing to oblige but there's a problem .

K. R. Perry, superintendent here, says the whistle aboard the Helene was huilt to operate on "satmated steam at 350 de­grees" while the Princess of Acadia ,runs on oIsuperheated steam at 800 degrees."

. Tc'chnicians are working on the problem. Mr. Perry says.

"For 'residents of Saint John and Digby the Helen's whistle is part of Iheir daily W<lY of life. We will try tD keep it that way,"

R. C. KNIGHT, Secretary.

----I Hamilton Hotel

s~~~o REM, 123 - 125 Hamilton Ave.

Catering to Permanent! and Transients. For re-l !G!!mI!:~ii:mr:2Plll~ servations Please dial

8·5636 Published By aug15,lmth

Authority : ~-----Under and bv virtue of the i

• I

powers conferred by Section 55 [ of the Highway Traffic Act. i Chapter 94 of the Revised Statutes of Newfoundland, 1962.1 and of all other powers enabl-· ing me in tlJis behalf I have.

I made the following regulations. : Dated at St .• Tohn·s this 17th.

day of April, 1963. F. W. ROWE,

lIIinisterof IIighways.

REGULATIONS The Highway Traffic (Snow

Clearin!!. st. John's Area) Regu· lations 191i2, dated the 17th day of Decembel' 1962 and published in the Newfoundland Gazette on Ihe lRth day of December 1962 are revoked.

INSURANCI~

~----. ..".

A WELCOME WAGON

HOSTESS Will Knock at your Door with Gifts and 'Greetings from '.Friendly Business Civic and Social Groups On the occasion of:

The Birth of a Babv. New comer to the City PHONE 8~4664, 8-7682

FLY

EPA~ to

GANDER TWICE DAILY

(bcept Sunday)

4:20 PM and

9:15 PM

Train 'Th, SI. JoluJ" l~:OI April 2W;' \I'ill.

tion via 1"",('11113, Argentia ,':1111 )1.\,

for 'tVl':-:;t j:l::I,

Train "Thl,' 51. .Iohn'; 1~1I[ p:n.' \ '1 ')/"11 \\ill 1I1!\1 1 pn _ 11, ,

lion "i~ f'lal·t'lilil ~,

Argellti~ lIillt .' fOl' SOlllh 1'1),"[ .

CONNE(,TIII'i SloRnn: IT\.,

r. \Sqn~., . "'1 l"rl'l~l l'riHIl •. _I 1" ,1.'

SI. .Iull"'. 1~lIt ,,\ April :~mh \\lll~! lion ~I p"rI "I' lIl.V. i\lOlli;1 fill' Serl'ire.

SlIlI'PEBS .\~II PUIILlC WU.L

~OTr: . 'rot 111 Owing 10 pre, .

lions Northcrn Coasts aml in

, Isle. regular Service on rt be postponed un I

tions ilJlprol'c:-St. JDhn's to

Sel'\·ire. CDrner Brook to

Servicc. 'kt. Green Ba), Setlor AnnollllCC]l1cnt ,11 . . " ... of these sen'lce,

bter .

SELL

KIN! BO'VS'

eWspapl SERIES

CONSOLAT

:RICHArtD DC Drug Store. STEPHEN HOl WILLIAM PE~ CLARENCE D Avenue. EDWARD REI MARGARlTE

ing Road. TER JOHN FU

D. BUHKE, 2: DON CHANE,

K. HYALL, 9 W. CHANIFOF

nN KEMP, MAHY SKIN~ NANCYDAW

PAT GOSSE. 1

lIVGH BATS WILLIA;"! (

Hoat\. LEO GLYNN.

MARGAHlTl Side Hoad.

MAIN P MRS. Ar

)0

Cards for gam

claim Bingo P on the

elp Kin -

SEItVICt~

AVALON WATER AT I

FO~ o

Approximl

PER

321 DU

AYlWAJ Pl

su~ -ReqUired imn ~sbesl:os Min IU Newfoundl

~uties involvi lUg survey co s~ttil1g up sur fIeld layou~ office calcula veys, etc.

This is a pem Excellent saIl medical prog Reply giving and E:xperiel1

ell Ad

]

Wn

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KINSMEN BOYS' CLUB

Newspaper BINGO SERIES No. 74

l'P\ ~\ 11, \TIO:\ Wli'<:NEUS

,; 1\1111 \I,P J)l1llLEY c:o Kenncdy's 1""1' 'b \: l'.

:: "1"1:1;111\ III )\)l;EHS, 25 Flower Hill. , \\ III 1\\1 I'F\\EY, Kilbrillc. ,ll \IIF\1 T 11\,\\ 10:\ D, 1-14 Empire

\\,',IUl', .. n 1\\\ I, 1) II FIn. sri ~:pringdale Strcet. '~, \1,\1,\:\ l\ Ill': l1lCKS, 121 Merrymeet-"",,·l\\\hL

\11,n:\, 11111\ ITHLO:\C, 112 Pleasant St. " l' 1;\ 1\1, F. ~~ Shea Street.

1\1\ ('\,\\\-:, 17 \Iilitary Hoad. '" 1\\\11, ~) lkl1ll'rv Avenue.

\\, 1'1, \\ I Fll1u). ;)'7 (juidi Vidi Hoael. , II 'H\ 1i.1-'\11'. ~:) I Le~!archant Road. '\1,\1\\ :-.1i.l\\EH. Torbav.

. ,\\\1 Y 1)\ \\'SO:\. 26 Cookstown Road. \'\1' l:( ):-;S F. 1\\5 Livingstone Street. lll't:ll H.\lSTO:\E, 86 Cabot Street.

, \\ 1l1.l \\1 COLU:\S, 59 Allandale );0;,:

, 1 l'l) C\ \\\. 1(1 Bannerman Street. 1'1:, \j\lll: \l\ITE PEDDLE, 528 South

" ':.it' l"l,ltl

MAIN PRIZE WINNER MRS. ANNIF. T ANSLEY,

J 0 Gill Place

\'.",i, "'I ~;\\lll' :\0. 75 now on sale.

To claim Bin90 Phone 8-7269 by 10 p.m. on the day published.

Help iUn -- Help Kiddies

Watch Repairs

SI:ll\'1l'1: \rlTll A s~nLE AT

AVALON CREDIT JEWEllERS 1I'.\T!:n ;\T '\1lF.l.AIDE. PIlONE 8·7829

FOR RENT OFFICE SUITE

Approximate 1,000 square feet

PERLIN BUILDING

321 DUCKWORTH STREET

Apply to

AYlWARD & CROSBIE PHONE-8·S247

~lJRVEYOR R~quirl'd . \. lb' . 1\ 11ll1llL'l mte V V New Open-PIt ·,\1 It'stns ~ \' ' d' ill ~. .j' • \lllng an Milling operations

, ell ollndland.

D\llb il\\'oll" .\ bl' I . d . . ill" ( L'S a IS 11l1g an mamtam-, S\lr\'e\, t I f I 1 I ~tr . con 1'0 0 t 1e w 10 e property,

fieldng tl~ Sll1'wY records and procedures, offil'e rill ollts, quantity measurements, Il'\ a cltlaholls and draughtin!T of sur-

. s. ell'. M

This is '111 t\C 'II': Cl'mancllt position with a future.

~ tnt s'II'II'" l' nll'di I ....' new lOusmg, group Repl~a .. ,~.r()gram, .moving expenses paid. and E gil I~lg detailed resume of training

\\lencllce to: . '

CHIEF ENGINEER, Advocate Mines Ltd.,

Bnie Verte, Nfld.

Wm. L. CHAFE too TAILOR

IJ)S\VORTH ST. ST. JOHN'S IF ClOTHES MAKE niE MAN

CHAFE MAKES THE CLOTHES. '

OUT RESPECT FOR THE LATE

J. E. EDWARDS EDWARDS DRUG STORE WILL BE CLOSED FROM 1 p.m. TO

4 p.m. TODAY.

THE YOUNG PEOPLE'S UNION AND YOUNG ADULTS FELLOWSHIP GROUP OF GOWER ST. UNITED CHURCH WILL

BE SPONSORING

COLD MEAT TEAS in the Lecture Hall of Gower St. Church

on FRIDAY, April 26th,S to 7 p.m.

Admission .............. $1.00

Tickets may be obtained at the door.

ART GALLERY ASSOCIATION OF NFLD.

Presents

EXHIBITION of Paintings from St. John's Homes at

MUN ART GALLERY APRIL 22nd to MAY 4th

3 to 5 p.'1'" -7:30 to 10:00 p.m. Daily apr24,25,26myl

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

Approximately 3000 square feet Office Space at 115 New Gower Street, contains vault, private offices, toilets,' etc. Parking space for eight cars. Formerly occupie~ by Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce.

. Apply

B. D. PARSONS PHONE 8·3731

apr22,6i

The 'St. John's Community Concerts Association

announce

"THE RONDOLIERS . TRIO" MONDAY, April 29, and

TUESDAY, April 30 . 8:30 p.m. sharp

The. Concert l~an of the Holy Heart Regional High School, Bonaventure Avenue

NOTE: If you must change the night of your attend. ance. please arrange the ticket exchange early-see 'your membenhlp card for Instructions. Please do not phone, exchanges will be made Immediately in person • apr25,29 .

THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND. APRIL 25. 1963-H

Rev. R. Fletcher Tink

HEAR Rev. R. Fletcher

link Outstanding Musician

and Evangelist at the

ylount Pearl Church of The Nazarene

Park Avenue Thursday through Saturday

7:45 p.m. . SUNDAY: 11:00 a.m. and.

7:00p.m. Saturday: 7:45 p.m.

SLIDES OF THE HOLY LAND

Everyone Welcome

WARNING! - -

Have You Booked Your Tickets for

CARD PARTY BELVEDERE ORPHANAGE

MAY 7th at 8:30 p.m. I' -

," ; t.-I . -i I If -

BRIDGE and AUCTION I -,fj!' r ~: ~-I':: i bj,'r 1~:;, i _,- i

i 'i:1 " " " $100.00 Door Prize.

1"' • ,

~.U' ' . I :

. , " .' • :1"

I - Il -, ,:. : Usulll Vlllullble Prizes. . :.1 '\"1 . Patrons are asked to bring their own Cards' :1 I 'r'

and Baskets. Teas will he served. " -il !i;~> II I'.' i;l. I j :': ~. ,~j ~ .

F;;;;';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;;;;;;;;;:;;';;;--';;;';-;';'-';;;-;;;";;;'-;";' '';;;--;';;' --;;,-'~--;..;-~.;.;;;-.,;-...;;-;;,;;;~ . ; ," ~ 'j

; i ~r' i'

WANTED Female Clerk Typist

(High average in mathematics preferred)

- ..

i' I I-I I "

I ,. , " " i

I; , I' ,

i .::

Also experienred

Female Bookkeeper f!; -:.

I I ,

1 , I SPRING SMILES & WHISTLES?

,

I

i'

DIAL 84080 or 97174 NOW All Seats Reservcd $1.50, $1.25 and $1.00.

BISHOP FEILD AUDITORIUM, May 1, 2, 3, 4.

Career Opportunity and Sales

(for large Insurance Agency)

Applicants for both positions must have Grade XI. Apply stating age, education standard, experience and salary expected to:-

BOX 417 c/o THE DAILY NEWS apr25,26,27

,~. . .

,. .~ !

.. 'I.-

" .. ~ .. " (.

, k Lj' , .

I! .' , , 1 ,

I I I . l r I . '. Ir. .' I

I I

I ! , I

• , , Are you interested in:

1. Representing a leading manufacturer who is the largest advertiser in the world. Selling famous quality products such as Duncan Hines, Fluffo, Crisco and Crest to the retail and wholesale grocery and Army outlets?

2. An attractive starting salary with increase based on merit?

3. Unsurpassed profit sharing plan, Pension Plan, Hospital and lIIedical Protection, Group Life In' surance ?

4. Company car which may also be used for personal driving?

5. Unlimited opportunity for advancement in the firm where all executive appointments are made from within the company 7

6. Thorough sales training programme? If you are interested and aggressive, intelligent young man between :11 nnd 30 years of age. Please call MR. A. HMIEL1N Thursday at the Newfound­land Hotel to arrange for an appointment. apl'24.25

-'~.;

R.C.A. ' p~:

INSURANCE :-.' .. -AUTOMOBllE~,' R.C. Anthonr· Insurance L td~ '., .

Imperial Oll Bldg •..

. I: '

I d Ii

,I il ,. I:

: i,

Elizabeth Avenue ~ :'.0 I,

TEL. 9-5079 "

I, :'! I .~ i i ,

~ ,

I'i ,I ' ,

" r-"-------~ FOR RENT - Four bedroiiin I I 1 I' furnace heated house, situat-

:

~TERRA l~OVA I)ARK BUNGALOWS

Famous In Eastern Canada

THE OLD MILL NIGHT CLUB

Serving only Tim BEST OF FOOD. Featuring the Finest Entertainment - Dancing.

UNIQUE and INTIMATE A "MUST" when visiting.

Call 8·7581 or 90026 Brookfield Road st. John'.

WANTED

TUTOR Grade IX Mathematics

Two lessons per week

Reply BOX 418 c/o

THE DAILY NEWS

GREAT EASTERN OIL & IMPORT

CO., LTD. Radio, TeleVision, Washers, Refrigerators, Deep Freezers

Electric Ra!lges. Floor Polishers.

Gramophones Public Address Systems

Tape Recorders

ItEPAmS AND SERVICE 5 LINES

DIAL 8·3001 to 8·3005

WATER STREET Jao28,ly M·3

WANTED PRODUCTION MANAGER

for a Fresh I:ish Filleting Plant in the Conception Bay Area.

Good wages and working condition.

Interested parties please apply to:

BOX 419 c/o THE DAilY NEWS \

ed 60 Fleming Street. tor " , information pie a s e call" i i· 8·37054. mon,wed,thur ,

CASH PAID FOR Comics, ',i ! ~ magazines, pocket novels,

and books. John D. Snow, fI" . '1

i I, ii, I ' 1

'1 ' I . I'

TilE CENTRAL BAlmER Ii:' I . I . 9 New Gower Street.

SHOP-We arc now operaf,." I I ing 10 chairs, you can be !I II' assured of prompt, efficl· I,

em, sanitary service. No '\1.: waiHng problem, 24 New Ii:!,

I , Gower Street oppOSite Ad.,. '1, '

laide Motors Ltd. R II!'. , '---'-1' ,

FOR SALE-A quantity of I:, local Bailed Hay. Phone 'I 92870. apr24,3i ------ ,.'

FOR RENT, Two-Bedroom

BUNGAL.OW Situate

No.3 Dartmouth Place.

Telephone 82544.

FOR SALE OFFICE SAFE

(i\ledi{lin Size)

Reasonably Priced.

Phone 80155

Three weeks after date here· o! application will be made ,to the Board of Liquor Control for a licence to sell beers and wines, in an establishment situated' at 719 and'72i Water Street West, St. John's, in the,district'of St John's. South. .

WEST END TAVERN CO. I

I

, ,

. , , ,~ 1,

, , •

, I ~ 1

I

! i

..

! .

! ,

';

Page 12: ~S .5. Tries To Head Off Laos' Crisiscollections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsSt... · Harriman wlto has just com. t union, Communist China uncl! tit em tOll'ard Ihe Cummunist

j 1

I

, '

\~-TnE DAlLY NEWS. ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, APRIL 25, 1963

NEW ARRIVALS

"SHATTUCKS" TRIMMED NAVEL BEEF BARRELS and HALVES

NOW IS A GOOD TIME TO

FERTILIZE YOUR

LAWN.

EVERGREEN

FERTILIZER

20 lb. and 40 lb. 8ags

GOLDEN VIGORO

141b. and 35 lb. Bags

Advice For Exporters

A new publication designed

to promote increased Canadian

cxports and offering advicc to

businessmen planning sales of

their products abroad has becn

published by the Bank of Mont-rcal.

AMERICAN VIKING The booklet, "Export Markets

The Saga of Hans in Brief-A Guide for Canadian

Isbralldtsen~ Exporters", has becn prepared

D $7 50 by the bank in conjunction with James ugan. -- --' the Department of· Trade and

APPROACH TO Commerce, Ottawa, and em:

BATTLE- bodies facts, figures, and com-

Lieutenant-General ments on potential markets for Canadian goods in 68 countries.

Get the most from your new

.•• HA Movie

TOOT LIMI

Headq uarte rs for KO DAK pho\ogra phic equipmenland ,._ and HAWKEYE 8 Movie Camera accessories'

U. S.A. PACK FAT BACK PORK ALL.PURPOSE

VIGORO

Sir Francis Initially designed for distri-

N6~~erBUT'THE"ifc~~ t1~~~~!~e c~~~~~~tiO~al:;th pt:o~ 1- u:s ... RO.'\DS------~,ioSTSKOKi:~ I f I motion conference, to be heIdi Thcre are some 3.5 million Languagc nlio;t

BARRELS and HALVES \

T le Story 0 t le by the federal department in I milcs of pa\'cd roadE in the more peoplr IhJII

Greek Svndicate- ot~awa, • th~ booklet is also I Unitcd States .of which about 1I0~the~n Chinl"" or

5 lb., 14 lb., 35 Ibs. Charles Graves 6.25 hemg distributed by B of M.I 2.R million Inllcs are paved: which 15 l"e(i hy -'10m" GHEECE BY I ~~:~~.hcs and is availablr. on rc, ! wit1~ blac~top. _ ' Iiun _ !1~r.~I". ..

CHOICE RIBLETS (!

HALF BARRELS

TURF SPECIAL PREJUDICE- i-I' Daphne Atha:; _ ..... 7.25 i-AS

Ol~i:~~~~~s_ 1 MaJ:er Fact j I~----"--Fo-r Th-UI'-sd-ay-. A-p-ril-2S-L..:.:'

Stanley Lovell ...... 4.75 i I . Present-For You and

DIAL

SEED

CO., !.TD.

8·4328

1------------

THE DEPTHS- I _ i John Creasey ...... , 2.75 I The lantern fly of the Amcri- I

I PEHRY MASON IN THE I' can tropics protects himself I CASE OF THE from his enemies by the closc

7 resemblance of the forward MISCHI\ EOUS I part of his head to the profile

DOLL- of an alligator in miniature.

ErIe Stanley 'fh.c thought seems to ?c that 5 1 3111mals who pr. on files and

Gardner ........ -...... 3.9 who are in turn victims of the

TROT -A Novel of I'cgion's many alligators, will at

--------------------------- Sl1spense- ,Iea~t hesitate, at this represcn'

THED i, I'

.' . ,I •• b Min 3m $301. 31ll. 30'\\ + ',i'l Yk lIear 3800 113 110 110 , 1 1. nufal1lt 4D5t'I 640 625 610 _S ,"ukeno 2516 :;~-'.z 51,1. M'iI T I"J

TORONTO'" .' ~ Lak r Lin" 500 8 8 8 + '.> I Yukoll 1100 42 ·12 42 : 14 0611 21'00 15 HI,:: 15 + V. Zu1apa 2S00 2:1 22VJ 23 + 1 i

, I. Shor e z30 23l 235 235 . Zenmac 16S00 21 20 20 -I i , l.an~I' 49010 33 ,2 33 + I OIl.S I ,I.otln Am 17r.;,0 31 32 33 + V, I Alml"" 24130 320 299 310 + j ,

"'Rt':\nl rt.n~lS0 ~T(1rK~ , 1.l'ncourt )300 9 9 9 Am Leduc 16600 6~2 6',2 6\-2 .! 'r'll Ir.",udil'l1J ~Ut'I~IaMi In nnh IInlc~~ 1.1. I.Cle 1000 139 1~8 llS ~-l Anchnr . 300t1 7 7 7 "\, .. tlo.r..1 ~, l ll,I.1 flt. __ Ex·o\\"id\'nd. : I.uradf' 26200 166 163 163 -2 AUmerA 31:13 110 10.i l1l1 -+ t ! '~.'n."f \\ h"'nl l'ft\hlU1I IWitl"l1 ' lilt, I.tlu\'h't ::MNI H'.fz Hlh 81 .. 2 ) nallcy SI\ zRO 5111, tP.'~ !P~ I .:t,,*I",- ,..aIC'. n,,', L)'ndhlit 2001.1 5': !i l,!.! ~\-'.tI Bailey S pr 100 SZ-J 2·1 2~ - ~a 1

Stl ~lacH:t~a 40 310 3~O 310 1 llonrf 1(,200 121i 11-1 126 _ ·,12 1

. 'btl""

.'('"{t,t,

.\~ .. \h""

.'f':Ii\~ H\Or """11 .\ "'t(',ach .. .\\ l·. l\'r hln·Nuf .\\I,n~.q

1'.'1'11.\ };"tf' ~"'l I lttlmn l'I'I.,lm

mSJ:!' ~I.r~o" 6100 19 17'1, 17'h -2 lIal. 120011 5 4'; ,I', - 1; , ... '-;., :1> til Iii . - I, ~1"dic ]5000 6 j\~ 5\-';I -- I,'J. Cal ala M~) t;j lS 1:; + 1 ! ,:-'." .... , :'I! .i~ , :.! ~ladsl'n btlO 22B 2~5 228 +3 Cal Ed ]~j S21~~ :,!l3,~ 21o/l - \'4 :'111\ H t:l n --1 ~1ajtrl\n~ 10000 8 jlh n!l- ~~ Camerlnl 260 2:5 215 215 +10 I .,,, ;!" ;!,' 1!,.1 --w; ~Ian liar ~jOO 23 23 23 CS Pele ~JOO 415 m 400 -15 ~,:~ ~\'l ~n, !l'.1 I ~lmhoy 6GOl) u;~ lW,; 141~ C Dehl, 7~j2 415 .\05 410

• "" "1 h t I~O 9' ~ 91 +1 Cdn Dc,' 32M 370 300 310 ... 101

I .. ~~;\l .;-\ ..;"1 I 11 arC' an V\IV , ;l'U

);'" \0: 1110 HMO ~I"rron 2500 D BY. 9 + 'h C Home,ld 300 95 95 9.1 -2 :=;~; j1i jl"l j'"4 - ''3' :'ttnriUme 900n 42lh ~1 421., - h Cent Del 5641 83S £2,j fiJI) I ; ,,,I .• ~; , ~1.I"ml 61B5 810 B35 B3; Charter 011 3800 1M 149 150 HI, , .... lil! II'! Inl I Mcintyre m $531, 531'" m. - C Dra~nn 1000 9 9 9

ll."'l .\''lI ~,I::. 5~: I McKrn 9700 35 3~ 3t -1 C l\Uc Mnc 29~O ,US 4~5 445 tot,,,' .f.\. ~II ~o 1 1 :\lL'\\o'at 2(Kl0 23 2J 23 C West I' 550 218 n~ :!18 .J- 3

For eomplete

COVERAGE and

Prompt Adjustment

of Claims

CALL REG T. MORGAN

INSURANCE LIMITED

]) 'd EJ 4 95 ~ tahon of their enemy, thereby aVI y ....,. . giving the lantern fly time to

THE EXPENDABLE escape.

MAN- ---------Dorothy B. 1

1 49-: Hug 1es ._ . v. : ULTRA11ARINE­I Malcolm Lowry__ 4.00. I THE SAND PEBBLES- I

Richard McKenna 6.25 i : :\lADDALENA­I Pamela Hill .. • THE TIN DRUM-

,

5 1)'" I ._v :

. GUllter Grass. 7.50, THAT SU}'IMER IN

PAIUS- 1

~lorley Callaghan 5.00 I

Dicks & Co., Ltd. The Booksellers

Mat-CORMAC'S RECEIVING OFFICE,

1 ADELAIDE 8'IRIlET

GEAR STREET

l\t\ \"'1"" l-\I~'-'

PHONE 8·5001 ~Iro 3~l 31.1 31; -. 1 Me"lor I~ 2B 28 28 +I D.v Pal 731 74 4 4 +3 7 Tcmple Bldg., Duckwortb St. ;01: , ;', 7', llerrll 800 51 51 M Dom. Pel. 400 $Im 1m 1m - " ;,u," :1',~" :: -~"! llet. Ur.n 1000 8h 8\, 81> D)'nomlc 1000 2m 21'; 21Y. -- \, DIAL 8,0370, 8·7556 i ~.'l'" 1~1.: II i: - ',':I! ~t1drlm lSOO 39 38 ~9 +3 Fargo 2BO(1 260 255 ~55 -5 • _____________ _ "'It'" ,h.)

Ht't\'\UIH~ ;0." • .',;, h' Min Cnrp fi20 Sl5\\ 15\1 15\, - \1 Fr. rele pr z25 305 305 305 ' jan19,lmth,dly. i NOTE OF THANKS

I , , ,

I

"MlIIn l~r':"i'Il",t

itl\'''' UN'f hl\u,,," ...

311'" ~I', ~I II I MUlleta 3&900 93 87 lIB Glacier 2000 '1l II Il -I , Moma 13aO $521, 52" 5210 - % i ~:',' ~hl 3;5 .hI't l Mr Wrl~hl 4025 49 46 47 -!1l Gr 1'1.1.. 250 $121, m~ 121,\ ,.,. Alumlni 6UO 32m 27', 27~' + ~'I h b d f 'I·

I"" :.1 2,\~; I Mull·M 3600 25 2~:.I Grldol 19I1tt 35 34 31 +1 AlUm 2pr 500 519V, 49',< 49V. +1> Mr. Jo n Hum y an amI y 111'-' Ji'l' ;;,0 3,,"' ,10 1 Murro)' ~I 400 117 115 U5 -5 1I0me B 4200 $131. m', 13\\ Ang T <I;p 2111 $41 44 44 +0;, I wishes to thank all those who'

... utl ",-i .n\r Ch,t. l' "m, l·lml1 IU. i· .\,tNI" l \hnll t' "alat\ l· " lnu ,"'4n ~\\ l' ~Illt·a l·lftllalf" l~AD 'Er;Q l'oriloo<> ,'uU"r .. .-tl'l \'1\ l".Jl,,"­l"tMrt l ;'It\ ~\ l ~I'\m· l"l'<"tt \\"1\ l'.,I" Ld .• l fifo'" Mr. ,,,",,,,n ((\t\,t\C'.,'I.' , ~.I,~ l' (.UUft l.' tlu~w f t"tn l"(\n (""UiM r H.lh \~ ~.h"\J' l' ),It,,"ul l~ Mnt1i!ofln C !.l(\shtr C Sollhld " r.ah t.'MI UUf C llambl" " lIod ror C 11""",,11 (~ Sunorm \,'l';\" ",.t ror ('.11'

''<'1'-'" n ,' .. "" o.f".~ t~(I\\ k-" Oll,ml ''''Inor r''''''l'al 1'1"", llttr n~", I'rnlt<'ft Ilk'",. l'<om. 'O\l1-alnt' 1-: •• 1 ~I.I "'~.-t Sui );]d ... );]d,l.h F.llrth Fit ...... r"'UI T "~lIr "-oN\ Ha""ln l.t<"C' ;\hnn ('-fon." GIani '1( 1'04'14.1. Gr )\Iolnl \lraNf GnC\t.ae G'''Nr R,N,lIn It <I I .. ~ .. Nn4 ... ,. Rulli mJ1>-1IoI1 HoUlIll?r NOW'I)' ll ... ' II ... It)\In ". Irloll !'or 11ft nar I .. J Wall. 103" "\rl h .. boa.

I'"~ ::0 :15 215 ,Soma Cr 7000 15\; 15 15 - 'h 110m. A 3000 51m 13'1; 13Y, +1; Ang T 290p 135 553 53 53 " , " •. ; "" \"; 40,; -10 ; Smull 51400 171> 15\\ 1611, - ~ II 11 011 G 2355 Slm 16~' I~V. - ~, ! .\r~us j;.o $IWo lOll 101ll + 1.1 helped him over his illness i

I:~~ :f:" I;:., I;! •• -9 ! ~~~~ ~:~ ~~~ 3;1. 3m 3~(~- \\ ~l~~:~y 61~~ ;~~ i~~· ~~~ +l I ~~~e.~o:r I~~ $~~\' 2~;; J,. .-n! while a pati:nt at the D.V.A., .'1o."tI to'. :I', I~" • I', I S.weon., 101) 425 425 423 Nal Pelc lfiOO 197 191 m -5 nail,S 5lip 50 525¥> 2m 25¥. -~, Ward. espeCIally Dr. J. B. ' ; III \0:, "OJ lilO -u I Neon.. 11'18 1300 130 130 130 "":10 N Concord 938 4 4 4 - I> I nank NS rlS 738 340 310 340 R b t D CIS h D

"II I ",000 A',L 8 8 - H .S Coni 20500:lO JO 30 I lIank '/IS 73 $75'1. 7511 75'. _ " a er s, r ar up er, r. : ;1~;l JF\,;;: ~a 38 .'1 flrr -il • d 11'" • R S - 1,; N.w U""'o 41500 155 150 m +Z N Dal'le. 3100 1\ 11 11 Dr The Cnn.dlnn I' .. " nank C N 370 1761i 75\\ 751> +1. Niel Turner alld S:ster Kenne y

I;;~~ If'i" In;" !O~\' ,I 'I' ~ef,eto~~on I~: I; ~.; ~~Itg(f.1 283m I~~ I;~ I;~ +~ ~~~~~I'IO' 4~~;i llD~~d.}a~ g~; i ~~~~ ~ rls 2m m 5~"> ~;I> =4~" and her staff and also thc Red, .. '" I!', I~ 12', , Newlund 26800 22'~ 21 21 -I NCO pr 175 13m 331, 331, + 211 IInque C Nal 7511, FoundaUon 1010 neu phone 1423 556'1. 5m 56l\ Cross for thcir wonderful Easter I 11'«' I:', I~I. 12'. ,I I N M)'lama 1000 191, 19 19 -I Okana 3~ 12!; 11\, mil -I\> lIank Mont 69 Frase.. 23\, Row 5 pr 5(l $50\. SOl> 501>- \,. d . th k . .'fI,' Rn 80 10 -1 I Sewnor 13100 15 14\, 15 - \, Pnmoll 1400 48 48 18 -2 k ~S 7.I\i GT I •• ke. 19" Druzil 2150 .110 420 420 -5 gift an once agam an ~ 0\1 : •. ".' 'II II 1\ • '. ',SrII' Ito.yn 3000 IA!, 16 16 Permo 820 ,lO 30 30 -I D.n. C 'I'L IllId Bay Min SBh n A 011 433 $2W 28 28" uch

"., • "7 " S-/ '2 I DD'ellqlue P " '" • " very m . 11\1 1:'::~ 1:::1 l:J -5 ~ ~ "'l1ntor 1:10l 8 714 "!I PenH' 01 BOOG U 1I. 56:;~ Imp on 4Ft BC Forest R:;G $17;-. 17~A U', ... ~"i 1~),'\ 71,; ~ j 1:'Ii(' .1 MS 2211 3~ 33 3~ Pnt1l1pJ! 4301) 16 l:!ol,.j !51/2 -4 ,Brazl 42() lnt Nick 1i7~1t BC row 310 '20!i 20\1 20\'1- 1;8 ____________ _ :\ ..... ' 13',:: 1~1'1 1~1~ !'\Il'k Rlm 1600 IS n 1!'i - Yz. Place 2.~OO !Ill !'i2 ~3 I' Cleveland 0\ Mass·Ftr 14',8 Bruck A ll}() S18~k ~a% 1MB - ~. ~l HI.~ :14\~ J~'2 --'!''j ~or·,\cme ~oo IM'i 15~'; 15~ - Y. Pro\'O Gas 4fiOD 117271 ,:" 172~1' 121 ~t' _ .. tL. ' C Stenmship 57 Price :J9l.1 Build Prod 50 S3D 30 30

::", 18~ mIlO -,5 1);0'1« I53BO 35 331'" 311'> +IY. Quonlo &2575" "" "~ .. " C Bnlt Com 68 noyal Dank 19-1, Buloo m 775 775 775 -10 lhl"" ~~O ·41,' ",ZO -,) I ~'orme1al HOO 290 2a6 286 Jtanger 1000 115 11j 115 +4 Cdn Drew 11 Royallte 1218 Cal pow 425 $23% 2.:J~~ 23'!4 +~~ 1111\' 2.1 2.1 2J -I );nrpa. 6000 10 91> 91'> -I Sarcee 8500 127 122 125 Cdn Celan 6m Shawln ~~;. Can Com 9Il1 S3m 39 39 -,.

750 19 19 19 - h' Sorth~te 1l6!¥.l6 400 360 3~1 -IS I Seeur Fr.e 3910 81.1 795 815 +IS C Inl Pow" 13 St.e ·Wi. Can Cem pr 60 1781, 78'., 781, + 0;, I ::.., '" .~ ~8 -I N nank 1000 31 33 3J -2 Soulh U 1200 12 12 12 C Inl l'wr pr 45 Tr Can l'L m. C Dom Sug 175 $281'" 28',; 28',\ ":5\1 12 11 il', - \\ I );orsp A w 200 50 46 50 + 4 Spooner 1500 11 II I! cpn 28 Walker • 5m CI Fndry 575 5221'J 22 22',\ WI" ~ 6'. 64 Xorlh Con ~ la6 lr.6 186 -4 Tidal 1500 65 6.1 6, -5 Sengrams 51\'< CANADlAl> CI F 4h 75 S86 86 86 -I ,

':l~ i\l ;\~ 7l , Nor Rock 1800 21 21 21 -z'h TranI Can 61 63 63 7 63 -1 GCons PilP 40 AnJt Am I\!oyb 225 Can MalL ]00 S861h B6~ 26~., -H. I I"," 7, 7S ;a ,2 10h .. k. 2000 5 5 5 Triad Oil 3m' 168 Jr,(, 168 +2 ') CSL 25 $57 57 57 +"! ~'" 11 \l \l O'llrl.n MOO $.I 54 55 .'-2 Union 0\ 620 sm. 111, II\> - ',8 Purd.. 1112800 16 13 IJJ.i -210 CAE 925 !S\, ali a\1 ~1 1\\1 tOl~ ~t; ) Olll!ntiska 49j4 780 76~ 700 .+- 10 Unlspher 270oo:l2 30"2 32 +2 I Cdn Brew 3455 Sl1h l{)~l 11 -}1

Zl'''l ~Jh 2:\ 2Jl~ - ,~ I Orchan ,900 222 218 213 -1 U Cnnso vt 1376 144 144 144 I; C Brew Bpr :100 S~2~i ~2~3 521,'l- 1/41 ~,,, !>1 !lO 9~ -3 10ren.,I. 56700 21 . 20' 20 -I Un 011. 18264 IS2 146 148 2 Crtn Celan 185 S611> 6m 6111 - \'.0

u, ... II: 10~ 110 -1 Osl,kn 2500 311 38\, 39 Un Heel P I!IOO 17 17 17 C Chern 6775 SIOl. 10'(. 10'1. I :~ ~: III "2 I'ammlr 9()() 103 103 103 W.burne 3500 115 R-1 85 +S C Frbk!i A 100 S!l% 8il 8h + 1/11 ~"'\01 ~I ~'" 201 -2 ; I'.".maq moo H 13 l3'", - If.. W.lale. 19~ 335 3M 355 +S C Husky 6Q<l $6'" 6~' 6% - Yo l~ ~t).::9 1~~'.: -lli i PatIno 1&;5 715 72j 175 +25 W Decaita 5~OO 117 11~ 117 -1 C lJydro 1200 S16;~ hH~ 16~, I "'oo I: 11 11 Il'ax Inl 2000 21 19 21 +2 Wlndl.ll 18000 33 31 311" - I, C Imp Bk C ~14 1680;, fi8\1 81t';. - ~'I 1200 ~I ~o ~o 1 + I Pn)'mnst ] 150 12 12 12 Van Con 1000 7 6~~ 01f.a nr The Canadian Prell C1L ·375 515JII 15% 15% - % 200 1M 101 101 -3 re. Exp I:tOO 11 1\ II nANKS Bid ",.t CI Pow 300 SI3 13 13 ',\XI 12 II \2 Peerl... 2;750 31 2D 30 -1 Mont 50S $6m 681, 69 - ~I All Cdn Com 9,70 10.iO CI Pow pr ISO 54S 44% 4.1 +",1

IN MEMORIAM

FUREY In fond and loving memory

of my dear mother,

MARY FUREY, who died

April 20th, 1962

-Inserted by her daught· er Angela, son·in,law

Leonard and grand. chlhlrcn.

_, 9'. 9', 9'." I P.rron 2000 15\, 15 15 /IS 817 $751, 75\'.0 73% - Al Cdn Dlv 685 i.SI CPH 2665 528 21'10 28 +111 "\\J ~ ~ 6 Pick Crow 2015 62 62 62 -I C Imp Bk C 1349 568\\ 68 68'.\ American Growlh 8.53 D.32 Cdn Pcl pr 2325 51'\> 111'. III: •••••••••••• 1 1hl~1 I!~ m no I'ltrMJrt moo 5\\ 51> 51; - I'" Royal 1020 5791, 79\\ 79'/, + '\ Beaubra. 3\.00 36.92 Capilal Wire 550 $~\'.o 8l', S\'.o \H 1(\1" Il U IS POl\' Rou ~OO 47 4L 17 +3 Tor·Dom' 912 58m 6ll> 6511 +1, Canada Growlh 5.11 S 58 Cent Del 1700 830 825 825 -10 -------------1001.1 11 II \I I'r •• lon 2200 915· 905 905 INDllSTnULS Cdn Ga, .nd Ener~y 7.08 7.74 Col Ce 200 5710 71> 7110 - I.

1650 32'. n'; 32'; - '" Pro. Air 9000 7ft 11 7S -2 Alumlnl 89n $271. 27% 2n'l +"-10 C.nadaln Investmenl 10.71 11.78 Con M S - 1020 12m 261,> 261,> I'...... 21 ~I 21 .1 i Purde. 102800 16' 13 131,> -2\; C Brew· 7865 SII . 101, 10V. - ',' Canadian Trusteed 4.70 5,14 Con Te't 200 600 600 600 -I :l,X' III lin 110 -I lIue Chlb 1625 22 20 20 -2· D Magne. 200 m. 9\1 9,. - ~ Can.fund 44.35 46.78 Cr Cork 25 $30 80 80 -I IN'!! 5131, 111', laa" ... ~, Que Lith :100 23Z 2~2 252 +1 Dosco .1150 SI5~" 15 t~. - 1,~ Commonwcollh nter 9,20 10.08 Crush Int 100 $15~, 1~1 15;. +

5!>.\f\1 IR 16 IR ,I tl 51.lIgml 1750 III> 140;, 141" Gen Bake 100 $Im m. 12\. + Iii Champion Mutual 8.13 6.74 Dlsl Sea, 1395 552 51\1 5l\i1- y, mil 9 8'; 9 + I II Mel.1 1600 89 89 89 Inl.nd 2000 18 6 6 Commonwealh nt Lever 7.84 8.59 D Bridge 5588 11911 lSI. mit 1'" 211\\1 ~''I 6\i 7 - li Qunston 1000· 13" 13 13 lnv S.YD A 757 S59~~ !IlR~'~ 5B1.- liS Corporate Inve!lton; ]0.65 11 64. D Coal pr 250 $14 1-4 14 + 1A moo (,,\ 67 67 -I Uadlore 3000 el6 45 46 Pemblnn 3125 $710 7 7 Diversified Inc. 22.50 D Fndry 231 S61\/o 6; 67 - II :.I7l III'. 111, 11',- Ii Raglan 5200 62 61 81 -I Slmp.o.. 7M 13m 311< 33\> + II Dlve"lUed Ine. n 4.61 5.07 D GI.ss 6300 $1m 17\\ 17,. HI

1611 41~ 4:13 410 + 10 Rayrock 6700 91 89 91 + I GW.lnwr 1000 50 50 so Dlvl~end Shares 3.11 3.74 D Glass pr 100 SISY. 181> 181',,-1 :;1\ Il~ :!!I 29 Rec,',' 200 1-15 115 115 +10 Walk ... ' 890 sm, 5H't 57"1 -'I Dominion Eqully W,o.l 19,45 . D Lime 425 $71> '/11, 7\'-\>

::267 :1 :1 22 -I H.lOpar 1100 20 20 20 We.ton n '1540 '~221'" 22\<1 221. + 1. Dreyfu. Inc. 16 8; 18,32 I D Sleel 1210 $15!', 14J1. IS 1110 :.11 m 2ll nto Algom 4743 $Im 14\1 14\1 Europe.n Growlh 6,77 7.40 D Slor.. 131lO SIS 141. We - Ii

~"\J :I! l!9 215 + 10 I nto nup 2100 6 G 6 Tola Sales: 3.156.000. F.deraled Growth 4.98 5.41 Dom Tar 1470 119\, 19!-' 19!"- \0 ::00 11\' 98 ~ Rlx Athab ~ooo 29 21 27 -2 First 01 an d Gal 4.69 5.13 llonohue 350 $25 25 25 + 14 ",-'Ill U 13 1.1 - hi lloc)l\\'In 528 1-1 14 a -1't~ Fonds CoUectif A '6.47 1,03 Falcon ]360 $63 63 63 _ ¥.II ~%\'" 1l~~ 22\~ 2!'Az - ~ ,Rowan Con 1000 6 6 6 -] Fonda Collee.if B 5 S6 5.9l... Ennm Pr B 400 265 265 !!65 lro It\I 1M 161 -3 'R)'anor 3000 11 11 11 - V. Fond. Coll •• lI! C 6' 6J 7.211 Fndln 400 sUA. lOr; 10-1i +11'

:!tl<'\l ll'l I3h 13'\ + \1 I Salem !!.I67 361; 36 '36 +1 Group Inc. 3~72 4.0i Fr ••• r 400 528;, 280;, 281,- ~i 41'<\' 11 I' II - I; San ,\nl 7100 35 31 3! -2 Growlh 01 and Ga. 9.08 10,37 Frosst A 100 $19\, 1m 19\4

m '2 n ~2 + I I Sand Rlv 1000 5 5 5 Inveslors Growlh 7.10 7.7'1. G.I 5 pc pr 33 $101\'.0 lOll, 1011'.0 11100 ;1. ;\> 7', Sh.rrlll 8369 325 315 325 +5 Inyeslors InU 4.53 4.92 G J. r.per 1950 $19% 19\. 1m - H

m SIR 2! 28 -" SII Miller 8240 22 22 22 NEW- TOnK CLOSING STOCKS Inve.lor. Mulual 13 00 14-13 I Handy Andy 350 SI7 IG'.; 17 I 3l\" 11 10 10" - I'" SI.rnt 21SO 17a 172 175 + I lIalh Sleel 321i Kennecott l8 Mlllua ecumulalln, 3- 90 4,26 Hardee 600 285 275 215 ,-35 1.1 NEVILLE.'

','0 m 12 12 + Ii Slarrell 3~ 9 81> 9 BorG Warner 45% Monly IV 36\\ Mulual I.eome 5.53 6,04 Illandy A ~'I 260 675 675 675 + 75 "'" 31 30 31 Sleep n 875 490 480 490 Con. EdISon 67 Rndlo Corp 64% N American 01 Canada 11.35 12.40 IInwk Sid 1225 S6!. m 6\\ + \1 Hamillon Avenue EJ:tension ~ Il', Il 15 Slur~ .. n 31110 31 30 30 - I C and 0 ' 59*' NY Cenl 19 One WU\am Slreet 13.87 15.16 lIome 670 S131. 13y" 1m + ~I

t65 $211" 201, 20" Sud Cont 2000 9 81'.t 81,> Oen Eec 791< Sid 011 NJ 67\1 Provident 4.13 4.51 1I0me B 1150 $14 13llo 13% + \1 ~!l<l3k\ 3l<l 360 + 10 Sulll"an 761 175 I7J 175 +6 EI AUlo El 571'" SoulhPacllle 330/, Pulnam Growlh - 8.65 940 1I0rne PI 900 160 160 1~ 5 U;~ ~]~ 815 823 Sunbursl 3300 121'" 12 12 - I> G.n Eoc 7'1-'. Uld Aireralt 48llo Radisson 4-80 5.!l7 lIud Bay 275 '5814 58\'00 >8'" _ ;1 :oc<l 10'\ 101, 101,- I'" Teck·1I 1510 166 165 166 +1 Goodye.r '361> Eesini/.e' 37\1 Re,ent 5.95 .. $.50 IIBC 1000 SI31, 13;. 1m I 1I!<\' U HI, II', T.ma~ 100 ql 70 71 01. Nor RY ~9Y, Inl T T 4711 R .... rch Inveslln, 10.67 !l.66 Imp 011 2126 542 41;1 4m _ ~, 3;11\1 ~I\, 21 21', + .... Thonl 1. 2500 78 75 77 +2 ,. Sovlng. Inve.lment 6.43 7.02 Imp Tob 2105 $15 14\\ IS +% "'<00 5" 5', 51; Tombl 1500 65 65 65 1962 E .... Fund Cda 5.$.1 5 60 Inland C pr 125 sm. 18% 1811 + I. ___ :Ill :~7 :!!I5 + 1 Tow.~ 1~ 11 101> II TVEleclronlcs 7,42 S 09 Int Nick. 1477 $68 67% 67% - !i ::Ml $:!". 2!" 2.,\ 11+ Tormonl 3500 25 24 25 Timed Inv.slmenl 6.45 7,08 Int pap 610 '341> 34'1.. 34\\ '"

;1.'<1 2111 275 210 'rorbrll 2500 38 27 3& United Aecumulalv. 6,3J 6,D2 Int Ulil 520 S5O';\ SOl' 50';\ \\ 1'65 S511i 5$ 581, + 1\ Trans Re. 5000 10 10 10 Inl um pr 400 $53" 5m 5m I.

IMI :; 2m r. Tribal 6500 92 89 92 +2 Inl.r rL 740 S8m 81\\ 81% + \. t;OOO 47 46 46 -I Trln Chlb. 7000 24 23· 23 -" " Jamal.. PS ISO Sl2l, 1211 1m _ I, ~I"" I~ 112 123 -2 U A,be.ID. 2Q2 335 335 3ll MOST ACTIVE TORONTo RTDeKS I' Laboll 2560 $16\, 16H 16V. ~2ro 1'2 7n 10 -2 \I Mining 35110 2:\\ 21 21'h ,,, B1 no Ca •• dlan I'r... I Lau Fin A 500 sm, 17% 171i _ %

II'" I. 1m 13 Un lIul/ad I~ 71 73 73 -2 91 .. k ' ' Sal.. nllh Low CI.1f Cb',e, I Lau Fin 125pr 175 S2Jv. 211,. 21\\ + \, .(\\\ IJ 13 13 -I Un Keno 1635 7AS 755 m -20 ., . INDUSTRIALS MB and PR 1167 $25;\ 2~" 250;, _ 1(.

t3!OO 21'I:!tl 20'; -1\1 uU. FC°r! 124~~00 1!45 14123 .1!25 ~3 7 DAlcumln!'- 11937 127V. 27% 27% +% Marillm. Tel 650 52214 12\-', 2Zv. +\1 2m 41\ ~\1 4', pp an 2wOOO' "L 4'L '4'" D' Power \J253 $20Y. 201., 200/< + 1'. MONTREAL. CLOSING STOCKS ,,5Iass·F ,7960 $14\\ 14 l4'" l\IOO III, II', 11\1 -m V.ndoo 9666 9~" 89" 9/" +1 om Texl 7950 $20 19!1o 20 +.,. Dr'The Canadian I?re.. Loblaw 800 58110 m S\. 2(1(10 II 21', 21', Vau,e 2660 liv. 17 17 -I Cdn 'Brew' '. 7865 11 1010 '10110 - \iI Monlreal Siock Excha."e-aprll 23 Lob,w B 500 $9 9 9 3(00 Il" 13', 13\1 ,~,"Pdar '000 3'L 3'L ,,,L _ 'L N rth OILS Complele labulaUon of Friday" tr ... • Miron 6pc p 1435 S12\. 121> 12\'a - I, ~ III 12/ 121 -8 " .. on • '" ~ m r. 0 cal 283725 31 38' 29- .cllon.. Quolallon. In eenl. unle.. Mlteh R A ,200 $6V, 6", 6\1 + '"

.).1£<1 11 " 31 -I Werner 2000 ID 10 10 Quonto. 82575 271> 231, 2m -31'" marked S. z-Odd 101. ex-Ex·dlvldend. Mobo.n A ,ISO $30 29'% 29\, _ V. 1 moo ~ 5~ 60 IV Malar 11131~ 400m 37561'0 311' ~'I.I- I'" Unl.pher '. ,21780002'4 _ I~~ 1304''1.. 32 +2 xr-Ex-rlllh\JI. xw - Ex,warrants. Net Due to technical difficulties

lI9O!i90 Q5 690 -5 We'l Mine ~ • Un on. "_. H8. -+2 cbange 1< Irom preVIOUS board 101 ' -If'OO 310 310 310 -5 WllIroy 31600 180 174 178 +2 .. ,ftIlNES cD'lnt sale 'I we are unable to publish the

SOlI 26 :6 26 Wlltlty 19~ 16 16 16 - I. Blbla 15lI00 2m 20 22 -21'" Net I t S'I· . . t t:roo 11\\ 21 24 - I'" Wr lIarl 7550 III 80" ID . Norlhgl., .116996 400 360 385 ,-15 .Slock .Sal ••. 111gb Low Co,. Ch'ge comp e cock Marke Report

4lOO I'" 151, lSI'" Val. Lead 2000 9 '8\1 81> -II'" Weol'Mln. JlJ500 400 ,375 ·3115 Abitibi 1505 $45'1,. 4-m 451>,.. \1 .iodny. '

PIIONE 9,5300

TV REPAIRS

, REASONABLE RATES GUARANTEED WORI\

PHONE 94123 . . Electronic:

Centre Ltd. 90 CAMPBELL AVE.

Atterhours'Phone 8·7313

NOW AT tOCAl PRICES P1:m No\\' for Summer Pleast~e Afloat' '..... .' ". . '

,.'mfii,VJis1 MOANRET'INHOIZUINRG' . . , . ,..:. , .

-":'~~~1~~~~--.~.~ B.oats" 'Outboard, 'Motors ' Trailers, imd " Accessrlrics' :,

Charles R. Bell Limited

, toI .... stln lIIITCU_ ® I . ;";:'. T~.M6sT.)N DRY CLEANING. ":' ,SATISFACTION GUARANTEED

:'~~."ughe~~May"~rd· Cleansers Ltd. '

MOLSO:NS CANADIAN LAGER and' EXPOR'f ALE

.' FREE' HOME DELIVERY~-"., '.'

TELEPHONE 8·2011..,..5 LlNES-NFJwFPUNDLANDBREWERY LTD.

,WATER ST. -WEST. PHONE 8·2131 BLA<:KMARSi-l:RD~ . PHONE 9·2186-7 (Not I}lserted by_ 130ard of Liquor Control)

, "

"

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, . ....

Yours _ .. This may turn out til be a confusing sort of day. wilh

a tendency to carelessness in. habits and manners. On the pos­itive side, money aspects -ar,e

somewhat better .than they' have

been recently, with strong possi. bility of benefit through a gift

. or legacy in many charts. Re· sourcefulness pays off now.

Pc1st." Tn 1912, when the pop- Fuiure ... "'00'11 r{ . ulation of ~he U.s. was 95,300,. drivc 10 a "alien. park ~O. an. esl.lmat~ 78,400 Amer- and whiz 10 YOllr oflk/ leans died In accldenls. In 1961, miles away in a . wilh a population of 182,950,- . ' ,qUarter tt 000, accidents killed 91,500. hoor ,,~cn net\' Thus,. dcalhs per 100,000 popu. some wlthoUI "'ils or : lalion in 1912- were 82, com- revoltllionilc cil)' and pared to 50 in 196 I. Iran sit.

The Day Under Your Sign

ARIES IBo<n Mm~ 21 10 April 19) HI' dlplc;::lllle 1f .uktd 10 arhltu.te A tUJ~ p:J!t, ~"U·II md Wltl1 tbe frtm("h~ or b¢th !'lln!f'!.

TAURUS {April 20 '0 May 201 s~~ peoplt tmll 1a twist 1011: r1l!mtril,

, 100 tr'1 to be !;lKIne In whit ,C:!J JaT.

GEMINI (May 21 t. Jun.2i) Don't tIO!' J1Jr~4 int.., maklnr: I. prt'lmbe !'ou e:s.n·t er don't want In lJ:~.

22 I. July 21) • t(J rUlon. ~ttlllbomn~n JI.

.... 's "oriA to )'our dlttdnntue. LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) K~ Jour mInd and hands bUJ1 JO ,OIl hUe no tl::1>! lor ntj!.tivt thouzhts.

VIRGO (Au;. 22 10 S.pt. 221 Don't hlde ie.:r lithe undt!' I. hnet. nom " 1011. .hUt tl) b:o" ,our own Mm.

SAGITTARIUS I~h 22 Ie J.t.lttn t!:t thr I~r'~~ ,~ I r:-:'n~. bt.;t dcrn n,:~."!~;:r, .

CAPRICORN I D.o, 22 tol,., • Cenfit!e j~t;.~ l!rr.~ I'! ~~!.I~:':>t"r.J I,t th~ ~pn~ f';~ ~:-.~~~ t~~:~r.

AQUARIUS IJ", 21 "F.!. ; YOIl rtn onl,. I~~~ "10~!~ ;'., . illeSt 1n 'IJth~rlt,., t"I wr., '1."1 tun~'

PISCES I F.D. 20 10 M."H:! D~~l':!i }U'Jl In~:!!:.fe t~ ~!'"~l amUe ,o11 - lJ'.~ (l(.~.n eo:t_~

Winged Creatures ACROSS 46 Masseur's forte ~~e~~i

] Singing bird 49 Wash Ii~htly 5 Wingless insect 53 Boundary 9 Bird bill (comb. lorm)

]2 Harness part 54 House servants 13 Antarctic sea 56l!iver (Sp.) 14 Eggs 5; Organs lfi Neglected ilems 58 Guido's noles 17 Selne 59 Feminine 18 Dull finish nickname '19 Retainers 60 Florida county 21 Wilhout (Lalin) 61 Plexus 2J English coal DOWN

measure 2.1 Co\'er 1 Pronoun 27 Bows slightly 2 Chibchan 29 Plerce Indian 32 Ascended 3 Exude 34 Dres. 4 Homes lor 36 Invent winged 37 Huger creatures 38 European 5 Weekday (ab.)

stream 6 Glanced 39 Pace '7 TheolV 41 Sweel potato 8 Property item -42 ReCeree (ab.) 9 Person 01 no 44 Paradise accounl

10 Alw • .-, 11 Flying

mammal!; 16 Nels 20 Somt' ",in~rd

creatures tlrr.

22110man riate 24 n,jJ 25 Irked 26 Pastime 20llesclled 30 Scope 31 Road

r.--r:--,.:o-~., r.-r::-t:--J::-"1

l I

Scngrnnrs v.o. CANADIAN WHISKY

• : . -'

." ' ",

• . Dunn' sPharmacy lt~, , Get;·fhe REAL

FEELING ·OF- SPRING! . with·

DUNN ~ ,A ~VIT£S DIAL 8~7388 - 9-2697

511· rr,--NOVI'I

e for

ft&r-T TH1

ireme, (,\PI --' P~I refcrred to hi:

a~e and CI'Clltllll 'n' a specch rep l' .'f

news agcncy 1 ilSS

Ircno\' 6~ and , a . . the to say SIl." IS

·t "For c\,cryone I

:I;at I cannot hoi, the po;;ition I noll',

1'1 nnd the stnte. pa y'

lHI' two " He is chainn3n "

01 ministcrs Illrc secretary of thc

l'art~·.

~t)ect11 ;.1 thai the Il

might ~il-r IIJl cilh srcret"ry~hin 111' th,

if 1101 huth.

remark, WCl'e ,Iel!\" lin Il1cetill,:! ul mil

~nn"tl'lIrlil1l1 workers

IS I."",tlm a\)~arrnl I'epll' hi, IIntii,'ptllcll I' IIf I he Sodt'l

rCIII':,ted hi!; Iwl Ihe "ll'ir'lI nnll

of tlir Sl1\'i(·t PI" llulIlisl 11:11'1y ..

llint no ,,1\1' will ill slatill~ Ihi;;. I I,

SI1PCifll ~I :md lhe p"rly.'·

----- ,--- -- --

with snl today

Temper~tun

31 3l 3: 3(

Skil

.. ,,,.4::

· .. ·· ..... 10:· QI uarler ' .. A

P a . n~t. Meri:~ grOWing dlmn

neurer. til reappear: . Planel: II

. or \Vhere Vel ~re npwlt

Tldea',