• v .. :.j; ,.·:.,..4vol. ~7. (pric:e....

16
THE DAILY NEWS HEll 'J A DELUXE .. ' IY'IU" ·. . ·. .... ·lttJ$}, -at' o-\ . . .• )'P .:<> ........ " .... •y ,, . v .. Terra Nov.a •. ·· ·:--------------------------- No. 220 ltiE DAILY NEWS. ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., TUESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1960 (Pric:e. 7 Cents} . . . . ' ' Nfld. Skies By BAILEY'R, FRANK TUESDAY, October 4. Sunset today . . . , . • • • . . 5:34 p.m . Sunrise tomorrow • , . . . . . . 6:05 a.m . Moonrise today .. .. ..5.41 .p.m. Full Moon today ........ 6:47 p.m. TIDES Hiflh .. , .•.•• , , 6:43 a.m. 7.04 p.m. Low . , . • • • • • • • 12:35 a.m. 1:02 p.m . :.J; .... ,.·:.,..4vol. ..... HUSSEIN STAY OUT WARNS .REDS TO OF ARAB WORLD Calls For Eisenhower To Meet Khrushchev 'Fl.•· TON RI>SSER here to ren!firm that we reject I abuse of many kinds from the l':\11'1-:D :-.IA'I'IONS, :'\.\'. C\P communism." I U.A.R., and recalled the Aug, 30 1\hg Hussein or Jodan Th Soviet premier walked out I assassination of Haz.za the Union of trY· of assembly before Husse!n' which was In· in·• to wreck tlw United spoke, and did not hear Hussem stJgated .by ;orasser s rcg1me. ?.nd the United Arnh ilctmblic o! deliver this castigation of Soviet Then, m direct. .to the to dcslro)' his ll<>shcmit, role of the SDV1et Umon m , "Yet nhnost from the very, Middle East, he added: 1:·; a s 1 '1l'rth to the !lll·na!ion birth the Sol'iet Union has sought I A PARALLEL r.r::1•rnl q,,. 24-year· to destroy the United lliations, to "The policy of the Soviet is to ol·l deo:crt n:onarch he saw hampct' its deliberations, to block i split friends. The United Ara 1 > 11 in the actil·itics o! So· its decisions, ond by t•owdy i Republic is seeking to , ict l'rrmil't' 1\hrnshche\' 1 ics and petulant walkouts to de·' our part of the world. There ts l' .. '..H. President in the mean the representatil'es of the significant parallel in these two ,\r«h ,•,orld. Security Council and the General' aspirations." ' The young nis · I He said he would welcome. me. dr:·,,scd in a eo·tsetTatirdy Similarly President Nnssct· was words of friendship from the blue lmsil;ess Htit. was not present to hear Hussein's at·, United Arab Republic but that to the ··•1strum br :ack on the United Arab Rcpub· i he did not expect ar.y at the 1 towerin:: mili:ar)' aide dressed lie. · : United Nations. ' in kha!;i and pink .\!'ill; But U.A.R. Foreign 1 M?.hmoud Fawzi listened as Hus· ' Jtt:JECTS · scin declared that the aim of the j the spotli;!h! ll.A.R., "our sister state, ap-, ,ll'o.t :\hl'tl>hC!I('\. the .lor pears In be our I dani;m lc:ull'r <lrclarcd "I am lie said Jordan was subJect to Convicts Stabbed .. -.. - __ ,, ... ---------------··-·-1 [{old Suspects In : REIDSVILLE. Ga. tAI'l-Two [com· ids were stahbed to death, B ·a n k Rob be rz·es i and two IVOll!\ded early I NE\\ YORK-IIulian Prime nlimster Nehru :Monday in t1 riot at the ' is at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel here Sept. 27th. Nehru I prison here. The riot was quelled I continuing in his effort to thaw the cold war by talks , CPl- Provincial, une 11 ·us believc 1 t to be in Mex· 'quickly after guards to I leadr.rs of East and In what. has described as police arc tive suspected · ico and another described as a' the barracks after hearmg shouts 'imbibing the atmosphere belore dec1d1ng which way to members of a gang, believed to "parl·timc, small· time wrestler." I and then cries of pain. I swing India's prestige.-UP! Photo. ha,·e stolen nearly in a · One of the holdups blamed on · ----------- t:!liiTED NATIONS, N. Y.-AP-lndia's Prime Mini· W •ll E " 'ster Monday still professed hope for an Elsenho,rer· I OJOJ \ Khtushchev meeting despite a notable lack of enthusiasm I frmn either of the cold war camps. ChristmaS Nehru told the united Nations that President Eisen· I bower "has not "''holly rejected the idea." He asked the Gen· VICTORIA CCPl- Archbishop 1 era! AssP.mbly to pass the resolution he and four other neu· Harold Sexton of the Anglican ' tral learlrrs have proposed, calling for Eisenhower to meet Church of canada says he is go ' with Soviet Premier Khruhchev to ease world tenslont. ' ing to enjoy Christmas day in 1 . the traditional manner despite ' "I have felt as if I was being: He backed the Ass em· . the fact that it falls un a Sunday buffeted by the icy wir.ds of the hly's guidelines on the Congo, but this year. cold war," the Indian leader: a special .!heckup to : The head of the An g I i c a n leader said. "Coming from a i make sure all Bc!;:ian troops ' church in British Columbia said · warm country, I have shil'ered 1 l ha\'e pulled out in accord witil · in a sermon Sunday the editors : occasionally at these roid blasts." UN policy. He said m1ny tho US· of the British Lord's Day Observ·' Nehru listed a con\inuation ofi ands of Belgians are still there. · ance Society's magazine Joy and 1 disarmament discussions as the' He once again favored admis· Light seem "to be <'arrying ri· U:O:'s number one duty. "If it; sion of Red China the gid ideas of Sunday obserl'ance : fails in this, the United Xations' called for admission of Commu· too far." 1 fails in its main purpose," he' nist and for UN con· The magazine appealed to Brit· said. : sideration of the Algerian rel'olt, 'ons to postpone all Christmas Clothed in garb and cajl which France contends is an in· merrymaking to Boxi•16 Day this for his major U:-.1 .1ppcarance. · ternal French matter. yrar. C\chru also ranged broadly orer; Khrushchev, U.S. of "S1•nday, the Lord's day, other top issues before the inter·' State Christian A. Herter and· he the happiest day in Cl'ery national organization. othe1· major delegates stayed in week and I trust that .he fcast.nf He opposed ·weakening or the their seals for the 50·minute ad· Christmas will be all the more exctutive and fai'Ol'ed a go dress by the Indian who joyous !his year just because it slow approach to re·:ision of the carries enormous prestige in falls on this day." . present L'N setup. world body. ----- , P.M.'s Mother I I Improving series of recent bank robbel'ies in the gang was a $6.000 robbery p t M Qurhec. 0 :\-lay 12 at the Canadian Bank of Labor ar y oves Toward SASKATOON rcPl-:llrs. Mary and the Commerce branch in Scotstown, Florence Diefenbaker, 87 year· N ikita Dag To Quit Post ol eight men and one woman is I Que. Fh·e people were reported . old mother of Prime Minister to ha\'C held up. fOlll''in\'oh·ed in the holdup which re· a.·ggest Post- War cr.·s·ls 1 Diefenbaker, Monday showed b;mks in the last 'four months. 1 suited in a spray of subma· :favorable signs of process in her UNITED XATIONS. l'i'.Y. rcpt ASKS The arrests were 'l!ade during: chincgun fire when a . hattie against severe lung in lee· Premier Khrushchev mounted Speaking a;ain :\londay night. weekend hut information wns, took a shot at the getaway car. 1 1 !ly ED SIMON I icy as well as the French and' Although Britain's NATO role t' · powerful new o!lcnsh·e Khrushchev reiterat?t! his will IOU. . D H '·. ld d. . t t E' I withheld until :llonda: .. to avoid , Canadian Press Staff Writer Portuguese colonial policies. : is not covered by items on Wed- Her condition still was critical : ag . ammars•.JO M !ngness o. mee on Y orr the man brlicved to· A Banque PI'Orincialc branch: SCARBO R 0 UGH, England One or the most controversial' nesday's defence discussion, one and the prime minister has not; mto a defiant rebuff !rom the: pres1dent that be ,::ang's leader. , at Coteau Station was held up 1 Labor party Mon-1 issues expected lo arise from the! of chief points against made known any plans about, U:-.1_ secretary.gcneral. , . the l·- and IC· Thwarted several times in thci! the same day by two masked gun· day opened 1ts llilnual conference ! conference is a ban -the· bon¥': unilateral ism is his contention leaving here. He ar;-ived Sunday: cha!lenged .lam- 1 c. on n a san c plm es \I'N-: nttempts to capture the inan, po , men who escaped with $5,600. with ringing denunciatior's of the: movement backed by •,orne party I that its logical consequence is by plane from Ottawa. marskJold to . rcs1gn. He also 1 ·treacherous acts. lice now feel that knows he'•' Other holdups charged to the Conservatives at home and South 1 members. It is expected to pro- I British withdrawal !rom :\'ATO Dr. Da 1 ·id :\I. Baltzan said to. 1gnore l!N peace·! ------ wanted'' and thnt thct·e is no fur· netted $15,000 May 20 at the Africans abroad. vide a serious test of power for ' other Western alliances. Diefenhaker is "extremely r.x- · unless Ham·· tltc,· need for secrecr. ' Banque C a n a dicnnc Nationale Warming up for more contra- leader Hugh Gaitskell. hausted but showed favorable l marskJold s JOb 1s abohshcd and Xone of those seized was idcn·. branch in St. Pie de Bagot, and versial to follow, dele- APPLAUD GAITSKELL D;e Ql.f signs of progress." · by th:ee·man. ti[ied. 'S3.200 Sept. 22 at a the rmammousl? res· Gaitskell drew warm applause " 'J Prime Minister Piefcnbaker \ tne armed lclo pmlels. While the female n.emhcr ol, same bank ·at St. de o!uttons pen- earlier in the day when be paid . .• visited his mother Monday in: Ha_mmarskJold, to a tremendous the gang eluded clothing 1 Cou!'l·al. . ! s1ons, protection for v1chms of tribute to the late Ernest Bevan.' Heart Atf:a.CkS Universitv Hospital and then re·: from mos.t or the mem- Dies In .Explosion belor.ging to her was in an, police .said ·rent dec.ontrol and curbs on land describing him ·as "the great· ceired friends at his hotel suite. i bers m the_ 9S:nallon General A.s· apartment where one of the ar· i pnsone!·s Will be m . speculation. . British socialist who hated in.l HAMILTON <CP -' A couple Mrs. Diefenbakcr has been in sembly, said II wns the big S':,DNEY, Australia - AP -: rests was made. i Vallcyheld, St. Hyacmthe, Sher I They. unammous!y a , justice, po,·erty, squnllor and ug- lil'ed in Hamil\on for 50 hospital for many years. She was' powers wHo need the but all, A boy or the three other men sought. I b!'Ooke and Sorel. I the Umted · liness and loathed hypocrisy or years coll-apsed and Qied within confined to a wheel chair three th;, others. . . i tated by an explosiOn m hts role 11_1 sham." 30 minutes of each Sunday years ago. . I shall rem am m ill)' post dur·\ home :lion day while he was Medicated Bees In Her Bonnet nmg South Afnca s aoarthe1d pol· Apart from some minor bicker· night. William Henry, Robinson mg the term of my office as a· dismantling an aerial bomb he ing over resolutions to be debated I was watching television with his servant of the organization, in the: found on a local practice range. French War Vets at Wednesday's crucial defence wife, Isabella, when \he had a Organ Gr.lnder of all those na-! The victim was Noel Tongue, a discussion, the conference con·: heart at t a c k. Mrs. Robinson : lions. as long as THEY Wish me . member ·of the Air Training centrated on that per·' called for help, but naif an hour I 0 . ; to do so," 1 Corps. Demonstrate milled direction 'Of a maximul!' [later died from a heart att·ack ·. leS He stressed the word they. ; - .. -·- ------ of invective against the Conser·: herself brought on oy shock '. RED DEMONSTRATION ' A A b d vatives, I ' -·- . (CPl - Arthu. once led. the nrrest nm assa or Former party chairman Barh·. PI T d M' 1 Lachapelle, 71, long known as. rommumst. bloc delegattons a: llv GROVER ara Castle, winding Up the Af·l an ra e ISSIDR grinders, is dead. For years La : dem.ons.trahon of YOR K!AP-:Thc PARIS <Reutersl-Sel'eral hun- rican debate, belabored the "hyp.: MONTREAL tCPl-Fifteen Ca- chapelle, with long white hmr I to slgmfy the malan ambassador .o Belgmm By BORIS MJSKEW case. But official medicine hqs dred slogan·yelling youths ll!on· ocrl'sy" of Prl'me ,. 1 .n 1 'ster Mac d' . d 1 1 . t d fed 1 and moustache turned out hiS ·, leader was sm11lng at the lime. : was arrested wtth three other h f d t h ythl to d 1 dau n1'•ht overturned barner· "' · na tan m us r1a IS s an era · ' · · Th d · 1 t h tl · 'f d d d · ! CP ,_ T e customs re usc o ave an ng o , n . , millan's acknowledacment of 3 D d . , tunes 111 front of . shoppmg wm· 1 e e' e opmcn came s or l , men " on ay an accuse m a officer at London airport asked: with her methods. and . started runnmg l?wards "wind of chan e" Africa eputy c Mmlster James A. dows of the big department ' after India's P r i me Minister· $4,000,000 plot to purr "Anything to declare, madam?· WANTS TEST PATIENT President de Gaulle's olfi_CJBl res· g · Roberts will leave 0 .ct stores n st. catharine street in Nehru lent his powerful voice to' heroin into the U.S. :llauricio "Fivepcnce in my pocket and Mrs. Owen hopes to bring bacit idence an ex·serl'lcemcn's ! LOYALTY TO UN. 7 for a three·.week trade miSSIOn rain cold and heat. With the defence of the present struc· Rosal and his companions were a lot of bees in my bonnet," re· from Montreal an arthritic pa-\ demonstralion at the i\rr de Tri· : touc_hed obhquely ?" the to Europe, It was announced his death ihe only known :\font· :lure of the U:-1. held in bail totalling $1,000,000 for plied the wealthy Englishwoman. tient for treatment at her home omphe. dispute over The . ex-· real survil'or of the era of organ; The Indian leader also brushed a hearing Oct. 17. The Of fl'cer shruggod 1"ear1'ly and in suburban Bromley The patien•l The youths yelled "Algeria !s disarmament when she said loy- ecullves of chemical, mmmg, · d · J h v dul'1k 'aside Khrushchev's remarks cold· , , . . , " " . " alt t th U 't d N t' t . I d t f t . I grm crs IS osep e . : . let her pass. will be treated free . 1 f charge In 1 French, shoot the traitors and 1 Y o e m e ·a 1ons mus mmera pro uc manu ac ur;n, ' shouldering the possibility of a That was in 1948 when Mrs. return for the hospitality her I Salan to power." They I now come loyalty to any and pulp and paper compames.. '71 . A ! new meeting of the Pre· i TAKES NEW NAME Julia Owen, refused 11n import husband received in that city were ?Y forces .l een·· uers mier with President Eisenhower I MUENCHBERG, West Ger· permit, smuggled into Britain 1 while serving In fbe Royal Navy to baton · wreldmg pollee in the c II 0 D . t:::J. Nehru said that Eisenhower had · many (Reuters)-A 40-year-old her first batch Of "medicated. I in the Second World War. streets around the Elysee Pal- a s n uncan : not entirely rejected the idea and laborer Monday received SUS· bees," anaesthetized with whiskv "I have never had a failure In ace.. · . Sentenced added: pended sentence of two months and bred specially for treating 1 the treatment of arthritic cases," Groups of youths chanting "al· "The door is still open for con· in jail for using a false name, arthritis. I she said in an Interview at her gerie Francaise" later smashed T R . J h CHICAGO <APl-Six members 1 sideration, and the has Hans Schultz. He explaiied he Since then she has treated! $55,000 home. windows in the offices of the left· 0 es1gn 0 of the Vice Lords, a teen-age ! expressed his deep anxiety to. always hail trouble telling peo· more 1.000 patients, At her disposal are between wing weekly L'Express. run by . ! .. were sentenced to 20 .:.cqrs h.elp in of interna I pie his real name: Englebert from Br 1 tain and Franre. 10,000,000 and 12,0011,000 bees supporters or former Premier . . . . . . ·, ; in pr1son Monday for the Ilona! tensmns. Grzegorczyk. Wednesday, Mrs. Owen, 53 , bred and fed In secret. No one Pierre Mendes· Franc-,!. bu.ild· TORONTO L1b·' pie m Ontano that thiS pubhc of 8 ·man who re!use.d to share flies to Montreal. She will spenrl not even her husband, Is allowed near the new.spaper.s off1ce.l era! Leader John I serv;mt should neglect to his wine bottle with the boys the rest of October in ·Canada into the air·conditloned rooms in Pollee used clubs m cliasmg dem called for the reslgna- Of a myal Chicago police could not deter. spreading the word that bee ve· which the bees are kept. onstrators away from the area. ! hon .. of James M. as I hearmgs o! a select comm1Uee mine which of the Negro youths, nom is a cure for arthritis. The treatments-the bees are SARTRE" , I c,halrll,lan of the Ontarto, Hy?ro- <of. the legislature) and represen. 15 to 17 years of age, fired the will also visit Toronto and De· held in tweezers anJ placed in .. Earlier, there were .. of i C 0 '11m 1 s smn .• tatt.ons · · · from Northern On i sawed·off .22-calibre rifle which. troit. contact with the skin-range from shoot Jean· Paul Sarlre from a termmg h1s attendance a New a.nd yet be. able to ·police said, killed Malcolm Wil Her patients and a number of a week to six months. Some seri crowd of between 10,1100 15,000 luncheon for fmd hme t.o dme ;nth" Mr : Iiams, 32 French and English dortors are ous cases however, have re- as hundreds of ex · m1er as outrage. m New \ ork, he , --,---- convinced that she the oniv quired treatments lasting two to the de He sa1d Duncan. has not sa1d. , TRY lHND known cure for the crippling dis· years she says m a demonstrallon agamst the been attendmg to Ontano Hydro, Mr. Duncan was among the i \ IENNA, Austna (Reuters) _____ . ---·------ "manifesto of the 121." business. guests at a l•mcheon held in New, -The first Hungarian power Death Hits Twice At Intersection The manifesto, now reported to The leader said the de·l York last week by Cyrus Eaton,: station to be driven by wind · have been signed by some 1811 mand for Mr. Duncan's resigna·. Canadian·born industrialist, for will he built soon at Szekesfc· . ----------------------- R I Of H I writers, actors, teachtrs and lion came from a caucus of Lib.[ the Soviet premier. hervar, it was reported here N.S. (CP 1-Two cars I were heavily damaged. lt.-. e om· e n other Intellectuals, supports the era! members of the legislature! Mr. Duncan said he has no- lllonday. If successful, the en· mto a highway interscc· Sunday night, four·vear-old Wii- V right to "refuse to take up arms who met Monday. I thing to apologize for and no gineer-builder will construct lwn head-on early !lion· iia.eniot ef Pictou was killed against the Algerian oeople." "It is appalling to many peo· reason to resign. other wind·driven stations. : day mormng persons and his mother Mrs. Mary Beniot h ld --- ! and m]urmg another. 43, injured: Mrs. Bemot was re- R • • ( • 1 The accident happened et the ported in satisfactory eonditio11 . I ren . same spot where a four-year-old Monday. n . T . L k f w A d B N A A was killed 12 hours previous The accidents took place wher( ADELE, Que. <CPI - whatever success they had 0 . . 00 . or ay to men ct. 10 another two-ear erash. a right-of.way yield sin ChUdien ro through a period of achieved. · Killed in Monday s , traflic Rowing onto No. G highwav transition about the age of 12 Delegates expressed the view were Harold Fraser, Sam Chevrie I from a side road which meets the and it ill then that the home and that child-help efforts should be and Grace Dalton, all of Pictou. highway at a 20 degree 111111e: community exercise powerful focussed on pre 1 e r v lng and By KEN KELLY A federal authority indicated ali or only some of the provinces ment. The must recent request ; RCMP F:aser wes drivinJ Influence, a group discussion con· strengthening thP home. In cases I Canadian Press Staff Writer Monday that the transfer of Brit- should be a requirement of any was ·made: at thP. last session of the car m which all three met eluded Monday .at the Canadian where home environment was un·l OTTAWA (CPl-Consent of the ain'a powers may be suggested change made in Canada. the Canadian Parliament ¥hich , death. . . Children's Conference. satisfactory, outside provinces may be sought this as a first step tow ultimate Since 1949 the Canadian Par- asked that the retirement age o! I . The .. highway shck follow- The· forum type discussion might be necessary. week for the transfer to Can· repeal of the BNA Act and enact· liament has 'had power to amend superior court judges he fixed at . mg ram Sunday mght and over- tackled the question of whether ada's Parliamel)t of all the pow- ment of a wholly·Canadian con· the constitution in matters of 75. : cast weather prevailed at the the h(lme,or communit.;y exerclzed .SEVERAL GROUP!! ers now held by the British Par· stitution.• federal jurisdiction. Tbe prov- SIMILAR POSITION i time of the crash, 7.30 a.m. ADT. tt.e most lnOuenee. J\ayes .'''Phe discussion was one of sev· llament to amend the British An object of the "transfer. for· inces always have had this right Federal authorities argue that I Severely injured was Ronald of Montreal, executive vice pres· era( rtib off, as North America Act, mula" appears to be to avoid at In their own fields of i;;risdiction. consent of the provinces is not also Pictou, and the !dent of the Canadian Jewish the five-day cionlerenee split Into Provincial attorneys . general the outset the shoal on which pre However, where is joint legally necessary for e request ourth ?Ccupant m the death. car. Congress, said that In his opin· project groups, . ' and Justice Minister Fulton open vlous constitutional . conferences federal·provincial jurisdiction or to Britain for a constitutional rhe dmer and one passenger of Jon the community bu' a greater The groupa eonsldered 'such to- talks here Tliuraday with the have eome to grief. where jurisdiction is not defined, amendment. Therefore, they say <he otber vehicle escaped with eHect on the child than the pies as educ,jlou for. avowed object· of finding e way Hitherto, it has been agreed only the .British Parliament can the provinces would be In basi minor injuries. llome. . parentl)ood, chronic . AaabUitles through which the BNA Act-this that It should be oossible to amend the constitution. caUy the same position if Brit· 1 Police found two of the bodies Weather Cloudy, with rain this morning, ending this after. noon. High 55. TEMPERATURES Toronto ........ 45 Montreal , .. .. .. <19 Quebee ....... 44 Moncton ........ 39 Sydney .. .. .. .. -41 St. John'• ...... - 10 rr 61 59 sa Bu\.be llppe'ared to hoi( a mln affecting childrea, dellpncy and country's basic doc· amend the constit.ution in Canada Sur.h amendments are made b.y ain's amending powers lodged in the Fraser car, while I 'oplnkill. Several delegates facilities for · emot!OiaU, dis- ument-can be changed in Can· but differences arose over the the British Parliament at the re·l transferred to the Canadian Par· the other was thrown onto the lted home Uves ffor turbed children, ' · ada. . · question of whether consent of quest of the Canadian Parlia· Iiament. highway by the Impact. Both em ... .-. .. . . .

Upload: hoangbao

Post on 26-Apr-2018

216 views

Category:

Documents


3 download

TRANSCRIPT

THE DAILY NEWS HEll

'J A DELUXE CO'~ ~\.~!T ~~ .. \~ '

IY'IU" ·. ~~~ . ·. .... ~ ·lttJ$}, -at' o-\ ~. ~

. ~:l• t..~"' . ~ .• )'P .:<> ........ " .... ~.

•y ,, . v .. Terra Nov.a •. • ·· ·:---------------------------

No. 220 ltiE DAILY NEWS. ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., TUESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1960 (Pric:e. 7 Cents}

~ . . . . ' '

Nfld. Skies

By BAILEY'R, FRANK TUESDAY, October 4.

Sunset today . . . , . • • • . . 5:34 p.m . Sunrise tomorrow • , . . . . . . 6:05 a.m . Moonrise today .. .. ..5.41 .p.m . Full Moon today ........ 6:47 p.m.

TIDES Hiflh .. , .•.•• , , 6:43 a.m. 7.04 p.m. Low . , . • • • • • • • 12:35 a.m. 1:02 p.m . :.J; .... ,.·:.,..4vol. ~7.

..... ~---------------------------....:..---------

• • HUSSEIN

STAY OUT WARNS .REDS TO

OF ARAB WORLD

Calls For Eisenhower To Meet Khrushchev

'Fl.•· ~Ill. TON RI>SSER here to ren!firm that we reject I abuse of many kinds from the l':\11'1-:D :-.IA'I'IONS, :'\.\'. C\P communism." I U.A.R., and recalled the Aug, 30

1\hg Hussein or Jodan :\!ond~y, Th Soviet premier walked out I assassination of Pr~mier Haz.za ~('uscd the Sol'i~l Union of trY· of tl~e assembly before Husse!n' M~jali which Jord~n say~ was In·

in·• to wreck tlw United N~tions, spoke, and did not hear Hussem stJgated .by ;orasser s rcg1me. ?.nd the United Arnh ilctmblic o! deliver this castigation of Soviet Then, m direct. refcr~nce .to the ~·:~·!:in:: to dcslro)' his ll<>shcmit, t~ctics: role of the SDV1et Umon m th~ , k;t~··dom. "Yet nhnost from the very, Middle East, he added:

1:·; a s1'1l'rth to the !lll·na!ion birth the Sol'iet Union has sought I A PARALLEL r.r::1•rnl :\~.·•·mhly, q,,. 24-year· to destroy the United lliations, to "The policy of the Soviet is to ol·l deo:crt n:onarch ;~i<l he saw hampct' its deliberations, to block i split friends. The United Ara1> 11 p:n;:~llcl in the actil·itics o! So· its decisions, ond by t•owdy ta~ i Republic is seeking to domina~-~ , ict l'rrmil't' 1\hrnshche\' ~11d 1 ics and petulant walkouts to de·' our part of the world. There ts l' .. '..H. President ~:11<S~r in the mean the representatil'es of the significant parallel in these two ,\r«h ,•,orld. Security Council and the General' aspirations." '

The young ~ing, nis ~light fi~· ,\s~cmbly." · I He said he would welcome. me. dr:·,,scd in a eo·tsetTatirdy Similarly President Nnssct· was words of friendship from the t~ilored blue lmsil;ess Htit. was not present to hear Hussein's at·, United Arab Republic but that :~.·~omp:mierl to the ··•1strum br :ack on the United Arab Rcpub· i he did not expect ar.y at the

1

~ towerin:: mili:ar)' aide dressed lie. · : United Nations. ' in kha!;i uni~orm and pink .\!'ill; But U.A.R. Foreign ~linister

1

h~2~dre,s. M?.hmoud Fawzi listened as Hus· ' Jtt:JECTS rmntt'XIS~J · scin declared that the aim of the j Ta:dn~ the a;~cmh!y spotli;!h! ll.A.R., "our sister state, ap-,

,ll'o.t ~Iter :\hl'tl>hC!I('\. the .lor pears In be our deslructio~." I dani;m lc:ull'r <lrclarcd "I am lie said Jordan was subJect to

Convicts Stabbed -· .. -.. -__ ,, ... ---------------··-·-1

[{old Suspects In : REIDSVILLE. Ga. tAI'l-Two [com· ids were stahbed to death,

B·a n k Rob be rz·es i and two other~ IVOll!\ded early I NE\\ YORK-IIulian Prime nlimster J~waharlal Nehru :Monday in t1 riot at the stat~ ' is ~huwn at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel here Sept. 27th. Nehru I prison here. The riot was quelled I ,..a~ continuing in his effort to thaw the cold war by talks

~I<JC\'I'RE:\L , CPl- Provincial, une 11·us believc1t to be in Mex· 'quickly after guards ~ushed to I ~·i'h leadr.rs of East and \~~st. In what. ~e has described as police arc holdii~J: tive suspected · ico and another described as a' the barracks after hearmg shouts 'imbibing the atmosphere bel ore dec1d1ng which way to members of a gang, believed to "parl·timc, small· time wrestler." I and then cries of pain. I swing India's prestige.-UP! Photo. ha,·e stolen nearly ~0.000 in a · One of the holdups blamed on · -----------

---·-·--------~ t:!liiTED NATIONS, N. Y.-AP-lndia's Prime Mini·

W•ll E " 'ster ~ehru Monday still professed hope for an Elsenho,rer· I OJOJ \ Khtushchev meeting despite a notable lack of enthusiasm

I frmn either of the cold war camps.

ChristmaS Nehru told the united Nations that President Eisen· I bower "has not "''holly rejected the idea." He asked the Gen·

VICTORIA CCPl- Archbishop 1 era! AssP.mbly to pass the resolution he and four other neu· Harold Sexton of the Anglican ' tral learlrrs have proposed, calling for Eisenhower to meet Church of canada says he is go ' with Soviet Premier Khruhchev to ease world tenslont.

' ing to enjoy Christmas day in 1

. the traditional manner despite ' "I have felt as if I was being: He backed the G~neral Ass em·

. the fact that it falls un a Sunday buffeted by the icy wir.ds of the • hly's guidelines on the Congo, but this year. cold war," the Indian leader: prop~sed a special .!heckup to

: The head of the An g I i c a n leader said. "Coming from a i make sure all Bc!;:ian troops ' church in British Columbia said · warm country, I have shil'ered 1l ha\'e pulled out in accord witil · in a sermon Sunday the editors : occasionally at these roid blasts." UN policy. He said m1ny tho US· of the British Lord's Day Observ·' Nehru listed a con\inuation ofi ands of Belgians are still there.

· ance Society's magazine Joy and 1 disarmament discussions as the' He once again favored admis· Light seem "to be <'arrying ri· U:O:'s number one duty. "If it; sion of Red China t.~ the U~. gid ideas of Sunday obserl'ance : fails in this, the United Xations' called for admission of Commu· too far." 1 fails in its main purpose," he' nist ~longolia and for UN con·

The magazine appealed to Brit· said. : sideration of the Algerian rel'olt, 'ons to postpone all Christmas Clothed in natir~ garb and cajl which France contends is an in· merrymaking to Boxi•16 Day this for his major U:-.1 .1ppcarance. · ternal French matter. yrar. C\chru also ranged broadly orer; Khrushchev, U.S. s~cretary of

"S1•nday, the Lord's day, ~hquld other top issues before the inter·' State Christian A. Herter and· he the happiest day in Cl'ery national organization. othe1· major delegates stayed in week and I trust that .he fcast.nf He opposed ·weakening or the their seals for the 50·minute ad· Christmas will be all the more I::-.~ exctutive and fai'Ol'ed a go dress by the Indian !~adcr. who joyous !his year just because it slow approach to re·:ision of the carries enormous prestige in th~ falls on this day." . present L'N setup. world body.

-----

, P.M.'s Mother I

I Improving series of recent bank robbel'ies in the gang was a $6.000 robbery p t M Qurhec. 0

• :\-lay 12 at the Canadian Bank of Labor ar y oves Toward SASKATOON rcPl-:llrs. Mary ~!asked and arm~d the gan~' Commerce branch in Scotstown, Florence Diefenbaker, 87 • year·

N ikita ~hallenges Dag To Quit Post ol eight men and one woman is I Que. Fh·e people were reported . old mother of Prime Minister

lllle~ed to ha\'C held up. fOlll''in\'oh·ed in the holdup which re· a.·ggest Post- War cr.·s·ls 1 Diefenbaker, Monday showed b;mks in the last 'four months. 1 suited in a spray of subma· :favorable signs of process in her UNITED XATIONS. l'i'.Y. rcpt ASKS AD~IISSJON

The arrests were 'l!ade during: chincgun fire when a b~·stander . hattie against severe lung in lee· Premier Khrushchev mounted a· Speaking a;ain :\londay night. th~ weekend hut information wns, took a shot at the getaway car. 1

1

!ly ED SIMON I icy as well as the French and' Although Britain's NATO role t' · powerful new o!lcnsh·e ~londaf: Khrushchev reiterat?t! his will IOU. . D H '·. ld d. . t t E' I withheld until :llonda: .. to avoid , Canadian Press Staff Writer Portuguese colonial policies. : is not covered by items on Wed- Her condition still was critical : aga1~st ag . ammars•.JO M !ngness o. mee '1s~nnowcr on Y

tippin~ orr the man brlicved to· A Banque PI'Orincialc branch: SCARBO R 0 UGH, England One or the most controversial' nesday's defence discussion, one and the prime minister has not; r~~ mto a defiant rebuff !rom the: 1f.~he pres1dent ~~~m1tt~d that t~1e be th~ ,::ang's leader. , at Coteau Station was held up 1 (CPl-Britai~'s Labor party Mon-1 issues expected lo arise from the! of Gaitsken·~ chief points against made known any plans about, U:-.1_ secretary.gcneral. , . fh~hts o~ the l·- and ~B-17 IC·

Thwarted several times in thci! the same day by two masked gun· day opened 1ts llilnual conference ! conference is a ban -the· bon¥': unilateral ism is his contention leaving here. He ar;-ived Sunday: Khr~shchev cha!lenged .lam- 1 c. on n a I~ san c ~. plm es \I'N-:

nttempts to capture the inan, po , men who escaped with $5,600. with ringing denunciatior's of the: movement backed by •,orne party I that its logical consequence is by plane from Ottawa. marskJold to . rcs1gn. He also 1 ·treacherous acts. lice now feel that "~e knows he'•' Other holdups charged to the Conservatives at home and South 1 members. It is expected to pro- I British withdrawal !rom :\'ATO Dr. Da1·id :\I. Baltzan said ~Irs., thrc~tened to. 1gnore l!N peace·! ------wanted'' and thnt thct·e is no fur· ~:ang netted $15,000 May 20 at the Africans abroad. vide a serious test of power for ' ~nd other Western alliances. Diefenhaker is "extremely r.x- · makm~ ~ac~me:y unless Ham·· tltc,· need for secrecr. ' Banque C a n a dicnnc Nationale Warming up for more contra- leader Hugh Gaitskell. hausted but showed favorable l marskJold s JOb 1s abohshcd and

Xone of those seized was idcn·. branch in St. Pie de Bagot, and versial de~ates to follow, dele- APPLAUD GAITSKELL D;e Ql.f signs of progress." · r.e~lac~d by ~ th:ee·man. c~ecu-ti[ied. 'S3.200 Sept. 22 at a b;anc~ ~f the gat~s rmammousl? app!aud~d res· Gaitskell drew warm applause " 'J Prime Minister Piefcnbaker \ tne armed '~ 11 h lclo pmlels.

While the female n.emhcr ol, same bank ·at St. ~ephmn de o!uttons dem~ndmg h1~he.r pen- earlier in the day when be paid . .• visited his mother Monday in: Ha_mmarskJold, to a tremendous the gang eluded capt:11·~. clothing 1 Cou!'l·al. . ! s1ons, protection for v1chms of tribute to the late Ernest Bevan.' Heart Atf:a.CkS Universitv Hospital and then re·: ovat1~11 from mos.t or the mem-

Dies In .Explosion

belor.ging to her was ·~und in an, ,~ police ~pokesman .said t~e ·rent dec.ontrol and curbs on land describing him ·as "the great· ceired friends at his hotel suite. i bers m the_ 9S:nallon General A.s· apartment where one of the ar· i pnsone!·s Will be a~ralgned m . speculation. . British socialist who hated in.l HAMILTON <CP -' A couple Mrs. Diefenbakcr has been in sembly, said II wns n~t, the big S':,DNEY, Australia - AP -: rests was made. i Vallcyheld, St. Hyacmthe, Sher I They. unammous!y approve~ a , justice, po,·erty, squnllor and ug- ~who lil'ed in Hamil\on for 50 hospital for many years. She was' powers wHo need the ~:'ol. but all, A 1:~-year-old boy \~·as ~ecap.l·

or the three other men sought. I b!'Ooke and Sorel. I res~luhon su~portm~ the Umted · liness and loathed hypocrisy or years coll-apsed and Qied within confined to a wheel chair three th;, others. . . i tated by an explosiOn m hts :"'~hons role 11_1 ~frtca, co~dem· sham." 30 minutes of each ot~er Sunday years ago. . I shall rem am m ill)' post dur·\ home :lion day while he was

Medicated Bees In Her Bonnet

nmg South Afnca s aoarthe1d pol· Apart from some minor bicker· night. William Henry, Robinson mg the term of my office as a· dismantling an aerial bomb he ing over resolutions to be debated I was watching television with his servant of the organization, in the: found on a local practice range.

French War Vets at Wednesday's crucial defence wife, Isabella, when \he had a Organ Gr.lnder 'i~terests of all those oth~r na-! The victim was Noel Tongue, a discussion, the conference con·: heart at t a c k. Mrs. Robinson : lions. as long as THEY Wish me . member ·of the Air Training centrated on i~sues that per·' called for help, but naif an hour I 0. ; to do so," Hammarsk.~old ~~id. 1 Corps.

Demonstrate milled direction 'Of a maximul!' [later died from a heart att·ack ·. leS He stressed the word they. ; - .. -·- ------of invective against the Conser·: herself brought on oy shock '. RED DEMONSTRATION ' A A b d vatives, I ' -·- . • ~fO~TREAL (CPl - Arthu. Khrus~chev once agai~ led. the nrrest nm assa or

Former party chairman Barh·. PI T d M' • 1

Lachapelle, 71, long known as. rommumst. bloc delegattons ~~ a: llv STEPH~N GROVER ara Castle, winding Up the Af·l an ra e ISSIDR grinders, is dead. For years La : dem.ons.trahon of tabie-thumpl~g ~EW YOR K!AP-:Thc Gu~te·

PARIS <Reutersl-Sel'eral hun- rican debate, belabored the "hyp.: MONTREAL tCPl-Fifteen Ca- chapelle, with long white hmr I to slgmfy prole~~· bu~ the S~vlet. malan ambassador .o Belgmm By BORIS MJSKEW case. But official medicine hqs dred slogan·yelling youths ll!on· ocrl'sy" of Prl'me ,.1.n1'ster Mac d' . d 1 • 1. t d fed 1 and moustache turned out hiS ·, leader was sm11lng at the lime. : was arrested wtth three other

h f d t h ythl to d 1 dau n1'•ht overturned barner· "' · na tan m us r1a IS s an era · ' · · Th d · 1 t h tl · 'f d d d · I.O~DO~ ! CP ,_ T e customs re usc o ave an ng o , n . , millan's acknowledacment of 3 D d . , tunes 111 front of . shoppmg wm· 1 e e' e opmcn came s or l , men " on ay an accuse m a officer at London airport asked: with her methods. and . started runnmg l?wards "wind of chan e" i~ Africa eputy Tr~ c Mmlster James A. dows of the big department ' after India's P r i me Minister· $4,000,000 plot to ~muggle purr "Anything to declare, madam?· WANTS TEST PATIENT President de Gaulle's olfi_CJBl res· g · Roberts will leave Montrea~ 0.ct stores n st. catharine street in Nehru lent his powerful voice to' heroin into the U.S. :llauricio

"Fivepcnce in my pocket and Mrs. Owen hopes to bring bacit idence aft~r an ex·serl'lcemcn's ! LOYALTY TO UN. 7 for a three·.week trade miSSIOn rain s~ow cold and heat. With the defence of the present struc· Rosal and his companions were a lot of bees in my bonnet," re· from Montreal an arthritic pa-\ demonstralion at the i\rr de Tri· : Sh~ touc_hed obhquely ?" the to Europe, It was announced • his death ihe only known :\font· :lure of the U:-1. held in bail totalling $1,000,000 for plied the wealthy Englishwoman. tient for treatment at her home omphe. ~l~mmg dispute over u~lla,t.cral !Vlon~ay. The me~bers ar~ . ex-· real survil'or of the era of organ; The Indian leader also brushed a hearing Oct. 17. The Offl'cer shruggod 1"ear1'ly and in suburban Bromley The patien•l The youths yelled "Algeria !s disarmament when she said loy- ecullves of chemical, mmmg, · d · J h v dul'1k 'aside Khrushchev's remarks cold· , , . . , " " . " alt t th U 't d N t' t . I d t f t . ~ I grm crs IS osep e . : . let her pass. will be treated free .1f charge In 1 French, shoot the traitors and 1 Y o e m e ·a 1ons mus mmera pro uc manu ac ur;n, ' shouldering the possibility of a

That was in 1948 when Mrs. return for the hospitality her I "Gener~l Salan to power." They I now come befo~~ loyalty to any and pulp and paper compames.. '71 . A ! new meeting of the ~oviet Pre· i TAKES NEW NAME Julia Owen, refused 11n import husband received in that city were d1spers~d ?Y str~ng forces .l een·· uers mier with President Eisenhower I MUENCHBERG, West Ger· permit, smuggled into Britain 1 while serving In fbe Royal Navy to baton · wreldmg pollee in the c II 0 D . t:::J. Nehru said that Eisenhower had · many (Reuters)-A 40-year-old her first batch Of "medicated. I in the Second World War. streets around the Elysee Pal- a s n uncan : not entirely rejected the idea and laborer Monday received SUS·

bees," anaesthetized with whiskv "I have never had a failure In ace.. · . Sentenced added: pended sentence of two months and bred specially for treating 1 the treatment of arthritic cases," Groups of youths chanting "al· "The door is still open for con· in jail for using a false name, arthritis. I she said in an Interview at her gerie Francaise" later smashed T R . • J h CHICAGO <APl-Six members

1 sideration, and the ~resident has Hans Schultz. He explaiied he

Since then she has treated! $55,000 home. windows in the offices of the left· 0 es1gn 0 of the Vice Lords, a teen-age ! expressed his deep anxiety to. always hail trouble telling peo· • more th~n 1.000 patients, most!~ At her disposal are between wing weekly L'Express. run by . ! ~ang .. were sentenced to 20 .:.cqrs h.elp in th~ le~sening of interna I pie his real name: Englebert

from Br1tain and Franre. 10,000,000 and 12,0011,000 bees supporters or former Premier . . . . . . ·, ; in pr1son Monday for the S!a~ .u~ Ilona! tensmns. • Grzegorczyk. Wednesday, Mrs. Owen, 53, bred and fed In secret. No one Pierre Mendes· Franc-,!. a~d bu.ild· TORONTO ICP)-?~tano L1b·' pie m Ontano that thiS pubhc of 8 ·man who re!use.d to share

flies to Montreal. She will spenrl not even her husband, Is allowed In~~ near the new.spaper.s off1ce.l era! Leader John 0\1~term_eyer I serv;mt should neglect to ~tt~fld his wine bottle with the boys the rest of October in ·Canada into the air·conditloned rooms in Pollee used clubs m cliasmg dem ~{onday called for the reslgna- .hear~ngs Of a myal comm1s~1on, Chicago police could not deter. spreading the word that bee ve· which the bees are kept. onstrators away from the area. ! hon .. of James M. D~ncan as I hearmgs o! a select comm1Uee mine which of the Negro youths, nom is a cure for arthritis. Sh~> The treatments-the bees are "SHO~T SARTRE" , I c,halrll,lan of the Ontarto, Hy?ro- <of. the legislature) and represen. 15 to 17 years of age, fired the will also visit Toronto and De· held in tweezers anJ placed in .. Earlier, there were .. cr~es of i Elec~fiC ~ower C 0 '11m 1 s smn .• tatt.ons · · · from Northern On i sawed·off .22-calibre rifle which. troit. contact with the skin-range from shoot Jean· Paul Sarlre from a termmg h1s attendance a~ a New t~rm a.nd yet sho~id be. able to ·police said, killed Malcolm Wil

Her patients and a number of a week to six months. Some seri crowd of between 10,1100 t~ 15,000 Y~rk luncheon for Ru~.s1an. Pr~: fmd hme t.o dme ;nth" Mr : Iiams, 32• French and English dortors are ous cases however, have re- as hundreds of ex · serv~ccmen m1er K~rushchev as outrage. K~rushchev m New \ ork, he , --,----convinced that she ~~~s the oniv quired treatments lasting two ~arched to the ~rc de T~1omphe He sa1d ~r. Duncan. has not sa1d. , TRY lHND ~OWER known cure for the crippling dis· years she says m a demonstrallon agamst the been attendmg to Ontano Hydro, Mr. Duncan was among the i \ IENNA, Austna (Reuters) -------~,:_ _____ . ---·------ "manifesto of the 121." business. guests at a l•mcheon held in New, -The first Hungarian power

Death Hits Twice At Intersection

The manifesto, now reported to The Liber~l leader said the de·l York last week by Cyrus Eaton,: station to be driven by wind · have been signed by some 1811 mand for Mr. Duncan's resigna·. Canadian·born industrialist, for will he built soon at Szekesfc· . -----------------------

R I Of H I writers, actors, teachtrs and lion came from a caucus of Lib.[ the Soviet premier. hervar, it was reported here P~CT~U, N.S. (CP 1-Two cars I were heavily damaged. lt.-. e om· e n other Intellectuals, supports the era! members of the legislature! Mr. Duncan said he has no- lllonday. If successful, the en· 't~1rnmg mto a highway interscc· Sunday night, four·vear-old Wii-V right to "refuse to take up arms who met Monday. I thing to apologize for and no gineer-builder will construct lwn cras~ed head-on early !lion· iia.eniot ef Pictou was killed

against the Algerian oeople." "It is appalling to many peo· reason to resign. other wind·driven stations. : day mormng kil~i~g ~hree persons and his mother Mrs. Mary Beniot

h ld --- ! and sev~rely m]urmg another. 43, injured: Mrs. Bemot was re-

R • • ( • 1 The accident happened et the ported in satisfactory eonditio11 . aiSI~"g I ren . same spot where a four-year-old Monday. n . T . L k f w A d B N A A ~y was killed 12 hours previous The accidents took place wher(

~'TE. ADELE, Que. <CPI - whatever success they had 0 . . 00 . or ay to men ct. 10 another two-ear erash. a right-of.way yield sin eontro!~ ChUdien ro through a period of achieved. · Killed in Monday s acciden~ , traflic Rowing onto No. G highwav transition about the age of 12 Delegates expressed the view were Harold Fraser, Sam Chevrie I from a side road which meets the and it ill then that the home and that child-help efforts should be and Grace Dalton, all of Pictou. highway at a 20 degree 111111e: community exercise ·~~ powerful focussed on pre 1 e r v lng and By KEN KELLY A federal authority indicated ali or only some of the provinces ment. The must recent request ; RCMP s~id F:aser wes drivinJ Influence, a group discussion con· strengthening thP home. In cases I Canadian Press Staff Writer Monday that the transfer of Brit- should be a requirement of any was ·made: at thP. last session of the car m which all three met eluded Monday .at the Canadian where home environment was un·l OTTAWA (CPl-Consent of the ain'a powers may be suggested change made in Canada. the Canadian Parliament ¥hich , death. . . Children's Conference. satisfactory, outside ~upcrvlslor provinces may be sought this as a first step tow IV~ ultimate Since 1949 the Canadian Par- asked that the retirement age o! I . The .. highway w~ shck follow-

The· forum type discussion might be necessary. week for the transfer to Can· repeal of the BNA Act and enact· liament has 'had power to amend superior court judges he fixed at . mg ram Sunday mght and over-tackled the question of whether ada's Parliamel)t of all the pow- ment of a wholly·Canadian con· the constitution in matters of 75. : cast weather prevailed at the the h(lme,or communit.;y exerclzed .SEVERAL GROUP!! ers now held by the British Par· stitution.• federal jurisdiction. Tbe prov- SIMILAR POSITION i time of the crash, 7.30 a.m. ADT. tt.e most lnOuenee. s~ul J\ayes .'''Phe discussion was one of sev· llament to amend the British An object of the "transfer. for· inces always have had this right Federal authorities argue that I Severely injured was Ronald of Montreal, executive vice pres· era( rtib off, slmul~aneously as North America Act, mula" appears to be to avoid at In their own fields of i;;risdiction. consent of the provinces is not ~hisholm, also o~ Pictou, and the !dent of the Canadian Jewish the five-day cionlerenee split Into Provincial attorneys . general the outset the shoal on which pre However, where ~ere is joint legally necessary for e request ourth ?Ccupant m the death. car. Congress, said that In his opin· project groups, . ' and Justice Minister Fulton open vlous constitutional . conferences federal·provincial jurisdiction or to Britain for a constitutional rhe dmer and one passenger of Jon the community bu' a greater The groupa eonsldered 'such to- talks here Tliuraday with the have eome to grief. where jurisdiction is not defined, amendment. Therefore, they say <he otber vehicle escaped with eHect on the child than the pies as prem~ educ,jlou for. avowed object· of finding e way Hitherto, it has been agreed only the .British Parliament can the provinces would be In basi minor injuries. llome. . parentl)ood, chronic . AaabUitles through which the BNA Act-this that It should be oossible to amend the constitution. caUy the same position if Brit· 1 Police found two of the bodies

Weather Cloudy, with rain this

morning, ending this after. noon. High 55.

TEMPERATURES Toronto ........ 45 Montreal , .. .. • .. <19 Quebee ....... 44 Moncton ........ 39 Sydney .. .. .. .. • -41 St. John'• ...... -

• 10 rr 61 59 sa Bu\.be llppe'ared to hoi( a mln affecting childrea, dellpncy and country's basic ronstltuti~nal doc· amend the constit.ution in Canada Sur.h amendments are made b.y ain's amending powers wcre~1 lodged in the Fraser car, while I =· 'oplnkill. Several delegates facilities for · emot!OiaU, dis- ument-can be changed in Can· but differences arose over the the British Parliament at the re·l transferred to the Canadian Par· the other was thrown onto the

lted tbe~ home Uves ffor turbed children, ' · ada. . · question of whether consent of quest of the Canadian Parlia· Iiament. highway by the Impact. Both em ..,..,..,_..,...,.~.,. ... .-. .. . . .

2

Suslov's ·:·:Behind

.. ~~ ... . . t ~~ .: . , -.. ~ ., .. ' - -

Rise T·o _ Kremlin Power Seen Kill U. N. Khrushchev's Try T·o ·-· ..

THE DAILY NEWS. ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., TUESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1960

Water Remains Still A Problem

By LEON DENNEN 'pears to command control of BUT 1960 SUMMER TRULY ian uncomfortable reduction Ill UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. ,he Communist Party's Central! UNIQUE both surface and underground

(NEA) - "Niklta Khrusbche\' :~ommittee. He has been forced GLENWOOD - It is often water supplies. Nor does any in w:s ordered to kill the United to bow to the demands of his said that the favorite topic of I dication of imminent rain ap· N~tions by the ~arne men who opponents and go for a tougher :conversation in this island is I' pear in the forecasts of the 1m-ordered him to torpedo the line in foreign policy. i the weather; that because it is mediate future. Residents say Summit meeting in Paris last I A Soviet official with whom '!frequently unpleasant. This pathetically "well, it must rain May." I discussed Khrushchev's erratic summer and early autumn such 1 in November", and gather what

The· man who made this i ~ehavior at the Summit meet· cgmplaint has been because the \consolation they can from that statement is one of the leading

1

, ing in Paris said: weather has, since the end of I statement. Moose are heginnin~ Western experts on comtnu· : "I know that the West will , 1\lay been weli·ni~h perfect. to put in . occasional appear· nism who has studied every j interpret Khrushchev's ada· I But, alas, every rose has its ances, pos3ib:c d'sturbcu f~om move made by the Soviet Pre· 'I mant position as a sign of' thorn. Lack of precipitation in their favorite Ceding gwund in mier since he came to the U.N. 1 strength, an act of courage. I a province which owes its the southern trian·:;le dclinc~lt!d

lie is convinced-and this. Is : I This will not be the first time 1 vegetable and forest growth to , by Natural ncsourccs us a iree also the consensus of other , ' the West completely misread 1 ' ! frequent rainfall has produced ! for ail hunt in~ ground. L:ttle U.N. experts on Russia-that 1 events in Russia. Khrushchev 'I i Grouc;te~ cam~ home from nothinl short of the re1i1na· 1 i is no Stalin, He is not the er of Russian communism He 1 school ye~terday with a ~tory lion of Secretary Dag Hammar· ' master of the Soviet but its I still has prestige in Party · that t.hey .had occn a moose skjold would make Khrushchev 1 public relations mnn." 1 ranl<s. He took advanta~c of I dra~:1111g a broken leg b:h!nd relax his pressure on the U.N. i .It was the view of the Rus·l Khrushchev's absence abroad i him; m•yiJe the victim of an This, of course, would mean I sian official that the Soviet ~·•· ,,. uo. ,~.... -:.._ in 1957 to organtze a conspiracy ill-aimed sh?l. . the West's capitulation and Premier was ordered by the

1. "'"'''"''·'"" anainst him At that time Khru- All the httlc Grouches, and

complete Soviet domination of Presidium to torpedo the Sum· shchev, by· coralling the ccn· P::pa Grouch, ha1•c now rc~ov-the international organization. mit-just as he has now been ; "You don't want your ·money to get all mildewed. Why tral Committee was able to em! from a l'ery unpleasant

Who are the men in the ordered to destroy the United \ ~ .. .don't you let ~e p~t a q~arter's worth back · turn the tables 'on ~lototov and, bout with some little 'strcp" Kremlin who give Khrushchev Nations. IZ., __ . an ctrculatton!" -___ ! purge him from the Kremlin. : viru;es who prel\y well knock· orders? Who runs Russia while KHRUSHCHEV 'WORKS' A RECEPTION. The salesman has , That Khrushchev is not a Did Khrushchev fear another: cd !he'll. one by one. hors-dc· the Soviet Premier acts the role some new bosses In the home office. free man to act as he pleases traveling abroad since last May. I In thi~ ~onnection Western ~!.olotov-Suslov conspiracy dur· : comha_t. The same little viru;;es of communism'• traveling sales· is best demonstrated by the fact He stili intends to go to· analysts arc now taking another ing his absence which would 'are sllll contwumg thor me~ry man, gi\'ing balcon~ interviews port of Red China's Mao THe· I It wa~ Suslov who last .Tuly that he continues his wrecking North Korea to convince the 1 Iook at the appointment of depri1·c him even of the limit·; dance around. the_ comi'lUmty, and strutting like 1 pouter tung. who is emcrgin1l as the announced Russia's new for· artivities at lhe U.N. el'en Reds there that Mao Tse-tung, I formcn Premier Vyacheslav ed authority he now has? 1 and one mfectwn IS poor pro tee· piseon? leading man in the Soviet hi- eign policy which calls for the thollf,h he h:>s alienated what·, the "revisionist" who forced: ~lolotol' as a minor official of Wh:1tever the answer. the: !ton a~awst a second.

According to the Soviet ex· erarchy, "encirclement of the West" and ever support he had among the 1 him to adopt a tough policy to-. the International Atomic En- consensus of experts is that 1 Workmen .are now replacing perts Runia is now run by The new Kremlin alignment the destruction of the United neutral nations of Africa and ward the U.N., is wrong while I ergy Agency in Vienna. Khrushchev is no longer a free: the hralge ll'~ 011 the C.N.~. a triumvirate of the Commun· doesn't mean that Russia and Nations and all other Intcrita· Asia. he, Nikita, has always been I Do Khrushchev and his men· ~ent to act as he plea~es. :steel trestle across Gander rtv· ist Party's Central Committee China are any less the ri\·als tiona! organizations which Rus· "Imagine Stalin taking a slow right. fie then has to go to i tors in the Presidium want He will continue to peddle , cr. ~s v:ork has to be t~m­members consisting of Mikhail in the struggle to control sia cannot dominate. , boat to New York and then Peiping to convince his "best i ~lolotol' out of Russia while the peaceful coexistence to befud-. poranly suspPndcd wlut? trau.IS Suslov. Frol Kozlov and An- 1 world communism. It simply Officially Khrushchev is still 1 spending two weeks clowning at friend and ally." Mao, that all! Soriet Premier is skipping all die the \\'est but he will have arc mol'ma, the operation Will astas Mikoyan. i means that those who advocate the "glal'ar," chieftain of the i the U.N.," said the Western . talk of their disagreement is I over the globe? h> bow to Suslov's and :'\lao's. hkcly t~ke some tune. .

However, It Is 58·~·ear·old 'a •·hard" line against the I Kremlin junta t11at runs Russia :diplomat ment~ned earlier. I merely the invention of "capi- 1\lolotov is the last surviv· line of the "encirclement of, A t•oup_le nf changes m the !u~'ov, a dogmatic Stalinst j West enjoy, for the moment, and the East European satellite The fact is that Khrushchev, talist warmongers" who want in;:. Soviet leader who worked capitalism" if he is to retain locn\ bu,;ln.~;s world have oc-"'hO is said .to have the sup- ascendancy in both camps. nations. But he no longer ap· has been either on vacation or Ito split the Communist camp. )c!o.'ely with Lenh. the found· his job as the Red peddler. currcd durmg the past week. A

----··- . gro:ery store hereiofore operat·

1 • .. :

,•

To make the next ye~s the best years of your life .•. means planning and saving ... now. Whatever your hopes and desires may be-a new home-college education for your children­security for days of retirement or a trip abroad, Canada Savinp Bonds can help you realize them.

CANADA SAVINGS BONDS are cashable at any time at full face value, plus interest. They are really like dollan with interest coupons attached.

THEY PAY INTEREST ANNUALLY - :with an average yield of 4. 71 per cent per year for ten years.

THEY ARE AVAILABLE in units ranging from $50 to $5,000. The limit o& the new series is $10,000 per perso~

CANADA SAVINGS BONDS are Simple to buy-for eash or systematically out of current income.

To make the 60's the best years of your life • , ,

GSBO AT·YOUR:BANK,,AUTHORIZED INVESTMENT DEALER, STOCK BROKER,

.. ' 'I

TRUST OA' LOAN COMPANY, OR THROUGH YOUR C9MPANY'S PAYROLL SAVINGS PLAN.

DS NOW!

l

. cd by Wesley Oakc has been 1 purchased by Lewis Hill, who :conducts a grocery and a dry· goorls store at Glenwood west.

i In addition o:to Sheppard. hith· : crto runni:1;.: a carpenter shop :and hardware store. has opened a ',;!rocci'y section in addition. "1he t<>st named will be of in·

i tcrc;t to the Grouches. csoeciai-1y in b.:d wc~lhcr. as it is but fil'e minutes walk away.

Thr En~!'sh were czlled by !'::"lC]Cnn a "nation of shop· kc~pcrs," Newfoundland, in its ~m<:ll way. follows the tradi·

't!on. However it' is mostly un­like!~· th:•t we shall ever hal'e

1 a suncr market here. \ . Little Grouches and tl1cir

11 ttle aunt arc now in the thic!< of m~ttcrs of learn:n~. Little :\Ess Grouch proudly announced this noon that "<carher said her writing was better than L.G.'s". This was also bolster· ed by the fact that she had written a letter (six) to her mother whir:h has greJt'y pleased the latter. !\ot to be outdone L.G. penned his con­

I trib!l!ion which is now \:'"it· ing postage tomorrow. Wh2t'1~r it be pure accident. or wh~::•"r it proves that acquis:tion is P1~

I chief attribute of the male ani· mJl. 1:·hi:e little sis:?r ~: ·-~J

I nothinr, hut afic~tion the bo:· i wa1: 1ed to !:now "w',at are yo:J goi:!·~ to bring me:·'

At anyrate ali the hon~e· keeping Grouches are lo;;bn; lon~ily at the calendar and cour.<ing the davs of October

I which will, the): hope. soon bring them :\lummy again.

The Grouch's daughter ~lay and her husband had baret-· finished their holiday than they arc a~ain off, winging their way to the Far East. Their fledgl· ings (the Grouch's grandchil· dren) have long ago "left the nest."

The very Littlest Grouch is already ta!ki ng a bout Christ­mas trees and, this morning, in the course of our walk to the Post Office, pointed to a huge spruce and remarked it would be "a lovely Christmas tree"­though it looked a bit over· grown to the Grouch,

BOMB IN CAK LmLE ROCK, Ark. (AP-;',

violent blast Sunday ripped apar 1

the automobile of night watch man Jack Mann, 55, JJhortly efte; he had parked It near a eafe and gone Inside for lunch. "I knew J had enemies" said M1nn, < member of the Segregation[;• Capital Citizens, Council, "but t didn't know I had them thi! bad."

A WELCOW WAGON

HOSTESS Will Knock at Yaur Door witti Gifts and Oreetings

from Friendly Business Neighbours and Your

Civic and Social Groups On the occasion of:

New Comer to the City, The Birth of a Baby,

PHONE 94865 - 90943 and 3582.

ST. JOHN'S, NIWF?UND~D ·The TUESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1960 Daily News ----------------------------------~----------------~------------------------------------------------------Reuben Baetz Speaks At Red Cross Dinner

"Red Cross is people helping Cross is doing much in the people," said l\lr, Reuben Baetz, kng run towards a better fu· guest speaker last night at the ture. It is the youth of these Annual Red Cross Dinner held places that hold the fire of in the Old Colony Club. The action. best definition or this organiza. Turning to India, the I!Ucst lion was that simple one,cbosen speaker stressed that there and illustrated by the .very were many homeless. The num· interesting and inspirational ber of hungry in the world Red Cross worker. represents an astounding figure.

"The Red Cross is active it. is hard for the people of here in Newfoundland, not just North America to realize what Overseas," Mr. Baetz stressed,' goes on around us in this hu· but for hi!; speech, he 'dwelt man sea of misery. Approxi· on some. of the wonderful work mately 60% of the world's being doae by the Red Cross population goes each dar with· across the world, in places he out enough to eat. "Our ef· has personally visited. forts ilave to be modified to

As many as 40,000,000 refu. help these pX>ple," he said, and gees have sought freedom from today our survival is consider· governments since the end •of cd at stake against poverty and the Second World War. l\lany disease. More volunteers are of these still need ilelp, "Your needed e1·ery day. Help" the speaker urged. When The last topic of Mr. Boctz's he returned to a refugee camp speech dealt with the cartil· In Germany after ten years quake earlier this year in Chill. absence, Mr. Baetz still found Arter three minutrs of trcm· same there that were li1•ing ours. there were 800.000 left In the same condition on ilis homeless and 5,000 killed. Only first visit. The sad stories of a day or two later, supplies were the handicapped and aj!ed in being flown in to the large these institutions, always seek· stricken area, and it was \'ery lng to mo1•e to freedom, struck gratifying to sec the Red Cross 1 note in many minds, and the in action around the world to OFI"lCJAJ,S of the Canadian Construction Association in Newfounrlland for a two-day visit during which they will meet Red Cross is always realized i helD the stricken Chilians. -lth G•vcrnmcnt anrl Construction rrprescn!ath·es. Left to riJ,;lJt arl':-~lr. Gordon Thomas, President Constrnrtion Branch as a hand in the relic!. "The Red Cross is nothing " "

There is e1•cn Jess hope for more, nothing less than people or Board of Trade, St. John's; ~lr. J. Soules, l:halrman of llo:n d. R~bertson·Yatcs Corporation, President of tile CCA.; tile Arab refugees. Mr. Baetz. helping people .. , are we go- 1\lr. H B. Montgomery, National \'ice-President of CCA.; ~l.r A. Turnr,r Bone, Past President of CCA. and now v.ith the

CCA OfficialS: Arrive For Visit

Officials of the Canadian This Is an open and apparent Construction Association ar- method which is used in seyen ril·cd in st. John's on Sunday of the other prol'inces to show on the last parl of their Allan· the taxpayers that they are tic lour. During this tour, they getting a fair and even dcalin,~. spoke with Construction and This is not yet the practice in Government personnel. and l\e1vfoundland. Nol'a Scotia or endca\"ourcd to clear up any New Brunswick. This is one' of problems in the field, alon~ 1 the many points to be present· with prescntin::: l'icws and look I ed by the CCA. · into projects which come under Newfoundland shows an in· their organization. crease of 60> in its work .. hut

this must be spread out so that The President of the Associa· . the Wintertime will not · be

lion, ~Jr. Jack Soules. said at a ' without work. Institutional press conference in the New- ! work was consid~red the most foundland Hotel ~·estcrday that i buoyant influence in Newfound· among other points, his aim is ; land. to !:Cl the labour pool to be a : The polidc~ of the CC:\ are steady and controlled thin:;. : not new said Mr. Soules. the Most of the labour lc~islation : free enterprize system has been recom mendalions made by the : fal'oured by the Association Assol'iation ha\"e been carried , for quite some lime. out. b11l there are still snme ' The visiting officials met w·ith outstandin~. llc made il clear Bankers and construdion men tl1al rmplo)WS should be as re- at a reception and dinner l1cld sponsiblc for their actions as last nibht. They return 5hortly the employers arc. to the :llainland after tl.J~ir

Public tender l'allin~ should lcn~thy Dominion wide _tour he made in Xewfounrtiand. · draws to a close.

:Community Concerts the Assistant National Commis· ing to keep it strong?" Much J. L F:. Price Company. Present sioner in Canada. said that the applause followed Mr. Boctz's Organization's approach to tile talk, and a \"Ole or thanks was Ch d w· h Arab refugee problem is to offered hr l\lr. Malcolm J. Mer- I R d c 11 ld. . T D ' arge It ' N D . h Q . . . have eompassion and help. The cer. The Newfoundland Rran- i e ross 0 Ing wo ay t t ~~dt;:::s ~~~~~~. tu~~e it~li~~~~: ~h~~r~~~\:~:~ec~ l~[t Bt~erza~~ l ' I I. ew an IS uar e East is the powder keg of the! delircr the annual speech to R c f . H Son's Slaymg : world. and work is urgently, them this year. t• By A:\"DREAS BARBA:"< 'porar)' with Nielsen's open needed. Here the Junior Red I Awards were presented at epor Ing on· eren ce . ere For t!JC first time in the his- . ~~a~kerade." The O\·erture of ----------- i the annual dinner to outstand· Harold Sheppard of 1-cwis- tory of Community Concerts in this opera is ani!able on rr·

Food Poisoning In Woods Camp

ing members. Hi~ Honour the . . . 11 'porte appearel in Grand falb Sl. .John's a program of cham- rords and forms a delightful Lieutenant Governor presented , Nearly fortHhrce mrmhcr> 1 he rrprcscntatin, hut 1! was and Directors of Scrnres WI ~londay on a charge of murder· her mu~ic has been presented ··easy" approach tn 1\ielsen·~ the awards, and in his greet·, of the Red Cross !rum all orer luund that the 1mghbuurmg speak. and _the_ Slttmg Will take mg his lour and one-half ;.car to the members which makes style. The Quartet shows-a~ in as stated that he was very · Newfoundland and Labrador .. people II' ere more than helpful. · place at DJYJSJonal Hcadquart· . old son. no concession whrrlsocYcr to an everything by :'\eilsen-superh pl~ased to be present and to I ga\'e reports of the year's work , supplying the family wilh cloth· ers here. Alter !Ius conference. The killing occurred Satur- audience allc~cdly prejudiced technical mastery, sense of have met so many of his old II in their communi!;.· at the an·. ;ng and nearly Sl.OOO.OO to help the elc~·mth annual mectmg day while the father and son against chamber music. An en-~ form and skill in scoring. AbO\·e friends. people in the Red , nual mcctin~ now in progress thrm on their feet. · wtll ad]Oli~ll. . were in a boat about three thusiastic response n! ycster- all. :\iclscn was a \"Cl"}' imagin· Cross all over Newfoundland. I in St. ,John's. Minutes of the tenth annual . As a pomt of mlcrcst, the miles from Lcwisporte at a day's audience prored that the ali,·e composer and. allowin~

rortr fii'C loggers in an AND I The President in Newfound· mc_ctin_ g wer. c read. and business i mtcru~ report 1~f the 19fi0 place t·allcd Embree. ~hoicc was right. · for differences in style period Company Jogging camp in Ccn· 1 land, Dr. P. J. Mc:'\icholas. /II.D .. a;·isin~ from these \l'c> heard. : campnu:n for Newfoundland The son. Terence was found Carl :\iclsen ( tB65-1931 l is and personality. in the final tral Ne .. .toundland are suffer· 1 p bl• R I t• acted as chairman at the two, The rcadmg of the Dirisional shows that proceeds arc up ti11s relatirely little known to audi- anal.\·sis his music is not unlike

Wl u I( e a rons I I with his throat slashed and an l'ng from food poisoni"", accord· 1

1 , day meeting and thanked the r:~:lOrts w~s one hi~hk:ht of yelr some S_1o.o_oo, O\'Cr ast. cnres outside Denmark. Those thel of Jol1. Scb. Bach himself.

"" Th t 11 hl t [ t immediate investigation was ing to a report reaching St. , I many representatil'es for tic· yesterday's silting. Such imDort· ere arc s I cig ou ·0 · own who took trouble to listen to The program began with the John'& Monday. s • Q b livering their interesting and ' rnt !'cn·iccs as the Blood Trans- I branches to be heard from, and started by the R:~[P. . . some of his works on record Quartet in E flat major op. 64,

This is the second auch case emlnar cto er inspirational reports. ~ fusion Scrl"ice. Campaign, Dis- • Wl~h thiS m mmd, the cam- : . -~hc~par~ 41•• 1\~S ~etau;e,d ~n ' hm·c in the meantime diSCO\"·. 1\o. 6. Haydn is one of those In about 1 month. ' One noteworthv point of most , nst~r SerYices. Hostel, the pa1gn shows excellent success. Jal O\ er e ~\ec en un 1 e . cred that 1\:ielscn was a com-· composers who are being rc-

Over the weekend a number of these reports "was that there Junior Red Cross, :-lursing, I This ~ear's figures stand. at i could appear 111 court Monda)', I poser of the first order. This, discoYcred at present. How of men bad left the afflicted A three-day Seminar on Pub- were many fires in the separate Water Safety and lndi\'idual f sno.flS;,.76, _th1~ was suhmll~ed f of course means that you hal"c ' often has it happened in musi. camp to go bome for the week· lie Relations tbe first of its communities, and representa· F·ncrf::enry Aid were reported 1 by !he Dll'iSlOnal Campa!gn N R d• i to get to know him in order to tal guessing games that people end; tbe rest of the crew stayed kind in Newfoundland will be I lives stated that the_ Red Cross on and questions re~arding any I Chairman, lllr. l\!. J. ~lercer. . ew a 10 I l~ke ~is music. His quartet in reasoned as fol_lows; "I can't behind and were suddenly held 0 lobe 5 6 d' 7 at the was on hand to rchevc those of these were heard from the' All blood donors l~eie_hea~ll· ~ ~ major wh1rh was played yes· make up my mmd whether it taken ill. Newfoucnd\a~d Hot!t under the afflicted in 'most of the cases.; members. 1 !Y thanked for donalJ_ng 10 cl10· 1 • terday ~>y the :\~w Danish· i,_ Mozart or Beethoven. So it

Those returning to the camp sponsorship of Newfoundland The toll t~ personal property 1 l\lany parts of the Red Cross I !cs held all over the _1sla~~: and! Stat100 QpenS Quartet 1s a relatl\'l:I;· early: w111 ~rohahly be Haydn!" The p b 1. R 1 11 C was \'el'Y h1gh, and the \·olun-

1 work 1\WC represented on the Jn the report of this dJ\JSIIln,; work. 1\Tlltcn 1n !90G. euntcm· • (( ontllllil'd on Pa"e 5)

Monday were il~lted at Badger L"u . ~ c e a on• ompany teers and workers supplied · whole a~enda and round table ' the· figures or donations were; ~ by officials of the AND and by umte.. . . clothing, bed clothes and what· i discussit~is should ckar up all i shown, as examples, SL John's I Newfoundland's newest. radio : medical aides who thought it SpECial speak~r from outside ever other things were ncces·! the business today. Yesterday , up to August 31st, this year, I statwn has opened at Lorner' better if they did not return to the provmce Will be ~{r. Leo- sary for the immediate com· 1 saw the bulk of the important

1

contributed 3276 donors. whcr~- Brook. . 1

their camp until the cause of na~d ~· Knott,. Pres1d~nt of I fort. One example of this was : work dealt with. among which; as last year there w~re _370?, this I The statwn, CFCB. operated: tbt food poisoning had been Ed1tOr1al Associates L1mlte~, at Herring Neck, where 8 fam·

1 was the presentation of the riccrcase was n~t md_Jcalll"e of 1 by the Humber Valley Broad-,

determined. . )!ontreal, and a for_mer. pre~!· ily of fil'e was burned out, much ; 1D61 proposed 'hurtget, h~· the ' the whole proi'IIIC~. m Ar~:c~· ! cas tin;( Company, went on the The afflicted men are not dent . of the. Canad1an Public assistance was given them, said l!onorary Treasurer. Recom- 1 tia thrre were 268 donors th1s: air for the first time at 6 a.m. •

aerious today. They are report· Relahons Society, mrndations of tlic Awards Com· year, last rear there were 230. , ~londay morning. . ed recovering from their ill· Mr ... W. Thomas How~ll, mittcc were read. nnrl prescntn- ' this in~r~ase is ei~htccn o1·;r! Located at 570 on the dial. i

Supe~mtcndent of Commumty Jrawlef tion or awards tell for the an-, the ant_JcJpatcd quota. Poor or· the ~tation has a power of 1.000.

Fall Session Supreme Court

RelatiOns of the Anglo-New· nual dinner at the Old Colony gamzatmn was one reason pv- watts and operates on a sche· foundlan_d . Develo_pmcnt Com- ! last niJ:hl. 1 (l'ontinucrt on Page 51 ~dule of 17 hours programming pany Lnfllted Will tell the Under Tow. Divisional Auditors were ap-. -------- dailv. "~ase History of A.N.D."~ con· 1 pointed and the Report of tile (l .. 1. R fl t d i ~ianaging director of CFCB SJde~ed to b7 one of the b1ggest ! :\ominating Committee for I 1\e\,J\ e oa e . is Harold N. Butler or St. pubhc relatiOns programs pre· -- . 11961 was heard. ; /John's. . sently underway in Canada, The small Icclandle trawler • At the round table conference , • · · The station's offices are I

The three-day seminar starts Skule Magnusson. leaking with • which bc~ins at nine o'clock: Shrp for Damage located on Premier Dril'e in 1

on Wednesday, October 5 with her engine and boiler out of I' this morning. branch represen- : r, Corner Brook. Tbe Fall Session of the a press reception for the guest commission, was en route here·, tatives, Divisional Chairmen I . . I ------

Supreme Court of Newfound· speakers. On the same day 1\lr. yesterday under tow. There I --··- , -.-land convened yesterday with a Knott will appear as the guest were no reported injuries. · I An ore earner, the Arthur i A •d l &hort ceremony in front of the ,on CJON·TV's News Calvacadc. The vessel is under tow of a Case Cle'"'red Cross went aground on a shoal CCl en s . • Court House on Duckworth sister trawler Mai and officials a ncar L1Ule Bell Isle over the I . .

· · I ' · ·nnkend She 1vas sucecssfullv Four traffic accidents were ' Street One of the illghhghts of 1 of the Tors Cove Tradmg Co. 11 cc • ' • • . . · · · refloated hOII'c•·er at hi. "11 tide reported to Cit'' pollee yester· Tile appointment of the Thursday's events w1ll be a 1 of St. John's plan to dispatch a ' . ' " . ' .

Grand Jury was first on the luncheon at which directors of tua rarlv today to assist the A controversial court case and WJth full astern engtncs. day. ~t 12·35 n.m. a car coll_Jd· 1 . . . . ) " · with political overtones that Tile \'esse! has 110w 1locked cd w1th a fence on Emplfe I agenda Monday anrl appomted the local news media Will "JI'e, two vessels. . . . I , · 'b · f 1 lk 1 th 1 c" 11 1 for a limP involved Prime 111 st John's whe1·r. dn·crs w1ll A\cnuc. There was conslder-weFre: E 1 \'' B ric ~ .s 0 bl~ pcolpt~ u .Y I The disahlrrl tnwlrr t·arrl'· :llinistcr Dicfcnbakcr has final- atlcm.ni to rlrlrrmi1;e the extent. able damagp done to the fence. 1

oremen. ar , . est mcm· enjlageu 111 pu 1c re a 1ons 10 · • . : • 1 . b cleared from the ' ,. . ' A 11· · • hers, Ronald Noscworthy,'liarry St. John'~. · mkJ: a _par!Jal load nf !Ish. was IS~ eenc· t L ·I r· . 1. of damage. 1[ any. :G •. tlls'Ot·cart co1 61s1on on N1te'd', B R" h d T R ta en 111 tow l:lO m1lcs east of uprcme our . ega 1n,1g 1ng The captalll s;ur\ that hr was: rl\\rr ree a p.m. resu e : Aarbnes, D IC ar Ch. 1 yaBn, herr. It wa~ not immrdiatr11': kept the case alive after the· unable to ~ivc au C!'tim<~tc of • in considerable damage to both i J\ADGES OF SERVICJ:: ll'ere presented to ten memben of

u rey awe, · cs cv · k h l 1 · · t d" · ~ th ·I · r i · · ' A th t · h · I d' th Old C 1 C1 b St M 1 r d · N p• nown ow t 1e trnw rr got 10, cour JsmJsseu c c aim o I ctama-ge unt1l !li\·crs report 011 ·cars. no er wo-car mis ap 1 the Red Cross at last n ght's mner at e o on1 II . even~?~· • ~ ey . 0~ ' or I' Jres • • • difficully, )!onlreal industrialist Redmond the bottom of his ship. ion !he Road de Luxe at 9.31) I "ihuwn In tiYe photo is Mrs. M. Freake of Lewisporte, belnl

~~n B 1 ~~j· ttra~cl\ K Ha I, I Grant against city businessman ! p.m. also resulted in extensh·c . awarded for her distinguished work, Tile Lleutenant-Gowrnor 0 n • lO • yrl cough, William Perlin. Mr. Grant dama"e A two-car collision on j · d

Robert Gau!ton, Do_uglas .~-I City firemen recei:cd only Pcli.ce Blotte" r claimed that more than $10,000 Polt·o Stt.ll Le~[a;cilant Road resulted in made the presentations. Also shown Is Mi!ll Rll a Dove. ~indsor, Er_1c E. ~ames, \\ 11· one call yesterday. T~ls was at he gal'e Mr. Perlin for cam· slight damage to one ear. Royal Photo Service. ham A. Squires, Richard Cook, 8.30 a.m. from tile lthddle_ Bat- pai-gn expenses in the last fed- ·=======---,-----------------=-============ Thomas G, Hounsell, Edward tery where a mattress 1n a 1 era! elections was not used for 41 c W. Chafe, Harry Rowe, John S. house had caught fire. ThP City police had a quiet ni~ltt I the purpose intendc1L. ases Fifield, Percy W. _Chaulk, John East End pumper responded tn I with only two arrests mnde. Mr Grnnt's lawyer, Isaac King, G!Ibert Dav1s. the scene. j Both were for drunkenness. Mercer, subpoenaed Prime

..

------~ - :llinister Diefenbukcr in Ottawa

• BONOURAR.Y maERSatr-Mr, W, A. S. Perlln wu awarded Honourary ··lllllenhiJ In till' Red Crlu last night. The Lleatenant-Governor made the JI'IIIIUitlen In retutnltlen of Mr. Perlin's outstanding work In the .Red Cross .. NIWfon~... Llekll" en b Dr. P. J. McNicholas, Divisional President.

Royal Photo· Service

to give evidence in the case which came into prominence early tilis year. The court ruled it had no jurisdiction to sum­mon witnesses outside the pro­vinre.

Lowyrrs for thr two men ap­(lcarrti at the oprnin~ nf the fall te'rm of the Supreme Court yrstrrrlay to ~sk ·that motions marie earlier be dis'continued. The request was ~ranted.

No Holiday For Thanksgiving

Next Monday, will be Thanks· giving Day. This used to be a statutory holiday but was wiped out under the new five-day wcdi legislation and. holiday schedule.

It will be business as usual for those who arc used to work· ing on )!ondays, but the banks and Federal civil service will be keeping the holidny as it is a special day on the Federal holiday list.

Some churches will be bold· ing Thanksgiving services on Sunday, but others will, as usual, observe the special day for intercessions for harvests of land and sea at a later Sabbath.

The official polio count stands at forty one,

The most recent case that of a youngster from hoon. This was released from the Department of Health St. John's yesterday.

Call Tenders For Salt Fish Tenders have been invited by

the Newfoundland Fisheries Development Authority for the purchase of approximately 1,500 quintals of Labrador codfish produced at northern Labrador settlements during the 1960 season.

Quota lions should be submit­ted for sound quality ileavy. salted salt-bulk codfish; cullage. onboard vdsel at an agreed port of discharge,

Deliveries will be made by the motor vessel Trcpassey about the end of October.

Tenders should arrive at the office of the Newfoundland Fisheries Development Auth · ority not later than noon Oct· ober 20; and these sho11ld state the port at which the {ish is to be discharged. The office is ' located In the Confederation j Building, St. John's.

GOOD HUNTING WITH THESE ESSENTIALS

REVERSIBLE HUNTING CAPS ~ed and Khaki for your protedion ........................ 7 5c.

WOOL PLAID HUNTERS' CAPS Nith earflaps-a must for every sportsman .......... 1.75

MEN'S FLECKED TWEEDY WOOL CAR COATS Ideal for those chilly days on the barrens .............. 4.95

THE DAIL }' 1VEWS tlewfoundland's Only Morning Papsr

YEARLY SUBSCIUPTION RATI..:ll

.Canada ............ $12.00 per aJIDUm United Kingdom

and all foreign countries .. . ... $14.00 per ann 11m Authorized as second class mai! Pr.st Oltlce Department, Ottawa.

The DAIU NEWS is a ~ paper established in 1894, aud pub­lished at the News Bllildlng SM.s:sll JJuclcworth Street, St. }obn'a, New· foundland, by RobiliiOD & Compuv Llmit"d. · ' .

MEMBER OF THE CANADLt~ PRESS

Tbl!l Canudlu Press ill excltlllvel) 'ntitled to the use for republication of all news despatches in thh paper credited to it or to the .\s.~ocialed Press or Renters and also the local oP.ws published therein.

A \1 Preu • ervlr.a and teatnre article~ In this paper are copvrl~hted and their reproduction is prc>hiblted.

• Member Audit Burea~o

of C!rculatitm.

TLIESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1960

What Makes Nikita Run? As the present session of the

General Assembh- runs its appoint­ed course, Nikila Khrushchev. pos­sessor of the greatest personal power on earth, remains in ;\cw York without evident purpose or achievement. His trail up to now is littered with massive failures. lie remains as much a personal enigma as Russia appeared nearlv twenty wars ago in the mind and words of "'inston Chmchill.

One thing is certain. He feels safe at home. Stalin never travelled farth('r than Potsdam or Teheran. He dwelt behind the forhidding walls of the Kremlin in constant fear. But Khrushchev has roamed the world without thought of do­mestic threat to his authoritv.

lie seemed for a while to have liberal ideas for a Soviet dictator. Foreigners received a warmer wel­come and greater latitude when thev visited Russia. The dreaded secret police are less obvious. :More freedom unquestionablv exists to­dav in Russia than at anv time since the a~cent of Lenin to absolute power. And in his relations with the west, he seemed to encoura~e co-operation.

But the lhmgarians scratched the Russian and found the Tartar. The savage and ruthless suppres­sion of the Hungarian revolt dis­illusioned those who thought the Russian leopard might have chang­ed his spots. Yet thereafter came overtures to the west and lip­service to the ideals of co-existence and disarmament. Khntshchev asked and even begged for the summit conference. Then, seizing upon the U2 incident, he made this an excuse for tof1Jedoin)!; it in its first moments and did so in lan­J!uage so ugly, vile and insulting, that he created an immediate emotional revulsion to himself and all his works in the United States.

He has since made trouble where he could, intervening where inter­vention promised C o m m u n i s t profit and was likely to trouble

the llnited States. He found a willing tool in the obviously psy­chopathic Castro. He tried to take over the Congo. And while he re­sents the United Nations as a com­petitive force, he decided to lead an imposing delegation of captive heads of satellite states to the Gen­eral Assembly meeting with the obvious purpose of seeking control of the United Nations by bidding for the support of the new African and other uncommitted states.

He has failed all along the line. The Communists have been kicked· out of the Congo. His tirade against Dag Hammarskjold and the United Nations brought a favourable re­sponse only from the C~mmunist clique. He embraced Castro who alone embraced him in return. He challenged 1\lacmillan in the U.N. and made himself an object of al­most ribald laughter. He has met Macmillan in private and found no basis for a new approach to the achievement of disannament bv even the inevitability of graduaf­ness. Yet he stays on in New York and nobody seems to know why since few men like to remain on the scene of their most abysmal fail­ures.

What, then, makes Nikit~ run? Many hazard a guess but nobody knows. He seems unconcerned that his failures in the U.N. might in­fluence opinion at home. He shows a total umvillingness to compro­mise with the western powers. He has made no discernible gains in his efforts to win the friendship of the Afro-Asian group. Is there then some devious and obscure purpose with the culmination of which he hopes to surprise the world, or is he driven bv some individual ob­session which blinds him to the realities of international politics?

If a tenable and valid answer could be found, world tension might possibly be rela:"<ed. At the moment the question of what makes Nikita run is the bi,ggest riddle of the age.

Visitors From The Maritimes The ministers of agriculture of

the three ~[aritime provinces are now visiting 1\ewfoundlaud. Scep­tics, unaware that agriculture is contributing substantial values to onr economic output, mav wonder what thev have come to ~~ee. But we have made a lot of progress in some special directions, among them the reclamation of boglands, the development of an important mink industrv, and the experiments in sheep-raising. These are onlv a few of the fields in which advances have been made and thev are cer-

tain to attract the interest of our \'isitors. Among them, by the way, is a former Newfoundlander. He is Hon. Edward Haliburton, a native of Port au Port, who is the :\Hnistcr of Agriculture in Nova Scotia. It is hoped that he and his colleagues, Mr. Levesque of New Brunswick and Mr. MacRae of Prince Edward Island will enjoy their visit and 'Rerhaps be impressed by some of the efforts we are making to de­velop a more valu~ble agricultural industrv in Newfoundland.

Mutterings In Fran(e There has come lately from

France news which suggests that all is not well with the new re­public.

General de Gaulle emerged in a moment of appalling crisis. He took command. He won public confi­dence. He restored domestic sta­bilitv.

But he has failed to solve ·the Algerian problem and in other re­spects his administration seems to have acquired a measure of steril· ity.

Merely to give France a more austere government is. insufficient. These are times iri whi.ch people crave positive leadership. And . ru• mour sug~ests that de Gaulle has failed in this respect to meet popu- · Jar expectation.

The extreme right has been a~ainst· him from the start. Lately the left-Wbi,; intellectuals • have

been among his critics. And in for­eign affairs, he has been less than co-operative with his NATO allies.

It is 'true that there has been an end to recurrent political crises but if this were enough to justify de GauUe, the fact seems to be that he has no visible successor.

That and the tortuou~. costly course ·of the Al~erian civil war are ·enough in themselves to cause the mutterings that are now being heard in France. •

. '

OJ4t llnrb · of Cin~ ••• Ca goDCl wife) •• , 11 far 11ore prec­

lo}ll tUa Jewels.-Prover•• 11:11. • • •

Here Ia a fitUIIJ conel111lon to the &rcat book of moral wisdom. The char· aeter of a· wife Ia of ... teat illlportuee to fi'II'!J homt.

THE DAILY NEW5. ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., TUESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1960

~-------------------------------------~ I IN THE· NEWS By Wa~a1ar

~ t;ATCHING UP

The Globe and Mail of Toronto appears to be deeply disturbed by a somewhat sweeping statement attributed to Dr. Copes, an economist on the staff of Memorial University, that Newfoundlartd hesn't a ghost of a chance to catch up with mainland Canada, economically. socially or in any other way. The Tor­onto newspaper is Indignant. It calls the alleged statement a death sentence and fears It may scare off in.vestment capital and Impair the confidence of Newfound­landers. The Globe and Mail's concern . is quite touching,

• • • Now, to begin with. we hesitate to

believe that Dr. Copes has el(pressed the opinion attributed to him without some qualification that would help its accurate interpretation. For anyone to suggest that there is no field of human en· dcavour in wltich we can catch up to mainland Canada would be absurd. In svme respects, we arc away ahead of the rest of Canada. One of these Is our ability to detect the weaknesses and shams that exist in the Canadian po· Jitical system.

• • • But before we examine this business

of catching up, should we not ask how important that is? The aim Is not neces· sarilv to catch up. It is rather to acqu.ire first a tolerable minimum level of opportunity and then to toil for steady advancement in all useful spheres. This column is not concerned with party poll· tics. That is not an issue. What is con· sequential is that ·Canadian policy should be just and that it should take fuJi account of inherent disabilities in· any region and strive to remedy them.

• • • As things look at the moment. we

shall never be able to make much pro­gress in the expansion of secondary industry so long as we must depend on finding part of our market on \he Can· adian mainland. The handicaps of a horizontal freight rate structure, dis· lance from the main centres of distri­bution and production and the poverty, bl' mainland standards of our communi­c~tions. will see to that. But it is pos· sible in the futurl\ that a combination of power and port faciilties at Bay Despair will lead to manufacturing of a large range of commodities for export. That could alter our entire economic outlook.

• • • However, there arc certain facts that

must be faced. First, Canada is obligated to prov.ide us with improved . communi·

What Others STINGY SCOTS

Galt Reporter The Scotsman sent an indignant Jetter

to the editor of the newspaper. He said that if any more stories about stingy Scotsmen appeared in the columns. he was going to slop borrowing the paper.

SAUCE Winnipeg Free Press

A few months ago the Chinese Gol·ern­ment refused to renew the visa of the only Canadian newspaper correspondent in Peiping. The excuse given was that the correspondent was not reporting the Chinese scene fairly and accurately­although some of the cJrrespondent's critics in the West claimed that he was falling Ol'er backward to present a. pic· lure favorable to the Chinese.

Recently the Government of India refused to renew the visa of a Chinese correspondent on the ground that his reporting on India had been persistently "one-sided and malicious." China there· upon sent a note to India calling this "an unreasonable move" and demanding that the Indian Government restore the "proper right" of the correspondent in New Delhi to continue to stay there.

Apparently sauce for the Canadian goose is not sauce for the Chinese gan­der.

NATIONALIST LOGIC Montreal Star

The Prime Minister of South Africa Is making the mo~t of ihe Congo troubl~ to justify the South African Nationalist r~cial policy. "If our standpoint had been understood by the United Nations," said Dr. Verwoerd recently, "the situ· ation in the Congo would not have arisen."

This can only mean that the Congolese should never have been given freedom , from the colonial power that ruled them 10 long. They should have been kept in subjection, as South African Nationalists keep the Bantu In subjection. "There are those," added Dr. Verwoerd, "who speak of partnership and concessions. Belgium made concessions and the Congo was the heritage ... We must know that we have a strong case and that eventually justice will prevail."

A strong case for what? For continued repre!llion? For retention of Common· wealth association? It is In the context of the republican referendum of October II that Or. Verwoerd speaks and he calls to his aid every Issue on which South Africa is on the defensive-the dispute with the UN over Southwest Africa, the Congo trouble, the prospect that if South Africa votes republican it will not be welcomed by other Commonwealth natlona. '

In one breath he says that the white 'man's struggle in Africa Is not merely selfish but aimed at ensuring a future for every part of population. In the next he says that the Nationalists believe white people were placed In South Africa for a ·l]lecific reason; it was· not only their task to preserve Christianity with all Its value• apart from the c~lor of a man's skin.

cations In both Internal and external Trade. This is the only province in which large cnpit31 Investments in rail· way construction were unneceliSary. The. equivalent should be supplied by a more generous contribution towards the com· piclion of the Trans·Canada Higl11vay. Secondly, so far as shared grants are concerned, justice demands that the share of any province must be related· to two things-need pill" capacity to pay. Instead of viewing Ydth alarm the depressing note alleged to have hccn sounded by Professor Copes, the Globe and Mail would be making a more use· ful contribution by urging these policies

· on the· government of Canada. • • •

The Gloh.c and Mail was hordly charJt. able over the Newfoundland re3ction to the sordid betrayal of our rights under Term 29. . The view of most mainland editorial writers so far as Newfoundland is concerned is myopic. The facts elude them because they want to kcop on living in their ivory towers from which, at least for Ontario, the prospect of con­federation is sheer enchantment. Why should it be anything else when the primary producers of the poorer and fringe provinces must toil to reap the profits and provide the taxes that make Ontario rich. The Globe and Mail is disturbed that what Dr. Copes said mig\1t scare away investment capital. Ontal'io inl'estment capital? We ha\'e been luoj{. ing for that for nearly twelve ~'l'tlrs.

Oh, yes, the carpet·baggers can1e in their· thousands after union to get. their share of Newfoundland trade. But t!w im est· mcnt capital, the risk capit~l to rte­I'Ciop Labrador and to !inane~ proc!IIC· tive industry-that is another matter. American capital cawe in hundreds of millions. British cap::aJ w•s providrd ft>r exploration, hut ho1r much capital at mk from mainla.~d Can:.-:a i1 there to he scared away on the basis •lf our ex­perience up to now? If Dr. Coprs actu. ally used the words attributed to him, they were somewhat exaggerated. But on the record, we fear that the Glohe and Mail's concern is no less exagger­ated. If that or any othcr ncw,papcr wants to help, let them advocate a con­structive programme for the removal of the disabilities of the Atlantic provinces, the greatest of which are unhappily to be found in Newfoundland.

(Since the above was written. Dr. Copes has confirmed in a statement to Canadian Press th! belief expressed in this column that he had not made the sweeping ~tatement that had been attri­buted to him).

Are Saying TIIOUGilT J'OR TO:IIORROW

Ottawa Journal To speak of Canada's wide acres gives

a comfortable feeling of security. Where there is abundant land there should be the promise of abundant food.

This sense of well·bring may not al­ways be justified.

A booklet issued by the Department of Agriculture "Farming in Canada", re· veals what a small part of Canada has been brought under the plow or pro· \'ides grazing for livestock.

Canada altogether has about 3,846.000 square miles and of this total, farms oc· cupy 272,000 square miles-137.000 under cultivation, plus 72,000 square miles in improved and wild pasture.

If other land had been profitable to 11ork it must be assumed that pioneer· ing farmers would have occupied it. With the population growing rapidly i~ is desirable to guard out proven hut imitated acreages. They have, in areas such as the Niagara Peninsula, to be protected, against the grimy clutch of industry while in other regions, such as the prairies, there has to ha practice of good husbandry along lines the de· parlmcnt advocates to guard soil resour. ces

Agricultural surpluses today arc no guarantee that we will have more than we need tomorrow.

;Jtrength ~or 9cdaq .., EARL L. DOUGLAS

FIRST THINGS HltST A man in our town has been trying

to sell his home. In the course of sev­eral months he has puttered about re­pairing screens, fixing a broken railing, trimming the hedge, and so on. But no one •has bought the house yet, for it has an old undependable furnace and the roof obviously needs .major repairs. While the owner is busy with trivial de­tails, the important issues arc neglected.

The man's attitude toward his house reminds me of the attitude of a couple toward their religion. They are careful about the small details. They are al­ways dressed in good clothes when they come to church. They never fail to bring their children to church or school on time (even if very often they' do not stay to church themselves). Every year the husband allows himself to be put on one church committee-though ap­parently he never does anything on the committee-and his wife graciously con·

· sents to give one or two hours of her time to helping at the annual church fair.

What about the important matters? Do they believe in God? Their conver­sation hardly suggests it. Do they have any idea what it means that Christ died to save sinners? I fear that they would be greatly embarassed by the mention of such a matter. Do they live in Jove and charity wilh their neighbors? Well, no, as a matter of fact, they do not not.

First thinas first!

The Gjbal View <TBA'S CASTRO WALKS A TIGIIT·

ROPE BETWEE!Ii KIIRUiHCHEV A:"iD PEIPI!IiG

By LEO:\' DE:"-;:'\E~

Newspaper Enterprise Analyst

Ci\'ITED NATIONS. :\' Y.-IXEAI­Nikita KhrushchrY and Fidrl Castro are in disagreement over Cuba's close re· Ia tins with Red China.

Latin Americans in touch with Cuban affairs report that th~ Sol'iet Premier warned Castro last July that ~!oseow

expected Cuba's "full support" in the United Xalions Failure to do so, Khrushchev hinted, m.ght force him to reconsider Russia's economic aid for Cuba's declining economy.

The warning io said to have been transmitted through Fidel's brother. Raul Castro, chief of Cuba's armed forces who visited ~loscow last sum· mer.

In the background of the disagree· ml'nt, according to the Latin American ·sources, is Ftrlcl Castro's rlo.<e rcla· lions with Khrushchev' ril·at for suprc· mary in the Communist wrld. China's ~Ia Tsc·tung. The Havana-Peiping frirnd>hip was underlin!'d hy the an­nu.ncement September 23 that Cuba has !'xtcndcd diplomatic recognition to Rt'd China.

Russia. and not China, has given Cuba l'ronomic aid. :lluscow also prom· ised Castro military backing in case· the U.S. derides to "invade" Cuba. Yet many o£ Castro's leftist adherents favor ~lao's tough policies of revolutionary brinkmanship over Khrushchev's so­called peaceful coexistence.

Organi1.ations for "friendship · with the Chinese people" are mushrooming in many parts of Cuha-as in the rest of Latin America. :\lao's agents con· stantiy shuttle between Havana and Peiping.

Cuba's official Communist Party headed by Bias Roca is completely pro·:\loscow in its allegiance. It was Roca, in fact. who urged Khrushchev t11 warn Castro that there were import· ant political strings attached to Rus­sia's "disinterested" economic help.

However, in l'idel Castro's inner cir· cle there is said to be continuous fric· tion between partisans of Mao and Khrushchev.

Raul C: ·tro is a strong supporter of the So1·iet Union. But "Che" Guevara

I

-the mysterious Argentinia who is dictator of Cuba's economy-is appar­ently veering. toward ~lao's policies.

Latin American specialists see this conflict reflected in the "Havana De· claration" which outlines Fidel Castro's policies. The Cuban government tries to balance itself precariously between the two Red giants. Both Russia and

· China are gil'en equal place in the document.

The "declaration" was recently dis­tributed by agents of the Cuban gov· ernment to U.S. trade unions.

Fidel Castro himseU is a befuddled ~!arxist who identifies Cuba with all underdeveloped and uncommitted na· lions. His admiration for Red . China does not prevent him from courting some of Mao's enemies such as India's ~rime Minister Nehru and Marshal Tito of Yugoslavia.

While .fidel Castro, urged by Raul, agreed to support Soviet policy at the U.N. "without reservations," he made no secret within his inner circle of his resentment at being treated like an "errand boy". This may well explain the reason for Khrushchev's hurried visit to Castro'. Harlem hotel soon •after the Soviet Premier reached American shores.

Was the famous Khrushchev·Castro em· braces in the U.N.'s General Assembly a sign of reconciliation? Has the Soviet Premier finally appeased Cuba's beard­ed "messiah" who considers himself a revolutionary Bolivar of ail Latin­America?

Old Spanish Swindle Still Brinss In New U.S. Dollars

By JERRY BE!'INETT ~ ewspaper Enterprise Assn.

WASHINGTON- (~EAl - Old rae· kets never die, and those that fade away usually reappear after the public has had lime to forget about them.

That's the case with the "Spanis~

Swindle,'' a confidence game more thar. 200 years old. Inspectors of the U.S Po~t Office Department say that after a three years' absence, the racket i1 being worked with renewed vigor.

Since the first of the year hundreds of persons have discovered letters from .\lexico in their morning mail. The letters usually begin like this:

"A person who knows you and who ha> spoken very highly about you hu made me trust you in a very delicate matter. The entire future of my daughter as well as my very existence may depend on you."

The writer purport:; to be a banker or reputable businessman. He claims to have been tossed in the clink for bankruptcy; he wants out to clear his name. The intended victim is promis-

ea a fortune if he will hop the next plane to ~texico City to spring the bank· er.

The banker assures him that there is no danger involved All that's re· quircd is to pay off a few . officials. Then the banker plans to make a bee· line for a trunk held by u.s. customs that contains half a million dollars.

~ht money will enable him to pay off his debts and stay out of jail. He offers to gil'e the victim one-third of the hid· den fortune for his help.

All the ~ucker has to do is fly to ~lexico City with $10.000 to pay off the jailers. Included with the letter an several faked documents to prove tht banker's id('ntity and the existence of the half million dollars.

ru a further inducement the bank· er offers to have his "beautiful daagh­ter" act as intermediary, helping the victim enjoy himsel£ in :\lexica.

If the victim is hooked, he is told when and where to arrive with the cash. He is met by a man with a gun and returns to the U.!> 510,000 poorer

If you doubt· that anyone could fall for such a phony pitch, Post Office De­partment inspectors recommend that vou brush up on your psychology. Chiel inspector David H. Stephens· says:

"The idea of getting rich overnight is so attractil'e that some people just don't think clearly when they are offered a chance of making this dream come true."

Usually vietim!l are the very people you would expect to know better. They include doctors, lawyers, college pro­fessors, business executive and mini· ters. Sometimes swindlers pick up their victim from "Who's Who." Reason for the selection of businessmen and professional people· is that they usuall' ha.ve $10 000 or c~n raise it in a hurry. . .

Of the hundreds of people who have received letters this year, PO inspectors don't know how many have actually been taken ill. ·They estimate \hat "Spanish Swindle" racketeers make more than $100,000 annually. But finding out their exact profits or nutn· ber of victillll5 is impossible because cases are seldom reported.

Usually it wouldn't do any good if they did call the co~s since there is no extradition treaty with Mexico covering mail fraud. And. Mexican courts have held that victims in such cases are just ·as guilty as awindlen.

RUINED HEALTH Weiland Tribune

An Italian woman, who claimed she ate spaghetti three times a day for 100 years, has died at 106. Sooner or later, all that !paghetti was bou11d to ruin her health.

THE DAILY NEWS·. ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., TUESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1960 15

· OldACJePayments Total S947 ,340

Payments of Federal Old Age Pensions for Septemb~r amoun·t ed to •~7,340,000 for 17,165 pensioners.

During the month. lb9 per· sons be1an receiving their pen· sions for the flrat time. Of theae, 61 had applied' directly, while 108 were taken over from the province, where they bad been receivinl payments under one of the -combined Fed· eral-Provlncial programs- Old Age Asslatance. Disability AI· lowances, or Blind Persons AI· lowances. The number of deaths ·reported-101.

There are still a number of applicants who do not receive the pension aa early as they might have, had their appllca· tlons been submitted prior to reaching their sev«!ntleth birth· da)'. In other words, a number of applicants dela~· submitting an application until long after reaching 70. thereby losing what in some instances amounts to hundreds of dollars. Since the Act provides that payment commences the first month after the application is received or effective the month after, the applicant attains the age of 70, whichever is the later, those approaching 70 should apply between thf! age of 69',1 and 70 years.

A recent amendment to the Old Age Security Act provides for payment of pension outside of Canada to a pensioner who absents himself from this colin· try. If a pensioner has resided in Canada for twenty.fivc years subsequent to his twenty-first birthday, payment of his pen· sion outside of Canada may continue indefinitely; if he has not done so, it may continue for six months onl~·. in addition to the month of departure, and. must be then suspended. to be resumed effective only with the month in which he returns to the country. It will be noted that the provisions of this re· cent amendment relate to pay. ment out~ide of Canada to n

c=

... -~

" , ...... u. ........ . ·- _ ... J'

Community Concerts

(Continued from Page 3) resemblance of this work. es· pccially the 1\linuet and Finale, with the corresponding more· ments of Mozart's 39th sym­phony is striking. And the {lro­gram notes tell us that Hay· dn's work is two years younger than Mozart's. A unique instance of an older man learning from a younger collegue without the slightest trace nf jealousy! But this was Haydn: kind, cheerful and just to his fellowmen; one of the few co!llfosers whose music speaks wisdom.

The program concluded with Beethoven's Rasumowsky Quar­tet op. 59 No. 3. An amazing contrast to the preceding two compositions it was! Beethoven had n!!ither Haydn's spontane· ous melodic Invention nor the admirable counterpuntal skill of Nielsen. But hy his com· mand of form and the sheer drive of his indomitable person· ality he has created an excit· ing and highly interesting work.

With some apprehension the writer of these lines is noticing at this point that he has so far said nothin'l: about the new Danish Quartet who played all this beautiful music for us. But this is perhaps the greatest praise any performer can re· ceive: that he succeeded in conveying the message or the composition without personal Intrusion. This can only be ac· compllshed If he has complete technical mastery over and spiritual grasp of the work. In a quartet group the difficul· ties are multiplied. The tone of each Instrument was always beautiful. There was no shrill· ness at. any time: the tone was always mellow. the four instru· ments were perfectly blended, and at all times there was per·

pensioner: that is. someone who has qualified for payment on the grounds of age and rcsi· dence. The amendment makes no change in the residence re· quirements which must be met in order to qualify for initial oa)•mrnl.

~. "ll'alotionl I didn't want hl1 noa to allllburnl" . .!1 .. . --

j Red Cross (Continued from Page 3)

\ en for some of the p]acel mark· Superfluous hnir-on fa c e,l ing blood donating decreases.

arms, underarms and legs-is! With new efforts, however, this not only a sign of ili·:(r~oming, ot \ is expected to pick up, and the i' definitely ugly and should he 1961 IE'ason should show ·con·

· remove. There are excellen• siderable turn outs: · depilators available-or a razor The report of the Disaster

I • • • Service was a short one, but ' Mustache wax, wuch as ~rand· this valuable division continued father used to use, 1~ wonderful to show Its alertness and help for keeping eyebrows and lashes I to those places in need. There glossy and in p!nce. wer~ 89 minor disasters to ac.

; • • • · count for. Of th~se 80 were It Is said that If fingernails : fires, 5 floods, three ship.

. are painted with colorless iodine · wrecks, and one automobile IC• : IJefot·e polish is applied, It will cident. These minor disaster• prevent chipping. Seems t h c involved 585 individuals and an

·iodine strengthens the nails. expenditure of $9,944.159. • " • Hospital visiting convenors

I H you want to he !ashionabb were thanked and praised for torlay, strire for the natural look their excellent work in sup·

. in makeup. plying magazines, playing cards, i • • • J cigarettes and other commodi· I A fall facin!-three or f o u r , ties to the sick in the hospitals. · are h e t t e r-will do m u c h to ! A lengthy report from the stimulate ,(dn ·and drv and tired I Junior Red Cross was also from the summer sun. heard. There is a decrease in

• • • 1 this year's enrolment of mem-1 A little eye cream or petrol·' hers, totaling 2,563. But the . cum klly applied to the upper 1 high school branches show an eyelids will m~ke the eyes ap.l increase of 100 members. 1\luch pear brighter. Petroleum jelly work was carried on in this smoothed on thp eyPhrows and sphere and the names of ten

, eyelnshes at '' i g h t induces delegates to the Junior Red : ~t·owth. Cross Training Centre at Que-

h h I I b bee were read. These ten New· l'RESENTATION OF CHARTER to the new Plac:ntla Branch of tnt Rc•.1 Cross. Presenting t e C arter s l\ P Reu en Baetz, foundlanders will attend tbe M.A., B.S.W., to Mrs. Leonard !'fllller who has been th~ represer.taUve In Placentia for seven years.-Royal Photo Service. NA!IIED A:I1BASSADOR Centre on July 12-21, 1961.

1 . . h . th - ·-· F\NS RiOT . NICOSIA Cyprus (Reuter~) --SETS--OFF ON TOUR-- . NICOSIA, Cyprus - Reut· ~ther committee to make feet c anty m t e ra er con· I ' I G ' M d k'll d I 1 er3-A former EOKA under· 'I the1r reports were the Nursing trasted tessituras of the three GUATE~I \I A CITY Guate- G- uknmcen .'ton day t el rl a LONDON meuters)-A man I ground leader Adnis Soteria· Services Public Relations, Water works they played The New ' ' ' ' ' rce yprw an wounc e a d · rl ' 1 Safety W ' W k d th . Quartet th~nkcd the mnla <APl-The GuatemalaiTurklsh Cypriot, hrin~ing the:left Lo~ on atrport ~!on uy on·des, 36; M~nday was appointed, . om~ns or ,an e ·~:3i1:!ce for the enthusiastic soccer teum failed to ~how up 1 toll to three killed and at least 1 an . e1ght·mon\h, 23·country 1 Cypr~s frrst . ambassador .. to· balance of fmances. reception with two encores from ;\londay for a match wtth Hon: I three wounded in shootings in • Commonwe~lth . tour wtth 12' Brltam. Soterlades, a Brthsh-1 The two day meeting rloses the quartets by Haydn and 1\lo- duras and 20,000 angry fans I a little more than a month. I feet of airline tickets. Dr .. v.' S.! cducat~d lawyer, was leader. of today, and members return to

If ld not ll.ke rioted. A 13.vear-old boy wns ~----~------- ______ ____ Jha of Indta, a Common\lealth EOKA s north Cyprus rel(1on.j their homes confident that the'rr

zart. or once wou . · f h ·I d · t' 1 rr· · 1 ·n ,. 't · H · 'I·-' b h B · · h · j ' to be in charge of the onrush ktlled ond there were . numer· o:er the heads o I e crowc . · ~ . uca 10na o leta , w1 ~1st 1 e was J31 c-u y t e nhs m conference has done much te f th fl

1• lght rs who want 1 ous injuries. The pollee put 1 w1th tear ~as bombs and by\ w1t~ erlucatwnal authont1es •19M but escaped and manag- further the work of the Red

0t e r.s nt n'~ht down the uprising by firing 1 flashrng clubs. dur1ng the trip, cd to avotd capture. Cross in Newfoundland o go agarn o· r, . __ ______ .

I

"THE CLEAN LOOK OF ACTION"- BUICK '61

IT TOOK Gl\'1 AND BUICK TO BUILD A CAR SO BEAUTIFULLY NEW-SO

BEAUTIFULLY TRL\I O:N" THE OUTSIDE, YET SO BIG AND ROO~.fY INSIDE .

AND IN TRUTH G:M AND BUICK BUILT A CO~IPLETELY NE"VV CAR TO DO IT.

The flow-through horizontal lines of this '61 Buick Electra are part of the new CLEAN LOOK of action found in all1961 Buicks.

For 1961 you'll find Bl!ick has scored a clean sweep over every car in every price class. A trimmer, lower, lither car that's new clean through. And in basic design Buick-was ahlc to start right dowh on tb ground! Thus, its K-typcframe became an X-type frame, conventional mspension gave way to ControJ.:\rm Suspension, its Wildcat V8 developed more power, Turbine Drive. ga\·e way to a new Super Turbine 'Drive, far smoothrr, far more re;oponsh·e.

It started with an ALL-NEW FRAME

Buick";: engineers started with a rcJ:

O!Jcn mind. Find a liner frame, they were told. So the 1...:-frame g,n·e '1ay to the \-framr. The rc;:ult: lower 1loor ;;ill,;, a !'lllOoth~r, quieter ride. ea;:icr handling and better insulation from road shock. ;\'ew donut-like rub­her separations hu;:h out road noise.

The new frame aliowed a NEW CONTROL-ARM SUSPENSION

Find finer springing, they were told. So conventiona\5uspcnsion arms gave waY to '61 Buick's Control-Arm Sus· pcnsion.From this cJme flatter corner· ing and mirror-smooth going over the bump; as well as the super highways. Bui~.:k has ·a new semi-floating rear axle, too! This combines what engineers call Torque-Tube Drive and Hotchkiss Drive-giving..you the finest features of both.

The new axle allowed a NEW HIDE-AWAY DRIVE SHAFT

Lowcrthcdri\·c ;haft tunnrl (the came of that big hump in the middle of the !loor of mo"t cars) was another order. So Buick put a new kind of double· joint into a 2-picce drive ehaft. This let it hcnd down under where your feet rest. And do11n went the hump to giYc you far more flat floor space thau before.

The new drive shaft allowed a NEW COMFORT ZONE

In addition to flattening out the floor, the Hide-Away drive shaft allowed more headroom, better seat height and more cushioning for all pas· sengers. The new frame allowed lower door sills. And, as fqr the doorway it· self, the dog leg was smoothed away and the door opening made even wider.

And the Clean Look called for the clean getaways of a NEW WILDCAT VS The c1eaner lines alone spelled more power' per drop of gas. But the order came down for streamlining within the engine itself. As parts lost friction, power rose. And so did gas sa'ringl. Refmement after refmement right down tonewcalibrationforthewbu· retor and distributors. ADd what a wildcat this Wildcat V8 be<:ame!

This new Wildcat power • called for a · NEW TURB!NE·ORIVE First Buick ingenuity found a way to unload 20 more pounds from this wonder transmission. Then through an ever-so-slight tu+n in the angle of . the turbine blades a' whole new source of power and gas savings was brought to life. The Wildcat and this new Super Turbine Drive spell Wow!

'61 IS BillCK'S YEAR

And it 'all adds up to the full comfort, full luxury, full size

1961B lila. GllANCEL JITZ, JntematlonaUy known biJ·gaJne hunt·

THE TERRA NOVA MOTORS LIMITED • 11M wrt&er, wllb Ill• equally famous IIIII· Mr. Pita left ove.r tile we.JrotJHI for c .. er Brook to make 'arrangement& to fly lllh tile la&ert. wtfk''Mr. Wellon In search of I record specl· _. ef the Woodlud Clrlbou. If he obtains sucb 1 specimen, u •111m wiU be wrlttell· on the bUilt for. Outdoor Life Mal· · llbte-IOJal ftete; . . ... . . ·

. ' . . REAR NFLD. HOTU DIAL 5131-35 . ST. JOHN'S

I

.Social-Personal -Column-

ON' BUSINESS TRIP during the summer months, and members began to formulate plans for their winter sched· ule, ·Reports were also read of the annual dinner held at Bar·

Mr. and Mrs. Cecil R. Perry ol Portugal Cove Road, who have been on a two week bus· iness trip across the province, motored to all the inland towns and main settlements as far as Corner Brook. They returned to St.· John's on Sunday,

ney's in June. The next meet· ,- - - - - - .... - - - -ing will convene October 12th. ' Th D I

~~ e octor 11 IN HOSPITAL ·

Mrs. Roy Clarke of 41 Golf rl Sa·ys II;· JOINS MEDICAL CORPS A1•e, entered the Grace Hospi· • I

:Mr. Bruce Perry recently tal yesterday, Monday October I joi~·the Royal Canadian Army 3rd, where she ~ill remain un· I B7 HAROLD THOMA1 RYMAN, ?lledltal Corp, and left for der observation. Mrs. Clarke is M.D. Gaeetown, N.B. on September the sister of Mr. Jim Tucker, lOth. He has since been trans· M.P. for Trinity·Conception. ferred to Petawawa, where he I __

is now receiving officer's train· RECOVERING FROM ing. He is the son of Mr. and OPERATION :Mrs. C. R. Perry, Portugal Cove Road.

Home· Baked French Bread Made Ideal With Pre · Sifted Flour

With You; Newly-Made Jam

1 egg 1· tablespoon water . Add cold water to scalded milk. Veasure out ~,t cup ~nd dissolve ,lleaspoon sugar In it. Sprinkle 4eaat on ton and let Ftand 10 Wnut~s. Then ~ur. Ad .J . paining sugar, salt and short· ,.Ung to remaining 1"' cups

;· 2Jfow T~ Hold )ALSETEETH ·~ Mort Firmly In Place ·; Do Jour !aile teeth annoy and em• ·hfnU bJ lllpptna, dropplnl orwob• l!llnl Wbln JOU Ht. lam.::J:xl:llt:? ., .. ~ alll'IDIEI• a U"'e P on ·ep1awa. Thlllllbllnt~DOD·aeldt . • holda tlolla t.teUI more ftlmiJ

limon CODifortabiJ. Jfo 1\11111111, ·s·DUU- or fii~.Doea not ' , Cbaelul "pla\1 odor' (denture • Ul), Get PAIITIITH todaJ M ~-\Ill Mlf7WIIIft, ~~\ .

As summer fades away, so does the porch rug, Add new life to your sisal rugs by applying a coat of thinned house paint .

AIR TOO DRY? Rl'LE TO APPLY IS SIMPLY THIS:

HUMIDIFY

THE DAILY NEWS. ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., 'TUESDAY,_OCTOBER 4, 1~~-·

The Inside · Track By CASSIE BROWN

Hi! Indian summer still lia:tering through beautiful! ;Jays and crisp, clear night!, a::d those calm, still mornings

· ~livr our old country side a <liflr.rent look, somt·how . as if we had Lt•en tran~porterl to ·~orne other world Is there a•;ylhing more brdutiful thaa: lnd:an summer·~ • I

I

THE THE1\TRE l.>id linally cPrtact Don , .

Jamir<on last Friday. and I though he coul·l'l't give c.IJ. a 1

tl<·linitc date, he said tlJe TC 1 festiral will be l.e!d ear 1 ~· in 1 • 1\'ol'emher. It thr. microwa1·e is ~ • installed, (as he hopes . and ! ;;,

whic:1 has hecn "'oldin~s ~hin~s i !((;·: .. up) there can ale a ~t&lion i IIi\,:· . . . . hookup, and Grilnd Fall~ a;,d 1 CAssn. BROWN Corner Brook ~~~~ (lo thr.ir; plays from Granll Fn~l<. JI,J'I'· i .. New sa;v a perfor~er e.'1.10;> ever if the micro11·a,·c j:;n't.: .us w11;·k a.; much a' Earl l.r~::: in b;. that time, thr ~ruuo' \\'Iii on the .Ed Sulliran fhow S:m come to st. .Jolm':•.· Dill> ~l·u, da.~ ni6hl. Ilts chuck!r> and sa)·' !"cala Grifrm is comir.~ tu ,laughter •.;·el'e ~onla~iou.-. ~.'d town October tr.th '10 discus~ • k.ept utucklm~ t't~hl ~long w:!h the developing of talent for TV !ham .. Cotildn't ;:,ct orcr t:Jc in that city. Obviou·,l~· thi; is ~I fecmmgly h:•!lhai:ml way .Jc big year for local drama. had of hlltmg thP eyes.

How to Treat an ACHING

. -. THE DAILY NeWS·. St. JOHN'S, NrLD., HH:SL>AY, uCivocK .4, 't~oO 7.~ ------------------------------~·------------------------~--------------~========~~==~~--~ PRINTIID . P, ..

TRO-GUI E'~ B Ceean

... Present-For You and Yours ••• People ttnd to be ~tri&IIHilindlll under pre1ent vibratloal, 10 IIOII't tty to 111ake Ji*ht of guallOIII that bother tl!tm. Career mlttm sbou\d p w:cpdona!Jy ....U today, with an assist from a - you lea~ expect lliJhly possible. Y o u r. mate can l!e d. iavlluallle help to you, 100. SPRING PREVIEW P1st; , . .l111n Fn11toi1 Millet, !'rcnch J.tter, wns born on Oct. -4, !uA. He worked In his fdher's fields; started drawinK after secill1 cnpvlnas in an old llible.

Future , , : We mny soon be able to purchase auto tDJine Ju. bricants that will last the lif( of the car. Then will be devel· ope<! by the U.S. N a,. al Re­•c~rch Laboratory,.

The Dey Under Your Sign Atti!S' j1em War•' 21 to Ap11l 19) ~~t~Jo lrcttin1'1• Prob!tml arc ttlt to mate Ul thiak, "'' to m.akt '.Ia .,.orr,. TAUlVS jApril 2e te' Moy 201 Ui~ h lilu: a ;ourat)"'l h:.11 the ~un de· pt:td• 011. ,our tra"t i•r companloas.

GEMINI (May 21 to Juno ll) Watch Jour ltDlltCrJ Aftltr h oa1y CllC :ctttr t.hort oi cltftllt• ,

CANCER (Juoo 22 to July 211 Rt-lautian should not ht nmtthtar you d•; but aomtthint )'OU don't do.

LEO (July 21to Aug. 21) . \' ""' an in n~ daaafr •f dt"el~•r _eye tluia fron1 JDOllinl on tltc bri1ht llde.

VlltSO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) Doa't tP:end. 100 :ntl.ltb. After y0'4 en• tract a dc'bt, it -• 10 <XI'IM·

School s All Play For Mothers

Cut A Pretty Figure

LIIRA (Sop!. 2l to Oet. 22) You'll be ""''"d al lbc bel~bto '"' car\ auain by nmainia1 oa the level.

SCORPIO (Oet. 2l to No•. 21) .Actcnt 1)\lnctu:.lll)'• l\'1 r.ot eaouah to run U )'''" don't tlart ia timr, SAGITTARIUS !Nov. 22to Dae. 711 If yDU want ttJ k ek the oflt tttpoalible 1ar )'OUt tro11blc, a~e rour llecl, aot yottr t~t. CAPRICORN (Dee, 22 to Jon. 201 Jt witt rla you no rood. to 1it up &P t:l\.:r. nntice i( you kcer on rhdal'. A9UARIUS (Jon. 21 to Fob. 191 Drn·c eartf\lllr. lh.nr. a drinr ••• carrttl his temhotono by ehl~tlinr Ia trafflr. · ' PISCES (Feb. 20 to Moro~ 201 No matter how muck •cnt:Y JO\t la"n'• ycu hnt to bur whdom 011. tbe llstl • mmt .PI~n. ·

e 1960, Fltld Entm>rl .... lao.

Red Cross Directors Return

TEENERS PAY A HEAVY PRICE BY MARRYING TOO

YOUNG

~

4764

At a stork shower where the mother·to-be an d her friends were teen-agers the 16-year·old guest of honor who bad be e n married at 15 said wistfully as she unwrapped the gUts, "I hope the baby will marry young so we can start having some fun."

That, of course, II one of the sad things about these y o u n g, young marriages. Youth has to be postponed-because the care· free years have been forfeited.

lG-11

t,:/1.,..:. ~, All or a sudden, a couple of

NEWS at the top-see how tb" kid! arc faced with adult respon· dublng cape collar directs the slbllities. And no matter how eye to a pin-slim waist above e much they love each other, how Jllntly flaring skirt. Fall'l favo- determined they are to make a rite look-make It all youra in go of their marriage, how much fluid rayon, cotton, wool. they love the baby that comes

Printed Pattern 4764: Misses' along to tie them down-they are Sizes 10, 12, 14 16, 18. Size 11 bound to realize too late t h a t tues 5~ yards :w-Inch fabric. they were in too much (l( a hurry

P.aris Designers

Spotlight Put

Send FIFI'Y CENTS fin eolnal to grow up. Catamps cannot be accepted> for The strain of too heavy respon. thl.s pattern. Please print fpaln· slbllltles on their young shouldera 11 BJIE, .NAME, .ADDRESS often tells on the marriage, The ltYLB NUMBER boy may become •'eStless in . Send order to ANNE ADAMS, the· role of husband and father

care of ST. JORN'II DAILY and provider.

By PEGGY MASSIN PARIS meutersl-Women with

more Imagination than money can give many of last year's NEWS, Paltera Dept. 10 FRONT The girl may be lonely, cut off

ft., WEST, TORONTO, ONT. from her teen-age friend! with SEND NODI Big, beautiCul whom she no longer has much in no success.

COLOR-IFIC Fall and Winter common. She may find that The picture . the parents paint Jattem Catalog hu over . 100 playing arownup for keep~ Ia t doesn't seem ~eat to teen·agers ltylea to 1ew - social career atraln. In love. AU they see IS romance. balf·alzes, only asc.l ' ' And 10 while the ltusband and They think tbey can fave mar·

wile are still teen·qera they are rlage and their youth too. looking forward to the yeau-far But it doesn't work out that

In Paris, the Uttle heel's re- In the distance-when they can wey and t~cy all find out sooner •laclnl the spike. The lowered be free of such heavy responslb or later that they have traded tin lookl IDchiDUng when com· IUtles IDd start having a little fun. their youth for adulthood a n d biDed ·In• 0118 of'the opulent fab' But how do you nmke young that they will have to postpone $1 llld. pmilhed with t be people realize all this Parenu being young and carefree for 1a'le dillcac, Df trimming. try to tell them, but often with years and years.

Of dresses a new look with details, trimmings and I i t t I e ideas adapted from the new French couture collections.

Every Paris designer, for in· stance, puts the spotlight on hem­lines'. There are fur trimmings contrasting bljnds, flares and flounces, fringes and braiding. Rnzor·edge hems and nat-pressed effects are out in favor of in· verted and rounded lines.

Adapt the Dlor silhouette with a y.ride hem flounce or puff ball skirt of contrasting fabric shirred on to the hipline of a slim tubu tar dress. Seal op the hemline of a

Hemline suit jacket and skirt with two­inch-wide, circular cut·outs in the Gardin style. · ADD SOME FtTR

One of the prettiest ways ~o change the appearance of a sim· pie dinner dress would ·be to treat it to a fur border on the hem.

Trouser fashions are another fancUu) innovation, endorsed by Jacques Heim and Madeleine de Rauch, for sport or cocktail wear. The side seams of a skirt or dress could be slit :o the waist· line and worn over a pair of tight. knee·length pants in the manner

Between Us

Women

4540 Sl ZES 36---48 • {, ../In \_' . ·.:' 1 ~~-·-

CANADA SAVINGS BONDS 'Buq 4()Urs now. bq ~ ~for oosh,

of fml1 bronch of ihen~oL·

THE ROYAL BANK OF CANADA:·.

•• •• :· 1nc: DAILY NEWS·. ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., TUESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1960

·8~~:~-~~~~-~----------------------------------------~~-=~-------::-~-------------------------~--~:::::::::::::-~-:~----~~--~~--~G~E:O~L~OG~I;ST~D~IE;--

CBN TUESDAY, October 4~h.

'-~\!. . 7.~CBC News 7.35--Top of the ~rorning 8.110-CBC News and Weather 8.15-Musical Clock 9.110-Morning Devotions IUS-Program Preview 9.20-0n Parade. 9.30-CBC News. 9.45-Rec:ords at Random

10.110-Arclters 10.15-;-Doris Janes. lO.~For Consumers 10.30-Nfld. School Broadcast. 10.45-Music in the ~turning. 11.45-Saercd Heart Program. 11.00-Morning Pops.

5.0J-Now and Then. 5.30-Fisherics Broadcast 5.45-~Iusic from the Alllums 6.00-CBC News 6.05-lntcrmczzo 6.25-Program Prel'iew 6.30-Suppcr Guest. 6.45--Light Music 7.00-CBC News ami Weather 7.15-Musical Program .. 7.30-Tops Today 7.45-Doyle Bulletin 8. 15-Rawhide. 8.30-Raving Reporter.· 8.40-Musical P1·ogrnm. , 8 5:>-Weather For !\lariners. 9:oo-Invitation to Worship.

1l 9.30-Du~incss Barometer. 10.00-!.eicestcr Square.

1

10.30-Vaneom·er Chamber Or·; : rhestra.

11.00-Nocturc. 11.30-CDC National News, · 1

Roundup and Talk 12.00-Sign Of£-0 Canada""

The Qnren.

MONTREAL t.CP 1-Ur. 11o'>ert . Harvie 76 well-~noll'n g:okist I ' ' who was one of the lirsl I o .1W(l

the rich mineral deposits of northern Quehec and Ontario,

' died during the wcek'.!n~ in r.o>· · pital here. A gradual( of McGill

, _,"._,.:~~------ ____ -~. ______ 1 University and the Unil·crsily _of . - · · d tl ! Wisconsin he explor~d the ncl!l·

XXXI ; motel, where h~ dismisse Je , in;: are2s' of the two prol'ii1CC3 "It's not practical." Artemus; cab ;;nd went 111 to the_ tclc- durin~ a Ion;:. career· l';i,h t~e

told her, "we have no authority; phone. lie called the olfrccdol ~eologicat s•rrvcy of C~nd~. to search. No e\'idence thnt • )Jarvin Leeds, ami to the ~rrl · ---------would get us a search warrant. who answered he sa~d, --~~~tc- M>AINST COM~Il':-;1:-l~l Only guesses." 1 mus Baldwrn spcalon:,:. I ell F'II·:::TJ.\:\8. Laos •.\r >-\cu-

'Thcre's difference hetwren a Leeds il's important." tralist Premier Pl'incc S3t~r;:rra guess and deduction" she pro-! Leeds come on the wire. Phouma to'd the L~olr<:n pc•Jp!e tested. ' I "I've taken ol'cr." i\r:emus S::turd~y night that ~i) ll'm r.~·.-cr

'"Also, I've a job to rlo. Sup-. said. .. . allow L~os to bec1n:e Comnw-pose we barged in. Suppose we\ "Don't:". ~~it! Lrcds .. ·.;·: 1 1_~:; nL;t. Communi•m. he ~~id. i' l went to Bayside's door and de-· ·•get too hr.~ for ymrr hr.':··.1cs .. do~a·ine th:~:l dcstro:·:; 'lud•.lhi~m. mandcd Pomfret Lionel or the "~ly bntelws 11'111 frt. .\rk the rcli~ion of Lao;. right to hunt for him. If l'.'e, mus ~:•id ~rimly. "So we talk. --------tried to force ou1· way in. he You and me. Thr host pl<wc l:i .JOll \:O:'.:'t·:S13l'f,(;. ~oulh .\f. would have the ri-ght nf an~· herr-ant! quir:i;." riea 1)\euters-,\ •c\wc carln citizen to defend his home. He "You're giv'n~ Ill<' orders·:" tremor ~hou~ .Joha11ncJI>urg :111d would be warned. If he has con· dema:Hicd l.<•rds. 'the st11-roundil1'! area Sunday federates-which is certain- "Somebody better ;;il·e or·dcr·s ni~hl, plun;:in~ lar~c arc<rs. into they would be altered. Evidence the ll'ay things ;:rc foul::d lip." fl~rkne>:s. The tremor tnppcd

'··- ... ·-- ... ---· -· would be destroyed. The or-. Artemus sairl. '\\'hat dou~h- ol'.'ilche, l'rrryin;: ~<11-rcnt from Pcrfcctlv proportioucd and eleanlv sly led, the 1961 Buick Special is a com- 'ganization would scatter." hca<l pulled this c<:~cr'.'" power s'Aions hut lt.~l:t. ll'as rc·

11.15-A Man called Sheppard. 11.30-Nfld. School Broadcast. 11.45-Parade of Stars. 12.110-BBC News c 12.11}-..;Announcors Choice. 12 3o-:F'arm Broadcast 12:4s-,:Jilid Day Serenade

lllctelv new car. The Special combines the best of bi1r-car perfonnance and "~!y son,'' said Mrs. Roche There 11·a., an insL:nt'> sil· stored a~lcr a short ~mod. ------------~ ' 1'-. th h t" bt I' ... ot x ellen Then Leeds >puke in;;ra- - ~· comfort with the best of small-car econ omy and manoeuverability. The four- pe~orl~;ble .:g tps, ts n . e.·. 1 i<Jt i~~4Jy, "Glrrl you c:olle.rl. Leerls asl;rd.

VOCM door· sedan, shown here, and the four- door sedan wagon are powered by an "I thi~k there is a way," he Baldwin. I was goin:~ to call' ·In m1· cc:se.'' .\rtemu; s::id, aluminum Fireball V8 cn!lh~ that wei ~rhs only 318 pounds. Optional on all :said. "Operating this ring is a you. I'll be there in 15 min- "gil·in~ r~c a place on the tet:m

'' '"' ])' If I l " could ·do it. And not on the Special models is the new ual-path Turbine Drive transmission that saves !irst-rate intc 1gencc. . were u cs.

1.00-Doyle Bulletin· 1.15-!tlusical Program. TUESDAY, October 4th. 1.30-CBC Nel\:s and Weather i -.,-_.-,l!--N~el-vs-a""n~d"!\:;:1'/~e~at~h:'er:""'-1.4S-Tommy Hunter Show. · u" Blll 2.15-!tlusical Randezl'ous 6.~5-Breakf...st with

I I · 1 · l h f I . 111 the place of thrs mtcllrgcncc. In le>s than a quart('r of an· bench. In the infield.'' near y 100 pounc s over ·convention a au tomahcs t uoug use o an a ummum this evil brilliance. 1 think 1 hour, Lee d's knuckies upon the "\Vhot makrs you 1~1ink I

2.29-Dominion Obs. Time 6.55-Ncws 7 .00-Brcal;fast with BiU

housing. know what 1 should try to do." door a;;ked for admiosion. ha1·c a tram:" Leeds a>~ecl. "What would you try to do., Artemus opened the door ~nd Ar:emus sneered. "I think

Signal • 7.30-News and Watcrft'ont %.30-:\tusical Randezvous 2.45-BBC Variety Directory 3.15-John Drainie Tells a 7.35-Breakfast with Bill

Story 1 7.55-N€ws ; :1.30-CBC News. i 8.00-Torbay Weather . • 3.33-Trans Canada ~latinee. j 8.05-Breakfast with Bill 4.30-~lusic from Halifax. 8.25-News ---~ ___ _

State of the Union

ACROSS

·.·,.­.-. . ~ ... -' .. ... . .

. -~~~ t' :. .-... _ ......

DOWN

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

8.30-Hit of the Oa7 8.35-Sportscast 8.40-Breakfast with Blll 8.55-News 9.00-Morning Date 9.15-Lindas First Love 9.30-Mornlnc Date

10.00-NtWI 1('.05-Stork Club

110.15-Jlm Ameche Shr.w '10.55-News 11.00-Jim Ameche lhow 11.15-Western Jamboree 11.55-News P.M. 12.00-Western Jamboree 12.30-News 12.35-Ramblin with Recorcll 12.45-Fisherman's Forecast 12.50-Ramblin with Rec:onh 1.15-Sportscast 1.20-Ramblin with Recorda 1.30--News 1.45-Passing Parade (John

Nesbitt) 2.00-Jim Ameche Show 2.55-'--N ews 3.00-Dollars On Parade 3.55-;-News 4.00-Bob's Bandwagon 4.55-News S.OO-Bob's Bandwagon S.30-Supper Serenade S.50-Fisherman's Forecast 8.110-Bulletin Board

Travelogue 8.30-Supper Serenade 6.45-News 7.00-Kiwanls Luncheon Ad·

dress. 7.30-Shillelagh Showtime. 8.00-Cream Of The Crop

10.00-VOCM All Time Hit Parade

10.30-Eventide Meditation• 10.45-Sports 11.00-Torbay Weather 11.05-Big Top Ten 11.30-Club 590 and NeWI.

CJON TUESDAY, October 4th.

8.30--The Bob Lewis !>now

NOW' ·~· · .... ;--:·;·

~~efore Pontiac puts you in ,~~ the lap of new luxury ~~$~~ (NEW SPLENDOR WHEREVER YOU LOOK) ..... ~ .. .,. .. ~. .... ·-o~

:~r~ti .-f" .. ~,.

:;: ::;:;

qPhntiac's· done it .... '.

1f.~gain! Extra roomy :;~side-yet trimmer • :11 ,,:.: .

2li.Jl.tside J More room $,. ........ ~

~k your head, more • ... ~!~~-

__ rQom for your legs-more room to relax! ~·· , ....

{~:··october 6 is the date-won't be long now! ·:~'··~: . ~

·PONTIAC Bl . .. . . .

A,1,. .. •',

, ,.~ "~! .•

6 30-Nfld. News 6.35-Weather Foree~~• 6.40-The Bob Lewis Show 6.45-Headline News and

• Forecast fi.SO-The Bob Lewis Show 7.00-Ncws 7.05-Loc~l Weather 7.20--The Bob Lewis Sbow 7.30-News 7.35-Complete Weather 7.45-News 8.00-News 8.05-Weathcf 815-Shipping Report 8.20-The Bob Lewis Show 8.25-Kiddics Corner 83.:-News 8.40-The Bob Lewis Sh~w 8.55-Just a Minute 9.00-Ncwa 9.05-Musle for Millions 9.20-Jerry Wiggins Show 9.55-Cliffs Kitchen.

10.00-News in a Minute !0.01-Martin's Corner 10.15-Housewives Choice. 10.35-Housewives Choice 11.00-News In a Minute ll.ol-Housewives Choice. 11.15-Right to Happiness, 11.35-Nfld. Quiz ~ 1.45-Moneyman 12.00-News Highlights 12.02-Town and Country 12.30-News 12.33-Town and Countl'J 1.00-New.' 1.0!>-Weat,·er Forecast 1.35-Don Jamieson'a

Editorial 1.40-Sports 1.45-Art Baker's Notebook 2.00-News Highlights 2.03-.Jerry Wiggins Show 2.30-News 2.31-Jcrry Wiggins Sho" 3.ol-Western Jamboree 4.0~ews in a Minute 4.01-Ranch Party

1 L k A I' k F ~II·. Baldwin?" :\Irs. Roche a~k- the lawyer glided rn. l·ou'rr un a tc;>m." He was

00 - I € UrS cd. Without a worr! of greeting. ;.:atcliin-~ Lecd's !ace. hut noth· MONTREAL (CP)- You can't "[ would furnish the police. Leeds 11all;ed to the bathroom in;! was to be read t11ere.

tell one fur from another without the outraged people w1th a krd- door and lookc<l in:dde. "When yon ~o to bat you don't a program in Else Schiaparelli's, !'a per who would_ ~1ave no part "Ju;t yon and me.'' ArlenHb swing until you look at the fall colleclioti of fashions 1111 the counterfe1hn~ rmg, I ,;aid will! a 'atllnine smile. third-base coach for signals.

Feature of the showing ·here of; would frame .some person and "\\"hat hophcad got you rnto You're pretty good, Leeds. but the Paris • designed, Canadian-~ pin the guilt upon him. I ll'ould. tl1is hassle'!" I'OU don't pack the weight to manufactured creations was the do a conjuring Irick, misdirect- . ·_·T, .. o wl1at ha",lc do you rc- ;-un the team." design of one fur to resemble

1

mg attention from myself In fer. Leeds .oskcd. ., The l:lwyer's eyes ~littered. another. , ~some man for whose· blood the "l know the b<l. Artemus .\rtcmus had struck where it

b 11 bl' Jd b 1 1 1 · I . hurt. The man had vanity. I There were pieced lack an : pu rc cou e mate o c a- >aH · 1 1 1 ... 1.hnt'"'s Cl!l·c·ao"O," ~ ~ i d

I

white milk gills looking like 'I mour." ··so 1•:hal'?" f.r•rrl< r rmanr ct · , L

spotted cat and muskrat sheared "But wh!'rc." sire il>k<'d. •·so." Artrmn., >aid. "he's il Lrrtk to look like beaver, :"could they find such a man·:" :'marl eook)·. !k's nuts on play- "There il ki<l10appPrt bo)·."'

Li;1hter shades predominated al' ·-~re." Artemus told lwr. in" l'''~s ;m<t rnhhcr;. lie's a' ,\rlcmn.~ conntcd. "you play the show although one French· "They have hecn 1-011,·i1wcd that .)t;~-n ,,;oop. fir's 20l notions. sn ,-our c:ml an<t I'll play mine.''

I lapin full-length, cut and belted. 1 :1m a fugitive gangster from· hr stHH>Ps. :\nri lw gets cau::ht · 'Then~ ilrc always f!lllls." in trench coat style. was shown Chicago named ,\ntun Spain. ><loopin;(. Ti1rn nobody h:mdles Lrrrl.; snul cul_dly. . . .. in bright red and could also be' I'm a lone wolf who has tl'ird him wisl'. ;\ohody huys !urn an. "Go look 111 the ho>JHtal,

'1 had in green or violet. Ito muscle in a toul(h rharacll'r ire-cream cone and hanrls him a Artemus sncri·ed. "The Ba!lins .~!iss Unil'ersr. 18 -year- old; who has bern associatrd with line. i\o. Sonw jerk loses hi:; brought in ::uns, and the dar.·

I Lmday Bement of Salt Lake Crty.lthe find in~ of one body: who head and Qrahs. Anrl every- tors arc picking lead out or m~dclled furs f~om ~c\'cral cou~:. has stumbled over another body body's in a jam. ll'ith a kidnap- them." He paused and crossed tries to emphas1ze 11hat sponsob in his bathroom· who was 111. in~ on lhcir !rands. I dorl't like eyes with the dapper law::cr. described ·as thP "universal char- volved in a >ho~ting affair in it.'' "Let's see you do your gun act~r" of the show. ~lis_s Ben:e~t which two Los Angeles gunmen • This , 111 :~rl kid sn<>op,;· trick again." he said, ''It was claims French ·. ~anadran _ongm were wounded last night They Leeds slid, "Into what docs he 'a dandy. Maybe you'd like to and says the orrgmal ~pelhng of

1 could not have invented a more 'snoop?" take on the job. Maybe you'd

her name was probably Beau-· suitahle person to frame." ; "How should I know'?'' Art~- like a showdown now." mont. : • • • mus dcmanrled. "All I kno1r rs "Don't be a fool," Leeds said.

Many ~f the coats ~odellcd I Artemus was dril•cn to his , .•·ou're in the soup and some- He was not afraid of a show· were dcsrgned and ~ut hke cloth, . -------------~ __ hodv's got to ladle you out." , rlown. That Artemus could see, ones. A brown Pers1an lamb: for 1 • • • "Somebodl' named Anton: hut affairs were not in a state example, had sleeves set Ill a lrrmmed With mmk. . . S · .... id. I ccds disanreeabh· :in which he could afford a r 1 t d · A hu"e cap stole of ~orwc- pam, sa - · • ~ · · s 1mu a e cape. . : . " •. e , · ·. , , "Don't try to crack any: showdown. Respectable lawyers

Among smaller fur J'Ieces was • ):!tan blue fox 11 as su·,gcsll' e o. . ,, . .. . 1 . , 1 b t" to shooting t I · "bl b]ac. • the 19•0s with its H'I'Jaround l".'hrps. Artemus ,,uri sharp)., canna e par ICS , a SQUare S 0 C Ill rever'! C K' " ' ' '' ' d • k f ' d " • affrai'S

1 and red moleskin ~nd .II flared' look. and a purple mont on jacket "It 011 t 111•1 ·c ncn s. • .. 1

· ·.: t . , I jacket of Russian pony treated with a ~ood collar was shown for • " ' 11carn '8n~ Continued) Ito look like Russian or~adtail anJ aftcr·skr or suhurban 1re~r. ''\\'hat docs makr friends'.'" · o •

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

5.00-News in a Minute 5.01-Bob Lewis Dance PartJ 6.00-News Highlighll 11.01-Weather 11.05-Bulletin Board 6.10-National Newa 6.15-Sport.s 6.25-Ever Battecy Newt 6.30-Club 93 7.02-Club 93 7.45-Don Jamieson's NeWI 8.00-Ncws in a Minute 8.01-Best from the Weat 8.30-National News 8.31-Best from the Weal 9.00-News in a Minute 9.03-Nfld. Soiree. 9.40-Report from United

Kingdom. 1.45-Dosco NewJ.

10.00-News Highlights 10.01-The Hammer Guy. 10.30-National Newa 10.~Spor!J 10.~5-Music in the Night 11.00-News Highlights 11.03-Muaie in the Night 12.01-Music in the Night

CJON-CJOX-TV

TUESDAY, Oetober ~il.

IUS-Cartoons. 11.00-Romper Room 12.00-Local and National New•

Summary UO-My Little Margie. 4.30-All Star Theatre. 5.00-Liberace 5,30-Follow Me US-Here's my Pel 6.00-Buccaneers &.25-The World ot Sports

With Howle Meeker, 1.30-News Cavalcade, 1.00-The Real MeCoy'a. '7.:!1-Manhnnt 11.00-Lill Palmer Show, 11.15-Natlonal Newa 8:39-1 Love LUCJ t.OO-Bachelor Father 9.30-Chevy Mystery Show,

10.(0-Fronl Page Challenge, 11.00-Red Skelton. 11.30-Ciose·Up. 12.30-New• Headlinea

· GETS CUNARD POST

MONTREAL WPl-Capt. Nor­man E. Rees·Potter, senior of· fleer of the Queen Elizabeth and the Queen Mary when the giant ships were carcylng troops during the Second World War. SUnday was appointed marine superin· tendent for Canada of the Cuoord Steamship Company. He succeeds Commtldore R. V. Youd, whore­tired, recently after 36 years with the company.

oct4.,::J

ook neater longer

AMAZING TERYLENE/WOOL

shrugs away wrinkles, keeps pressing bills low !

See this wonder fabric at TIP TOP now in

dozens of new patterns and colours. Let the sure

hand of a TIP TOP craftsman fit you into the

TerylenejWool picture in a ·tailored to measure·

suit at our one price only .

THE

MODEL

SHOP.

WHERE QUALITY

COUNTS.

~£o/J~

ALL TIP TOP TAILORED TO MEASURE SUITS

on~':72SO pnce/

THE WORLD'S LARGEST ONE PRICE TAI~ORED TO MEASURE CLOTHIERS

SECTION· II THE DAILY t~EWS SECTION II

Conception Bays

Glee Club Progress

I Wedding Bells BAY ROBERTS- Holy Re­

deemer Catholic Church, Bay

News

Personal·s BAY ROBERTS - Mr. and

Mrs. Leonard Burke and ~·oung son 'left by TCA on I•'ridny past for their home in St. Jovite. P.A. After spending a brief visit with Leonard's parents, :Oir. and Mrs, J. L. Burke.

IIARP.OUR GRACE-Th~ src- Roberts was the scene of a ond mcclin!! of the newly form· \'cry pretty wedding on Sal· Pel Glee Cluh was held at the urday Sept. lOth. when at 7 atulitorium of the C<'ntral High Jl.m. Catherine, youngest daugh· School on Thur.~clay m•cnin.~ tcr or 1'11r. and llll·s. Patrick with 91 prcsrnl, Fitzpatrick !Jecamc _the bride of

Plans for the fnturc nf the 1 LAC Roller! 1Jobb1c, son o( , 1\lrs. Eric Churchill anrl \Irs. Cl•lh we considered a•1d the • ~Ir. allll, Mrs. Ilo~Jcrt Dobbie, I R.o~ert Hardy p~id a business m;:ttrr nf spason;ll frrs were Sr. ol Hanley, B.C. i I'ISlt to St. Johns on Wednes. di· •·nssr•l. 'falc double ring ceremony

1

. day, . The fnlluwin~ ll'<'rr nppuint· was performed by Hcv .. Joseph . ---

ed to look after carh town. ('ilr· llc·.:<m, 1'.1'. of North Rl\'cr. Mrs. IRcv.) J. B. Reynolds hn~rlr. )lr. ,John Lc~mon; liar· 'i otc hr:tlc, gixrn in mat'l'ia~e 1 and daughter Debbie are prefi· hour Gr;11·c. ~lis~ Dr:: nne Shrp- lly her father. looked radiantly · enUy spending a few dayfi with p:~;·ct; Ba~· Roberts, :\Irs. J. Wil· 1 l.le_lulif\11 w.caring a. white ball: Rev. Reynold's parents, Mr. ~nd )i::ms; S;Hmiilrd's lla)', Wss . c;·ma lcngt:J ~ortra1t_ gown of Mrs. J. Reynolds, Burnt Pomt, )l~rina Bishop, 1 ull lucc wtth Imger llp sleeves, B.D.V, We are pleased to re·

Thr>e pet·sons may he re- , i1cr cilapel length veil _was held port Rev. Reynolds mother has fc··~ct.l tu in connection with I in pl&ce by a pearl llara, and recovered satisfactorily from r 1:·ttcr~ dc::ling with meetings, c.~r.1cd a bouquet of red and her recent illness. fr"' clt•. wi1ilc roses, The bride's attend·

The Glcr Cluh will c[firi;ll- ancc were her sbter, Mrs. Ar- Members of St. Matthew's I•· ·•d umlrr wav on Thnrstla)' · liwr Price as matron of honour CEW A East and West branches, ~\T~ing, Octohrr' 6th. About ·~~aid ~!iss ;\largaret l'icco . as

1 Sl, John the Evangelist branch,

th .rtv mm·e men would be wei· Drllll'Sn!l!ld, both wore ballerma I Col~y's Point and St. Mark's l':nncd into the Club. ll·n·:;th gowns ol Iemond and ; branch, Shearstown, motored to

pink respectfully, with match·: Carbonear Thursday evening to 1 iu;: acccssori~s, their bouquets i attend the annual church ser-Personals 1 Wl'l'C of mulll-coloured mums. 1 vice of Conception Bay North 1 ;\bly bUpporting the groom 'district branches, CEW A held at

11.\HBOUH GH:\l'E ~lbs wcl'c Raymond . Fitlpatl'ick, 1

St. ,James' Church where the ~\J;·,· DU1111 eccumpaniecl hy her llrothcr o( the bride and John ll!Ucsl preacher was Rev. P. G. 1nnthcr. ~Irs. Alire Dunn who D:twsun. H. ~lohan, Secretary Canadian h:.rl spent their months •:ac~tion The wedding music wa:; Bible Society. Following the \'isitin~ ~In;_ Dunn's dau~hter. bcautJl!tlly rendered by the' service a meeting of the mcm· :llr>. \r. Maher ami f;~mily at ·church organist ~!iss Winnie . bers was held in the Parish ,<. .., • •• . •• , • · ·

"t•c·llai!S., rrtur11Ccl home on . Brennan, _ass_istcd b_y the R. C. 1· Hall, when Rev. Mohan showed · 1 • h · 'I p 1 T b Ia,. ca11~ 1t 1'an •mbassador If ;~hur>cla•·. ~!iss Dunn hils re- School Prmc1pal :\hss :Olargarel films or the places he has 1'isit- Reuben C. Baetz, assistant national commissioner Ill the Canadian Red Cross Society (TI~ 1t). '' s owing ·' r. au rem ,, " ·"'

· 1 ·Dawson who sang the very love· 11 ed 1·n our Island home, 1·n Con· Chile, the jeep pt·ese••trd to the Chilean Red Cross as 1 gift of the Canaclian Reel Cro•s anti the peOille of Canada. ~lr. Baetr. '1\'as guest speaker a& ~tuned her duties as accountan d' R d c s · 0 1 b 3

with the Avalon Telephone co. ly hymn "On this Day Oh i nection with his work. the annual meeting ol Newfoundland Division of the Cana 1an e ross • oc1ety on co er · Jicautiful Mother." j __ __ --~-~ ~-~--- - ~----· --·· --- ------ ----

)lr. F. P. Sheppard who had ' • :Fol.lowing the ceremony, the I Mr. and Mrs. Milton Nose- ship of these teams is as fol- c Rowe Trevor Snow r)lgr• the spots a huge success. spent a forlhnights \'acation : wcdd~ng party motored to j worthy are rejoicing in the birth lows:- a;ld Capt. .J. v. Rabbits t coach'. 1 The program for the S p or t s with relatives nt Syclnl',l', N.S. 'Clarks Hotel, 1\larysvale, where of a baby boy, at the Grace Stnior Track Champions congratulations will be released ~ery shortly so returned home on Thursday; the r·eception was. held •. The i Hospital, St. John's. A brother George R. Crane, George Par- President Rahbitts is in re- that all athletes will be able to aud has resumed duties as :mother of the bflde rece1ved,l for Tony. sons, Gordon Follett. Raymond ccipt of a letter of congratula- see just what events they wil_l be Town Clrrk. i wearing a _strcc~ length go~n /1 --~·Wilkins, Douglas Wilkins, Tho- lion from Collnel G. \1. Stirling, entering but, in the mcantm1c,

! of navy With p1~k accessor~es Gwen Bussey celebrated her mas Tansley. John Candow. \\'il- Q. c.. Regimental Commander lads could get in training so th~t The many friends of ~lr. Colin: and c~rsage of pmk and wh1tc 16th. birthday on Wednesday, liam Hart, Ronald West, For- of the Brigade in ;.;ewfoundland,: they w11l be ready when the b1g

.Tones are pleased to welcome: carnal!ons. . Sept. 28th, with a party at her : re>t Follett, Eric Budden. Ches con;.:ratulating all athlets, par- night comes along. him back to Harbour Grace i The toas,t to the bnde 1yas 1 home !or her little friends.: Thursda\· or this week will lion_ of '\'al'al Kit helon•ln• to Sullivan, ,Joe Budden, William ticularlv those of ~he Sen i or· P~•cr se\'cral months spc~t with

1

. pro~osed lly lllr. Robert Fllz· ~ernice and Linda. reported hav-

1

b r in~ 'yet anoth.cr Battalion 10 t~m e; members or" 1: he \\'ells, Arthur Wi~so.r, \l'.allace Track ;ream on their achieve- DUCHESS DIES h1s daughter and familY at, patrick, the groom responded mg a wonderful hme. ~ight for the Bri•mle and a 11 ' Companv also belts and gaiters. 1 :llercer. Donald Ih~gms. t_,eorg~ mcnt durin~ lhr pi15l season in IL\S'fl:-IGS. Engla•ld iAP• :\'ir.nip~g. :l!anitoba. Mr. Jones; an_d proposed the_ toast to the , • l\1' A 1 1 1

ranks are asked 1~ be in their: Any fm:n;er member who has. Cobb, Lewis Bickford, Fran~ the interesh of the Brigade The dowager Duchess of Bedford ~~ lookmg well although he: bndesmids to which Mr. John I o~ St. Johns, . ' tss , I ge a respective places for that' any of these items in his poses-. Bennett. Particular reference is made to died in hospital Sunday -after ~llfffred a serious illness while! Dawson responded. ~clegrams Hickey, Mr. Patrick Cal roll of. Parade. I sion it would be appreciated and, Junior Track Team,. . George Crane finally winning out bein• found uncon-cious last away, ! w~re read from. their many /Harbour Grace. 1 CA:'IIP DONATIONS . their donation dUI)• recorded m. Geoffrey F?.llett \\ ;~h~m G.aul· in the 10 ~ile run, r;nd the re- wee!~ in her country •home. She

fr1ends and relatives, also one ~he young couple were the 1 Now that the 1960 Camp is but! this column 50 please bring them ton, Arthur \\ msor, \\ 1lhnm Coul- cord brcakmg performances or was ?fi. The duchess was the ,_Irs. Ed. Whelan left on Fri. from the g.room's parents who j' rec1pent. of many lov~Jy .and' a memory, and all accounts arc along to the Armoury on Tuesday, ta_s, JR., A.lex Yctmln, Robe r.t t:eor~e Parsons and Gordon widow of the 12th Duke of Bed·

!lay by H. :ItS. Newfoundland were unavoidably absent, , useful g,{ts, They ~a\ e smce just about settled, we would like nights. : R1ce, Leslie Ryan Gerald Bm · I· ollelt. ~\'ell run to all.. ford. One of her two sons is the fur New York. She was accom· The honeymoon was spent at i left for Summel'Side, P.~.I. to register tllose kind pop I e Lieut. )losdell would also like ret ~!axwell _Sheppard, ,J_o h 11 · I:">DO~R ~P?,RTS . ·present duke-the showman peer panied by :>Irs. James Carroll. St. John's, Out of town gue.sts 1 w~cre they are both serv1_ng who supported the camp by their to sec any lads come along who: Hayward, ~ev1? Clark~ •. Clifford Ali Compame, 111 ·!le Batlahon who rcccnllv married French tel·

were Mr. and :llrs, Robert F1tz·l with the RCAF and took w1th contributions and to thank them would Jil;c to be mcmiJers or the Bennett, R1cha1d Lamo11ood and 1nll be. pleased to hnow that· cdsion producer Nicole Milinair.

C · E t patrick; 1\lr. and :l!rs. Leo Filz· :them th~ best wishes ?f their most heartily for their continued Naval Company. The age for Da~id Bennett. there will be an Indoor Sports om I ng ven s patrick; ~tr. and Mrs. Arthur I many rmnds for happmess in interest in the affairs of the joining is 12 years and over and Jumo~ Foot~an Team -· . Sports held in the Armoury on. -BAY ROBERTS_ The Unit· Price; :.liss Margaret Picco all: the years ahead. Brigade and the camp:- there is room· there for you and ,Bas11 ~mrd (Capl.l,, ."•~!Jam Suturday, ~owmber ~6th, at 8.00~ P.\RIS (Reutcrsl -The eur-

~d Church, East branch w.A. ------ -··------ ··- Robert Caines, Sr., 20.00; :l!r. your pal, so come along any \\ells iVICe Capt.l, 11. ~Ill a.~ p.m .. when the Team Shield, put rent issue of France Obsen·a· will hold their annual fall sale and Mrs. Ron !\lacDonald 5.00; Tuesday night, in (act, why not • ~art !Secy,) Ches Sulh\an, \\d· up b)' the Old Comrades, will be, tcur, a left-wing weekly review. S T E AM S H I P MovEMENTs Colonel G. M. Stirling, Q. c., make 1·1 ".· OW. ,

1

ham Coultas, .Jr.· ~onald D. ay, be the target of all Companies.· has been seized by the Frenclt of work with turkey suppers on r " R B D d G 1 l' c • 1 · d October 26th.·27th. in the U.C.! 25.00; in memory F. W. Pike, ATHLETIC ASSOCIAT!OS I aster rown, 31'1 arc m~r: ompany .ommanr.crs an' . government Jt was announce

1 10.00; L. G. Garland 10.00: Brent Thursday Septem!J<or 29, 19fi0 1

- Edward French, Paul R e 1 n others concerneri are asked to co- Thursdav. The seizure was made School. Bay Roberts East. I THE NFLD. GRio;AT LAKES r lor St. John's, Berg lO.OO; G. R. Williams, is the dat~ on which the c. L. B .. Ernest Cul'l!ew, Donald Saund · opernte in hm·ing as many en- because· of the publication of an

Central United Church \\'.A. STEAMSIIIPS LTD, 1 S.S. Gowrie loa~ing at Toron· ~!BE, 1o.OO: G. Phillips 1o.oo: Athletic Association was revi:ed.l ers. Paul 1Fa:ey, ~dward DJw~. tries a, po,siblc in rach crent unsigned article on the attitude

will hold their annual sale of 1 S.S. Gowrie loading at Tor· ·to Oct. 29th, Hamilton Oct. 30t~. H. A. Outerbridge, 'oiiBE, 25.oo: After ha,·ing been dormant 51~ce I Roland \\ane~--.J~~- _!"'! c e ~. and to help in all wa:;s to make of youth to the .-\Jgcrian war. work with meat and salad sup. I onto Oct. 6th, Hamilton Oct. I Montreal Nov. 2nd for St. Johns Rev. T .. Smith 5.00; W. R. 195~ it is now back in operallon -~ .. -~ ~- -~ ~~~---p~r~. on .Wednesday Nov. 2nd .. , 7th, 1\Iontr~al Oct. lOth, for St.: and Bol';"ood.. Canning 5.00; Rev. C. J. Aura· and it is hoped that all members \\'lth l'ariOus stalls and added 'John's and Bofwood • Refr•geratHin. ham 5.00; H. J. Stabb ami Co. will get behind !heir Athletic ~llractions, I M.V. London loading at Mon· CLARKE sn:~MSHIP co. 5.00; Major R. ,), Noel 10.00: Association and help them by

' trcal Oct, 20th for Botwood. •Novaport leavmg Montreal :\irs. w. NoPl 5.00; in memory competing in all endeavours that St. Matthews West Branch, ~I.V. Perth loading at Tor,. Sept. 28th., due St. John's Oct. w. Reel'es 5.oo; Maior J. 111. C. thev mav mnke.

fEW A will hold their annual I onto Oct. 12th, Hamilton Oct. 3rd, leave Oct. rlth. Facey 15.00: Babb Construction The first meeting wa~ held in fall sale of work with meat and j16th, l\lonlreal Oct. 18th for ' •Gulport leaving , Montreal 25.00; Magistrate w. Mercer 5.00; the Armoury on Thursday, ~ep­Falad suppers on No1•cmber St. John's and Botwood. I Oct, 5, due St. Johns Oct 10, cecil Peddle s.oo: His Honor the !ember 29 1960 and w;~s prcs1ded 23rd with various added attrac-) *M.V. Dundee loading at 'saili"g Oct. 12. Lieut. Governor 25.00; J. Craw· sided 0 ~ e r by Captain John lions followed by a card game; Toronto Oct. 22nd, Hamilton Highlincr leaving M.ontrcal ford 5.00; Capt H. Noel 10.00: v. Rabbitts, who had been ap· at nh:ht, · i Oct. 23rd, 1\lontreal Oct. 26th Oct, 12, due St. John's Oct. 17, Rev. L.A . .T. Ludlow 5.00; Harold pointed Convenor by the Com-

sailing Oct. 19, Bay Rob6l'ts. Parmiter 10.00; Archibald Farms manding Officer. Caotain Rab·

\

- Sa~e with • • •

THE EASTERN CANADA

\ SAVINGS AND LOAN

~- COMPANY --

Paid on Debentures for 5-10 years, 4Y2 for 1 and 2 years and 5% for 3. and 4 years.

A safe and profitable Trustee ln~estment

Rate of interest guaranteed throughout term selected.

$1000.00 in~ested in a Cumulative Debenture for 5 years will earn $327.80

ANY AMOUNT OF $100.00 AND UPWARDS ACCEPTED.

4% PAID ON SAVINGS ACCOUNTS.

. CHEQUEING PRIVILEGES IF DESIRED. For full details\.and supply of -depasit;by mall .forms, write, terephone or call at ·

THE EASTERN· CANAIJA . SAVINGS AND· LOAN · CO.

(Established 18i7) 170 WATER STREET P.O. BOX 543

PHONE 3335 - 7241 . CLAUDE E~ DAWE, Man~ger.

•Novaport leaving !llontreal 10.00; W. and J. Moores Ltd. bits explained to the selected le· Oct. 19, due St. John's Oct. 24, 25.00; and a rery special thank presentatives the puroose of the sailing Oct. 26. you to Harry Lakin, w h o meeting, and then called on

•Gulport leave Montreal Oct. annually looks after doin~ at I fi!ajor J. J\1. c. Facey, Command-26th, arrive St. John's Oct. 31st, the plumbing hookup for the ing Avalon, to conduct the clec-leave Nov. 2nd. Camp. lion of officers for the n e w

Highliner leave Montreal NAVAL COMPANY Association. Major Facey hoped Nov 2nd., due St. John's Nov. 1 Lieut. Harold Mosdell requests t h at the Association would 7th, sailing Nov. 9th, I me to advertise the fact that flourish and wished it well in all

•Novaport leaving Montreal the Naval Company at He a its future undertakings. T h e Nov, 9th, due St. John's Nov. d·Quarters would like to get dona- following officers were the n

14th, sailing Nov. 16th. York Sept. ~7 • Saint John, N.B., elected:- . , •Gulfport leaving Montreal Sept, 30, leaving Halifax Oct. Hon. Pres1dent: MaJor J. M.

Nov, 16th, due St. John's Nov. . . St J h • Nfld C. Facey • . 21st, sailing Nov. 23rd. 3• arnvmg · 0 n s, · Hon. Vice Presrd~nt: Mr. Enc

"Refrl.:eratlon. Oct. 7; for Bay Roberts and Cor· G. Pomeroy, President C.L.B. GULlo' AND NORTHERN ner Brook. Old Comrade

SHIPPING CO. FURNESS, WITHY &: CO. LTD. President: C aPt. John V. Newfoundland leaving Liver· Rabbits •Fergus leave Charlottetown,

PEI, Sept. 30th, Pictou Oct. 1st., due St. John's Oct, 3rd., sail· lng Oct. 4th.

•Fergus ieave Charlottetown, PEI Oct. 7th, Pictou Oct. 8th, due St, John's Oct. lOth., sail· ing Oct, 11th.

"Fergus leave Charlottetown Oct. 14th, leave Pictou Oct. 15th, arrive St. John's Oct. 17th, leave Oct. 18th.

•Fergus leave Charlottetown, Oct 21st,. Pictou Oct. 22nd, due St. John's Oct. 24, sailing Oct. 25th.

•Fergus leave Charlottetown Oct. 28th, leave Pictou, N.S. Oct. 29th, arrive St. John's Oct. 31st, leave St. John's Nov. 1st.

•Fergus leave Charlottetown, P.E.I. Nov. 4, leave Pictou, N. S. Nov. 5th, arrive St. John's Nov. 7, leave Nov. 8.

•Fergus leave Charlottetown, P.E.I. Nov, 12th, leave Pictou, N.S. Nov. 12th, arrive St. John's Nov. 14th, leave St. John's Nov. 15th.

•Refrigeration. NJl'LU,·CANADA STEAMSHIPS

•M.V, Woodcock , due St. John's toda)t,

M.S. Bedford II sailing from Montreal Sept. 29th, due St. John's Oct. 3rd.

M.V. "Fauvette" salling fr()m Halifax 'Sept. · 30th, due St. John's Oct. 2nd. •

0REFRIGERATION

FURNESS 'RED CROSS S.S. 1 Guernsey leavinlli New

pool Sept. 23, due St. John's Vice President: Capt Harold Sept, 30. Leaving for Halifax H. Haynes and Boston Oct. 1, due Halifax Secretary: c. r;. M. Aubrey S. Oct. 3 and Boston Oct. 6. Leav· Rogers .. ing Boston Oct. 7 and Halifax Treasurer; c. s. M. Wilham Oct. 11, due St. John's Oct. 13. Hart. Sailing again same day· for Committee: C·nptains D. A. Liverpool. Edwards, w. B. Co u It as,

Nova Scotia lew;ing Liverpool Lieuts, J. B. Pye, G. R. Locke. Oct. 12, due St. John's Oct. 18. B. s. M. c. Murdoch, C. P. 0. C. Leaving for Halifax and Boston Russell c. S. i\f. W. Taylor, Oct. 19, due Halifax Oct. 21 and Sergts. 'G. R. Crane, D. Wilkins, Boston Oct. 24. Leaving Boston G. Parsons, L·Scrgts. S. Fol­Oct. 25 and Halifax Oct. 29, due lett, D. Woolgar, L-Corpl. N. St. John's Oct, 31. Sailing again Facey and c. s. M'S K. Fowler same day for Liverpool. and N. Simpson from Foztrap

Newfoundland leaving• Liver· co. and L-Seamen Chafe and pool Oct. 28, due St. John's Dallon from Petty Harbour. Nov. 14, Leaving for Halifax In addition to this Committee, and Boston Nov. 5, due Halifax others .as may be needed can be Nov. 7 and Boston Nov. 10. added from time to time. Leaving Boston Nov. 11 and A very pleasing event was t~at Halifax Nov. 15, due St. John's of conferring an Honorary V1ce Nov. 17. Sailing again same day Presidency on Mr. Eric G. for Liverpool. Pomeroy who is !also President

Nova Nova Scotia leaving of the Old Comtades of t h e Liverpool Nov. 16, due St. John's Brigads, and who,Hs i(eenly _in· Nov. 22. Leaving for Halifa-x terested in all kiril!s ~~ athletics, and Boston Nov. 23, due Hali!ax being l!lso a !~mer ~ oothall Nov. 25 and Boston Nov. 28. player of note in .~e 1930 s. Leaving Boston Nov. 29 and ATHLETIC\TEAMS Halifax 'nee. 3, due St: John's One of the firs~items on the Dec. 5. Sailing again same day agenda for the t!le·.vly forn:ed for Liverpool. Association was ijiat of puttmg

Nova Scotia leaving Liver· the plans in operation for t h e pool Dec. 7, due St, John's Dec. holding of a Part'y for the h?n-13, Leaving for Halifax and Bos· ouring of the Brigade's Semor ton Dec. 14, due Halifax Dec. 16 Track and Field Champions for and Boston Dec, 19. Leaving 1960. It is also planned to in· Boston Dec. 20 and Halifax Dec .. vile the members of the Juvenile 24. Salling direct from Halifax j team as well as the members for Liverpool, not ca\ling St. of the Junior Footb~ll team. The .Tohn'a. complete listinlli or the member·

Tom Matson has lived his life the way he likes, sailing his Great Lakes steamer 'through the

maze of rivers, lakes and canals from the Lake­head to the St. Lawrence. After retirement next year, he's going to go on sailing in his own

. trim craft ... a happy plan made possible by banking his savings regularly.

Mary Parsons doesn't ·know port from star­board but she keeps a very shipshape home. Paying bills through her Personal Chequing Account gives her a firm hold on household expenses and help~ her save too.

Two very different people, but both of them find the friendly courteous service of The Canadian Bank of Commerce a real help in· planning their futures and enjoying the rewards of their wor~-

THE CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE

. . ' . .

Call us your· bankers

. ')

/

_, ~·

.lo ____ _.. _________________________________ T:.,:.H:.::,E..:;:D:,:A:!!;JLY!..:.::N.::.;EW:!;S~; ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., MONDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1960

DOMINION ALE Not 1n11rtecl by Boord of Uquor Confral,

light, yet satisfying THE IENNETT BREWING CO., LTD. . Brewers- since 112i

' ,..

Commercial Bowling NELLIE O'KEEFE--401

Nellie wns sure in great form lnst ni.l(hl ns sh•: l!tll·

rlassed the men in this Lcngue when she posted lh:! highc;t single frame so far this scason.-401. S~u! :~bJ rnme Ill) with a fine three frame of 881. Congratulu­!iom Nellie O'Keefe.

Other fine scores last night :trc as follow;:-

High Three Jo'rames: J. O'Keefe .. • J. Cowan V. Gorman . . . .....

Men's Civil

~THCUNARD Lea'fW fey wind.t and lluth:9 eh·eetl

beh!Dd. Buk iD aunlit days, enjoy moonlit nighta 111 your Cu1111rd cruise liner

UDlolda the beauty of now oouthera •ttinp ••• tho picturcoqu.e Wcot lndi.,

• , • the hiatoric wonders or the blue Mediterranean. Or tour the whole

world ia the air-conditioned CARON lA, the largeot, most lu1urious liner

ever built for crui•inr. Marvellous cuisine • , • unsurpa.;scil

Cunard oervice •• , entertainment for everyone ••• the holiday of a lifetimol

SUNSHINE CRUISES lrt11 low l11k It tbt lost ln<ll11 ... S.Utk Amodttlo tb

f•lly ok"'oodltlond III.UlETANIA Dtcooober 20 13 days 6 porll $395 up

$500 ., $-465 up $415"' $300 up $300up

february -4 18 dayo 11 porto february 25 17 days 10 porto March 11 15 days 9 porfl April 4 12 doys 6 porfl Aprl111 12 days 6 ports

CAIOIIA lOlli CIIISI S<lili•Q from Now Yorl:,

JfJfHJGry 21, 1961 95 days-19 poris­

T .'1 eoUttlrlto­fro• $2,17 5 .,

I

Sff 'I'OUI lOCAt AG!Nl'-NO OHI CAN SfliYI YOU 1m11

UIOIIA !PUll IIDIIIlllNEAI CIUII(

Salli•g fro,. Now Yort, May a, 1961

39 dayo-17 porfs­lle..,.lrits­frooo $975 up

Cunard .. ..,., ...... .375 Barrington St., Halifax, N.S. Phone: 3-9363

T.~._DA-IL•Y-~._ •. _s_T._J~OH~N~~~·~N~FL~D~.,~TU~E~SD~A~Y,~O~C~T~OB~E~R~4,~1~9~~~----------------------------------------------------------------------~·11

Starting 1

Lineups For Series PITTSBURGH <Ap1-Probable

slarting lineups for Wednesday's world series opener at Forbe.; Field. <Se~son butting avcmgcs and pitc:lin~t rrcords in paren­theses:

NEW YORK Kubck, SS 1.2't3l Lopez, LF I .2841 M:tris, RF I .283l Mantle. CF 1.2751 S!;owron, IB 1,3091

t~rra, C 1.27GI Eo~·cr. SB 1.~4~ 1 R'chardson, ?tl C.2j21 Ditmar, p llfi-91

,• PITTSi':TJRGTI Virdon CF '.:;.p

(;1, 1 1 '-It, f

r.roal. SS 1 .32i> 1 f':i11ne:·. !.F I onl s:~~~rt. -1!1 1$~1 r·,r~~rr;. r 1 .!':- P r,~.,~c''~C'. RT·~ I ~t~\

H1~!c. :lR 1 .~"~ 1

:i:::eros~:i. ~B !.:!71 1

1.1\1', p 1:0-~l

St. Bon's Drop PWC ..

6-2 In Senior Opener Reg Farrell Scores Five Goals

St. Bon'a opened Senior ln·1 : tercollcgiale football with a , 6-2 victory over Prince of Wales at the Ayrc Athletic Grounds

' yesterday afternoon. The Blue­,1 golds got five big tallies fro!ll the talented boot of center Reg

1

Farrell and were never in

I trouble as they built up a 3·0 halflime advantage.

I Farrell sent officials looking , through the record books and : as far as could be learned his i five marker total is tops in the , I ntercolle.6iate circuit in recent years. Gerry Brennan of St. Bon's scored four goals in the

11952 season to be next to Far- ' ' rei\. II Derm :\!cGettigan added the other St. Bon's goal with Don REG FARRELL

... ,,·"·'' f Campbell, Dick Yabsley; Don ; Warr and Dave Kendall.

REFEREE: Gerry Smith.

LINEUPS

ST. BON'S - Goal: Jim Fltz. patrick; Fulls: Don Crane, Ed. Healey; Halves. Pete Byrne,

, l\Iike Dohoney, Gerry Doyle; Forwards: Bren Rumsey, Danny

• , )lcGettigan, Reg Farrell, Derm • ~lcGettigan, John Chancey.

. PRINCE OF WALES -Goal: :John )!oore; Fulls: Mac Lemes­. seriur, Bob Johnson; Halves: Pete Roberts, Jan Campbell,

'Da1·e Kendall; Forwards. Dick Yabsley, Don Warr, Crosbie Guzzweii,Tom Barbour, Bob nice.

\\' arr and Bob Rice registering score and made it 5·0 on anolh· for Prince of Wales.

TODA Y'S GA:\IE

t'mpirc.;: Dn;;l ,. Rnt·~~~~ 1 :\a­tioM11 p'1t~: .lohn ~!Hrl'~ l,'m· ~l'ic~nl first l'asr: Rill .Jacl·o•.':· ~kl ~~~ti~nall sccod lnsc: ~'r;;. t~r CIJ)'lak 1 Am~ric~n \ thir·J hnsc: St:•n l.ande, 1 :\at ion all >rd .lim Honochic!; 1 American I foul , lines.

1 er pivot shot after Peter B)Tne Junior Intercollegiate soccer ,H'T!O~ in )'Cs\~rday arterncon's opening game of In!crcoll:~;_.·~ s ... ~!or Football ha> Prince of Wales goalie John Moore Des_piteh the fou_rt goal hdiffer- fed him an off. swings into action today. Prince

I r J I Ch f Sl B ' Tl "l II "" D 'I "' Ph t ence m 1 e score 1 was 1 e top · 1 of \"ales and St. Bon's 'ace off t=nckill~ UJJ a s 10t rom om ance)' o . on s. 1e .. ue r,o ·:' wun v·~.- a1 Y ,,ews o o. goal-keeping of Jim Fitzpatrick, Dick Yab~ley c~mcd the ba I ' • ..------- ·-· - ------- - --------- _ .. __ - ..... strong fullback work of Don down. the n~hl s1de to set up in the opening cneo~nter at the

enou"h for him to hit a sharp · C d th 1 k I f . h b I the ftrst PWC goal. He drew. Fr.1ldtan Grounds w1th starting

Euards P . I ract~ce: GROAT 1/S READY

' "ron~der to second base. II P~~e ~n , ~ a~h ~ tnls si the St. Bon's defence to one time set for 4.30 p.m. o . , orna_r 5 . a gave ·1 side and slipped a pass to Don'

Game tim~-2 p.m . ..\DT "The, second baseman threw 1 Bon s t~e wm. Prmce of Wales Warr standing unchecked. \\'arr!

me out.' satd Groat, "but I fell i broke 1 ~to the Bluegold. zone 1 belted the ball behind Fitzpat·: the rl·r·.·t ~~. : good. 1 had hit the ball right I often Wilh Crane and F1tzpat- 1 • k f 51 Guard~ haw called " , on the no~e and there was no rick being th~ big stumbling! ricf. orlla .t h~amfef.th I f

S ~ w t' ar.r hockey practice of the s~ason. . ll)' .101-: REl.Cili.I·:B,. . ~ ~>nl.'· 75 per <·t·nt hraled. llut I . 11 y 't . . 1 blocks I ;~rrc go 1s 1 goa or

New Corner Brook Goalie er.es ea ~~" An o;Jcn workout for the' Ass,<ll'l~l~d ,rr:•ss SIJ(Jrfs \-,~··trr h:•d to find out. I want~d to nam at a . 0\1 can Imagme I • St. Bon's on p penalty shot to

IGllar(l ' 1-11111·0 r sctuad will be .IIT~SBlR<dl (,\Pl-.-- ''.hen play in lire world st•rics morr how ~ood that felL It was, Up front Farrell was the St.im k 't 61 1 ., b 11 " - onlv one swin!' hut somehow I' Bon's story, He spearheaded a' ahbe d1 f · ·hand ~.-ampd cF '"'3151•, ·-- ,held tonight with a second drill' D1ck <.roat.ldt the_ Plitsb•,•:gh t:~an ~ll)'lhi,.~ else in the world .. · k l'd .. h 11 1 1 tl k' f d ]' ,na e or an san arre

I'ITTSRURGII (.\PI-Most· :sci for Wednesday night. I ~lugout to p~neh htt !n t~w 1 li!rd 1 h<td hrt•n dreaming of doin~ JUSttll·n~vw rid ser~e: J e o p ay s1~nhoo fl wor ·t~g . orwpar . J~el. i laced a low drive through the R f k . d ·Aa•her w&s' 1 Both practices will start at , mnma of I m!a)' lll':ht s g:·mr th:·t ;incc 1 '':as a Iii tlc hoy." Ill e o · e or mer JUmor rovme1a 'center of the PWC goal. cports rom Corner Broo

aunn) an warm "' • · · · ' •'tl '1'1 · k 1 · k "· ., . ., · (' 1 1 k star for St I awrence banged •' t d · d' t d th t th lor•Aas• for th~ opening name 17.00 p.m. and will be held at I. Ill l " I II au cr. us IH {' "I c , ro;l . 1 w acnQwlcd ~cd . ' , n , Dirl· Yabsley was back to •et yrs er ay m tea e a t

'' • " • a ttlall'' I k " II I I I 1 f t' 1·· 1 1 '' Groat's wrist still is not lull.'· pass from '.l'1ke Doho11e" on an' ' · · \\'est Coast center may have a h ' ·ld ' 'e here Wed· the Prince o[ Wales Arena. All' c . ' s la lll~. ·~ nn: s Ci\0,('1' " ,)(' ll'a cs. I >e "a· ·' , th d f p

0( t e II<Jo. serl s j . . 111ere 1cc cold and I he drm11 at"l L••nal I.r;:::ll<'s JrJdin~ hiller mrtrled ~nd it won't he for SCI'·' indirect free kick into ti1c PWC up · e se~nn scor~. or · rmcc new hockey goalie for the com· nesda)' between !'lew York those Wlshmg to ITY for a hcrth I cll'lll'' ll'callter l1a<l 111 tll.lll" to 'lll'i ton "tl<l'<l t f 1 era! weeks yet. But Dick can I mesh at 10.14 and added num- of \\ales 111 the dy_mg. mmutes 1·n, .<.'a.•on. John '".'t'"get•." Yankees and Pittsburgh Pir· I with the Guards team are to d : 11 .1 ' 1 ·' ' · •· e .. · 1 " c or mo< lil·r with it The tou~hrst part 1,, 1 th . 1 1 t of the contest. Th1s lime Bob ~ c , ·" ~ ·'

d th a tl·c s • o WI 1 1 . 1 :ll1wh!t• pla~·er honors. had · · • ver wo rce mmu cs a cr on R'. .. th ·k 1 1 h . ~Iadinsky has been at Corn~r .t•a atten e pr c c. "I I 11 f 'I" I . l·s '''llcn he llll·s·.rs a. '.ll'l·ng Blld'oann)' .'lcGcttl'gan's pass. , Icc lias e mat snan o ale :::..:.':.:· ______________ :._______ ac ua v. ll'as a raH, Ill' l'ol "ccn act lOll siner Sept. 6 , ·• j ·' Brook s1'nc last sprt'ng and

- has to turn h1s wn<t~ on the D '! G tt' 1 't ~ 0 . the encounter end 6-2 for St. , e Pirates' captains ami slwristop b•raus:• of a liTis! f;··;cturc. • · ; · crm ,, c e 1gan rna< e 1 ,,. , Bon's :latest reports say he will be

La And D• recalled Monday. "I hadn't 1:.\ n~. "f Sl\T:'IlG UAT follow throu;;h. That~ when he for St. Bon's at the intermission · · staying there for the winter.

W Jtmar swung a hat in actil·e compcti· lie hmln't o~1·an:: ~ hat. cl'en !eels pain. The determined when he countered on a cross I It was Farrell, Crane and A native of Sydney, N.~ .• lion in three weeks. I cli<ln't in pr::~:irr. until four da)'s he· ::oung man has found a,rcmedy from John Chancey. ,~:oalie Fitzpatrick as the St. )ladinsky wa5 ll'ith the New know how the wrist would rcncl. h•·r. But thrre hr wa; faciug, for that, though. Farrell got all three St. Bon's: Bon's standouts with -'like GlaSi!OW Rangers last year.

Opener "I wondered whether I w~~ r;,,~,, :-uhl, one of. tl~c h_arge~t: 'Til just ha,·e to keep hit· second half mar,kcrs. He pii'Ol·! Dohoney al,so playin-g well.! Rated as a top-notch netminder doing the right thing. The doe· ':1,to.1crs 1n the lcag_Le. l.roat; ling the ball," he said. : cd on Dohoncy s pass up th.e i Prmce of "ales got good soc·' he has played several years in tors had told me the wrist_l~<:s _!·:lees _s~~~ed_s~~mg __ l~n~ 1 m1ddle for the fourth St. Bon s i cer performances from Ian~ the Cape Breton League. In Series

By JOI aEICIILEJl The Yankees also are the PITTSBURGH IAP)-Pitt&· writer's choice. They ahould

burgh'• Vernon Law and New win the series In six games. York's Art Ditmar, a pair of They 1hou!d encounter their nteran rlght·handers, were most trouble from Law and confirmed Monday u the start· southpaw Harvey Haddix the inc pitchers In the first game first time they face these pit· of the 1960 world series be- chers. They should have less tween the Pirates and Yankees, difficult)' with the right-hander atarlina here Wedne~da)'. Bob Friend, who has been

Botb camps breathed opti· named to pitch the second game mism. Dann)' ~1urtaugh, man· here Thursday, and southpaw ager of the Pirates, predicted a , Vinegar Bend Mizell who has Pittsburgh victory because •·we been tabbed to pitch the third beat tba best In a tougher lea· game, at Y.ankce Stadium on aue." Saturday.

"We're loose; we're not Unlike ~lurtaugh, Stengel did frightened; we'll show the Yan· not name his second-and third­kees y,•hy we won the pennant." game pitchers but it appeared

Casey Stengel of the Yan- 1 he would follow Ditmar with 'kees, in his best brand of 1 another right-hander, Bob Tur­double talk, had this to say: i ley in the second game in spac-

"My writers tell me we got : ious Forbes Field. Stengel Is the momentum, which is sup· ! expected to open with Whitey posed to give us some kind of I Ford, his left-handed ace, at psychological edge. I dunno Yankee Stadium. about that but if it means we ' Murtaugh, who has previously tan •!retch our 1:1 straight to I announced he would start his 19 atraight then I uy agree be· "left-handed lineup against a uuse that's what I told my right-handed pitcher, 1urprised players." by naming the right-handed hit-BLAZING FINISH ling Dick Stuart to play first

Stengel, of course, was refer· base instead of left-handed bit­ring to the Yankees' bla~ing ling Rocky Nelson. finish which produced \'ictorics "I am going with Stuart all in their last 15 regular season th)! way if he warrants It," said games, Murtaugh.

The odds • makers have made Stengel said he would not an-the Yankees' 13 • to • 10 favor· nounce his lineup and batting ites and even money In the first order until after today'a work· game. out at Forbes Field.

Joe Gordon Qui~ By JERRY GREEN Ohio, after he fled Detroit. ":o!o

DETROIT <APl - Joe Gordon one has talked to me about left the Detroit Tigers high and Kansas City. dry Monday by quitting as man· "I'm going to the world series ager and the Kansas City Ath· at Pittsburgh and probably won't letics said they would talk to him give much thought to a job for about succeeding the fired Bob several days." Elliott. Gordon declined to say why he

The Athletics dismis~ed Elliott, quit the Tigers after only two their manager for only one .~ea· months., 10n, a few hours after Gordon But there were lmtientions here dropped his resign at ion bomb in that he and Dewitt were in dis­the lap of Tiger President Bill agreement over numerou~ mal Dewitt. ters In the handling of the Tl·

Parke Carroll, general man· gers. ager of the Athletics, said he in· "This whole thing came to me tends to discuss the Kansas Cltv as a bolt out of the blue," De· mana~erial job with Gordon dur· witt said. "I don't know yet what tng the world series, starting the Tigers will do about. a n~w Wednesday at Pittsburgh. manager. I haven't had a

Dewitt, who swung a 9Cn· chnnce lo think about it." ~atlonal' mana;:~rlal ~wap · two Detroit has hcen a graveyMd months ago to hring Gordon to 'for managers ~incc 1952. Red Detroit while sending ,Jimmie Rolfe, Freddy Hutchinson, Bucy Dykes to manage Cle•clanrl, said Harris, ,Jack Ti~he, Bill Norman, he knew nothin~ of Gordon's plan D,vkcs and Gordon have held the to quit until Monriav morninJ!. jon in rapid succession.

Carroll said he had talked with The Tiger owners have ached Dewitt about Gordon's release. I uled a meeting in Pittsburgh to-

"I explained 'to Dewitt." Car· day. It's expected tne manage· roll . said, "that a Kansas City rial situation will get top billing. Rroup i.~ negotiating for the pur- QUIT BEFORE chase of the club and •t has been This is the. second lime Gor­agreed that It \1 Ill 'Je consulted don has left the Tigers in a sud­oil certain mPtters r~Jatlng to fu. den move. In .1956 ne quit es a . lure plans. N~>turall)• the 1961 coach after a squabble wltl! the manager was diseussl!d. Four or front office. fh·e men were men•lnned who Gordon g1,1l~ed the Tlgel'l! In 57 would be acceptable. games this year, winning 2fl and

· "Unknown to the Athtttic~. Gor. loslnl! 31. The 'alub finished a·dls· don tP.Iked 1o n re!'rc~~nlrtive of opnointlng sixth. the· ·K~ns•q ('ih ~rn11n rlurlng Elliott. 43, was in his first sea· Detroit's visit last wee)l~nd. SOil as 8 ma.for leP!(~e mana!(er

"Now that he ·I~ availoh'" I wlll after a bright playlna career In , dlic1,18s a contrect wllh him In the Natlolllll League. His A's fin. \

. Pittsbuuh." . !shed eighth, , : · . Ea'rller Gordon denied that he A new grortn Is nMotiatinl! for

was headed ·for Konsa~ CUy as' ownership of the Ka11sas Citv manager. ! franr~!s~ d•Ie lo th• rieath to.;!

"I have resigned at Detroit and l spring of Arnold .Jolm~o~. Chi· !1

' am aeeklni employm-.nt,'' Gor- ca~o fl"11ncier and majority \Inn told newsmen In Canton, stockholder.

369 WATER ST. Phone 5011-5012-5013

ALLSTATE a famous brand name you know and trust!

FREE J

INSTALLATION

for more GO the SNOW •

Ill Allstate WINTER TRACTION tires will serve you with assured safety in bad weather.

For the

economy

minded.

Regular $17.95.

NOW ONLY

Lifetime guarantee against any material or manufacturing defects. No time limit on this guarantee.

~ ~

.95 :f. AND YOUR RECAPPASL! TRAD'E·IN '

Plus 20 months against road hazard• if the tire is rendered un~erviceable, regardless of reason or manner, we will replace, charging you only for wear received.

You get ALLSTATE'S famous road hazard guarantee

ALLSTATE'S famous ~ I ~ · " r.,'" 'lilt ht -. ,M

guarantee me~ns ~- '" .~ u.I'""I·~ ... }D~~ .1-4~ fullest protectton. :~ -..r ~

WE HAVE THE LARGEST SELECTION OF SNOW TIRES IN TOWN FOR YOU

Super Traction

25-month roc;d hazard guarantee. Reg, ·19. 95 NOW ONLY 15·95

Silent Traction

30-month road hazard guarantee. Reg. 22.95. NOW ONLY 18·95

Anti-freeze

Don't take chances. Fill your car now. Enjoy these low, low prices.

2-98 gal. sse. qt.

Storm King

Recap-1 5.month road hazard guarantee. Reg. 16.95. NOW ONLY 12·95

Storm Master

Recop-12-month rood hazard guarantee. · Reg. 15.95. NOW ONLY 11 ~95

YOU CAN'T BEA.T SIMP SONS -SEARS l ..._____ ______ ~ SATISFACTION OR MON~ Y REFUNDED

1!

Stock Market Toronto

: ~". ·,'·-.atml a.ouiiG ITOCU · ..• , 1'¥ eo .......... .

· · t'wwlto ltiOdt BllebaiiP-Oel. 1 tQioealotll Ia eenll aDieu markod s. ~ 101, lid - Ex-111\'dellll, xr-El· -111, IIW-Ex•WIITUII.

NOW· PLAYING-

_,_ -~~ JOHN HUSTON

Also - UP-TO-THE-MINUTf NEWS

TIMES OF SHOWS: EVENING SHOWS 6.45-9.00.

MATINEE: 2 P.M.

NEXT AnRACTION GARY COOPER-ChARLTON HESTON IN 11TH! WRECK OF THE MARY DEARE"-ACTJON­THRILLS-SUSPENSE.

NOW PLAYING

:Exclusive Limited Engagement In This Area.

EVENING SHOWS 7.30 {One. Evenin9 Show Daily} ADMISSION PRICES.: .1.75.

~ ·MATINEES-1.30 (Wed .and Sat. only} . ADMISSION PRICES: 1.25.

Children 12 years and under 75c.

Report J50it II II II -141 35.1& TM 71.1 7110 H

11000 Ill> 11 II IIZSO II II 18

181800 ll1 41 50 +I IW5 1:1'1 Ill 121 -10

Alllmlal AOJio Nll4 C l!rew D 11hiD• Dooeo llll111d Gil Pemb•a Slmpsono Sledmaa \\'alk!rt w ......

,.., !M. m ~" :1000 Jl) 2m 2110 -2141 1331 3110 210 290 -1

310 350 310 380 U20 21 20 21 3000 100 91 100 1000 3\0 3141 310 N47 1o.1 100 m -1

110 • ' • 1!00 1n 1:12 m -1 500 20 20 20

3100 .. 45141 .. -1 1000 4.l 43 43 -2 375 172 170 171 +2

30000 19 17 II + V. 1000 1141 3\ll 3~ - " %000 '~ 37 37 -1

100 m 37o :rro -to JSO All &75 &75 -5

lOGO 14\ol 14\ol 14\ol - V. ~110 109 1M 101 2000 4 4 4 -141

m 12410 ~310 13\i -4900 )Oil 105 )Oil

100 51.1 ~~ 51.1 +I 1000 3 3 3 -" soo w; m; 14141

!100 us 1011 1n9 -4 14SDO 15 14 141'o - .. I

1000 5141 ll'l ll'o + I'll ISO Ill l1l Ill -Z

110011 I~ I ! 14 +2 21:111 103 lOt 103 -2

10:00 71 M 7ft 5 17 17 17 -! norlnC

!00 I 3 I -1'1 500 17 17 17 -1

,.... ...... 1.120.eoll.

Montreal MONTI.J:AL CLORL'IG STftCill

»1 Tbe CUidliD Prtll Alrllb :17~ J'OIIDdalioo Athnloo Zl,. Funr B1111111 C Nal al GT L&k• li&Dk Mont 51\lo Hcnr Smith Baal< !15 11M Bud l!aJ Mill Bltllll PC -~ IIIIP 01 Balllllnl a :10 IDI Nlell BeD ~ bl Pap Brui) Ge MIII·Fet Bldl Pnod 33l4o N st Car Clloolu4 t!4o Noru4a C CUIIIIII :14\(r, Paadatll c Ceme•l tr fl Preo C Sleamthl!l !t\4o Ro7a1 BaH C: l!DII Clm U\t RoJ&Itt Cdn l!rew 37 51 L Corp Cda Celu :1014 Sl!awlll C Ill Power IIIlo SIHI C Ial POW pr 40\lo Trllll Cu PL CPR 11 ~ Walker lllolrallll 1m CANADIAI( D Brldl• 11 COlli Pap Doll! Tar u~' Ford

Hew York JISW 'IOU CLOIIlfO STOCII.I

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

BJ 'ftt Cao .. ln Pl'lll - SIMI ~ JIOGI7 W m\ 1!01'1 Wamor 3m NY Cllll 17 C aDd 0 5allo Ra4o Corp 5310 COil Edll• 1210 814 OU Nl 40 El Auto El 451\ Uld Arcrall 40 Goa Elec 'II Vaudllllll lMI Gooob'tor "1\ Wtstnpa 41la Gl Nor a, 4510 lle~~necott 71 IDI T T 'II

R)'anDr MaJJnlt l!dcop !Copan 'rem tory

----

Toronto

Mutual Funds llll'rlJAL FUNDI

a7 Tilt Cuadu Jrs.u . .. , ... B1d . .U .. N.... \4

All Cda Com AP Cdo DIY American Growllt llonbraa ca .. dlft lanolmllll CU&fllftd Cbampkln IIUIDIJ CommoawaaiU. Inter.

aid Aot UZ U7 UT U! 7.21 7.H

21.13 :lUI 1.31 t.l7

SUI :15.03 S-17 Ul T.a U7 ._IH U4 Ul U7

COIIIDD IDler. Le\'trlll hnd Corporate IDYlllatl Dvanllad be. aba. Hrill B 3.50 3.U DIVd•d au. Dombdn EQtllr P'lral 01 Ud. oaa I' .... COIJoc:lll A I'D"cll Colltdf 8 J'DD CdaolleeW C Group be. , OmPtd Income AeCWD. Gnlap &alecllf G GIVWIII on ,,.. o .. lovaatora !lrowllt FlUid 1••...,• Kulllal · Kt7_.,H llullla1 Aecum FlUid Mutual ln .. ma Fund Nor ,\Iller 1'111111 11 ca .. da

:~.u a.u 14.40 !4.73 3.1t 3.TI 5.07 Ul 1.11 s.u uo S-43 3.23 3.13 4.91 5.37 ~.00 5.45 1.11 U2 1.41 ua lo.7& 11.7'

ll.S& IU7 U2 7.58 4.4.1 us 7.tt ....

THE DAILY NEWS. ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., TUESDAY, OCTOB!R .4, 1960

with MAJOR HOOPL~ OUT OUR WAY I'M 6011o.l' HOME At-J' TAKE ABUSE I THIS'LL 8E TH' THIII:.D LIC.KIIJ' tVE TOOK FER GTI'IIl:TIIJ' OUT WEST WI'TH BOOBIES! I HEARD ~·ou TRYIIJ' 'TO S'TIFLE SOBS·· WHY, THIS CAR: NII6HT !JOT LEAVE TH' YARDS FER A WEEK, AIJ' HERE YOU ARE HOMESICK AT

HOME/

Rolling Adjustment

sure. Controlled cycle-Thill I~ the

thcorv that the old dlys Df bi~ upswings followed by inevitable downswings have been made ob· >olete. In other words, we won't let a real big cycle !mppen any·

FURNESS RED CROSS LINE

~ SAILINGS TO AND FROM

NEW YORK, SAINT JOHN, HALIFAX

TO

ST. JOHN'S AND CORNER BROOK, NFLD.

S.S. GUERNSEY S.S. GUERNSEY"

Leave New York .............. ~ ..................... Sept. 27 Leave Saint John, N.B. .. ........................ Sept. 30 Leave Halifax ........ .. .............................. Oct. 3 Arrive St. John's, Nfld. .. ........................ Oct. 6 Leave St. John's, Nfld ............................. Oct. 7 Leave Bay Roberts, Nfld. .. ...................... Oct. 8 Leave Corner Brook, Nfld. .. .................... bet. 11 ACCEPTING FREIGHT AT ALL PORTS FOR BAY llOBERTS AND CORNER BROOK DISCHARGE. Accepting fr•ight for Corner Brook at all Ports.

For rates, etc. Telephone 2073-5890.

Furness, Withy & Company. Ltd.

/

THE DAILY NEWS. ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., TUESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1960

ARCONI FOR 1961

J u s T

A

F E w

Marconi '61

Marconi '61

21-inch table model

19" portable

21" combination model

Radio·phono combincrtion

s E E T H E 0 T H E R s T 0 0!

Marconi '61

Marconi '61

Triphonic Stereo Portable phonograph

Marconi '61 Marconi '61

Table model radio

PROUDLY PRESENTED For your Increased enjoyment of sight and sound backed by the name that has been synonymous with advanced research and development in eledronics for more than half-a-century ef progress.

For prompt ~nd eHicient furnace and fuel oil delivery

Dial 7469-3007-3001. ' .

THE GREAT EASTERN. OIL COMPANY, ·LIMIT~D

ST. JOHN'S .aELL ISLAND ·

CORNE.R BROOK ·WINDSOR

\

• Jacoby on Bridge UNLUCKY EXPERT GETS SWINDLED

By OSWALD JACOBY The · victim of ;today's

swindle was one of our · better players. In fact he is one of our very best and as a result of the misfortune is to be pitied rather ~an censured If one should ever pity an expert.

South's six n().trump contract was optimistic to say the least and he had certainly overbid to get there. His opening two no·trump did Include a J!ix card suit but he had shaped his I high card value down to 20

1 points and really should have I i passed when his partner raised I : him from two to four., II Actually the contract wasn't , a bad one. Put the ace of dia· I monds over in the East hand ; and South would have 12 1 tricks but that diamond ace i • sticks out right in the middle

1

·of West's cards. 1 So, how did South make the . contract?

It was ~ cinch, Remc111ber

I f :NORTH I ) .ABU

WIST leQ4 ¥1098 7 tAJH 4o985

.AQ2 +951 .1082

EAST • J 10 9 3 • 65 4 3 tQ10U .. ,

SOUTH (D) •Kn .K.J +KT .AKQJ711

East flnd West vulnerable Soulh Wetl North Iaiit 2 N.'1'. Pasr ol N.T. Pass 6 N.T. Pau Pass Pass

Opening lead-• 10

. Wcstwas an expert. .. South :simply won the first trick with : dummy's ace of hearts, led a diamond and went up with his

, king. ' · Expert West ducked. He did , ' not know about that six card club suit. He did know about his own ace and jack of dia· mond~ and wanted to wait for

'a second diamond lead so that 1 he could make both of them. I That second diamond lead never came. And to add Insult

1 to injury South made all the /tricks. West hung on to his ace 1 and jack of diamondJ while East was equally tenacious with the queen and ten and South's deuce of spades took the 13th. trick.

CARD Sense Q-The bidding ha• been:

, (South West North East 1 1 • Pau 1 • Pan i ? ' ' You, South, hold: IIA2 .AK9876 +431 .AS

What do you bid? A-Two hearts. Three hearts

II~ a elose second choice but I · prefer the slight underbid, 1

:roDAY'S QUESTIO~ Your partner bids two spades,

' What do you do now? Answer Tomo!1'ow

1_ ... ____ ._. __ .. ,

1

1 Capitol I I I 11 Now Playing

• • 1

1 BURT LANCASTER­''THE UNFORGIVEN A atar.studded cast combined

1

1

with exquisite photography and the craftsmallship of an Aca·

1 demy Award.winning director

· make "The Unforgiven," which is playing at the Capitol Theatre through United Artists relewoe an unforgettable experi· cnce. The cast, all of whom give outstanding character!· zations, include Burt Lancaster and Audrey Hepburn ln the top roles, with other atellar parts being handled by Andie Mur· phy, John Saxon, Charles Bick· ford, LilliJJn Glsh, Albert Salmi, Joseph Wiseman and June Wal· ker. John Huston is the afore· mentioned Academy Award· winning director whose skill in handling the broad canvas of character and story In "The Unforgiven" is at Its peak. The camerawork of Franz Planer, enhanced by glorious Techni· color and Panavision, is breath· taking. Dimitri Tiomkin's score, a fine one in its own right,

I highlights the picture'• varied moods,

"The Unforgivcn," from Alan LeMay's widely acclaimed novel, with screenplay by Ben Maddow, tells of the Zacharys, a family group in the desolate prairie·wilderneu of the Pan· handle who are haunted by a malevolent past. It concerns a sinister mystery surrounding the orit!ln of young Rachel Zac-

whom the Indians claim was their child. Egged on by a demented stranger who had known the Zacharys long ago, the Indians ride upon the Zac· hary soddy to spread murder and devastation.

Lancaster portrays . Ben Zac· hary, the taciturn spokesman of the Zachary clan since the night his father had been struck down by an Indian lance. As Rachel, around whom the bloody controversy rages, Aud· rey Hepburn is seen in her first outdoors role. And she is great as a flirtatious child of nature faced with the impacts of suspicion, hate and death:

THE STORY OF MARTHA WAYNE

CAPTAIN EASY

ALLEY OOP

FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS

BOOTS AND HE~ BUDDIES

PRISCILLA'S POP

THI? I? A eEAUTIR)l. cw~ ~JR. BOOMER,

I'U.6ETTHE! DI.JE?/>R5 VeRY HCGH.

8UGS BUNNY

I JUSTTt-IOU6HT YOU Ol.J<5Hr10 KNOWTHA.T YOI.JI<! LICENSE.' PLATE 15 BAR~LY HANGI,o.J6

ON/

I'M A/OT MUCJi ro , AT, BUT I 00 HWE

MONEI,J·-NEilRDI A M!I.LION /XJLI..MS --fWD I'D 7PI!10

I MAKE t,JOU I/4PPt,J/

THe 9IG THING 1'7 THAT VOO MI.Jo?f PAY THEM PROMPTC..V., THE.V'Re Vef<'r' '3TRICT ABOUT Tl-l.A.T, HERE. TAKe R:IOR ED NEBEL-THERe ...

13 .

By W. SHRUGGS

OtMUr•L• ~ , ....... , •M.•·

By LESLIE TURNER

By V. T. HAMLIN

By MERRELL BLOSSER

By EDGAR MARTIN

By Al VERMEER

By DICK CAVELL

By LEON SCHLESINGER

-.. Public Notice

. THE BRODRIBB tRUST

Attend Red ·Cross Meeting

Applications are Invited for Thirtyseven women from the admission of children to

across the Province of New· Christ's Hospital, Horsham or roundland attended the Annual Hartford, under the provisions

· of this Trust. ~leeting as Branch Representa· Candidates must-lives of the Canadian Red p bl" 1111..1 t' ~ross society on Monday, octo· U IC 1~0 .ICe 1. Be related by blood either

to ARTHUR HUBERT BROP ber 3rd. Mrs. T. Perrault travel· RIBB (died 1920), LAW· led the furthest to attend the TYPISTS AND SHORTHAND RENCE CUTHBERT BROD· meeting since she came all the TYPISTS RIBB, CHARLES HILDRED JraY from Happy Valley, Labra· va~ancies tor Typists and BRODRIBB (died 1941), lo~.hirty • seven women and Shorthand Typists exist in DORIS ELIZABETH BROD·

· hi m tr v lied f r 0 m several Departments of Gov· RIBB (nee. Holman), or tiS. e~ a e . ernment. For these positions LILIAN FLORENCE AN· Various pomts of the Provmce applications will be accepted NIE BRODRIBB· (nee Wal !If Newfoun~land to attend the from either single or married ler) (died 1946). annual ~eetmg as Branch ~e· persons who desire employ· 2. Have passed their ninth presentallves 0~ the Canadian ment on a full-scale or a part· birthday, but not have Red Cross Soctety on lllonday, time basis. ~alaries will be reached their eleventh, by October 3rd., held at the New· paid in accordance with quail· the 20th September of the ---------­foundland Hotel. . fications, ability and the length year of admission. AUTO PARTS (Whole}

Earh repre~entahve gave a of time worked daily or week· 3. Pass, prior to admission, ----------,re~ort of their home branch, ly as the case may be. educational and medical :whtch w~s generally favourab~e. Applications in writing, stat· examinations. Dr. !llcNtcholas acted as Chm· ing age, educational qualifica· .

Nfld. Armature Works ma~ and than~ed all represen· lions, experience ,etc., should . Parents, or gua.rd1ans, of can·

utn·es for thetr reports. be addressed to the Civil Ser·l d!dates must sat1sfy the Coun· 38 ~Irs. T. Perrault travelled vice Commission, Confedera· c1! ~f ~moners that ~he. gross !~=~!~ Bambrick

the furthest to attend the meet· lion Building, St. John's. En· famllr mco!D~ falls w1th1.n .the I Street. ing, since she came all the way , 1 taining applica· permitted bm1t~ for adm1ss1.on. 'lial 7191·2 from Happ)' Valle~, Labrador. ~i~;:e:houf:n be clearly mark· . Further details and appllca· 1 ------------

Other representatives were: I ed "S·T·1005... hon f,orms fro.m the Clerk of: B'l Mrs, Ceci{ Rose, Alexander Bay; CHAIR:\~ AN, Christ s Hospital, 26, Great: I.! ILDING MATERIALS :\irs. \\', H. Drover, Bay Rob· I Civil Service Commission. Tower Street, London, E.C.3,' CHESTER DAWE, LTD. trts; l'olrs. D. B. Russell, Bay England. SIJAW ST. and TOPSAIL RD

.. J!oberts; Mrs. G. Eveleigh, Bell, September 28, 1980. For all your Building · bland; Mrs. )lary Power, Bell( octl,eod Requirements call

island; )Irs. F. Murphy, Bis· 1 Public Notice so1s1-91171 hop'a Falls;lllrs. George Cuff, Bonavbta; Mrs. W. Moore, Bot· wood; Mrs. V. Shave, Burin;

- Mrs. A. O'Brien, Cape Bro~·le; : ·Mn. F. Hicks, Carman1·ille;

Mrs. William H. Earle, Change Islands; Mrs. T. W. Windsor, Channel; Mrs. J. Bailey, Claren­ TENDERS

;\'ille; Mrs. Ralph Tulk, Corner. SEALED TENDERS address· ··Brook; Mrs. ':f, T. Monaghan, I ed to the undersigned and

Corner Brook; Mrs. A. Jenkins, marked "Tender for Construe­Durrell; Mra. A. L. Earle, Fogo; 1 tion of Two Single Dwellinga DAY OF THANKSGIVING

ELECTRICAL

APPLIANCES

llAINE JOHNSTON COMPANY, LTD.

Agency Department 243 Water St. Dial 2102

YOUR FRIGIDAIRE DEALER.

Mra. N. Piertey, Fortune; Mrs., at Grindstone Magdalen Is· . . C. Mews, Ganler; Mrs. G.[lands, Que.", will be received By Procla!'lallon of H1s ·HEAP & PARTNERS Reeves, Garnish; !lliss Elsie! in Room 404. 232 st. George I Honour the Lle.utenant. Gorer· (NFLD.) LTD. .Tlbbo, Grand Bank; ~Irs. W. Street, Moncton, N. B., up to nor to be puhhshcd 111 the Wiring Materials, Wire and Matthews, Grand Falls; Mrs. 3:30 P.M., (Atlantic Daylight Newfoundland Gazette of 41h Cables, Motors Starters, E. F. Goodland, Harbour Grace; Saving Time), Thursday, Oct. October, 1960• Sunday, the Lamps, Switches, Lightin!l Mra. M. Freake, Lcwisporte; 27. 1960, 9th day of October, 1960 has Fixtures, etc, Kra. V. Mitchell, Jllarystown; Plans, specification• and ~her been d.e~lared as 1 Day o! WAREHOUSE: PRINCE'S ST Mra, J. Buffett, Norris Point; tender documents may be ob· Thank~g,vmg to afford an opf DIAL5085 Mra N. Pittman Pilley's Is: tained on application to the portumty to the people 0

1 d· ' d Newfoundland to render thanks an , Mrs. M. Moores, Red Bay; underslgne , at 232 St. George t AI · ghty God !or the Mrs .• Silas Pittman, Rocky ~ar- Street or P.O Box ~2, Monc· :erciesmke has been pleased bour, Mrs. J. P. Clarke, Sprmg. ton, N.B., upon receipt of an t b tow upon this Province dale; Mrs. Jam~s K. Joy, accepted cheque for $2~.00 d~rl;; the past year and to Step~envllle Crossing; Mrs. E. payable to the Receiver Gen· acknowledge our National bless· Cannmg, Topsail; Mr~ .. E. M. era! of Canpda. ings. (1\largaret) Fac~y, Twilhngate; J. A. LENAHAN, ~frs. Leonard Miller, Placentia; R 1 1 Dl t Air !!ervl..,•l 1\lrs. T. Powell, Victoria. eg ona rec or,

Other Branch Representatives September 28, 1960. -were. Mr. Godwin, Belloram; oct3,4

: Mr. Arthur Thompson, Bot­wood; Mr. George Hoskins, Car· ----------bonear; Mr. Arthur Green, St tutory lll.lot'ce

.· Deer Lake; Mr. Joseph White, a I~ I Herring Neck; Mr. T, J, Mc­Donald, St. Mary's; Mr. Arthur Thorne, Stephenville and Mr.

. Roy Yetman, Buchans,

In the matter o! the Will aDd Estate ol Plemon Carlet Taylor late of st. John's In the Islud of Newfoundland, Longshore­man, deeeased, All persons claiming te be

creditors of or who have any claims or demands upon or af. feeling the estate of Plemon Carlet Taylor, late of St. John'a aforesaid, longshoreman, deceas· ed, are requested to send particu­lars of their elaims In writing, duly attested, to the undersigned, solicitors for the executrix of the said Will, on or before the 27th day of October A.D. t96ll, after which date the executrix will proceed to distribute the said estate, having regard only to the claims of which she shall have had notice.

MYLES MURRAY, Minister of Provincial Affairs.

3rd October, 1960.

FIRE INSURANCE

::ROSSIE & CO., LTD. Agents for

UNDERWRITERS AT LLOYDS.

LOW RATES DIAL 5031

HARDWARE STORES

HARRIS & HISCOCK, LTD. General Hardware

Distributors for Sunbeam Electrical Appliances,

Sports goods and Sp11rl.l wear for all occasiona.

DIAl 5016

ERNEST CLOUSTON, LTD,. McCLAR'i AUTOIIIATIC

WARIII AIR CONDITIONING 210 WATER ST.

DIAL 4183 ---RADIO-TV REPAIRS

GREAT EASTERN OIL COMPANY, LTD.

REPAIRS TO RADIOS, TV AND ALL ELECTRICAL

APPLIANCES DIAL 3001 to3005

THE DAILY NEWS. ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., TUESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1960 -----· ----- _........,

1 Where To Stay Balsam Hotel

BARNES ROAD S!tuated in •he Hearl of

the Cit.'.

Quiet, Comfor!able Atmos· phere.

For heservatlon~ and In· formation.

" I •

FOR SALE: - One mare (weight 1500 lbs. (approx.) suitable for farm or lum­ber woods. This mare is sound and kind, also young. One box cart, wheels and harness. One tub slide (suitable for hauling coal). Apply Wm. Ryan, Sr., Ken­mount Road.

oct4,5,6

Dial 6336 )1;9fii .. ~~· BARGAIN- Toledo comput· 1 !I ing Scales, ~~ lbs. In ex· 1

cellent cond1hon. $125.00. i 11!'4D Telephone 92721. '

MRS. JOHN FACE\' Resident Manageress

m31,t! AUCTION --------------- '

A V AII,ABLE-Gentleman re· tired on pension desires office or other work. In good health and active. References. Apply Box· 503, cjo Daily News. SLIVERS and KNOT HOLES

GREAT EASTERN

OIL & IMPORT

CO., LTD.

TODAY OCT. 4th

CARPENTR·Y----T\V-0 -F-IR-ST: r----'"""':------,

Radio, Television, Washers, Refrigerators, Deep Freezen

Electric Ranges, Floor Polishers,

Gramophones Publlc Address Systems,

Tape Recorders REPAIRS AND SERVIl:E

5 LINES DIAL 3001 to 300ll

WATER STREET •an26.h.

11.30 a.m.

CI.ASS CA1tPENTERS ani!· i able for reno1•ations, repairs, i cabinets, storm sashes, lin· : oleum tiles, bathroom tile~, etc. Houses built on contract or labour. Phone 6919A or 93849. s28,29,30,oct 1, 3, 4

"It's bound to be the faaleat racer in town-all the Dll· trrials came from HOR­WOOD"S."

• • •

'10 HEAD CHOICE BUTCHERS'

CATTLEi '

1 0 Milch Cows

Now there is a young build· er, who knows that it al­way5 pa~·s to use the best.

1 YOU will win by having llS help you plan your new home or any remodelling which ~·ou have been want· in g.

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES 1

PART time work to reliable · resident in this area mak· ir.g light deliveri~ in a car or sma II truck. No selling inv~lved: The Indi­vidual selected must have a good driving record and be insurable. Only those in· terested in a long term ar· rangement need apply. Starting salary $68.50 per week. The applicant must be prepared to work steady on a year round basia and 1

.I 1 BULL have S1500.00 cash avail­

able. No others need apply.

. CANADA I Write to Box No. 203, c/o

News. Approxnnatcly 1000 square 5 CALVES septl7,tf

feet of fm,t class office space. ' --~--::-:::=:-:~--:--1 on the ground floor of the ' FOR ALL YOUR Erlerior I Federal Building, Water Street, I and Interior Paint~ng, carboncar, Newfoundland. , 1 BOX Young Paper Hanginl, Cleanmg,

: . ! I Roofing, etc. 'Phone L. B1ds Will be received up to Howell, 739'/H or 3752A.

3:00 P.~l.. ~londay, October 17. PIGS . 1960. ll~ghest or any bid not FOR A_LL your. !~tenor and necessar1ly accepted. exter1or pamtmg and

Particulars a1·ailable from J. i W. Pyc, District 1\lanager. : Property and Building Manage. ment Branch, Department of Public Works, Building 29, Buckmaster's Field, St. John's, Newfoundland.

sparkling. Contaet Frank Melendy. Phone 4767F. Free estimates. jne29, tf jly29,(2wks)

MAX Sl}LLIV A~, Office Manager.

.NEWFOUNDLAND . SERVICES .

House For Sale FURNITUR£ REPAIRS- Re­pail• to spring-filled mat· tresses. Ch~ terfield auites also rebuilt. Fifty yeara'

139 ELIZABETH AVENUE experie•tce. Keata Mattress Factory, 11l Mount Royal Ave.

Bungalow, containing or Dial 92753 or 2656.

the first floor, Jiving room. THE CENTRAL BARBEll dining room, kitchen, three SHOP-We are now operat· bedrooms and bath room ing 11! chain, you . ean be and in the basement twc assured . of promp~, eUici·

ent, samtary aerv1ce. No 1 completely finished rooms, waiting problem. 24 New

PASSENGER NOTICES I hall and two piece batr Gower Street opposite Ade· room The basement ha• !aide Motors, Ltd, I · · .ct8, ( tf)

f¥)NNECTION SOUTH 1 very large windows wit~ -----=-=~=-=-:=-Trair, ''The Caribou" leaving southern exposure. For op· ERS-Rugs and Carpet

COAST SERVICE I NEW ME1'HOD RUG CLEAN·

St. John's 1:30 p.m. Thursday, pointment to view phone made to look like new. October 6th, will make con nee· i 91192 during busines~ Von Schrader process adds lion at Port aux Basques with h d 94923 f ..._ years to life of rugs. Clean-the S.S. Bar Haven for regular ours, an a ter o;; ed in home or at our planl ports South Coast Service. p.m. 'Phone 91033, New Method

CONNECTION WEST RUN PLACENTIA BAY

Regular 831 a.m. train leav· 1

ing St. John's Friday, October 1

7th, will make connection at Argentia for the West Run Placentia Bay.

CONNECTION SOUTH. COAST SERVICE I

Regular 8:31 a.m. train leav· ing St. John's Friday, October 7th, will make connection at Argentia with the S.S. Bacca· lieu for regular ports South

tucs,thurs,sat,2w

Prompt Delivery On • STOVE OIL • FURNACE OIL • HARD COAL • SOFT COAL

Rug Cleanera, Freahwater Road.

STORM WINDOWS, Sashes ,_ Boxes made to order. Price• reasonable. Phone R. Pel· ley 4849-H. sep7,1m

WATER STREET WEST PHONE SOil

WESLEY w~ A. Will be holding their

Annual Sale and Turkey Tea

on WEDNESDAY ,OCT . .5,

In the Lecture Hall. TICKETS $1.25.

WANTED RELIABLE MAID

Far family of 2 adults,

3 children. Highest wages.

Phone 2503 oct-1,8

Fly to St. Pierre Far information can MRS. O'BRIEN elf

4461A or 90797L For taxi-boat service call

FRANK DUNNE at

Dated at St. John's aforesaid this 27th day of September A.D.

---------- Coast Service. • IRON FIRE~IAN

HEATING EQUIPMENT.

WINTER STORAGE - proper storage of your outboard motor or power lawmower now will ensure satisfaction in use next summer. Reasonable rates: free pick-up and delivery with· in City Limits. Call 494'l' Mewscraft, 107 Gower St. tues,fri till Oct. 28. 2376.

A WELCOMI WAGON

HOSTESS

·.: Will Knock at Your Door : · . with Gifts and Greetings

from Friendly Business _ >Neighbours and Your

. :(ivic and Social Groups ::On the occar.ion afs < New Comer to the City, :~. The Birth of a Baby, ''

:;: ·-PHONE 94865 - 90943 and 3582.

.-~--------

the ·ONE BRIGHT POT

1960. . WOOD &: KELLY,

Solicitors for the Executrix of the WID of Plemon Carld Taylor, deeealled.

367 Duckworth Street, St. John's, Nfld. ·

sep26,oct4,11,18

Statutory Notice In the matter of the Will and

Estate of Plemon Carlet TIJ· lor late of-Saint John's hi the Island o f Longshoreman, deceased.

All persons claiming to be creditors of or who have any claims or demsnda upon or af. feeling the estate of Plcmon Carlet Taylor late of Saint John's aforesaid, Longshore, man, deceased, are requested to send particulars of their claims In writing, duly atte,t· ed, to the undersigned, solicit. ora for the executrix of the said wUJ, on or before the 27th· day of October A.D. 1960, after which ·date the executrix will proceed to distribute the said estate having regard only to the claims of which she fh&ll then have had notice.

Dated at Saint John's afore­said this 27th day of September A.D. 1960.

WOOD &: KE~Y, . Sol~dt.ra for tbe exeeutrllf Of &he 'WW Df rJ~IJIIID Carl't Ta;Jlor, deeeaaed. ·

387. Duckworth Street, SL John'a, Nfid, aept27,'oct4,11,18

FOR HOME DELIVERY

DIAL 2141

Beverage Sales Ltd.

(Not Inserted by ·Board of Liquor Contrul)

GROCERS (Retail)

L. HEALEY Crols Roads and Water 81reet

Dial 3026

INSURANCE AGENTS

AND BROKERS

JOB BROTHERS 6 CO. LTD •. Water Slreet

Dial 2658-4123

REG. T. MORGAN INSURANCE LIMITED

Temple Bldg., P .0. Bo:r 168, 3U Duckworth St.

·Dial 80370 or 'l'758

DRUG STORES

ST. JOHN'S·LEWISPORTE SERVICE

M.V. Codroy for regular ports St. John's.Lewisporte Ser· vice will sail from the Dock Coastal Wharf Noon Friday, October 7th.

FREIGHT ACCEPTANCES

FREIGHT ST. JOHN'S. LEWISPORTE SERVICE

Freight_ for regular ports St. John's·Lewisporte Service per M.V. Cod roy will be ac· cepted at the Dock Coastal Shed today Tuesday and tomor· row Wednesday 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 ·p.m.

FREIGHT RESTRICTED

CARGOES PORTS SMOKEY TO NAIN

Freight including oils and M. CONNORS LTD., other rcstrict~d cargoes !or

Prescriptions Pickup and ports Smokey to Nain per M. V. delivery service. Phone 2206 Trcpassey will be accepted at

________ ..;..· -- the Dock Coastal Shed today A YLWARO'S 'DIAL 90070 and tomorrow 9:00 a.m. to 5:00

PHARMACY p.m. Cor. Monchy & Empire Ave.

..... FREIGHT ST. JOHN'S· ..... PARKDALE . LEWISPORTE SERVICE

PHARMAC1 Freight for regular ports St. Elizabeth Ave. John's·Liewisporte Service for

Dial 91120 forwarding via Lewisporte and ----------the M.V. Codroy will be ac· FREIGHT SERVICE cepted at the Railway Freight

c: Shed Thursday, Friday and TRINITY ... OUTH saturday, october 6th, 7th and

From St. John'• via 8th, 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. I Whltbourne to Old Perlletn, 1 North Shore Conreptlon ~

11 I

to- Carbonear. Trucks also available !or

long haul seorv1ce. Rates Reasonable.

For further inl..rmalion DIAL 936030

CANADiAN NATIONAL 1<01 -1110 lr THL 0...<;.

Onr the years on behall of my Fire & Casualty com· panies, I have always relied on knowledge, through long service, decency and relia· bility as the main keystone• of honourable dealings with the Insuring public of Newfoundland. That will

always continue. Protect what you own by adequate and sound insurance ALWAYS . Caldwell Insurance Agen· cies Ltd., Temple Bldg., Duckworth St., St. John'•· P.O. Box 356. Phone 2485, 90616.

Wall Washing WALL WASHING - WaU.

cleaned by new machiM. Results perfect: saves paint. -New Method Rug and WaD Cleaners, Freshwater Road. 'Pbone 91033.

1 9 5 4

aug23,1mth

For Fast Taxi Service HOTEL TAXI Dial 2424-241 o

l QUEEN'S ROAD l Open from UO to 2 a.a.

NEW AIR CHARTER SERVICE

NEWFOUNDLAND, . LABRADOR and ·

ST. PIERRE.

Ideal for Businessmen, Sportsmen and Hunflin Far complete details fpr Freight and passenger service.

F o R D Dial 2005.6251 $500·00 AIR TRANSIT

8 . d M Ltd LIMITED atr otors . P.o. Box 5T7s fiERP.',.ME~TING ROAD ST. JOHN'S

j DIAL 8•037 8 • 8-0379 l._s_ep_19_·1m_t_h ------'

_.THooii!'""'D...,Al-.LY-.NEW;,;;;;,;..,s-..· S;.;,T;..;. J;.;;;O.;..;:.HN~, NFLD., TUESDAY, OCTO~~ER-.::..4'...;1.;.;96;.;.0 ______________________________________ 1:,.

KINSMEN Boys Club

Newspaper BINGO Series 36.

TO-DAY'S NUMBERS

B I N G 0 4 28 31 50 64 7 29 33 58 69 1 27 38 60 66

13 24 37 54 63 14 21 34 53 70

2 23 35 47 72 20 42

46 62

18 41 68 25 32 74 19 67

Consolation prizes to first 20 to complete the letter X.

Help Kin - Help Kiddies

WATCH BR·OKEN? Bne It ExpertiJ

ae,.lred Hert

CDOIIIOMF.TEBS

AU'l'OMATICS

CALENDAR

AU Given

Immediate AHintloa C.O.D. ORDEilS WELCOMED

SIMON LE~TZ & SONS L TO. 3'1 WATER STREET ST. JOHN'S

WANTED Young man required as assis.tant in well estab­lished .local sales organization, representing top Canad1an llnes. Good future for energetic and 1trious minded person. ·

Experience not essential but helpful.

APPLY BOX 509, CAR·E OF DAILY NEWS · eet4,8

ROWE, PENN·EY, HUNTER and Company

CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS

announce that their St. John's office is now locat­ed In the Dunn Building, Elizabeth Avenue and that their telephone number has been chan~ed to

. 95788

ATTENTION I MOTORISTS

REBUILT ENGINES NO DOWN. PAYMENT

CHEV. 6 cyl. 46-57 With Trad•ln •

·FORD 41-54 · cylinder htads,

With Tracl•ln

s169.oo $10.00 per :Month

s215.oo· $11.00-per :Month

s203.oo DODQE-PLYMOUTH ~41·51 6 cjl.

With Trad•in •n.oo ,.r A~v• low prices l.ndudt delivery of

MW llloclc and pick up of trad•in.

SIMPSONS~SEARS 369 WATER ST. PHONE 5011-12·13

IIIII Tbiii'L T :t.

·In· Tbe News . . \'

CARD PARTY AT BELVEDERE ORPHANAGE

TUESDAY, Oct. 11-8.30 p.m. BRIDGE and AUCTION

$1 00 Cash Door Prize - $25 Mystery Score Prize.

Plus Usual Good Prizes.

Tickets may be obtained by Dialing 2237

oct4;to · ---·---

Wanted Immediately A Combined X-ray and Laboratory Assistant

TECHNICI.AN Attractive personnel policies including a five­day week. For further particulars apply

SUPERINTENDENT, Queen's General Hospital, Liverpool, N.S.

ocl3,4,5

WANTED Male Boarder Or Roomer

In private home, centrally located.

Diai92783L (After 6 p.m.)

WANTED A Junior Office Assistant

(Female) ~;

With knowledge of typing. :Experience preferred but not essential.

APPLY WEST END BRANCH

THANK YOU

SENIOR CITIZENS Your response to our New Senior's Health Plan has been most gratifying. Due to the thousands of applications received during the past few weeks our staff will not be

table to have all membership cards in the mail before coverage begins on October 1st. We sincerely hope that this delay will not inconveni· ence y~u too greatly and wish to assure you that everythmg possible is being done to complete our mailings within the next few days. Than.~~ again for your co-operation.

. ::JJ~ Maritime Medical C·are Jlllr INCORPORATED

The prepaid medical plan Sponsored by The Medical Society of Nov,a Scotia

FOR RENT TWO SELF-CONTAINED, HEATED

APARTMENTS . in exclusive residential area,

GROUND Ft.OOR: 2 bedr_ooms, kitchen, double siHing room, dining-room; billiard room, 2 bathrooms and washroom.

. SECOND FLOORr .o4 bedrooms. dining-room, living room, kichen, clothes room, 2 bathrooms and washroom.

Double garage, lond beautifully landscaped. · , For further particulars apply

.THE .ROYAL TRUST ·co .. PHONE 5196 · · P.O. BOX 1300 oct4,8

DANCE. COLUMBI.AN CLUB

WEDNESDAY, OCT. 5th Double Tickets Commandos.

$2.00 . Orchestra

Tickets obtainable from Fred Wadden, Dick Squires, Leo Baird, Ank Murphy,

and at the Club.

WANTED-

A TEACHER For Grades V and VI at St. Mary's School,

duties to begin January 9th, 1961. Appli·

cations with qualifications are to be sent

to the Secretary,

ANGLICAN BOARD OF EDUCATION,•

FOR ST. JOHN'S,

BISHOPS COLLEGE, PENNYWELL ROAD. oct4,8,12

NEWFOUNDLAND DIVISION COMMUNITY PLANNING

ASSOCIATION OF CANADA

"COMPARISONS" By courtesy of the National Film Board .

The Association invites members and interested persons to attend a showing of the above film at the

NATIONAL FILM BOARD STUDIO, CENTRE BUILDING,

CHURCH HILL, ST. JOHN'S, WEDNEDAY, OCT. 5th, at 8 p.m.

The film makes comparisons between six European and Canadian towns.

ADMISSION- FREE.

I CHIEF ACCOUNTANT -~---­OFFIC'E MANAGER

MAMMY'S, Division of the nation-wide GENERAL BAKERIES organization requires a chief account­ant/ office manager. Qualified applicants are re­quested to call Mr. Boyd at 77 41 during the day­time or Mr. Harding at 80398 during the even· ings. Arrangements can be made for personal int~rviews at your convenience. Excellent oppor· tunrty and salary for the right man. oct4,5

AUCTION SALE THE GREAT EASTERN OIL &_IMPORT CO., LTD.,

SHOWROOMS, WATER STREET

2 ELECTRIC WASHERS 1 CHROME TABLE AND CHAIRS 1 EUREKA POLISHER 1 TELEVISION 2 CHAIN SAWS

ON OCTOBER 4th, AT 1:30 P.M. oct1,3,4

SPENCER CLUB SALE I

WILL BE HELD ON

WEDNESDAY, Oct. 5th BISHOP SPENCER COLLEGE

Morning Coffee - Afternoon Tea oct3,4

. JUST. ARRIVED I SIMPSONS-SEARS

FAMOUS KENMORE SPACE HEATERS

MODELS FOR EVERY HOME HEATING NEED AND COMFORT

NO DOWN PAYMENT

s74.9s S7 .oo per :\!onth

s139.9s 59.00 per ~!ont~'

20" X 1 7" X 38'' · s94.9s $7.00 per Month. ·

10" POT THE TYPE BURNER-HEAT-MIS~R FlUE BAFFLE FOR GREATER ECONOMY, FRONT DOOR LIGHTING, AUTOMATIC · DRAFT CONTROL All STEEL CONSTRUC~. liON.

SIMPSONS-SEARS,

REMOVAL NOTICE·: Carl Winsor Insurance Ltd ... Now located in their new offices: ··

GROUND FLOOR, 204 WATER STREET

(Formerly occupied by Fearn Ltd.) . :·~

We Need A 2-BEDROOM APARTMENT.

Self contained, with electric stove and ff'idge. Would like a yard for my little girls to play. Our number is 98181.

, Mechanics' , Specials

1952 FORD DID YOU KNOW? 1951 HILLMAN 1952 AUSTIN 1952 MERCURY

STAKE

McKINLAY MOTORS LTD. LeMARCHANT ROAD

PHONE 4193 • 4 • 5

THE

SHOPPING CENTRE 6 FRESHWATER ROAD

Carry full lines of e Ladies' Wear- Men's Wear e Children's Wear- Household Needs e Yard 'n' Pound Goods . e Notions 'n' Smallwares

Why not shop at this new, modern

'HIGHER. LEVELS JUNIOR :: DEPT. STORE

SOON- THE'R PRICES ARE REALLY LOW oct4,8

.-- .-THE DAILY NEWS. ST.· JOHN'S, NFLD., TUESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1960

.-· .. · .·

. CHILDREN'S ALL WOOL CHILDREN'S • I

PLAID SLACKS

ORLON

ClLTONE SA'rJN ·HIGH GLOSS

EGGSHELL SEMI GLOSS CILTONE SEMI GLOSS

GLOSELASTIC KEMGLO

CHINA LAC ENAMEL MATCHLESS ENAMEL

FRIGEN ENAMEL CILUX ENAMEL

$ena yoll!' favorHe snapsh:~ot ~ln ___ ..-.--1

CARDIGANS Reg. $1.75 Pair

All Shades NOW ONLY

Sizes 2 to 6x

Pair·

B-H ENGLISH SHERWIN-WILLIAMS AlOO

MATCHLESS ACRYLIC

TRY US FIRST You'll he amazed at the

money yoJ. save.

JARDINE'S PAINT & HOUSEWARES

Ell .. GH,LJNGHM1, Representati~e.

Phone 5567 165 Water Sl. aug9,lmth

SERVICE. PROMPT DELIVERY

~.,... ·-

BEFORE YOU GO Jerome Weidman

MADAME GOLDEN­FLOWER

C. . lee ............... . A GODDESS

$4.59

4.951

NAMED GOLD Bhabani Bhattacharya

HAWAII ....... 4.951

James A. Michener 6.95 · SAY IT WITH YOUR :AMERA

Sizes 2 to 6 Jacob_ Deschin .... 5.95

' JOURNEY INTO CRIME Don Shitehead .... 5.95

DEAR TEEN·AGER

Kodak Christmas Folders prov~de ~ * \

ner of Bishop's Falls.

1\lr. and l\lrs. Gcor.ge Saund· crs recently visited their son, Rev. Manuel Saunders and fam· ily at Channel.

handy and inexpensive way to send your 1avoritc black-and-white or color snapshot to friends and loved ones. Yours will be the card they'll keep and cherish! Choose from our colorful designs and

Ladies' Abigal Van Buren THE BRIDGE

2.95 greetings. Order your prints and folders early and avoid the rush!

Manfred Gregor.... 3.95 Miss Pearl Davis of Toronto • TRAGEDY AT HONDA

has just spent a short holiday, C A l k d d vsiiting her parents Mr. and I • oc WOO an

All Wool

CARDIGANS Mrs. B. J. Davis. \ H. C. Adamson .... 5.95

The motor vessel "Shirley HOW TO LOSE FRIENDS Goodyear I" has arrived back [AND ALIENATE from Labrador where she had PEOPLE

If not in possession of a presentable picture of you or your family come in .••• ar phone now for your appointment.

been under charter to the Dep_t. of Northern Affairs col· Irving D. Tressley 3.75 IccUng trout from the Eskimo Sizes 38 to 44

We have available a Iorge selection of local scenery from which you can choose. Don't delay.

Green Grey Mauve Wine

Navy Blue

fishermen of Labrador. Good o· k & c L d to see the captain and crew I( S 0., t , looking so well.

Thl! )!.V. "Elsie and Grrl- The Booksellers ~~~~:· ~;~n~~dar~~vs 0~~r<~~~~sleb~: . Spin 4425 ar 2008 or 3191 ' ville is now on the marine shlp i at the premises of Burry's 1 El d th·------shi ards. 1 • ·cry secon , e. sun un-

PY I leashes energy eqmvalent to ' . . . · that of a billion or more hy- ·

The christening of the mfant drogcn bombs. daughter of lllr. and M-rs. Joe ------------Goodyear Jr., of Gander took

S. MILLEY· LTD. Glovertown Notes

place at the Glovertown Cen­da~·s having come here with his tral United Church on Sept. 4. father's family from Fresh- The ceremony was performed water, Carboncar. He married by Rev. G. L. }forgan and the

II

WATER ST.

: C!'or;:r Pardy, aged 15. son j l'ollowing the ceremony a Miss Molly Pomeroy from . name chosen for the infant n[. ~!r. and )Irs. Carson Pardy 1 recrption was held in the audi- Catalina and spent many years ! was Elizabeth Patricia. ~Irs. of Glovcrtown won a $400 ' torium of the Central High at Boston, ~-!ass. A few months Goodyear was the former Miss F · t 5 · M th 1

5cholarship awarded by the , School. Mr. and Mrs. • Feltham before his death he came here Clarice Diamond of this town, I rS I X On S A.KD. Company to Grade IX I have taken up residence at to reside with his son, Melvin. daughter of Mr. and 1\lrs. Ken I Jet Operat'lons students. George was horn at ' Glovl'rtown. He also leaves to mourn a Diamond who attended the bap-~lu£rra\'Ctown Hr. on Sept. 2. I brother John. To the sorrow- 'tism as did Mr. Goodyear's par- ' 1945 and heard the good news lllr. and Mrs. Gordon Easton ing relatives and friends we ents, 1\!r. and ~rs. Joe Good- ~IONTREAL - On Sept. 30. ' of being awarded the scholar- and two children motored from extend sincere sympathy. Inter- year who reside at Grand T!·~ns-Canada Air Lines com-' Ehip on his 15th. birthda)'. He Corner Brook recently and mcnt took place on Friday, Falls. Mr. Roland Goodyear of t plcted its first six months of has attended the Glovertown spent a week-end with lllr. Eas- Sept. 16 In the United Church Gander was also present. I jet opcr~tions, establishing new l"e:1tral High School for the

1 ton's parents, Capt. and Mrs. Cemetery, Glovertown Central. llcl'cls of aircraft speed and re·

p3st three years and this past :Richard Easton of Glovertown Mrs. Leah Loder is at pres- MacCORMAC'S liability, and with two official year obtained an a1•eragc of North. Gordon is a partner in There passed away at the cnt visiting her son John at speed records to its credit. 77.9'i. Mr. Hickman, superin- ~the law firm of )!arlin and General Hospital, St. John's on Arlington, Mass. She enplaned Dial 5181 · t · I Since introducing the 127-: tcndcnt ol the woods personnel : Easton of Corner Brook. Sept. 10 ~rs. Blanche sweet- from Grander Sept. 7 and ex· GEAR, STRE~T pa~senger Douglas DC-B's on ! of the A.N.D., came here br i apple of Glovertown south, peels to be there several weeks. RECEIVING ()I- FICE, 'daily transcontinental service • pl~nc on Sept. 9 and presented ' ~lr. and )Irs. George Thistle aged 61 years, leaving to 1 ADEI.AIDE ;,TREET I April I, and on daily trans-At· I the cheque to George. Heartiest . motored from New York and mourn one brother, ~ir. Edgar Mr. and :\Irs. Carson Strand ----- - ----- •!antic scnice June 1, the air-co:J~ratulations and best wish· 1 stopped off at Glovertown to Samson of this town and one and llr. and Mrs. Arthur Strond BIRTH I line has carried almost 75,000: es lor future success. - . visit Mrs. Thistle's aunt, l\lrs. sister, Mrs. Chaytor of st. have just returned from a two ------- · · -- · ---- . jet passengers. ·

; Daniel Feltham and :I! iss Bes· John's. Interment was at the week motor trip to the Can- WALSH-Born ~t St. Clare's ! On Oct. 1, following delivery A \'Pry pretty wedding took ; sie Felt ham. Salvation Army Cemetery, Glov- ad ian mainland and Eastern Mercy Hospital on October 3rd . of its fourth DC-8 jetliner, TCA :

pl?.ce in the United Church at : ertown. She was a member of Slates. to Gabriel and Helen Walsh :will inaugurate a second daily Glovertown Central on Sept. 11 Trse Jubilee Guild field work· the Home League for a num· (nee Wickham}, a daughter. j trans-continental jet flight. at 6.30 p.m. when Agnes, )'Dung-: ers_ are _her~ for tw~ week~-~ ber o.f years and will be great- Miss .Jacqueline Butt of -St. 1 This second flight will operate est daughter of Mr. and 1\lrs.

1 Thls Gmld 1s· now domg hand!· ly m1ssed by all who knew John's and }!iss Jiilian Butt of • DEATH \. ),!ontreal · Toronto · Winnipeg-

Raymond Tuff became the b"iclc !craft work for a sale to be .her. Deepest sympathy to the Gander spent last week end Vancouver return. giving the of Ross, son of 1\lr. and Mrs. ·held soon. bereaved. with their parents Mr. and i ~lanitoba capital daily return :\oah Fcltham. Rei'. G. L. ~lor- 1. Mrs. J. W. Butt. I awWayHITSE-dPasseod 1 pbeacefulldy 1 jet service for the first time.

Ull ay, C 0 Cr 2n , I S' a ' " ( . gan officiated at the ceremony. . Reg Higgin~ •. who has been Mrs. William Faulkner of . Mary K 1 (!\!' · ) d 74 1 mce ~omg m o serv1cc, . The bride was given in mar- :employed with Grant Mills 1 Bishop's Falls is spending the A most enjoyable week-end I ;·cars :.i;e of m~~~~st ag~hite, i TCA's fleet of three jet aircraft

mge by ~fr. Nelson Sparkes 1 Construction Company for some I week visiting her sister, Mrs. 1 was spent at St. Pierre Sept. leavi~g to mourn, besides her has log~cd more than ~.500 re·

Rnd was attended by her sis-, time, has now gone to St. :E. N. Arnold. Mrs. Arnold's · 9-12 by lllr. and Mrs. C. E. husband, one son, Harold, 8 venue air hours, travelling some t~r. ~Irs. Walter Parsons. as I John's where he hopes to ob· :brother, :.vrr. Sig Lindahl, Grand Ackerman. They were accom- grandchil-dren and 4 great- 1:750,000 miles-a d1stance 70 11_1at~on of honour and. Misses i' lain employment. Falls spent Tuesfay and Wed· panied by Mr. and :.trs. Everett grandchildren. Funeral 2.30 .m. hmes around the earth at the 1

Kat1e Feltham and Ed1th Butt -- nesday 20 and 21 with her also. Doak ~f Terra Nova National today, Tuesday, from her ~ate :equator at an average ground : as best man and the ushers We regret to report the pass· Park and Mr. and Mrs. Don residence 133 Patrick st to I speed of 500 miles per hour · were William Feltham and Gar-~ ing on Sept. 14 of lllr. Richard Miss Edwina Holloway, who Spracklin, Charlottetown. [ the Angiican Cemetery, F;rest I over all routes. In additi..11.n; don Hounsell. Parsons, aged 69 years. He Is taking 1 commercial· course I J Road. they've logged more than WO

1'he organist for the occasion 11eaves to mourn his wile, one at St. Michael's School, Grand COMMER. BOWLING hours in training and familiari-

was Mrs. Frank Sweetapp!e and I daughter Eileen and fqur sons Falls spent Sept. 24 and 25 with NOTE OF THANKS zation flights. ~lr!. John Buffett sang, "I'll Vernon, Irving, Austin and Dr. her parents, Mr. and Mrs SchedUle To accomplish this with just \yal~ Beside You,': during the I ~1elvln. The late 1\!r. Parsons Roland Holloway, She was ac: The family of the late Rich- three aircraft is proof of the J1'6nlng of the regiSter. hved at Glovertown in his early •companied by Miss Marie Faulk; ard Dinn of St. John's wish to phenomenal reliability of the

SECTION (A) express their sincere thank to DC-8, according to TCA offi-

'~~·~:,:·.· ~ . ·'·~"'~ ~~e··~·

e·a1 RCH . eMAHOGANY e WALNUT eoAK eELM' eASH

Wherever be•uty •1111 dv,.. . blllty 1re the keynotes, you'll find NUFAply PLYWOODS. l11 oiRcet, playroom~, .11 vI n t r o o m 1 or hotela. NUFAply ' ·

• PI:YWQPDI .,. ouhtlncllnt ~ their field. Vl•lt your n•.,. · . est Lumbet Dt1ler 1nd lnslll on NUFAply .PLYWOODS for •II your Jnt.rlor flnltltea-•v•lf.

.1blt In lltdj, M1hoglily, W•lo nut, O.k, Elm 1rid Ath. • .

Wednesday:- all kind friends, relatives and cials. 7.00 neighbours who helped in any On ~lay 28, one of TCA's

Comm. Cables vs L. & Power way to alleviate their sorrow DC·B's established two official Bennett's vs T. N. Motors and bereavement in the death

of a dear husband and father. trans-Atlantic speed records, 8.15

Parker's vs Furness W. N fld. Brew vs Ayre's Ltd.

9.30 Brookfield vs Bowring's Imperial Oil vs Harvey's

Thursday:-· 7.00

Royal Stores vs R. Garage Nfld. T. & E. vs Telegram

8.15 Col. Cordage vs Barnes' L.N.Y. vs Hickman Mts.

9.30 G. E Oil vs .Mitchell's. •E. E. ·Bakery vs Ayre's S/M

SECTION (B) 7.00

Wednesday:- · Daily News vs Standard ·I. F. Perlin Ys U.T.E.

" 8.U5 Hubley's vs Walsh's Nafel vs S. Levitz

. 9.30

Bak.

Chas. R. Bell vs O~Regan's ~E. Utilities vs ~valon Tel.

Thunday:-7.0Q.

Can. Pacific vl Tooton's Royal Ban\ . vs McMurdo's

8.15 B.-Harvey vs Col. Garage Bursey's T. vli B.-Johnston

. . 9.30

! H.-Maynard vs D.-Bradstreet ' Geo. Neal n Great Lakes

To all those who sent wreaths, covering the 3,322 miles be­mass cards, sympathy cards, tween Ottawa and London in ]etters and telegrams, and five hours, 55 minutes, and the especially Rev. Father J. Iliad- 3,247 miles between l\Iontreal digan, the Holy Name Society, and London in five hours, 44 the Sisters of St. Joseph's minutes. Mercy Convent and Dr. J. These records have been con-Crowley. firmed by the Federation Aero· ,iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.. nautic International, official ~ custodians of all the world's

IN MEMORIAM

JANES. ln memory of my hus­

band, WILLIAI\1 JANES,

who passed peacefully away on October 2nd, 1955.

Gone but not _forgotten.

Inserted by his widow Annie.

speed records, which has two officials aboard the record-mak­ing flight.

TCA has ordered a total of 1 10 of the S6,000,000 DC-B's.

NAMED TO CPR POST TORONTO (CPl-G. W. :\!iller 1

has been appointed ass1stant gen· . era! manager of the Canadian Pacific Railway's eastern· region, succeeding W. F. Koehn who re· tired because of ill health, the company announced Monday. Mr. Miller, former general superin­

~~~~~~~~~~~ tendent of the Ontario district, -: • has held the position of assistant

TV REPAIRS

REASONABLE RATES

· GUARANTEED WORK

PHONE 94123 Electronic

Centre Ltd. 90 CAMPBELL AVE. ·

--After hours 'PHONE 7313

general manager, special duties since July, 1959.

OPENING

ANNOUNCEMENT

TAILOR SHOP Prompt service given. to all

Alterations and Repairs

JOHN and DULCIE SAUNDERS

364 DUCKWORTH ST . opposite Daily News Telephone 7788

II C-0 ··-

!j 2;::.

' I

:']i \ 1: 'L I .,

~

t\rrD\ :'\ ~ ~--~ I • \~(}-'~\ f-:<, (_ II ;·-/ ..... / I /1 ~· ~ =-'-'--

IIIIi m:--· '~· Y;rf L; ../ ~~ l -rr-. '-'-0

-··

2 ~ '-

• ··----w T.H.Rtr.U.t.,.•t.eft', I

'?·17 -~:~!!~nt.. j

"What do you suppose we want? A facial of course!"

HONOR HARLE~I DEATH SENTENCE J PARIS (Rcuters)-Mohamed

SANTIAGO, Cuba ( AP) - · Azrara, a 24-year-<~ld Algerian, One of eastern Cuba's largest / was sentenced to death by a manganese mines. which used : military court Monday for at­to be called the Chraco Redon- 1 tempting to assissinate ~rench do, now is named "Harlem." An , deputy and former tenms s_tar announcement said the workers . Robert Abdesselam. A pollee­renamed it as a tribute to "the 1· man was killed in the Pans suffering colored people of the. street attack last May in which United States." I Abdesselam was wounded.

BUY TODAY •.• USE TODAY WITH THE

I.A. C. MERIT PLAN We make all the arrangements on the spot-no need to borrow money. No lengthy delays . · •• No red tape. Buy what you want when you want

it. Automatic life insurance protects your invest· ment. Toke advantage of Canada's most used time purchase plan.

SPECIAL YOUNGSTOWN

VALUE SINKS SEE THEM TO-DAY

• Large roomy bowl • Spacious dralnboard. • Large storage com·

partment.

'2 Inches wide.

LOW, LOW

PRICE

$79·95 up

C,OME IN OR PHONE

·C. A~ HUBLEY LTD. KING'S ROAD - DIAL 3914·