VB.~,THE ··- DAILY· NEWS '· - Memorial University...

16
'GQQ.D' NEWS DAILY· NEWS ··- .. . l\ VoL 67. No. 197 . THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, l960 (Price, 7 Cents) Charles Hutton & Sons \ 1sm1sse rom ICe Pres. Kasavubu Names lleo As Succe·ssor I Indian Battle Troops: Rebels , NEW DELIII !Reuter,J-India. slroycd a ncar the post LEOPOLDVILLE CP-President Joseph Kasavubu ·• ··-· ·: st•nl troop reinforcements Mon· in a bid to prcn-nt reinforce- said Monday night he dismissed Premier Patrice What s·.de? I dny to an arm. ,;· near the menls [i'Om in. . 1 l!urmn oonlcr winch lws l:ccn, Lumumba, and Lumumba promptly strode tnto a I I anti cut orr hy rebel Extrcmi.<t \':lga t r i h r s men Leopoldville radio station, seized a microphone and i I!BllSSEl.S, Belgium rnt•til· tribesmen. hare bern a war called for support of the army. i neuters coi'I'C.<pondent , Dclcnee :\linh;lcl' V. K Kris- ngnin't thr Ind1an gonTnn"·nt · Lumumba denounced Kasavubu and the 1 in Lcopoldl'iiic this mcs· hna J\ic•n0•1 said the :;oo trihc>- the lust fm• :;cn•·s: drmnm!: i sage : 0 on the na i llll'n, allJlCd with l'lloc' and lllg an "mrlt•pendrnt :\;of.(a]anrl. president hod no au:hority to dismiss him. He said he 1 diu Telex s e r v 1 c c · m<lchinc · The rebels. rstim:lird to mnn· · spoke as defence mini:;ter and head of the army. · outnumber" solrlict's at !he po.;t b,'r ah11Ut tJIOil, hm·c lor·cn pro·· Kasal'ubu earlier in a ra·, '':\i'nll'rl Jwre just hill lwl.!:ng out <l,: •. nst pushed to the wild rt' b d t h t 1 h d d ---.... - .......... · .... .... bern at lhl' <lom· of t! 1 ,. · !H'a\'1' odds. lllllillllamntb IO roa cas. l a IC a name . ; the bnltle·lorn Bnkwnnl!a area of office to ·prel'ent jolll'nill· ll:r rchds lwd de nurma lmh;m !I'Oops. sr.natc Pres1denl ,Joseph lleo as · Knsai pro1·incc and announced 1( · isls from entering... .. ..... --- · · .IIUccessor t 1 o. L u ,m and i had set a secret dille for the in· ihked the lmtcd Nallo.ns lo \'aslon of l>reakawa'' :\skcd from Bru.;scts "me B I • R d. T ol'r con r.o o e ongo, a·, province. ' r I 1 r th C K 1 ' •· ''Oil in ihl' CtiiTC· e gia·ns ea )! 0 sm·ubu saul he· would hcnd the 11 WilS impossihlc to im· spondent rc11lied "Think so, 1 ' army. mediate!.'· the likel.'· lcaction to hut standing by machine fur I "'EED 'I \"'D \TE ' !ll'cscnl." " •'' •' ; Kasa\'ubt•'s hv thr Force D f d I( A U:-.1 spokesm/111 said the r:o-i' Publictuc, which mlitinicd ilflcr L i1 I c I' the e·n ·a- tang a would cndcal'or to take over but independence. In the lilsl lew .lames tclcxl'd to the 1 Brussels office would need a mandate to do so .. weeks. it has shown itself to he ":o;ot sure what side the Kasal'ul>u made his dramatic and cnpricious. hul !'ongulrse troops who Ill'· u;oroLJJ\'ILJ.I·: , cp 1 _ Bt•i-. :m:.!•L announcement the I it :;till was seen here the kc.v CIIIJ)'I· 11 g the 1'clnx ofr 1 ·c .. ., 11 ·c · r 'II · · · II 1 n 1 'l't 1 · ' c OI'C!'> >II rem;llillll;! 111 It' I 11 >i'U>'l' S, Ill I I ary SOli CCS army poured ·reinforcements inlo' to power in the Congo . . --------- -------·- .. _____ ... _ .. _ . _ on. hi;: :ll'lnv hasr of K<tmina in se· >Hid i11e nnh· >nldi<'l'> ''Impossible In whctllCr ce"iuni;t Kntang:1 pml'inel' itp- IL•lt in 1\illllil;<l arc tedmicians. Pro-chl ·nese Reds the is (Ill' Lumumha (II' ]];'ill' l'eatl,v to defl'IHI if SCI'l'ni)' . nine ini<Jnl:·y- fur Kasa\'Uhu. I feel it inadl'j,;. thr gorernmcnt tries to '1 men flew into Rrussrl> )Jond;oy ahle In him." inradr, a l'nited Xalions otficiill. and the suun·<·s >aid \\WC' :;aid ; thp lnsl comh:tl troops llclgium W u Fl d The otficial. just hack from a had in the Congo. I In Ppel .. an Trl·besmen !(lUI' of tht• ha>c. hP fouml .JL'ST A:o; HOUR AW.\Y I nn rl'idrnce thai thr The l':\ ol'fieial ><lid a Rrban ' 1 1 pian In pull out of Kamina t:Oill· olfit·Pt' al pointer! to I By H•:snr RRADSIIER shiftrd lraclrrship frollll th,. mod- Clash In I plelrl)', l'adin ll'ansmillrr hi,, tour I !liEW DELHI IAPI-The rae·, rrates to and s:lirl lion that supports Communist I'ROBI.E.\1 FOR 1'.\RT': , '"'ratronprr< h:•rl hren "St'r tll:tl tl·ansmitlrl".' Tl1r rir- PITTSBURGH, Pa.-This "private car", piloted by Morton S. Smith, Vice· Pre5ident and Regional Manager, was the only thing moving on the Pennsylvania as operations on the nation's largest railroad were brought to o halt by a strike of maintenance men. Actually fhe cor 1s a rail chP.(k.-(UPI Telephoto). China has apparently won the Up· When China the Ti· K 1rithdrmm. snmr In the F\ prn· noil is npen ill time< In lkl· per hand in the Indian Comm'l• hrrtan uprisiu;t in enya : lrl'ior.1lr of l l'lllll!i e;ost l'ht')" :trr jnsl F. Jlist party's divided leadership. . and in with I nf the hut p,•rhaps o,Oilll illl hnur ill\'il)' h)" pi;Jilr. If :nw I e r c e :\Iter a long with more· India on the border, the Indian 1\cn)·a tHrutc 1 ·sl nlhrl' 'oldiNs still rem:tiued in lrouhlr drn·lors. they'll hr hr•·c . moderate and nationalistic ele· 1 Communists were faced wilh a Another ciHsh l){'tll'crn 1\amina. lhr point of 1\ilt. in nn timr.'' Fighting Bakwanga Area In ments, the extremists now arc problem. In 1 hcory. a Communist and Wukamba tribesmen ha.< oc· · ----- _.. · · ____ .. _ ----- -- speaking in the party's name and country could do no wron::: and l!lll'l'cd in the arid Sultan llamud A .d t Toll T h e with Peking in the bitter must be suppOI'ted by othCI' Com- area about ;o miles from CCI en dispute with India over the Hlma· munlsts. But Communist modcr it was reported .\londay, la;van ·border. ales counselled caution · A group of Wukumba This fact has provoked angry , of angry Indian public reaction 1 into Masai territory and drove I outbursts by P r I m e Minister to both events. ; of! 500 head of Masal cattle after Reaches 69 Nehru, who told Parliament last · Injuring a Masai warrior guard· week the Indian . Communists The Indian Comm:mists ha\'C ing the herd Sunday night, the. carry on "a blatant, long been di\'ided on basic politi· ' reports said, and false propaganda campaign cal strategy. Some be:ievc in a · 1 The Wakamba drol'c the herd · meant to defame the position of tough policy. of opposition to the into their own rescn·e where ' By TilE CANADIAN PRESS · Ontario and Quebec 15 of lndia." government on all fronts and use I they il·ere followed by a police: .The death toll on Canada' them in four accidents. Ontario Tensions wIthin the Indian of Ioree if necessary. Others be· patrol which recovered 150 cal· • htghways rose to 49 'is the three- recorded 2:1 traffic deaths, Que· Communist party are obscure be· lleve In following constitutional tle and arrested four Wakamba. day Labor Day weekend drew iu IX'c 17, British Columbia three. cause of party secrecy, but a I routes to power, confident that Reports said a rel·engc.scck· a close. Albct'\a and X ova Scotia two meeting of the party secretariat internal factors will lead India ing war parly of 100 warriors 9 p.m. a Ca-' each. and Prince Edward Island recently is believed to have to communism. armed with spears was nmhan Pre>s surl'ey: which ;uns and :O.:ew Brunswick one each. Fire the Wakamba. Police patrols. from 6 p.m. local t1mes Fnda,,· were trying to intercept the I to :\londny, showed a, Ontario also counter! the most VI . cti• ms :party to prevent further blood· total of 68 persons had died in drownings, six. Brilish Colmnhia shed. car accidents, drownings and, had three. and Que· In a series of recent scattered from other accidental causes. I bee and :"/ova Scotia one each. skirmishes, 11 Wakambas and The traffic loll ulready ex-' In Queber one person was killed two !\lasaias h:ll'c been killed cecdcd last year's lola\ of 43,: in an accidental shootin.g, an· Ll·:OPOLn\'ILLE tfletller>l - clolhes. landed at Luluabourg., bc•·t Kalonji was reporled heal'y The l'on;:o!c'e . a r .11 y Sunday. Kasai, before going on to Bak·' and spreading. pou1·cd reinforcement> into the wanga 80 m i I e s away. They: A report recch·ed in Leopold· lnlttle-torn Bakwanga area of landed again at Luluabourg after ville Sunday said 400 persolll Kasal p1 01 ;nee and JllllOllllL'l:d it· making the trip, then took olf were killed or 11 ounded Saturday hns ,e( a srcret date for the in-' again , Kalonji has proclaimed a "min- \'asion or IJI'eakaway A Congolese officer at Lulua- ing slate'' in diamond-rich Kasai pi'ul·inee, : hourg said they were returning independent of the central gov· Ten Sol"iet 11.-14 111 in·engined to Stanleyville, 500 miles to the' ernment, planes, lent to the central go\'·, northeast, for more troops, l'rnment serer a! days ago, car-, REINFORCEMENTS ' a plane left Leo· rietl some 200 Congolese troop:;' The troops were slated to re· , poldl'ille for Luluabourg to claim to Bakwanga from Stanlcyville.' in!orce other central government : the body of Henry !'Ooble Ta)'lor, capilal ol Oriental prol'ince. forces in the Bakwanga area. 1 an Am c ric an reporter for The pl:mcs, which nil bore the 1 where fighting between central• Scripps Howard markings of the Sol'ict Union and: gol'ernment forces and Baluba I killed Sunday by machine-gun were manned by crew in civilian who support rebel AI· 1 fire near Bakwanga. R t H . and several wounded. I and was only one less than the other was struck by a tram. and e Urn Orne .10 predicted by the Canadian; two died of carbon · monoxide, s1• h ! 1 Highway Safely Council for the ' poisoning in a C:JI'. ,\ similar I g t ' Forest I long weekend. The total 19o9 La·' poisoning death was reported in QUEBEC (CP)-Resldents of: the towns despite a li;:ht rain·sun- · bor Day weekend fatality loll Ontario. where two children Gains Battle In three Gaspe peninsula communi·· day, the first in 10 days. was i4. also crushed hy n trailer in low ties, evacualed last WEek before Two or three da)'S of heavy Forty pc1·sons were killed on by a tractor. homes as the fire veered away. Residents of St. Charles Gar· Forest Fires s.t 'Ill -u N. ·-:T· .. _G_ _ ____ d ___ i w I. t h The fire was reported still nier, Val d'Espolr and St. Gabriel roops ua r ! burning In the forests away from de Rarneau were returning s\owl;; ' The forc,t fire situation in the In western Prince Edward Js. tol in the western section of the .to their homes. . Bu'flll. n .. · g ' I' were still far land !our separate fires showed province and another near Xew· 1 signs of declining Sunday night i castle near the east coast. 'The DEATH TOLL WHIM OF THE WIND K b 1 H 1 ------- · .... -- but by noon :llonday spruce I Newcastle fire was said to be They have been forced to move 'd r d 1 R' 1 · ff' · 1 I In d N P 'II' stands at B1 e or , Fox ey ll'er, causmg o !Cia s some concern. tw ce s Ce the fire starte 19 The forest fire situation im· a sa v u us 0 Rew eniCI IR I and Black Banks flared. up aga!n,. o.ne highway was and the Is HIGH days ago, depending on the whim proved over the long For a lime se\·eral bu1ldmgs village of Carnaby R1ver was of the wind, Day weekend, as most of 1 , · eluding a chlll'ch in the Bidclord · alerted. · the f1res started by berryp1ck· 1 u · 1 d " · 1 f h · h 1 . f H taiS I area were believed to be in 1 The new outbreaks brought the CHICAGO (API-The National Reports from the ngion sai•l crs last Thursday, were either I . me. ..altOn, tro?ps were' I Kasm·u II iS t e. e lief or ospl dan :number of forest fires blazing h there is little left arounri the com· out or smouldering in the turf posted 111 a cordon mound Ka· ·of state, 1t 1s because 11e so 1 g : , 1 • • , , Safety Council SJild t at itl t b 1 h "h · . . · I savubu's home alter· reports that 1 wished. We can also withdraw , . . . , Showers Sunday n1ght and. an 111 Brunswick to the death toll on US highways mun es o . urn, at ou" a The largest f1rc m the cast· nt t g t tr h d ,. 1 l'.l'el\' hosp1tal 1n Canada abrupt wind chanoc prol'lded: for the Labor Day hoi· change In lht wind could still ern region is burning at Old ' 1 11 rat 00 5 P 1 .sdan,?e : ou 1 r .. cnc,c. 11 1 1 d will a emergency •; 200 firefi"hters inn Nom Sco·l Rain was falling in Newfound· blow flames back toward them p \" 0 !\'[ 1 't h d cO e 0 c p ll > rc. ' ' . IS up 0 lC prop e ° I f St I ']J' tl ' ' . lday may fall !hort of the estl· The 1 d h , d 1 11 · b cr Icdan 1 · n 'th. om 50 ay 1 d a f ' SEEKS BACKING ; cide today. 11 is 1111 to them to supphy .o 3 Pl 1 ci·. 1 m. 1 . lhe new tia's Shelburne Countr with some; land ane:noon and it mated 460 w n as rcmamc cam a . urne o WI Jn yar s o In hi b a least 1 m b ; h 1 1 1 1 synl et1c pemc1 111 w 11c com.' small "ains aoainst a fire that 1 gave every md1Callon of check .. . k · d 1 tl t h I , s 1·o l . , .. u urn a c }C: \\'een a man w \0 pays 1 ••• ld S h'• b t . . · o · I , h At 6 p.m. ADT the count re· 1 wee en . I 1e neares ouses, ant was , cnlled 011 the Force rublique to he game or Belgian imperialism hats . (,o en. lap ac ena ·has burned uncontrolled lor 11: ing three hres m t e prO\'· corded by the Associated Pre>s . . . , , kPpt under• c.ontrol only by a 1 stand behind him and declared I and a go,·ct·nment who lights day mfectwns.. 1 cs1stanl all days. The wmd change back ; mce and s1x or seven smaller was 3 S 7 . Some I5? .mol'ed m,o: men who kept beat· 1 "We defeated the Belgians and and night !or the people." other accordmg. to tracked the fire front over. ai- ones. · "There Is a fair chance," said Grande. R 1v 1 ere, about scven 1 mg the f1re out. It was under . we must go on winning... : 1 Brussels Radio ,aid a few Dr .. Be1:nard D? )lasscy, ready burned ar7as but offlc13ls! . . . . an NSC spokesman "that the miles [tom the scene, as a pre·\ up to press but ! 1 Radio quoted Lu- cries of "Long Li\'e Lunmmba"' 1 cultve \Icc-President of Bnstol sa1d there was ·a great deal of. A maJor fire wh1ch erupted m toll nol be 81 as the At least a dozen. bu!ld· the wmd was and a , mumba as saying :and· "Long Lh•e the Republic , •Laboratories of Canada Ltd. I tmuble'' in two sections of the dense spruce near in the toll for. Labor Day l9S9-43B." . mgs were des!royed f1re. i Department. of .and Re· : ("We elected Kasavubu who , were heard in the studio during The l:lrl11sh :.Jed teal .Joun_Jal ; ftrc area. The blaze al.ready has central part of the was In addition to traffic accidents, most of them m St. Gabnel. off1c1al sa1d 11 I had not the confidence of the · Lumumba's broadcasl.l reports successful tnals w1th i devastated some 40 square m1lcs under control. At Garmsh on there were 20 dead in boating Most of the colon. eastly get of. agam. , I 111 said Lumumba Llme on the drug in .English Ia bora lor· . of spruce, pine and scrub. south coast four·day old hre traledies 59 drowning vlctlnu settled Wllh the Bid or the The Garmsh fire Which had air again 10 minutes later and ics and hospitals. I NEW OUTBREAKS was smouldenng under a steady ancl 63 kllled In vatious ace;. provincial h i an area three or four , TRQU BLE AT occuscd being "a The new pencillin has been 1 In New Brunswick where the rainfall and at Old Perlican on denll. · make a living by farmmg, fiShm::: · miles long, and consumed ' lackey of imperialism." , developed by outbreak. forest' the Avalon Peninsulal five .for· The · count started and -cutting wood. .... , several acres, flared ------ scienllsts associated with Bm· hres had about a head estry d7partmcnt pumpers were at 6 P m local time Frida and ., .- up strongly a gam on Saturday (A RQL LAKE to] laboratories and a group of start on the other Atlanhc prov· attemptmg to erase the last ends at local time Mon· k L burning ?Ut of TWO Nfldr'S British scientists. inces. the story .was grave. trace or a stubborn fire now day night' . Stri·C en oggers Ill fairly .. Rem· Detailed report.' on Staph- There were three new fires Mon· blazing in turf. · forced fire f1ghtmg eqUipment · 300 workers went on strike ·m will be made to the medi· day, -------- -TuE,.. COUNTRY PARSON and personnel. were ;ushed to at Carol Lake, Labrador, yes· w.·n Awards "profession on Wednesday, Forestry officials reported one Topiary is an ancient garden "' '1 doubt J{ we can' cause ne£gh bora or naUons tp Jove, us by pre· parJni 1o annihilate them If they don't. Leave · Ho· · 5 · p.:. l"ta .. I the scene, and a as lcrday morning. On Saturday September 7th, I 960 at 3 con· new bl.aze at Nashwaaksis craft: the work or art of train· well, and by Sunday 1t was well they marched to the Pentagon f d th auspi'ces of Fredericton another near Bns· ing and trimming trees or d 'I G'll · crcncc 1111 er c . . , un er control. By Monday only Construction Company office n c 1 Umversity has an· h St t Univ rsit of New shrubs into odd or ornamental Four loggers who had been stricken some ·time ago with a mysterious malady later dlag. nosed as a form of typoid, hafe left hospital at Springdale. The men were not fully 'rec!)fcred from the effects of the disease and apparently took French leave and walked off. Lumber camp foremen and· others have been warned against hiring the men' and apparently the au- thorities are going to do some- thin( to prevent the men from spreading the disease .. The other Iosgers In the hospital will remain there until they get a clean bill of health from the doc ton. half' a dozen smoke spots could and presented their demands nounced a record number or e" eu ef d' . . Hurricane shapes. be seen. for higher wages, improvement Entrance Scholarships awarded . or 0 egc 0 c Icme m _.,;:_ _________ _ A fire at Northern Bay burn. In living conditions and trans- for. the 1960·61 session. ! U.S.A. . . . Ki lis f 1 ·ye cd between four to five hundred portation. A strike was called Two Newfoundlanders "Were, .Shipments of . Staphcllhn acres over the weekend, but this yesterday morning and as yes· among those awarded and they 1 Without charge will b? made Kl:-.IGSTON, .Jamaica rAPl too is under control. terday was Labor Day officials arc, John D. Cant of Corner. f to more than BOO Canadian hos- Five persons were killed and A large fire at Triton Brook, of the comp,any were on holiday , Brook, a National scholarship pllals as soon Government scores injured by Hurricane Alexander Bay, is burning on and could not be contacted. The i which may extend to cusls of permit general diS· . Donna in the northernmost Lee· A.N.D. pjroperty, 150 men are men arc not represented by a I tuition, board and residence: trlbulwn._ . I ward Island or An::uilla, reports fighting this· fire which has union and the outcome has yet and Grenfell B. Adams of St. anrl ?lhcr ! reaching here Monday night said. ravaged' an area two and a half to be decided. The workers I John's, a .of lllcdjcine mslltuliOns equipped Anguilla has a population of/ miles long, but no other details tried to contact Pentagon offi· scholarship award. for re:sarch may 5,000. are available. cials in Montreal but could not "It is' extremely ·gr8tifying to for mvestigabonal quanblles, Officials reported, meanwhile. Several. other small fires are succeed in doing· so. In con· find that so' many gifted stu· ].!r. De ex?laincd. that the British frigate Ulstern Weather Clear. becoming cloudy with scattered showers this afternoon. High 55. TEMPERATURES Toronto .. . .. .. . 79 Montreat . .• .. . .. 53 Moncton .. .. .. .. 47 Halifax .. .. .. .. 54 Sydney .. . .. .. . 55' St. John's .. . .. . 52 74 70 69 70 64 63 burning, but are Iieber under tact with Mr. Claude Howse last dents have decided to attend Staphcilhn IS hemg produced was rushed to the nearby island control or· only smoking. The night, Mr. Howse informed the McGill this year," said Profes· at Bristol's plant in Syracuse or Barbuda, where the main vii· Jean Oe Bale fire Is out com· News that up to yesterday even· sor J. R. Mallory, Chairman of : when• most of the world sup· !age was nearly destroyed by pletely. as is the Burin Bay ing no further particulars of the university Scholarship Com· I ply of the first synthetic peni· the bi:: storm. of the t·esi· Arm fire. ' the strike had been received mittee. I cillin, syncillin, has been made. I dents found shelter in churches. a• • • • • • • • •• ' ..... · (

Transcript of VB.~,THE ··- DAILY· NEWS '· - Memorial University...

'GQQ.D' NEWS VB.~,THE DAILY· NEWS ··-.. '· .

l\ VoL 67. No. 197 . THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, l960 (Price, 7 Cents) Charles Hutton & Sons

• • • \

1sm1sse rom ICe Pres. Kasavubu Names

lleo As Succe·ssor I

Indian Battle

Troops: Rebels

, NEW DELIII !Reuter,J-India. slroycd a hrid~t· ncar the post LEOPOLDVILLE CP-President Joseph Kasavubu ·• ··-· ·: st•nl troop reinforcements Mon· in a bid to prcn-nt reinforce-

said Monday night he dismissed Premier Patrice What s·.de? I dny to an arm. ,;· o;t~po~t near the menls [i'Om l'Omin~ in. . • 1 l!urmn oonlcr winch lws l:ccn,

Lumumba, and Lumumba promptly strode tnto a I I ~urrou.wcd anti cut orr hy rebel Extrcmi.<t \':lga t r i h r s men Leopoldville radio station, seized a microphone and i I!BllSSEl.S, Belgium rnt•til· ':-In~« tribesmen. hare bern 11';•gin~ a ~ucrilla war called for support of the army. i r 1·s-.~ neuters coi'I'C.<pondent , Dclcnee :\linh;lcl' V. K Kris- ngnin't thr Ind1an gonTnn"·nt ·

Lumumba denounced Kasavubu and sa··~·d the 1

in Lcopoldl'iiic ~ent this mcs· hna J\ic•n0•1 said the :;oo trihc>- ~or the lust fm• :;cn•·s: drmnm!: i

sage :0 Brusscl~ on the na i llll'n, allJlCd with l'lloc' and li.~hl lllg an "mrlt•pendrnt :\;of.(a]anrl. president hod no au:hority to dismiss him. He said he

1 diu Telex s e r v 1 c c ~lond:il' · m<lchinc · ~tm~. "orerwhPlmm~ly The rebels. rstim:lird to mnn· ·

spoke as defence mini:;ter and head of the army. ni~ht · outnumber" solrlict's at !he po.;t b,'r ah11Ut tJIOil, hm·c lor·cn pro·· Kasal'ubu ~aid earlier in a ra·, '':\i'nll'rl ~U:II'IIs Jwre just hill li·~)· wcr~ lwl.!:ng out <l,: •. nst .~res.,ircly pushed to the wild

rt' b d t h t 1 h d d ---.... - .......... · .... .... bern pust~d at lhl' <lom· of t!1,. · !H'a\'1' odds. lllllillllamntb r~~lllll hnrdrnn~ IO roa cas. l a IC a name . ; the bnltle·lorn Bnkwnnl!a area of T~lcx office to ·prel'ent jolll'nill· ~!c'non ~aid ll:r rchds lwd de nurma IJ~' lmh;m !I'Oops.

sr.natc Pres1denl ,Joseph lleo as · Knsai pro1·incc and announced 1( · isls from entering... .. ..... --- · · .IIUccessor t

1o. L u ,m ~ml>a, and i had set a secret dille for the in·

ihked the lmtcd Nallo.ns lo take~ \'aslon of l>reakawa'' Katilll~u :\skcd from Bru.;scts "me B I • R d. T ol'r con r.o o e ongo, a·, province. ' r I 1 r th C K 1 ' •· ''Oil in dan~er'!" ihl' CtiiTC· e gia·ns ea )! 0 sm·ubu saul he· would hcnd the 11 WilS impossihlc to ~augc im· spondent rc11lied "Think so,

1

'

army. mediate!.'· the likel.'· lcaction to hut standing by machine fur I

"'EED 'I \"'D \TE ' !ll'cscnl." " •'' •' ; • Kasa\'ubt•'s :~ction hv thr Force D f d I(

A U:-.1 spokesm/111 said the r:o-i' Publictuc, which mlitinicd ilflcr L i1 I c I' the COI'I'c;pond~nl, e· e·n ·a-tang a would cndcal'or to take over but independence. In the lilsl lew .lames 1\'olf~. tclcxl'd to the

1 Brussels office would need a mandate to do so .. weeks. it has shown itself to he ":o;ot sure what side the

Kasal'ul>u made his dramatic undiscipli~d and cnpricious. hul !'ongulrse troops who ~rc Ill'· u;oroLJJ\'ILJ.I·: , cp 1 _ Bt•i-. :m:.!•L announcement a~ the ConD•oles~ I it :;till was seen here a~ the kc.v CIIIJ)'I· 11 g the 1'clnx ofr1·c .. • .,11·c · r 'II · · · II 1 n 1 'l't 1· ' c .~1<111 OI'C!'> >II rem;llillll;! 111 It' I 11 >i'U>'l' S, Ill I I ary SOli CCS army poured ·reinforcements inlo' to power in the Congo . . --------- -------·-.. _____ ... _ .. _ . _ on. hi;: :ll'lnv hasr of K<tmina in se· >Hid i11e nnh· lll'l~i:~n >nldi<'l'>

''Impossible In jnd~r whctllCr ce"iuni;t Kntang:1 pml'inel' itp- IL•lt in 1\illllil;<l arc tedmicians.

Pro-chl·nese Reds the ~ual'll is (Ill' Lumumha (II' ]];'ill' l'eatl,v to defl'IHI K~tan~n if SCI'l'ni)' . nine ll!'\.~i;m ini<Jnl:·y­fur Kasa\'Uhu. I feel it inadl'j,;. thr fctlrr:~l gorernmcnt tries to '1 men flew into Rrussrl> )Jond;oy ahle In a~k him." inradr, a l'nited Xalions otficiill. and the suun·<·s >aid th~.v \\WC'

:;aid ~londa;·. ; thp lnsl comh:tl troops llclgium

W• u Fl d The otficial. just hack from a had in the Congo. I In Ppel.. an Trl·besmen !(lUI' of tht• ha>c. s:~id hP fouml .JL'ST A:o; HOUR AW.\Y I nn rl'idrnce thai thr R•~lgian', The l':\ ol'fieial ><lid a Rrban '

1 1 pian In pull out of Kamina t:Oill· olfit·Pt' al I\am~w pointer! to ~ I By H•:snr RRADSIIER shiftrd lraclrrship frollll th,. mod- Clash In I plelrl)', l'adin ll'ansmillrr durin~ hi,, tour I

!liEW DELHI IAPI-The rae·, rrates to th~ !'xtrcmi~ls. ~ and s:lirl lion that supports Communist I'ROBI.E.\1 FOR 1'.\RT': , Hrl~ian '"'ratronprr< h:•rl hren "St'r tll:tl tl·ansmitlrl".' Tl1r rir-

PITTSBURGH, Pa.-This "private car", piloted by Morton S. Smith, Vice· Pre5ident and Regional Manager, was the only thing moving on the Pennsylvania as operations on the nation's largest railroad were brought to o halt by a strike of maintenance men. Actually fhe cor 1s a rail

chP.(k.-(UPI Telephoto).

China has apparently won the Up· When China SUJllli'~;~r.d the Ti· K 1rithdrmm. snmr In the F\ prn· noil is npen ill ~II time< In lkl· per hand in the Indian Comm'l• hrrtan uprisiu;t in ~.lao·ch. IOo~l. enya : lrl'ior.1lr of nuantl:~ l l'lllll!i e;ost ~ian p;ualrooper~. l'ht')" :trr jnsl F. Jlist party's divided leadership. . and th~n in .~u~u,;l ciJ~hed with I nf the l'nn~n. hut p,•rhaps o,Oilll illl hnur ill\'il)' h)" pi;Jilr. If :nw I e r c e

:\Iter a long stru~~le with more· India on the border, the Indian ~.\!HOB!, 1\cn)·a tHrutc1·sl nlhrl' 'oldiNs still rem:tiued in lrouhlr drn·lors. they'll hr hr•·c . moderate and nationalistic ele· 1 Communists were faced wilh a Another ciHsh l){'tll'crn ~lasai 1\amina. lhr 'Iron~ point of 1\ilt. in nn timr.'' Fighting

Bakwanga Area In

ments, the extremists now arc problem. In 1 hcory. a Communist and Wukamba tribesmen ha.< oc· · - · ----- _.. · · ____ .. _ ----- --

speaking in the party's name and country could do no wron::: and l!lll'l'cd in the arid Sultan llamud A . d t Toll T h e ~idlng with Peking in the bitter must be suppOI'ted by othCI' Com- area about ;o miles from h~re. CCI en dispute with India over the Hlma· munlsts. But Communist modcr it was reported .\londay, la;van ·border. ales counselled caution hecau~e · A group of Wukumba ~ros,cd •

This fact has provoked angry , of angry Indian public reaction 1 into Masai territory and drove I outbursts by P r I m e Minister to both events. ; of! 500 head of Masal cattle after

Reaches 69 Nehru, who told Parliament last · ~ Injuring a Masai warrior guard· week the Indian . Communists The Indian Comm:mists ha\'C • ing the herd Sunday night, the. carry on "a blatant, pernlciou~ long been di\'ided on basic politi· ' reports said, and false propaganda campaign cal strategy. Some be:ievc in a ·

1

The Wakamba drol'c the herd · meant to defame the position of tough policy. of opposition to the into their own rescn·e where ' By TilE CANADIAN PRESS · Ontario and Quebec ro~ub. 15 of lndia." government on all fronts and use I they il·ere followed by a police: .The death toll on Canada' them in four accidents. Ontario

Tensions wIthin the Indian of Ioree if necessary. Others be· patrol which recovered 150 cal· • htghways rose to 49 'is the three- recorded 2:1 traffic deaths, Que· Communist party are obscure be· lleve In following constitutional tle and arrested four Wakamba. day Labor Day weekend drew iu IX'c 17, British Columbia three. cause of party secrecy, but a I routes to power, confident that Reports said a rel·engc.scck· a close. Albct'\a and X ova Scotia two meeting of the party secretariat internal factors will lead India ing war parly of 100 warriors A~ 9 p.m. ~DT :\olonda~ a Ca-' each. and Prince Edward Island recently is believed to have to communism. armed with spears was trackin~ nmhan Pre>s surl'ey: which ;uns and :O.:ew Brunswick one each.

Fire the Wakamba. Police patrols. from 6 p.m. local t1mes Fnda,,· were trying to intercept the I to midni~ht :\londny, showed a, Ontario also counter! the most VI. cti• ms :party to prevent further blood· total of 68 persons had died in drownings, six. Brilish Colmnhia shed. car accidents, drownings and, had three. and Jlr~nituba, Que·

In a series of recent scattered from other accidental causes. I bee and :"/ova Scotia one each. skirmishes, 11 Wakambas and The traffic loll ulready ex-' In Queber one person was killed two !\lasaias h:ll'c been killed cecdcd last year's lola\ of 43,: in an accidental shootin.g, an·

Ll·:OPOLn\'ILLE tfletller>l - clolhes. landed at Luluabourg., bc•·t Kalonji was reporled heal'y The l'on;:o!c'e . a r .11 y Sunday. Kasai, before going on to Bak·' and spreading. pou1·cd reinforcement> into the wanga 80 m i I e s away. They: A report recch·ed in Leopold· lnlttle-torn Bakwanga area of landed again at Luluabourg after ville Sunday said 400 persolll Kasal p1 01 ;nee and JllllOllllL'l:d it· making the trip, then took olf were killed or 11 ounded Saturday hns ,e( a srcret date for the in-' again , Kalonji has proclaimed a "min­\'asion or IJI'eakaway 1\atang~' A Congolese officer at Lulua- • ing slate'' in diamond-rich Kasai pi'ul·inee, : hourg said they were returning independent of the central gov·

Ten Sol"iet 11.-14 111 in·engined r· to Stanleyville, 500 miles to the' ernment, planes, lent to the central go\'·, northeast, for more troops, l'rnment serer a! days ago, car-, REINFORCEMENTS ' ~!eanwhile a plane left Leo· rietl some 200 Congolese troop:;' The troops were slated to re· , poldl'ille for Luluabourg to claim to Bakwanga from Stanlcyville.' in!orce other central government : the body of Henry !'Ooble Ta)'lor, capilal ol Oriental prol'ince. forces in the Bakwanga area. 1 an Am c ric an reporter for

The pl:mcs, which nil bore the 1 where fighting between central• Scripps • Howard new~papers markings of the Sol'ict Union and: gol'ernment forces and Baluba I killed Sunday by machine-gun were manned by crew in civilian ··~~·arriors who support rebel AI· 1 fire near Bakwanga.

R t H . and several ~lnsaias wounded. I and was only one less than the other was struck by a tram. and e Urn Orne .10 predicted by the Canadian; two died of carbon · monoxide, s1• h ! 1 Highway Safely Council for the ' poisoning in a C:JI'. ,\ similar I g t ' Forest I long weekend. The total 19o9 La·' poisoning death was reported in

QUEBEC (CP)-Resldents of: the towns despite a li;:ht rain·sun- · bor Day weekend fatality loll Ontario. where two children wer~ • Gains Battle In three Gaspe peninsula communi·· day, the first in 10 days. was i4. also crushed hy n trailer in low ties, evacualed last WEek before Two or three da)'S of heavy Forty pc1·sons were killed on by a tractor.

homes as the fire veered away. Residents of St. Charles Gar· Forest Fires !er:ag~fcki::;st b:~e, t~o~r, ~~~e~:::.eb~u~~~~ft~e:os:;.use th~ s.t 'Ill -u N. ·-:T· .. _G_ _ ____ d ___ i w I. t h The fire was reported still nier, Val d'Espolr and St. Gabriel roops ua r !

burning In the forests away from de Rarneau were returning s\owl;; ' The forc,t fire situation in the In western Prince Edward Js. • tol in the western section of the

.to their homes. . Bu'flll. n .. · g ' I' 'r't~olinlllltioL'llipl'mroi.'S:I,·II_lCC.es were still far land !our separate fires showed province and another near Xew· ~ 1 signs of declining Sunday night i castle near the east coast. 'The

DEATH TOLL WHIM OF THE WIND K b 1 H 1 ------- · .... -- but by noon :llonday spruce I Newcastle fire was said to be They have been forced to move 'd r d 1 R' 1 · ff' · 1 I In d N P • 'II' stands at B1 e or , Fox ey ll'er, causmg o !Cia s some concern.

tw ce s Ce the fire starte 19 The forest fire situation im· a sa v u u s 0 m~·e· Rew eniCI IR I and Black Banks flared. up aga!n,. o.ne highway was close~ and the

Is HIGH days ago, depending on the whim proved sli~htly over the long For a lime se\·eral bu1ldmgs m· village of Carnaby R1ver was of the wind, Labo~r Day weekend, as most of 1 , · eluding a chlll'ch in the Bidclord · alerted.

· the f1res started by berryp1ck· 1 u ·1 d " · 1 f h · h 1. f H taiS I area were believed to be in 1 The new outbreaks brought the CHICAGO (API-The National Reports from the ngion sai•l crs last Thursday, were either I . me. ..altOn, tro?ps were' peo~Je. I Kasm·u II iS t e. e lief or ospl dan ~r :number of forest fires blazing

h there is little left arounri the com· out or smouldering in the turf posted 111 a cordon mound Ka· ·of state, 1t 1s because 11e so 1 g : , 1• • • , , Safety Council SJild Mon~ay t at itl t b 1 h "h · . . · I savubu's home alter· reports that 1 wished. We can also withdraw , . . . , • Showers Sunday n1ght and. an 111 ~ew Brunswick to ~6. the death toll on US highways mun es o . urn, at ou" a The largest f1rc m the cast· nt t g t tr h d ,. 1 l'.l'el\' hosp1tal 1n Canada abrupt wind chanoc prol'lded: for the Labor Day ~~ekend hoi· change In lht wind could still ern region is burning at Old '1 ~e 11 rat 111°1'el~ne~ete11nt··. 00

5P1.sdan,?e : ou1r .. 1c1o~,ll cnc,c. 11 1 1 d will re~rivc a fr~~ emergency •; 200 firefi"hters inn Nom Sco·l Rain was falling in Newfound· blow flames back toward them p \" 0 !\'[ 1 't h d cO e 0 c p ll > rc. ' ~ ' . IS up 0 lC prop e ° C· I f St I ']J' tl ' ~ ' .

lday may fall !hort of the estl· The 1 d h , d 1 11· b cr Icdan 1 · n 'th. om50ay 1 d a f ' SEEKS BACKING ; cide today. 11 is 1111 to them to supphy . o 3Pl1ci·.1 m.1 . lhe new tia's Shelburne Countr with some; land ,:>.!onda~ ane:noon and it mated 460 w n as rcmamc cam a . urne o WI Jn yar s o In hi b a least 1 m b ; h 1 1 1 1 synl et1c pemc1 111 w 11c com.' small "ains aoainst a fire that 1 gave every md1Callon of check .. . k · d 1 tl t h I , s 1·o l . , .. u urn a c oo~c }C: \\'een a man w \0 pays 1 ••• ld S h'• b t . . · o ~ · I • , • h

At 6 p.m. ADT the count re· 1 wee en . I 1e neares ouses, ant was , cnlled 011 the Force rublique to he game or Belgian imperialism hats . (,o en. lap ac ena ·has burned uncontrolled lor 11: ing three m~Jor hres m t e prO\'·

corded by the Associated Pre>s • . . . , , kPpt under• c.ontrol only by a 1 stand behind him and declared I and a go,·ct·nment who lights day mfectwns.. 1 cs1stanl t~ all days. The wmd change back ; mce and s1x or seven smaller was 3S7. Some I5? f~m1hes .mol'ed m,o: ~umber ~r men who kept beat· 1 "We defeated the Belgians and and night !or the people." other n~ed1catwn, accordmg. to tracked the fire front over. ai- ones. ·

"There Is a fair chance," said Grande. R 1 v 1 ere, about scven1

mg the f1re out. It was under . we must go on winning... : 1 Brussels Radio ,aid a few Dr .. Be1:nard D? )lasscy, ~xc- ready burned ar7as but offlc13ls! . . . . an NSC spokesman "that the miles [tom the scene, as a pre·\ contr~l up to press ~our, but ! 1 Brusscl~ Radio quoted Lu- cries of "Long Li\'e Lunmmba"'

1

cultve \Icc-President of Bnstol sa1d there was ·a great deal of. A maJor fire wh1ch erupted m toll ~ill nol be 81 h~avy as the ~autlo~. At least a dozen. bu!ld· the wmd was frcs~cmng and a , mumba as saying :and· "Long Lh•e the Republic , • Laboratories of Canada Ltd. I tmuble'' in two sections of the dense spruce near Gam~ in the toll for. Labor Day l9S9-43B." . mgs were des!royed ~y t.~ f1re. i Department. of llll~cs .and Re· : ("We elected Kasavubu who , were heard in the studio during The l:lrl11sh :.Jed teal .Joun_Jal ; ftrc area. The blaze al.ready has central part of the pro~mce was

In addition to traffic accidents, most of them m St. Gabnel. sou~ces off1c1al sa1d 11 co~ld I had not the confidence of the · Lumumba's broadcasl.l reports successful tnals w1th i devastated some 40 square m1lcs under control. At Garmsh on ~he there were 20 dead in boating Most of the ~esldent~ ~re colon. eastly get o~t of. contra~ agam. , I 111 said Lumumba Llme on th~ the drug in .English Ia bora lor· . of spruce, pine and scrub. south coast ~ four·day old hre traledies 59 drowning vlctlnu 1st~. settled Wllh the Bid or the The Garmsh fire Which had r· air again 10 minutes later and ics and hospitals. I NEW OUTBREAKS was smouldenng under a steady ancl 63 kllled In vatious ace;. provincial governme~t. ~ h ~ i b~rned an area three or four , TRQU BLE AT occuscd Kasa~ubu• ~~ being "a The new pencillin has been 1 In New Brunswick where the rainfall and at Old Perlican on denll. · make a living by farmmg, fiShm::: · miles long, and ha~ consumed ' lackey of imperialism." , developed co?perativ~ly by s~mmer·s outbreak. ~~ forest' the Avalon Peninsulal five .for·

The atatlstl~al · count started and -cutting wood. .... , several hundre~ acres, flared ------ scienllsts associated with Bm· hres had about a two-11e~k head estry d7partmcnt pumpers were at 6 P m local time Frida and ., .- up strongly a gam on Saturday (A RQL LAKE to] laboratories and a group of start on the other Atlanhc prov· attemptmg to erase the last ends at ~idnlght local time Mon· k L ~nd ~as burning ?Ut of cont~ol TWO Nfldr'S British scientists. inces. the story .was ~till grave. trace or a stubborn fire now day night' . Stri·C en oggers Ill fairly hea~y ~Imber .. Rem· Detailed report.' on Staph- There were three new fires Mon· blazing in turf.

· forced fire f1ghtmg eqUipment · 300 workers went on strike ·m will be made to the medi· day, ---------TuE,.. COUNTRY PARSON and personnel. were ;ushed to at Carol Lake, Labrador, yes· w.·n Awards ~~I "profession on Wednesday, Forestry officials reported one Topiary is an ancient garden

"'

'1 doubt J{ we can' cause ne£gh bora or naUons tp Jove, us by pre· parJni 1o annihilate them If they don't.

Leave · Ho· ·5· p.:. l"ta .. I the scene, and a he~1copter as lcrday morning. On Saturday September 7th, I960• at 3 con· new bl.aze at Nashwaaksis ne~r craft: the work or art of train· well, and by Sunday 1t was well they marched to the Pentagon f d th auspi'ces of Fredericton another near Bns· ing and trimming trees or

d 'I G'll · crcncc 1111 er c . . , un er control. By Monday only Construction Company office n c 1 Umversity has an· h St t Univ rsit of New shrubs into odd or ornamental Four loggers who had been

stricken some ·time ago with a mysterious malady later dlag. nosed as a form of typoid, hafe left hospital at Springdale. The men were not fully 'rec!)fcred from the effects of the disease and apparently took French leave and walked off. Lumber camp foremen and· others have been warned against hiring the men' and apparently the au­thorities are going to do some­thin( to prevent the men from spreading the disease .. The other Iosgers In the hospital will remain there until they get a clean bill of health from the doc ton.

half' a dozen smoke spots could and presented their demands nounced a record number or ~ e" ~ eu ef :~i d' . . Hurricane shapes. be seen. for higher wages, improvement Entrance Scholarships awarded . or • 0 egc 0 • c Icme m _.,;:_ _________ _

A fire at Northern Bay burn. In living conditions and trans- for. the 1960·61 session. ! Syra~use, U.S.A. . . . Ki lis f 1·ye cd between four to five hundred portation. A strike was called Two Newfoundlanders "Were, .Shipments of . Staphcllhn acres over the weekend, but this yesterday morning and as yes· among those awarded and they 1 Without charge will b? made Kl:-.IGSTON, .Jamaica rAPl -~ too is under control. terday was Labor Day officials arc, John D. Cant of Corner. f to more than BOO Canadian hos- Five persons were killed and

A large fire at Triton Brook, of the comp,any were on holiday , Brook, a National scholarship pllals as soon ~s Government scores injured by Hurricane Alexander Bay, is burning on and could not be contacted. The i which may extend to cusls of p~ocerlures permit general diS· . Donna in the northernmost Lee· A.N.D. pjroperty, 150 men are men arc not represented by a I tuition, board and residence: trlbulwn._ . I ward Island or An::uilla, reports fighting this· fire which has union and the outcome has yet and Grenfell B. Adams of St. l\!e~nwhi.le hos~Ilals anrl ?lhcr ! reaching here Monday night said. ravaged' an area two and a half to be decided. The workers I John's, a ~·acuity .of lllcdjcine medic~\- mslltuliOns equipped Anguilla has a population of/ miles long, but no other details tried to contact Pentagon offi· scholarship award. for c~llucal. re:sarch may ~~ply 5,000. are available. cials in Montreal but could not "It is' extremely ·gr8tifying to for mvestigabonal quanblles, Officials reported, meanwhile.

Several. other small fires are succeed in doing· so. In con· find that so' many gifted stu· ].!r. De ~l~sse.y ex?laincd. that the British frigate Ulstern

Weather Clear. becoming cloudy

with scattered showers this afternoon. High 55.

TEMPERATURES

Toronto .. . .. .. . 79 Montreat . . • .. . .. 53 Moncton .. .. .. .. 47 Halifax .. .. .. .. 54 Sydney .. . .. .. . 55' St. John's .. . .. . 52

74 70 69 70 64 63

burning, but are Iieber under tact with Mr. Claude Howse last dents have decided to attend Staphcilhn IS hemg produced was rushed to the nearby island control or· only smoking. The night, Mr. Howse informed the McGill this year," said Profes· at Bristol's plant in Syracuse or Barbuda, where the main vii· Jean Oe Bale fire Is out com· News that up to yesterday even· sor J. R. Mallory, Chairman of : when• most of the world sup· !age was nearly destroyed by pletely. as is the Burin Bay ing no further particulars of the university Scholarship Com· I ply of the first synthetic peni· the bi:: storm. ~lost of the t·esi· Arm fire. ' the strike had been received mittee. I cillin, syncillin, has been made. I dents found shelter in churches. a• • • • • • • • •• ~ '

..... · (

2 THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLO., TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6; 1960 ------------------------------------------------------------------------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~------

Letter From London ·-··-. ------ .... -·-· .. - -·· -- .... ·-- .. ~ .... - .. \ -----·-··-· ···- ---· ----·· ----

. Nt1 ,.,.,_ ~ ... M •' llqu« COIIfrel.

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ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND

Work Starts On New $600,000-Church Of St. Mary The Virgin

Excavation has started for eonstructlon of the new Church of St. Maey ·the Virgin on Craigmlllar Avenue in the west end. The elist is estlma ted at $600,000. Completion is schedul· ed for November 1961.

St. Mary'a will be 180 feet loll&. 81 feet wide and 100 feet tall, Including the spire. The nave,· where services are held, is 1~ feet long, including the altar, and will seat 800.

The church will be built in two stages. The first stage is to be completed this November with a temporary roof over ground floor classrooms and the auditorium.

A feature of the church will be the pre-cast concrete arches, the main structural member~ of the na\'e. They were chosen by eonsultinJ: en~:ineers Brett, Ouelette, Blauer to eliminate eostl)' interior falsework needt-rl to support workers and matcri· a Is. if concrete is poured !rom a height. Instead, the ground floor will be u~cd as a tempor· ary platform where the arches

' will be pre·cast ln two pieces and then assembled. A four-and­a-half inch pre·cast wall and roof slabs will secure the nine arches which are 116 feet at the apex and appear every 18 feet.

The two classrooms will be 60 feet wide and 28 feet long. An auditorium, 120 feet long, will s~at 400.

There is a chapel seating 100 and a choir practice room to seat 70. Other rooms will in­clude a baptistry, sacristy, study, brides' room, business office, broadcast, kitchen, dressing rooms and other multi-purpose rooms.

Old St. Mary's Ch11rch was located on South Side Road, near St. John's harbor. The parish had to make room for the new harbor development.

Architect is Keith L. Graham, Halifax, and consultin~ en· clneers arc Brett. Ouelette, Blauer, Halifax anrl Montreal.

Newfoundland En~ineering and Construction Co. is the gen· era! contractor.

Me Grath Says Ferry Is· Fit For Service

Traffic Report

There were no accidents re· ported to the RCMP for the whole week-end holiday from Friday to the close of Labour Day.

The Mounties attribute this good record t(J the co·opera tion of all Uu.• motorists anrl persons taking ~dvantage of .. the long week-end. .

·Returns 'To Town

Mr •. J., R. Tucker, M.P., re­. turned to St. John'• last night after •pending three days In his rldlnl of Trinity-Conception. He spent the weekend on Ran· dom II land and went north· as ,far as Hickman's Hr. He was aceompanled by" hil wift and 1011 Geoffrey,

·r

The Singer Sewing Machine Co's Young Stylemakers con· test was held Thursday even­ing, September 1st, to an over· flowing audience of parents anrl friends,

The young ladles modeled their own· dresses which they had made during the summer months. Daytime, sportswear and party dresses all gave their contribution and made the even· lng sparkle with eolour.

The judees for the evening were Mill Edna Baird, Home Economist, Memorial Univerai·

The Daily News TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1960

i

The New St. Mary's Church Labour Day Mass At Basilica.

Douglas Ellis, a native of On· tario, has been reported missing from his boarding house, 56 Hamilton Avenue, since 11 a.m. I Friday, September 2nd. Ellis is 28 years of age, 5 feet 10 inches tall, darjt hair (brush cut). It is not known what clothes he i

was wearing.

The Mass of the feast of St. Joseph the Worker was ~~~­bratcd at nine yesterday moqt· ing in the Basilica by His Gra~e the Archbishop, as has been h1s custom in recent years, on be· half of the working men and women of St. John's. The .. ser· mon this year was preached by Rev. J. J. Murray, P.P., of St. Kevin's Parish, the Goulds. Present in the sanctuary were Rt. Rc''· H. A. Summers, P.A., V.G.; V. Rev. D. L. O'Keefe. S.C.; Rev J T Fennessey a:1d priests of the Hasilica staff.

The feast of St. Joseph the Worker is celebratEtl' in Eurnp~ on :\lay 1st. Sir>rc it •.vas ii·~::. tuted to emphasize the dignity of work, the cclcbt'atioa is Ira;•·. fcrrcd in North America to C1>

1 incide with Labour Day.

I

:RCMP Checkup ·A Success i Thr thre~·da,· d1erk11p nn i molnr ,-~lllrlrs ·by tile R~IP

wa a ;:r~at succc>'. arcordin~Z to Scr;:l. Li~ht nf thr ROIP in con,:er~ation with t_h(' ~ew~ last ni~;ht. The public. s2id the Seraeanl. were mo5t C()o operati,·e and the polire w~re glad to sec people throwin~ their weight behind thPm in helping the police t0 help the public. Up to 6 p.m. last ni~ht only four minor accidents were reported o\'er the three·day period. :\lore ,·chicles w~re found to be in good condltJon than wrrc defecti\'e and, all in all. said Sergi. Light. the che:ck· 11p was a striking example of

, what ~ood work can I.Jr none ' "hen ihc public are in full CO·

operation. with the police.

Harbour Report·

1 There was not much acth·ily in St. John's Harbour 01( the

, Labour Day holiday, the 'l'ilot !louse reported. Only two Por· tugue'e fishing trawlers rc· turned from the Grand Banks.

POLICE BLOTTER Screnteen arrests were made

by city police 0\'er the holiday. One man was arrested for 1m· paired dri\'ing. three for as· sault. three for breaches of the Hiahwa\' Traffic Act. one for dr~nk driving. and one ;;ivrn in charae for being drunk and disorde;ly in the home. Eight ordinary drunks were also ar· rested.

IN MEMORIAM

BADCOCK In lo,·ing memory o[ our

dearest mother. LOUISE BADCOCK,

who died September 5th, 1!!59.

)lay ttJe Sacred Heart o£ Jesus have mercy on her soul.

-Ever remembered by her children, Bob, Jim, George, Mary, Louise and Helen.

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.THE DAILY NEWS · tlewfoundland's Only Morning Paptr

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and aU forei~ countries . . .. 814.00 per annum Authorized as second class maC Post Oftice Department. Ottawa.

The DAD..Y NEWS is a mOIIIb.J! paper established in · 1894, aud pub­lished at the New5 Building 355-35!1 Duckworth Street, St. Jchn''· New· foundland, by Rubill8011 & Company LimitPd..

~fEMBEI\ OF THE CANADlA~ Pl\KSS

The Canadiau Presa is exclusive!) 'ntitled to tho use for republic!ltiOD ol an news despatches ill this paper crediied to it or to the ,\s.,.ICiated Press or Reuters and also the local nP.ws pubUs.hed thereiu.

A II PreP • "rvica and teatnro articlea ln this paper are cupyril(hted and ·tbeb reproduction is prCihibltecl. ·

• I Member Audit Buren

of C!rculatioa.

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1960

Too Many Moose There wasn't a moose in :\ew·

foundland 55 years ago. ~ow we have too many of these large ~ame animals, so manv in fact that in some areas it is 'necessarv to start thinning out the moose or losing a great deal of our forest wealth. This is the reason for a new policy that will give additional sport and a lot of valuable meat to those who want it.

The area in which m·erpopula· tion is ~i\'ing the greatest cause for anxietv is a h·ian~le with its apex close to the point where the Exploits nms out of Red Indian Lake and its hase lying between Garia Bav and Hare Bav on the south coa:~t. The base ma\· he bet· ter appreciated with the ki1owledge that it follows the coast from near Hose Blanche to Rencontre West.

In that triangle, where there is quite a hit of valuable timber. the moose' population has a particular­h hi!-(h destim· and the design of the new policy. which allows hunters to obtain three constcutive licenc(~s during an extended sea· sun, is to kill about 1,500 animals.

The hunter can buy a special licence to take a moose in the designated area and after he has made his first kill, he can acquire two additional liceuces, each good for one animal. It would appear that the scheme is to be well super­vised and it has beell' very prop· erlv provided that the meat should be 'brought out. .

Whether this is a workable· scheme is something that must be learned from experience. But what is truh· amazing is the rate of in­crease' in the moose population in half-a-century. Only a few breed­ing pairs were brought to New­foundland about 1908 and these have since multiplied, in spite of an annual authorized kill in recent \'cars of 5,000, into an estimated 50,000 animals.

However, as most of the hunting is done in the more accessible regions, the purpose of the present policy is to persuade hunters to go a little further awav in search of their sport and a ,\•inter' s supply of meat.

The Fall Season Begins Labour Dav is o,·er. So is the

holida\' seasoi1. From now on the fall trade will increase rapidly in tempo all over the island.

It is a different kind of trade from that we knew in the past, particularly in St. John's which was both the dominant importing and exportinv, centre of the island.

:\luch of the salt cod production was brought to the capital for stora~e and export. Hundreds of ~chooners carried their fish to the 1JOrt and loaded supplies for the northern settlements whose merth· ants had to stock up against the five or six months of winter isola­tion. Between imports and exports, a :hi~h level of commercial activ­ity was maintained ri~ht up to the

I

time of the departure o£ the last of the northern coastal ships be­fore the close of navigation.

Many changes have since oc­curred. Few schooners come with fish. Many other yorts share in the distribution o supplies. All­weather highways have made it possible for many northern com­munities to procure their needs throughout the winter. The main distribution of goods to the out­ports is now concentrated into a shorter period.

l'\everthe less, the fa 11 remains a period of greatly increased busi­ness activit\• channelled into a rela­th·elv brief time and there are alre.' ly signs that the season has got well under way.

Enterprise In. Jamaica In the lush but relativelv small

island of Jamaica there is a' serious unemployment problem. There are 1,640,000 people and a working force of about 500,000, a high pro· po~tion of which is either unem· ployed or underemployed. A large volume of emigr~tion has failed to bring important relief.

But the Jamaican government has revealed notable enterprise in its approach to this problem. Its tourist industry has undergone rriajor development but the work of greatest importance is being done by the Jamaica Industrial Development Corporation. f:Its recent promotional publicity

11is included a reprint of an article in the international edition of Life Magazine which discloses .the in· t~sive efforts that have been made t~ expand the island's economy.

These have included special in­ducements to Canadian manufac· turing industries to establish plants in Jamaica.

The varietv of consumer indus­try which has been lately estab­lished is impressive. Shoes, house­wares, beer, and plastics are among the commodities that are now made in the island and an aggres­sive · development corporation is going all out to add to the range of local manufacturing.

Jamaica has certain advantages that are not possessed in New­foundland hut her success in build­ing up small industrv suggests that we should give morE consideration to the pro~peets o~ providing a higher proportion of our own con­sumer needs in fabl'icated pro­ducts.

Ordeal Bv Fire ~The rash of forest fires, more To say more at the moment

tlian a score of them, that has would be undesirable. But the rf:vaged areas of the Burin Penin· authorities should conduct a com­~a and the A val on peninsula, plete investigation· to determine seems to be an appalling reflection ' the causes of fires which have o~ human carelessness. . proved so destructive and brought ttbese fires have not been spon· grave risk and distress to several ~eous in ongin. It is more than communities. a::.:mere coincidence that most of

-= m have occurred on or near -----grounds. They appear· to be

resUlt of a complete indiffer-, to the ban on ontdoor fires

a a tinle when brush and wood · thider-~ ' and the' smallest

spiark · could cauSe an . explosive eimflaption.

BECKLESS PILOTS SL Catharinea Standard

An Ottawa n\aJiltrate expreued rt· Jl'et r~Uy that there'• no l!ilal pro­villoa. that would enable a court to alii­pend motor ~oat licences In eaaea where operatora . violate water aafet.J regula. tiOIII.

·IN THE NEWS By Wa~arer

VISIT TO LABRADOR Ul For all the importance that was At·

\ached years ago to the dispute with Quebec over the ow11ership of Labra· dor, the &real peninsula .that forms tb~ northeastern corner of North America Is little known to the people who pos· seM it. Those who have some knoW· ledee of it are Cor the most part, aware only of limited regions which have come within their personal ex· perienee. Thus, while for a century or more thousan~s of Newfoundland fish· ermen made the annual summer pil· 11rimage to the Labrad.n coast, few of them penet.rated more than a mile or two Inland. The "stationers,'' settled

'In their tilts In their chosen harbours for the summer, were concerned only with the harvest of the ocean. The "floater" crews who carried their traps from harbour to harbour in search of a quick load of rod had the same single· mindedness of purpose. The settlers, whites. Indians and Eskimo, have lived in their small and scattered communi· ties along the coast and only those who were trappers and hunters bave any fi!'llthand understanding of the vastness and tbe savage wildness of the hinter. land. Yet stretching along the !!2nd parallel from Blanc Sablon to the bank of the Romaine River and then follow. in& the height of land, the boundaries of Labrador enclose more than 110,000 of some of the wildest, most convulsed earth on the surface of the globe. A year ago as the guest of the Iron Ore Company, we flew across this scarred land to Knob Lake. Last week, through the courtesy of Premier Smallwood who had been invited by the British Newfoundland Corporation <Brinco) to visit the site of the power develop· ment on the Unknown River, a new op. portunity was afforded us to aee a very great deal of this little known part of the province.

Cartier, gazing at the bleak, forbid· ding coast, called Labrador the land that God gave Cain. other and coarser epithets ha\·e been applied to it. But only trappers and hunters and a hand· ful of intrepid explorers knew any­thing of the land even a few miles from the coast before the war. Through the air basp at Goose Bay, thousands of air travellers were privileged to dis· co\·cr a perspective on Labrador tbat only a few, seeing limited areu from the high banks above the travelled watercourses, had known before them. A Hudson '• Bay Company factor named

MacLean had traversed the country from Quebec to Northwc.>t River in i839 and had discovered the Grand Falls. Within the next century, a few bold and venturesome travellers had left the coast and penetrated, in most eases at great risk and with much suf· fering, the region as far as these famous and phenomenal falls. As rc· cently as 1929, when J. M. Scott and H. G. Watkins surveyed the area of the Twin Falls on the Unknown River. the existence of these falls was only a rumour based on an earlier visit to the •region by Varick Frissell. Scott and Watkins, with two trappers from Northwest River. made the journey In winter and almost starved and froze to death in their efforts to discover the Twin Falls-the. art' actually a triple falls-and plact> them on the map.

That was about thirty years ago. But the existencr of great deposits of iron ore in western Labrador had long been known and following a period of inten· sive exploration of concessions grant· ed· by the Commission of Government, geologists had proven a commercial ore body of great magnitude soon after the war. This was in the far western cor· ner, at the point where Quebec and Newfoundland Labrador met at Knob Lake. But this was a commercial ore body only if it could be economically exploited. It was hundreds of miles from the coast of Labrador. It was hundreds of miles from the nearest point of civilization in Quebec at Seven Islands on the north shore of the St. Lawrence. The land below the tree line is wild enough. Knob Lake is above the tree line 1nd wilder still. How was it possible to mine iron ore in this iso· lated region, separated from the near· est inhabited communities by hundreds of miles of lakes anrl rivers, mountaim and forests. muskeg and reindeer moss?

But the steel mills of the Middle West would not much longer be fed by the !llessabi Range. There is plenty of iron in the world but iron is a stra· tegic mineral and in a turbulent world a source of iron that could be trans· ported through enclosed and inbnd waterways to the steel plants had high importance. Here was a challenge to human ingenuity and rision, to courage and enterprise. to men and machines. to modern technology and engineering skills and to financial boldness. How it was met is a well known story to which, in the course of this narrative. some footnotes will he added.

-----------------·-· -

UJqr lfnrb nf ~n~ :Jtrength ~cr ~cdaq Gad Is light and In him Is no dark·

neu at all.-1 Jobn 1:5. Light gives joy, guidance and know·

ledge. In God we have these perfectly, for darkness and evil cannot endure Him.

CAMPAIGN CURTAIN RAISER

B~· BRUCE BIOSSAT There has be~n nothing like it in

modern U.S. political hhtory: a mid· summer session of Congress with three o{ the four major part)' candidates on the presidential ticket directly im·otved 011 the Senate noor.

On the Republican side Vice l're~i· dent Nixon. his part)"s 1960 nominee for president. will be presiding o\'er the Senate.

His formal rote will he limited. It he­tomes important only in the event of a tie vote, In which case he is called to break tbe tie. But aa the new leader of his party, he will be watch~d closely to see wht authority he exercises over Republican legislative efforts.

His problem will not be easy, for In termes of active governing, President Eisenhower Is still the commander and his legislative lieutenants are In theory at least bound to do his bl4ding,

Nixon thus far bas resolved this dif­ficult matter bt describing all his dif­ferences with :Mr. Eisenhower as answers to new issues developing in the years to come.

To be consistent, he should therefore oppose ny possible Democratic move in this session to increase defense spend· ing materially, since we are still in the "Eisenhower present" rather than tbe "Nixon future."

How he handles such an issue will be a new test of his political skill.

As for the Democrats, the two nomi· nees, Sens. John Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson, plainly hope to accomplhhe fairly limited objectives In the brief session.

They Intend to press for action on such measures as higher minimum wages medical aid to tbe aged, improved hous· ing.

It ls their evident belief that If this much Is done, the voters, will have been given a reasonable down payment on their 1960 plaUorm promises. They are penuaded, te~o, that any substantial GOP resistance to thla program will be remembered by the voters on Nov. 8. ,

The Republicans have a eountentrat· ·\ eiiY-tO try to embarrus the Demo­erats by offering to the Congress sweep­Ing proposals which amount to an im· medlatt translation of the wbole Demo· eratlc platform.

They will argue that failure of the Demoentlc majority to enact such a pra1ram will eonvict tbem of Insincerity In their platform.

• The election, of coune, 'will not be Wided Ia WuhiiiJton Ia Auguat. ~ut

ta, EARL L. DOUGLAS

ERROR AHEAD-GO SLOWLY

We are all familiar with the story of the rooster who brcause he crowed every morning at the time the sun rose, got the idea that it was his crowing which made the sun ris!'. There are two higho~;ounding Latin terms describing this variety of mistnk?: no sequitur. "it does not follow," and post hoc ~rgo

propter hoc, "after this, therefore nn account of this." They are outstanding examples of illogical reasoning.

Let us bring this down into the pnth· ways where most of us walk each day. We are all guilty of ind~.;lging in these fallacies. "I don't like the company he keeps. Birds of a feather flock to· gether." Yet he or she may be admir· able people in every respect who just bappen to fancy the company of folks who do not stand high in our esteem. Or, "He has no religion. He never goes to church." Certainly church at· tendance is one of the most helpful factors in the living of a good life, but let us never fm·get that there are some thoroughly fine and saintly peo­ple who, for one reason or another, have practically nothing to do with the church.

What Are

Others Saying

IT CAN BE DONE Kitchener· Waterloo Record

Tax reduction sounds good in any man's langu.age. Canadians must envy the people of The Netherlands where the goverl!ment has announced corpora· tion income tax will be cut from 43 per· cent to 28 percent.

Prosperity is reported to be at its peak In The Netherlands and unemploy· ment almost unknown. The Diefenbaker government might well investigate how the Dutch manage their affairs so we II and get the recipe If it's available.

CONGO RIVALRIES Christian Science Monitor, Boston

The Congo conundrum is a jungle thick witb rivalries among central and provincial leaders, criss·crossed by tribal interests ·fragmenting provinces within but sometimes extending beyond the Congolese borders. The new nation win not be built in a day out of this political morass. But the time needed for the operation can best be supplied by a

· strong and respected UN operating with equal authority throughout the Congo. ·----· -- ----the August session certainly provides us with one of the most ell!:iting prelimin· aries we have ever had. ·

Read 'Em or Weep . . .

FAVORABLE POLL RESULTS GIVE GOP THE JITTERS

By PETER EDSO:'< NEA Washington Correspondent

WASHJ:\'GTON - (:>lEA) - That Gallup poll showin~ .'\ixoa-Lod~e 50 p~r cent, Kennedy·Johnson 44 per cent, with 6 per cent undeeided. surprised, de­iight~d and scared the GOP all in one gasp.

Right after the Dcmocratic conven· tion in Los Angeles Vice·Presidcnt Xixon's organization ran sc\·eral priv· ate polls· in key states. They showed Kenncdy.,John;on ahead. 55 to 45 per cent.

But this was hdore the R•!puhlican convention in Chicago and the Demo· erats \vere much murc in the public ~ye.

Reversal of this standin~ three weeks l:1ter is attributed to the success or the GOP con,·rntion pet·formance. !\ixon's acceptance speech and nomination of Ambassador Lodge for veep.

But this showing so early in the campaign worries the Republicans. When you're on top the problem is to stay there and the tendency L1 to slide. When you're on the bottom, you work ltarder and arc likely to show gains.

AT TilE EXD of the first two Wt•eb in the special session of Congress. gen· era! feeling was that the Republkans had gnined ~round and the Democrats had lost.

Demonatic leaders Kcnn~dy and .Johnson were on the cldensiYC. He· publicans were conducting a smart and hard hitting offensive.

Summon Courage And Face It

By BRUCE BIOSSAT

Since the close of World War II it has been the great hope of the world's peoples that a true and lasting prace bJ found. Aftrr a decade and a half. however. this prospect seems further from fulfillment than enr.

The fact unquestionably is a source of deep disappointment, . disillusion­ment and frustration to many, many millions.

It lead., some ine1·itably to feel that there must be something wrong with our approach to the Russian and Chi· nese Communists. that if we can just find the J'ight formula we cat: wash away all difficulties and ha1·c the peace their tyrannies.

Yet there is a mountain of evidence to indicate that the only kind of peace the Communiol.'; would accept is one which would compel our surrender to their tryannies.

A '·ery reasonable argument can therefore be mad!' that the present real alternative to war is not a blissful peace hut ex?.ctly the kind of tension·filled crise;·ladcn existence we endure to· day.

Thi.< is an outlook few of us care to contempl~tc. :\'et·erthelcss. our sur· Yival as free men depend• 011 ur abil· ity to continue to bear. perhaps in­defimtel)·. the tensions and ct·ises of

Democrats were left \'Ulnrrablc on this age. civil rights. They had to go along with the Eisenhower administration in rati· lying the Antarctic treaty. authQrizing the 500-million.dollar Latin American aid program. and in taking Senate ac· tion to increase House appropriations for general foreign aid. Southern con· sen·ative Democrats teamed with Re· publicans to force compromises on minimum wage and health insurance programs.

The Democrats have one strike on them in that the House Rules Commit· tee may block liberal Democratic pro­grams on federal aids for education and housing. They have a second strike on them in that any extreme! legislation the pass is likely to collect an Eisen· hower veto.

DE~IOCRATIC ;\li\TIONAL Committee headquarters has overflowed into four floors of a small office building around th ecorner from national committee chairman Henry M. Jackson's and hro· ther Bobby Kennedy's command post. Unofficial office guide for the expand· e space is: Secund floor-paper, third floor-sex, fourth floor-brains, fifth floor-money.

Translating, this means that the dis· tribution and mail center with the na· lional committee's 700.000·name mailing list is on floor two. Women's division under Chairman Margaret Price is on three. Civil rights, radio and TV, speakers' bureau and li:Jrary are also crowded in here. Researr:, rnder Drs. Robert L. Oshins and Archibald Cox, :\like Feldman and Ted Sorensen of Kennedy's Senate staff are on four. And the finance division under Chair· man Matthew H. McCloskey on floor five.

REPUBLICAN Headquarters here is also having growing pains. Nixon­Lodge campaign manager Len Hall's 19th Street staff bas expanded Into the sixth floor of a new office build· ing across the street to give its brains departments room to think. This in· eludes the research department under Dr. George L. Glassmuck, University of Michigan political scientist, and the Nixon speech·writin!( professors under Time·Life Chief of Correspondents Jas. L. Shepley.

A r~eent writer talked of maturity in an inrli\·idual a~ a condition demon· strated most r nt cefully b~· his ability to bear tensions in his life. It might well be said that America's maturity as a country should be gauged in the same way.

Resistance to this notion cannot be expected to )·ield easil)'. Oddly, a good many of our intellectuals, who ought above all to understand totally painful alternatins, are among those most rapidly persuaded that some magic peace formula lies just around the cor· ner.

Intellectuals often are wedded to the idea of the perfectibility of man. They abhor the prevailing international dis· order. But they, like all of us, may be

$lowly driven to accept the fact that mankind, always fallible. is today in one of its lucky imperfect moodJ.

Facing this uncomfortable reality, we rio not l:ave to grin but we do have to bear it. This is one of the great test­ing times in all history for free men.

~ IN F .\HEWELL

ottawa Journ3l

The Audubon Society has announced the sad news that disaster has decimated the eastern bluebird. 'the bird of hap. piness.' The loss. this time. is not man's doing. but the result of last win· ter's heavy storms and cold.

BUCKS AND BANKERS

Vancouver Sun

With slightly raised eyebrows we note that a publication or the Dallas Federal Reserve Bank, no less, reo ports: "A doe can run 8 miles per hour, according to scientists, wbile a buck can run 9 miles per hour." The eyebrows are raised not over tbe ob­vious first implication of the item, but over a certain naivety implicit In it. Sitting in their marble halls counting their bucks bankers are obviously out of touch with Nature and her ways. The simple fact is that if the .flal·out speed of a buck were only 40 miles an hour, a 'doe would run at 39:

THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1960

-----------------------------------------------------------~~------------------------------·

CONTEST RULES 1 Each customer is entitled to one entry with each 50 gals. · of Oil Purchased or fraction thereof or with each % ton Coal Purchased or fradion thereof. (i.e. 150 gals. of Oil Purchased entitles you to 3 entries and so on.)

2 Contestants will complete the last three (3) lines of the Monthly Jingle (watch your newspaper and listen to CJON for 1st line).

3 A New Jingle each Month.

4 Company employees are not eligible.

5 Winners will be selected on neatness, aptness of thought, and originality.

6' Free Entry Forms available 'at Company's Office or from Company employees.

7 All entries must be accompanied by a delivery receipt.

1st. JINGLE LINE FOR SEPTEMBER MONTH: FOR CLEAN COMFORTABLE HEAT ON A CRISP AUTUMN NIGHT

1st AWARD

$ •

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BECOME A CUSTOMER­-ENTER TODAY

THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1960

v6i.::::::::::::::~::::::::::~-------==-~------------------~--------------------------;. .. - ~--··-.--·~---;[

... . Social-Personal -Column-

·~ ' The Doctor : I

1: Says :· I. a,. HAROLD THOMA1 HYMAN, 1

1 I ~ ARRIVED FROM LAMALINE Ml5s M. Haley arrived In the

City on September 1st., to visit her aunt, Mrs. Fred Andrews, 28 Henry Street,

BETURNED TO WASHINGTON · M/Sgt. Wm. and Muriel Chambers who left here on July 23rd., have recently re­turned to Washington, D.C., after spending an enjoyable holiday vi,itlng relatives In Texas.

INJOYED HOLIDAY 1\Ir. and Mrs. Herbert ~tercer

oi Campbellton, N.B .. who have ~im visiting his sister, Mrs. tdlth ~f. Parsons, 102 Patrick Street, and had a very pleasant trip and this is their hrst and final visit to Newfoundland in 48' years,

LF.A,'ES FOR U.S..\.

Miss Margaret McDonald, R.N .. 218 LeMarchant Road.

.le[t by TC A on Sunday for

Between Us

Women 11 RUTH MILLEn

Alexis, Illinois, where she will in future reside. She was ac­companied bf Miss Francis O'Toole, R.N., from St. Clare's Mercy Hospital who will spend · a week with Miss McDonald and 1--------~ 1 for the remaining two weeks 1 T'HE / will tour the U.S. •• · I ARRIVED BY PLANE I I

Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Spooner I ~ t of Toronto arrived by plane on a u ,.n I Thursday to attend the wed- I {; ding of their niece, Miss Sandra R t I Hynes. They are the guest of~~ a .. en Mr. Spooner's sister Mr. Melba I 1 I Humphries. \1 , ARRIVED BY CAR I 81 MR& MURVJ:.L LAWRENCE

. Mrs. Bertha .Nor'!lan of CU·. SOME REMAIN LIKE p1ds, C.B., arrtfed Ill town by TODDLER TIED TO FRONT car to attend , the wedding or YARD STAKE

: One of the first !e;sons given .

1

: student physicians and nurses, 1 about to have thier iir;t contacts

with patients, is the need I o • 1

caution in conversations direcler! i'

to, or overheard by, ;he Sick per son or a visitor to •he clinic or 1

I d , WM. I

Even with these precautions, 1t Is impossible to estimate t h ~ amount of mental ,,nguish in· flicted by careless remarks and loose talk.

Sometimes the damage is dona' by a medically correct stat2men• such as the fact that the lislenin~ paient is the vicim of a mali;; n.ancy. Or that sun·ival is a mal. 1

ter of only a few day5 or we~ks. 1

her grand·niece Miss Sandra Hynes.

i Sometimes the damage is done' by misinterpretation of frag ; ments of an overheard convei'Sd·, lion. Such as a patient's link in~ 1

Mrs, ~Iurie! Lawrence is on the word~ "tumor'' or "growth"· vacation. This is first of six art- with •·cancer."

IN HOSPITAL The many lricnds of Mrs.

\\'allace Halfyard, 19 Howlett A1·enuc, will be sorry to learn that ~he Is at present a patient al th~ Grace Hospital- at which institution she will be confined

icles by psychologist Dr. Rollo · ; Sometimes. as in a rntlltipa I. lay which will appear dm·ing · 'i tient ward, thr damage is in· her absence. They are taken from\ '

1j f!icled on a p:1tient other than the

1

Dr. May's "~!an's Search For, listener. Such as occltr5 when Himself," and reprin~d by per-i j the ward bn>)'hody :m<l ~o•sip 1

mi~sion or the publisher. Copy.\ learns that a fcllm' patient once! ri1:ht 19ii3, by W. W. Norton and: had a venera! <lise:.sc. . I Co., line. , \' But it has remained tor Ut·. !

By DR. ROLLO MAY I . Dal'irl R. Check of San Francbco I

tH,Jli.A ' The baby becomes a physical· I to direct attention to a rlanact : r/1/lf•C~-'It;l, I indil·idual when the umbilical ; i that manv of us snspcl'led hut: ltfJ R E OS 1 cord is sel'ered at his birth. But. ·;; 1 of which ;,.0 never could be quit~· MAKf f I N unless the psycholo~icat umbili- · ' l sure. . _ i cal cord. is ~lso cut in due .lime, I Writing in the Rocl;y ~lountmn

Some persons don't seem to; he remams hk~ a todJier, lied I~ Medical .Journal. Cheek preseni>: know how lo regis(~r a com· a stake m h1s parents fron. el'idence that the ~urgical pal·, plaint without being rude and yard. lent, during anesthesia, has the belli"erent He can ~o no farth~r than th~ capacity to hear and remember

o • length of his rope. His develop· meanifgful sounds. If you are hal'in~ a party in mcnt Is blocked and the surrender Although sufficiently under in- .

, honor of a couple from out of ed freedom for growth turns in- fluence of drugs to register no

I town make that fact :mown when ward and festers m resentment pain or discomfort during t h ~ KEEPI!IIG UP WITH .lONESES you inl'ile your other guests. and anger. These arc the people I operative procedure. the words

·IS FRUSTRATING AND FUTILE who, though they se<>med to get exchanged hy surgPons, anes· ·

f h along tolerably well within t h ~ 1 thetists and nurses may be heard ~owadays ~·ou can't e\'en be- Fa. II Re. res er range of the toddler's rope. arc·, and stored in the deer layers or

gin to keep up with the Joneses greatly upset when they confront · the brain-much as they are 'in by buying one or something, In marriage or go off tn work or· a deep hypnotic trance. . ' order to keep up, you'l'e gotta e1·entually face death. ln every ln the light of Cheek's dulles, have two. crisis they tend to "go back to I I recall m:my times when pa·

Just when lhe young Smiths mother." tients repeated to me f1·agments are about to make the last pay. As one )'Otmg husband put it: of conversations that I was cer·l ment on their new car I h ~ "I cannot lo1·e my wife enough ' tain the1• couldn't hal'e heard· ~oneses buy a second car and because I Jove my mother too during their stay in the operating'

·the' Smiths can't rest easy until much." : room. they are a two-car family, too, His error was in u~ing the word 1 :'l'ot being as k~en as Cheek.

E1·en bu~·ing a new home "love" for his relation to his · I dismissed these experiences' doesn't mean the Smiths can feet mother. Real lol'e is CXIJansil'e ' with the ready explanation that they hal'e arrived. Tile Jonese3 and nc1·er excludes :ol'in:: .othci'S; someone who was present durin;: I

· already ha1·e a cottage on the· it is only bein~: tied to the mother the procedure carelessly sounde'.l · lake. One home just 1sn't enough which excludes loving on e 's 1 off. ' ·to ' be impressh·e any more, wife. I I Now that I've read these new 1

You're gotta have two. , What has to be broken is the T ll' 111 ' 1 '1~' tiert'd bouffant skirt and the simple elongated (or low· observations, I'm quite sure th~t' Got a TV set in the playroom\ Infantile lies of dependency which l'rrd waistline) bodice hi~:hlights this intri~nin~ formal of black silk or- : mv explanation was inexact and I

(w·h i c h, by the way, is i bind the person to the parents and gnndy hy Ricky Form:tls nnd featun·d during Toronto Fashions Week. I unkind. 1f only I could identif:: ~· o u r second living room, thereby keep him from lol'ing those 1 must have wronged, I'd of course!? Well, so has e1•er~·· outwardly and creating independ-1 · · ·-------·- I apologi7e most humbly. 1

body else. But \be Joneses ha1·e ently. . . . . . I Cheek draws two practical con· .two. The second one In the bed- This is a matter of long uphill' POLLY'S QUIZ dal k green tin ee-pwce sectiOnal! 1 · f h' studies

· 1 Plea< sn""est c 1 f th , c us1ons rom iS · ·room, or in junior's room so l(rowth to new levels of integra· · e · " 0 • • 0 ors or 1 ~ 11 , The first is to caution operalin~

that he can get his programs tlon-•rowlh meaning not ·auto- REFURBISHED WICKER rugs, drapenes and an odd chatr ' 1 ff 1 be as •uarded in 0 I , ~Irs R p H room s a s o e

ll'ithout conflict with his parents· matlc process but re-education, ROCKER ADDS WHIMSEY • -. · · · -- ' their conversations lS they'd be choices. finding new Insights, making By POLLY CRA:\tER I . ?,ear ~Irs .. ~.P ~: T ~ r. 0 w. Whatever bathing suit you sel- if the patient were w;de awake.

Dreaming of going to Europe~ self-conscious or fr~quent bitter -- 1 lu.,:li~ ,:.he hll~g ; 00~"~ie. hkel) eel, or have selected, be sure to The second is to put the pa-WeD, your first trip Isn't going struggles. Dear Polly; We hope you w11i lo 11 ~ some nry ir~ t 1 ~to a caru for it properly. Th ac tient's awareness to practical use to Impress anybody. The struggle to become a per- 1 help us as we think you are just ~ospil~l be~. Do. mvest 1 ~ • 8 , means washing it in warm soap by giving encouragl'ment anrl

"You'll enjoy your second trip son takes place within the pers~n the greatest or. decorating pro I>· , ~ 0~~ •1· .'le 11i,ig:d pel ~i~ps a ~ack- or detergent suds dfter e ,. e ~ y helpful suggestions just as t h c

even more than your first," the himself. None of us can a\'md !ems. We hal'e Early American 1 a~. 11 111 ~ ~1_ee ~IX ;n-e. 1

rdd wearing. You'll prolong the l1fe skilled hypnotist does to the sub· Joneses wIll tell you. The taking a stand against exploita· furmture. l>eige walls and couch e~ie~ an 1~ IPb Co\er 0.r ti~ 0 and smart appearance o[ the ject that's been placed in a Joneses, of course hlve already tlve persons or external forces: and multi-colored braided rug c air ~? 11 e a ?a: 0 rat su1t. , trance. ' m~de their second'trip. 7067 In the environment: but the cru·: One chair is green tweed and prmt lllth 1?1; of. pmk .. and .red I • • • I I think those conclusions make

Are you happy with one vaca- · cia! psychological battle we must I another is a faded print. We'd; ;n ~h~ llollc~~· .mg 1~1~h gl:en To prevent snags and runs,, good sense. tlori a year-two weeks each sum· /...,. f'\n 'f) ~ wage Is that against our own de·' like to recover this chair but\ emes on 8 I\ ite ac eroun · put on a nylon stocking this way, -----=:: mer Well, you won't be long. VJ( t-ftlce ~ pendent needs, against the anx· i what color should we use for it? • • • 1 Roll it down to the toe and s~ip Not with the Joneses talking , 1 h r living-room lety and guilt which will arise as I Could we paint an old-fashioned' Dear Polly: I have light gray! on the foot. Fit heel directly Ill· , abOut their winter cruise. Now, re res . you ith t h 1 5 we mo1·e toward freedom. wicker rocker and use it in th~ i walls, carpels a bit darker. gray i to the heel pocket and smooth !

· •'And so It goes. Just as you get for fall enterta.mlng w si n The basic connict then i~ he· lil'ing room? What color and kind: lamps, yellow draperies and two· fulness forward. Then draw . d i 5

_'

ent thln11 paid for, It's lash· grace!~! ferns·t~ha:i~n de• a: ' to tween that part which lnm(s to of shades are ri:;:ht for milk glass: ;:1·een chairs. The chairs are fig- i stocking up the leg, taking care Costume J~Wcllery _!ha\ ·J !on able to have at least two ~roc et, a rl r ~otect 8 remain immature tied still to the lam)lS And what kind of cur·IU<'d in ro~. chartreuse and brown, to keep a sea in straight. When I colors the <~m may s.imp Y nee v! Just one means you only hav~ I bnghten a ~el~ cha1; 00f. dlrec- psychological umbilical cord and tains, since my husband d()('sn t. What color couch and chair could: fastening garters, !lex the knee. I a good brushml!. "lth 11 ~r:·.s~~P;_ the necessities. You need two to n.ew one: . ah er~. b · k· ann receiving the pseudn-protectinr. like while rulfy oncs?-:.lrs. i 1 nse~-i\lrs. G. L. i Fasten I he back garter first, the. water. Then nnse ~.~11 ry1 rl~ss

1

put ~ursel( in the clnss of thos~' lions llxiB·mc c atr ac ' and pam)'ll!rin~: of the parent in D. R. , front one last. all at the top .Jf ' ou,;hly and coat " 1 co 0 · ·

who live in luxurY. I re.•t 6 '~xll 'rR~~ ~~~~ttonCENTS exchange for independence. : Dear Mrs DR. A wicker' Dear ~!r<. G.L.: 1 You have the well and perpendicular to it.' nail polish. · \\'hat happens ~hen the Smith~ . Send TH • . 1 !t is, in essence the problem of' k ' ld · dd · ·1· . too many colors nnr no! enough • • • · • · · !In coins 1 for this pattern . f t d ' roc er cou a 3 lome~ an <I, close harmonv Do t1e those vel· . Sheer tricot is used for a bl'idal fmally get two of everythmg, JUSt: b ted\ to mov111g out rom a protec e . : rather whimsical touch to your • . : · · · · . 1 earn to relax and let 11 show· . . bl

like the Joneses-inr.'uding lwn, (stamps cannot e accep , familiar place into new independ·l . I I 1" . P . . low cm·tams mlo I he , c h e me , . , r and manner Tense niohlic and pcl~noir ensem e. ·• ' ST JOHN'S DAILY NEWS,: 111 orma lvmg room. amt tt a 1 Perhaps a ·ellow an 1 ·•ra · str'p 111 vour ace · · ~ 1' htf 1 t u•seau choice

telephone lines, so the teenager.; • ld A t D 1 60 FRONT ence, from support to temporary· dark green and have the pads d h . )rl •11 t ·" 1) • i · ne;s and nen·es can age you a de 1g u ro · · ·

h th · 1' d d 't Househo r s ep . · 1 t' h"J t th !'me 1 c c au· an a ve ow s tp cover ·. h t can a\·e e1r own me an on S TORONTO ONT ISO a 1on w 1 e a e same 1 . for the back and scat covered · d 1 qmckly so he smart enoug o • . k 1 have to share it with the adults ST.. WE T, ' • one feels one's own anxiety and 'th b · k d 1 It b . ; on the couch woul so ve your · lh · ymptoms anrJ · Woven ptn chcc .ms . . Prillt plainly NAME ADDRESS, WI nc re e or a e 1 g C· problem rccogmze c1r s · , .. ht for hand!ind and tmtors

In the ramtly? • • PATTERN NUMBER. powerlessness. and·bro~n plaid; Your husband . do so.mething about .them. Tr:'' i ".etg L ok for sm:rtness in na\·y Well, by that tune the Jonese.. edl h t t'l 1 · should Jtke strmght han"ing cur a sm1le to relax fac1al muscle.

1

llell. 0

.· start on threes-bezinnlng with 0t veder m ut~ · ea un 1 0~ onJ1 15 tains made Qf an 'an-ov~r pro\': Shoes need constant care, per- • • • and white. the! third ear or tilelr thIrd R • en r, s trnng occasiOna Y • • . • . • k I ·ing up

r · D "} Add tomatoes and cook 10 min· inclal prmt m be1ge, b r ow 1., haps more than any other article Undomg no s or pr~ . . visit send bread·a n d : bathroom, or their third;[( set. a1 y fClpe utes · Add peas beans parsley green and brick red. Siip cover of clothing. Wearing a shae lh~t. thumbtacks can b~eak and spht b Atfter 3

1 s to your friend ncr : There's just no such ng as salt; and ep er' and olives· mix the club chair to match. Us a is not polished is like riding an, [ingernails. The w1se ~omemaker ut er no(:f she lives with her. 1

keeping up with the Jones~s any well Tu~ l~to 4 lndivlduai bak· simple, tailored lamp shades, ungroomed horse. N~utral cream 1 will remember not. to attempt m~her, i else who entertains I more. They don't know wen to In Spain, as In the south of ing dishes or 8-inch'square bak .. either_ white or gold paper. lpoli~hes take cnr~ of all the.n~w 1 any job with her.natls. that. can ~n anyo~~ if you didn't bring, quit. France, ~ourmet-mlnded people lng dish Top with eggs Bake 1 • • • colors. The sat m lustre hmsh I be done more easily with sc1ss,ors ~ ou, a g I

come up with some taste-tingling, In mod~rate oven ( 375 ·degrees Dear Polly: My living room i has a special P?l!>h, as does the or pliers. one. i Try to keep the comers of your mouth upturned when your face Is In repose. Mouth expres · slens are Important to beauty. and there's nothing pretty about

mixtures that are considered as 20·25 minutes, or until eggs arc walls are pale green: I have a patent leather f1msh. dinner entrees, although in Cank. set. ---

:.' :.»ilckered, turned-down or pursed ·~l'JlP,.

ada terms ilke boiled ~ggs, pose · Makes four servings. E t ed eggs, scrambled or fried eggs HUEVOS ARRIBA E!!PANO ngagemen mean breakfast. 4 eggs, separated

,..... . ?.>.·:. ~) ... ow Many Wear

.i~,;ALSE YEEFH :r.;~i:~ With More Comfort · '.~': ·fA&TE!TK, a pleaaant llkallnt • ~ "·(IU>I1•acldl poll'der. holdo f•l•e toeth :~ :morellrmly,To eat and tllk In more • · ·tomrort, Juat oprlnklt a Utile FAS·

TEKTH on )'our pl•t••· No ;ummY, tooey, puty taate or feollnr. Checks "'ll&te odor" (denture bruthl. Get P.UTZZTH at •DY dru1 counter.

·~ .. !,..-!-.

Y. W.C.A. y

HUEVOS A L AFLAMENCA 4 slices buttered toast , (Baked Eggs) y, cup grated Parmesan cheese

2 tbsps. butter or m~rgarlne y, cup finely chopped pimiento· 1 large onion, sliced ~luffed olh·c~ '4 pOUnd hnm, diced '1 tsp. ~~~II 1 clove garlic, crushed . \i t~11. ra~'l·nne

I 3 medium-~ized tomatoes, diced Arran~e e~~ )'olks on toast. 1 B·ounce can beans. ciralned Real egg while~ uniil stiff, but

1 1 tbsp. chop)'ll!d parsley not dry; !old in chcc~e. olives, Salt and pepper to taste ~all and cayennr.. Arrange egg one-third cup choppe:J pimiento· white mixture ovl'r egg yolks.

stuffed ol11•es Place on baking sheet. Rake in 4 eggs moderate oven 1350 degrees) 25

Melt butter or mar:;arinc. Add minutes. onion, ham and harllc and cook I Makes four servings.

EVery Dollar Counts

Keep One For The Y -0

0 Every !,. · dollar assures you ~andsome dividends from

--• . valuable citizens of Newfoundland· to~morrow.

GIVE GENEJlOUSL Y NOW - SEPTEMBER ~th TO. 24th -. - .---.. . . ' .

J- y·ou~ MONEY WILL HELP EIGHT c~uss coNTINUE. Acl'IVITIES

~0~0 . 0~0 0~0 ~--~~

.o

Misi Margaret Amundn Smnrl, daughter of Mr. and :\Irs. Stunislnm J. Smnrt, Wcslmllunt, Quebec, and Mr. James Aloysius McGrnth, M.P., son of ~lr, and Mrs. Pal· rick B. McGrath, St. John's, Ncwfoumlland, whose mar­ringe has been arranged to luke place· SL•ptcmbcr 24th at · the Church of the Ascension of our Lord, Wcstmount.l .Miss Smart is the grnnd·daughtcr of Mrs. B. J. Dunphy 't

and the late Mr •• B. J. Dunphy, Holyrood, Newfoundland; the nice~: of Mrs. Marie S. Penney, Ramca, Newfoundland. 1

Miss Smurt is a graduate of Mnrinnopolis College, Univer· , sily ·of Montreal, Faculty of Science. Mr. McGrath is the I Mcmbet of Parliament for St. John's East • .

"ASTRO-GUIDE" By Ceean

For T~day, September 6

' Present-For You and yours , . This is an excellent

i da\' for ci.thcr business or per· so~al mailers. Morning aspect\ increase the ima~in.lion and <n­di<:ate sound rea~oning. You'll find people generally jovial and generous. Aflcmoon brin~ suc­c~s and promotion throu!h resourcefulne•\, and res u Its

; through quick action.

1 Past ... Sixty-one years ago.

I John Hay, U.S. Secrelary of State, proposed an open ~r

: policy with reference I? Chi~~. : outlining a plan of maontamms : equal opporl\lnil,ic~ for trade hy j foreign powers m that natton,

Future , , , Allhough it may I take the 111en a little while to get .

I

used to it, !hort sleeves on suit 1

coats will one day be accepted \ for warm weather wear, \

The Day Under Your Sign ARIES (1om Morch 21 lo April 191 LIIRA !Sop!. 23 lo Oct. 21) . • t~ramlparrntll ml,)' pro\"t a .riM>Imt co&· :n." if. .t ~:Md1 !u'" /«1 ~r~wntn

1 1:nt.Oitf· cc:r11 inr tht runn1 ol ctnlrrr'f'n. tn.al rlant £or •nan~• a a ., 2nCrmr

TAU~US (Apnl20 fo Moy.2_0) "SCORPIO JOel. 23 to 1:1••· 21) . Amhi1i<'ln. it' an. t'Xf~lltnt 1lrn·ma: Coree_ Th,.rt! .rc stJft~ o(. rutncttTt dtnlolt· but .m at the rxrense ot othtrl. 111ent,, 10 caatto«. 1.1 MCUPr1.

GEMINI IM•y 21 lo J1101 21) SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 lo.Doc. 211' H thin•~ rlQn't 11 ri•ht at Wnt'k, dta't Yom· mrnlal fac\Jitiu l1l!l blent• ;.rc take it out laler oa the bmilr. t'h~rr~td and ltc.r1enttcl todar.

CANCER (Ju•• 22 to July 111 CAPRICORN I Doc. 211• Joo. 201 Get that c.~tp aff your ahouldu 1 St•• you are run tJ entriY ancl amhl.tloa. bomnou wdl &tt 10'1 ..,.here. There'• nothin1 to 1top y011 now.

l£0 .!July 2l fo A•9· 21), AQUARIUS ]Joo.1t to Fob."' I~Yt«tnr a probl~ dot~ t mJft b. A\"oid 1 tendtner to .Jump into 1 ~t· Be ture yoUr dttr"OtL i .. t Klfltll. pnsstd Ott Jnutnto4 frame o( •ta~

VIRGO (.Aut. ~2 ~· S.pl. 221 _, PISCES I Fob 20 lol.lort~ 20] Crmitrvatnt thm1nnf 1hould rc.,.atc: • _.~_.1 lr.llnflinu: achemu. ollow )'OV ooa· Don't allow )'OIIr'.c:lf .to bt<'omc tmp1......, tcieaee. ~ doubts N" rr~Judtcu. Gtt the •ctt.

e 19h0, Fic:ld Enlerpri~~. Inc.

' ... ;~~------\--------------------------------~-E_D_A_l_Y_N_~.~J~N~,NFLD.,TUES~~~~~1~

'

THE STORY: Artemu1 was almoat re11a1. Ba~dwln, Secret Service op. ·'Oh, 1ure. Sorry. 1 for11ot," eratlve Ia euUintlnl Uae Bayside aald eareleuly. Porn· friendship of the Beaure- fret Lionel expreued lofty re· lards, lncludln& JeanUer, aentment. Artem111, Jennifer, Jlell: There were a few framed Roche and her 1111all broth· canvases on the walla and a er, Pomlret Lionel, call on half-dozen etchlnll•· The paint-the artlat Walker Jla)'llde. lngs were of desert acenea of

• • • dramatic mountain viatu. Arte· XIV mua, no expert In the fine

llayslde himself opened the artt,' thought that Bayalde waa door to them and became hoa- good at hla job. Jennifer ex· pltable. claimed. Jlck sat down In a

OUR. BOARDING HOUSE

"Now thl1 Ia nice!" he ex· comfortable chair and croued elaimed and 1tepped to one aide her legs, Pomfret Lionel 1tood for the1n to enter. "Thla Is the atlff and resentful. Bayalde lint time Jlck has honored my devoted himself to Jennifer, tak· tepee. And Min Beaure11ard, Do lng other paintings {rom a cab· come In out of the aun." He !net and exhibiting them on did not Include Artemus or an easel. Artemus strolled over Pomfret Lionel in his cordiality, to examine the etchings, con· contenting himself with a curt lsclous that Bayside was watch· ·-~~~~~~~~~~~::_: nod and a brief "Hello, Bald· lng him out of the corner of his

with M/J.I('R H0,n'" = ~----------~-i

I Capitol I TO-DAY •

I I I • ---,.-:-'

JERRY LEWIS IN "VISIT ,TO A SMALL PLANET" \

' '·

Fasten your seat belts, fans, we're about to be Invaded from outer space by a creature ma's· querading as Jerry Lewis In the new Paramount-Hal Wallis pro­duction, "Visit to a Small Planet." This spoof about .a beatnik from the stratosphere

: whose hobby is the 'Earth and I who decides to come take a !took at It, is based on the 1 Broadway stage hit, which ! i~ now playing at tile Capitol

!·Theatre. .

The screen gives the ltftafl.­story, so successfully dramatili. cd on the stage, more of an op· portunity to garner laugils than

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ did the show. It takes Jerry, as : -- -·------- ; Kreton, from his own habitat-

\\'in .•• How are you, kid?" eye, ''Promfret Lionel, sir," the "Interested In etchings? the

boy said with a formality that artist asked, ----

"Don't know much about them," Artemus replied. ''I like these.'' .

''1 do them for recreation. ·T·V· RADIO{OG-! way out there-and brin;:s him

F N R•d• way down here where many ranee Ow I lng mad things happen to him (and the poor people with whom he comes in contact), the filii

-NOW PLAYING

Also - UP-TO-THE-MINUTE NEWS

TIMES OF SHOWS:

EVENING SHOWS: 7 P.M .. - 9 P.M. MATINEE: 2 P.M.

NEXT ATIRACTION WALT DISNEY'S "SIGN OF ZORRO" .WITH GUY

WILLIAMS - ACTION - THRILLS - SUSPENSE.

TO-MORROW

SPECIAL ADDED ATTRACTION

c.-ELAINE FAITH . " SUWARJ • DOMfRG~E -·---TIMES· OF SHOWS:

EVENING: ',CRY TOUGH" 7 O'CLOCK 11ESCORT WEST" - 8.25.

MATINEE, 1.30,

LAST TIMES TODAY "WAKi ME WttEN ITS OVER"

9.40.

Experiment with them," Bay­side 1aid,

"You scratch them on metal, don't you?" Artemus asked.

"You might put It that way," Bayside said, with the ghost of a sneer.

"Yeah," Artemus said, turn­Ing his head from side to side. "Have to have a steady hand, what? If you make a mistake you can't erase it."

"We manage," Bayside said carelessly.

They rode away under the cloudless blue of the sky. Pres­ently Pomfret Lionel broke the silence. "I say," he said firm­ly and savagely, "that that droop is a drizzling drip.''

Artemus' job was a lonely one, He had to worm his way Into the confidence of the local underworld and be accepted by them.

Counterfeiting, historica II y had an International character, was ev~n sponsored by mighty names. Napoleon, before his ln· vasion o! Russia,· had counter· felted a vast sum in Muscovite money, and had purchased with it supplies for the Grande Armee. Hitler had scoured eon· centration camps for experts and had equipped them for the wholesale counterfeiting of British pounds.

Artemus Baldwin's telephone rang, The voice of Marvin Leeds came over the wire, "Remain at home, "Mr. Baldwin," It said. "You will have visitors within the hour." Then the re· cciver at the other end was hung up curtly.

In less than 30 minutes knuckles rapped upon the door, and Artemus ready for come what might, opened to find two men on his tiny porch. Without a word they slid inside and closed the door after them. One of the men obviously was an Indian. The other might have been either Indian or Mexican. face of the Indian was square, his mouth an elongated slit, his black hair long and his beady

small and ophidian. His I shoul.de1rs were broad and his body squat. The other man was somewhat 'taller, swarthy, not so expressionless as his compan• ion. He spoke English of a rather stilted sort."

"Mr. Baldwin," he said, "we are Yaquis. Thees man iss chief. He come from Mexico. I live in Yaqui settlement here. You expect us?"

"I expected you," Artemus said.

''The chief spik no English. I talk for beem,"

"Talk ahead," Artemus said shortly.

The man spoke to his compan· ion in some guttural tongue.

Impassive face, the Yaqui chief fumbled in the pocket of his shirt and extracted a bag whleh he emptied upon the table.

"Gold," said the taller of the two.

"What's the story?" Artemus asked.

"Yaquis great people. Wild people. Even Diaz cannot con· quer."

"Fine. So you're great people. You eat Mexicans." ,

"Much gold from the mine­bars of gold in saddle bags of burrors over the mountains. Sol· dlers guard. Not too many. Ya· quia keel soldiers. Take gold. Hide gold In our country. Ver' savage country. Si? Cannot sell in Mexico--too much watch. One year, two year, flve year. Maybe smuggle across river, eh?" '

"I'll bet," Artemus said, . "you're, a liar.' He shrugged. "Now listen. I'm the sucker, see? Me. You work this sWindle on me.'

"No onderstand." "You d9n't need to. Just do

what you're told. I do the thlnldnll."

"Sure. Okay." · "When I need you," Artemus

asked, "where do I find you?" "Chief lu wetback," said the

man. "Muet not be catch. My name eet Iss Pedro. You tele­

Mr. Leeds, I come. Meb· by so the chief come too.j

Artemus swept the gold from the table; replaced It In the ball and tossed It to the English· ipeaklng Yaqui. "That," he said, "Ia all for tonight."

(To Be Continued)

CBN TUESDAY, September 6tb.

~.M.

7.30-CBC News 7.35--Top of the Morning

· 8.00-CBC News and Weather 8.1:1--Musical Clock 9.00-Mornlng Devotions 9.15--Program Preview 9.20-0n Parade. U.30-CBC News and Direct

Reports 9.4[)-Records at Random

10.00-Arcbers 10.1[)-Dorsi Janes. 10.25-For Consumers 10.30-Morning Pops 10.45-CiifCs Kitchen 10.50-~Iusic in the Morning 11.00-Musical Program !US--Musical Mcrry-Go.round ' 11.45-Sacred Heart Program. 12.00-BBC News 12.10-Announcers Choice 12,30--Farm Broadcast 12.45-lllid Day Serenade 1.00-Doyle Bulletin 1.1[)-A :\1an Called Sheppard 1.30-CBC News and Weather 1.4[)-Tommy Hunter Show. 2.15-:\l usical Randezvous 2.29-Dominion Obs. Time

Signal 2.30--Musical Randczvous 2.45-BBC Variety 3.1[)-J ohn Drainie Tells a

Story 3.30-News and Trans Canada

Matinee 4.30--Lucio Agustini. 5,00--Halifax Theatre. 5.30--Fisheries Broadcast 5.45-Music from the Albums 6.00--CBC News 6.05-lntermezzo 6.2[)-Program Preview 6.30-Supper Guest. 6,45-Light Music 7.00-CBC News and Weather 7.15-Muslcal Program, 7,30--Tops Today 7.45-Doyle Bulletin 8.15-Rawhide·. 8.30--Roving Reporter. 8.40--Musical Program. 8,55-Weather for Mariners 9.0{}.-lnvitation to Worship. 9.30--Paradox or Plenty.

10.00-Choral Program. 10.30--Leicester Square. 11.00-Nocture. 11.30--CBC National News,

Roundup and Talk

VOCM TUESDAY, September 6th.

6.311-N ews and W cather 6.35-BreakfllSt with Bill 6.55-News 7.00--Breakfast with Bill 7.30-News and Waterfront

Directory 7.35-Breakfast with Bill 7.5[)-News 8.00-Torbay Weather 8.05-Breakfast with BiU 8.2[)-News 8.30-Hit of the Oay 8.35-Sportscast 8.40--Breakfast with Bill 8.5:1--News 9.00-Morning Date 9.15-Lindas First Love 9.30-Morn\ng Date

10.00-Ntws lll.OS-Stork Club 10.1[)-Jim Ameche She .w 10.5[)-News 11.00-Jim Ameche Show \1.15-Western Jamboree 11 .5[)-N CWI

P.M. 12.00-Weatern Jamboree 12.30-News 12.35--Ramblln with Reeord1 12.4:1--Flsherman's Forecnt 12.50-Ramblln with Recorda US-Sportscast 1.20-Ramblln with RecordJ 1.30- -News 1.4:1--Paaslng Parade (JDhn

Nesbitt) 2.00--Jim Ameche Show 2.155-News 3.00-Dollars On Parad. 3.155--NeWI 4.00-Bob's Bandwa11on 4.115--Newa 1!.00-Bob'l Bandwagon !!.»-Supper Serenade 11.!10-'Fisherman'• Forecut 8.00-Bulletla Board .

Travelogue : --8.30-Supper Serenade U5-NeWI 7.00-Klwanla Luncheon Ad·

dress. 7.30-Shlllelallh Showtlme. 8.00--Cream Of The Crop

10.00-VOCM All Time Hit Parade

10.30-Eventlde Med!tationa 1D.45-Sporta

11.00-Torbay Weather 11.0[)-B!g Top Ten 11.30-Club 1190 and News.

CJON TUESDAY, September 6th.

11,30-· The Bob Lewis Snow 6,31).-Nf!d. News 6.3[)-Weather Forec.1st 6.40--The Bob Lewis Show 6.45--Headline News and

Forecast 11.~0--The Bob Lewil Show 7.00-Newa 7.05--Loeal Weather 7.20--The Bob Lewis Show 7.30--News 7.35-Complete Weather 7.45-News 8.0{}.-News 8.05-Weather 8.15-Shipping Report 8.20-The Bob Lewis Show 8.25-Kiddies Corner 830-News 8.40--The Bob Lewis Show 8.55-Just a Minute 9.00--News 9.0[)-l\lusic for Million• 9.20-Jerry Wiggins Show

10.00--News in a Minute 10,01-~1artin's Corner lO.ll}-The Right to HappineJV. tO.:Jl}-Housewivet Cholr.t 11.00-N ews in a Minute ll.Dl-The Rev. Matthew 11.35-Nfld. Quiz 11.45-Towne and Country. 12.00-News Highlights 12.02-Town and Country 12.30--N ews 12.33--Town and Country 1.00--New,, . 1.05-Weat..·er Forecaat 1.35-Don Jamieson'•

Ediiorial 1.40--Sports 1.45-Art Baker's N oteboo\: 2.00--News Highlights 2.03--Jerry Wiggins Show 2.~30-News 2.31-Jerry Wiggins Show 3.01-Western Jamboree 4.00-News in a Minute 4.01-Ranch Party 5.00-News in a Minute 5,01..!Bob Lewis Dance Party 6.00--News Highlights 6.01-Weather 6.0[)-Bulletin Board 6.10--National News 6,15-Sports 6.25-Ever Battery News 6.30--Club 93 7.02-Club 93 7.30-News 7,4[)-Don Jamieson's Newa 8.00--News in a Minute 8.01-Best from the West 8.30--National News 8.31-Best from the West 9J)O--News in a Minute 9.03--Nfld. Soiree. 9,4[)-Dosco News.

10.00--News Highlights 10.01-The Hammer Guy. 10,30--National News 10.45-Sports 10.55--Muslc In the Night U.()()...:.News Highlights 11.113-Music In tbe Night 12.00-Ncwa 12.01-Music In the Night

CJON-CJOX-TV

W Of P laugh potentials or which could

ave rosperl•ty coanmlyerab.e realized through the magic of tbe motion picture

. . . Kreton arrives on Earth By ALAN HARVEY st.rong s1gns ol so~Jal d1scontent., wearing a Confederate uniform

Canadian Press Staff Writer Wages and salanes h~ve been I since he's gotten his dates mix­p,\RJS <CPJ - France is ge'· held nt whnt to an outsider seem I ed Towever th b f

ling so prosperous that socks are low levels, partly to combat in·: · • e mem ers 0

actually being worn inside shoes: flat ion. Now the OEEC exper•J 1 e?, How~~~r~ .~he members of instead ol being used as a hiding. suggest that the time may be Cldes to VISit are thems~lves plac-e for francs. ripe for France to stimulate pri· dressed to attend, a masque~ade

Which is a heavy-handed way of vale consumption to avoid "social party so .Kreton s strange: ap. saying that the prudent peasants tensions." pearance IS taken for gra11ted. and the far-sighted financiers are But, sav the experts the gov 1 But when they learn the "facts" ~etting theit· confidence back. ernment ~hould g0 carefully. j and when the impish visitor With industrial production up Ia, "This is a field in which the, falls in love with the beautiful per cent over last year and the greatest caution is necessary," i daughter-well, there are lnn~e external trade balance in surplus., says the OEEC report. "The ·laughs to pay than even the dormant money is coming out ol

1

maintenance of price stability is II most devoted Jerry Lewis fan the secret caches. 1 clearly one of the essential con- can imagine.

So much so that the Bank of <litions lor any real improYement ------France has had to lower its pur ~in the purchasing power of the I L m ,. N . chase price for gold. i wage-earnrr." a a lne ews EXPORTS UP Slil\RPLY ! By :-iorth American standard;,

1

Y~s. thinl!s. are boominl!. Only: indu~trial workers are poo:Iy LAMALINE _ :lli~5 )]aye two or three years ago prospec~s paul. Some 60 per cent receive :O.!addigan returned from iraJi. l?oked black. :'>loll' the franc Js less than 52,000 ?ld francs u fax on Au~ust 29. after 5 ·end· f1rm, th_e t~easur.y actually ~as: month. Thou~h ~am1ly allowance; ing an enjoyable vacation Pwith money m 1t. pnccs are fa1ri.Y ; and other benefits make compat'· her aunt )! D 1 stable and u n em pI o y ment IS' i<ons diffic•1lt. the fact remains k tt • · rs. oug as Brae-slight. : that 52,000 francs worKs out at· e ·. • .

In the first half ol 1960. exports . little more than $100 a month. 1 ~hss Kay Elliott returned have leaped dramatically by just! It is impo>sible to travel in' from Corner Brook: where, she under 40 per cent. This com· 1 France without realizing that 1 ha~ sp~nt her l'acatwn _w1th ·her pares with a 32-per·ccnt increase i there are many people who hav~. lwm s1ster. ~Irs. Ch~rhe Da1·is. in import~. . a hard time. Some families lind: )Irs. Lcomlla Collins return· France·~ surprising economic i thin!(s so difficult, a Frenchma~ 1 ed from Halifax on Au;.:ust 30.

reco\'ery has been confirmed by 1

told this reporter, that they don·t, Special greetings are rxtend· a team of international experts ·take baths at home because h~ 1 ed to ~[r. Chris Pittman who employed by the Organization for; hot water is oo expensive. [celebrated his 86 birthday on European Economic Co-opera- I This autumn may ~ee under- August 25. Greetings also to Lion. They note the surplus on! lying discontents come into the illr. George Ember!)", Gower ~t.. the balance ol payments, look ! open. Last spring's wa1·e of St. John's, who celebrated 'his forwm·d to further increases in ' strikes petered out when it looke1 \birthday at Allan's Island fth? 1961 and say the French come- as though peace in Algeria was i place of his birth) on Au"ust back should make a "powerful on the way. Now. with the war ;25. Greetings come from aJ{ hi• contribution" to the economic plodding on its weary way, union3 1 friends at Lamaline. · well-being o( the Wes+e~n world and workers may be ready to ! A son was born to ~lr ancl

yet the~e IS another s1de of th~ p~ess the government hard for a ! ~Irs. Alfred Stacey at th~ St. I com. A~1d1 all the e1t·idtehnces ol ~t1gger share of the new prosper-~· Lawrence :\lemorial Hospital 011

economiC mpro·:emen . ere are 1 y. . ___ Aug. 27. Congratulations are ex-

N N I I . . !tended. €W OV€ nsp1rat10n :\li~> ~~uriel Ayres arri.rcd

LO:'{DO:'>J ICP) - Britain's I V:\:'<COUVER ICPl-A rodeo ~from Hahfax on August 27 to weeKly ma~azines wax enthusias· rider who was dating her. spend her vacation with her tic over The Luck of Ginger Cof·i daughter was the inspiration fori parents, l\lr. and Mrs. George fey, a new nol'el by lrish·Ca· ·starting ~frs. :llary Robertson of lAyers. nadian writer Brian :O.Ioore. i El Cerrito, Calif., on an unusual' :lliss Jean Pittman left lor

P3ul West in The .'lew State,. 1 writing venture. Channel, where she will teach man sa;·s the story or a discour· i "When I went to talk with the in the Anglican school during aged Irish immigrant makes a I young man, a hull rider. I found the coming vear. "rich, distinguished book." . i l knew nothing about rodeos,'' Messrs. J~seph Fleming and

In The Spectator, Ronald ~.rY· ~he sai? during a visit to the William Haley, accepted schools den ~ays M~?re mak~~ ~n Im· m~~rnatwnat rodeo h.ere. in the St, Bride's Parish, -P.B. press!1:e try at ach.Ievmg the I went to the library and Thomas Fleming (of · Law-transiiion from earlier works, lound there were no books on the I renee) will be teaching t F written out ol a bacl,ground oi subject, so I decided to write Cove Bur1'n dur1· g th a ·ox th th • t· I 1 d 1 " I • • n e com1ng e au or s na ll'e re an , o a one. year · nov~! with a North American Since then. :\Irs. ~obertson has --·---------settm_g. . travelled 82,000 rn1les and at- : at the Pacific National Exhibi

lf 1t doesn t wholly come . oiL :ended sc?res of rodeo~ gather· lion's rodeo. "I saw my first girl Bry~en says_ the. ~hortco,':"mgs I mg matenal on the subJect, bronc rider, a girl steer wrestler ~rent so m~1ch l~}s1hes as , holes FORMER REPORTER and also a girl bull rider. · m the expenence of 1\loore s new Mrs. Robertson, a former re· "Years ago there were lots ol environment. porter on the Los Angeles Times, women in rodeos but now they'n

"What he ha~ mastered, he has said she had interviewed mor~ rare." · mas~ered bril!iantly The odd. than 350 . cowboys and as many Her husband is vice-president ~n.ftm~ Canad1an underworld ~~ ~omen n?ers as she could. fin_d of a San Francisco insurance wmos and . Ion e l.Y men m m preparmg . the book, Th1s 1s firm and she says he c'oesn't lik~

YMCAs, ta~mg ma1i • order Rod~o, now m the hands of a anything "that even smells 'likE rn~scle . bU!ldmg course~. ram· pu.~ilsh~r. . a horse or a bulL" bllng on about fabulous JObs. UiJ • I hit the )ackt;ot at Little She was asked whether her north; . the bleak, neon.· iln~d H11J, Kan., recently,' she said as daughter was stili going around sprawl of the su·Arct1c c1ty · she watched the riders in action with the rodeo rider <Montreal) with ils toagh French · police and anonymous . apartment blocks." HARSH ON CANADA Coinage I

AOIOBS :1 Coun!r7 Both review.ers use the novel's

theme for some passing corn· : rnents on Canada.

-.T•U•E•S•I>•A·Y-, .Se .. p_t .. e-mbe_r_G .. th ... - The New Statesman critic says Moore is "rightly" harsh on Can·

1 English cola &.Former

4 "Blue Eaet!!" &Japanese

monetary unit e Wife of Aeglr 4.00-My Little Margie. ada, and the "childi;n society"

4.30-All StarTheatre. depicted in the boo!<. Moore's 5.00-Llberace chief character epitomizes a 6.30-Follow Me "sleepwalking stoicism one has 6.45-Here'a my Pet spotted many times in the new 6.00-Buccaneen canadian." The new country Is 6.30-Local News and World seen to be "sordid, ~hallow and

of Sports unciviL" 6.45-The Real McCoy1. In The Spectator, Bryden hails 7115-Summer Theatre. Moore as the writer who will 8.15--Natlonal News speak for the "huge, cryptic coun· 8.30-I Love Lucy try" he has chosen. He compares 9.00-Captaln David Grief the book with the classic North 9.30-Chevy Mystery Sho:w. American nightmare of Arthur

10.30-While We're Youn11. Miller's Death of a Salesman, 11.00-Parade. except that in "booming, post-war 11.30-Brun Walter. Canada . . . one simply learns 12.30-News Headlines to settle for disillusion." 12.35-Sword of Freedom. Moore, in his late 30s, emi· 1.00-Summer Olymplea. grated from Ireland after til<! 1.30-Sign Off. Second World War and now

lives in Montreal. He has written two earlier novels, Judith Hearne

Whether out of curiosity or because of worry over a health problem, a person may be anx· ious for Information on health. It is safest to seek information tilat is authentic. Information on many phases of physical and mental health, IS Well as on chjld training, written by ar· thoritlea in the various fields, Ia published by federal, provln·

and The Feast of Lupercal. Moore also gets a bouquet In

a Sl.lllday newspaper. Kingsley Arnis, one of Britain's best-known younger novelists and author of the best-selling Lucky Jim, says in a review publlshed by Thf , Observer that "Mr. Moore can· write most or his contemporariez into the ground.'~

cia! and local departments of ment, mentioning the informa· health. By writing to tile local lion required, publications will or provincial, health depart· be made available.

Russian coin !I Bellowed 13 Cask H Llquld found

In petroleum 15 Yearly 18 God (LaUn) 17 Male 19 African fly

(VIr.) 20P1eblaa 22 Table morsel 23 Hlls existed 24 Son a! Setb 26Act of

endearment 28 Oriental min 30 Encountered 31 Golf mound 32Enemy of

Oslrl1 33 J au dances

of a sort 38Sweet

setretion

(myth.) 7 Footed vue a Beuta 9 RentS

lOFeminine appeltaUon 27 Stauer

12 Populaee 29 Planet , (comb. form) 33 Placid

13 Javanete 34 &otltsh small fowls woolen doth

18 Clrele part 35 Sun 21 Game at cardl37 Wandered 23 Choicer :J8 Procurator 25 Appnr of .Judea

39 Colle,e- ome1a1 1..-J:r,...j.-11-40 Splnnlnt toy 42 Render turbid 44 Arrival (ab.) 45Caueho 46 WlnJ}lke part 47Keep ~OMarlner ~3 Make poiSlble ~41tounded ~s Perlllnlnr to

the kidney, 58 Burdena

DOWN lGoadl %Geological

period

3D Venture~: 41 Nuisance 43 Narrow ways 48 Camel's hair

cloth 495lck 51 Conger ft Brazilian

...... ~ •.• t •.

. . .. ~ ..

ludy Problem:

Canada's Biggest . Unemployment .... ~ ..

-~~· · ' ' It aoJERT aiCE cent of th~se were In the con· "A region with a large part o!

JE' . Preu Staff Wrl&er . atructlon industry and most of its labor force engaged in the WA (CP)-A special the rest were in the primary in· primary industries, construction

nt report says ·Can· dustries- agriculture, mining, and transportation will have adll1a: "aonal industries must logging, fishing and so on, The considerable seasonal uncm· il\tUt new technique! and new transportation Industry, directly ploymcnt," says the report.

' t1 If the long-term pro- affected by the level of activity "IC, on the other hand, a re· Cil aeaaonal unemployment in other industries, also reacts gion has ~ labor Coree primarily

iii \8 be solved. to seasonal unemployment. engaged m a varied manu!ac· t,: a. comprehensive examlna· A reduction by el'en one· turing industry, its seasonal un·

tloii;~of this subject a team of third in the wage loss would employment problem will likely . JOiemment economists has laid have "a substantial impact" on be less sevcrf, aiJ,t ·~. new portrait or what Canada's economy, says the re· On this basis, the report says, ~ ·reprd as Canada's big· port, prepared by the cmplO)'· it is not surprismg to find the Jet~· domestic problem. The ment and labor market division largest seasonal problems in the stlid)•..:..publlshed in tbe I.ahor or the labor department's econ· Prairies, Quebec and Atlantic G~tte, month!)' journal of the omk~ and research branch. regions, witil Ontario least af· fet\eral labor department-sees "The $90.000,000 which this fecterl and the West Coast's twp.:1dnds of solutions :

1reduction rcorescnts annually milder climate offsetting the

~.)~ short-term remedy which could put 24,000 persons to fact that region ois heavily de· depends to a laree extent on ac·l work Cull time for one year, or pendent on primary industries. tion;,b)l all lel'els of govern.

1

build 7.~ singJe.unlt dwellings VULNERABLE JOBS ment. at $12,000 per unit, or put 15,· Jobs particularly vulncrahlc . 2. A Jonl(·term remedy which I 000 students through a four- to seasonal unemployment in·

''dfmands'' de1·e!opmcnt o{ new year university course on scho· elude cooks and kitchen work· techniques and new machines, a larships of $1,500 a year or in· ers at summer resorts, protcc new ·attitude toward the sca~on· crease the iO\'estment in schools ti1•e serl'ice workers, skilled and al job problem from the indu~. and other educational facilities ~emi·skllled loggers, workers in tries bardt!t bit by seasonal I by 30 per cent for one full food and tobacco industries and fluctuations. ~·ear." the stone.and clay-products in· ON,US. ON INDUSTRY HUMAN PROBLE~I dustries, plastererR, bricklayers,

Thus, in a quiet war, the ~OI'· The report says much of the carpenters, spamen, taxi, truck f'm\n~nt·sponsored stud)' puts a human .suffering that results and tractor dril'ers and labor­lar&e shire of the onus for soh·· from seasonal unemployment ers. Ina aeasona\ unemployment on has heen o1·ercome by several "The analysis suggests that industry Itself-particularly the benefits under the unemploy. apart from a large group of ~ruction Industry. ment Insurance Act. Ncvcrthe· skilled and scmi·skilled con·

ll. suggests research into how I less. It adds, the under-utili· struction workers, the seasonal· building techniques can be ex· %Rlion or capital and manpower Jr employed are relativeil' un· tended through the cold winter resources remains a serious 'tkilled male workers in the months. It urges management 1 problem. younger age groups," the study to;:.tiu a new look at bow it or· 1 'These manpower rcsourr~s conclude~. ainlzes its work schedules so I are not made up of tired old A short.term solution re· tliat the Impact or seasonal ups men, inexperienced boys and [quire.~ finding or creating jobs arid downs can be eased. 1 married women looking for for the skilled and semi-skilled

I

THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., TUESDAY, SEI'T'EMBER 6, 1960 -

BEST CADET -A \.rand Falls. \'rid._. Ann.~· nulrt "a~ jml,!!;~d ti.IC hl·st cadet in "B" Company at the annual summer train in!!: at Camp Altler. ~hot, l'i.S. Here Cadt•t J. W. Hamon rccm rs Ius. lmphy from .\laJor·Gcn l'ral ,\,I. P. llo~;l,rt, general officer commanding Eastern Command.

Consumers are told to re· ipart·time jobs," sa~·s lhe study.lconstruction workers and for vamp their bu~·lng habits to buy "The seasonally unemployed in relatil·ciy unskilled men, many more from seasonal industries winter arc, on average, a little of whom also lack any extcn· when they normally slow down. older lban the summer unem· sivc work experience. -----· ---·- --·

(National Defence Photo)·

Th~ report calls for 11·ider pro· ployed but the bulk of them are In general, jobs for the ~ea·

motion and publlcit~· for do-it·! between 25 and 44 years of age.1

son ally unemployed have to be I Ul nilw projects in the winter I They are lllOStly men, since \YO• created in local areas wh~re i v· t. B months, more education and men who,Jeave their jobs in the I seasonal ln)·orrs occur and hai'C I cer IC Ims ecom·e ti'iininl( 11[ unskilled people to fal\ are not likely to look for ·to be suited to the kinds of fit' them for modern technologt. jobs until the following 9pring." skills available locally.

Thus. constanl ll'llt'l'Y prudue<'f 1 A hole in thr stomnch or " eontinuot\s flo II' of i'li<'<'i I inlt•,linal 11:dl made hy the di­\\ hich may ''\'l'ntuaily l"<HJ.-.,c an ;.!rsti\·c jlliCP.'. uln'r. Ero,ion of Jar~t· artcric·< to.

:\ >t•co:HI lh!'rtl') •·l:1i111s ul- c:<tcd ncar the slomach wluc:1

.Japan's Hirohito. a noted marine biologist. maintains his Ol\'11 laboratory and has puh. lisherl a scholar!)· hook on sea hor~rs.

cal jobs. From registrations for em· The Ion!( · term solution ~ocs '.'The over-riding factor in tbe ployment at the National Em. deeper. It involves technologi.

aearch· for a solution to this ployment Service offices, the cal innovations to reduce sea· problem lies, of course, in the !researchers found that whether sonal C1uctuations, to cut the country's abllit)' to keep the a person is skilled or unskilled number of workers in seasonal tc:oriomy buoyant," uys the does not seem to be an impor. industries. to shift seasonal pHI· Labor Gazette report, soon to tant factor. terns so there is a better bal· be reprinted 11 a separate do· "Tile most important. link ance between the peak activity cument, seems to be the industry, and of one industry and the tromh 1V AGE LOSS within the industry the associa· of anotber, and to shorten the

· T~e report says the loss of lion appears to be with the seasonal layoff period. wage! In the winter of 19511-59, weather. This is clearly seen in "Promotion and education, a~· elght·month period from Oc· the construction industry." building ~search, development tobei' to ·May, has been estlmat· LOCATION FACTOR of new managerial and organ!· ed.·•t about $275,000,000. This Since climate is a principal zational techniques are but a wlitks out to more tban $1,000,· cause of seasonal unemploy. few of the many approaches to Olio a day. . ment and since certain indus· the problem." says the study,

At the seasonal peak unem· tries are more affected by ''Recent developments along pJO~·ment time in this period, weather than others, the extent these lines Indicate that the hi. ;.March, 19119, about 250,000 or seasonal unemployment is longer • term solutions are be· J!.t!Ople were out ol work for determined largely by what in· ing sought to a greater and 1~al reasons. About 40 per dustrles are where. greater P.Xtent."

VA B .c.· • • enetiCiarie3

ULCER complications ra n necessitate surgery.

By JF.RRY BENNETT 'dict.1 work best on specific WASHINGTON - (Nt;A)- patienls fnr f:<ster anrl more fH•

-Three million American pep· qucnt cures. tic ulcer victims eventually This two.pronged ini'C,ti~a· will benefit from a gigantic 'lion headed by Dr. )lorton medical research program spon· Crossman of Lu• Angeles a:Hi sored by the Veterans Adminis· ; Dr. R. \\'. Pustlcthwait of Dur. tratjon which begins Sept. 1. , ham, N.C., will be the largest

!'<'I'.' arc inh~ritcd. ,\ lhiJ'(I 'ran prodtH'c mtl'rnal IMc<hn~. ]HJ~rl; that thP)" arr t;•u .. ec\ hy Ton lllllf'h ~e:n· tis:'liC on ;1 ·

a reduction in the hl<JOd supply hc:lii11~ dundr:o:d ulcer ll'hich to tlu: stomach or inle~tinr. oiHnH:Iii lhc opt•nin~ hrlllcrn

D•>l'tors tr('at the ma.inril.1· or llw i!lt•.'~tinr and 'lom.1<'h. u\err l'<l.iCS ll'ilh opccia) <lie!.< lJ~CI'S which l'l'fli>C [II }:('~)

and mcdil'incs that rounter.act. no matlrr h(J\1' reli~iOII>I} a stomat·h <tcids. lltcts consist o{ paticnl follow> his dol'lor'> •II'·

I hlanJ foods. Highly seasoned dcrs. Such mtractahlr <'<~>rs arc foods tcn<l 10 5timulutc the di· rare.

I gcstil'c juice producti<lll. The Sometimes sur~cr_,. is ol'o I same is true of liquors, coffee used lo rrmn\'l: gastrict ulct·rs I and tobacco. wiH'<: I here ~rc no complir·.: .. I D,. Lee says that most pa·, tions because slomach caw:cr, tienls who maintain proper ·can m:J,qurr.1rlc os au ulcer.

ldicts' and l;tkc their medicines \\'bclher ulccl's cause cancer can be cured. Those who don't is unknown. Some dm·tor.; h~·

often find thcmsch Co i11 seri· licl'e that all untreated pcptie ous trouble and need surgery. .ulc~r:; ·will r1·cntualiy become

Four typrs of ulcrr complica· mah~nant. Others claim til:1t. lions require >Ur~cry. They ,there is absolulel.1· no rclaliun· · arc: ship between the two ailments. J

Doctors in 14 VA hospiinls ever undertaken on tlJC sever~ , ; throughout the country will digestive ailment. It follows a ·

keep detailed case histories on current VA study which ·h:b i ulcer patients for several years. heen confined to the best sur.~i· ' They want to determine which cal lcchniqucs for ulcer opera· : or many ulcer medicines and lions during the last thr~e ! ------------years. Hanna-Barbara team, the same outfit which has done so well The importance of tlle medi· i

cal research program is rc· i witb its children's shows. Hue· fleeted in Public Health Service 1 kleberry Hound and Quick· statistics: they show that there ' Draw McGraw. · • • • arc seven times as many ulcer :

T I g th t I. t . , victims today as there were 25 opp n e mys ery 1S 1s ; "

Ambler, the great suspense , •

ENJOY LIVING

+ IWIM SAFELY

Checkmate, a series with Eric •

1

years a.,o. • • • ·

writer, as its guiding genius. Ukers are erosions o[ I issue.; This is on the CBS schcdule.IThcy can be mi;;croscopic in Others. on the lists are NBC's 1 size or as large as four inc he~· ' Dan Raven, Dante and nlichael 'in diameter. Shayne, ABC's Surfside Six 1 Dr. Lyndon E. Lee Jr.. V ,\ (which attempts to do for llli· ·ulcer expert, says that pcplk , ami Beach wbat 77 Sunset Strip ulcers fall into I wo categories ..

. FlED MACMURRAY holdl Tim Conallllnt as he listens to· and Hawaiian Eye did for Los gastric and duodenal. The first .

•.. OF THE TOTAL OF 1 0 BILLION DOLLARS SPENT ON ADVERTISING !N 1959, NEARlY

ONE THIRD WAS PLACED IN DAILY PAPERS! WilHam Frawley on ABC's new comedy, "My Tbree Sons." Angeles and Honolulu respec· strikes the inside of the stom· t

· · ft'lmed. half hour comedy 1'er1·cs lively) and· Naked City (back ach lining, The other attack~: Year ""Ve us the dlaappblnti.ng h · h 11 I ..- starring Fred MacMurray (My again In a full-hour version). t c upper porllon of l e sma . Startlme, Ia a mystery series Th d t h · t t' th 1 d h. h

d Three Son .. ABC) ·, Pat O'Brl'en e . a ven ure .s ows 'use m es me, e 1 uo cnum, w tc with Boria Karl off u host· an · tt h d tl 1

d d (Harrlg.n •·. Son, ABC)., Nan· backgrounds of varying places IS a ac c to Jc stomac 1. occasional star. It'• ue to e- • d · h B 'h th ht' t b · ette Fabray (Yes, Yes, Nanette, an times. There's ABC's T e O• arc oug o e caus· but on Sept. 13 on NBC. 1 1 . d Th R 1 '20 d d b . d fl C

NBC In January) ·, ·the -'iere san ers, e oar ng s an c .Y an mcreasc ow o . Family Classics, a new Idea w K Th d' t' · · I 1 from David' Susskind's Talent Brothers (Oh, Those Bella!, CBS Hong ong; CBS' e Aqlla· !ges IVe JUtces. n an u cer

· 1·n November)•, Annie Farge nauts and Route 66 and NBC's victim, these flnids arc present Associates, wlll · be similar to 1 th · f d Du Pont ·show of the Month (Angel, CBS); Peter Lind Hayes Klondike. And or course, more even w 1en ere 1s no oo to

11 atralght drimaa are and Mary Healey (Peter Loves Westerns, such as the bighJy. digest. So the fluids begin to ~~~r~~ea, they are few and with blg,ideas, It wlll dramatize Mary, NBC), . regarded Tbe Lone Westerner eat away lhe intestinal or stom·

flf~:lwt!en. Tbe only replar- a elualc novel· In a· two- hour with Brian Keith, Outlaw and ach lining, 'dramatic Is the version, ·with one hour sh.own Also Joan Dru (Guestward The Tall Man on NBC and Victims suffer from cramps,

alternatint U, S, Steel on. each of two successive Ho, ABC); Andy Griffith (Tbt ABC's stagecoach West. nausea, and a gnawing reeling and Armstrong Circle nl1hta. "The Three Mv·· leers" Andy Griffith Sh01fj' CBS);· Tab ·one . new . anthology. series in the stomach. In some cases,

~~~~r. The nearest approach· will be first, .cin Oct. 211 and 29, Hunter (Bachelor • at • Large, will be along. NBC's Barbara severe hunger is the only early . new dramatic Pf01J'8111· via CBS. NBC); Tom Ewell (The Tam Stanwyck Theater, with Miss symptom. In others, patients .are The Wll'*l, The • · • • Ewell Show, CBS) and Elaine Stanwick attempting to follow have none of these symptoms;

21r!...,.,r and Flllllly Oissle, Sonae of the other dramatic Strltch (My Slater, Eileen~ CBS) In the shoes (and other accesso· tbey don't discover their ulcers Wltneaa will operate be· proli'ams will be .returning - · . There· are a few others with ries) o{ Loretta Young and until they .arc given physical

29 on CBS with a Du ·Jlont, the. Hallmark Hall 'of no name. stars;. Candid Camera, June Allyson examinations. Each pro1ram Fame, The' Dow Hour of Great will. have I~ own spot tbls y~r This is not' an exhaustive sur· Nobody knows for sure what '

Why do advertisers show such confidence in the

power of newspaper advertising ? .

They know that advertising is a two.way street . . . that readers are constantly looking for a myriad of goods, services, bargains and ideas.

1

Expeerience has shown them that newspaper readers ore enthusiastic prospects who know what they wont and that the place to find it is in their daily newspaper. Advertisers know that their daily newspaper reaches more prospective customers effectively and economically than any other medium.

a famOUI rogue in )ly•lerles, :But· there is no PlaY· on CBS, with Eddie Albert and vey. There are many others on stimulates tbe inc rca sed

MR. MERCHANT,• LET US GIVE YOU RATES

AND DATA ON AN EFFECTIVE NEWSPAPER AD

PROGRAM FOR YOUR NEEDS ! • .-~-aome fictional. 1ome bOUle 10· on the schedule no Dorothy Colllna joining /.lien the list of possibilities, and per- amounts of digestive acids. Most

'him throulh' in Sl!,ldlo. One,· no' !;Craft, non~ of Funt. . t haps some of the ones men· doctors, however, blame stress. with the culprit th~ replat"wcekly series.. • Another. comedy note of in-· lioned will never materialir.e. • • •

tiD defend him1eU. There are lndicatlonsi tbat terest is The Flintstenes, an But that's the way the schedule They believe that worry The DAILY NEWS 'ftlr\Uer, thia year's bll coniedy ;_ of the altuatlon abrt ABC. olferlng; which is an ani· generally looks at the moment. caused by emotional pressure .,..,.. ll•llbeU. lobln10n -may be In for 1 boom toon. mated cartoon series for adults. Anybody for a good book activates the nerves which reg· . ~ IO!Il.PU.Y Jut Thil Jear, there'• to be new It wlll be produced by the dub? ulate digestive juice glands. '------------i------------------•

,

SECTION II THE DAILY NEWS Two Brothers In Politics ---87 STEPHEN SCOTT

Caaadlaa Preta Staff Writer Caaadlaa Preas Sl.aff Writer VICTORIA <CP> - The big,

amlling man In the hotel lobby uld "As a matter of fact, I have a bet with my brother on \l'ho will become prime minister first. Of Course, 11$ has a head atllrt." . '

TorqUe Macleod, Progressive Consm•atlve c a n d i d a t e In lialmon Arm In the Sept, 12 Brit· ish Columbia eleclion, was talk· lng about Ills brother lain, who !it~ in the British caoinet as sec· rctary for the col!miea. Hi~ elder brotoor has been

called one of the rising stars in Prime Minister 1\lacmillan's JlOV· ernment In London, while the 43· ~·ear-old Torque Is contesting his first election. The Progressive Consen•atil·e party has not hell a seat In the B.C. legislature since 1953, F.\ITH IN FUTURE

;\fr. Macleod said h~ has faith In . his party's future here and added "if a man hasn't lender· ship aspirations he ~hould · not enter politics."

He Is not seeking the party leadership, he said, but will be among the candidates If Deane Finlayson, the pro,·incial party leader since 1952, should quit. :\fr. Finlayson, who ~~s failed to ' wIn a scat in three prel'iOU! pro­vincial elections, has ~aid he will resign if he is not elected this time.

Interviewed while attcndin~ a meeting ol party candidates, Mr. !llacleod was ob1•!ously proud of his brother in I.ondon. They have periodic telephone com·ersatlons.

COWBOY CADETS-It's not official mul it never will lll', hut those Army wdcts ju't couldn't n·sist the westem )O.~allon hats 11ith ilwir own military uniforms. The cm1cts from vurious centres in the Atlnntit• Pro\"in~l's lwd nltt·ndt'd n spcl'inl thrct'·l\·cck camp at Jl;m[f. :\Ita .. and pi~kcd up a ·few souvenir.~ to show the boys hHck home. Trying on the oversize head l>icct's nrc, left to right: Cndcts Peter Clarke, St. John's. ;\fit!.: William

SECTIOtJ II

Lions Try To Revive Tuna Fishing In N .S.

By EJ) S~IJTII 1 h~· lis <1.; temporary pr011Crty o! C;matlian Press Staff '\'t'itcr :the Nova Scotia ;:o1·ernmcnt. l\IETEGHAN, N.S. (CPl -A\ Now onglers in .\Icteghan, 33

hunch of £ishing rnthu~ia~ts, 'Ji1iles northwest of Wedge port, some nf whom n1a,v never h~vc i and of nearby Cape St. ~lary honkl·rl anything bi:!grr I han a 1 arc confident thl'y can land the ttu·cr-fool eel.. ma~· spark a rc· , elusive biuc!in, Sportsmen last vii·~! n! hig g:lmc tuna fi'hin~ ~·car hauird in 80 tuna in t!ocse in !\ova S!'otian waters. 'water.<, rompal'Prl with cinht

Tlw Lions Chill in this "lll:J!l hookr1l hy tourist an;:lers of( town is holrli n;! a I una lournn· i W rd~:r.porl. nwnl Sl'pt. 4 aJ;d 4. ~lr.Jllhrrs of, There i~ rvidcn'·~ that tuna 11 Lions Clubs in Nova ~eolia "hal"r "'·arrncrl of! l'aPc St. anrl :"\cw Brunswick have brcn: ~lary as !on,:! as it:; Acadian re-invi!cd In eumpclr. :sirlcnts can rcrnrmbel'.

How the anwtrurs f;uo will , I( the ~rrvice club tourll~· I be watched closely hy pro,· in· , ment and the annual intcrr.9l· cia! fisheries otficia!s ami direr· kgiate seminar to be held a ters of the dormant International· week later at Wcd~eport arc a Tuna Cup classic. usual!)' hehl succ~ss, perhaps the big lea· at \\'cdgepore. N.S. I guer; will be back in 1961.

Trade and Industry )!inister ; Frank Jubis, president of the E. A. ~!anson .chairman of the '~lcteQhan Lions Club, says his tuna cup match board of direc· 1 district 4ocsn't wont to steal tors. calls the service club's Wed~eport's tournament glory venture •·a forward step." He· hut adds: indic~ted the directors will: ''We'd he happy to accomo· closelY follow the new competi· :date any tournament but we're lion ~:nrl will probably use it ~~:not pressir.:z. We are anxious a gua~e in deciding at a me~t-l only to prove that Nova Scotia ing in l"t'W York in .January! has tuna every year." wht;lhcr to rni:·e the intrr· '.'lF.\\'FOl'lliDLAND BID Jlalwnal t·ompclltJOn next (all. r dl d h" l h al· ~OT ,\ !\'IBBLE , i\'cw oun an , w tc 1 as_

>O made overtures as a posstble new tournament site, has re· oortcd catches of se1·en tuna sn i·ar this season. Conception Ba~· has been terming with tuna for sel"eral weeks.

Thl' last lntrrnational Cup contest at 1\'cdgrport in !n58 was a flop when anglers reprr· scnlin~ the Commonwealth. l7niterl Slate;;, ~lexico and t:uha tlidn"l get a nihble. It '"'cmed th,• luna harl desert.ccl the nor· mall~ prolific sports fishir;;.( .~rounds of Soldier's Rip and Lobster Bay. su the atlnual touruament was suspenrled. The Sharp Trophy went into mo:'l·

orr \\'edgeport. anglers boast· rd three tuna by Aug. 26. anri off )lcteghan-Capc St. :llary they chalked up 25 hy the same date.

Sons or the late Dr. Norman :~tiacleod, who lived fln a lamii~· estate in the Outer Hebrides. the Macleod brothers were always interested in politics. lain how j t\'er was rejected when he firs~ contested a British general elec­tion in the Hebrides, ir, 1945. H~ was elected in Enfield West, in the Midlands, in 1950 and has been an MP since. H<' was min­Ister of health and then minister of labor before becommg ·colonial secretary in 1959. W,,R VETERAN

Ford, Bell Isluml; Ray O'Brien, St. Jol111's, nnd Bert Spraeklin, St. John's, (:'li;ttional Dt•ff r1cc Photo) • · --~ ..... --------------

, ------ -- But this i~ >mall fry compar· 'ca1·ations and other surface' cd with the 1949 boom w!1en :cavities made riuriug the cour>e ·sportsmen landed 1.760 b\udin 1 of various projects throughout, tuna for a total weight o! 450,· 'the city, ! 000 POUl)rls. Fil"e teams com· I A preliminary map of similar peting in the 1949 tuna cup

__ 'I nature of \\'est Ottawa _was pub·, match muscled 72 fish aboard lishcd hy the Geolo~rcal Sur- their· boats, 29 in one day.

'vev in 1958 The additional in·' lr01:mation o~ drill-thickness h~s l Twenty-five boat~ were rig. I permitted the rens10n of lh1s 1 gcd for the bluefm bunt 10 Torque, a medical student be­

fore the Second World War, !e~ved in the Far East for most of the war, attaining rank of major, After the war he joined a bicycle manufacturing firm and \\'as its sales manager when in 11148 he decided to move to Can· !Ida.

For three rears he and a doc· tor friend fprmed a quarter-sec· tion near Weatlock, Alta., so miles north of Edmonton, raising pigs. Then he went into the car business, first in Victorla, then in Kamloops and finally at Salmo;1 Arm 80 miles east of Kamloops.

In 'Salmon Arm he is contesting a riding that has been held by the Social Credit party since 1952.

STEAMSHIP MOVEMENTS THE NFLD, GREAT LAKES

STEAMSHIPS LTD, S.S. Gowrie loading at Tor·

onto Sept, 12th, Hamilton Sept. 13th, and Montreal Sept, 16tb, for St. John's and Botwood.

M.V. London loading at Mon· tr•al Sept, 18th, for Botwood.

M.V. Perth loading at Tor· onto Sept. 20th, Hamilton Sept. nst, and MontreMl Sept. 23rd, for St. John's and Botwood. •M.V. Dundee loading at Tor· onto Sept, 28th, Hamilton Sept: COWBOY LADETS-lt's not offidal 11ow und it never will be, but those Army cadets just couldn't resist the western J<l-~allon hats ,., ith their 29th, and Montreal Oct, 1st, for own military uniforms, The cudcts from vurious centres i11 the Atlantic l'r01•inccs had attended a special thrcl'·Wcck camp at Bimff, Alta, nnd St. John's. picked up. a fe\\ souvenirs to show the boys buck home. Trying 011 the oversize hcadph:cs are. left to right: Cadets William Ford, Bell island,

M.V. London loading at Tor· !IJfld., and William MucDonald, GluLoe Buy. (National Defence Photo) onto Oct lst, Hamilton Oct. 3rd, -------------------------and Montreal Od. lith,. for Bot· . wood. lng Oct. 11tb. Sept, 30. Leaving for Hal~fax G I . I Ottawa. !National Research Council and

• Refrigeration •Refrigeration. and Boston Oct, 1, due Halifax I eo og ICa "The map has been published :the Geological Survey o[ Can· CLA.XE STEAMSHIP CO. Nt'LD •. CANADA STEAMSHIPS ~ct. 3 and Boston Oct. 6. Leav- · M f Ott to meet the demand for detail-' ada to file ail available soil in·

'Hlghllner due St. John's Sept. •M.V. "Woodcock" enroute mg Boston Oct, 7 a~d Halifax I ap 0 awa ed informati.on relating to con- 1 formation on Ottawa with the 5th, aalllng ·Sept. 7th. (Bay from !llontreal, due St. John's Oc~ .. 11, du~ St. Johns Oct. 13. A geological map of the city struelion, engineering and 1 :ieological Survey .for use in the Roberts), August 30th. S~rhng agam same day for' of Ottawa of much interest both ground-water problems", said~ publication of a map of the sur-'

· •Novaport leave Montreal: M. V. "Fauvette" sailing from Ltverpool. . . . I to industrial and private in· ~ines and Technical Surveys: face deposits of the city. Sept. 7th, arrive Sept. 12th, Halifax August 31st, due St. Nova Scotta leavmg, Liverpool terests has just been issued by :\linister Paul Comtois, ''On a' The map's basic !rnmework o[ leave Sept. Uth. John's Sept. 2nd, Oct. .12• due St .. Johns Oct, 18. the Geological Survey of Can· scale of one inch to 1200 feet, 'city streets is overlain with con-

•Guiport leaving Montreal M.S. "Bedford II" sailing Leavmg for Hal!!ax and Boston ada. It is :\lap 39-1959, Drift. it shows depths through the tours and depth figures that de· Sept. 14th, due St. John's Sept. from Montreal Sept. 1st., due ~c\ 19• gut ~~ah~x ?ct. 21 ami Thickness Contours. City of overburden to bedroek through· .!ineale the 'drift-thickness. A 19th., aailln1 Sept, 21st. St. John's Sept, 5th. 0 °~ ~~ ed, H i·f eavtng 2~0sJon --------- out the city-information which geologist spent many months I

Highllner leaving Montreal •M.V. "Woodcock" sailing S~ ·J h ~11 0 t ~txsO~~· ' ~e New York August Jth, leave will he of use to construction collecting the !lata from every

Sept. 21st, due St. John's ~ept. from Montreal Sept, 8th., due sa~ odn 9 f c i; ' :u ;ng agatn Saint John, N.B., September engineers, well-drillers, town nvailable federal. provincial,! 28th., aailln& Sept. 28th., (Bay St. John's Sept, 12th, N:wf~n3fan~vr!~~~g Liver· Znd.. Halifax September Gth., planners and property owners." municipal and industrial source. ! Roberts). ~.V. "Fauvette" salling from pool Oct 28 due St John's arrive st. John's September 9th The map is the first of its This included the examination

•Novaport leaving Montreal Halifax Sept. 13th, due St. i Nov. 14 ' Le~ving fo' Halifax leaving September lOth for Bay kind of a Canadian city. It of 1,000 drill holes and obser-Sept, 28th., due St, John's Oet. John's Sept, 15th. I and Basion Nov 5 du~ Halifax Roberts, leaving Bay Roberts stems from a decision by the \'a lions of rock outcrops. ex· 3rd., sailing Oct. 5th., Bay M.S. "Bedfo~d II" sailing Nov. 7 and Bo~to~ Nov. 10. September 12th for Corner :Roberts). from M~ntreai· Sept. 15th., due Leaving Boston Nov. 11 and Brook, Halifax and New York.

••Gulport leaving Montr~al St. Johns Sept. 19th, • Halifax Nov 15 due St John's S. S. Guernsey leaving New Oct. lith., due St. John's Oct. · M.V. "Fauvette" sailing from Nov. 17. Saiiing 'again' s;me day York September 23rd., Saint loth., 1aUing .Oct. 12th. H11lifax Sept. 21st., due St. for Liverpool. John, N.B., September 26th ..

"Refrl.leratioJt. ' John's Sept. 23rd, FURNESS· RED CROSS Halifax September· 28th., arrive GULlo' AND NORTHERN 'REFRIGERATION LINE St. John's October 1st., leave

SHIPPING CO. FURNESS, WITHY & CO. LTD, S. S, Guernsey, sailed from October 4th. for Corner Brook. •Fergus leave Charlottetown, Nova Scotia leaving Halifax = ; Sept. 2nd., Pictou Sept. 3rd., Aug, 20, due St. John's Aug,

~~:t.s~t~~hn'a Sept. lit~, salllng. i~ve~;~!~.ll again same day for FURNESS, WITHY & CQ., LTD. . •rer&us·leave Charlottetown, Newfoundland le~ving Liver· P.E.l., Sept. 8th, leave Pictou, pool Aug, 19, due 1 St; John's Liverpool f!&. Jobn's

. N;S •. Sept. lOth, arrive St., Aug, ~6. Leaving for Halifax te to Rr1 & John's Sept. 12th, leave Sept. and Boston Aug. 27, due Hall· St. Jobn'a BosleD 13th.. fax Aug, 29 and Doston Sept. "Nova Scotia"

•Feraua leave Charlottetown 1. Leaving Boston Sept, 2 and "Newfoundland" Aug 19 Aug 27 .. Sept. 16th, leave Pictou, N~. Halifax Sept. 6/7, due St. John's "Nova scotia" , .Sept.' 7 Sept: 14

Sept. 17th, mive St. Jobn I 3ept. 8/9. Sailinll for Liverpool "Newfoundland" ,Sept. 23 Oct. 1 Sept. 18th, leave Sept. 20th. 8/9. ''Nova Scotia" , , . Oct. 12 Oct. 19

•FeriUJ leavlna Charlottetown Nova Scotia leaving Liver· "Newfoundland" . oct. 28 Nov. 5 PEl, Sept. 23rd, Pletou Sopt, pool Sept. 7, due St. ·John's

BostOD . t~

Rallfas

BalUn S&. Jolld't to to

St. John's L'poot Aug. 20 Aug, 22

Sept. 2 Sept. 6·7 Sept, 8·9 Sept. 20 Sept. 24 Sept. 26 Oct. 7 Oct, 11 Oct. 13 Oct. 25 Oct. 29 Oct, 31 Nov. 11 Nov. 15 Nov, 17

· :Uth,· due St. John'• Sept. 26th, )ept. 13. Leaving for Halifax :aillnJ Sept. ,27th. · and Boston Sept. ·14, due Hall·

Persons contemplating passage to EuroPe abou!d make bookini!S well in advance

•FeriUJ leave Charlottetown, fax Sept, 16 and Boston Sept. PII, Sept. 30th; Pictou Oct, lit., 19. Leaving Boston Sept. 20 and due St. Jobil'a. Oct. ard., ull· Halifax Sept. 24, due St. oJhn's 1111 Oet. ·4th. 1 Sept. 28. Sallln& aeain same day

•Peraua leave Cllarloltetown, for Liverpool. i PSI Oct •. 17th,: Pictou· OCt;, loth, New(oundland lea vine Liver. t ~·It, .J~b'• .'Oct _IQtlt., .all· pool Sept. 23, due St. John's

., . ··'·,

Am PASSAGES ARRANGED BY: 'B.O.A·.C.. K.L.M .. o\MERICAN AIRWAYS, SCANDiNAVIAN. T.W.A. connecting Airllne.s. ·

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ONTARIO and QUEBEC MARK YOUR ORDERS

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All rates attractive especially where VOLUME is offered. A good service backed by experi­ence. A Commonwealth-wide organization.

ST. JOHN'S 221 New Gower St. Phone 2634 or 5199

CORNER BROOK Western Terminals Bldg.

Phone 4-4972

Route "MUIRHEAD'S'.' TORONTO-HAMILTON-MONTREAL-LEVIS

1111 ap and its <'X tension to co1·er. years ago, compared. wtlh only •the c;·stcrn part of Ottawa. The· nine that are ma1ntamed today I has c may was furnished for this purpose. Bookmgs f?r through the courtesy of the boats used to be made well tn :\ational t:apital Commission. ad1·ancc at a 55? a _day rental,

Copies of the new map may . and accommodatton m. the area hr obtained from the Director. was l1lled to O\'erfi?wmg: Many r.rolo~ical sun·ef o[ Canada. anglers round lodgmgs 111 lou­Department of :\lines and Tech· :rist camps and hotels 100 Jr.Jlcs nicnl Surve1·s. 601 Booth Street. away. then headed out at 2 a.m. 01\awa. ot · 25 cents each. for the daily fishing,

FURNESS RED CROSS LINE

~ SAILINGS TO AND FROM

NEW YORK, SAINT JOHN, HALIFAX

TO

ST. JOHN'S AND CORNER BROOK, NFLD.

S.S. GUERNSEY Lv. New York .................... Aug. 30 Lv. Saint John, N.B ......... Sept. 2 Lv. Halifax ...................... Sept. 6 Ar. St. John's, Nfld. . ....... Sept. 9

Sept. 23 Sept. 26 Sept. 28 Oct. 1

Lv. St. John's, Nfld. . ....... Sept. 10 Oct. 4 Ar. Bay Roberts, Nfld ..... Sept. 11 Lv. Bay Roberts, Nfld ..... Sept. 12

Will call at outports as inducement offers and conditions permit.

Accepting frt>ight for Corner Brook at all Ports. For roles, etc. Telephone 2073-5890.

Furness, Withy & Company. Ltd.

CLARKE FREIGHT

SERVICES froiill MONTHAL

To NEWFOUNDLAND To(l()RNER BROOK-weekly_

MfV "Irish Root" ....! M{V "lriob Willow'! . . .. / - . . --

To ST.JOHN'S-woeeklr S.S. "Nova~", S.S. "r"...lt-rt" Mid_..-.

S.S. "Hiahliner",..... . ":"~ • __ "':

• Complete 1Dnl'1111Cle ~ . • Th10111b Ratet m c.P .R.. C.N.R .. aDd C.S.I.. • Refricerated Carro Spece to St. Jolm'• • T I'MiDc and Ezi>editiJJc Semoe.

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I .'

THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., TUESDAY, SEPTEMSER 6, 1960

ST. PAT'S WIN JUNIOR •

TITLE ON 10-7 VICTORY Russ Grimes Homers For Feild

St. Pat's stopped Feildians 1 o-i in the second I scoring Conn.olly nnrl rnol'ing Cor-!

f h · · • b b 11 f · 1 c d f cornn to third where he rnced game o t etr. luntor ase a • ~Ia s ... a!ur. ay a ter- J home on a wild pitch. Bob Dow-~oan at the Ctty Ball Park,, wtnnmg the (Untor Crown den was !he third pitcher. in the 111 tw::1 games. St. Pat's behtnd Ed. Byrd won the open- frame and he retn·ed B11l Ma· · f h · 20-6 d h · • · h lone on a !ly ball to t-enter. tng. game o t ~ senes an swe~t t e senes WII Another three run rally in th~ th11r second wtn as Byrd went the dtstance. fifth Jllll the game on ice for St.

The Irish were outhit in Saturday's encounter but Pnt's. A wnlk to Ron Conwny

h II, d h , and buck to back sin.llles by Bill two t ree, run ra tes sewe up t e contest. St. Pats re- Malone and Aus Thompson scot·· gair1ed tl\eir crown which they won over St. Bon's last ect one run whilb the other twu season, also in two straight games. scampered hon;te on a long •.lou.

ble by Joe Collins down the nght Trailin& 10--1 going into the last' nuss Grimes, losing pitche1·. i field line with two out.

lnnin::. the Feildians made •1 belted a two run shot in the final Two walks and three errors desperate bid to pull the game inning for :he doubb blues. a I ~m·e Sl, Pat's a brace in th~ I o[f the lire. scoring three runs was his fourth hit of the game, i seventh and a single run in the but B~'t"d stalled them to gala i and the first circuit clout for the eighth J:al'c the Patricians the his second win in as many tries.: league's batting champ. junior crown. , .

St. Pat's hurler Ed. Byrd ga,·ll ~ St. Pat's were never in trouble Derm Connolly s three safelle.> up ten hits during lhe contest I alter a three run second lnninti. , was the top pcl'formancc for a but was at his best when the! on only one hit. The Fcildlan> ~st. Pat's player. Bill Malone ST. PAT'S won the junior basebaiJ·crown for the second year on Saturday with a I 0-7 win over Feild. Members of the winn:ng squad Feildians had runners on base.: had three pitchers doing duty in' also or St. Pat:s w~nt two for are (left to right) front row: Eric Gregory, Bill Malone, Derm Connolly, John Corcoran, batboy; Brian leonard, John Boyles, Danny Hl' was in trouble in two inni~gs.! the frame ns St. Pat's pulled: f~ur. Russ Grimes ":81'ed the Corcoran Bill Oliver· back row· John Abbott coach· Gerry Bennett Ray Evoy Ed. Byrd Ron Conway Alf Connors manager; Bob In the se1·enth he fanned the fll'st, Into a 4·1 edge. 1 btg bat for the Fclldtans. He ' • ' . · . ' ' . . ' ~ • • . ' two batters but ga1·e up two' Russ Grim~s in taKing the loss, sin~ led t~vicc and hit a ~oubie 11 Abbott, Joe Colhns, Mrke Donovan and Mrke Murphy. M15Stng from the photo IS Aus Thompson.-( Royal Photo ServiCe). walks and a single to Russ, walked the hrst batter he (accril besides h1s two-run homer m the ---· _ _ --·-·- _ __ _ _ --· __ Grimes, scoring both runner>

1 in the inning and was replaced by 1 ninth. Bob Dowden also had I

St. Ben's And St. Pat's who wrre moving on the pitch. 1 Don Yetman. Yetman was greet- two hils for the Blues. f' I ( t'

Bob Dowden kept the rail~· !lO·: ed by a single off the bat of Derm l Byrd walked four butters In I ma s on mue lnJ: hy bouncing one through the' Connolly, scoring the first run. , picking up his second straight Jell sidr of the infield but B)-rrl! Danny Corcoran walked and bot it 'I· win. He gal'c up three doubles got Gerry Lewis to jlOJl out to. runners moved up a base when and seven singles but fanned ' The Senior Baseball finals con· the ralcher Danny C"orcoran IQ: Ed. Byrd sacrificed. Ron Con- i sel'cn bailers in gelling out of tinue tonight at the City Ball •

~on~~~-rsc~r:lg_ l ~~~~la_t._e_s ___ : sw~~-th~t_ar_~l~e-b_al_la_~~-r~kg_h_L _fle_sid_t~t:_twoo _Ja_m_ps-~~-p~~-" ;_-d··· ~:.~~:g:;:; .~;,,.:~~'TIed In S ' . F. I ·en1or ··· 111a~s Thompson· Is expected to start I for the Irish while St. Bon's B will likely start Don Ryan. Irish Win 8-6; luegolds Tak.~

BUt Stl

.ll Lead Y· an ke e s i H . p . t St. Pot's and St. Bon's split the opening two game~ : ousmg rojeC I of the senior finals at the City Ball Park during the

iT E I JQO weekend. St. Pat's copped the opener of the best of

By THE CAMDIAN PRESS 1 run. a li·llil Cincinnati attack Jlon·: 0 mp oy :seven finals with a 8-6 win Saturday but St. Bon's Baltimore Orioles had thei•·: A two·run homer by Don Honk I day night 11hich o1·erpowered' :rebounded for a 10-4 decision Sunday.

seven game American Leagut!: and a three-run homer by Dick • Philadelphia Phillies !1·2 and Gordon Glynn's four-innings of shutout relief winning streak halted b~· Wash·' Stuart s p a r k e d the Pirates' . gave Bob Purkey his 16\h l'ic On site at the Roslyn De· lngton senators Labor Day as~ seven-run rally in the first gnme tory or the year. velopment: a new suhdivi>ion pitching was the big factor in the Irish win Saturday th~ :\ats stopped the Birds 4·0 · of their twin·bill with the Braves. Purkey gm"t• up 13 hit, but he for one hundred homrs Mf tht• b'-!t John Power evened the series by stopping St. Pat's ln the first game of a double·! At Washington. it was a com· : wns nhle to coast in a, the ned.; Torbay Road; is a mil~ of pipe 1 "-4 i '·u day afte 00 • e header. Skinny Brown threw d blnation or Chuck Slol>bs and Hal 1 jumped off to a 2·0 lead in the and fittings for water and , ~t. P~t'su nt t d Sa~~rcht~ s gam · . thrte-hitter at the s_enators ~n the Woodeshick for a t'ive-hil pile~· I second on Robinson's 27~h homer,· sewer mains. Back hoes are mght's gnme l~i~~ ~ hang. Th~i· , St. ~on's made 11 6·5 in their ~cond game to gn·e Baltimore lng effort that stopped the 01'1· :a double by Ed Batley and now at work excavating in the d f in the rpenin,~ : :al'?r m tl;e last of the sa~e 1

·3·1 victory. oles in the first game of the 1 Gordy Coleman's single. ' roads· in preparation for the '~core 1 our 11 behind 6•4 be 1 mmng. \\ alks to Ted Gllhes The Orioles clung to first place doubleheader. The Sen a I ors' I K,\~SAS CITY tAP 1-Kansas' laying of these services. I rnmng 1111 fe . .1 , and Bill Gillies had the door

In the league by a one game llnl·mon Killebrew and Reno City Athletics scored seven runs· Engineers are now finalizing fore _they scored _the:r 1' th wide open for B'ob Redmontl

margin over :-lew York Yank~s Bertoia, the Windsor,. Ont., pro- in the lirst . inning and then del nils for the erection of the ' run, 111 _tl~e ftflh ummg. St. , who scored Ted Gillies with a who won both ends of a twill· duct each homered w1th one on. stal'ed off Clucago ~omeback at· i sewerage treatment plant which • Bon 5 failc 11 to , score off Sl. 1 sin "lc Bill, Gillies scored th" bill !rom Boston Red Sox b~· the R~n Hansen's 2~th hom~r s~nt, tempts .lor an 8·7 v;ctm:y Ol'ell is capable of servicing upwards I Pat's rellef,rr (,ordo~ ~lynn: i lea~ti~g run' for the Bluegold· aamA 3.~ score Baltimore ahead m the fifth tn· the \VIttle Sox Mondav mght f h d 1 d f'ft I but St. Pats >cored t11o m the h K :. d d • • · . . .

1 ' ·. o one un ret an 1 y : . h h 1 1 1 d th 8 6 ,· w en arn .,rns groun e out

At Detroit, the . Ttg~rs ~Jlhl mng of the second game. Petro The loss dropped the lh1~·d homes, and installation will 'cig t a~c gr~ 1 1e e · 11111

to the shortsto . ..,ith Cleveland. w I'll n 1 n g the Ramos took the loss for wash· phtce Sox four fUll games behn11l commence within the next few 'w1th a stngle m the nrnth. P. op~ner 4·3 and rtropplng the ington, his 14th against 10 wins. the lea~ue • leading Bullimm·~ I d· . All . . 1 Charlie Walsh's do11hle st~rt· But that was 1t for the Blue-nightcap 4·2 as Woodie Held 1 Bobby Shnnlz, who pitched in Orioles and they trail New York . ~~s. t ~~ces~~IY eqmpmcn ed the ball rolling for St. golds. G?r~lon GI!·nn to~k : slapped a two-run homer in the, reliel of starter Ralph Terry wa:. Yani;ees by three games. 18 ~o.w a ed 51 ~- 1 .11 Pat's in the first inning 3nd ?ver fo: m!ur~d ~hke ~!artml first inning I the winner of the second of th' us new eve opmen ' WI :was followed by a walk hy '" the fifth mmng and gave up · PIRATES SPI.IT two Yankee wins. Joe Demaestrll American U!agut supply, ~ much. !leeded want Jackie Withers. Johnny Ail· only two safeties in keeping St.

Ol'er in the :-<ational League. singled home Johnny Blanchard I w L Pct,GBL for set Vlced bt~lldmg lots, and bolt drew a frl'e pass to load Bon's off the scoresheet. the l~ading Pittsburgh Pirates\ with two out in the last of the B•tllimm·e RO 54 .~97 _ c~nsequently_t1l~ he~ t_he ~~- the ba>es and .Mike Marlin Glynn gave up a single in · took the first game tlf a double· . ninth to give him the win.

1

: N~w York· 77 j:l .~U2 1 faft~~~u~t~t~: 1:ennso~~mg tc I doubled to score three runs. the first two innings he pitch· header 9-7 on a seven-run out· 1 ANOTHER RALLY Chicago 75 j 7 .5GB 4 . . . · h . l\lartin came home on 1 passed ed and fanned six batters. The . burst in the fourth inning, but 1 The Yanks had to come from Washin"ton 67 66 .504 12'i . Il 15 antic.'pated that t e 'ball. quick pitchin& righthander Milwaukee Bra,·es. won the sec·. behind in the fi;st game as 11'~11. Cle~·ela~d 65 66 .496 13~, flrs11t excavations h fotrly h~~~:~ I St. Bon's scored a single In walked Comerford in the eighth ond game i·l behmd the sel'en· Mtekey :Mantles run .' scormg Detroit fi1 71 .462 18 WI com!"ence 5 or · . the second and tied the score but continued to retire St. hit pitchin~ of Bob Buhl.

1 , double,. th~ Yank~s: fn•st. ex~ra~ Boston 57 7~ .432 22 tdhct. pourmdg of C1?ncrelfe foUl~· 1

1· 4·4 in the third. Bob Redmond Bon's to take the decision for

At Chicago. the Cubs and t 1e, base hit m 43 mmngs, tgmteu Kansas City 46 86 .348 33 3 tons an ~rec 10~ 0 supc. · walked and after he stole sec· the Irish. St. Louis Cardinals played a ~ the rally that won the first game. · structures w1!1 begm. It ts I ond was singled home by Karl i pair of 10-inning battles. The I Woodie Held's homer at De·! · apparent fro~ p~ogress mad~ i Arns for the first St. Bon's ! Bob Redmond was the on.ly cards won the first game 2·1, troit helped Borl'y Lotman get 1 Lad' ' s £ ball to date. that 11 w1l1 not be too: , I St. Bon's batter with two htts but the ni~ht battle was. called o!f to a fast st~rt and the y~ung: IeS Q t long_ before homes will be . a : sc~~~cc walk., had St. Bon's , while four of the St. Pat's · because of darknes~ wtth the nght handel' pttched the lndm~s . l'f ~hty on the new roads m f th . in the third. Don I players banged out a brace of

11core tied 4·.4. . . ; to their .4·2 second game Will __ this are~. . : ~~·an, e ~~~t Sparrow and Ted ' hits. Mike ~!art in, Charlie San Franc1sco had a twt-mghlj over the rtgers. The only dam· The fifth and deciding game Tht> site 1tsell, commands a, G: 11. 1 ded the bases and Walsh and Jack Harvey stroked

JOII:-; l':lWt:R

10 .. 4 Game

mKr '1.\t:Tl:-.

twin-bill ~ched~le~ at. Los An·' aging_ .b!ow off him ~as Rocky of the Ladies' Softball finals is 1 v.iew overloo~ing the· cit)', ! B~b~~ed~~nd sin~led home two doubles while the other two hit !

geles, whtle Cmcmnall was to·. Colat11o s 28th home 1un. :set for Churchill Park tonight 1

1 smce construction work start·' 'th G'll' mol"ing to third man was Bill Abbott. I WALSH :\OEL SPARROW play a single night game at' Clel'cland'~. Jim Grant, who , at 6.30. The Jetettes and the ed on the site the main road ~\r t •e~d when Tony Man: i Twenty-six batters had the . CHARLIE of the St. Bon's hits while Ah· Ph~ladeiphi~. I starle~ the hi'S~ ~fn,:;· ~~rr:d b1° Freshettes will face·off. . 1 has been put through, ~s. we!l n:n~c~r~~~rled out. 1 third strike fired past him in the series at a game each Sun· bolt gal'e up only three safe·

1 he res u It or that game,! men 111 selen 10 11" i· 1

h d 11 ~! The Jetettes won the ftnals' 1 as the upper crescent, tt lb St Pat's moved out front in the openmg contest of the day afternoon as John Power tie St Bon's hurler John Pow·

coupled with the Milwaukee· 1

. Don kNewc1ombe

11who hm s e I ~opener 11·4 and third game by , possible to drive over this sec· the ·fifth when 1\like J!artin finals. Fifteen of the St. Bon's stopped st Pat's squad with a· er .wa~ touched for five doubles

Pittsburgh split lifted the Car· struc out wo was ome run •. I 1 d h · t' n of the development It is • b 1 t dow via the · ' . . · • nd 1

tie , ~ two-run eff~rt by Charlie Max· I 9·0. 'fhey defnu le t e sec· I 10 • and Bill Abbott singled to open a tet·s wen n . neat nine hitter. He was touch· : hut walked only one batter dl~als l.nt? a seco p a~: be·' well his 22nd and a solo drive ond outing and were dropped i ~o be noted also, th_at a re· the frame. ~!arlin was tossed third strike route while eleven ed for all four St. Pat's runs' while striking out nine. '\~h ~!ll'~:~~~:un~~g g~~ates. I fro~ Norm Cash, his 16th, whica 15·3 ln the fourth ~ontest. I mforced concrete bridge h~s 'out at the plate by Ted Gillies' . Irtsh batsmen had the same in the fourth inning but was ' Aflcr the four runs St. Pat's h 1 e ORCES IN RUN defeated Grant AI Kaline drove I I ~een , constructed_. Great cat e throw but Abbott scored on an 'fate. . . ' masterful the rest of the way. fourth, the only other rally 'M¥~1A~ ~ snapped a 1·1 tie in i in Detroit's oiher ru~ in that Topiary is an ancient gard~n Its bemg taken m the prop~r error by Karl Arns. ' Twelve Blucgolds htls !ted ~. St. Bon's opened the scoring I which. they hatl going wa_s in

e 8! sin of the first ame :·game. I craft; the work or art of tram· ~rrangement of h_ome~, and II · ·-- in the top of the fourth inning. ! the ei!:hlh frame when • smgle the lOth mn M~sial bouneel into' PHILADELPHIA rAP: -Hom· ing and trimming trees or IS hoped that this will prov_e ' k F b I i Tonv ~Ianning started the. inn· ' by Aus Thompson and a double =~rc~tan I~ with. the bases I ers by Frank Robinson, Billy I shrubs into odd or ornamental to be a model development: II c I La e a u ous 1. ing 'with a walk and scored on' ?Y Bill ;\bbott ~~d two runners o·aded ch~si~g home the winninG Martin and Vada Pinson sparked shapes. . has been In the ~lanmng stages a ro . , scored on a throwing error by . m scormg postlton. However

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Nearly _all ho~es to _be creel· , h St. Pat's · got back to back nt'Xt two b_att~rs and fini~~ed ed at th1s location will b~. of ~ p • s K doubles by Johnny Abbott and the mnt~ mnmg by retmng the bungalow type. Fnmt~ICS I' ro)eCt ays . eoug Bill Rahal. Billv Abbott'.;.· the side tn one. two, three or· today seem to . p~efer havmg I ground ball forc~d Rahal at ' der. . . sleepmg and h~mg quarters I . third but Jack Harvey doubled I • Whtle_ St. ~at's_fal_led to tally on one floor, w1th complete 1 T . th C tu 'Is ,!inistrr said "to provtde for a t 1 ft f' lrl 'th Abb 11 1 I m the !mal f11·e mnmgs the St.

f t d I "The wentte en ry

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. · • · h o e te WI o s op· B , dd' t th · base~ent or s orage ~n re- . with the Labrador huge crushing plant, a crus · ping at third. Joe Kenny lined on s crew were a m_g o e1r creation purposes. An 1m port· ; catchmg up 1. t , . . the ed ore storage building, a bene· . . "I t 1 It d . d t 1 total of Glynn, the ftrst game

f I 11 , bush hand-over- ts , 1s . a stn, e o e an 1ace o 1 T · th th ant eature necessary o a . . h !-1 W J ficiation plant and ratlway d h W'lf C , f 'led . menace. wo m e &even families seems to be direct optnton °~ .' e r onj· · d marshalling yards. And miles ~econ w en -~h 1~se)b at. o i and three in the eighth sent the access to the basement area Keough, Munster 0 ~ mes an of roads have been built all bo 11comc . up :~b tt e d ~~c~nf 1 Patricians back to defeat 1nd f tl gr und Resources. " a • sconng 0 an a a · c\'ened the series. rom le 0 s. . The Minister has just return· over the plac~. . St. Bon's took over the The total. val~c of tlus stag: ed from a tht'ee·day visit to Fore~t. Ftre Preventton lead in the fifth as they pushed Karl Arns and Noel Sparrow

of the proJeCt IS .b:tween on Carol Lake, Schaeferville and I ~he ~ltmster was particular· across four runs which was all I spearheaded the Blue Golds and a half two mllhon dollars,

1 1 1 A · 1 trip to llv tmpressed w1th the precau· ·. Power needed The Blue Golds attack in Sunday's tilt Arns a d the employment potential Seven s ant 5· SH e ' · h b t k t 1

• • • . n . Twin Falls had to be abandon· I lions that ave . een a en. 0 1 sent nine batters up in_ the 1 banged o~t three singles in six

IS rated at approxtmately thre~ ed due to had flying weather. I prevent forest ftres. A ftre· ; frame and collected four smgles tries while Sparrow collected hundred wo~_kmen. The archl· "Carol Lake." said the :'rlini· break has been :ut comple~ely · to go along with a walk. Two · the only St. Bon's extra base teet ~espons1ble for the work

1 ... £ hulous develop· I around the townstlr and_ a P•pe· ! St. Pat's errors helped the Blue , blow. a double to go along with

ls Wilham J. Ryan of St. s er,t ~rs a a ao 1 flew· I line encircles the townstte w1th i Golds cause as Johnny Abbott 1 his single John Power also had John's Immerl'ate plans call men wo years .,o h d d d o · · · . ' · ·

1 tl d all that was valves every un rc yar s r was !mocked from the box. : two hits for the Blue Golds,

for the ere~hon of some 30 to '" 0 le area 1an I' ·t . I' so to which hoses can be con· Gordon Glvnn seeing relief ' and helped his own cause

40 homes on the site. there was a lln< 1bng sf np, a nee ted action for th~ second day in a The nine St Pat's hits ~vere quonset hul a uum er o gang' · · h ~r · · · · r d. d' drillers_ and the "The set up," satd t e • ml· row was greeted rather harshly .. <hared by nme players. St. ? lamo.n L brador hush stcr, "is the most satisfactory by the St. Bon's batters as he Pat's made six miscues in the

I n C 0 rt ~~~~e~orlal s ~endid new I;IOd· arrangement for the prevent· was tagged with the loss. contest while St. Bon's pulled U : ern too~~ ~ :Cing lll'l together lion of forest fires that I have Glynn was tagged for nine ' the collar on two plays.

I · · d' t · t seen

- is being shaped up for produc· The epost s 0 e and a vast new mmmg Is nc , · d 't r th carol I

In Magistrate's Court Friday I tion The Carol properties ar~ and Wabush arus lumpe~. t.o· 111orning there were several tho~&ht to contain two billion gether make a new !\Ir~~ I ~~ cases of drunkenness. Among 1 tons of ore and the first deposit th~ Labrador heartland, I • these was an elderly St. John's being mnde ready for product· 1\!~?l~ter ~omm~nted I man who was arrested Thurs· . · , 1 '~hat IJl gomg on at Caro • d t rt h . f d 1on has. been named the Sma,l· Wahush. Twin Falls, Ruth La lie

ay pas a er e was oun wood ~!me . · · lying ln 1 vacant lot with an "Tl • h. 1 and W1sbart IS developmMI 1e w o e topography of t 1 r n " he empty wine bottle by hi.s side. acres has been altered," the of mlondumden a propor to s,

The defendant stated that · cone u e . the bottle wns not his but he lies because they were had at was proven drunk and fined different times of the day. $10.00 or 30 days. Th~re was no plaintiff in court

A St. John's motorist was so the case was remanded until charged with being in collision later this week. with another car on l11e Bay A case of larceny brought Bulls Road on Tuesday, August against a St. John's youth was 13th. It was said that he had dismissed. The same youth was three beers but the defendant charged however with stealing

I claimed that it made no differ· $30.00 worth of goods from a ence to his drhdnK. According different premises. This case to the lawyer, the man could was remanded until later on not be drunk on the tbree bot· this week.

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lHE DA~LY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1960

Royals Finals

And With

GeeBees ·. Open 1-1 Deadlock

WHITE AND. BURr ARE GAME'S MARKSMEN GRAND BANK (Staff)-The Grand Bank Gee Bees a·nd the Corner Brook Royals battled to a 1-1 tie in

the opening game of the All-Newfoundland Senior Soccer finals here last night in an exciting game that

drew close to 2000 football fans. The game opened the best of three finals for the John V. Rabbitts Trophy and the Howie Meeker

medals. Guards had won the Provincial title for St. John's in the past three years wt City champs, St.

Pa:'s, were eliminated by the GeeBees in St. John's last Friday. Both goals in the encounter came in the first half with Alf White hitting pay dirt for Grand Bank and

Ches Burt scoring for the ,Royals. The second go me of I he finals ·is set for tonight.

Mayor Fred Tessier, GBAA go three games but there will President and Vlce·President of be no overtime. To win one of the NAFA, welcomed the visit· the teams must come up with lng team and the fans in the four points in the three games. opening ceremonies and kicked A tie in the three encounters the ball to NAFA President will see joint champions de· Bren Curtis, who also spoke, to clared. officially open the finals. Last night the two teams saw

Although rain fell yesterday a movie of the last world cup morning beautiful sunshine pre· soccer finals and were guests vailed for the game which drew at a dance. Un WednP.sday night a record attendance for an the Grand Bank AA will tender All·Newfoundland contest. a banquet and dance for the

far low corner to complete the ·1

CORNER BROOK: Goal. Bill scoring. , Wells; fulls, Gordon Wells,

Grand Bank did get another Tony Edwards; halves, Ktaus goal near the end of the game Jerico, Ed Roche, Steve Nose· but had it ruled out for off. worthy; forwards, Ches Nose· sides. . ,. • worthy, Bob Colbourne, .roc

LINEUPS Gulliver, Charlie King, Ches Bul't.

GRAND BANK: Goal. Gordon ST. PAT'S: Goal. John Browne; Grandy; fulls, Ray Stoodley, I fulls, Doug Phelan, Hubert Eng. Clarence Brooks; halves, George I !ish; halves, Walt Dalton, Joe Hickman, AI Buffett, Malcolm Browne, Pat .1\larshnll; for· Osmond; forwards, Eli Lee,

1

wards, Steve Angel, Dick :lin· Harold Hollett, Tom Rose, Alf Ioney, Joe Kenny, Angus Bar· White, Druce Buffett. relt, Bern lllarshall.

With both teams playing cau· visiting team and officials. tious soccer in the first halC

1

1\!eanwhile it was the second action mo\·ed quickly from one · 3·2 win by Grand Bank over ----------------------end to the other. St. Pat's is as many nights that

AI£ White put Grand Bank gave the Gee Bees their berth I L• c t ane goal up at 15.40 of the in the finals at St. John's last I 0 n s a p u re stanza. Bruce Buffett took a Friday ni~:ht. The win left '· corner kick for the hometown Grand Bank with six goals and I

·,··

squad placing the ball in the i St. Pal's with four in the two L • tt Corner Brook goalmoulh. White: game-total goal semi-finals. I I le League mo,·ed around a defender to I As in the first game of the blast the rollin~ leather into i semi-finals Grand Bank buill h h the low cGrner on a bang-bang • up a 3-0 advantage with St. RED CLIFF copped the top spot after the senior softball regular schedule and won the VOCM Trap Y over t ~ play. Pat's getting close with a first weekend. Members of the USAF squad are: (left to right): Front row: Terry Thomas, Harold Sprinkle, Vi(

Corner Brook got l'I'Cn at' and a ~crone! stanza goal. It Defeat Dodgers 8 2 h h d G B d w· f d B b s ~ I G I d Bo lw . ht Paul-:' 21.50. Gee Bee goalie, Gordon: was 3-1 ror the Gee Bees at ha!C -1

Smith, Jo n Kue n; secon row: erry en er, 1n re or er, em vamp e, or on a ng , ;~ Grandy made a top sto

11 on j time. Winterson; third row: Roy Minyard, Reg Miner and Bill Dill.--( Morris Photo). • · .

• Joe Gullil'er's close in dri\·e . Eli Lee starred again for · Llons, champs of Churchill( players to thr plate in the third 1 ·-

but Ches Burt was left un· Grand Bank. The flashy nut· , Park, took the City Little Lea· inning to ~core four more lime.; 1

checked and laced it home. Burt . side ri:::ht . hanged !lome the . gue Championship Saturday I for a commanding fil"e run lead ; R d ci· ff c v 0 c M T l is a natil'e of Grand Bank but first two tallies to run his lo· evening by !akin~: an n-2 1·ictory. They added three more tallies in i e 1 op r•op 1 'T e

1GUARDS :: Is now residing at Corner Brook. tal to four for the two games ove: Daily :"<cws ·Dodgers. . 'the fourth and fifth bclorc allow-1 · .J .,

The Grand Bank squad, who and set tiP the third. L10ns had defeated Sporters m ing Dodgers on the srore sheet. j WIN·LO.SE~:

1\·ere greeted by a 150 car mo· Lee drove a bard shot at St. the fil'sl game of the second· In the sixth and final frame Brad. torcade when the~ retur~erl Pat's goalie .John Browne 0~ round ro~in series and_ Sporters: hury lost his shutout on a pair' s • F • I A D l-1 l d home on Saturday nu:ht. camerl the opening play. The ball hit I kept _their chances ahl'~ by a! of walks, an error and twn pas·' eilll ~ Ina s . .I .. D eac O·C ~e the play In the serond half. Browne's feel and took a crazy 9·4 wm over Dodger~. L10ns had, sed balls, when Dod~ers tallied • ll...t -~ They ran lniG a stone wall Cor· hop to bounce over the net· dropped a close 3·2 contest to 1twice. ·

The Guards senior football 1 ~am split their two exhibition ~ames at St. Pierre o\·er the weekend. Alter winning the first meetin~ with the ASSP squad 3·1

: thr'" lost the second 5·3.

ner Brook defensive setup how· minder's head at 1.50 of the Dodgers in the first round robin I Red Cliff captured the first place in the regular I · ~·-··-·~ -~~- · ~~~--· ~---t\'er and were unable to break game. but. with the excellent pit chin~: UA l the tie. At 5.15 Lee was back again. display of Wayne Bradbury, were; c· .I s . sch~dule of Senior Softball over th~ weekend end • ~u.o~vao '

Bill Wells between the posts Taking A corner kick the star unbeatable in their !ina! attempt. lVI erVI(e claimed the VOCM Trophy. Red Cliff held ·a fo~r I .It i ~ fllr Comer Brook saw more ac· of the semi-finals belted a eurv· Bradboury, backbone of Lions point spread over second spot Rams. !

tion than Cee Bee netmlnder ing shot that was carried into squad, scattered three hils to B ~· L SOFTBALL Gordon Grandy but both play- the far tGp left corner for a record his win. He sent the third ow mg eague The league semi-finals ope~ed yesterday OS ' ' '

1 The City team left the Frt;nch islands 1·ester(!ay and arr11·ed

: back in· St. John's early this

ers cave a fine soccer display. 2.0 came. The speed of the strike past six DGdgers and the four teams entered have a wm end o loss 1n two Wells was at his best In the ball and the dropping eurve handed out four free passes. He I H d d f d R 5 2 'th R

1

final frame but also had several gave Browne no chance of a was also head batter or the ball The annual meeting outings. ygra es e eate ams - WI oms i W'NNER·s ! morning.

I

~Race Entries nice aaves In the first hal!. atop. game, banging out a double and 'fen's c· .1 s . Bof !the evening up their set with a 12-8 win, Aces took ten ' I " li'I ernce Oil' mJ: Grandy had mGst of his action The tllird Grand Bank mark· a single in his two official ap· League Is scheduled for tonight innings to edge Red Cliff 4-3 while the USAF squad . in the first frame. er came at 13.10 with Lee start· pearanees. He was intentionally at St. Pat's alleys. The meet· i got even on 0 14-5 decision

1

Grand Bank scoring star Ell lng it off. A low drive from walked twice. · ·n g t d 1 8 • Lee Who got fo

ur markers In d Bert Winsor started on the mg WI e u~ er way a p.m. Joe Quinlan '.vas th_e big Entries close today for the

Cross & Company fl\'e mile: well out by Lee ha Browne The presentatiOn of reports and ston· f \ m thc 1r close the semi·finals was well bottled beaten all the way but the ball hill, for Dodgers a~d w~nt five the election of ollicers will take · .· or "' res up by Comer Brook and held hit the left post.. at ground lnmngs before seekmg aid from place at the meeting . \\lfl. o\'er Red Cliff. Qtunlan

I d d t H ld Ed Taylor · ' homered for Aces Ill the first

score ess. level and reboun e o aro · . · All teams interested In taking' Comer Brook got the b~st Hollett who drove it over the .wmsor gave lip seven. runs ?n part in the league this season i inning and sent the game into

games from three defensive line for a 3·0 Grand Bank lead eight. hits. He walked five while must have a delegate present to-' extra innings with another shot players. Fullb~ck Tony Ed· in the game and a 6·~ Gee Bee strlkmg out four. night or they will be dropped., in the fifth after Gerry Bender wards along with halves Ktaus ad\•antage in the serieS. An error and thrc.e free pa~scs I ~cw entries must be in to Sec-, had homered lor two Red Cliff Jerico and Ed Roche stood out ' Pat l\larshall got his second I ?pened up the scormg .lor Lions; retary Bob Chafe at the Welfare' runs in the third. with Bob Colbourne dangerous goal o( the semi-finals for the 1 m the second frame f01 an early' 1 Red Cliff went out front 3-2 up front. I season for St. Pat's at 29.05.11·0 lead, They sent nine more I Dept. 1 in the top of the tenth on an

For Grand Bank Ray Stooley Clarance Brooks was nabbed -----·---------··

was tops at his fullback slot I for a hands Gn Grand Bank p c Tl e ·d at centerhalf. Tom Rose was: ty shot. Marshall drove the free' arson · · while AI Buffett worked well and the Irish awarded a penal· I · s op s tlr the top Gee Bee forward as kiclt just under the bar at mid·l Alf White also turned In a goal to beat Gordon Grandy for I

go~~ufsa~:~gentil of St. ~ierre a ~·:r~ir:lta:s~:{~ g~~o~~e lrlsh 1.1 A d Sets N'ew Record . is the referee for the fmals. within tWG goals of Grand I n

The secGnd game of the finals Bank in the semi-finals at 6.30 ' will be played at 11.30 p.m. to· of the second half as he made day with business here closing it a 3·2 game. Dick Maloney fed down at 5 p.m. for the en· a forward outside pass to :Mar­

taunter. The series must now shall and he belted it into the

\

Save with • • •

THE EA&TERN CANADA

SAVINGS AND LOAN

COMPANY

--

Paid an Debentures for S years, 5%% for 3 and 4 years.

A safe and profitable Trustee Investment

R~te of interest guaranteed throughout term selected.

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

ANY AMOUNT OF $100.00 AND UPWARDS ACCEPTED.

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CHEQUEING PRIVILEGES IF DESIRED. For full details and supply of -deposit-by mall

forms, write, telephone or call at · . '

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(Established 1887) 170 WATER STREET P.O; BOX 543

ClB LEAD ST. PAT'S Arter losing twice to Gordon

Follett in the one mile walk this summer, George Parsons beat his teammate by just over two minutes on Saturday as

, Parsons won the Annual Royal 1 Stores Ten Mile Walk for the ' third year and broke his own record in dGing so.

Last summer Parsons shat· tered the 1951 record G( Ferd Hayward and on Saturday he cut seven seconds off his re· cord time in 1959. On Saturday morning the CLB walking star covered the ten miles in one llour, 16 minutes and 34 sec· onds.,

In 1958 he was first In one hour, 21 minutes and 41 sec· onds and last year set the new record with one hour, 16 min· utes and 41 seconds.

Gordon Follett was two min· utes and 11 seconds behind Parsons with third slot Art

' WinsGr trailing Parsons by t~ minutes and 27 seconds. All three walked for CLB and claimed ni.ne points . with the top three spots.

The nine points moved CLB out front or St. Pat's in the senior race for the Brookfield Ice Cream Trophy. Going in· to the event the Irish held a three point spread over CLB but with the 20 Mile Walk and the Marathon remaining CLB have 41 points and St. Pat's own 35.

Six walkers toed the start· lng line on Saturday with Herb Hallahan forced out after two miles because fo cramps.

Parsons took the lead from the start with Follett close be· hlnd. The winner was out front all the way covering the first two miles In 13 minutes and five secGnds. .\l five miles his time was 311 minutes and 49 seconds with seven milea being covered In Ill minutes. GEOR'GE PARSON crosses the finish line in the Royal

Stores Ten Mile Walk on Saturday for his third straight win and a new record.-(Morris Photo).

Ju1·enile Walk on Wednesday. To date 11 entries ha\'e been

· recei\"Cd by AAU Secretary John V. Rabbitts.

JOE Qt:INLAN

G.un: ItiCti.\I;US, Ha•.'' third baseman. was the top balt~r in Se11ior Softball with a .H-1 awra~e ami also had the most homers \lith 11. Gus ~lrJ>onahl of the Comets was next to Rirahrds in tbc a1·cr~gcs with .465 with Tom Conway of Jays and Gcrray \' ctman of the Comets had

error by Aces but Ray With~rs I doubled and George Crewe

singled for two Aces runs in the bottom of the tenth for the win. nh1e hom•'~"> rach.

In their ~ccond meelin;: for the day Red Cliff saw Aces' score four first inning runs hut came back with two in the first. : and two in the second, to even the count at 4-4. After Aces scored in the third Red Cliff got three in the third. four in the fourth and three in the sixth for a 14·5 victory.

Hed Cliff got homers from . Terry Thomas, Gt•ITY Bendel' ' and Harold Sprinkle. llendt•r lost the first game and won 1 ht· second with :llel\"in llui1g the winner in the first mHt the , loser in the second. ,

1\leanwhile Ham~ and lfy.l grades were also spliting their two games as they opened the other best of five games semi·j finals. I

Hygrades tallied once after Rams had ~rorecl lll'icc in the : second inning. !n the fourth ' Hy~radcs J:(ol two runs and I added another pair on Ed De· Bourke's shot in the sixth for a : 5-2 win in their opener. I

The second ~:arne went to Rams as they ;;ot homers from .Jack A1•ery, :Tom Barron, Ron Oulelte and Ralph West with two ·circuit shots. .Jim Keats hanged out a grand slam for I!ygrades in the third to give the 6·4 edge but Rams scored two in the third and fourth and four in the fifth for the vic· tory.

Ed DcBourkc and Crash Krauser each hurled a victory and a loss for their teams. ·

GEOR{;E AL:\IARODE of RedCliff won nine of the ten games he pitched in Senior Softball to he the top per· t·enla~c hurler. Crash Krau· srr of Rams woh !G of 22 games.

In finishing up the regular .schedule Jays walloped Hawks 16·3, Rams defeated Hygrades '17·3, Comets took Falcons 18-4, Red Cliff edged Aces 8·7, Rams blanked Hawks 18-0, Jays took TOM CONWAY, first base· Red Cliff 7-4, Hygrades dropped man for the Jays, was the

Entered for the race are Stan Cook. Denis Furlong. Pal Furlong and Allister )lurra:• of St. Bon's: Art Winsor. Lc: Ryan. Geoff Follett and Aiel Yrtman of CLB with Carl ~!c :\I1·en. Bill Squires and Ar: Dawe as the other entries.

\\"ith entries closing toda! they ~ust be phoned in to 271: durin~ meal hours.

'!canwhile, the 20 ~!ile Wall will be held on next Saturda! with entries closing Friday Entered to date for this rae• arc George Parsons, Gordo! Follett, George Crane. Alef Yetman, Frank l\lartin ant Dick McNiven.

The 26 ~lile )!arathGn ~;r be held on September 24th With five entries necesary tc hold the el'ent only two, Fran! ~!arlin and George Crane, have entered tG date.

: NA.FA Meeting The annual meeting of the

: :'<rid. Amateur Football :As· · sodation is set to be held at . Grand Bank today, The Jlres· , entation of reports and; the ell•dion of officers will be ~eld

'at Grand Bank. · ·----·.

PRACTICE / . I The Aces Senior Softball 1 squad will practice tonight; All , members of the team are to be ' at the Bannerman Park:dia· I • 1 mond at 6.30. ·

-~ ~·

THE 80WATER PAPER

CORPORATION LIMITED

Notice of Interim Dividend

The Board of Dire<ton at • 11eetlng hold Sept0111ber ht, 1960 declared am Interim dividend In raped of tile year ending Docombec 31st, 1960 at lhe rate of one !hilling per £t stodt 1011t equl'l" olen! to U cenll per £1 otock unlL The dividend w~l be pold,lm tlritbh "-"• to•, on October 31st, 1960 to atock­holdoll of re<ord at tho close af b"""eu .., September 15th, 1960.

London, England.

W. E. J. MIES Stcro..., Comets 21·13, Aces slopped 1 lop RBI player In Senior Rams 16·11 and Red Cliff com· Softball. Conway batted In T h B · t pletcd the third round by stop· ·, 37 runs to edge Gerry Yet· e 0 W a . . e r ping Falcons 7-2. ' man of Comets who had 36 0 fg a n i z a t i.~, R

. . , RBis. ~ The scmi·fmals contmue at . ------ coood• • C.•"' lrt,;, • ·G •

PHONE 3335 - 7241 CLAUDE E. DAWE, Manager.

The race was under the supervision of the local branch of the AAU,.of C with the RCMP and the )ocal Pollee controlling traffic alon& the route.

Finishers With Times \ 3.-A. Winsor: CLB 1.-G. Parsons, CLB 1.16.34 4.-F. 1\fartin, · SP 2.-G. Follett, CLB . 1.18.45 5.-D. .lllcNiven, C.L.

1.32.01 1.34.19 1.39.59

the Victoria Park Diamond to· 1 p.m. All players are to be on 1 •' AMor~• • A""'all• • w- zoo~~ ·so.., · Aftlca • lepublc of lr•IOI'I4 • Norway H11 night as Rams meet Hygradcs time as the contest will start · • "'•"'• •loi9...,. N'!IY in their third outing at 6.30 sharp at 6.30.

1HI DAllY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1960 .. '

.BIG SALE USED

AND

DAMAGED ~PPLIANCES

AT OUR

GILBERT STREET WAREHOUSE

...... t···============ •,.

~··. '~:~ · .. 2 Only 3% ·cu. ft. ELECTRIC

REFRIGERATORS S5 4.50 EA.

1 USED MAID OF AVALON COAL RANGE S54.50

1 USED ACME STOVE s15.00 1 SINGLE COMPARTMENT

I·C·E CREAM CABINET S7 4.50

: 3 USED ELECTRIC RANGES, 220 v. s25.oo to s49.so

3 COAL and ELECTRIC ·coMBINATION

RANGES 2 at s49.50 '1 at s99.so

6 USED OI,L HEATERS S25.00 to 49.50 2 USED FLOOR FURNACES s59.50 EA.

· 3 Slightly

2 Slightly

2 Slightly

8 Slightly

Damaged Small

Damaged Medium

Dam.aged Large

Damaged

s89.so

O·IL HEATERS s39.so EA.

O·IL HEATERS s54.so EA.

OIL HEATERS s59.so EA.

WASHERS to s119.so

DROP IN AND PICK OUT A BARGAIN WHILE VARIETY IS AVAILABLE •.

For prompt and ,fflctent furnace and 1tove oil delivery

_DIAL 7469 - 3007·- 3001.

TH£ GREAT EASTERN OIL .C.OMPANY, LIMIT~D

COitNI!R IROOIC .WINDSOR

• Jacoby On Bridge

ONB CLUB II SET IIX TIUCJ[S

BY OSWALD JACOBY When you open one of a suit

and the next player makes a takeout double which hla part­ner leave• In you can expect to be In trouble. If you aren't proud of your own auit and have 1 balanced hand It will usually pay you to try to get to a better apot. The way to do thla le with 1 redouble.

Your partner ahould not mis· conatrue this bid. If you liked the idea of playinl your own suit you would almply have passed and taken a small pro· fit.

South had the right hand for

I his redouble, but for •ome rea· son or other he decided to pass

,and aamble It out at one club 1 doubled. It was a mistake. i The Brandon brothers of Hoi· llywood, Fla., who held the East· I West cards proceeded to make ·a defensive little slam.

I It wasn't too difficult, but in . case )'OU can't see how It was

I ! - .. MOk~-(D) -~. I 1 •xeuz , I:. ¥783

•totn I •• I WEST

' .Q875 'I ¥AQ11! ·' .AKQI

.. A 10

IA8T .JI ¥11HZ .2 .K96432

S0 11TH .AIO ¥KJ8 +JH3 .QJI7

, ~o on• vulnerau: ~ I : Nonll lut S.atla Weot

· ' PaJJ Pau 1 • Dollblr I i I :Pas• Pan 1'a11 i I Optlllnr lead-• Jt . I

1·--- ----· l done, A. V. Brandon started by I playing four rounds of dia­monds. Brother Joe followed to ;the first; discarded his spades i on the next two and ruffed :the fourth, Back came a heart. :A. V. won the triek with the i appropriate honor and led a 1 apade for Joe to rufl. Joe Jed another heart and A. V. cashed his other two heart hon· ors before giving Joe another spade ruff and Joe Jed his last burt.

At thL~ point South was down to his four trumps, but

: there was no way that he could j make more than ene trick with them and he waa down aix.

I Fine defense bf the Brandon brothers, but it certainly was nice &f South to liVe them the chance.

CARD Sense Q-The biddinll baa been:

Seutk Weat Nerth East 1"' Pm 1 + Pau 1 • Pass ll spade Pass

1 You, South, hold:

.AK178 ¥31 .0 ... IQ10 165 What do you do! A-This Is one of the many

situations when there b no good bid, If JOUr partner lias jut& the right tards th11re may bea (l'and alam. If ke 1\11 the wrong cards even five tpades may be a hopeless c:ontrad. lily own preference Is for the under·

of four spades, but I won't criticize a five spade bid.

TOQAY'S QUESTION You hold the aame hand.

Your partner reaponda with onf heart to your en• club bid and jump• your an• apad• bid to thrse, What do you de In !hit case1

Anawer Tomorrow

It Ia Important that )lllrk should lie eoo)fed very tllor­oullhly. There ahould be n41 pinklah underdone mut. A dise .. e called trlchlnoala , Is tranamitted to humans throuah underdont lnfeet•d pork, 111d anyone whose work entalla handlinl or cookinl pork, aucb as 11\lllle maklra, ahould never eat aamples of the raw product to teat for 1auonlnc. Through cookinl rendera any Infected pork uft. -----------------

A WILCOMI WAGON

HOSTISS Will Knock at YGUr Door with Glfta ·and Grtetlnga

from Friendly lluslness N11ighbours and Your

Civic and Soei1l Group• On the tccaalon of1

The Birth of C1 Boby, New Comer t1 the City, PHONE 9_.165 ~ 909.43

and 3512.

CAPTAIN EASY

THE STORY OF MARTHA WAYNE

ALLEY COP

FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS

BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES r .

PRISCILLA'S POP

BUGS BUNNY

MORTY MEEKLE

fJO':!,\ CO\I;lE IS T•E A'.OST ~UBBOOJ 0'.0 COOT I K/~11--I WOU~Dil'T PUT lollY·

T'HIIlG PAST HIM/

-··YOU PAY Me A DIM~ Wf-lcN YOUR_ FINANOcR.

C01N!SJ

By LESLIE TURNER

By W. SHRUGGS

By V. T. HAMLIN

By MERRELL BLOSSER --·-"" .. -- -·-· ·-.-·---. L~ltD, S~:~JG Mr! l'o DIMl': AND Tl-l"-T o-N FUlL 01" GAS F~O.V. MY GARJ.6e/

By EDGAR MARTIN

~\'..',\\ 'O'U\ 't\Qll.) C.\1..~ 't C:.\0~ '1\'i:.'il...~

By AL VERMEER

By LEON SCHLESINGEI

By DICK CAVEll

THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1960

Obituary JOHN O'TOOLE

Death came with tragic sud· I denness on Saturday, July 30th, to a well known and highly re· ' spectcd. citi2en in the person : of John O'Toole. •

GREAT EASTERN

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CO., LTD. Radio, Television, Waahen, Refrigeratora, Deep Freezer&

Electric Rangea, Floor Pollabers,

Gramophone• Public Address Systems,

Tape ftecorders IEl'AlRS AND SERVICE

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WATER STREET •an26.l:'t.

John (more familiarly known as Jack) O'Toole, was born in St. John's thirty-nine years ago the son of John and the late Julia. O'Toole. He was educated · at Holy Cross School~. and on · graduation joined the New­foundland Militia. On the out· ' break of hostilities he enlisted , in the 59th ileavy Artillery and saw action in the various the- ----------- ~::::=::::=::::=::::==~=~==· atres of war. On his return to ch·i!ian life he became associ-~ ated with the grocery business owned and operated by his For Fast sister on Duckworth Street. I

Jack O'Toole was a great I Taxi Se"ice outdoor man. He sought out

1 our lakes and streams with joy · and enthusiasm. In fishing and HOTEL TAXI hunting he found pleasure and happiness. •

He was a faithful mcmher of Holy :\!other Church e\'Cr living up to its duties and al· wa~·s taking an actil'e interest in the actil'itics of the parish \\here he will be missed but the memor)' of his great contri-bution will Ji,·e in the hearts

Dial 2424-2410 QUEEN'S ROAD .

Open from 6.30 lo 2 a.m.

AUTO PARTS (Whole}

Nfld. Armature Workt

38 Bambrick Street.

:llal 7191·2

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SHAW ST. 111d TOPSAlL RD For all your Building

Requirements call . 80181-91171

of those for whom he worked. I Velvet Horn Judged by worldly standards, · DRUG STORES

Jatk O'Toole did not achieve HOLYROOD !---------greatness but as a kind hus- ' TUNA BOA-TS 1M CONNORS band, loving father. dutiful son, ; I • • _LTD., a sincere friend and good cili- i I Prescnptlons Pickup and zen he is regarded as heine , FOR CHARTER . delivery 1crvice. Phone 2206 truly great in all those things Exper! Wedgeport I God expects a man to he. Guides. ELECTRICAL

The funeral took place on · APPLIANCES Wednesday, August 3rd, fol· Phone 29F2 ! lowing Solemn High l\lass af I Requiem !ung by his parish HOLYROOD liAINE JOHNSTON priest, Very Re\'. Father J. J. jl)·14,2mts COMPANY, LTD. ::llurray with Very Re\', Father '------------• R T. 1\lcGrath, P.P. as deacon Agency Department and Father J. J. Murray as sub 243 Water Sl. Dial 210Z deacon. ver)' Rei' Father w. v. Statutory Notice YOUR FRIGIDAIRE Snlli\·an, P.P., was present In DEALER. the sanctuary. A large congre· gallon, a well attended funeral. Many floral tributes, and num­erous spirituals bouquets bore testjmony to the esteem in which he was held by all who knew him and appreciated his qualities of heart and mind. His remains were interred in the family plot in Belvedere where the final prayers were recited by Very Rev. Father Sulllvan.

In the matter of the Will and 1 HEAP & PARTNERS Estate of James Walsh late or St. John's In the Pro\'lnce (NFLD.) LTD. of Newfoundland, Watchman, Wiring Materla!J, Wire and deceased. Cable•, Motors Startera,

Our deceased friend ls sur· ''il'ed by his widow and seven little children, his aged father, three brothers and three sisters to all o£ whom the writer ex· tends deepest sympathy.

1\lay his gentle soul rest in peace.

A FRIEND.!

All persons claiming to be creditors or or who have any claims or demands upon or effecting the Estate of James Walsh late o£ St. John's afore· said, Watchman. deceased, are hereby requested to forward particulars thereof In writing, dul)' attested, to the undersign­ed Solicitors for the Executor of the said Estate on or before the 21st day of September A.D. 1960, after which date the Ex­ecutor will proceed to distribute the said Estate having regard on !y to the claims of which he shall have notice.

Accidents 1 Dated at St. John's this 19th I day of August A.D. 1900.

BROWNE, RENOUF and GRAND BANK-A 1958 Che\'· · MERCER,

role! sedan, owned and driven i Solicitors for Executor, by George Snook of this town I ADDRESS: was badly damaged when it 24 Queen's Road. overturned In loose gra\'el ncar I aul:24.30sep6,13 Thornlea on Friday night. 1 •

::llrs. Snook received a broken ~---------­leg in the accident and her daughter Betty also received I lnJuriel. The driver received bodl\y inJuries and all three

1 victims were taken to the Coll\e By Chance hospital where the two women were detained. Mr. Snook was released after re· ceiving treatment.

A 1957 Chevolct sedan own-ed and driven by Fisheries . Of· ficer Ralph Taylor was con· I . siderably damaged when it atruck a concrete bridge near Grand Bank on Friday night. Mrs. Ta~·lor who was In the vehicle at the time received some minor bodily inJuries and ls et present a patient at the cottage hospital here.

ENJOY LIVING

+ SWIM

y

SLIVERS ~nd KHOT HOLES

Lamps, Switches, Llgbtinl Fixtures, etc.

W AREBOUSE: PRINCE'S ST. DIAL5085

FIRE INSURANCE

C:ROSBIE & CO., LTD. Agents for

UNDERWRITERS AT LLOYDS.

LOW RATES DIAL 5081

HARDWARE STORES

HARRIS & HISCOCK, LTD. General Hardware

Dlstrlbuton for Sunbum Electrical App!ianeea,

Sporta goods and Spurta wear for all occaaion1.

DIAl 5018

ERNEST CLOUSTON, LTD, MeCLAR~ AUTOMATIC

WARM AIR CONDITIONING ZlO WATER ST.

DIAL '188

RADIO·TV REPAIRS

GREAT EASTERN OIL COMPANY, LTD.

REP AIRS TO RADIOS, TV Am> ALL ELECTRICAL

APPLIANCES DIAL 3001 to3006

GROCERS (Retail)

L. HEALEY Cr011 Roads and Water Street

Dial 3028

INSURANCE AGENTS

AND BROKERS

JOB BROTHERS & CO. LTD. Water Street

Dial 2&58-UU

FOR SALE VICTOR ADDIN~

MACHINE 1

with Pricing attach-1

ment. I In perfect condition.

BEST OFFER.

Phone 94640

llEDDY KILOWAn •·

ELECTRICITY the

ONE BRIGHT SPOT

Serve in The ROYAL CANADIAN

NAVAL RESERVE

HMCS CABOT Bldg. -4, Buckmaster's

Field, Monday and

Thursday Nights or

Phone 7021 For .information.

~---1

Piano Lessons

FOR SALE 42 ft. Twin-Screw Owens Cabin Cruiser; mahogany hull, copper sheathed; match· ed pair counter-rotating Kermath 275 h.p. "Sea-Raid· er" gas engines. giving speed of 20 knots; sleeps four with foam rubber cushion~.

Less thim ten years old, in excellent condition; bargain for quick sale.

16 FT. SAILBOAT (SNIPE TYPE) good condilion. sails good-mainsail almost new.

SPECIAL JUST ARRIVED

A' new shipment of

Potatoes at .......... S2.25: Defivered. l

Turnips ................. $1.60 : Delivered. i

1less tires. Would accept I 107 Gower St. Phone 4947 • any reasonable offer,

1

Commencing FOR SALE I finaPh~~~ b94o7rd. j

September 1Oth. A two-storey dwelling ~~Lt~----- _ _ _ _______ 1

MIS.S KAY JOY, . House (furnished or un- . LADY OF THE ASSU~IPTION: in will be accepting furnished), situate Parade J PARISH, A\'01\'DALE ·

Family Budget pupils. :Street. First floor, kitchen,, Ticket Drawing i 'dining room and living , Winners of eash prizrs were: - Phone 92781A ·room. Second floor, three, !st. prize SoO-Pat canning.

LIGH So ..... : ~~~~~~~~~: bedrooms and bathroom. , Tickrt .:\o. nl4 . Li "' • " I! " ' ' ., " 1 I ; :::___ -- i Oil radiation. Front ond .2nd. ~rizc S25--Ann Flynn. '

I · d Ticket .:\o. 2843.

I Cheap Reliable Electricity I; rear gar en. Driveway, 3rd. prize S!O-.James Fox. In and Around St. John's , Colony Cabs :Garage. For further par- Ticket ~~- 2293 ~~~~~~~~~~ t ticulars Phone 6654F after Ti~~~-t \~~c 27~13°--loan Doyle.

Tenders \ KING'S BRIDGE 5 p.m. · 5th. prize 55-John Keough. · 1 DIAL 6300 , Ticket ~o. 3401. :

ME~IORIAL UNIVERSITY OF I NEWf'OUNDLAND '

Sealed Stipulated sum Tend- I ers will be received until I

3:00 p.m. Monday, 3 October, I 1960, for the Construction of:-,

(a) l\lcn's Residence (b) Dining Hall

at the lllcmorial Unil·ersity of '

5759 1 Tickets drawn by )!iss J. : , Cantwell. Witnessed by :>!iss ·

7300 Fly to St. Pierre _A._H_un_t. ______ )

"All cars fully passeng- For information call' Tenders 1----,------er in~ured. Specializ- MRS. O'BRIEN at 1

ing in out of town I 4461A or 90797L . SEALED TE!\'DERS. address· i calls". ed to the undersigned and I (Open from 7 a.m. ta For taxi-boat service call 1 marked "Tender for Clearing,

3 FRANK DUNNE ot : stumping, etl'., at st. John's

Newfoundland Campus on Eliz- ' au~30,1mth a.m. ' <Red Hendl Newfoundland". I

237 6. , will be recei\·ed in Room 404. abeth Avenue, St. John's, New. ~~~~~~~~~~ foundland. .:: -- ·

Tenders shall be accompani­ed by a Bid Bond in the amount of $50,000.00 made payable to the Universit~·.

The lowest or any tender will not necessarily be accepted.

Plans and specifications may be obtained from the Associate Architects upon a deposit of $50.00 per set, which will be returned only if drawings and specifications are passed back in good condition. These wlll be issued only to General Con­tractors bidding on the job.

· Plans and specifications are on display at the Builders Ex­changes in Montreal, Halifax and St. John's.

HORWOOD and GUIHAN, Associated Architects,

389 E!i2abeth Avenue, St. John's, Newfoundland. sep2,6

TO-DAY'S SPECIAL

1956 Plymouth 4 Door

REDUCED

$675·00

McKINLAY MOTORS LTD. leMARCHANT ROAD

PHONE 4193 ~ 4 ~ 5

Public Notice

lt. MANNING, Dopu11 Mlnltter.

Crystal Palace GOULDS ROAD

' 232 St. George Street, Moncton. aug23.lmth X.B .. up to 3:30p.m. (Atlantic ~o..---------•· Daylight sa\·ing Timcl. Thurs. Pubii•C .._10tl'ce

1 day. September 29. !960. for I 1"111 ---------- I Clearing. Stumping. Grubbing. I

LABOUR DAY Where To Stay ' Trenchin,g and !.lackfilling for I Separate tenders are invited ) Power Cables, Control Cables ! and will be receh·ed up te i and Ant~nnae _Ground Radials . 5 p.m. on Wednesday, Septtl'A· I at AeradiO/~Iari~e StatiOn (Red! her 14th, for the ~onstructi&R CLUB OPEN s P.M. Balsam Hotel

DANCE AT NIGHT BARNES ROAD Hcadl, St. J~h_n 5 •. N~ld. of Sub-Depots for the Depart,;

Cover SOc. Situated In +.he Heart of . Plans, spec1hca1Ion, and oth-) ment of Highwaya at ( 1 ) salt ! er tender document~ may be

1 Pond (Burin) and (b) Bait

1 obtamed on applicatiOn to the V t Prizes and Novelties. the Ci1!.

I' undersigned. at 232 St. George ' e;l:~s and specifications TAI:V Dress anyway you like. Quiet, Comfortable A!;nos-

Dial 90024 phere. S!rcct or P.O. Bo,:c 42, Moncton, , he inspected in the Draughlin&

1 N .B., upon receipt 0~ an ac- 1 Room of this Department and l cepted cheque for_ $2a.OO pay- I copies obtained ll&inst a 4e· ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ For heservation) and In· = _ , formation. able to the ReceiVer General posit of $:lS.OO made with the

FOR HOME DELIVERY DIAL 2141

I of Canada. i c 1 1 c h · · th D " rt Dl·a I 6336 J. A. I~El'\ADAS. en ra ~s ler In ~ era .' · . . . mcnt of F mance. ThiS depo11t

RegiOnal Ducctor, Air Services. will he returned when tkt ~:~de!?R~~n~i~~~~ Department of Tranport. ; plans and specifications are r.:.

m31.tf I s~_6_:__7__ . · turned. ·----------·1 ------------- I Tenders !separate for nch : building) are to be submitted , on the forms provided and iri the envelopes provided with all

1 9 55

. D 0.0 G E

· spores filled in. Tenders arc to be accom·

, panicd by an approved. accept· ; ed cheque in the amount of i 10% of the amount of the ! tender. This sum will be '" 1 turned to unsuccessful tend·

l ~:~:de~~enTh:~eof ~~:t~~~~e4~ ! ful tenderer will be retained ' until 90 days after the com· $800·00 I pletion and acceptance of the

I contract.

The Department does 11ot 1 8 • d M l Ltd , bind itself to accept the lowest air 0 ors . or any tender.

R. MANNING, MERRYMEETING ROAD, Deputy Itlinister of Public

1 Works. 01.4l 8-0378 • 8-0379 sep2,8

CAN·ADA WIRE INITIATES MANUFACTURE OF TELEPHONE CABLE IN ATLANTIC

PROVINC'ES The initiation of the Manufacture of Plastic Insulated Telephone

Cables in tha Atlantic Provinces is announced by Mr.' C), W. Titus,

President, Canada Wire and Cable Company Limited.

This will be the result of an immediate substantial en·

largement of the present Western Wire and Cable Company

Plant at Lancaster, N.B., which will now become known as

Canada Wire and Cable Company Limited, Atlantic Division.

Mr. M. C. Schofield, P. Eng., a native 9f New Brunswick

formerly the Superintendent of the Western Wire and Cable ..

Company Plant, is appointed Plant Manager. ·

In concluding his announcemem, Mr. Titus stated: ''We

are most appreciative of the co·operation and encouragement

received from the Honourable Michel Fournier, Minister of

New Brunswick, and from the Atlantic Provinces Economic

Department of PubUc Worka, ~ aept•mber II, ltiiO.

Beverage Sales Ltd.

<Not h11erted by Ieard or Liquor Contrllll

Council".

aepU

;: •' ~; COAL ~w discharging b S.S. HUDSON SOUND .' FRESH CARGO NORTH SYDNEY 'coAL.

.• Screened and washed-$26.65 Ton

FOR SALE A 1960

Morris Oxford Car

_. ..... 10 ....

ST. JOHN'S MUNICIPAL COUNCIL

delivered. Also in stock-Fill your\ bin now.

e American House and Steam Coals. ·:. • Famous Reading "nthraci1e. 1

~DIAL ................ 80151 - 80152 - 801S3

sep2.6.B

HARVEY & COMPANY LTD.

"HEAT HEADQUARTERS"

WANTED A CLERK-TYPIST

for

CURTIS ACADEMY Apply in writing to:

W. E. BISHOP, Principal.

C/o The Academy.

Dial 5839H ALTERATIONS and REPAIRS

to Men's and Ladies' and Children's clothing. Prices reasonable.

Call at MRS. FLEET, 40 LIVINGSTONE STREEl

For further particulars:

'Phone 6612L

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

HEATING EQUIP~IENT.

WANTED TO BUY 4,000 CORDS LOCAL AREA WOOD

QUALITY MEDIUM PULPWOOD

NEWFOUNDLAND FIBRPLY LIMITED TOPSAIL ROAD ST. JOHN'S

ASK FOR , MR. JAN&S.

1960 FALL FESTIVAL SUPER SPECIAL

~~· Pri~e: ................................ $100.00 monthly for 3 years or $3,000.00 d. Pnze: .............................. $100.00 monthly far 2 years or $2,000.00

3rd. Prize: ................................ $1 00.00 monthly for 1 year or $1,000.00 MONTHLY DRAWINGS

luna 30 .................................................................................... $500.00 Prize July 30 ............................................................................. , ...... $500.00 Prize August 30 ....................................................................... : ...... $500.00 Prize Septe~ber 30 ......................................................................... $500.00 Prize Opemng Night at Fall· Festival ............................................ $500.00 Prize

. TICKETS ........................................................................ 25c. each Drawing for September 1st. World $500.00. Drawn by Mrs. M. Pearce.

Witnessed by Mr. J. Davis. · .

TENDERS Tenders are requested for the construction of

a concrete retaining wall at the Battery. . The work must be done in accordan~e wilh

specifications which are available at the office of the City Engineer.

Bids in sealed envelopes ma1ked 11Tender for Retaining Wall-Battery"· must be delivered at the office of the City Clerk not later than 9.00 a.m. WEDNESDAY, September 14, 1960. .

The lowest or any tender will not necessarily be accepted.

scp6.7

E. SAVIDGE, Acting City Clerk.

----·~---·----·--

MEMORIAL UNIVERSITY OF NEWFOUNDLAND

The University is interested in compil~ ing and maintaining a list of University Graduates competent to give instruction in First Year courses, especially in English Composition, French and Mathe.matics. Interested qualified persons, who may be available on a part-time basis, are asked to apply in writing to the

DEAN OF ARTS AND SCIENCE. sep2.6.10

St. Jahn's Transportation Commission

"Change of Route" Freshwater Route-Commencing Sunday, September 4th. Buses will discontinue operation on Wishing Well Road, Stamps Lane and Gambier Streets, but will con-1inue wes1 on . Freshwater Road to Oxen Pond Road, then north on Oxen Pond Road, east on University Avenue to Paton Street, Elizabeth Avenue and regular route.

TO RENT furnished and heat· ed five-room Apartment with separate entrance, 51 Rennies Mill Road. Ring 2505.

HOUSEKEEPER WANTED­One who is interested in a good home. Must be a good cook. To live in-Between ages of 25 and 45. Reply to Box No. 109 c/o Daily News.

THE CENTRAL BARBER SHOP-We are now opera!· ing 10 chairs, you can be assured of prompt, efiici· ent, sanitary service. No waiting problem. 24 New Gower Street opposite Ade· laide Motors, Ltd.

NEW METHOD RUG CLEAN· ERS--Rugs and Carpet made to look like new. Von Schrader process adds years to life of rug". Clean· ed in home or at our plant. 'Phone 91033, New Meth9rl Rug 'Cleaners, Freshwater

THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1960

SNACK BAR EQUIPMENT

FOR SALE Including Deep Fryer's, Potato Peeler, Stools, etc.

Phone 6013-L

SPECIAL ONE 1960 BEL AIR CHEV

SEDAN Mileage 8,464, Automatic Transmission and Radio.

PRICE .................. $2400.00 ONE 1956 PLYMOUTH

SEDAN New point job, good tires

motor. PRICE .................... $550.00 ONE 19.5'6 VANGUARD

SEDAN In good condition.

PRICE .................... $650.00 TERMS ARRANGED

DOWNEY IS USED CARS 12 CASHIN AVENUE

PHONE 96000 srp6.7.R I ----.

N EWFO UNO LAND., SERVICES!

PASSENGER NOTICES CONNECTION GREEN U.\ Y

SERVICE I Train ''The Caribou'' leavi ll' 1St. John's 1.30 p.m. Tuesda)' ·.September 6th., will make con I nection with 11.V. Nania on tht Green Bay Service.

CONNECTION SOUTH COAST SERVICE

Train "The Caribou" leaving : St. John's 1.30 p.m. Thursday, September 8th, will make con· nection at Port aux Basques with S.S. Bar Haven on the South Coast Service.

CONNECTION WEST RUN PLACENTIA BAY

Regular 8.31 a.m. train from, St. John's Friday, September I 9th., will make connection at I Argentia with ~rotor Vessel for West Run Placentia Bay,

CONNECTION SOUTH COAST SERVICE

Regular 8,31 a.m. train from St: John's Friday, September 9th., will make connection at Argentia with S.S. Baccalieu on the South Coast Service.

ST. JOHN'S·LEWISPORTE ERVICE

The ~LV. Codroy on the St. John's·Lewisporte Service will sail from the Dock Coastal Wharf NOON Friday, September 9th,

CONNECTION CORNER BROOK-ST. JOHN'S SERVICE

Train "The Caribou" leaving St. John's 1.30 p.m. Friday, September 9th., will make eon· neclion at Corner Brook with S.S. Northern Ranger on the Corner Brook-St. John's Ser·

PUBLIC NOTIC_E BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS OF PUBLIC

UTILITIES

In the matter of the Motor Carrier Act, 1951 AND

in the matter of the Petiiion of William ~~uires for a Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity. William Squires hereby gives notice that he has presented to the Boord of· Commissioners of Public Utilities a Pelition praying for the issue of a Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity to enable him to operate public service vehicles for the transportation of passengers over the following route, to· wit:

FROM AND INCLUDING SIBLEY'S COVE TO ST. JOHN'S VIA HEART'S CONTENT AND CARBON EAR. •

Such Petition will be heard by the said Board at a sitting to be held on Monday the 19th day of ~eptember, 1960 at 2:30 o'clock in the afte.rnoon in the S.U.F. Hall, Heart's Content.

All persons interested in this proceeding and de­siring to be heard at ~uch hearing must file notics of such desire in writing with the undersigned, Confederation Building, St. John's, on or before 5.00 p.m., Thursday, Sep;ember 15th, 1960. Dated at St. John's, Newfoundland th;s 2nd day of September, 1960.

BOARD OF COMMISSIONeRS OF PUBLIC UTILITIES

.<rpr..n

C. W. POWELL, ChrJirmon.

Canadian h~~ ~i'~ss SocJety NEWFOUNDLAND DlV!SION

HOME NURS~NG CLASSES

The course consists of Weekly Lectures and Demonstrations

given by Registered Nurses, fallowlng the Standard

Text of Re.d Cross

sep2,6

Classes starting week of SEPTEMBER 12

Enroll now by telephoning CANADIAN RED CROSS

DIAL 7031

WINNING NUMBE.R ........................................................................ 510568

WANTED FOR RENT-Two Girls, office worker and student, require 2 or 3 unfurnished heated rooms in the vicinity of Rawlin's Cross. Dialll3136-A. Phone after 6 p.m.

Road. ---------=-- vice. Tickets for the Super Special may be obtained from the following:

FEEHAN'S DRUG STORE, WATER STREET. THOMPSON'S DRUG STORE, QUIDI VIOl ROAD. CIGAR DEPOT, WATER STREET WEST. THOMAS RICKETTS, WATER STREET WEST. O'MARA and MARTIN, RAWLIN'S CROSS. MURPHY'S DRUG STORE, MILITARY ROAD. BAILEY'S BOOK STORE, DUCKWORTH STREET EAST. CORNWALL DRUGS, HAMILTON AVENUE. PARSONS DRUG STORE, LeMARCHANT ROAD.· THEATRE PHARMACY, LONG'S HILL. THEATRE PHARMACY,.DUCKWORTH STREET THEATRE PHARMACY, ST. CLARE AVENUE. DUNN'S·PHARMACY, MERRYMEETING ROAD. COLONIAL STATIONERY, WATER STREET. H. POWER, MILITARY ROAD. POWER'S STORE, HAYWARD AVENUE. BENNETT'S STORE, WATER STREET WEST. M. ALLAN'S STORE, WATER STREET WEST. PETER O'MARA DRUG STORE, WATER STREE1 WEST. ~EDDY'$ STORE, WATER STREET WEST. .. DON HOGAN'S DRUG STORE, NEW GOWER STREET. J. JONES STORE, WATER STREET. M. P. O'KEEFE, McFARLANE STREET. REID'S CONFECTIONERY, ROWAN STREET. H. ASH, LONG'S HILL. MISS J. HAYES, WATER STREET WEST. CLARK'S GROCERY, TOPSAIL ROAD. MAC'S SNACK BAR, TOPSAIL ROAD. . . BRADBURY1S GROCERY, TOPSAIL ROAD. PICCADILLY CLUB, TQPSAIL ROAD. HARRY SOPER'S, TOPSAIL ROAD. JAMES SOPER'S, TOPSAIL ROAD. ASHFORD PHARMACY, GLENDALE. .CARIBOU;CONFECTIONERY, DUCKWORTH STREET.

sep2,6

FOR SALE-One and a half storey furnished dwelling, containing 6 bedrooms, liv­ing room, dining room, kit· chen, bathroom, pantry and I

Porch. Connected to town water and electric current. Septic tank. Contains oil range with 200 tank, two oil heaters, bedding, dishes and kitchen utensels, washing machine. Price $6000.00. Apply Clyde Wheaton, Mil· lertown. sep2,6,7

FOR RENT - One Office, situate ncar Court House, Duckworth Street. Reason­able rent. For information Dial 2020 or 5674. sepl.(ii

FOR ALL your Interior and exterior painting and sparkling. Contact Frank

! Melendy. Phone 4767F. Free estimates. jne29,tf

1 jly2t, ( 2wks)

··uRNITURD REPAIRS- Re· pall& to sprlng.filled mat· tresses. Ch1 terfleld suites also rebuilt. . Fifty yearr' experle11ce. , Ke•ts Mattres: Factory, 16 Mount Royal Ave Dial 92753 or 2658. .etB,( tf)

Wall Washing WALL W ASBHolG .,. Wall:

cleaned by new machine Results perfect: saves paint

i -New /lethod Rug and w~ .. 1 Cleaners, Freshwater Road,

'Phone 91033,

FOR ALL YOUR Eiterlor and Interior Painting, Paper Hanging, Cleaning, Roofing, etc. 'Phone L. Howell, 739'/H or 3752A.

NOI IN$UT!O 1Y IHl I.LL

FREIGHT ACCEPTANCES FREIGHT LEWISPORTE·

CORNER BROOK SERVICE Freight for the Lewisporte

Corner Brook Service via Lewi9-porte and S.S. Springdale ac·

1 cepted Railway Freight Shed : to,day, September 6th., 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.

FREIGHT ST. JOliN'S. LEWISPORTE SERVICE

. Freight for tne St:. John's· Lewis porte Service per M. V. Codroy will be accepted at the Dock Coastal Shed today and Wednesday, September 6th. and 7th. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

fo'REIGHT SOUTH COAST SERVICE

Freight is accepted daily at the Railway Freight Shed for ports on the South Coast Ser­vice but in order to guarantee movement by this trip of S.S. Baccalieu, freight must be at tne Railway Freight Shed not later than 1 p.m; today, Septem· ber 6th.

FREIGHT LEWISPORTE· ST. JOHN'S SERVICE

1 Freight for the Lewisporle· St. John's Service via Lewis· porte and M.V. Codroy accept-

! ed at Railway Freight Shed I Thursday, Friday, and Monday, September 8th., 9th. and 12th., 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

ID£!' ~ANA DIAN N~ TIONAL

Abbott's Commercial School Re-opening September 6th.

Private lessons in Shorthand (Gregg, Pitman & Sloan) Typewriting, Filing, Bookkeeping and Ac­countancy (Advanced Course), Business Moths, and Business English. Day or Night Lessons, Pupils prepared for examinations. For appointment and further particulars apply to:

141 LeMarchant Road or Phone 3401

aug30scp1.6.7,9

IN ·sTOCK

Chloride Of Lime

112 lbs. DRUMS

DIAL 92128

1~ TH~E:!DA~I~LY~N~E~W~S~, _!ST~.~J~OH~N~'s:,~N~f~LD~.,~T~U~ES~D~A~Y,~S~E~PT~EM~BE~R~6:_, ~19~60~--_:.--------------------:---------------===.,._'":":·.~

KINSMEN Boys Club

Newspaper BINGO SERIES W

Consolation winners for Series W:

Mrs. N. Rockwell, Sycamore Place. Mrs. Mary Smyth, Belvedere Street. Mr. Jame• Bishop, Central Street. A. G. Mcfarlane, Temperance Street. Mrs. A. Felix, Rowan Street. Job Rideout, Upper Gullies. Mrs. Elizabeth Stamp, New Gower Street. Mrs. B. E. Bishop, Gambier Street, Mrs. Ray Coultas, Whiteway Place. Mrs. Gertrude Fry, New Gower Street. Mrs. John Hogan, Gower Sireet. Mrs. Ann Coady, Long's Hill. Mr. Daniel Stamp, Pennywell Road. Mrs. C. Antle, Eric Street. Hubert Hudson, Prescott Street. leo Moore, Brazil Square. Pat Sullivan, Middle Battery. Frank Warren c/o Harris & Hiscock. Mn. Dorothy Adams, Long's Hill.

MAIN PRIZE WINNER

CYRIL POWER, MAJOR'S PATH.

Help Kin - Help Kiddies

Han It Expert11

Repaired Here

CDONOMETERS

AuTOMATICS

CALENDAR

AU Gh·ea

lamediate Attention C.O.D. ORDERS WELCOMED

•·• ... ~~~.~VITI & SONS L~: ,....,, ' '

WANTED A competent TYPIST or STENOGRAPHER

Please apply in person to

MR. B. R. GILLETT,

The Bank Of Nova Scotia MAIN BRANCH.

REGISTERED NURSES are required for the following posts:­

OPERATING ROOM, . PEDIATRICS, MALE SURGERY, FEMALE SURGERY, OBSTiTRICS.

Modern well equipped . hospital. Excellent . c~n­dltions of service with good personnel pohC1es.

Apply to~-MISS G. B. FITZ-GERALD, R.N., Superintendent of Nurses, WESTERN MEMORIAL HOS~IT AL,

CORI>!ER BROOK, NEWFOUNDLAND aepll, 61

FOR HIRE A MAN WITH A VAN

$1.80 an .hour. Special Rate for the Day or Week.

DIAL 7126

lUll II ·- . -.,., •••••• IIIII

\

· Nftd. '

Armature W~rks . Ltd. ' '

IAMIRICK Sl. DIAL 7191 • 7192 I

I •

JUST ARRIVED! SIMPSONS-SEARS

FAMOUS KENMORE SPACE . HEATERS

MODELS FOR EVERY HOME HEATING NEED AND COMFORT

.... 14".,. $7 4.95

... . ... . ... $139.95 "". "". ... $94.95

10'' POT TYPE BURNER-HEAT-MISER FLUE BAFFLE FOR GREATER ECONOMY, FRONT DOOR LIGHTING, AUTOMATIC DRAFT CONTROL. All STEEL CONSTRUC­TION.

SIMPSONS·SEARS PHONE 501l-12-13

Required ImmediatelY 6 TEACHERS

FOR HIGH SCHOOL WORK Mainly Grade IX

Wire application paid to: THE SECRETARY OF THE BOARD OF

AUGMENTATION, AMA'l.GAMA TED REGIONAL HIGH SCHOOL,

CORNER BROOK NEWFOUNDLAND sepl,2,6,7,8,9,1D

Importer and Distributor has opening for

YOUNG MAN Interested in selling. With or without experience.

Car essential.

Apply by letter to: P.O. BOX 1452, ST. JOHN'S.

Removal Notice The legal Offices of the undersigned have now been moved to 170 Water Street, on the second floor of the premises now occupied by The Eastern Canada Savings and loan Company.

Browne, Renouf & Mercer Barrish~rs and Solicitors.

170 WATER STREET PHONE 7115 sep6,7,8

A T T E N T I 0. N I MOTORISTS

REBUILT ENGINES CHEV. · 6 cyl. 46-57 ·

With Trade-in •

. FORD 41-54 with cylinder leads,

With Trade-in

DODGE·PL YMOUTH '41·58. 6 cyJ.

With Trade-in

s169.oo s21·s.oo s203.oo

Above low prices inelude delivery of ·new block and pick up of trade-ln.

SIMPSONS·SEARS PHONE 5011·12-13

The Vera Perlin School

will re-open for former pupils on WEDNESDAY, September 7th at 9 a.m.

and for new pupils

on THURSDAY, September 8th at 9 a.m. Parents of prospective pupils· may be interviewed at the School on Tuesday and

Wednesday afternoon.

Warehouse Space WANTED IMMEDIATELY

WAREHOUSING SPACE

Heated or unheated. Preferrably centrally located.

Apply

1.30 to 2 p.m. and 6 to a p.m. daily.

Phone 90933 Or 92869F scp6,7

'

FOR SALE

One Three Bedroom Bungalow NO. 8 LONG POND RD.

PHON~£ 91367

FOR RENT NEW OFFICE SPACE, IN

MODERN BRICK BUILDING 2,000 square feet available in downtown

business sec.1ion.

DIAL 2891 or 4840. sep6,8

FOR SALE TWO STOREY DWELLING,

8 RENNIE'S MILL ROAD. Apply_

F. M. O'LEARY l.td. WATER STREET DIAL 2119 ev.tu,th,tf

MEMORIAL UNIVERSITY OF NEWFOUNDLAND

ATTENTION All Students 2nd. year and above.

A meeting will be held

8 · p.m. Tuesday Sept. 6th in the ladies Summer Room. S·tudent Union Build­ing, Parade Street for all students interested in: 1. Helping with orgor(zotion of Welcome Week. 2. Being Big Brothers or Big Sisters.

It is hoJ?ed that as many students as possible will attend this meeting. Your cooperation in this matter fs essentLal in the successful welcoming of our 1st. year students to the University.

AUCTION (On the premises)

LEASEHOLD LAND AND DWELLING No. 60 SPRINGDALE STREET

on

FRIDAY'· .. SEPTEMBER 9th at 12 o'clock noon.

Dwelling contains living room, dining room, ~itchen, 5 bedrooms and bath· room.

This property will be offered at a very low reserve.

Ground rent $20.00 per yec:ir.

JOSEPH FITZGIBBON, DIAL 2006 At.;tTIONEER

NOTICE St. Mary's School ·.

will op-en for classes in the old building

on the South Side

Wednesday Sept. 7th All last year's. pupils are request-ed to be

at the school 9:15 a.m. and all new

pupils registered at St. Mary's are asked:·

to report at the school 2.15 p.m.

------------·-~·---

WHY? Y Hold back till to-morrow

What you can give to-day ?

I I.--·-

C ontributions given now

A ssures the Y will stay.

FOR RENT SUITE OF TWO OFFICES-203 WATER Si'.

Modern, Clean and well lighted.

Suitable for Lawyer, Commission

.• .. ,

Agent etc. ..-.:

Private Washrooms, Parking Available. ~~:: Apply • ..

I Baine, Johnston & Co. Ltd •. ::.~~ / PHONE 2101 ask for MR. COOK. . ·'

scp6.8.10

Registered Nurses required for the member hospitals of the ::; Quill Plains Regional Hospital Council. -. Hospitals vary in size from 75 to 11 beds. :.:~

Salaries: $275. to $345. 40 hour week. ·: Travel advance available. Information .. and application forms from Qu111 Plains _:i Regional Hospital Council, Box 389, ·~

Humboldt, Sask. !~p6,7,8

Pick-Up And Delivery Service

for small and large deliveries. FAST and EFFICIENT SERVICE.

REASONABLE RATES. All Goods Insured for Lost.

D1AL 7126 DAY or NIGHT.

• WHILE THEY LAST !

250 STANDARD Reg. 11t. Each

GUAGE JASPE AND MARBLEIZED c

TILES EACH

DURING THE GREAT VICE-PRESIDENT'S SALE

SIMPSONS·SEARS . ·PHONE 5011-12-13

.>

•' . • '

MILLEY'S SCHOOL GIRL

NYLONS

SUPER KEMTONE ~ MA'l' SATIN PERMA SA'riN

HIGH GLOSS EGGSHELL SEI\!1 GLOSS

GLOSELASTIC KEMGLO

CHINA LAC ENAm;l, MATCHLESS ENAMEL

FRIGEN ENAMEL B·H ENGLISH

SHERWIN-WILLIAlllS AIOO MATCHLESS ACRYLIC

TRY US FIRST You'll be amazed at the

money yo11 save. PROMPT DELIVERY

SERVICE.

THE CHORD OF STEEL i Thomas B. Costain $3.95

THIRST FOR FREEDOM David A. Stewart . 4.95

THE SPANISH PIMPERNEL

PAINT & HOUSEWAIU:S. C. E. Lucas Phillips 4.2~ Phone 5567 165 Water St. WARRIORS FOR THE

JARDINE'S

THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1960

With Seams ,.,..au.~:9,...t•m•th._..,._..,. ... WORI<ING DAY i P-eter ~lstob ........ 3.50 i ·~--

And. Seamless THE DEV!L'S ADVOCATE

Morris West ........ 3.75 :IIURPHY -Pilssed peacefully KING'S FOOL

away on August 29, 1960, 111 St. b II Patrick's ~lercy Home. after a ·Margaret Camp e lengthy illness. William :lim·· Barnes ................ · 3.25 phy of Plate Cove East, B.B. STATION WAGON in his 80th year. Left to mourn

their sad loss besides his wife IN SPAIN ~--~=~iii,aiiil are three sons. Denis and John. Frances Parkinson St. John's: Ronald, Montreal: Keyes .... .. ......... 4.50 · ~j¥1¥.1--~"-M!ilj~~ SO Cents • pa1r

Sizes to 11 ·at

S. MILLEY LTD~

five daughters, sarah 1 :\Irs. J. MORNING AT JALNA Raymond), St .• John's; Bndg~ (Mrs. :lt. Barker), Buchans; Mazo De La Roche 3.50 Jllary (Mrs. N. Bccsaw). Steph· CANADA enville, and Rita (Mrs. A. Til- J. Bart/et Brebner I 0.00 ley), ·Toronto, as well as 25 grandchildren. Interment took THE POLITICS place in the family nlot on 1 OF EDUCATION August 31, following nrqni£'m Frank MacKinnon 4.75

1 ~lass at Plate Cove. ~lay he

rest in peace. Amen. o· k & ( L d I TAYLOR-Passed pcmfully · I( S Q,

1 t • '

away at 12.45 a.m .. September 5th., :llr. Plcman Carl Taylor of 20 John Street. He leaves to The Booksellers mourn four daughters, Olga Spin 4A25 or 2008 or 3191 (~frs. E. Burke) of Japan: :Muriel (~Irs. L. Dcsatelsl of Florida; Gwen (~Irs. II. E. Broe) of Dartmouth. N.S.; and Olive (Mrs. J. B. Morgan) of this City; also five sons, Clar-' ence, residing In England; lllax-' well and Douglas or Toronto; Alex and Selby at home: also 27 : grandchildren and three great·~

------------~---::--:---:--:----:-----:---- 1 grandchildren. Funeral at 1

• · Scun·~· is o!len regarded a! nip, cantaloup and other fresh I Fur designers predict thai fox :2.30 p.m. Wednesday. Sept em.' .. an . ~bsolete d1sease today, but fruits and vegetables. Is the next fur slated for a come· I ber 7th from his late home, 20 I It s_t•!l occurs w~ere there Is .a . . back. They envision sumptuous John Street. 9ef1C1ency of \'ltamln C m Candace 15 a name borne by 1 I HALFYARD _Died al his the ciet This important vitamin certain queens of ancient Elhi· horizontally-worked wrap coats. 'd . · . · . . . I I . res1 enee, 14 Pennmore Dnl'e, 1s ~ou~1~ 111 c1trus ~ru1ts and opia. Reference to the name Is boas of seven feet 0~ ~ore 10 · Mount Pearl on September 2nd. then· JUices. broccoh, raw tur- made In the Book of Acts. length, eapelets and Jackets. William L. Halfyard, aged 72.

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Leaving to mourn 4 sons. Wil· liam. Wallace, Noel of St. John's: Ray of ~tontrcal; I daughter, Irene (:\Irs. Wm. Em· berley), 8 grandchildren, 2 brothers and 4 sisters. Funeral took place Monday afternoon, September 5th to ~Iount Pleas· ant Cemetery.

EMBERLEY - Passed peace· -ANNOUNCE~IENT-- I fully away at 11 a.m. September ____ I 4th, at his home, 163 New Gow. j er Street. George EmbPrley, ~lr. and ~Irs. F. A. ~!alloy aged 72. Left to mourn are his

1 announce the engagement . of I

wife, Fanny: four sons, William 1 their daughter. ~Iaureen Eh?.a· i and Ralph of ~!aunt Pearl; Eric , beth to Donal Edward, son of 1

and Otto of the City; five : ~lrs. Mary and the .late Dr. D. [ daughters. Viola Olrs c. · J. O'Regan. Weddmg to take ' Nixon) of l\lount Pearl:. Joan i place December 31st. I (Mrs. A. Taylor) of :llount ___ _ Pearl: Shirley (:llrs. Tim Neuss) BIRTHS or this City; Betty (Mrs. Bob Alex) or this City; Phyllis Olrs. CROWTHER - Born to l\lr. , Hazlewood) of Houston, Tex .. I and :\>Irs. Brian Crowther at the ' also one brother. Bill in .BC. Grace Hospital on September· and one sister, Mrs. Frank 3rd a son. Lewis of this City and 27 grand- ' . children. Funeral at 2.30 p.m. BUCK!NGIIA:If-To Dr. G. · today from 222 Hamilton Ave. and :I Irs. Buckingham t nee,

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ICarmel Battcock, n.ili.l. at St.,

I Clare's :llcrcy Hospital. on· September 5th, 1960. A son. (tel)

BARRETT -Born to Kelvin 1 and ~lary Barrett (nee Pike) on September 4th at the Grace Hospit~l, a son.

:I!ISKELL - Born Clare's :l!ercy Hospital on Sun. day, September 4th, to :llr. and :\Irs. Frank :lliskell (nee Mary ~turphy), a baby girl.

Centre Ltd. EVOY-Born to Stanley and

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After hours 'PHONE 7313 ber 4th, a baby girl. ------

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