Cover |
Save page Remove page | Previous | 1 of 24 | Next |
|
small (250x250 max)
medium (500x500 max)
Large
Extra Large
large ( > 500x500)
Full Resolution
|
This page
All
|
Loading content ...
T^r!:^f^y'l:... "'"'■' *" , -'; Patrol ON L THE FAM "BUICK & Terra Nova Motors Ltd. THE DAILY NEWS Vol. 67. No. 252 THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1960 (Price. 7 Cents) DOYLE'S NEWFOUNDLAND COD LIVER OIL CONTAINS VITAMINS A and D Kennedy Wraps Up Fight As Minnesota Clinches Victory Khrushchev Sends Congratulations Calls For National Effort To Keep Free World Secure WASHINGTON-CP-John Kennedy wi upped up lhc presidential U-M \\eclnesila\ .* going over the lop in Minnesota and Illinois and immediately (ailed on the country lor ■-*-"■' ■■ ' , WOrld secure in the vcar*. ahead. s hc ack- •ing the, to the preservation and consotida- "We need yonr help, tlu* 43-year-old wm hero told Amenc-in son.l.c I; DAY- ountrysidc MANY MEN HAVE PASSED THIS WAY—REMEMBER THEM ON THIS THE NOVEMBER 11—Ghostly figures of Canadian soldiers march through the Italian in the shadow of the Ortona Cross. More than 1,300 Canadian servicemen are buried at the lime wh-cn would mcet tne basic j tions whose solution would bring Canadian Military Cemetery at Ortona—scene of one of the bitterest battles in Italy durin" •nterests not only of the Pc°Plcs •about th,? easinE and improve the Second World War. On Remembrance Day, November llth. millions of citizens across'^L;'^ =f?,«et h^ nf1''™.^.^t^ -he CntirC internaUonRl Canada will pay silent homage to the more than 100.M0 Canadian servicemen who have died . ^-^l.but of theJ»hole S,t"a"on- .__ fn defence of freedom since 1914.—(National Defence Photo). LONDON <CP- — Premierlof mankind which is longing for Khushchev h as congratulated deliverance from the threat of a president-elect Kennedy in a mes i new war ... sage in which he expressed hope I that Soviet - American relations; "We ere convinced thet there would follow the line along they were developing during the, to the preservation «...u s»„„,m. . ... . . . . ,, . presidency of Franklin D. Roose-■ tion of peace. For the sake of this nowlcdged Republican Ridwrd Nixon s capitulation .md pledged lhat vclt, Tass reported Wednesday. jgoal we are ready for our part, will be devoted to thc interests of thc United States mid lhc cause ol heedoni around The message said in part: to continue the efforts to solve |],e world." "Wc hope that while you are!such a pressing problem as dis-. ._ — Messages of n o n ". ralulalions, point where il wa.-, le.-s than on* in this post the relations between I armament, to settle the German our countries will again follow the' issue through the eaiicst conclu-. f 3 nan a VI PWC line, along which they were dc-jsion of a peace treaty and to vdlluUu VlCWi doping in Frankly Roosevett's | each agreement on other ques all our 1 Election nt in a record count that run to somc 70.ono.non Thc previ.m.s hiul* was <U. in 1956 when Eisenhower Seafarers Order Katanga Tribesmen Slay shi • Wa|kout 10 Irish U. N. Soldiers I! JACOMET SOUSTED poured into Kennedys Hyannis per Port, Mass., home — including one from Soviet Premier Khrushchev who expressed hope Soviet- American relations would follow along lines of the lale prcsidenl Franklin D. Roosevelt, f By ALAN DONNELLY much admired by Kennedy Canadian Prcss Staff Writer "«,Ve arc convinced there er-. OTTAWA <CP'-Senator John no unsurmounteble obstacles F. Kennedy's capture of thc the preservation and consolid. White House has raised hopes tion of peace'' Khrushchev sai* here for two favorable results for jn a messegc. adding he Canada—more Canadian exports rea(jv for the "most friendly re- to its southeril neighbor and a lations' between the Russian and , PARIS 'Reuters' - President more flexible United States for . American governments. de Gaulle's government Wednes- eign policy. ; Federal secret service men day refused to accept the resi?- But authorities are taking a moVcd in to protect the new t nation of its lop Algerian admin- , MONTREAL (CP) - The Sea-1 agreement which th:sc comp.in ; wait-and-see approach to othei* president • elect, youngest candi-, istrator-and then fired him. I farcrs International Union said I ies had' contracted with a west possible repercussions for Can-1 date ever t0 win the White House, The firm action against Andre I Wednesday it ordered a walkout I coast group (the name) which |ada from the first Democratic, through the polls and first Ro- Jacomet was designed to cut I against two shipping companies | did not number a single one of I administration at Washington in man Catholic to achieve that short a threatened revolt nf sen LEOPOLDVILLE (Reuters) -: be one'survivor. !had failed to reach IU destina- j aftcr they tried to make an agree-1 the engineers among its mem-1 eight years. The Democrats won".; high office. ior officials against de Gaulles At least 10 Irish United Nations! Reports from Elisabethville. tion and thai a train sent to Ni-! ment .with another union that! bership." | take over until January. : Kennedy told reporters at Hy-'program of self - determination soldier* were slain in an ambush I capital of breakaway Katanga | emba to remove the bodies of I would have cut salaries and holi-1 _. „ . „ KMtmm. iA .,, ! It's not unusual for Canada^ annjs Port that he and his wife for Algeria. by Congolese tribesmen in north-i province, blamed the ambush on ' ambush victims had not been day-pay sharply for the compan-! „ ne . statement sal0 nie • boal to be rocked by the ground-; .Jacqueline, plan a short holiday Jacomet, 43. tendered his res eastern Katanea Tuesdav nloht Uh. Rninhn .nhncn,™ . I able to leave because of the situ- ies' employees. |allegt, ag)'ee.ment, wou,d. cut i swell from U.S. policy decisions ibeforc he picks his cabinet. These ■ ignation Monday in protest 'ation. I ,r.McEwm. secretary forthe!^ » num^_ 0t ilS*"'* J!' appointments won't na announced; against the government- eastern Katanga Tuesday night,! the Baluba tribesmen, the UN announced Wednesday, jTROOPS SURROUNDED The incident, worse since UN force arrived in the Congo four months ago, brought io about 30 thc number of UN servicemen who have died here. Thc Irish were in an ll-man patrol reported missing in the Niemba area. 25 miles west of ■Albcrtville. A UN spokesman' *aid there was hope 'here might' The provincial interior ministry said there was one survivor. It added he had rejoined his unit 1 called tl union statements corn- UN officers, noted that this was the first loss.... , , , at Niemba but that UN troops I ffi£g£ J^^^ Wj£^I^ MU*r there were encircled by Balubas ',fw;0U"f? * pi 7 «- u «, who had occupied the railroad'publlc atter the First World War station. j , n 'AsirySe^i-Si^ V mUCh 3S "* *$***£ SceTteade; jtf anotner two wecks. but Elisabethvifle „„,^j .,.?.._?. .»?..__... .!"'Ithird engineers as much -- ""* j Starr has becn invited to inter The interior ministry said a UN patrol which left Albertville for Niemba Wednesday morning Election Briefs WASHINGTON <AP> - President Eisenhower's firsl official caller Wednesday reported the president looked fine, "but nes not happy about the results of the election. C. Burke Elbrick, U.S. ambas- sador to Portugal, called at the White House-before departing for his post in Lisbon. LONDON (Reuters) -A British newspaper Wednesday night called Jacqueline Kennedy the "most exquisite" first lady in the history of the United Sates. The writer of the Londoner's Diary in the Evening Standard commented: "Whatever the Republicans think of the new man in the White House, most of them* will admit that they have the most exquisite first lady in the history of the presidency." NEW YORK (AP- - Henry Cabot Lodge, Republican candi-. date for vice • president, sent a telegram of congratulations io Senator John-Kennedy. Lodge's message said: "Now that the vot ers have spoken, Americans should closejanks and present'a united front before the world." TUCSON. AriT"(AP) - Mrs. Margaret Sanger, world leader In THE COUNTRY PARSON "You can't measure the value\\ of a man's work by the amount he wai paid for doing it." the birth control movement, said | Wednesday she would wait until! the end of the first year of Sen-! ator John Kennedy's administra-: tion before deciding whether to1 move out of the country. Mrs. Sanger, founder and president emeritus of the Planned Parenthood Federation, said last July she would "find another place to live" if Kennedy became president. Help Yourself SUMMERSIDE, P. E. I. (CP) - This town t.as a do- it-yourself thief who also subscribes to thc help - wanted motto. Carpenters and plumbers were busy renovating an apartment building when a man crawled through a window and asked to borrow a The SIU, issuing its first statement on the walkout that started in Montreal Monday night, said N7 M. Paterson and Sons Limited and Scott Misener Steamships; Villiers Graaf, leader of South Limited claimed they had signed an agreement with the National i tesoeiation of Marine Engineers, j The SIU said engineers serving 1 in vessels operated by the two ! companies were "handed documents purporting to represent an rian Algeria" policy. Likc mosl „ „ , . .. and finance. Kennedy team will be picked in J Frenchmen in Algeria, hc wan:s 51. It also charged vacation pay presjdent - elect Kennedy has;a dav. or two to form a liaison1 the territory to remain French. would be reduced by more than had far less direct contact with ■ with \he Eisenhower administra-, Dc Gaulle presided Wednesday na,{*" 1 Canadians and Canadian affairs; tjon f0r a smooth government morning at a cabinet session than President Eisenhower, who. transition when Kennedy takes called to discuss Pacomcl's res- . .. . ~ , I commanded Canadian Iroops «n; office Jan. 20. Sanation. The ministers decided VISITS CanSOa I Europe in war end peace, or, whi-e Kennedy held a lead all, to dismiss him summarily from ■ President Roosevelt, who signed, through the night as votes from : his post antl also suspend him LONDON (Reuters) - Sir De the Ogdcnsburg defence agree-: Tucsday's election poured in • from serving as a senior mem- '-lent with Canada in 19-10. from across the country, his pop-, ber of thc council of state. Prime Minister Diefenbaker ular-votc margin narrowed to a I Frencc's highest juridicial body Africa's opposition Unitcd Party, who has met Republican candi- said Wednesday he will lcave j date Vice - President Nixon on here next Tuesday on a visit to j several occasions, said Wednes the United States and Canada day he has met Senator Kennedy , . , , 'onlv once and that was about He plans to spend about a week; gg^ ^ in New York. Diplomat Thrown Out WASHINGTON (AP) - The Ghana embassy complained to the state department Wednesday that an African diplomat was thrown out of a polling place in Georgia Tuesday by two policemen. - H. V. H. Sekyi, a second secretary at the Ghanaian embassy was assigned by Ambassador W M. Q. Halm to observe presiden tial election procedures in Georgia. R. M. Akwei, embassy councillor, said the incident occurred in Mableton, near Atlanta, when Sekyi another Ghanaian and a local representative of the UJS. commerce department* who acted as the diplomat's official guide, visited the polling place. Akwei said that shortly after the Ghanaian diplomat went into the polling place a 'kind of confusion,", started with groups of white voters "apparently resenting his presence." Akwei continued that because of the confusion policemen told Sekyi "to get out or there will be trouble." Sekyi protested saying that he as a diplomat visiting a polling place on the invitation of State Secretary.Christian Herter... I "Sorry, we have to eject you,' I Akwei quoted the, policeman. He said the policeman "pushed Sekyi lout ot the building -and roughly I He promptly sawed a four- l foot section off a sheet of j plywood, returned the saw and unchallenged crawled back oul the window with the plywood. The carpenters thought he was a plumber; the plumbers thought he was a carpenter. The tenant, viewing renovations at the timc, thought hc was a ncw tradesman employed by one of the groups. P.Q. LEGISLATURE HAS BIG PROGRAM Following the Canadian government tradition of strict neu- jtrelity in U.S. elections, Mr. ! Diefenbaker made no further [comment on the election out- ! come. But he, like ifellow-citizens I across the country, stayed up j late Tuesday night to watch re- ; turns come in. Nixon Takes Loss In Good Spirits Bv JOE LEWIS ! LOS ANGELES (AP'-Richard; Nixon tasted political defeat for Officials"see no. basic chang?,the first time Wednesday—and Labor Defeat LONDON (Reuters) - Labor members of Parliament who op pose the provision of a Scottish base for American Polaris-car rying submarines were overwhelmingly defeated in a party j vote here Wednesday. Labor critics of the Conservative government's Polaris agreement with the United States spent two hours urging their colleagues to oppose the granting of any facilities to the U.S. submarines. By RICHARD DAIGNAULT ! Canadian Press Staff Writer ! QUEBEC (CP) - Quebec'.,; I Liberals, still in high gear five ;months after their upset victory; iover the five-term administra-; 1 tion of the Union Nationa e party, | jhave prepared for the legislature session opening a program that! will set this traditionally Conser vative province on a new course. At 3 p.m. Lieutenant-Governor Onesime Gagnon, garbed in a brilliant red, gold - braided uniform and wearing a white- plumed hat, is to inaugurate the first regular session called by Premier Jean Lesage's new Lib- eral government. For predominantly French speaking Quebec the annual session of the provincial legislature is a key event.'This ahead in Canadian-American rc- took it in the tradition of good a major social event and ! lations. which have atways been losers. a turning point in provincial af- j cordial, fairs. j - j Application Some 500 hand - picked guests _ * .». are expected to jam the red j rAKITIP'S carpeted 24 -seat Legislative! ■ HUM I'M Council-Provincial upper House- for the elaborate bilingual monies, | With a guard of honor drawn. . - up on the square opposite the WINNIPEG (CP- - The name' ier than planned facade of the grey-slone legis- of a boy who died in Hong Kong , they wanted to keep their chil* in 1951 was used to bring another j ren out of sohool no longer tnan Chinese boy to Canada on a fals- j nccessany. ified immigration application, a> The Nixons flew in Tuesday to witness testified in court Tues- ! vote, spent a sad night hearin? The Republican vice-president was turned back in his long, ardu ous quest of the presidency by a decisive electoral vote margin for Democrat John Kennedy. He sent the winner a congratulatory telegram Wednesday morning, then was to fly with his family to Washington—a da** eart- An aide ~'J latere building, the lieutenant governor, greeted by Premier lesage at the main door is to lead a procession to the guest- packed council room to read the speech from the throne. ' FORECASTS LEGISLATION The speech is likely to forecast major legislation in all fields of provincial endeavor, and par ticularly significant changes * to'be opened by a Liberal gov the fields of education, social ernment since 1959, is regarded' welfare and public health. Hairline Victories Not New NEW YORK ■ (AP) - Hairline victories are nothing new in American politics. 1 There was 1948, for nstance when Harry Truman barely scraped through to beat Thomas Dewey when practically everyone—except Truman — figured Dewey had it in the bag. And then there was the celebrated case of 1916 when Charles Evans.Hughes went to bed on election night as the winner and woke up the next morning as the loser. Senator .Kennedy and Vice-President Nixon is likely to be remembered for a long time for " complexions through the long hours of vote counting. California's electoral votes played a key role in the hectic 1916 election, as they did this time. . The contenders that year were Republican Charles Evans Hughes, and associate justice of the Supreme Court, and President Woodrow Wilson, a Democrai seeking re-election. HELD EARLY LEAD Early returns gave Hughes a comfortable lead and in many quarters he was quickly heralded tbe victor. But the Associated Press was not among them.-It clung to a position that the vote was too close in some states to be certain. For 4B hours the returns kept coming in, and Hughes' electoral tally began ebbing. At last everything hinged on California —and Wilson eventually won <t by 4,000 votes. When the result was flashed an AP. editor put in a midnight phone call to Hughes in a New York Hotel. A Hughes aid informed him that "the president elect has retired for the night and cannot be disturbed." "Weil," said the AP man, "when the president-elect wakes up in the morning tel\ him he isn't president-elect any more.'' day. The evidence was given at the preliminary hearing of Lui Pak Tong, Winnipeg import agent, on a charge of conspiracy in connection with illegal entry of immigrants. Wong Fung Ying, a cook, tes- j tion to the immigration depart ] tified that he made an applica-1 ment after he was asked by Lui I Pak Tong to do so. ! Wong Fung Ying said he bad 1 returned to Hong Kong in 1951 j to visit his son, born lo his first wife in 1938. Witnesses said his j wife died in 1946 in China and | when he went to visit his son in ' 7951 the boy had bcen ill and died while he was there. j Wong Fung Ying testified he 1 met the mother of a young boy named Lee Hung Bo wh le there and discussed getting her son to Canada. After he returned he decided to make the apDlication. unfavorable returns, seemingly cheery Wednesday morning. The 47-year-old Nixon-a Congressman at 33, senator at 37, vice-president at 39-had never lost at the polls until returns sent him tumbling in his try for the top U.S. job. SMILES AT DEFEAT As his wife wept at his side. Nixon smiled through bitter disappointment in a 1:15 a.m. tele vision appearance at which he all but conceded. When his press secretary made the formal concession Wednes- d.iy morning Nixon himself riM nnt appear. Thus ends the campaign that started at the Chicago Republi c,nn convention last summer. Nixon, with his wife Pat at hi* side most of the way, travelled ft-1,000 milcs by plane, train, car and bus to each of tne 50 states, made more than 500 speeches in hamlets and cities—acquired 1 hoarse voice, a haggard look and lost innumerable hours of sleep Nixon, his wife, his 75-year-old mother, Hannah and a brother Donald, spent most af election night in his Ambassador Hote; suite. ATTENDS CONGRESS BUENOS AIRES, Argentina (CP)—Msgr. Maurice Roy, Roman Catholic Archbishop of Quebec, arrived here Tuesday for the inter-American Marian Con-1 gress opening today. Weather Nfld. Skies Cloudy with intermittent light rain beginning this morn ing. High today 45. TEMPERATURES*: Toronto 32 48 Montreal 27 45 Moncton 13 36 Halifax 25 35 Sydney 29 32 St. John's 30 31 THURSDAY, NOV. 10. Sunset today .. . .4:31 p.m. Sunrise tomorrow..7:00a.m. Moonrise tonight 10:36 p.m. Last Quarter tomorrow 10.18 a.m. High. Low: TIDES 11:46 a,m 5:56 a.m.,6:23 p.m. PROMINENT STARS: Thc Twins, rise 8:27 p.m. VISIBLE PLANETS: Mars, to the right of the Twins. Venus, low in southwest 5:29 p.m. Jupiter, low in southwest 6:14 p.m. Saturn, low in southwest 7:00 p.m. (Computed for St. John's by Bailey R. Frank)
Object Description
Title | The Daily News (St. John's, N.L.), 1960-11-10 |
Date | 1960-11-10 |
Description | The Daily News was published in St. John's from 15 February 1894 to 4 June 1984, daily except Sunday. |
Subject | Canadian newspapers--Newfoundland and Labrador--St. John's--20th century |
Location | Canada--Newfoundland and Labrador--Avalon Peninsula--St. John's |
Time Period | 20th Century |
Language | eng |
Type | Text |
Resource type | Newspaper |
Format | image/tiff; application/pdf |
Collection | Daily News |
Sponsor | Centre for Newfoundland Studies |
Source | Microfilm held in the Centre for Newfoundland Studies. |
Repository | Memorial University of Newfoundland. Libraries. Centre for Newfoundland Studies |
PDF File | (11.39 MB) -- http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19601110.pdf |
CONTENTdm file name | 29901.cpd |
Description
Title | Cover |
Description | The Daily News (St. John's, N.L.), 1960-11-10 |
PDF File | (11.39MB) -- http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19601110.pdf |
Transcript |
T^r!:^f^y'l:...
"'"'■' *" , -';
Patrol
ON L
THE FAM
"BUICK &
Terra Nova Motors Ltd.
THE DAILY NEWS
Vol. 67. No. 252 THE DAILY NEWS, ST. JOHN'S, NFLD., THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1960
(Price. 7 Cents)
DOYLE'S
NEWFOUNDLAND
COD LIVER
OIL
CONTAINS
VITAMINS
A and D
Kennedy Wraps Up Fight As
Minnesota Clinches Victory
Khrushchev Sends
Congratulations
Calls For National Effort
To Keep Free World Secure
WASHINGTON-CP-John Kennedy wi upped up lhc presidential U-M \\eclnesila\
.* going over the lop in Minnesota and Illinois and immediately (ailed on the country lor
■-*-"■' ■■ ' , WOrld secure in the vcar*. ahead.
s hc ack-
•ing the, to the preservation and consotida- "We need yonr help, tlu* 43-year-old wm hero told Amenc-in son.l.c I;
DAY-
ountrysidc
MANY MEN HAVE PASSED THIS WAY—REMEMBER THEM ON THIS THE
NOVEMBER 11—Ghostly figures of Canadian soldiers march through the Italian
in the shadow of the Ortona Cross. More than 1,300 Canadian servicemen are buried at the lime wh-cn would mcet tne basic j tions whose solution would bring
Canadian Military Cemetery at Ortona—scene of one of the bitterest battles in Italy durin" •nterests not only of the Pc°Plcs •about th,? easinE and improve
the Second World War. On Remembrance Day, November llth. millions of citizens across'^L;'^ =f?,«et h^ nf1''™.^.^t^ -he CntirC internaUonRl
Canada will pay silent homage to the more than 100.M0 Canadian servicemen who have died . ^-^l.but of theJ»hole S,t"a"on- .__
fn defence of freedom since 1914.—(National Defence Photo).
LONDON |
CONTENTdm file name | 29877.jp2 |