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tel's Premier Is Injured In Bomb ■ 3.00 15.50 10.00 % dted Nations: Defer Action On Syria IflTEI) NATIONS. N. Y.—CP — The United w General Assembly continued to hang back Ljir on any rommHinerl in the Turkish-Syrian Jl' dc«pitc renewed calls hy Syria —' n'—!- HK ■bi _ ^B jht move came at the end of a morning sess IE, D^Kai i formal submission from either side for ICnR jHisiiition of thc Syrian claim that Turkey is ma If WIOH Iew NDLAr4 EUf ft m J person °n° PERMANENT. I down ond • spring "' I put up it " 61 I'm ei\ Jad PARK RlENDLY SERVICE ALL MAKES OF ;ARS AND TRUCKS 1 THE DAILY NEWS ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1957 Charles Hutton & Sons border for an invasion. Fonifn Minister Andrei Gromyko made what iKtptcd ns a reasoned appeal to the assembly, Sm'a cillrrl once again for the UN body to take ijenlly" the "dangerous" situation on the Mid- |bil border. it orroRii'siTV ,in ! S>TheSl !(.' the ulhs ■ereignty. k of lormal action by side indicated i ' vote, providing tl.? United States with a moral victory tn its con- Prime Minister Says Election Will Not Be "Too Long Delayed" "Next Spring Thrown In Parliament raelt motorized columns and parachutists started the slashing attack across Egypt's Slnal Des- it the government table sat still, i pool of blood on the floor. The Knesset (parliament) ad- WASHINGTON, D. C—Secretary of "State Dulles offers British Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd (right) an apple at start of a conference with British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan (center). Meeting was one of a series which opened recently to counter Soviet mov es in the Mideast and Russian advances in the realm of superweapons.—(IN Photo). Pine Tree Line Said Ineffective Or Sooner" OTTAWA (C.P.)-Prime Minister Diefenbaker has indicated he is thinking in terms of an early general election, perhaps next spring or sooner. He iold the Commons Tuesday a general election will "not be too long delayed". Mr. Diefenbaker made the statement after 6eing criticized by Hon. Paul Martin, former Liberal Health Minister, for disclosing in a television broadcast Monday night that Progressive Conservative social security legislaion would come into effect November 1. Mr. - Martin said Mr. Diefenbaker had violated the rules of Parliament. By trandition and practice, all announcements of government policy were made in the Commons when Parlia- their deb te later Wit. If the 120 members ol : were in the cl - lomb explode . rther Reduction In ,nce-Canada Trade goods valued at $17,000 000 from France, an Increase of more than la^fj' by Ihe I "nc •*!» last x.,1^ mainlv i in 1956. purlng the period ian importers bought wines !, cosmetics, perfumes and Ship In Trouble Off South Shore The RCAF identified the vessel trouble off the southeast tip of Newfoundland Tuesday as the "-'- owned by an un dentlfied The RCAF een 2 miles off Cape Ballard 'here the vessel was reported to ■ '-'-'-- In water. The plane — any help. The ship's distress signal was picked up tt Halifax and New York and by two sh ps in the Nature ot her trouble was not Continue Talks On Bus Situation employees of Capital Coach Lines id the Company last night. Meanwhile, it was reported that negotiations between the Company and the Municipal Council arc proceeding. It is believed that the J ions wli lb* econtlnued to- By DAVE MclNTOSH Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CPl— Plane-spotting equipment used In the $200,000,000 mid-Canada warning line i '" ' useless to detect intercontinental! missiles, Informants say. This means that if the i ment wants to convert tl eventually into a missile-detecting network, it will have to spend millions of dollars for a new type along the 55lh parallel ... operation a few months before Russia announced successful testing of an intercontinental llstlc missile. The line ls designed to detect aircraft flying no higher than 20 miles but " ' ' tlnental ballistic n an altitude of sor DANGEROUS Scientists here se dangerous element earth satellite ir that Russian developed rockets to carry it up to roughly " — ■ • •■ ■ has the propellants to power Intercontinental missile. The mid-Canada line Is nol DIDN'T TRACK SPUTNIK An RCAF spokesman said the the satellite. Thi line throws up New Position For Zhukov )VY (API — Georgi K.I ihaf he had _ committ ed text - but if his govv... nt made no worse indiscretion a that. Canadians vouli" ' 1 satisfied with the nev explain why s mnister. Fulton On Democratic Process OTTAWA (CP)-Justice Minisler Fulton said Tuesday the democratic process must be kept at work if the symbols of government are to have meanng. Canadians must understand the machinery and form of government as well as admire its syn bols—the Crown, the Governor General, the Senate1 and House of Commons, Mr. Fulton spoke the first national convention thc Federated Women's Institu executive secretary of he dian Library Association, si per cent library service for allj Canadians should be an aim! or | 1967. At present, 83 per c rural Canadians had no library service. As a one - time rural teacher, Miss Morion sa d s lieves a successful rural school education is impossible v good rural libraries. Ca National Library had already photographed catalogues of " Canadian libraries. •• own books, too,"she sad, referring lo a list of 40 bo ks about, Canada which have been suggested for every public library. ' ,v Marshal Zhukov to-! leaders appeared at a Turku Embassy reception honoring Tu key's National Day. All sought ' CITES WILSON MOVE Khrushchev and Premier lai Buiganin reminded ' i pondents of Defence Secretary Charles Wilson's resignation recently in the United States; "It's all the same," they in- The Soviet le ership has fa e days to offer any c nouncement has been printed, announcing that Marshal Rodion Y. Malinovsky replaced Zhukov. said: "You will not friendship. The Soviet military press was full of admonitions Tuesday concerning the supremacy of the Communist party and the debt of loyalty owed io it by the armed forces. Thc suggesti '— without pi ,' John T. Haig, minister produce a year" is necessary to workable government the Commons. GOVERNMENT The June 10 election produced a minority government. Party standings in the 265 - seat Corn- Ill, Liberal 105, CCF 25, Social Credit ent-Liberal in which he reviewed ie political series Thc Na- date of Nov. 1. The prime minister replied that cheques for any month arc re- Thus, the $9 increase'to $35 in old age pensions would be paid for tlie first time in cheques received by recipients at the end of November. In his view that made Nfld. Skies WEDNESDAY, Octobi TIDES .12:15 a.m, 32:28 p.m. . 7:21 a.m. 7:40 p.m many left Tuesday for a three- week tour of the United States.' Canada and Britain t» itudy Mental Patients Take Over Hospital t of division of The P.C. Party And Patronage OTTAWA (CP)-The first : ported dismissal of a gove: ment employee in tbe wake of thc June 10 election produ ed a 20- minute rumpus in the Commons Tuesday. But there was no ind!- denying "patronage' was in- volved In the dismissal, said: "Public servants who participate In politics certainly eopardlze their jobs." The dispute was over the prac Mce, admitted by both sides to' 'lave existed for years, that a government employee ean bc summarily dismissed if -a Com- ployee engaged in poltical partisanship. The practice was cond Tuesday by CCF spokesmen. Its ■exlstenccwas admitted by Transport Minister Hees and former Liberal transport minister Lionel Chevrier. Mr. Chevrier said it the dismissal last Friday of i assistant gang foreman at a f Lawrence River canal at Carnal, Ont. The man, not named the Commons, has becn identified as George W, Forrester. Mr. Hees said the man missed on the basis of a declaration by A. C. Ci (PC-Gronville-Dundas) t He s hired May 16 on the recommendati of the Liberal candidate in Gren- ville-Dundas. "I think it is clear that this has been the practice which has been accepted by succe ding governments over a great manyl years, and that. . .1 have simply followed thatpracticc," Mr. He said. The debate recalled reported ing patronage—thc hiring of people on recommendation of politicians. .Mr. Hamilton also issued Stanley Knowles, deput; leader, calledthe Cardinal firing "patronage in reverse" Hamilton. "There is no question of patri age," Mr.. Diefenbaker s a i in politics certainly eopardlze A. Wesley Stuart (L - Ch totte) asked which MP had p immended thc firing o forera Mr. Green replied that if foreman vvas fired there' " was done after a thorough ir. sane, took over the building Tues day and held about 30 guards hostages. No one vvas reported injured. Guard Kenneth Bergcr, released Dr. E. R. Hodgson hospital the building several t-.ves. vvas reported trying to get men to surrender a gas gun. ' i. (API | (Dom. Spokane) called la secur- for a legislative investigation of te Men- the hospital. He said he had «vi- „_ :_ j...; of ..snocking conditions" POLICE STAND WATCH Deputy sheriffs mannec guard towers. Stale pair building houses about 15 KNIVES AGAINST BACK Bcrger said they took him lhe personnel office, acting captain >f the and told them still. ' they started building, picking up a guard d he and the other Weather tlurric—A few clouds after sunset. High today 40. TEMPERATURES
Object Description
Title | The Daily News (St. John's, N.L.), 1957-10-30 |
Date | 1957-10-30 |
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 | (8.23 MB) -- http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19571030.pdf |
CONTENTdm file name | 13076.cpd |
Description
Title | Cover |
Description | The Daily News (St. John's, N.L.), 1957-10-30 |
PDF File | (8.23MB) -- http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19571030.pdf |
Transcript | tel's Premier Is Injured In Bomb ■ 3.00 15.50 10.00 % dted Nations: Defer Action On Syria IflTEI) NATIONS. N. Y.—CP — The United w General Assembly continued to hang back Ljir on any rommHinerl in the Turkish-Syrian Jl' dc«pitc renewed calls hy Syria —' n'—!- HK ■bi _ ^B jht move came at the end of a morning sess IE, D^Kai i formal submission from either side for ICnR jHisiiition of thc Syrian claim that Turkey is ma If WIOH Iew NDLAr4 EUf ft m J person °n° PERMANENT. I down ond • spring "' I put up it " 61 I'm ei\ Jad PARK RlENDLY SERVICE ALL MAKES OF ;ARS AND TRUCKS 1 THE DAILY NEWS ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1957 Charles Hutton & Sons border for an invasion. Fonifn Minister Andrei Gromyko made what iKtptcd ns a reasoned appeal to the assembly, Sm'a cillrrl once again for the UN body to take ijenlly" the "dangerous" situation on the Mid- |bil border. it orroRii'siTV ,in ! S>TheSl !(.' the ulhs ■ereignty. k of lormal action by side indicated i ' vote, providing tl.? United States with a moral victory tn its con- Prime Minister Says Election Will Not Be "Too Long Delayed" "Next Spring Thrown In Parliament raelt motorized columns and parachutists started the slashing attack across Egypt's Slnal Des- it the government table sat still, i pool of blood on the floor. The Knesset (parliament) ad- WASHINGTON, D. C—Secretary of "State Dulles offers British Foreign Secretary Selwyn Lloyd (right) an apple at start of a conference with British Prime Minister Harold Macmillan (center). Meeting was one of a series which opened recently to counter Soviet mov es in the Mideast and Russian advances in the realm of superweapons.—(IN Photo). Pine Tree Line Said Ineffective Or Sooner" OTTAWA (C.P.)-Prime Minister Diefenbaker has indicated he is thinking in terms of an early general election, perhaps next spring or sooner. He iold the Commons Tuesday a general election will "not be too long delayed". Mr. Diefenbaker made the statement after 6eing criticized by Hon. Paul Martin, former Liberal Health Minister, for disclosing in a television broadcast Monday night that Progressive Conservative social security legislaion would come into effect November 1. Mr. - Martin said Mr. Diefenbaker had violated the rules of Parliament. By trandition and practice, all announcements of government policy were made in the Commons when Parlia- their deb te later Wit. If the 120 members ol : were in the cl - lomb explode . rther Reduction In ,nce-Canada Trade goods valued at $17,000 000 from France, an Increase of more than la^fj' by Ihe I "nc •*!» last x.,1^ mainlv i in 1956. purlng the period ian importers bought wines !, cosmetics, perfumes and Ship In Trouble Off South Shore The RCAF identified the vessel trouble off the southeast tip of Newfoundland Tuesday as the "-'- owned by an un dentlfied The RCAF een 2 miles off Cape Ballard 'here the vessel was reported to ■ '-'-'-- In water. The plane — any help. The ship's distress signal was picked up tt Halifax and New York and by two sh ps in the Nature ot her trouble was not Continue Talks On Bus Situation employees of Capital Coach Lines id the Company last night. Meanwhile, it was reported that negotiations between the Company and the Municipal Council arc proceeding. It is believed that the J ions wli lb* econtlnued to- By DAVE MclNTOSH Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CPl— Plane-spotting equipment used In the $200,000,000 mid-Canada warning line i '" ' useless to detect intercontinental! missiles, Informants say. This means that if the i ment wants to convert tl eventually into a missile-detecting network, it will have to spend millions of dollars for a new type along the 55lh parallel ... operation a few months before Russia announced successful testing of an intercontinental llstlc missile. The line ls designed to detect aircraft flying no higher than 20 miles but " ' ' tlnental ballistic n an altitude of sor DANGEROUS Scientists here se dangerous element earth satellite ir that Russian developed rockets to carry it up to roughly " — ■ • •■ ■ has the propellants to power Intercontinental missile. The mid-Canada line Is nol DIDN'T TRACK SPUTNIK An RCAF spokesman said the the satellite. Thi line throws up New Position For Zhukov )VY (API — Georgi K.I ihaf he had _ committ ed text - but if his govv... nt made no worse indiscretion a that. Canadians vouli" ' 1 satisfied with the nev explain why s mnister. Fulton On Democratic Process OTTAWA (CP)-Justice Minisler Fulton said Tuesday the democratic process must be kept at work if the symbols of government are to have meanng. Canadians must understand the machinery and form of government as well as admire its syn bols—the Crown, the Governor General, the Senate1 and House of Commons, Mr. Fulton spoke the first national convention thc Federated Women's Institu executive secretary of he dian Library Association, si per cent library service for allj Canadians should be an aim! or | 1967. At present, 83 per c rural Canadians had no library service. As a one - time rural teacher, Miss Morion sa d s lieves a successful rural school education is impossible v good rural libraries. Ca National Library had already photographed catalogues of " Canadian libraries. •• own books, too,"she sad, referring lo a list of 40 bo ks about, Canada which have been suggested for every public library. ' ,v Marshal Zhukov to-! leaders appeared at a Turku Embassy reception honoring Tu key's National Day. All sought ' CITES WILSON MOVE Khrushchev and Premier lai Buiganin reminded ' i pondents of Defence Secretary Charles Wilson's resignation recently in the United States; "It's all the same," they in- The Soviet le ership has fa e days to offer any c nouncement has been printed, announcing that Marshal Rodion Y. Malinovsky replaced Zhukov. said: "You will not friendship. The Soviet military press was full of admonitions Tuesday concerning the supremacy of the Communist party and the debt of loyalty owed io it by the armed forces. Thc suggesti '— without pi ,' John T. Haig, minister produce a year" is necessary to workable government the Commons. GOVERNMENT The June 10 election produced a minority government. Party standings in the 265 - seat Corn- Ill, Liberal 105, CCF 25, Social Credit ent-Liberal in which he reviewed ie political series Thc Na- date of Nov. 1. The prime minister replied that cheques for any month arc re- Thus, the $9 increase'to $35 in old age pensions would be paid for tlie first time in cheques received by recipients at the end of November. In his view that made Nfld. Skies WEDNESDAY, Octobi TIDES .12:15 a.m, 32:28 p.m. . 7:21 a.m. 7:40 p.m many left Tuesday for a three- week tour of the United States.' Canada and Britain t» itudy Mental Patients Take Over Hospital t of division of The P.C. Party And Patronage OTTAWA (CP)-The first : ported dismissal of a gove: ment employee in tbe wake of thc June 10 election produ ed a 20- minute rumpus in the Commons Tuesday. But there was no ind!- denying "patronage' was in- volved In the dismissal, said: "Public servants who participate In politics certainly eopardlze their jobs." The dispute was over the prac Mce, admitted by both sides to' 'lave existed for years, that a government employee ean bc summarily dismissed if -a Com- ployee engaged in poltical partisanship. The practice was cond Tuesday by CCF spokesmen. Its ■exlstenccwas admitted by Transport Minister Hees and former Liberal transport minister Lionel Chevrier. Mr. Chevrier said it the dismissal last Friday of i assistant gang foreman at a f Lawrence River canal at Carnal, Ont. The man, not named the Commons, has becn identified as George W, Forrester. Mr. Hees said the man missed on the basis of a declaration by A. C. Ci (PC-Gronville-Dundas) t He s hired May 16 on the recommendati of the Liberal candidate in Gren- ville-Dundas. "I think it is clear that this has been the practice which has been accepted by succe ding governments over a great manyl years, and that. . .1 have simply followed thatpracticc," Mr. He said. The debate recalled reported ing patronage—thc hiring of people on recommendation of politicians. .Mr. Hamilton also issued Stanley Knowles, deput; leader, calledthe Cardinal firing "patronage in reverse" Hamilton. "There is no question of patri age," Mr.. Diefenbaker s a i in politics certainly eopardlze A. Wesley Stuart (L - Ch totte) asked which MP had p immended thc firing o forera Mr. Green replied that if foreman vvas fired there' " was done after a thorough ir. sane, took over the building Tues day and held about 30 guards hostages. No one vvas reported injured. Guard Kenneth Bergcr, released Dr. E. R. Hodgson hospital the building several t-.ves. vvas reported trying to get men to surrender a gas gun. ' i. (API | (Dom. Spokane) called la secur- for a legislative investigation of te Men- the hospital. He said he had «vi- „_ :_ j...; of ..snocking conditions" POLICE STAND WATCH Deputy sheriffs mannec guard towers. Stale pair building houses about 15 KNIVES AGAINST BACK Bcrger said they took him lhe personnel office, acting captain >f the and told them still. ' they started building, picking up a guard d he and the other Weather tlurric—A few clouds after sunset. High today 40. TEMPERATURES |
CONTENTdm file name | 13060.jp2 |