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9,15 a.m.-No lullaby for Use. 9,45 a.m.-Burtons of Banner Street. 10.30 a.m.-Adopted Son. 9,30 p.m.-Coma A-Cajlirig. 9,30 p.m.-Coma A-CaJUng. presents • , NUTCRACKER SUITE available il Charles Hutton & Sons Vol. 62. No. 240 ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1955 (Price 5 cents) * Eden Promises to Return Visit Of Soviet Leaders By ARTHUR GAVSHON GENEVA (AP)—Sir Anthony Eden informally has promised Soviet leaders he will visit Russia some time after this trip to Britain next spring diplomatic officials reported Sunday night. > i The prime minister wjs said lo have given this undertaking to So viet Premier Nikola Bulganin and Soviet Communist party boss Ni- Wta Khrushchev during informal exchanges at Ihe Big Four summit conference here last July. The informants said it was arranged lhal the Soviet government would extend an official, invitation to Eden when lhe Russian leaders litit Britain in the spring. Soviet sources attending the current Bi& Four foreign ministers conference said they assume Eden, accompanied probably by Foreign Secretary Harold Macrnillan and officials, will come to Russia within a year after Russian loaders visit Britain, Bulganin and Khrushchev arc expected In Britain next April or May. No firm date for the first official visit of Soviet government lenders to Britain has yet been announced, however. The Informants said ii is not yet knaw'n whether the So/let foreign minister — at present Vyaeheslav Molotov—will come alon* with Bulganin and Khrushchev. They noted these two Russians have made or have arranged trips to other coun tries without Molotov and so they presume lhat unless, by next jprins, Russia has a new foreign minister, Bulganin and Khrushchev will bc accompanied by aides rather than by other members of fa* government, There I.i a belief among Western Governments that Molotov is near- in; the end of his lone career as ihe Kremlin'? foreign policy chief. The name of P. T, Sheplluv editor- in-chief of the Communis) P?rty rr;an Pravda who in the last few days has bcen awarded the Order of I.onin, lias bcen mentioned mosl ;* Molntov's likeliest successor. Sir Wlnslon Churchill was thr l»t British nrimo minister to vlstl Eii^to. He Attended tlie Valla conference just ovcr 10 ycars ago, Etlen accompanied him Eden also visited Moscow in 1943 n foreign minister for wartime references with the leaders of iho l.-te .Joseph'Stalin's government. W livo Hunters Arc Killed HALIFAX-(CP) - T\v,-» hunting ompanions were shot <mri killed I Saturday near Elmsdalc l» wtitrall N'ova Scotia. ttcorso William Smtlh, 37,' of nearby Falrvlew was killed with a .W3 bullet as he carried & bagged rlrer on Ids shoulder. Police said Says Newsprint Companies Are Profiteering WASHINGTON (AP) - Representative Arthur Klein (Dem, N.Y.) charged Saturday lhat the recent price increases on newsprint from Canada amount to profiteering. Klein is chairman of a House ot Representatives inlersta'e and foreign commerce sub • ommlltee making an inquiry into newsprint supplies. Several Canadian producers have announced increases of ^3, §4 nnd $5 a lon, making the delivered price in New York $129, $130 and $131, They blamed rising costs. Klein said; "There was apparently nothing to justify increasing tlie cost of newsprint, neither wage mcreases nor other costs, ' "By increasing the price of newsprint, newspaper costs are also increased. This may actually force some papers to go out of business. "There's nothing our government can do about the price ol newsprint in Canada, although the possibilities of ramficallons In tits country and possible violation of the anti-trust low is something that might wcll be looked into." Klein also reported that his committee will set out Nov. 14 n visits lo paper mills in Tennessee, Texas and Alabama, He said "wc want lo sec if there arc Mime ways by whicii wc can increase domestic tics so lhat we'll not bo at the mercy of thc Canadian producers." Morc than 80 per com of all newsprint consumed in lhe United Stales comes from Canada. DULLES WON'T. POSE—Soviet Foreign Minister Vyachcslav Molotov (right) shrugs as U.S. Secretary ot State John Foster Dulles (left) refuses lo leave his automobile for a formal pose for photographers after thcir meeting on the crisis in thc Middle East at Geneva, Switzerland. In automobile with Dulles are :U.S, Ambassador to Russia Charles Bohlen (right )and Assistant Secretary of Slate Livingston Merchant (center). Restore Youssef rocco France Promises Democratic Government Gales Delay Liners LONDON (AP) - Atlantic gales have delayed Europe-bound ocean liners. The Cunard liner Samaria is ex pectcd r.t S'Mithumpi'in !rmn ada on Tuesday, -13 hours lute. Fo;; held Up the Peninsular and Oriental liner Himakty.i for !)'j -»—^ hours before it ciuld doek al Til-' |j j->-m bury Saturday. She came from! J_ \J3l Australia. The Himalaya anchored! off Margate until the fo-j cleared. PARIS (AP)-Sidi Mohammed Ben Youssef was officially informed Sunday of France's decision lo restore liim ns sultan of Morocco. ' A declaration by Ben Youssef and Foreign Minister Anionic Pinay, issued after a brief conference, paid they agreed that Morocco will bc made a "democratic state, with a constitutional monarchy." To strains of the Marseilles and the Chcrificn (Moroccan) hymn, lhc sultan — unceremoniously deposed two ycars ago—said: "Wc consider this day a decisive date In the hlatory of our countries," The new government and Fiance, the sultan said, will conduct negotiations "desti.ied to make Morocco an independent stale, united to! turn—the prime demand of Moro- France by permanent ties of an! ccan nationalists—was still not an nounced. Nor were any deadlines fixed for the shaping of the new Moroccan regime, Tiie dale most frequently men- dsFor Settlement Of Eastern Strife Huntfor\A$k EgyP1' ^rael Escaped (Accept U.N. JL n.. Pm/TAMII T rt T3TJT3 Offer, Three Die When Car Is Burned Convicts Shot Way Out Of Prison VANCOUVER (CP) — John Wasylenchuk 42, one of four convicts who shot their way out of Oakalla prison Friday, was recaptured Sunday by RCMP in suburban Burnaby. Wasylenchuk offered no resistance as two RCMP officers and an Oakalla prison official arrested iiim on a street. The capture followed a "shoot- to-kiir order in thc search for two "Valjcc werc bmWc ,0 aivc anv rrrivLT'T^ 1° PnMn '»'■«'« ^tnils immediacy, break triday afternoon ( Thn „.„:,,„„. c,nnn ,e X By EDMOND LE BRETON Washington (AP)—The United States "with deep concern," urged Israel and Egypt Saturday to accept United Nations proposals for ending their border fighting —and asked them to reply. Military clashes along.theii frontier have now reached biggti proportions than any the troubled Middle East has seen since thi cmcoumi, Que. (CP)-ThrCDi 'S^t £bT« I- persons were burned to death Sat- rael and Ahmed Husseiil of Egvpt urday night when their car overturned and caught fire on lhc road between Normandin and St. Moth- ode in northern Quebec. Provincial police here identified onc of the victims as Augustin Val- lee of Normandin. Another was a young girl identified only as a Miss Tremblay of Ste. Cioix, Que, There was no immediate identification of the third victim were called to the state department at separate times to be told by Assistant Secretary George Allen that the United States "ha« noted with deep concern the increasing tempo of hostilities ba* tween Israel and Egypt." In a statement issued afterward* the department said Allen told tha diplomats "thc United Statci strongly supports the United Na- lions' efforts tn achieve settlement J by peaceful mean?, especially tin Wasylenchuk w„ Sp,,Hr<l ,l,«|.| m™e "f^Si''"' 65: current proposals." He .tked fN mucs rasi nt unctimimi | ^formation as to the two govern. menls' "intentions regarding thcsB matter?." The UN nmpnsaU arc the work of a Canadian Maj.-Gen. E. L. M. to-kill" order in thc search for two interdependence liberally defined and agreed to." COUNCIL HOLDS POWER Under treaties dating from 1&12, Tiie dale most frequently men- [ ing on a sidewalk, with his hack France has run Ihc country, with j Honed for the sultan's icturn h\ in ihc street, by Roland Uncles,! volver when I hoy broke nut. the sultans only figureheads. j Nov, 18, tlic 28th annivctsary of his; supervisor of the youmi offender's1 son HEAT HUSH Under the new arrangement, dc-. original accession. . unji at Oakalla, who -vas on his; A report bv prison oUicials Sal- fined for the first time Sunday, the! Thr new government. In bei ■.'->• I0 work. I urdav that 'llip pnir "^(il rlcaa sultan will apparently a^ume a! broadly based, will "elaborate in- Two RCMP officers, summoned', .m-jiv" mnvpil the hunt .'r-r the e«; p,,1'iS l,,c UN m,Cc supervisor in status similar to thai of British stitutinnal reforms," Ihc Malemcnlj by Uncles from a ncarhy detach.| chpec* nwav rrmn a .'iMarrr traci: lhc 31'rn' Thcy *rf! in'BntIefl lo monarchs, with a Parliament ban- said, but these wore not spelled ment station arrested the unarmed' dling the government. j otlt< H was expected, hov.xver, the crcapcc without a Mi'li^le. Police Until Bon Youssef returns to hir. reforms would result in Moroccans said he was "cold and haggard"' Rabat palace, a reeently-namcd having an effective role m govern- when picked up. Tlie convicted bank robber s capture spurred the search Jor Robert Lewis, 21, the only one u [our escaped prisoners still al large. Two oilier escapees, llaiold Coulter and Carl LaVictoire ucre recaptured shortly after the break in thc yard of warden Hugh. Christie. •Wasylenchuk and Lewis were firmed with two rifles iind a re- four-man council of the tnrone will "continue to conduct current affairs of the empire," the Pinay-Ben Youssef statement said. The council of thc throne bad previously bf- (ercd'its resignation to Ben Youssef. The date of Ben Youssef's re* ing themselves. Since outbursts of Nationalist violence in Morocco this summer and early fall.-tlie French hate sought 'a political' settlement to'quiet thc protectorate and still keop tlie important territory linked with France. ^Political Triumph^PP0^1 For ffipcr*-; away frnm a .>'<i-f ar rr of wet hush and scrub i-mbcr in Buni a by. Al nnc slagr. ,VI0 pn»,in guard.*, RCMP and other poire officers conducted (lie search (oi Wasyk'n- ?!'■;'; and Lewis, The escape came ilivce daj> •jfter Wapylcncbu'i -vc-i* refused !"a'.c to appeal to the Supreme C'jirt of Canada against a life =en tence arising from a o«rik holdup In Burnaby. He was awaiting Mop clashes and reprisals from growing into a new Jewish-Arab war before the baric problem.- of the area can again be attacked diplomatically. WANTS CLEAR LINE Although details have not been made public, it is underwood Cen, Burns called for clearly marking the border in the area now being fought over—ironically a "demil- Mendes-France Police On Track Hit-Run Driver Police have a clue which may Albert Dyer nf Halifax, who fired; lend to llie discovery of who ran | minister Edouard Dcladicr. Hie jun, said lie saw only the deer.! a vehicle into Thomas Spry's 1034 I His election represeulul a clear- PARIS (Reulers)—Pierre Mendes-France took a mighty stride along lhe political comeback trail Saturday when he was elected vice-president of the Radical party by the parly's congress here. Unofficial figures showed the stocky, energetic ex-premier with 1,003 votes to 528 for pre-war prime bullet went thniujh lhc dead; Dodge, which was parked near Im- *»ima] and struck Smith. ■ 1)L,ria| oi] Umju-d, Soiillisidc Knar, lianalil llirtlf, 21. of iLditax and iWmim havt. |KH.„ .^n\ to ^idtlit-y beliavcd Ilirllo died from >.,al c l,L'« ii!i * wm,h llP tiff the a lu-gaugc sliot^im bla»t. but it is mil known who fired lhc nun. Smith's body was found Saturday morning, about 24 hours b*fore a search party discovered Hirtlc's body. ' Hie RCMP said they are conducting a full investigation Into the fatalities, RATTERMAM STARS CLEVELAND (APj-Ucorge Hal- terman emerged Irom lilt shadow cf Otto Graham Sunday as he Pitched Cleveland Browns from an n-point deficit to a 24-M National Football League victory ever New York Giants. The former Montreal Alouettes quarterback who has been second* '(ring to the great Otto thc last force seasons after a-year at Dal- 'a- enjoyed his finest h'.'Ur after taking ovcr Jn lhe second period when Graham suffered a head in- hirv. SOCCER CREATES WOT NAPLES, Italy (Reuters) - One kindred forty persons, nS of them psliccmcn, wcre injured Sunday v'hen a riot broke out uert ovcr a referee's decision In a soccer Same. One of the injured was critically pounded when police Died shots 'a the air and cut" loose with tear *as to break up a bolllc-wiclding *r.iwd besieging thc dressing room where the referee took refuge, SPEED SKATER PIES SACKVILLE, N.B. (CP. - For- nier champion speed skater William F; (Willie) Logan, 4fl, died.ln Sackville Memorial Hospital Sun- ■% after an illness of eight Months. He had been a resident of ''ort Elgin since coming (here frnm Ms home lown nf Saint .lohn, N.B;, >i lakt a business position eight years ago. hit-and-run driver who damned Spry's car to the extent of S75 or more. Damages were done to the left rear door and fender. Spry is a resident of 236 Freshwater Hoad, St. John's. WEATHER Cloudy; rain this .morning, and showers this afternoon. High today 52. cut triumph oyer his oppuuciits in HiL< middle-of-t'lie-road party. Men- des-France, whn sU'ercd through lhe Initoi'tiina iirmustiee while premier, Ind campaigned vigorously among llio provincial It-durations of tlie party represented at llie conference. But his foes, mainly among the Radical members of the French Parliament, soughl to curtail his growing influence in thc party by backstage manoeuvres which kept lhc actual presidency out nt his hands. Ailing elder statesman Edouard Herriot, who has strongly supported Mendes-France in the past, was returned as president of the party after his resignation last year. Prime Minister Edgar Faure is NIfiHT AT THE OPERA-Porlugal's President Cravelni LnppR (tight) whn Is on a state visit to England, attends a gala opera performance with Queen Elizabeth and Prime Minister Anthony Eden at London's Convent Gardens. among the opponents uf Mendcs- France within lhe KadicM party. The two Radical leader* clashed until recently in the National Assembly (lower house} ovar Ihu government's plan to bold early elections, Saturday's vote meant .Meiules- Fruiice will be the man primarily cuueurned with running the Radical party during this critical pre. general' election period. • Mendes • France successfully avoided a split between the Radical party and the ■ government Saturday night. The congress approved his suggestion that a demand for the with- drawal of Radical ministers from tlie government, unless the electoral law is altered in favor of single-member constituencies, be deleted from a motion of the general policy committee. The motion, if passed in ils original form, would have meant the resignation, on pain of exclusion from tlie party, of Faure and his Radical ministers unless the electoral law was changed. The motion approved calls on radicals ln the Council pi the Re- public (upper house) to continue to fight for this reform when the bill for early elections comes before them. €c»r£c W. Ross MONTREAL, Nov. 7 —Election of George \V. W. Ross, Sainl John, j as a vice-president of Royal Secur- j ities Corporation Limited has been announced here by the corporation. Mr. Ross, who is manager of the Saint John office, has been associated with Royal Securities since 1923 and is well known DVLLES AND TITO: . . . ,. D „ .. .. itarized zone"—and for in fact ransfor , tho B. C. n-mtenhary v.-itndr-iwing troons of built sides mr.cwUr-!m-r.,i<T. ' from lhe tS-riiory. Officials said the Bonis proposals now have first priority in U. S. nlans for the Middle East, V Soviet Satellites By STAN SWINTON BRIONI. Yugoslavia tAP»—U.S. Slate Secrelavv This v.juhl mean the United Slates wants thcin given every opportunity to restore poace before any other nossiblc UN move, such as a debate in the Security Council, is tried. Each of thc two ambassadors, who met newspaper men scparal ely after their talks with Allen, accused the other's country of be- ins the aggressor in the border - , righting, in financial circles in the Atlantic ; John Foster Dulles and President Tito of Yugoslavia called I Kadi ambassador disclaimed for Declare War On Gangsterism In Vancouver VANCOUVER (CP)-Sojiad police shock troops, armed with sub-machine guns, shotguns and tear gas will be reorganized here immediately lo stage an all-out war on gangsterism. Reorganization plans were, announced Saturday by acting Police Chief Alan Rossiler following a demand by Mayor -Frcd Hume. Similar squads of shock troops were used last fall following a wave of hank robberies, "I think we should have a new crackdown," Mayor Hume told police commission members Friday following a $7,500 bimk robbery here and the escape of fcur convicts from Oakalla pi toon. The special squads \v;ll bc composed of two-man teams.in tin- marked cars.1 Each officer will be a war veteran trained In.lhe use of machine-guns. provinces, including Newfoundland, where he was manager in St. John's fur .several years, lit! is a director of the .Maritime Electric, Newfoundland Light and Power and olher companies. Also announced is thc appointment of Ivan A. Martin, Montreal, and George C. Stewart, Toronto, as directors of the corporation. Mr. Martin is sales manager of Royal Securities and Mr. Stewart is manager of the Toronto.office. Sunday nii*ht for the restoration of independence to Soviet Russia's European snU'llilus. Their tU'flaruUim ums tlie hi^li-1 — - - - - ■-- ■ h»ht uf a seven-hour im-eliiig at! ASKs TITO'S INFLUENCE this '.syi'ltideil island retrirat in i -• Tliuy had agreed "the C«r- l!u' Adriatic and later on Hit' >mal- ma;- t|Ui>iimi must he titled grad- ler nearby island of Var.j,a. his uutmtry any aggressive inten* linib. l-lban. who U Isucl's chief (Il-V»;iU. tit the United Nations as well as its ambas.sador to the United States, said he. had Jfiven Allen "my ^oveni meat's assurance that it will study in t con- Stores Open Today Water Street stores will be open today as usual. The regular weekly holiday will be celebrated this week on Friday, November llth, Armistice Day, It showed that Tito's views toward other stales in Eastern Europe were not changed by tile visit of Soviet leaders to Belgrade last May. Sitting side by side Willi Tito at the Yugoslav premier's dalmation limestone mansion, Dulles told reporters: 1. They "discussed the peoples if the states of Eastern Europe and were of common accord in roccgnlzing the importance of independence for- these states, noninterference from the outside in ttie:r internal affairs and the right to develop their own social and economic order in ways of their eh-ice." These words could apply to Hungary, Bulgaria, Albania, Romania, Czechoslovakia and Poland., i.ally, step by ?u-p." A>ked about! .-imdivc spirit" tbe UN proposals. ,methods, he said: "Thai's another■ lUts-cin 'said the pro;iwals had question. We shall see"—indicating t)Peil forwarded lo Cairo by the no full agreement. Egyptian UN delegation but he 3. Tlie two statesmen discussed had net handled them and could the deteriorating Middle Eastern nDl ccminent on them. situation with "particular regp^d for the fact that President Tito is going to Egypt" lo visit Premier Nasser in December. While Dulles did no say so, informed sources hinted he asked Tito to use his influence for peace Previously Tito bad planned to postpone his Egyptian visit. Dulles apparently persuaded him to make it promptly. American support of the Philippines for a United Nations Security Council seat against the candidacy nf Yugoslavia did not arise, Dulles said in reply to i question. However, he said emphatically that .Egypt does not wish any large-scale fighting to develop, but wants only peace. Nfld. Skies MONDAY, NOVEMBER 7 Sunrise .. ■. • • . 6.53 a.m. Sunset .. • • .. • * 4.35 p.m. High TIDES Low 12.39 a.m. 7.44 a.m. 12.55 p.m. 8,04 p.m. St. Laurent Warns Must Be No Slack In Defence Effort OTTAWA. (CP) — Prime Minister St. Laurent reiter- oflated Saturday night that there can be no relaxation now irtfthe defence effort in Canada. He told ['Association Canadiennc- Francaisc pour .l'Avancement des Sciences: "It is true . . . that tht- international outlook is more peaceful now than for some years—thanks In part to the increased might of our alliance with the other North At-. lantlc nations. "However, in spite of the Importance of the task of planning for the constant growth in our economy, we cannot, for the time being at least, relax our defence effort, for we are convinced that it is only that effort which has brought shout this bright spot In the cloudy international' sky" The statements were included in not survive." the text of a speech isMied lo tbe press before delivery. At another point, the prime minister, speaking in French, said: "We recognize that thanks to the talents of our Canadian scientists and to the Ideals of organizations such as yours, thanks also to Uic contribution of universities and public bodies, Canada has played an important part in tile outstanding scientific progress achieved during tbe first half of the 20th century and that today our country Is better equipped than ever to hold Its place among the most advanced nations at the dawn nf llie atomic age . . . HAS CONPlltoNCK "We look upon this atomic age with the firm'confidence that the discoveries of the scientists and .the application of those discoveries wUl continue to serve humanity and will not be used to set off view to managing our resources icut Most of Mr. St. Laurent's speech j for our own benefit and witlu was devoted to a description of; prejudicing fuUtiV generations." the work of some government| agencies in the field '>i scientific 'research and development. He said the government ncM, year will begin construction o[ a* new, fully-equipped laboratory fori use by the Pulp and P:per Re-] search Institute of Canada, organ-j ized in 1338 under a joint arrangement among the federal government, McGill University and the Canadian Pulp and Paper Association. "The federal government's con- tinned and Jctii'i> interest in' the fundamental problems af research emphasizes the vast amount or scientific work which remains io he done in this primary field of Canada's economy. "The demand for scientists inj the field of forestry alone is bound catastrophes which humanity .coifldl to increase considerably with a | Tht "hwny bene" proboWy gM *H oome os o feW Meayw it if a» tht *cra«X, i 1 ■'■* 'th '■i? is mm SWgk _% S$M 51. i XX i .■■**■ 4... SSfefiv *%£*• m m A- m r.' iv^Snrt m u'i '.■ *k ^- w 1J?'< tit- iir. ii j', ^ fi' s 2fc. { *j ■ ■ {!;:■ k bx
Object Description
Title | The Daily News (St. John's, N.L.), 1955-11-07 |
Date | 1955-11-07 |
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 | (7.63 MB) -- http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19551107.pdf |
CONTENTdm file name | 3730.cpd |
Description
Title | 001 |
Description | The Daily News (St. John's, N.L.), 1955-11-07 |
PDF File | (7.63MB) -- http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19551107.pdf |
Transcript |
9,15 a.m.-No lullaby for
Use.
9,45 a.m.-Burtons of Banner
Street.
10.30 a.m.-Adopted Son.
9,30 p.m.-Coma A-Cajlirig.
9,30 p.m.-Coma A-CaJUng.
presents •
, NUTCRACKER SUITE
available il
Charles Hutton & Sons
Vol. 62. No. 240
ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1955
(Price 5 cents)
* Eden Promises to
Return Visit Of
Soviet Leaders
By ARTHUR GAVSHON
GENEVA (AP)—Sir Anthony Eden informally has
promised Soviet leaders he will visit Russia some time
after this trip to Britain next spring diplomatic officials
reported Sunday night.
>
i
The prime minister wjs said lo
have given this undertaking to So
viet Premier Nikola Bulganin and
Soviet Communist party boss Ni-
Wta Khrushchev during informal
exchanges at Ihe Big Four summit conference here last July. The
informants said it was arranged
lhal the Soviet government would
extend an official, invitation to
Eden when lhe Russian leaders
litit Britain in the spring.
Soviet sources attending the current Bi& Four foreign ministers
conference said they assume Eden,
accompanied probably by Foreign
Secretary Harold Macrnillan and
officials, will come to Russia
within a year after Russian loaders visit Britain,
Bulganin and Khrushchev arc
expected In Britain next April or
May. No firm date for the first
official visit of Soviet government
lenders to Britain has yet been announced, however.
The Informants said ii is not yet
knaw'n whether the So/let foreign
minister — at present Vyaeheslav
Molotov—will come alon* with Bulganin and Khrushchev. They noted
these two Russians have made or
have arranged trips to other coun
tries without Molotov and so they
presume lhat unless, by next
jprins, Russia has a new foreign
minister, Bulganin and Khrushchev
will bc accompanied by aides
rather than by other members of
fa* government,
There I.i a belief among Western
Governments that Molotov is near-
in; the end of his lone career as
ihe Kremlin'? foreign policy chief.
The name of P. T, Sheplluv editor-
in-chief of the Communis) P?rty
rr;an Pravda who in the last few
days has bcen awarded the Order
of I.onin, lias bcen mentioned mosl
;* Molntov's likeliest successor.
Sir Wlnslon Churchill was thr
l»t British nrimo minister to vlstl
Eii^to. He Attended tlie Valla conference just ovcr 10 ycars ago,
Etlen accompanied him
Eden also visited Moscow in 1943
n foreign minister for wartime
references with the leaders of iho
l.-te .Joseph'Stalin's government.
W
livo Hunters
Arc Killed
HALIFAX-(CP) - T\v,-» hunting
ompanions were shot |
CONTENTdm file name | 3714.jp2 |