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m Grant* It and ib and Brlen, mcht and ■lie, em- ■Crawford spperrell I Marine Mount War are tbe Btr- fn seeing seasons. CLAY and relti [8-0161 For Belter Sunday Llsttnlng 6.15 p.m,—Grantland Rice Story 6.30 p.m.—Music ln a Modern Mood, 9.00 p.m.—Red For Danger. 10.00 p.m.—Obsession. Vol.. 62. No. 153 ■ -ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND,: SATURDAY, JULY: 23,-1955 . (Price 5 cents) '. i PRESENTS ■ ' SONATA No. 23 in F MINOR ; avaibhlr al Charles Hutton & Sons ' S'S-, 4000 Men Battle Big Ontario Forest Fires 200.000 Sq. Miles Timberland Blazing By THE CANADIAN PRESS More than 4,000 men, scattered through 200,000 square miles of smoke-clouded bushlands Friday, battled Ontario's biggest fire menace in seven years, 1 Officials said never before have ''Summit99 Meetings.AtAgenda's End: Heard By Big Four Conference World News —Briefs CANADIAN TOUR LONDON (Reuters) — Forty imp: Britons will leave next "Riur-day for a four-week tour of Canada under an education trust irt ur by \V. H. Rhodes, who will -jvj the boys an official send*off itLor.don's city hall. HIGH LINE BACK JURIS—Renters'— Christian Ihor. world's most famous folitnn ricsipner, will bring heel: the high ■'EmprcM Jos* *p'i;mc" waist, according to riranee information on winter rpl.rri.0M duc to be shown --<-•!. The reports say Hubert r,e i'rivenchy. miot.irr leading cf-'fj-irr will also feature ihe 'jfrfl-Jiipfi «*aistli»e, which fpr.* with a long skirt and a vdlmey figure. CABINET TO RESIGN JAKARTA. Indonesia (Reuters) Th- Indonesian cabinet announced Friday night it will resign today '■•Ibivii-z a four-week" erisis be- Uttn lhc government and army, EXPERT DEAD MOSCOW—AP — The death rf .Mflj.Gen. Dmitry Alexond- rprich Ventsel, a ballistic^ «. pfrt credited with numerous tifrcfoptnents in Soviet artit- Itrj and ntiialioH, was announced Friday in Red Star, the Soviet Army newspaper. V**tt(- -W, a Stalin prize winner, head- ri the faculty ot Zhukavsky Ah* Forces and Engineering At/idcmy and teas the author tf-inmrroH* tejrt books. , (T.1MBKR PROMOTED LONDON (Reulcrs) — Col. Sir Un Hunt, bader of the 1953 Brit* R'xpodition which conquered Mt. E**rr*i. has been promoted tern- p*Tiry brigadier, tho war office iv.oar.ced Friday night. VISITS RUSSIA SVW VORK--AP — William F*t!frr. pwWisfirr 0/ the En- rs'fip-n-dia Briton 11m mid f«—«trr U.S. srnalor from Con- -f**icn* will go to Russifi this •V' t*> report on idfologicnl iwtlr>vmen\x fhere.,hfc offict wl Friday. He plans to writt. i W.niw-11'ord rcport for the 'Frifnnnica book of the year" f- U put out early next year. POPE TO BROADCAST VATICAN CITY (AP)-The Pope r3 tl**se Rio'de Janeiro's inter- •"tlfiiwl eucharistic congress with 1 radii address Sunday. It will be bidcast by the Vatican radio at 1-** conclusion of the great euchar- l-ftif prnccssion to be held that day I* tte Brazilian capital. SAFE LANDING .YE IV YORK — AP — An Ca-trrn Air Lines Super Can- *'tt?niiun, opproacJm.g Idle* 11M airport, notified the con- I'ol Um-er Friday it had land- "J pear trouble. From, the *"r.!rfil tower, thc line's chief *trk<inic told thc plane's en* "inrrr .loin lhc landing pear '***M he /ottered and locked. W" p'-ir***, tr'tose JliffM ort- tw.rd nt San Antonio, Tc.r.( '*<*•■ 'cttrifrf safely with its 48 fC-*rui-pr5. ' so many fires threatened over so wide an area. They said no overall plan of action Is possible as men and machinery arc constantly tolng diverted from one partially, controlled fire to another threatened area. T. E. Mackey, chief of the Ontario lands and forests department's division of fire protection, said only rain can put an end to the 115 fires licking through bone- dry timber and bush and burning low in undergrowth. Mr. Mackey's department, inundated" with constant calls from hard-pressed areas for more men and equipment, is counting on rain Sunday or Monday to aid fire- lighting crews. SMOKE HAMPERS FLIERS Officials of thc photographic survey corporation said, despite ex* cellent flying weather, aerial photography has been made impossible in many sections by thick smoke. In niany areas people were reminded of th-a bi** fire of 1948 in the Mlssissag! and Chap'eau districts which consumed almost 1,- 000,000 acres and sent up smoke which drifted as far soulh as Texas. Mr. Mackey said fires this year have consumed approximately 250,000 "acres of forest and bushland, only & quarter of the area covered by the 1948 blaze. But he said firefighting expenses are expected to be higher than ever before for the province, with a likely year's end total of more than $1,000,000, Some 200,000 square mites of bushland was closed as out-of- bounds to all hut forest workers. Fire, districts closed to the public were Kapuskaslng, Cochrane, Swastika, Gogama, Chapleau, White River, Sudbury and Sault Ste. Marl:. Right-Hand Man Resigns By DOUGLAS CLARK BUENOS AIRES (Reu- By ALAN HARVEY GENEVA (CP)—Premier Edgar Faure and President Eisenhower Friday laid before the Big Tour conference ■uuiynwi-r ******,« v..~» plans for piercing the Iron ters)—President Juan Per- Curtain and reducing inter- Eisenhower, Faure Seek Modification Travel, Trade Bans E.'il' MEETS WEST—Face (0 face for the first time in 10 years, East and West meet for tlie Big Four "Summit" talks in tJic green and gold Council C.'aiiibcr of -Geneva's Palace of Nations. Clockwise from far right, the delegations arc: U.S., headed by President Eisenhower; French, headed by Premier Faure; British, led by Prime Minister Eden; Rtwsian, /leaded by Premier Nikolai Bulganin, Chinese Warn They May fd: 'c*f-J service Under Bomb British Shipping To Prevent Cargoes Going To Communists ( By SPENCER MOOSA ■ TAIPEI, Formosa (AP)—Sources who should know said Friday the Chinese Nationalists are anxious to avoid Fire In Commons OTTAWA (CP) — Opposition member John B. Hamilton said Friday that Fisheries ' Minister Sinclair made a slanderous statement last month about helicopter companies in Canada. Mr. Hamilton, Progressive Conservative member for York West, referred in tlie Commons to an exchange lie had in the chamber ii'ill. Hli. [*,..,.1~:.. .... !..„_ nt -1 I national tension by permitting freer contact between thc peoples of East and West. "Closer relations between p copies are an essential element in any relaxation of international tension," Faure told a lU-hour meeting at which he proposed a nine- point plan. Eisenhower's three - point proposal envisaged elimination of mutual distrust, increased trade and a free and friendly exchange of ideas and peoples as a means of removing barriers on "the paths toward the objectives we commonly seek." .Prime Minister Eden ana Premier Bulganin did not speak at this sixth session of the conference. Another meeting, expected to be the last of the conference, is scheduled for this morning. out of control near Blind River, east of Sault Ste, Marie, A't Cochran^. Timmins. Kapus kasing and Iroquois Fall.--, loud speaker trucks pleaded for volunteers to fight the -t-OOO-asre blaze in Ottaway township. 10 miles southeast of Cochrane. Altogether, officials believe, al least 13,000 acres of slash, timber and swamp in the Cochrane, Kapuskaslng and S w a s 11 ka districts smouldered or flamed. Scouts Gather For Jamboree MONTREAL (CP) - The vanguard of 10,000 Boy Scouts arrived here Friday and made interim camp before heading for Niagara* on-the-Lake, Ont., for the world jamboree. Some 130 boys arrived at nearby Dorval airport for the world. Boy Scout jamboree' to be held Aug. 18*28. The scouls headed for Ihe Canadian National Railways exhl* bilion grounds In suburban Lachine where a massive assembly camp lias been organized by th** Scouts Association and La Federation des Scouls Catholiquus. Some 250 more seouts'ai'c due today and "0 more Tuesday In the air-ferry operation lhat will carry more than 1,000 scouts across the Atlantic, Mom than 10,000 scouts from 41 countries -are scheduled to attend the jamboree—the first of Its kind in North America, Tha sources refused lo be iden tifod. They arc familiar with high policy decisions. Use ol air power to deter British ships, from entering such ports as Foochow is considered prohahle in the event—and possibly before— any largc-fcalc hostilities break out in the Formosa strait. Use of planes has apparently been considered because oE the British threat to use the Royal Navy to protect British merchant ships trading with Red China. The Nationalists are evidently convinced that; while Britain might use warships to protect hcr merchantmen, London would hesitate to order the RAF to afford similar protection. TOO MUCH AN ALLY The'thinking here seems to bs that this would, as one quarter put it, make Britain "too much an open ally, of Mao Tse*tung," the 'Bed Chinese leader. in*-.* vn »■/« •—» i--..■"*■*■■■ ■ ■- * ■ -■' where thc Communis build -»--,.,■ ■ , , , •,., cnuld.be translated into an attack «'<*■>■ record and •« net like on the offshore islands, and even ^»cr companies uhich 'have been ['Jekyll-Hyde" Policy n Air Transport On IHC OHMtuiu isjuump, nun w.vn - - on Formos-i itself, U tha Beds dc-j dropping helicopters around eided lo take the risks" Involved.! emmtry." Thc Nationalists arc particularly anxious tn im ll trade with Foochow, capital of Fukicn. A British stonmer, the 7,777-ton Indwells reported she was at on's right-hand man resigned his parly job in a mass shakeup of the regime announced Friday. But there still was no indication how the 53 - year • old president | would emerge from bchind-the* scenes manoeuvres among leaders of the Argentine armed forces, believed to be seeking the gradual breaking down of the Peron regime. The man who resigned is the country's vice-president, Rear-Admiral Alberto Teissaire. He luit his job as chairman of the supreme council, or titular leader, of the Peronista party backing the president. The 64-year-old admiral told a press conference he was giving up the job to concentrate on his task as vice-president of the country. OFFER RESIGNATIONS At the same time, he announced that all other members of the parly's supreme council also had their resignations to make ...i..U-e-eli-'ction-. of-new. .o/fi*{- part of the political shakeup; by Peron after he sur- i^™c"^PX£Vi W"« P-**--„ cmli„uJ *«rSHshn,ent „, . Joijt LIMITED TO TOP MEN Today's session will b* rtitrit- ted, with only thr* leaden, fonljpi ministers and two assistant* ft* each group present. Each lidt hat had 10 or more personj present for previous meetings. By remaining «lent Friday, Bulganin passed up an opportunity to give Russia's reaction lo the plan advanced by Eisenhower Thursday for a mutual exchange of military information between the Soviet Union and the United State**,. The only indication of Russia's attitude on this was given by an unidentified member of the Soviet delegation who circulated a report that Russia is unlikely to go along with Eisenhower's suggestion for exchange of blueprints and air Inspection of military establish ments. The Russian spokesman slid « reason Is that it makes no provision for abolition of atomic and hydrogen bombs. But, he added, the Soviet delegation does not doubt the sincerity of Eisenhower's plan and feels it might be possible to study it if it were linked with the prohibition of nuclear weapons. *> r Mr. Hr-millon said Friday: "Thi! appears to he n slanderous state niunt, I would think, about the balance of companies in thii field." ) inenweus rcpurwa suu .-.*.■, -^-j Mr. Sinclair was not in the Com- tacked by two Nationalist Thun-, monr. He left recently for Moscow] «gime'wouid lead to chaos-and derjats in the Formosa strait July to attend an international moating the air force's attitude is uncer- 9, but offered no casualties arid 0n whaling. tain only flight d*.ma*-e. She continued1 ' her journey to Shanghai. Britain protested the incident. The Nationalists have insisted on what they term. tiV sovereign right lo close any Chir.c:c port to shipping. They call it a defensive measure. enters closes today The Bill Lynch Circus is leaving this week-end for a six-day show in Grand Falls, which opens there Monday. Then they go to Corner Brook for another stand. * OTTAWA (CP)-An op- ition lawyer-politician 0 has appeared before air transport board Fri- ■y accused the government a Jckyll and Hyde .attire on over-all air policy x Canada. J°aii B. Hamilton (PC-York t!l> said in the Commons that] 1IV one hand the government !* *»ying everything is rosy In the plry economically and that air Fla-Portalion is developing by fa* and bounds. "ti be added, only last autumn * ttvtrnment and the air trans- |j**, board rejected a licence ap- r^lioi, iur , competitive air ■2" on tb* ground economic IJ-lilio-u did nut make thla serv- \L&Pr-wtiinc. _Tr* Hamilton did not say so E'lfl«lly, but he apparently re- f■■ ^ »n applicatipn by Asso- "M Airways Ltd. of Edmonton to operate a service in the Northwest Territories in competition with Canadian Pacific Airlines Mr, Hamilton acted as counsel for Associated Airways before the air transport board which, Transport Minister Marler said Thursday night, tentatively favored the application but later rejected it after Mr. Marlcr asked the board hi reconsider. Mr. Mario*, said that his action was motivated by thc fact that'Canada was (ln a moderate recession at thc time. KIND OWN COURSE Mr. Hamilton said Friday lhc government should provide a general background of sound regulatory and promotional policies, letting the industry find its own course In competition .wilh all other forms of transportation, But this wouid'-be accumpliilitd only by provision of an air transport board free from cabinet interference and by the government owned Trans*Canada Air Lines being placed on an equal footing with other air firms. Talks On German Problem Bogged over whether month's uprising, Peron should go. Navy leaders are believed to bej pressing for his immediate re- moval. Army leaders are divided—some 'believe the immediate breaking up of tha Peron tain. PARTY CRISIS Meanwhile, Peron's order that party officials cannot hold government jobs has caused a grave crisis in the Peronista ranks. The crisis is most evident in Congress where the Chamber If Deputies has been unable to meet because of tha continued absence of Peronista deputies arguing who shall resign their cimgrt-ssimial I'l-mmilU'f .i'lbs. oppiiMlii.ti HuilU'-il party members say .tlii-" lias led tlit* country 1 ti lo "anairliy." blitt havi' de- mamlo'l nn imiui'di.iiT reMimpliim of cuiigi'L's-ii'i'u*i| •'■.iivil'.'*.. formulate a final communique for approval by their chiefs. The No, 1 task of the foreign ministers remains to work out some plan for their continued study—in Geneva probably in October—of the question of German r**unification. Their second task is lo report on disarmament prospects. But as a new and separate project they weite to report on the Soviet proposal for an interim agreement between the East and West blocs by which they would agree to settle their disputes by peaceful negotiation. OUTLINE ,0F PLAN Faure's plan for increasing East-West contacts, the final item on the agenda, included these proposals: I. K-jcilities for tiulivtdual limr- isls li'imi K.isi ami Weil lu vi-.il carli iiUier'-* jvuiiiilriea. -'. <Tillui'.il e\i'ljjiu/ea siiiiun'f ■jiutt-s-iiuial, ■jt'iciilifiL', t?i*tii*m'.-l jtul aili'tiT oi'^mu/aliiJib'. ;». An t-Nvliatige uf i.nifs.s.-i'lrs, .sl'i-li'iil-i tinti lecturer*!. 4. Free access io the sources of information, particularly for the,' press, in all countries, and an un- rinitfiv uiiii .knil.A.. »„,i „,„„ 1 dcrlaking by each of the big four Cloudy uilh showers, and warm- hc3rls fl( g0(.crnm5nt lo pPrmit m er, High 6o. Temperatire at 3 publidlv in lhEir oWn countries for WEATHER a.m.—35 degrees. Nfld. Skies SATURDAY, July 23" Sunrise '.. 4:26 a.m. Sunset 7:48 p.m. TIDES High 10:10 a.m. 10:24 p.m. Low 4:18 a.m. 4:55 p.m. SUNDAY, July 34 Sunrise 4:27 a.m. Sunset ..- 7:47 p.m. TIDES High .... .10:52 a.m. 11:09 p.m. Low 5:03 a.m. 5:50 p.m. Yestenlay afternoon the'Ambassador of- the United Slates, to Canada" and" Mr?. Sluarlwe^.guestsof.hommrala.tea^i.ven at Government 'Mouse, -iron.'. Mr. . H. " "" '"' " --- -. -e t 1 r* T.I ("■*„,,,, n t-*.-i.,.ii.- fVlYl. Douglas"Stunrt and Mrs. Stuart"are-lhe yuc-slv of Ll. GcncVal, Glenn 0. Ktu-ciis. Commander North. East Air'.Command during Iheir ..lay in St.-.Jclin's. Left to-right: Mrs Siuarl.Lt. Governor Sir p. C. Outerbridge Kt., C.J3.,113,ltrD.R.6.,. .LL.D,., Lady ..Cuter- '.. bridge, Hon. Mr:'R, Douglas Stuart, U.S. [Ambassador, *■*- INSIDE 2—Vacation buying guide. 3—Squid Giggin' st Holy* rood. 4—Movi? rsviews, 6-".Why Do They Do i»?^' —editorial. 7—Women'* n«wa. 8—Sport. 9-10'U—Baby Contest. 12—The Church P*g«. 13—Farm Pagt. ** 11—Com to, pUUll«-JI.< .11 u .. - declarations by any of tlie other three on international affairs. 5. An exchange of statistics on the economic and social situation in the four countries. 6. The development of interna- of general public Interest irom which 'all countries would derive mutual benefit. LOWER BARRIERS Eisenhower said that "to help achieve the goal of peace based on justice and right and mutual understanding," these "concrete steps... could be taken:" "1. To lower the barriers which now impede the interchange of information and Ideas between our peoples. "2. To lower the barriers which now impede the opportunities for people to travel anywhere in the world for peaceful, friendly purposes, so that all will have a chance to know each other face to face. ■*3, To create -conditions which will entourage nations tu increase the exuliaii^e uf peaceful -foods tlii,LHi*>l'-Jiit the -..urltJ." While t-ldeli Uitl not spfetik Friday, lie di-l tirctilate n plan Whii'h i-i-Netl lui* uu-lea-.eU cultural, li ade tijiiml add tumimiiiu-altt-u l-uii- laeta* brhvireit Kast ulid Weal, lie .specifically teiine-ited area ter freedom for Western journalist! tu travel in Russia. Friday's brief meeting started an hour behind time in hopes the foreign ministers could hammer out, some form nt agreement. But Foreign Secretary Macrnillan, State Secretary Dulles, Foreign Minister Pinay and Foreign Minister Molotov remained deadlocked on the thorny Gerraaa question. -•*» «.,!■■ ■:,■!* 1* T.zU:y..<i::x::V& ■. Tt^;^aa .:<:-T^;T^B| ^^TT:Z^ (NLM-^Rfldi-jre^photo) TJIE SOVIET DELEGATION to the Big Four Conference at Geneva, on Thuntiuy jteijnl President Kixenhotce'r vi'ahe his electrifying "exchange of Rccrclx" prnposnl for i-:nrld peace. Left to right ore: Defence Mini- .iter Georgi- ZhvUnn; NiUita Khru'fhev, head of Cofliii'uim* Pnrtj*;.' frcmier ft'icotai, flul-janin; mid f'oieign JKliifoter-. V.-'JU." Molotov, •[■ tin ii-*.-!',Jl,S*1:i -F-fTO^ '■:;JsM V-.- -;r-;H X\ %}* s;" i-T:-*' -X x,k$ ■i; €x ! I**"-?' t ■\m ;'»i s[x* 1; ir "'fTt'il ; if -'! •-,i<«r,,i - '■*'!'■.: ■'■Mi. Y'W T* wx ; is.*;, u.-'j- : ll ■iwSi ■f'f:p*. . 'mm: Xj
Object Description
Title | The Daily News (St. John's, N.L.), 1955-07-23 |
Date | 1955-07-23 |
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 | (7.99 MB) -- http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19550723.pdf |
CONTENTdm file name | 51.cpd |
Description
Title | 001 |
Description | The Daily News (St. John's, N.L.), 1955-07-23 |
PDF File | (7.99MB) -- http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/dailynews/TheDailyNewsStJohnsNL19550723.pdf |
Transcript |
m Grant*
It and
ib and
Brlen,
mcht and
■lie, em-
■Crawford
spperrell
I Marine
Mount
War are
tbe Btr-
fn seeing
seasons.
CLAY
and
relti
[8-0161
For Belter Sunday Llsttnlng
6.15 p.m,—Grantland Rice Story
6.30 p.m.—Music ln a Modern
Mood,
9.00 p.m.—Red For Danger.
10.00 p.m.—Obsession.
Vol.. 62. No. 153
■ -ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND,: SATURDAY, JULY: 23,-1955 .
(Price 5 cents)
'. i PRESENTS ■ '
SONATA No. 23 in F MINOR
; avaibhlr al
Charles Hutton & Sons
' S'S-,
4000 Men Battle Big
Ontario Forest Fires
200.000 Sq. Miles Timberland Blazing
By THE CANADIAN PRESS
More than 4,000 men, scattered through 200,000
square miles of smoke-clouded bushlands Friday, battled
Ontario's biggest fire menace in seven years,
1 Officials said never before have
''Summit99 Meetings.AtAgenda's End:
Heard By Big Four Conference
World News
—Briefs
CANADIAN TOUR
LONDON (Reuters) — Forty
imp: Britons will leave next
"Riur-day for a four-week tour of
Canada under an education trust
irt ur by \V. H. Rhodes, who will
-jvj the boys an official send*off
itLor.don's city hall.
HIGH LINE BACK
JURIS—Renters'— Christian
Ihor. world's most famous
folitnn ricsipner, will bring
heel: the high ■'EmprcM Jos*
*p'i;mc" waist, according to
riranee information on winter
rpl.rri.0M duc to be shown
--<-•!. The reports say Hubert
r,e i'rivenchy. miot.irr leading
cf-'fj-irr will also feature ihe
'jfrfl-Jiipfi «*aistli»e, which
fpr.* with a long skirt and a
vdlmey figure.
CABINET TO RESIGN
JAKARTA. Indonesia (Reuters)
Th- Indonesian cabinet announced
Friday night it will resign today
'■•Ibivii-z a four-week" erisis be-
Uttn lhc government and army,
EXPERT DEAD
MOSCOW—AP — The death
rf .Mflj.Gen. Dmitry Alexond-
rprich Ventsel, a ballistic^ «.
pfrt credited with numerous
tifrcfoptnents in Soviet artit-
Itrj and ntiialioH, was announced Friday in Red Star, the
Soviet Army newspaper. V**tt(-
-W, a Stalin prize winner, head-
ri the faculty ot Zhukavsky
Ah* Forces and Engineering
At/idcmy and teas the author
tf-inmrroH* tejrt books.
, (T.1MBKR PROMOTED
LONDON (Reulcrs) — Col. Sir
Un Hunt, bader of the 1953 Brit*
R'xpodition which conquered Mt.
E**rr*i. has been promoted tern-
p*Tiry brigadier, tho war office
iv.oar.ced Friday night.
VISITS RUSSIA
SVW VORK--AP — William
F*t!frr. pwWisfirr 0/ the En-
rs'fip-n-dia Briton 11m mid
f«—«trr U.S. srnalor from Con-
-f**icn* will go to Russifi this
•V' t*> report on idfologicnl
iwtlr>vmen\x fhere.,hfc offict
wl Friday. He plans to writt.
i W.niw-11'ord rcport for the
'Frifnnnica book of the year"
f- U put out early next year.
POPE TO BROADCAST
VATICAN CITY (AP)-The Pope
r3 tl**se Rio'de Janeiro's inter-
•"tlfiiwl eucharistic congress with
1 radii address Sunday. It will be
bidcast by the Vatican radio at
1-** conclusion of the great euchar-
l-ftif prnccssion to be held that day
I* tte Brazilian capital.
SAFE LANDING
.YE IV YORK — AP — An
Ca-trrn Air Lines Super Can-
*'tt?niiun, opproacJm.g Idle*
11M airport, notified the con-
I'ol Um-er Friday it had land-
"J pear trouble. From, the
*"r.!rfil tower, thc line's chief
*trk |
CONTENTdm file name | 35.jp2 |