
'. , , , I .. "" \ .1, . ~ .' ~ :. ~ . --~----,--.--------------------~,,-;' • " ' '. I , .'." r" , ~ : • ' '. .... ~'. -," 'r~.· . .' '" , ", . I, , • . , . II";''E'" ,,' '''I)'"" "'A''':'' "It'·"'1" .N" EW' S~ ... , ,i, ' ' '" ,; :,' . " ,':; ',:, , ,.. ,,' , ' " . ": . : ' presents . ~ , /. •OVERTURES BY VERDI , \ : .; " '" ~ , 'r •. '.. avallalJle at . ,'-. "';r";"',"'; .......;, ri-ce-'5::·' C-e-nts-) Hutton' Sons "" , . ~Va'":'.I.~'6::'2.~. ~N:-o.-:.l~04~---~----'-sr~~',-JO-, H~~-'S'-':N-EW~fO";':, U~.N-Dl-·A";:'ND~· T-HU..;.R....;SD~A-~,;..MA-Y-1-2,-1..;.95-5 .;.....;~~...;.;..-'{P-. ..;.I"'(harles & " ·'Wel:col11ed,ByWestJ~ , ,',' , Propos,ISeenAs:· '~~:s::!r MajorAdv'ance In; Power Effort For Peace:: 'By rpfOMAS ,HARRIS Reds. Make Concessions To Ease - HELSINKI. (R~uters)-Fin- land, nov.,) over the· wors~ of Negotiatioiis her :post-war economic dif;, ficulties,'has einerged as an By Moshin A:1i. " in'dustrialpower. LONDON (Reuters)--:The .western powers Wednes- " "., •. day, welcomed a new Sovlet dlsarmament .proposal as a.' , New, facto~es and sbl~yards are major advance toward their vie~s on how to halt the, turo1ng out such specialized prod- I uets as electrolytic copper special world arms race. alloy steels, automatic lo~ms, ex· statements from the British, eavators, rock drills, trawlers, French and American delegates "g:tes who also issued statements,·, cargo and passenger ships. attending, the' current five.power Wadsworth expressed doubt about; . , ..'. • dL~~rmament talks here said Rus. ti:c Soviet plan for an eflecllve ':' . FillIand nOW bUIlds the IJlggest si:. has made concessions on major arm checlrup within each nation.; t:nd, .the Finns claim, the best icc· points which have until now ham. "If We do not provide a rcally:; brukers- in the world.. strung negotiations. _ crrectil'c means of seeing 10 it that, These new industrIes were And in Paris External Affairs agreements reached arc carried: ~t:.rted, and some existing ones Minister Pearso~, who has repres- out in fact, then wc will bedelud· .. expan~ed, to produce the $300" cnled Canada at various times at Ir.~ not only ourselves but all the: (Dally NeWs Photo) oou,OOO worf,!! of repar~Uon goo~s, the five.power disarmament talks, peoples of the world w~o hope and i " Delegates from the, various Pl:esbyteries of the ~omen's Missionary Scciety of the United Church are visiting st. John's to attend the annual vJlued at pre·war pnces, whIch (cold a press conference the Rus, lonl! fllr real disarmament," he. I; , meeting of the Conference BraUl'h of the Organization. Left to right, front row: Mrs. H. Strong, Mrs. A. G. KelIoway, Mrs. A.J, Barrett the Finns undertook to send to Eian proposals are "interesting sala. ': :. 5 Russia after the ;1944 armistice. End may be important.'· CONCEDE 2 :lIAJOR POINTS Presidentj Mrs. A. E. Parkins, Mi~!i G. Hollett, Miss A. ~unter, Mrs. J. R. Parsons. 2nd row: Miss M.I1owell, l\frs. L. Noel, Mrs •. W. Locke: The Ru~~ians fixed the composition Some Western officials regarded British 3linister of State Anthony; Mrs. }~'. M, Butt, Mrs. D. Hod~inott. Mrs. 'J. W. Winsor. Mrs, I. A. Richards, Mrs. H. Pike, Mrs, A. Wilkinson. 3rd .row: Mrs. Lewis 'Bartlett, of these reparations, not in ac· the lIIoscO>.v plan, announced car, Nutting said Russia's plan gave: Banfield, cordance with what Finland could hpr Wednesday at a meeting of the' London conference "3 new: Mrs, J. Reynolds, Mrs: G. B. rowell, Mrs. W. R. Fradsham; )Irs. N. Winsor, Mis~M. Hilliard, Miss B. Mrs. Hopkins, Mrs.' D. !l~oduce, but in accordance with C<.mmunist nations in Warsaw, as jci~se of life" aner months of in-; , Eveley, Mrs, M. Jo11nson and'Mrs, E. Fisher. what they. needed. a mOVe to ease the cold war com· coosillcisve talks. He said the: .' .' AIDED BY U. S. LOANS paJable with Russia's !.greement plr.n "is an important and in many; • Jlfore than tradltiona, Finnish :~, an Austrian. stale tr~atr. re.!pects an encouraging dcvelop.: goods like wood produc!s, the Rus· SJlIl1LAR VJEWS ment." 3ians needed machinery for war· '1'he Soviet formula for halting Nulling said Russia lIas made cbmaged !actories,ships for tllc!r the arms race was presented' Tues· hl'o important concessions. NATO Council Calls For'Copter dccimated fishing fleets and diesel d~y at the London meeting. noW Firstly, it has agreed to the locomotives. 111 the third month, of the United Western suggestion on· what the As the. Finns lacked the factor· Nations dis arm a'm e n t com· !'eduction levels of forces of the Ic~, en!:lneering workshops and mission's sub - committee, com· five major poWers should be. Thls shipyards ·to· turn out many of posed of Britain, Canada,. tbe is 1,000,000 to 1,500,000 men for the these commodities, they set about United States, Russia and France. !inlted· States, Russia and Com- Peace In Europ~Atid Asia ~::h~;ad building them with the help of Russia's formula a~ce~t~,. the mUllist China, and 650,000 each .for . , ' .. It loans from the United States. West's proposal for reduclilg~·,the France and Britain. Moscow ear PARIS (A.P.)-Thc 15 countries of the Atlantic tJncUon can be made between the concept 'of Quemoy and the !\lat· An announcement from When the last reparations deliv- armed' !<lrces of the fife' major lirr had Insisted on a straight one- tV alliance called Wednesdr" for a truce in the Far East and ~f!Ehore Islands and Formosa .aOO fUS ,as vital to. the defence of For· Northeast Air Command last cries were made to the Soviet. Un· powers to agreed numbers, agrees tltird cut. , I '\' added that the Dnly Canadian com· mosa.· Most oC the EUl'opean min~ iOIl In 1952,' t..ie Finns began to to a Western compromise. plan on ~eeondly, the Soviet Unio!! now :1 .. • Big Four agreement 'c.: European problems to end the Ii1l1ment In the area could come Inters. in the. councll appeared 10 night said that two hcllcop· ' look for, paid markets for the prohibition of nuclear w~apons, hd5 agreeu te the Western com· ''I ; threat of a third world war. from her obllgations as a· memo agree with S~aak,these sources ters had crashed near the big /loads they had '·been sending free ilnd suggests a means oI mterna· promise proposal that the complete . , rorell~ mio1sters oI the North Canada's External Affairs Min- ber of the UnUed Nations. F:lld. • Thule Air Base In norlhern over the Soviet border.. tional arms inspection. prohibition and elimination of nu- , I ' AUanUe ,Treaty OrganizaUon, In.a Isler, L. B. Pearson, at a press The United StalPs has heen con· In its communique the .counci~ . Greenland killing one inaD and This has been a difficult and an U. S, delegate James J. Wads· c!(ar weapons should start after'!'. I cl~y review. of East.~est p~o~II!.'.I!~' .conferll!l~1l af~·!n.l, hinted 1l!~t, ~1~erln8 th~~ posslblU!,Y o.f ~.eg~U~. w~!!!olDed tlJ.e . J!!vlta~~n ;.:,b"Y ... thCJ. "'j , '. Important' task. JUs diHicult· be· w~rth said.in-a statement We.dnes: ,15-per, .cent, Df the convenUo~al 'l t,:: SI" ,. communiqUe 'issued :iffe'r, a tliree; most NA'TOiiIemliers leel t/ie Dest 1ni1if"stilC'e Premll!1' Chou,."EIP1:ii Western llig T1iree PoWers 'hi nus •.. niurlng another. ·c. e~uSe Flnland'has to import ma1).y d3)' o1glit that Russia finally ~fuchons has taken place. Origin . I. :w' 'SI II"Drned that further' fighting' 'In sollOUon for the Formosa dispute tnld ~e Bandung Asian·Afrlcan sia Tuesdar for a· big power con·· The t~o crashes ocurred Qf the ralV materials wblch these "seems to be using ideas and a .. y the West wanted the ban' to '" • ltD A~la will "clearly endal,gcr the would be the surrender oI Quemoy crrJerence April 23 thaI Red China (fIence on European problems. It ; Independently, tile relcase said. Industries' need and cannot al· language which are similar in come Into force after all these • 7a:! • 1'70 p~Rce of the world." ~lId t~ Matsus offshore Islands would welcome direct talks with expressed the hope that "this 101· It is believed that the con· ways find the 'necessary foreign D!0ny"respects" to the Western :edu~tions \I'fre completed' whlle . " • Jf3 The dispute over Formosa ob. held by the N~lIonallsls, to Ihe Washington to reduce tension In t1dUve would ]ea,d progressively to dillon of the injUred man is currency news. Fl!ssla wanted it after a 5O-per- .'II ltD24 I'iously was uppermost In their Communists in return for a col· tbe Far. East. allr~ements ~hlcl1 woul~ remove not serious, The names of those POLITICAL WEAPON LIke the British and French del, etr,t fulfillment. III• .n12 minds, although t,lIe Issue was not !ective security pledge to Chiang Dlplom atlc sources 'sald Belgian sources of c?nfilct and contribute Involved or other information . Geography has made Russia the 11 11 )I, Ii spelled, out in their final atate- Kal·shek's regime. F~reign Minister ~aul. Henri to the secunty and liberty of all, was not available at preSs r natural market for th'ese new in· _TS no7l!~ ment. He ,said Canada believes a dis. Spaak challenged the American peoples."· lme. at ZII _ :4 ~~~tr~~esan~h:: ~~~e~ :~~~t~:! _ lOll '~greements. So far, these agree· Me'., , • !I'I III Britain: rg' er See nFor T~mperatures Disaster Area WHERE MEN ments h a v e worked reasonably 131 1)0, II 11, V:!:f\cOtlver .t ••••••.•• ; 41 53 35 66 ..• Il1O23' Winnipeg ........... Declared In . Toronto ........ u ....... 44 64 ARE MEN .' 'JO .
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