Davince Tools Generated PDF File

Davince Tools Generated PDF File

J', ,.. ":; :', ' r---------~~------~ . , 'l-' 1956 METEOR SEDAN .,~ " , 1t.Sf\ price $1475.00 . ~; ",C.IFICE PRICE .... $950.00 RS THE DAILY NEWS .' '. ferrJ Nova Motors Ltd. • , 66. No; I Vol. 91 st JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND SATURDAY, APRIL 2.5, 19.59 (Price: 7 Cents) Charles Hutton & Sons: i eace Says Federal··· 101'1. e ru a es ove . I e ween e s a al• Precedent r No Solution IEEN ST. Other Provinces Could t Of A Hat" Be Like Newfoundland III,!;. ',\1" -I Hadio, By IA:-'- DO~,\J,D:;O~ ~lr Hicks said tire adjustment \rnrll malic a, :'\ellrll wa5 greeled by a ~hecr· Canadian Prc.~s Staff Wrlte1' ! granls amount.. lo 10 per cent of : ',' lor pl'arc bcl\\'~cn I in~ crowd as he arrived for his I HALIFAX tCPl- Lib e ~ a I! ;'\ol'a Scolia'::, rcvenue "and the ",,'"11I1l,L, and Tith>l's : lalk wilh Ihe Dalai Lama, Leadcr Henry D. Hicks of No\'a pro\'ince'~ dependcnce upon them ~",J lie inl ilrd Chinese I :\ehru ~aid the door Wll! open Scotia said Fridav the federal has become "u~h that it would " l,'I're,rnlatilc" ~nd I for the Chinese ambassador tn gOl'ernment had SCI a precedent be extl'emc!y difficult " . for .,' i1 I'IIPI"'!' Ihe I'a:l·llndia or any other Pelpl:lg rep· that could lead to Ule disconlin- Ihe No\'a Scolia gOl'crnment 1.0 f:,'I1 I i;il the Dalai I rcsentali\'c 10 visit the fugitive ua:lce of Ihe annual $25.000,000 ma:1a~e wilhout t11Cm',' i •• -'mc In exile here. Tibetan leader here, special Atlantic prol'inces adjusl· lie said Ille provincial ~ol'~rn· '. n','rime .10 Pcip;l1g The 21·year·old Panchen Lama ments ~rant5. ment ,houldn't wait ulltil 19£0 Of ." a pr~'s l'onfercnce was placed at the head of a reg· Mr. Hicks said at a press ~on'11961 to dbcuss "the renewal and .. ( "I' ,'colferrro for "Uill' ime in Lhasa by Red China 3fler lerence that the ledcral govern·: extension of these granL," with , ' "I' 23·year·old Dalai II1C Dalal Lama sided with rebel men,'s recent "notice" 10 Nell"I the federal government. Premier ,,,( 1,',,-IJn :od·king. I forces ami ned from the Tibetan foundlar,d that special grants of Robcrl L Stanficld sho.uld "press , \chnl .aid laler, was capital last month. $8,000,000 annually, pro v ide d for a declaration of tile federal' ~ :'r ;w,-ibilily of crral· PA~CHES LAMA'S VIEW undcr the 1949 CO:lfedention ~ol'ernl1lenl'5 pulicies ill rclatiol ,::·:,1'i,hcre lhat ml;llt The,Panehen Lama, In a speech agrcement. would not be conti· to these grants." .,,:' "~' lie ;aid the lalk 10 the National People's Con· nued afler 1%2. could indicate "a He said thc dcei,ion of the ~,' ,i':"1 h'.It he expected I gress i:l Pelping, accused India financial crisis" for the otller Doseo loan for a wash·plant ""an· ,J" ":11 of the hal" would of expansilmist alms, He 1UP­ Ihree Atlantic provinces, nol be lightly accepted by IhoH ~,,::-, ~" meelins wilh the porled Communist charges that "We all fear that Ihis may be interested in the future of co a: 1..:",;, Ihe Dalal Lama's statements de· a precedent which could result in I induslry. The lack of this plant ~'::::l,n :0 Ihe P3nl'hen f nO\lncin~ Communist rule in TI· the disconlinuance of the . ", may wcll cost Dosco some of its i j ,8: lome "IP in Ihe, bel weren ot made by Ihe Dalal adjustment graJts, the payments' marKels." The plant would mak~ : Lama himself, of which has only been assured I available more domestic coal. .; ITT\('I\ ' ~ehru ~aid Il'e Panchen Lama'! unlil 1952." : The latest subl'entions "rna, , \, :C:I \l,l' Il1Jkin~ hi., ~perch "docs not do justice 10 SnaCKED AT DECISIO:"II ! only be postpo~ing the cl'il days, " :""J',1 India's Chinl',e i India. China.Tibet or the Pan, I.lr. Hicks also said lle was i \\'e must someday produce ,;oa: , e,' ,li~,: \la; opening 81 ! ~hp~ Lama." "shocked and disJppoinled" all more economically. Somebody " -, :01 rrnment. The Communist charge that INDEPENDENCE, MO.-iVIingling with the crowd, former President Harry Truman (left center) serves the leder"l government's deci· must gi\'e leadership in lhis mal· ;J,,-,r.:l1i'nl tommulIi,'i the Dalai Lama was abducted sion to lurn dow~ a $6,000,01lO ter. If We can increase coal ,ales ~~ ncio"·~. f'cop!r'\ Dail~ said I and brought here under duress by as honorary wagon master to start the Oregon Cente ImiJl wagon train on its way. The seven covered loan to Dominion Steel and Coal by U{){},OOO or 2.000,000 million . :c", "omrnt had "pr.lcli. l rebels is nol so, Nchru said, wagons in the train were out to retrace the old Oreg (1n Trail, hoping to make the 2,000 mile trip to lnde­ Corporation for a coal·washiJg Ions Dosco might be in a position ;:'s "imid, plant in the Sydney area. He said to reduce its costs." !X~.' tnlOJra~ro" Inrtia1 I He expressed hope "the Dalal pendelice, Oregon, in time for the state's centennial celebration in August. The wagon shown is the l~ad Ac.d nr\\'spapcrs now I Lama can rcturn some time or Ihe outlook for the pro\'ince's He said the pasl two years had ~liit ~ Tlr)(:lan independence. I olher - when, I cannot lay-to wagon, carrying mai1.-(UPI Telephoto) coal industry "has not im· seen "pcrhaps the mo,l serioll! 2no',; newspaper said Tibet. Surely no one wants these prol·ed."despite one·year sooo,., rteclinc in the history of t.he ~oal ,t and O'Jt· , ,",0 ~oou~ted the Dalai tensions to conlinue i:1definitely." 000 subl'entions to help freight i industry." indo... ·5il1 ~ij ,cccil'Ni "an unusu· :'\ehru has never condemned coal into competitive central I The. short ·term .'ubl·enticlls 'l'7:1 ,cceplio~" in India IRed China for the suppression of Canadian markets. I were anJounced six wceks ago :t \r~nl ~ol'crnment was the Tibetan rebellion, bul he ias The adjustment granLs, ,et up aller DMco built up a 1,J000.OO, ~,,-: to discoural:e. ,\5 said India' is sympathetic to the No Retaliatory Strike for fOllr years. give NO\'3 Scotia, ton stockpile of unsold industrial I -,o!1 too­ .• 10[15 betll'een the tll'O Tibeta[15 and that Tibelan sell· New BruJswick and ~ewfound· coal The company's mines {ace • ere being affected\. rule in i:lternal aIfalrl II the on,lY land S7,5O{),000 each ayear and I,staggered shutdowns for the rest jL~ thtm, II b,oadcast by Peiping ultimate lolution. Prince Edward Island $2,500,000 of the year, ,es PiM'$On [nOellIsland Mines ·1 thr iOO~ BELL ISLAND, Nfld. (Cp)­ Corporation closed its NO.6 ONa· ernment subsidy. that if the layoff takes place "wc! Th, pr~ldent of a Bell Islp.nd banll ore mine here 1,000 men Mr Jackman said I strike It will hold 8 secret ballot on the! I. ught Farmers mine local IBid Frlday there would walk off In sympathy for Wabana "wouldn't force Ottawa's question of a strike." would be no strike In retaliation (he 573 put out of work by the hald and neither' would it force About 12,000 people live 0:1 this CLC To Request of I layoff May 1 of ~73 of 1111 shutdown, the company', hand" tiny island In Conception Bay, 12 members, TALKED TO STARR "If the miners who are not to miles from St. John's. Half of Preslde:!1 D. 1. Jackman of lo­ But Mr, Jackman said he had bel aid off went on strike, ~hey them lil'e in Wahana which IS cal 4121 of the United Mine Work· reconsidered after consultbg with themselves would be among the entirely dependent on the ore His Own Head ers of America <Ind') said a federal Labor Minister Starr, He unemployed and the 573 wnuld mines, "sltlke could IeI've no useful said Mr. Starr told him the fed· not be helped: therefore I strike DMco announced the shutdow;J Negotiations In \ l"P '-Paul ~l1rtin' more than they were able to purpose ..••" eralgovernment could not avert I' would only make matters worst." of one of ils three mine~ here 1 ;~.:.;: '.'01 .~;riculture ~!in'l carry out after the 1958 election. He had predicted Thursday the shutdown Ind that there vas SAID WOULD BE VOTE several months ago for lack of: <L-'~(-; brought down on! AI! Mr. Harkn~ had done that il Dominion Steel and Coal no chance of receiving a gov- He had said earlier in the week markets. 'riC Ihe Weslern farm· ~ was "refine" Liberal government , U::,r,n 011311'8 and an ex·f aJ:riculture policies and acts, he I I;:,r,,:urc debate in th~ I said, The Conservatives aave the Firemen's Strike , , farmers :10 new deal as they had AND Company Expects By JOlt" LcBLAXC ! plcle repolt from the repre;cn· . I I.!P '0, O~Iario's ~:'~ex I promised in the election. Ballerina Afraid Cacadlan Press Staff Wrltc~ Itatil'es of the Brolherhood ,of .10- :'/ \..:1craI5' a~ricuI~ure! "You're quile wrong there," In· OTTAWA (CPI-The Canadian comot1ve FIremen and E:Jgrne· ., 1 ":~ Ihe debate-in: tcrjecled Mr, Harkness II Mr, New Trouble On Drive Laoor Congress likely will ask f mcn ICLel with regard to their " d;\ Friday-would be I ~!artin said the Conserl'ative the federal gOl"ernment to get Ihe I dispute with the CNR.

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