Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - October 11, 1955, Winnipeg, Manitoba
New free press phone number 93-933r All departments deluding classified ads. Final edition Winnipeg free press the weather Winnipeg Cloudy overnight. Otherwise sunny. Not quite As warm. Winds Light. Low tonight and High wednesday 45 and 65. Winnipeg tuesday october 11, 1955 in rises 6.43 . Moon rises 1.13 . Sun sets 3.4s . Moon sets 3.4-1 . Forecast cooler better tax Deal seen by Premier Manitoba s delegation to the Federal provincial con Ference has returned from Ottawa satisfied with the conference itself and optimistic that new financial arrangements Ottawa and the provinces will be to Manitoba s advantage. Rockets worry j Canada new York Canada monday suggested world disarmament might be achieved More quickly by International control of the development of future inter Continental Tion. Weapons of destruct Hon. Paul Martin health minis Ter Canadian Delegate on the five Power United nations sub com Mittee on disarmament said it would be easier for a country to discuss limitation of armaments still being developed than those in existence. He also told the annual dinner of the National conference of christians and jews that he is More hopeful than at any time in the last 10 years that an effective system will be devised to control existing armaments. Last week or. Martin addressed an Appeal by Canada to the United nations disarmament sub committee for a real Effort to Stop the the in Ter Continental guided missile. He declared the Issue was of particular concern to Canada. Such mis Siles he said constituted a very real and terrifying threat to Man kind or. Martin said past disarmament conferences have wrestled with the problem of achieving a mutually agreed reduction in Al ready existing armaments. Tackle new weapons one of the major Aims of a disarmament be to reduce the crippling financial Burden imposed on All nations of the world. Perhaps the time has come to consider carefully whether this Airn. Cannot be More effect ively realized by concentrating our efforts More on the armaments of the future than on present Arma scientific developments showed there was reasonable certainty of a completely new weapons system for intercontinental warfare. If the present armament race is maintained this will involve All nations in vast new expenditures on defence against intercontinental ballistic or. Martin said. Should we not now explore the possibility of International control of the development of these new agents of possibly even International co operation to guide research in this Field along peaceful lines or. Martin said major difficult ies still stood in the Way of Gen Premier d. L. Campbell who led the Manitoba group said he would be so optimistic As to expect that the proposals advanced by the Federal government did not represent the ultimate in Ottawa s thinking and that further conferences would result in better arrangements As far As Manitoba was concerned. The Premier said he could not agree with the Premier or premiers who said the meeting lad been of no use. While he mentioned no names his remarks Lere were apparently aimed at Premier w. A. C. Bennett of British Columbia who declared following the conference that it lad been a the Premier s satisfaction Over the meeting was shared by Hon. S. D. Turner Manitoba s provincial treasurer. Or. Turner said that Ottawa s proposal of financial arrangements to replace the Pearson put on spot Craf officer stirs Kremlin Wrath Ottawa special air Commodore Fred car Penter tuesday accused Tass news Agency of purposely misquoting him in its despatch which reported him saying Canadian squad Rons in Europe were poised for an attack on the soviet present tax rental agreements her May and Britain he was in appeared to be better than the u., agreements themselves. He Cau toned however that much would depend on the details of the plan still to be advanced by Ottawa. See Premier Page 9 Union and caused embarrassment to Hon. L. B Pearson during his Moscow visit. The whole business was too silly to comment air commo Dore Carpenter told reporters. Air Commodore Carpenter was wrongly described in the Tass Des Patch As chief of the air staff air marshal c. R. Slemon is can Ada s chief of air staff. Air com Moore Carpenter is chief of air operations. Upon his return from a tour of Craf bases in France Ter viewed at Halifax by the Cana Dian press which quoted him As stating Canada s air squadrons in Europe Are maintained at f 1 combat level. See Carpenter Page Gregg lauds labor s oc5 Okay of automation by Michael Harkis Toronto special Hon. Milton Gregg labor minister monday praised the attitude of organized labor in Canada to Automa Tion bugbear of some tradition bound unionists. Automation is the term used for the new method of mechanical mass production by push Button operation or. Gregg was addressing Ihei annual conference of the Canadian i Congress of labor Here As the Cal decided to seek closer ties with Farmers and heard its presi Dent a. R. Mosher press for amalgamation with the trades and labor Congress of Canada. The Cal voted to set a com Mittee to work for closer ties be tween Farmers and Industrial labor. Congress chiefs were instructed t set a permanent body to a Vise and assist farm organizations so that a better understand ing of our joint problems May b part of the committee s work appeared will be of Fence i enc ing nature by Way of Patching divergences in views Between far mers who look for higher agricultural prices and labor which customarily presses for action to hoi Down consumer costs. J i see Cal Page 14 Labori ties rout Bevan _ so labor s leading left Winger eral agreement on a major Reauch Aneurin Bevan heavily de Tion of armed forces and Conven tuesday in elections for the Tindal armaments and the promo. It. T tonal armaments and tire Prohic Tion of atomic weapons Post of treasurer of the labor party. His rival Hugh Gaitskell of the moderate Section of the party was appointed for the second year run Ning. Voting at the party s annual conference was card votes for Gaitskell against for Bevan. But in tuesday s elections for the 28 member National executive Sevan s six chief adherents retained their seats decisively. Top of the poll in the Section t elected by the local labor i traditionally where the main left turn army into police Attlee Margate England Reuters t i-1 j Uii Tui in party Leader Clement at Wing strength lies was Bev Anite Lee tuesday said signs Are More hopeful than Ever before for get Ting an agreement on world Dis armament. I think governments Are facing to he told the party s 54th annual conference Here. What the world needed was a general agreement to disarm i Down to the absolute minimum required for preserving Law and or no victors in War Attlee. Opening a debate on the a bomb atomic warfare disarm Ament and National conscription said any major War would leave no victors. Attlee said humanity faces the question of whether it would de stroy itself by its own inventions. But proposals to ban the Hydrogen bomb taken by the party s left were not a very fruitful line because if one weapon were banned others always remained he said. Attlee also urged a halt to a bomb tests under International agreement. We As socialists want to go beyond coexistence we want world brotherhood. But coexistence is a Start Attlee wound by calling again Harold Wilson. He had votes a slight increase Over his total last year. Other left wingers re elected to the executive were mrs. Barbara Castle Anthony Greenwood s. Crossman Tom Triberg and Ian Mikardo. See Margate Page 9 news of the world in Brief t ministers meet nor in Paris heard Sharp warn Ings from Canadian and s. Officers about Sov Iet submarine and a i r strength. Page 1 and Canada is seriously concerned Over development of inter Continental mis Siles. Page Pearson left Moscow for Pri vate talks with Bulgarin and Khrushchev. Page s assassination attempt at Brazil s vice president elect ushered in election of Vargas s heirs. Page a Moscow woman was permitted to marry a s. Citizen and to leave rus Sia immediately. Page russians build sub Fleet govt. Set to Back Loans on Grain by Frank Kelley Paris special Nyht the soviet Union now has More than 4 00 sub marines the largest under sea Fleet in world history and is building about three new units every two weeks n an Effort to drive an Iron Edge Between Europe and North America the defence ministers of the North at Antic treaty organization were told monday. Adm. Jerauld Wright supreme Allied commander Atlantic with Lead quarters at Norfolk va., and our assistants gave this g r j m picture of Russia s potential in undersea warfare. They estimated that the soviet Union next to the s. Now has the second largest naval Fleet of a 11 yes. And they warned that most of its units unlike Many vessels belonging to the nato member nations Are not in Mothballs but Are fully manned and Are ready to go to . Wright cautioned the n7ato Powers against any Redzic Ion in their individual or combined naval strength saying that any levelling off at this time in View of increasing soviet naval Power would simply increase the balance in favor of Russia. Adm. Wright did not disclose any evidence that the soviets have developed an atomic powered submarine to match the american built Nautilus but he said there was evidence that the russians were prepared to use atomic see nato Page 14 Pearson off to see top leaders Moscow minis Ter v. M. Molotov stood in a heavy rain at Moscow s Airport tuesday morning to say Farewell to Hon. L. B. Pearson when the Canadian external affairs minister took off for a meeting in the South with Russia s two highest leaders. Pearson s plane was due to Stop in Stalingrad for luncheon and then was to carry the Canadian party to a destination near Yalta in the Crimea for a meeting with Khrushchev chief of the soviet communist party. Molotov along with other soviet officials and members of the diplomatic corps turned out for the a. M. Departure which ended a Moscow visit marked by Good will and the Prospect of further Trade Between Canada and the so Viet Union. Pearson was accompanied on the soviet plane from Moscow Only by John Watkins Canadian ambassador to Russia and George Igna Tieff and Ray Crepault of the external affairs department. The rest of the Canadian party will follow him by Craf plane wednesday and join him at Basra Iraq. Pearson s Trade talks with Molotov monday ended satisfactorily and will probably be resumed in Ottawa in a matter of weeks. Russia is expected to Send a Trade delegation for the continued talks shortly. This is the car in which Giles Lussier of 381 Hamel Street St. Boniface was killed and threes girls injured Early tuesday morning. Markers show the route taken by the cast bound car. It veered off he no. 1 Highway four Miles West of heading Ley 3ian., Plung ing into the Creek which crosses the Road. The injured girls were in fairly Good Condi Tion in St. Boniface Hospital. Sunny. And 70. Warm air May stay few Days it was a Lovely week end for thanksgiving and every one was particularly thankful about the. Weather. Saturday it was 65 above. Sunday it was 71. Monday thanksgiving Day the Mer Cury hit 80 two degrees Short of the record hit in 1934. Normal for the Day is 55. And apparently we can keep on being thankful. There s no definite indication of any cold weather. The temperature should stay above Normal but there s cold air in the Churchill area and sudden shifts could bring it downward however. The Weatherman says this does t seem too Likely. Predicted High for today is 70. Tomorrow and the next Day will be about 65. 12-year-old hides on plane to escape feared operation car hurtles into Creek Man killed a St. Boniface Man was killed and three girls were injured Early tuesday when a car went off the no. 1 Hig Svay four Miles West of heading Fey and into a Creek which crosses the Road at a right Angle. Giles Lussier of 381 Hamel Street Driver of the car was the Only traffic fatality of the Holiday week end in Manitoba. The injured girls were miss Lor Raine Tinette of St. Emelie Man. Miss Carrie Henry of Shu Grove Man. And Cecille Dion of 441 Richot Street St Boniface. They Are All in fairly Good condition in St. Boniface Hospital. Or. Reginald Champagne Elie Coroner attended at the scene and has called an inquest which opens late tuesday afternoon. Car Cycle collision also injured Over the Long week end was lil year old Ettore de Tho Masis. Of 395 Alexander Avenue who collided with an automobile monday night while Riding his bicycle on main Street at Aberdeen Avenue. Hie youth is in fairly Good condition in Winnipeg general hos Spital with cuts to the face and possible head injuries. Canadian stocks fall sharply Canadian Stock markets plunged Down in. A major break tuesday in an Effort to catch to the new York Market which suffered a severe setback monday when Canadian markets were closed. Alf divisions of the Toronto and Montreal Stock lists were hit by Selling which sent Market leaders Down As much As so a share by Early afternoon. At 1 . The Toronto Index of 20 key industrials was Down More than 13 Points with the base metals average Down eight Points. The Montreal Industrial average fell Points in the same period. A recovery attempt in the new York Market ran out of steam Al for an International agreement Toj though Price losses at the noon Stop a bomb experiments Declar hour were about half the size of the previous the Dow Jones Industrial Index dropped 5.27 by in . By Ted Byfield the 12-year-old fort Garry boy opened his eyes wide. I m not going Back he said. The doctors Aren t going to do that to me and he meant it. He meant it so much that when the Prospect of another operation came he ran away ran and flew More than 700 Miles a stowaway on a trans Canada airlines North Star Airliner. One of those things it was simply one of those things the doctors told his Mother. Some thing had to be done to the boy which no medical science had found a Way to make easy. It would be an agonizing operation and it would have to be repeated. Last july he went through the first phase. Somebody mentioned in his presence that More was to come. No no the boy told his Mother. Won t let them do it he ran away from Home. He was found and brought Back. He ran away again. Juvenile court officials were called in. Again he was brought Home. we do not the effects these expert rents May have in the enough for surgery could escape a trained court officer was not explained. A juvenile court official had no comment. But out of Winnipeg general Hospital slipped the 12-year-old. The night flight to Edmonton was loading sunday at Stevenson Field. Amid the usual flurry of Busy passengers few noticed the 12 year old. The voice on the loud speaker called out the Edmonton flight. The youngster joined the other passengers. Where s your boarding slip the North Star roared through the night towards Edmonton. There was a commotion in the passenger Cabin. The boy no. He s not mine sorry miss he s not with How should Sonny Mother s right Mother was behind in fort Garry under sedative. In the City a wide Hunt was on for her son. I know whose son he that s the Pilot told the Edmonton Tower a about 12 years from Edmonton came one theory on How it happened. A woman boarding behind the child happened by fantastic coincidence to have two boarding slips having lost one been Given another and hav found the original. She turned both in. The stewardess assumed she was the Mother. The police were at the Edmonton Airport. To hawaii1 i m going to Hawaii for the 5 favors Cali Aid for Farmers by Victor Mack Fri Ottawa special a i government guaranteed Bank loan to Farmers with farm stored Grain is expected to be the plan finally favored by the Federal government for getting funds into the hands of Western wheat Farmers informed sources said tuesday. Provincial agriculture ministers from the three Prairie provinces together with representatives from the inter provincial farm Union Council Saskatoon Grain marketing conference met with prime minis Ter l. S. St. Laurent and other members of the Federal Cabinet tuesday. Or. St. Laurent at the conclusion of the conference tuesday noon said his government had been studying the problem of pro Viding Cash for those with farm stored Grain for some time. He said announcement would be made on the government s decision soon. Plan favored Federal authorities favor the introduction of a plan under which Farmers could borrow to a maximum amount probably f of the Banks and the Banks would be guaranteed to a cer Tain percentage of the loan against loss by Ottawa. The Saskatoon conference favored the establishment of machinery for Cash advances to far mers of to half of the initial payment of Grain they Are expected to be Able to deliver this crop year. It adopted a Resolution unanimously sept. 28 asking that As the Farmer delivered his Grain half of the value of each delivery be applied against the Advance. The Federal government favours the plan adopted in december 1951. The legislation passed in that year was known As the Prairie Grain producers interim financing act. It guaranteed a Bank to 25 per cent of its total Loans made under the act. The total aggregate of All such Loans made under the act was limited to the interest Rale on the Loans was set at 5 a per cent under regulations passed at that time. The conditions which resulted in the guaranteed Bank Loans for Farmers that year were brought about because of an Early freeze which prevented Farmers from getting their crop off the land. In Many cases they were unable to Complete the Harvest until the Fol lowing Spring. Plugged transport this year the banners have har vested their Grain crops but they have been unable to deliver their Grain due to a slowness in sales abroad and a resultant glut in Grain that has plugged transportation facilities. In addition to the prime minis Ter the following Federal ministers attended the tuesday conference i. Hon. .1. G. Gardiner minister of agriculture it. Hon. C. D. I Howe minister of Trade and com in Cree Hon. Walter Harris minis iter of finance and Hon. Stuart Garson. Minister of Justice. Prairie agriculture minister at tending included Hon. D. D. Robertson of Manitoba Hon. I. C. Nollet of Saskatchewan and Hon. Issued tuesday said Konrad Aden l. C. Halmrast of Alberta Auer West Germany s 79-year-old or. Howe discussed the problem you sure you won t change Oju mind and 60 to hakka rpm you will find main inside Page no. News 2, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 14, 26 deaths 2, 14 Kadio and to 10 Hollywood column 11 entertainment 11 comics. 12, 13 social news 13 if 18 sports 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25 parents Corner 26 special features Transcona notes 25 Billy Graham 2g letters to the editor 26 Jumble contest 27 Adenauer 111 Bonn fearful Bonn medical bulletin Neau Street St. Boniface. Calgary fires Bandiera added that it is fading away and the fever has Cial conference last week. He indicated at that time that the feel the Chancellor however must Jeri government had a plan in remain in bed for at least another j preparation which would be an the bulletin added. It was bounced shortly the first indication since the Ger Man Leader took to his bed last Friday that his illness was ser ious. Even before today s announce i men Adenauer s illness had i alarmed his close friends and fam a Lily. He is subject to colds and Dean Bandiera guard with is his serious ulness year. Intimates said he became chilled Calgary stampedes. And former Winnipeg Blue bomber Star has been booted out of the Calgary during a night drive from Luxom i Bourg to Bonn last wednesday Fol lowing a Day Long conference with. _. it is alleged thai Bandiera Prem or Edgar Faure and Congress of labor in ses axed because he disclosed some i minister Antoine Pinky of France Sion tuesday passed an cmdr gun club. Cal urges 75% Cash Advance Toronto can of his teams plays to the bombers saturday night. Six die As yugoslav Jack Rowand president of crashes it i Winter inv Fol i Nnoli up1 1 Pur com can a Vance 10 Farmers maximum minimum and Winter the boy id a police. Wife. Said monday m Regma v1enna least Grain harvested and stored in by Resolution requesting the fed eral government to give prompt consideration to providing a is per cent Cash Advance to Farmers proc. Readings for 24 hour period ending 6.ou . Tuesday oct. 11, . M n. Free. Vancouver. Calgary is j7 .02 Swift current Refina Saskatoon Brandon 67 7s 61 _ then the Day came. Tho. Court official and the youngster headed for the Hospital. How a 12-year-old boy Ottawa Toronto Montreal sick Halifax by a police officer saying he a Bandiera indicated to some Werc reported killed and been Well fed on the plane. Uhe Winnipeg players which play Solo others were injured when a police said he was carrying two j the Stampede is were going to use yugoslav Airliner with 29 persons bars of soap and a Candy bar he was just a Little free in Board crashed and burst into they turned the lad Over to the j South Side boys Home. He s there today. The Edmonton welfare de bomber coach Al Sherman said there were seven Ameri Parturient is arranging his trip the allegations Are utterly Ridi jeans on the plane including sol Dicks and a diplomatic courier. At the current the Resolution said that a ser ious situation exists this year for Canadian Farmers because they Are unable immediately to Market Home. And still before him is that trip Vito the Hospital. Culous. For More sports pages an american embassy spokes their Grain so that for thousands of farm households buying Power will be drastically reduced affect ing not Only Rural residents but also the jobs of thousands of Urban workers. Details see the least two escaped with slight scratches. One was seriously Hurt
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