CHILDREN SAFE, BUT SHE DIDN'T KNOW A frantic mother, Mrs. Leonard Lueth (right) is comforted by a neighbor as she waited to eee if her chil- dren would be rescued from an apartment house fire in. Los Angeles yesterday. Fire- man carries one of the tots to safety at left. All were rescued. --(AP Wirephoto) Commission Given Copies WASHINGTON (CP)--Trans- Canada Pipe Lines Lid. has furnished the Federal Power Commission with coples of all communications sent to or re- eeived from the Canadian cab- inet or the National Energy Board. CHATHAM, England (CP) -- Ernest Buckett, HONORED AT LAST a 67-year-old army veteran of the First|Medal which he was awarded World War, has just received|in 1919 while serving on the the India General Service|Northwest Frontier. By DAVE McINTUsn planned official Canadian government delegation had threatened no' to them. They claimed they had al- way here when they were bil-/@ in Honolulu while civilian mem- at a posh hotel at Waikik beach, officers. barracks here. RECALL BITTER DAYS The situation came to a boi HONG KONG (CP)--An ugly situation was avoided Tuesday when Hong Kong veterans on a Pp age here werc billeted in a downtown hotel instead of in British barracks as originally Some of the veterans with an to go to the barracks assigned ready been humiliated on. the leted in U.S. military barracks bers of. the delegation stayed The Hong Kong veterans in the Canadian government party are still in the armed forces and nearly all of them are non- The non-officers were the ones put in U.S. military barracks at Honolulu and had been sched- uled to be billeted in British during the stopover at Wake Island Monday night when bit- ter words were spoken by. some of the veterans who spent nearly four years in Japanese prisoner- of-war camps after the fall of Hong Kong on Christmas Day, 1941, Aiiex ine RAL kuaus pins carrying the 39member Cana- dian delegation to the Hong Kong ceremony left Wake Is- land for the 11-hour flight here, it was announced that a mes- sage had been sent from the aircraft to Canadian officials at Hong Kong requesting hotel t|space for the non-officer vet- {/erans. The officers and civilian mem- bersof the delegation already had accommodation at the swank Peninsula Hote), on corner where Canadians once had fought in defence of the colony. One Canadian official said ijthe cabinet had originally al- lotted $7,500 for the 25th anni- versary pilgrimage to honor Canada's Hong Kong war dead, MONEY SAVED He. said enough money» had been saved at the Honolulu stopover to allow the veterans to be accommodated at a hotel in Hong Kong. Among Canadian soldiers put up at bug-infested U.S. barracks near Honolulu was Sgt. Gerald 1}Osborn, son of Canada's Vic- toria Cross winnerat Hong Kong, Company Sergeant-Major J, R. Osborn of Winnipeg. Sgt. Osborn will place a wreath at the ceremony Thursday. He has helped train Hong 'Kong vet- erans who will form the guard of honor. Veterans 'Humiliated' On Pilgrimage To East "ailorimace will gor on n to Korea for a ceremony at the United Nations mem- orial at Pusan and to Japan for a ceremony at Yokahama. In Korea, where more than 300 Canadians were killed in UN service in 1950-53, the Canadian soldiers will have to leave their plane in civilian clothes, but|t will be allowed to attend the ceremony in uniform PERFORM SANS DRESS In Japan, no uniforms will be permitted at all. Canadian officials with the delegation said the Canadian embassy in Tokyo had sent word that Japanese sensibilities must not be offended. One officer with the govern- ment party said the Canadian soldiers will have to to the Yokahama cemetery in muft., carry their medals in their pockets and "our bugle in a bag." Canadian prisoners of 'war died while performing slave la- bor in Japanese shipyards and iron mines diring the Second World War, NECKWEAR ADVERTISES MONTREAL (CP) -- Mayor Jean Drapeau doesn't want any ties for Christmas, His only neckwear these days is Expo 67 ties, which come in a variety of hues, British Experts Say Smith Would Not Honor Principle LONDON (CP) -- British ex- perts said Tuesday lan Smith accepted the form put not ine substance of the six principles ail neg rs a 'or settlement of the Rhodesian crisis. In effect, all the Rhodesian leader was prepared to do was thon more of the coun- 's majority Negro population without reducing or threatening the overwhelming politi- cal power of the. minority whites, At no stage would he yield the powers of a police state, A foyal commission could there- fore never be sure that when it tried to test the country's willingness to accept a new constitution that the black man was saying "yes" simply be- cause he feared the white man' 8 pistol and club. The six principles not only demanded unimpeded progress towards majority rule -- the negroes outnumber the whites 20 to 1--but also maintained that. the British government would have to be satisfied that any basis for legal independence for Rhodesia was acceptable to the people as a whole. DIFFERS FROM OTHERS Rhodesia has a strange constitutional background that makes it different from other British colonies, Before it be- came a self-governing colon: 1923, it was ruled by the British South African Co. When responsible came to that colony in 'in 1928, mt, the Bvvcinv veCamn = epee figurehead, abiding by the ade vice of his government, Wilson's demand, thi that for a four-month Smith should yield absolute con- trol over the Rhodesian armed forces to Governor Sir Hum- phrey Gibbs includes an un- precedented condition -- council that would advise Gibbs would include a British govern- ment, representative. This would be a small price for Smith to -pay, since the majority of the council advis- ing Gibbs would be Rhodesians, There had to be some external demonstration that Smith's 13 month-long rebellion had been brought to an end and that rulé had temporarily been passed to the legal representative of the Queen, even though that repye- sentative would still ablde by the advice of his Rhodesian government, headed by Smith, The difference would be that instead of the aed government being composed of Smith men only, there would be five addi- tions, including three white moderates and two Negroes, The constitutional. changes, which Smith maintained would fulfil the six principles, would include enlargement of the 65- seat legislature to' 67, with the in|number of seats held by Rho desian natives increased to 17 f TONE SHOWS URGENCY The tone of the latest Trans- Canada submission reflects the urgency being expressed about getting that gas to Ontario from Alberta--or anywhere else--on time. Trans-Canada says it fears the filing.of the "irrelevant" documents will help opponents of its scheme make further de- "We emphatically deny that * material is proporly a part of this proceeding or relevant} to any issue in ie" "tt says. "And we, therefore, strenu- ously resist any effort to use the submission of this irrelevant material as an excuse for re- hearing." The additional documents con- cern the Trans-Canada agree- ment made with the Canadian government in September to continue its all-Canada gas line north ofthe Great Lakes as the main feed for Ontario and Que- bec. | Trans-Canada says the re- quest for the additional docu- ments, made in the name of the commission secretary but without the knowledge of the sioners themselves, came its from opponents of Maritimes Judge Til In Hospital WINNIPEG (CP)--Chief Jusp) tice J. L. sley of the Nova Scotia Supreme Court is "se- riously ill," the information of- fice of Misericordia Hospital | here said today. The 73-year-old former soul cabinet minister --revenue, fi- 'gance and justice -- became ill with pneumonia and complica- tions while he was en route home to Halifax from a British Columbia visit. He was admitted to hospital here several days ago. Two Nominated ENVELOPE PKGS, fe SPECIAL! LIPTON CHICKEN NOODLE SOUP MIX 49° SPECIAL! HAWES LIQUID FLOOR GLOSS 18 FL. OZ. TIN 39° 48 FL. OZ. TIN 99° SPECIAL! .LIBBY'S FANCY 48 FL. OZ. TINS 3 For Awards both of Toronto, have named Ontario nominees Rhodes scholarships. The scholarships, with a value of 1,000 pounds about $3,000 each, are tenable at Oxford Uni- versity for a two-year period with the option of a third year. The nominations are subject to confirmation by the Rhodes Senne and to acceptance by a college at Oxford. Mr. Barringer, year of Honors Classics at St. Michael's College, University of Toronto, is a member of the Congregation of the Priests of an honors degree in theology. am He plans a teaching career. Mr. Keefer, in his final year | of Honors Science at Royal Mil- itary College, Kingston, special- ies. He will seek a doctorate| ig low-temperature physics. | BB Bee ee in his final |e 2) EXTRA izes In mathematics and phys- | i2y CORN SYRUP Pe co coven exes wer 16 SPECIAL! CANADA FIRST GRADE BUTTER SPECIAL! EVAPORATED CARNATION MILK SPECIAL! FANCY WHOLE KERNEL NIBLETS CORN SPECIAL! LOBLAWS JACK & JiLL SUPERMOGENIZED PEANUT BUTTER SPECIAL! HEREFORD CORNED BEEF SPECIAL! CHOICE VITAMINIZED UNSWEETENED Cudney APPLE JUICE SPECIAL! 18 inch x 25 ft. Roll REYNOLD'S FOILWRAP 39 PRICES EFFECTIVE DEC. 7, 8, 9, 10. WITH COUPON & PURCHASE OF 'TWO REGULAR BITE TINS bela DUTCH CLEARSER FRUIT COCKTAIL fay C24 «COUPON EXPIRES BEC. M4 DILL PICKLES CHERRY VALLEY 63° 16-02, TINS 2 12-02, V.P. TINS 12.02. TIN