INTERPRETING THE NEWS | New Hobby Red Watching By JOSEPH MacSWEEN | Canadian Press Staff Writer A fascinating hobby of diplo- | mats at the 14-nation conference 'in Geneva is trying to spot dif- ferences or conflicts between the Soviet Union and Red China. The presence of Foreign Min- ister Chen Yi gives Westerners la rare chance to observe a top Peking dignitary at work, espe- cially since Chen has remained at the conference--which opened May 16--longer than any other foreign minister. His continued presence raised speculation on whether Peking might be more willing than Moscow to negotiate a settle- ment of the Laotian question. But some diplomats have noted privately that Chen, no doubt, is aware of this thinking and may be playing a double ||game by fostering hopes on the |Western side while, in fact, fol- |lowing a hard line. HIT US. Certainly Chen showed no Washington's ideas on Laotian neutrality as "preposterous" and "absolutely impermiss ible." Nevertheless, diplomats expe- rienced in Chinese affairs see a possibility that Peking will be willing to negotiate a Laotian agreement that will give the -|nist state with less assistance »/from Moscow than any other Laos but such other Southeast Asian neighbors as South Viet Nam and Cambodia will event- ually fall into the Red Chinese orbit as an inevitable develop- ment of history. In this thinking, Peking wants most of all to keep the South- east Asia Treaty Organization from going into Loas, with troops. Why should Peking pay the price of conquest for some- thing it would otherwise get in time almost automatically? SEE EVIDENCE Some diplomats see Peking's settlement of its border dispute] with Burma as evidence of the regime's wish to create an "image" of reasonableness. They can find little in all this to cause Moscow strategists to turn handsprings of delight. They note the Soviets never have come down in support of Peking in its long dispute with India over border territory. The Peking leaders, it is said, have developed their Commu- foreign Red chiefs, including the independent-minded Tito of Yu- goslavia. They know how to use communism to achieve national ends. But the same diplomats who use this reasoning also say it would be utterly unrealistic to imagine now that there are any serious divergencies between Soviet and Red Chinese foreign By FORBES RHUDE Canadian Press Business Editor Current company announce- ments are heavy with word of new products and new Cana- dian production. S. C. Johnson and Son Ltd. (Johnson's Wax), of Brantford, Ont., announces that it has en- tered the shoe polish market on a national basis, after farrying out market tests. Showing the new line at a Tor- onto press conference the com- pany stated that it believes it has come up with something "different and substantially bet- ter." Convenient packaging and cleanliness in home shoe polish- ing are featured. The Canadian shoe-polish mar- ket, now estimated at $6,500,000 Red China is far to weak to em- bark on a foreign policy inde- pendent of the Soviet Union, its source of heavy machinery-- and, abgve all, arms necessary to defy the U.S. Many New Products On Canadian Market annually, has nearly tripled in the last 15 years and, Johnson executives state, is bigger than the markets for paper napkins, deodorants and paste floor wax. Dow Chemical of Canada Ltd. announces shipment of first production of penta- chlorophenol from its new chemical plant at Fort Sask- katchewan, Alta, Pentachlo rophenol is a fungicide for the of wood and wood products. The plant will late produce glycol, a basic ingredient in automo- tive antifreeze; etha- nalamines for removal of sulphur from natural gas; and dichlorophenol, a chem- ical used in weed killers. ED 20 Jou Po Bo mn THE OSHAWA TIMES, Friday, June 30, 196) Canada of Canadian products." The hose, engineered to La- France specifications, is manu- factured by the Bowman- ville, Ont., plant of Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co. Ltd. from terylene fibres produced by Ca- nadian Industries Ltd. LaFrance, which makes fire trucks and makes or distributes most other fire-fighting equip- ment, says the hose's weave "gives it greater flexibility and reduces twisting and kinking," to take charge of their own operations." i? The de Havilland Aircraft of Canada Ltd., whose Beaver, Ot- LaFrance Fire Engine and Foamite Ltd.,, Toronto, an- nounces what it describes as "the first all-synthetic single- jacket fire hose developed and manufactured exclusively in| and that it has "unusually high tensile strength." Sperry Gyroscope Com- pany of Canada Lid, in a recent review of its opera- tions, says it sells on a world-wide basis, with the bulk of its export sales last year going to the United States. The company, formed in 1950 as a subsidiary pf Sperry Rand Corporation, New York, is engaged in the ter and Cariboo aircraft are sold in what the company terms "practically every corner of the globe," has issued a 28-page booklet describing their 'world- wide marketing operations. The company's plant is at Downs- view, Ont. SCREEN VETERAN Charles LaMarr has been a screen actor since he appeared in Warner Brothers' first mo- tion picture 53 years ago--My Four Years in Germany. small Indochina kingdom a de- gree of neutrality. policy. { They also see the possibility] They contend that despite its that Peking believes not only boasted 'great leaps forward, CarLvary BaprisT. CENTRE AND JOHN STREETS Affiliated with the Fellowship ot Evangelical Baptist Churches in Canada PASTOR: REV. W. NIVEN AITKEN HATED EMBLEM i a swastika which he cut down from the top of a flagpole at Scott Street Public school in the city. The flag was tied to | the 30-foot high pole during the night. I Mitchell Palmer, an employ- ee of St. Thomas, Ont.,, PUC is shown this morning holding Today Only Beavers Working On Railroad SUMMIT LAKE; B.C. (CP)-- mile-long $300,000,000 rail line to z | A year ago Premier Bennett of|the Yukon boundary. oe LEN periens Sd me British Columbia took a power| Jt took place in a clearing, | F. t at 1 y saw in hand and cut down a fir. roughly a0 vards wide ar | services office in Prince George, | "Work will never stop until|miles long, that was designated 30 miles south, where the PNR| this railway reaches the Yu-(as the railway marshalling|"°% is the butt of community Be i Cy pe as saying before a gathering of |* : | notables who assembled in a at Sat: only beavers still are three months. clearing here to mark the otfi-| > | The company itself, incorpor-| cials start of construction of the PLATFORM BROKEN {ated last year after the Wenner- | Pacific Northern Railway. The symbolic tree lies where Gren B.C. Development Com: | That occasion came just alit fell, weeds and underbrush pany had completed surveys) day ahead of the date specified|growing up around it. The gaily|through northern B.C., has un-| in 1956 agreements between Ax-|decorated platform from which|til July 31 to decide whether to 1351 CEDAR STREET el Wenner-Gren, Swedish finan-| Premier Bennett and PNR Pres- stay in business. I 0.30 AM--Sunday School Bo A MaMorriing Word 2 . 13 oval | t M.-- y Schoo! : JM. orning Worship cier, and the B.C. government|ident Bernard Gore spoke of The provincial government| Soeoker: Pastor :E, Winter as the deadline for start of con-|the future lies broken. has given the PNR until then to WELCOME THE CNAME OF THE LORD struction on the proposed 600-| At the edge of the clearing post a $200,000 bond and get . First Dead Boy's land alongside the Pacific Great Li done, Clothes Found | Northminster | Baptist Church InButtalo | nited Church BUFFAL O(AP) -- Police SIMCOE STREET N. AT ROSSLAND ROAD Mr. H. Philp, Musical Director Eastern Railway line which was | to carry the PNR"s traffic south from here, stands a sign pro-| claiming: "Persons seeking em-| ployment with this company are | requested to make application] through the local national em-| ployment office." | 9:45 AM.--BIBLE SCHOOL FOR ALL AGES 11:00 A.M.--STUDIES IN PHILIPPIANS 7:00 P.M.--GREAT STORIES FROM THE BIBLE "A Beloved Mother-in-Law" 8:45 P.M.--MISSIONARY WORK IN EQUADOR-- Illustrated talk by Mr. Bob Trimble Wed., 7:45 P.M. -- BIBLE STUDY AND PRAYER SAT., 7:00 P.M.--OPEN-AIR WITNESS AT PORT PERRY DAILY VACATION BIBLE SCHOOL Mon., 3rd July thru Fri,, 14th July 9-11:30 Daily All Children 3 ond Over CENTRAL ONTARIO BIBLE CONFERENCE At the Acres -- Sat., 8th July -- 3:30 and 7:00 p.m. Speaker: Dr. Jack Scott, Toronto HILLSIDE BAPTIST CHURCH THE CHURCH FOR ALL . ,., ALL FOR THE CHURCH "The Church is the greatest factor on earth for the building of character and good citizenship, * It is a storéhouse of spiritual values. Without & strong Church, neither democracy nor civilization can survive, There are four sound reasons why | every person should attend services regularly and support the Church. They are: (1) For his own sake. (2) For his children's sake, (3) For the sake of his community and nation. (4) For the sake of the Church itself, which needs his moral and material support. Plan to go to church' regularly and sead your Bible daily. Day Sunday Monday Tuesday 'Wednesday Thursday Friday Do you count the candles on your birthday cake? Why bother? Once you're past sweet sixteen, it doesn't matter how many candles you're en- found little Andy Ashley's trous-| Minister: Rev. H. A. Mellow, B.A. titled to. What counts is what you're doing with those years. ers and a piece of torn towel in Organist: Mr, J. R. Robertson Delaware Park lake where the| three-year - old youngster was | SUMMER SERVICES drewned by a psy cho pathic killer. 11:00 AA M.-MORNING WORSHIP IN NORTHMINSTER UNITED 7:00 P.M.-EVENING WORSHIP IN FIRST BAPTIST REV. SWACKHAMMER WILL PREACH AT ALL SERVICES IN AUGUST woman in the park who was car- 9:45 Sunday School in First Baptist ' ~~ rying a length of chain and a AOC NE ' mi plastic bag. HEIOU INU SCI Y aliu suo LAUT Police said she didn't fit the description of the woman de- TO THE ANNUAL scribed as the boy's killer but they took her to a precinct sta-| tion for questioning. 4 . Seventh Day Adventist Bible Conference JUNE 30 -- JULY 8 Oshawa Missionary College Campus--King St. E. Oshawa She was among scores of| women questioned already in the six-day-old murder. Despite HEAR! Stirring Bible messages that will bring peace to your hearts ! LISTEN ! To the outstanding melodies of the Michigan Ministerial Quartette and other music that you will long remember. countless tips from citizens, po- lice have not yet reported a EVENING PROGRAMS --7:30 P.M. ® FRIDAY--W. A, Nelson--President of Canadian Adventist Churches major break in the search for slender, dark-haired woman be- ® SATURDAY--G. E. Guenther--Director of World Adventist Welfare and Famine Relief lieved to be the killer. ® SUNDAY--Official Civic Welcome--Her Worship Mayor Thomas F. R. Millard of Washington, D.C. ® MONDAY--Branson Hospital Anniversary ® TUESDAY--E. W. Pedersen--Director of Adventist World Home Mission Work The years that are past have burned themselves out. Perhaps they have been all you've wanted them to be--but, if you're like most of us, maybe you could have made them alittle better, One of God's greatest gifts is the marvelous fact that it's never too late to begin again. Book Chapter Verses Ecclesiastes 11 Psalms Birthdays remind us of the passing of time, of 2 new life. Celebrate your birthday by giving. Give something of yourself, by going to your church and taking part in its activities, especially those that help others. Rest year, the added candle on your cake will burn with a special bright~ ness Lhe boy DOG) and underwear and bound with women's stockings, was found in the park lake last weekend. | PRL YDS ST ART PEE RAE RR 1961 Keister Adv. Service, Inc, Strasburg, Va HIS FEATURE IS CONTRIBUTED TO THE CAUSE OF THE CHURCH BY THE FOLLOWING | INTERESTED INDIVIDUALS AND BUSINESS ESTABLISHMENTS GENOSHA COFFEE SHOP GRANT GLOVER OSHAWA NATURAL STONE 70 King St. E. CEMENT CONTRACTOR Natural Stone Veneer for R.R. 1, Oshawa RA 5.9755 Home Remodelling RA 8-1022 LORNE GOODMAN PLUMBING & HEATING RA 5-1044 758 Mary St. HOUSTON'S SERVICE STATION AND GARAGE RA 3-7822 67 King St. W. BROWN'S LUMBER AND SUPPLIES, LTD. NORTH OSHAWA PLUMBING RA 5-4704 463 Ritson Rd. N. RA 5-3715 52 Wayne Ave. OSHAWA SAND & GRAVEL RA 5.0232 877 King St. E. MASTER FEEDS 54 Church St. RA 3-2229 vid RON ROBINSON TRENCHING : EXCAVATING RA 8-6621 R.R. 4, Oshawa STAFFORD BROTHERS MONUMENTAL WORKS MO 8-3552 318 Dundas St. E., Whitby F. R. MILLARD WASHINGTON, D.C. 30 Year Adventist Leader in Japan. M. V. CAMPBELL WASHINGTON,D.C. Vice-President of 'World Adventist Work. A. W. RUNDLE GARDEN RA 5-1764 1016 King St. E. ROY W. NICHOLS G.M. SALES & SERVICE RA 3-7242 Courtice MA 3.3553 Bowmanville HAMBLY TIRE LTD. RA 8-6221 534 Ritson Rd. S. C. E. McALLISTER Plastering Contractor and Quik Brik 226 Conant St. JOHN BURTINSKY FLORIST Res. MO 8-5285 . .Store: MO 8-3324 124 Dundas W., Whitby RA 5-5991 A. HEFFERING'S ESSO RA 5-9892 No. 2 Hwy.&Thicksons' Rd. GEO. H. HARDING CONSTRUCTION CO. LTD. 411 Fairview Drive, Whitby MO 8-3566 WHITBY CLEANERS N. H. EDGAR & SON LTD. 150 Colborne St. E., Whitby MO 8-2345 PAINT AND WALLPAPER RA 3-735] 34 King West McNAMARA MARINE LTD. Port Whitby, Ont. MO 8-2947 D.RALPH (POP) TAYLOR TEXACO SERVICE STATION MATT GIMPELJ 461 Park Rd. S. RA 6-2622 UPHOLSTERY CO. Reupholstering & Remodelling ASHMORE PAVING RA 5-7421 77 Celina St. RA 8-5342 $557 Garrard N. RA 8-8412 ATTEND THE CHURCH OF YOUR CHOICE Read The Oshawa Times Church Announcements for Times of $ervices and Religious Activities FOOTE SHELL SERVICE STATION 97 King St, E. i CARL E. GUENTHER WASHINGTON, D.C. Director of World Wide Adventist Welfare and Famine Relief. E. W. PEDERSEN WASHINGTON, D.C. Director of Adventist Laymen, Ed ROBERT BURGESS AND FAMILY OF CEYLON, FORMER STUDENTS OF OSHAWA MISSIONARY COLLEGE.