By ARCH MacKENZIE OTTAWA (CP) -- A second! for selling: Canada's share cf! American - generated Columbia} River power at a fat price was night by Premier Bennett of) British Columbia. Authority of the United States' Pacific Northwest would take the power at a high five mills per kilowatt hour, he said. It could afford that price be- cause of low-cost extra power provided through three - dam storage control of the turbulent river in Canada. Additionally, said Mr. Bennett, Canadian storage would cut $500,000,000 from alternative U.S. flood-pro- tection costs and help defray the five-mill price. It was suggested to the B.C. premier that he had put a five- mills-or-else proposition to the U.S. authority. He was interviewed on 'a na- tionally-televised CBC program which last week heard Justice Minister Fulton state the fed- eral case in the federal-provin- cial dispute. WANTS IT DOMESTIC | This holds that Canadian) downstream benefits -- half the extra power generated in the U.S. from Canadian storage--is Bennett Shows Plan For Big Power Sale termination possible after 10 years. That would finance the three dams, away with need for transmission lines and provide | expounded confidently Tuesday|2,000,000 horsepower generating/eral government says the right capacity to boot on the Cana- dian section of the Columbia,| The Bonneville Federal Power Which rises in southeastern B.C.|federal government wants and then eventually crosses into) the U.S. if the federal government will} guarantee that B.C. gets its} five - mill price for American- generated power, then it can set| any time limit it likes on the} length of a sales contract, he} said. | He said he is confident that the 60-year treaty with the U.S. will be ratified next year. Con- gress has already done so and U.S. impatience has been indi- } Not Planning To Boost Income Taxes TORONTO (CP)--The Ontario| government has no plans at present to boost its personal in- come tax, Provincial Treasurer Allan said Tuesday. Guiding a new Income Tax| i jers reported today to the min- Food Program. Plan Reaches Vote At UN By JOSEPH MacSWEEN UNITED NATIONS (CP)--A canadian-backed proposal for} an experimental world food pro- gram was scheduled to reach a vote in the United Nations to- day. The aid plan -- earlier ap- proved by a Food and Agricul- ture Organization conference in Rome--was considered certa'n of passage in the UN's 103- member economic committee despite some criticism. Canadian delegate Gordon Aiken, seeking to met bier- tions, presented a revised ver- sion Tuesday of the ; which is co-sponsored by the United States, Cameroun, Den- mark, Liberia, The Nether- lands, Pakistan, Panama and Peru. Canada, it was understood, sought primarily for passage of a three-year experimental pro- gram as outlined by FAO but the U.S. wanted to include in the resolution provisions looking toward a long-term program. ROUSES FEARS Debate arose from fears by Argentina and other food - ex- porting countries that U.S. food- for-peace programs would inter- fere with their trade and be- come a substitute for money aid to developing countries. | cated in the delay caused by the Ottawa - Victoria dispute about financing. Mr. Bennett said construction can start next spring if the fed- words, Mr. Bennett said that if the power for a national power grid, B.C. will sell it at less than five mills. 'Big Four' Reporting To NATO CP from Reuters-AP P/~-"--The foreign ministers of the Big Four Western pow- isterial council of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization on their agreement to continue probing Russia's intentions on The agreement was reached Tuesday night as the foreign ministers of Britain, the United States, France and West Ger- many wound up two days of discussions on international OTTAWA (CP) -- Two arch- foes of the waterfront -- the newly - formed Canadian Mari- time Union and the Seafarers International Union of Canada-- meet head-on Thursday in a certification battle here for the crews of six Great Lakes ships. For the first time, the CMU and the SIU will come face to face in a formal hearing be- fore the Canada Labor Re- lations Board. The CMU, established last summer with the support of the Canadian Labor Congress, is dedicated to driving the SIU out of Canada. In its opening drive to accom- plish this, the new union has filed applications for certifica- tion for some 140 seamen em- ployed by three shipping com- panies operating on the lakes. The. SIU has challenged every application and has made it clear it will fight them to the end. The three applications involve crews aboard the Hilda Mar- janne, operated by Translake Shipping Limited, Toronto, Waterfront Foes Meeting Head-On wholly-owned subsidiary of Up- per Lakes Shipping; the Nor- goma, Normac and Norisle of Owen Sound Transportation Company Limited; and the Kee- watin and Assiniboia of. the Ca- nadian Pacific Railway's Great 8 Steamship Line, Mont- real. CLAIMS SUPPORT The CMU claims majority support from the crew mem- bers on the five ships. If the new Maritime Union, set up by Michael Sheehan, a defector from the SIU ranks, wins certification from the fed- eral board, it will be its first break-through against the SIU. The Canadian Brotherhood of Railway, Transport and General Workers (CLC) broke the SIU hold on Great Lakes seamen earlier this year. It won the right to bargain for the crews of the Wheat King and Island Venture against SIU opposition. The brotherhood has indi- cated that it will turn over its membership on the two ships to the new Maritime Union once a the CMU gets on its feet. | Last Meeting Held By Brooklin WA the cheapest power available to|Act through second reading Of|troyble spots. x B.C. and should be used domes-!the legislature, Mr. Allan said) Britain's Lord Home, U.S. Hltically rather than sold back tothe rate of tax which the fed-|state Secretary Dean Rusk, the U.S. jeral authorities will collect on)France's Maurice Couve de| Any surplus power could »e/behalf of the Ontario govern-|Murville and West Germany's| sold for adjustable five - year|ment is set out in the act for a|Gerhard Schroeder all put their periods, Mr. Fulton said. B.C.|five-year period. views on the Berlin situation to would pay $458,000,000 for three} He added: "And we presently|the 15-country NATO council as dams and transmission lines\have no thought of increasing|jt opened a three-day session. handling American power, with|the amount we are asking Ot-| The Western probe of Russian a $172,000,000 federal loan tojtawa to collect." __.jintentions on Berlin was ex- help. | My. Allan read a detailed|pected to be continued by Lle- This "Fulton" plan would cost)statement outlining the act and| wellyn Thompson, U.S. ambas- an extra $750,000,000 over 35jexplaining why the provincial|sador in Moscow, with the years, Mr. Bennett countered|government has decided to con-|packing of British Ambassador Tresday night. tinue collecting its own corpo-/Sir Frank Roberts. B.C. instead would sell its|ration taxes independently of Committee for worship and aye. | Compiling [By MRS. ARTHUR ELLIOTT | BROOKLIN -- The Rev. S. J.|program: Mrs. Ruby Sonley, Di s Hillier, occupied the pulpit at/Mrs. Charles Wilson and Mrs, ictionary * In Iroquois the 11 a.m. worship, held on/Charles Elliott. Sunday morning at Brooklin| This will be the final meeting United Church. Senior Choir|before merger of groups into led in service of praise. \"United Church Women." MONTREAL (CP)--Within a year Canada will have the first Iroquois-French dictionary com- piled since 1878. Guest soloist, Mrs. Ivan Long,| Robert 'Hollier, director of the LONESOME TERRIER Woe-begone and lonely, this | lost and he has a broken leg. | and seems to have lots of little brown and white part | Picked up by the Winnipeg | time on his paws to wait for Irish terrier has more than | city pound, he is being cared | his- owner. his share of trouble -- he's ' for by the Humane Society --CP Wirephoto mao wih snd cans ond ome fence Expert Advocating sang a selection from Handel's Messiah. CHRISTMAS PARTY The annual Christmas party Drug Suspect Claims He Worked For Agueci NEW YORK (CP) -- Italian-; Albert Agueci originally was|claimed he had never met) born Rocco Scopellitti testified|indicated. on the charge but/Agueci, Scopellitti explained} Tuesday that he had worked a|skipped $20,000 bail before the, through an interpreter: couple of months for two Tor-|trial began. He was found slain! " don't remember what I! onto men prior to his arrest last Nov 23 near Rochester, N.Y. | said in Toronto. I asked for an spring on narcotics smuggling) After identifying a photo-|,;nterpreter and they didn't give| charges. graph of Albert Agueci that was|me one. Idon't understand Eng- Scopellitti, 26, who settled in Shown by prosecutor Edward|lish and I don't know what they Toronto in 1953 after his arrival eet said he had/put down." 7 Inited States Known the Toronto man fo Fae toe a haltdd kecalabout a year prior to his ar-|TELLS OF TRIP | share of the American - gener- ated power for periods up to 20) years, with 10-year notice of Former Striker Says Union Paid For Blast QUEBEC (CP)--Nestor Hen- ley, 29-year-old former striker, testified Tuesday he and three lofficers will be elected and a the federal authorities. Of the corporation tax. he| said the Ontario system means more revenue for this prov'- and less confusion--at a cost, | for collecting some $17,000,000, | of only about $650,000. PLAN NEW LEAGUE | CAMPBELLTON, N.B. (CP)| A Quebec New Brunswick| hockey league will start opera-| tion shortly after Christmas and| | schedule drawn up at a meet-| ing here Suaday, a league offi-/ cial announced after an organ- companions received cheques French government tourist of- fice in Canada, has spent the last year learning Iroquois at the nearby Caughnawaga res- ervation. Next year his diction- ary will be published under the auspicies of the National Mus- eum of Canada. "Troquois is a wonder'! tongue but one of the world's most difficult," said Mr, Hol- lier, who speaks half a dozen languages. "A little like Poly- nesian, Tahitian or Basque, per- haps. A single Iroquois word, for instance, can mean some- thing as complex as 'the cari- bou which I saw when I was AWAITS MEETING The probe by Thompson was likely to begin' soon after the Dec. 21 and 22 meeting between President Kennedy and Prime Minister Macmillan in Ber- muda, an authoritative Ameri- can source said. Despite the agreement to con- tinue the probe of Russian in- tentions, the four ministers ap- peared to have achieved no real progress during their two days of talks in bringing their views together on whether and how to negotiate with Russia. Britain and the United States) | for the Junior Sunday. School will be held on Saturday, De- cember 16 at 3 p.m. in the Christian Education Hall. On Sunday morning December 17, at 11 a.m. "The Sacrament of Infant Baptism' will be ad- ministered by Rev. S. J. Hillier. Parents desirious of presenting children for baptism, are re- quested to contact the minister. VESPER SERVICE day, December 18 at 7:30 p.m. in the Christian Education Hall. The annual Vesper service of the CGIT will be held on Mon- Nuclear Arms MONTREAL (CP)--Dr. John E. Keyston, one of the top de- fence experts in Ottawa, has ad- vocated nuclear weapons for Canadian armed forces as part of the NATO deterrent. "It is purely wishful thinking to represent that Canada can pull her weight militarily in NATO while subscribin only conventionally equipp forces," he writes in the De- cember issue of Exchange, a new Canadian monthly maga- zine now in its second issue. Dr. Keyston, vice - chairman of the Defence Research Board, writes further: "There is no room for moral reservations by any NATO -na- tion about the availability of nuclear weapons to its forces, and most certainly not by, Can- ada, one of the foremost sup- pliers of uranium for nuclear weapon manufacture." Dr. Keyston predicts that "the time is imminent when the jare in favor of searching fer a WOMANS ASSOCIATION | The final meeting of the year of the Woman's Association, will be held on Monday evening De- cember 18 in the Christian Edu- cation Hall. This will be the last meeting, for the group known for_many years as '"'Woman's Associa- tion'. In January, 1962, this group) will merge with WMS into one large body called the United) Church Women. threat of application of Soviet ization meeting Monday night. | The officials represented} , teams from Campbellton and France has opposed talks with | Dalhousie, N.B. and Causapscal|Russia at this stage. and Amgui, Que. The agreement announced The two New Bruns wick|after the foreign ministers talks Intermediate clubs, Campbell-|appeared to mean that France ton Tigers and Dalhousie Rang-|was not opposing further Amer- ers have been without a league|ican and British contacts. with this year since the Miramichi|the Russians, but would not con- | Valley League was re-organized|sider itself committed to any- land renamed the North Shore|thing which they discussed in | League. |Moscow, | basis for negotiations while} preen boat | Mr. Hollier said there has/| been neglect of Indian studies} in Canada. No up - to - date dictionary of Iroquois dialects existed. Caughnawaga children were punished for lapsing into their own language at school. And the only Iroquois book he could find in Montreal was a dog-eared copy of the Gospel of St. Luke. Within a few months after the crossing the wide river in a from the United Steelworkers of America (CLC) for blowing) up a conveyor belt at the Gaspe Copper Mines Limited smelter jat Murdochville, Que. Henley was testifying for Gaspe Copper Mines in its $5,- 200,000 damage suit against the union as a result of a violence- ridden walkout in 1957. ; paar y ee seci rest by RCMP narcotics agents! Scopellitti denied that Albert Secs tac Serucie seren on ear 3 |Agueci paid his fare to Italy in erated by Agueci and his| Asked about a statement he/June, 1960, or that Vito Agueci brother, Vito. in the fall of|made before RCMP Constable|helped him arrange for the trip 1960. Albert Anderson of Toronto fol-jat a Toronto travel agency. He Scopellitti and Vito Agueci, 41,)!0wing his arrest in which he said he took a plane from Tor- are among the 11 defendants on jonto and returned to Canada by) trial since Nov. 6 on charges| jsea via New York after spend- of conspiring to smuggle $150,-! jing between a month and six Verwoerd Outlines ween a mont 466,006 worth. ot navcaties intel weeks visiting his ailing father. the U.S. from Italy and Can- Plan For Coloreds |. Scoeliitti said he agreed to| Henley said the cheques were ----_--_______--- CAPE TOWN (Reuters) --|the U.S. after being approachedicympanied by statements for ae Prime Minister Hendrik Ver-\at the pier before boarding the |their expenses. The explosion) Queen Gets Visit woerd Tuesday outlined a 10-\ship But he denied knowing 11,500,000 colored mixed race; He was approached by a man, From Two Doctors population which he said would;about 60, and a woman at the LONDON (AP)--The Queen|Culminate in giving them con-|pier, Scopellitti testified, and was visited Tuesday night by|a 'colored Parliament." a favor by taking the trunk with two of her doctors, Lord Evans| He told the Council for Col-|him to their nephew in New and Sir John Weir for 20 min-\ored Affairs that he hoped to/York. ada bring a trunk from Naples to|dted July 1, 1957. nd were ac- year plan for South Africa's|that the trunk contained heroin. suffering with a feverish chill,|trol of their own affairs through asked if he would do the couple utes. see colored towns with their) Scopellitti said he agreed and No medical bulletin was is-|own local authorities established|turned the trunk over at a New|made out for repairs to his car. sued. The Queen returned to wintry within a year. |York Pier to a man who pro- 'try. 'since. MB FRANCTCO his 50-60 Nn COLDER IN THE EAST WEATHER FORECAST Cold Weather Entering Area Official forecasts | Kitchener 10 Wingham ....+.... 10 Hamilton | St, Catharines | Toronto Peterborough Trenton .. Killaloe .. Muskoka .. North Bay . bre tote coe issued in|goma regions, London: Cloudy|=@titon .. Toronto at 5 a.m.: lad Bae. colder with doen, | Kapuskasing ee Synopsis: Much colder air is| flurries considerable drift-| White River ...... - replacing Tuesday's mild tem-|jing snow, and locally heavy|Moosonee ... peratures over the district ac-|snowsqualls today. Thur sday|> Marie .. companied by strong westerly|mainly cloudy with scattered' winds reaching peak speeds of| snowflurries Winds westerly 25 over 40 mph The strong winds|to 35 today, westerly 20 Thurs- are forecast to continue today] day. moderating slowly overnight, to} Northern Georgian Bay, Tim-|Victoria . becoming generally westerly 20|agami, Cochrane, White River,|Edmonton . by Thursday jregions, North Bay, Sudbury: |Regina Lake St. Clair, Lake'Erie, Ni-|/Partly cloudy and colder with) Winnipeg agara, Lake. Ontario, Halibur-|scattered, snow flurries today|/Fort William ton regions, Windsor, Hamilton,}and Thiftsday. Winds westerly|S.S. Marie .... Toronto: Mainly cloudy, much! 20 to 30 today west to northwest| White River colder with scattered snowflur- 20 Thursday Kapuskasing ries today. Thursday partly " North Bay .. cloudy, with a few snowflurries. Forecast Temperatures |Sudbury Winds westerly 25 to 35 today Low tonight, High Thursday Muskoka western 20 Thursday. Windsor 10 20 (Windsor . Lake Huron, southern Georg- St. Thomas .. 25 jan Bay, Sault Ste. Marie, Al-\Londonm ..sssevees 25 2 20 Observed temperatures: Min. Max. - 10 - 10 |London .. Ke ITOFONtO coevseseess 26 The prime minister said he|duced a letter identifying him- weather here last Wednesday envisaged a governing council|self as the nephew. He said he|Murdochville local, had shown from a 10,000-mile, four-week|to look after the interests ofjhad never seen the couple be-|} tour through tropical West Af-|coloreds throughout the coun-jfore accepting the trunk, orjtember, 1957. took place June 24. | He said he and Normand) INTERPRE TING THE NEWS 39-year-old linguist first visited the reservation, proposing to |Boudreau received $50 each| jeach while Yvon St. Laurent} jand Claude Cote got $25 each |for the job. | Henley said his statement ac- jcompanying the cheque was made out for clothing and for \glasses while Boudreau's was | By ALAN HARVEY | Canadian Press Staff Writer | The bombs - for - Katanga de-| bate in Britain recalls the Suez) episwde of 1956. This time it is] Suez in reverse. As in 1956, there is a crisis} conscience. Feelings run high on both sides. Those who oppose Britain sending bombs to Katanga say the United Nations is embarked on a lunatic action against one of the few areas of tranquillity in the vast and turbulent Congo. Those who insist on the bombs being sent say that Britain has ne choice but to uphold the au- thority of the United Nations, the only available international Hold Decision instrument in an imper- On OMB Power fect world. TORONTO (CP)--The Ontario} 2 Court of Appeal Tuesday re-|SIMES REVERSED served decision on a stated case| The difference between 1956 intended to define the Ontario|an4 1961 is that broadly speak- Municipal Board's power toling the two sides are reversed. compel witnesses to give evi-| In 1956, supporters of the An- dence or punish them if they|<l0-French intervention favored refused. action largely on grounds of na- The case developed from the/|tiona! interest. Opposition came refusal of Murray Jones, Met-|mainly from the international- ropolitan Toronto's planning di-jists. who denrecated the my- ijrector, to give an opinion to the|country - right - or - wrong ap- board Oct. 27. Mr. Jones saidjrreach. then his instructions were '"'not|} In 1961, it is the international- |to express a personal opinion.' ists who are loudest in support In Tuesday's testimony, A. P./of action against President G. Joy, counsel for the planning/Tshombe's government. who board, conceded Mr. Jones had/say "my - United - Nations- been instructed not to express|right-or-wrong,"' while the na- opinions. But he refused to con-|tionaiists -- including the 1956 cede that the planning director|Suez groupers--are up in arms Henley said Theo Gagne, one- \time president of the union's jhim some dynamite during Sep-| | "The dynamite he showed me| was hidden under a little hay in the barn behind his mother's house at Chandler. "He told me the explosives |wonld be used to blow up a CNR crossing at Matapedia. But he didn't tell me where the crossing was." The case is continuing. aft Katanga Issue, 'Suez' Reversed gather material for a book on French-Indian conflicts, he was permitted to roam freely. Armed with a tape recorder and notebook, he launched a systematic exploration of the Caughnawaga dialect. Through lengthy question-and-answer ses- sions starting with names and household articles and ot | ' take an idealistic, high-minded|"¥P to complex constructions, he view of world atfairs yvhaeasny to|gathered about 5,000 Iroquois F hehe : _ listings. piggy the'side of aggres From the beginning Mr. Hol- jlier decided to concentrate on GREATER MENACE the language as it is spoken to- Thus the issues tend to be|day rather than the formal blurred, the peacemakers to be|tongue preserved by old Jesuit branded as warmongers, and/dictionaries. The grammar will thus Katanga becomes a poten-|@l/so reflect actual Caughna- tially greater menace than|W484 usage. Suez. Symbols had to be employed It is a noble sentiment 0 say to express Iroquois sounds for thet Katanga must not. be 'al- which there are no letters in lowed to wecede fain Se the English and French alpha- ( tal ae bets. There was no letter, for Congo; it is less easy to pursue/ instance, for the glottal stop--a bat OOuGy to a conclusion if it/hiccup more than a distinct involves open warfare. sound. roles is that those who try to) WMS 'armed force, nuclear and con- The Afternoon Auxiliary Of} ventional, is likely to be ap- WMS will hold its Christmas}plied very fully, forcibly, fre- meeting on Wednesday after-|quently and frighteningly in the noon, December 20 at 2:30 p.m.| endeavor to intimidate the in the Christian Education Hall.'NATO nations." COMING EVENTS NEARLY NEW SHOP THURS. and FRI. 2:00 - 4:30, 6:00 - 9:00 690 KING ST, EAST BINGO, Bathe Park, Eulalie Avenue,| Thursday, 2 p.m. Euchre Saturday and) Monday, 8 p.m. | | INSTALLATION -- Parkwood Lodge, | Oshawa. Thursday, December 14 at 7/ p.m, Installation of Bro. A. D. Hele and investiture of officers by Wor. Bro. | J. Biddulph, Installing Master. Charles | Elliott, WM. Sie Es THE BOWMANVILLE Kinette Club in- | vite you to its first Christmas Bazaar) Friday, December 15th at 1.30 in the|_---- Parish Hall of Saint John's Anglican Chruch, These Kinettes would be pleas- ed to help you choose your Christmas| gifts and decorations. Proceeds to fur.| ther the furnishing of the Children's |playroom in Bowmanville Memorial | Hospital. WHITBY BINGO CLUB BAYVIEW WEDNESDAY, DEC. 13th Special Games $25, extra in The tearoom will be convened by the} 51 Nos. Jackpots 50 and 52 Nos. Bus leaves Oshawa easiieteen | | Terminal: Children under 16 NOVEL BINGO | not admitted. THURSDAY EVENING, 8 P.M. [> At one time during the Suez crisis, it was possible to portray |r DON'T aE "KY « SURE the arguments raging in Brit- ain as a battle 'between the} eggheads and the boneheads."'| Those who agree with that view will probably wish things were as clear-cut this time. List with Lloyd then Call your Mover Of all kinds also suits changed from double to single breasted. EXPERT and Minalins Stanley Borek 3% Simcoe St, $. (upstairs) for 2 Consecutive Years. LLOYD REALTY (Oshawe) Ltd., Reoltors had been told to disobey an or-/against . "aggression" by the der of the board. Urited Nations. | PHONE 728-7125 101 Simcoe N, -- 728-5123 The case was taken to the ap-| One result of this reversing of! peals court by E. A. Goodman, counsel for A. E. Diamond, who had appealed a ruling of North! York council to the board. a Goodman had ib d. Mr. Jones as an expert witness. | LATEST FAD | HAMILTON (CP)--P6uch foot-| ball is the latest fad here, More than 200 carloads of players and| fans jammed McMaster Univer-| Cliff Mills 48-Hour Special 1956 CHEVROLET CONVERTIBLE sity campus for the game that | |has eliminated tackling. | } | | ' | |MoreComfort Wearing | upper and lower plates holds them firmer so that they feel more com- Here is a pleasant way to overcome ETH. fortable. No ty | loose plate discomfort. FASTE. gummy, gooey, pas It's alkaline front an improved powder, sprinkled on taste or feeling. icid). Does not sour. Checks "plate odor breath". Get FASTEETH today at drug counters everywhere. CLIFF MILLS MOTORS LTD. 230 KING STREET WEST Completely refinished. New V-8, Exceptionally clean, *995 top, Winner of Oshawa & District |) Real Estate Board Sales Award | at ST. GEORGE'S HALL, (Albert and Jackson Sts.) Games $6, $12, $20 May be doubled or tripled $210 JACKPOT INCLUDED _Door Prize $15 _ BINGO IS CANCELLED AT UNION HALL BOND STREET FOR | WEDNESDAY, DEC. 13 BATHE PARK BINGO | | | | | Wed., Dec. 13, 7:45 p.m. Sharp | 20 regular games 4 jackpots | | BATHE PARK | PLEASE PHONE 725-2987 CLUBHOUSE OSHAWA JUNIOR CHAMBER OF COMMERCE EULALIE STREET Monster BINGO - Thurs., Dec. 14 20 GAMES AT $20.00--5 GAMES AT $30.00 1--$150.00 JACKPOT ($20.00 PER LINE PLUS $50.00 PER FULL CARD) 2--$250.00 JACKPOTS JACKPOT NOS. 55 - 57 5 FREE TURKEYS $10.00 PER LINE PLUS $200.00 PER FULL CARD IN 55-57 NUMBERS THIS WEEK PLUS $25.00 CONSOLATION PRIZE. $150 TOTAL PRIZES GUARANTEED IN THESE TWO GAMES. INDIA HANDICRAFTS MAKE EXCELLENT CHRISTMAS GIFTS Items include beautiful table lamps, unusual coffee: tables, rosewood elephants, carving sets, Kirpan and Kukri knives, brass vases, bowls, compote, candle holders, pure silver filigree jewellery, hand-made silk dress lengths, head scarves, stoles and many other unusual and ex- citing items: For best selec- tion please visit display early. For appointment . . 725-6651 i ee |ADMISSION RED BARN, Oshawa EXTRA BUSES. 1.00 DOOR PRIZES