ee ae ~ POPE PAUL VI is gay as he talks with others aboard plane en route today between Rome Si ie and Bombay. He is making the trip to attend an Euchar- istic Congress and will stay Sie testias' three days. --AP Wirephoto via cable from Beirut The Pope Arrives, Starts India Tour By GEORGE CORNELL "AP Religion Writer BOMBAY (AP) -- Pope Paul VI landed in Bombay today to begin a historic four-day visit to India. Nearly 100,000 Indians, many night--as police swept up lead- ers of groups that protested the Pope's visit--as a "Catholic in- vasion" of India. Almost 2,000 police patrolled Santa Cruz Airport on the look- out for Hindu fanatics. forth with the papal hymn, Tu es Petras--you are peter. In a statement distributed as he left Rome on the longest papal journey in history, the Roman Catholic pontiff asked those who sympathized with his barefoot ard wearing the white} The airport crowd cheered/ mission to pray for its success. dhoti land, arb of their impoverished|and clapped as the Pope stepped|And with poverty-stricken Asia ronged to the airport butjfrom his Air India Boeing jet-|as his destination, he appéaled were barred from entering tojliner into 87-degree December|to the rich countries of the watch the Pope's plane land at/heat, at 5:16 p.m., 21 minutes|world to lend economic support the end of his unprecedented 4,000-mile journey to the Orient. About 8,000, many of them In- dian Catholics led by their par- ish priests, were permitted to enter. A great cheer went up as the Pope's plane touched down in brilliant sunshine. Minutes before the plane landed, about 2,000 Indians broke police lines and surged behind schedule. | The 67-year-old pontiff is the first Pope to visit Asia and his 4,000 - mile flight from Rome! was the longest ever underta:| ken by a Pope. PM GREETS HIM The Pope was wearing a white skullcap, a red silk stole and a ted brocade cape As he walked | jtook off to relieve the poverty of under- developed nations. TAKES OFF IN RAIN The Pope's Air India jetliner before dawn from Rome in a driving rain, and only a small crowd saw the Pontiff off. Because of the rain, he cancelled the departure speech he was to have made across the runway to gain a)d0wn a 40 - foot red carpe spread in front of his plane, In- Pee Tee eee on a aera\aae Pride Minister Lal Bail dur Shastri, a Hindu, and Vice- President Zakir Hussain, a Mos- lem, stepped forward to shake hands. boo poles pushed the crowds} Then the three walked down to see the leader of the world's 500,000,000 Roman Catholics. PUSH CROWDS BACK Policemen carrying long bam- back without using -violence.|a receiving line of diplomats, There was no sign at the air- port of fanatic Hindu groups that pledged to stage black fiag demonstrations against the Pope. About 250 persons were ar- tested--some in raids Tuesday many of whom flew 1,000 miles from New Delhi to meet the Pope. Information Minister In- dira Gandhi, daughter of the late prime minister Nehru, also was presented to the pontiff. Bombay's police band burst!ily." and instead copies were distrib- uted to newspaper men. In it the' Pope 'said his trip "seeks to unite all peoples in closer bonds of mutual under- tandi and friendship, mak- ing them ever more conscious of the inecapable duty of know- ing one another, of loving one another from the heart, of help- ing one another effectively ac- cording to the goods received from God in varying measure, not meant for a few nations but created for all the human fam- _By MICHAEL GILLAN OTTAWA (CP) -- An Ontario Conservative MP said Tuesday night the Red Ensign, as weli as the government's original three-maple leaf flag proposal, should be excluded from any \national plebiscite on the issue. William H. A. Thomas (Mid- dlesex West) backed his party's demands for a plebiscite but told the Commons the flag the government proposed several months ago and the Red En- sign his party wants retained should be left out because they have become involved in con- troversy. He was speaking on a Con- servative amendment calling for a plebiscite that was ad- mitted by Speaker Alan Mac- naughton at* the ing of the}, back to committee with a rec- ommendation that a plebiscite be held. Each member may speak for 40 minutes on the amendment, and for another 40 on the com- mittee report motion. There is also a possibility that the de- bate could be lengthened fur- ther through other amend- ments. REJECTS PLEBISCITE The government has rejected a plebiscite and argued that Parliament must decide. Mr. Macnaughton ruled on the Conservative amendment, proposed Monday, after consid- ering it overnight. He said it is unlikely the government's orig- inal resolution and a Conserva- tive amendment to it calling for day's sitting--the 21st of this record-breaking session. The Speaker's ruling dimmed government hopes for early adoption of the onedeaf flag recommended by a 10-to-4 vote of a special Commons flag com- mittee. The flag bears one red maple leaf on a white. ground with red panels at each side. The Conservative amend- ment would refer the report P ite would again come before the House. "In that case it would be rea- sonable to assume that the practical effect of refusing amendments to refer back ei- ther of these reports to the com- mittee .. . would be tantamount to preventing any decision af! the House on the particu- lars mentioned. .. ." Leave Ensign Off © Plebiscite: Tory sphere" and he had to decide what was "fair and equitable." The committee had objected to a plebiscite by a 9-to-5 vote, he noted, but the rules permit ac ittee to reconsider and even reverse any decision. Prime Minister Pearson said the government would support the ruling, then challenged Op- position Leader Diefenbaker to permit an immediate vote. He didn't. Because the committee report is the first item of busi SPEEDSTER GETS $200 POLE BILL Race driver Craig Breed love strapped himself into his jet powered Spirit of America Oct. 15 and raced 526 miles an hour to set a land speed record across Utah's Bonneville salt flats. But in doing it he also swerved off course, hit a telephone pole, landed in a canal full of water and nearly drowned. And that wasn't the end of it. Tuesdayr-he got a bill for $200 from the Mountain States Telephone Company of Sait Lake City, the re- pair cost for the télephone pole. each day, no question period can be conducted except by unanimous agreement of the House. TURNS OFFER DOWN Mr. Pearson offered a 30- minute question period each day, providing the sitting started 30 minutes early. Mar- cel Lambert (PC -- Edmonton West) rejected this, saying it made no provision for written questions and statements by ministers. Mr. Pearson agreed to sug- gestions that party House lead- ers should meet in an attempt The problem went beyond the "rigid technical and procedural to work on a possible agree- ment, GET 113 WEAPONS SAIGON (AP) -- The Viet Cong wiped out a government district headquarters post early Tuesday, seizing enough weap- ons to arm a reinforced guer- rilla company. About 300 Viet Cong troops smashed their way into the town 'of Thien Gido, 100 miles northeast of Saigon, and killed the district chief and 13 of his men, The Communists escaped with 113 weapons, including 33 machine-guns. Thirty defenders were wounded and six are missing: Two Viet Cong were reported killed in the fight. The force at Thien Giao ra- dioed the military headquarters at the coastal town of Phan Thiet for reinforcements, and flare-dropping planes and fight- ers arrived within an hour after the attack began. Two compa- nies of ground troops also were dispatched. However, by the time the ground troops arrived a little be- fore dawn, the Viet Cong had left with their booty. ey also carried. off two radios §and de- stroyed the distriet Headquar- Co Con (Tiger) Island, off the northern part of the zone. "This act of war... crudely Viet Cong Grab Arms From Government HQ violated the 1954 Geneva agree- ment on Viet Nam," the broad- cast said. Taylor Plans To Smash Guerrillas WASHINGTON (AP) -- Am- bassador Maxwell D. Taylor, armed with fresh. orders from President Johnson, will fly back to South Viet Nam shortly to work out new plans for intensi- fying the war against Commu- nist guerrillas, : . Presumably, prospective new military actions could include air strikes against the Commu- nist supply lines that run from North and South Viet Nam through the mountainous jun- gles of Laos. But a White House statement reporting on the conference Johnson held Tuesday with Ta- lor and other advisers withheld details on prospective actidns. statement emphasized Commu- nist use of the supply lines through Laos and said there is evidence of increasing support to the Viet Cong rebels from Communist North Viet Nam. The statement also said that Taylor would "consult ur- gently" with the South Viet Nam government on what should be done to improve the war effort. NEED -- Mortgage Mohey? Real Estete CALL McG | L Broker Day or Night - 728-4285 Saskatchewan To Chase UK Workers VANCOUVER (CP)--The Sas- katchewan government plans to recruit British professional and skilled workers to help meet a labor shortage developing in the province, Premier Ross RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) -- Brazil abruptly halted Juan D. Peron on his arrival from Ma- drid today with the aim of even- tually returning to Argentina. A Brazilian government spokes- man said the exiled former dic- tator will be shipped back to Spain. It was reported unofficially that Peron would be detained at the military section of the airfield until. the plane heads back to Madrid tonight. However, Spansih officials earlier indicated Peron might not be allowed to return to 'Spain in view of his back-to- Argentina activities. Official barriers mushroomed against the former strongman in Rio de Janeiro, Buenos Aires, and other South Ameri- can capitals. It- was made plain Peron, 69, would be unwelcome in Monte- video, the Uruguayan capital to which he had been bound, and in Asuncion, Paraguay, where he 'wanted to live until he felt Peron Detained By Brazilians the time was ripe for return the nation from which he w: -- by a bloody revolt 1955. The Iberia Airliner which carried Peron from Spain, where he had lived luxuriously since 1960, was held up nearly - a s tag Rio de Janeiro airport Iberia Company finally announced cancellation wae scheduled run on to Monte- eo. eee E. J. map| & Associates Professional Consulting Engineers 259 Simcoe St. S. Telephone 728-7868 Civil. & Structure! Enpinecring | and Building Design. Thatcher said Tuesday. Mr. Thatcher said in an ad- dress to a Vancouver service club that his province already has shortages of doctors, nurses and teachers and next year will face a major shortage of labor in a number of fields. The premier, who cam- paigned in the April Saskatch- ewan election on promises to bring. major industry to the province and create 80,000 new jobs in four years, called for a modernization of Canadian im- migration laws to bring more for CITY COUNCIL RE-ELECT Alderman MRS. ALICE REARDON Phone 723-2057 people to the country. ters building and a munitions dump. CHARGES BOMBINGS North Viet' Nam meanwhile claimed that 12 U.S. planes strafed and bombed three vil- lages in its half of the demili- tarized zone between North and South Viet Nam Tuesday. A North Vietnamese broad- cast said the bombing was the fourth recent attack on North Vietnamese territory. Radio Hanoi charged that U.S. planes hamhad Church Won't Pay Horsburgh's Fees CHATHAM (CP)--Park Street United Church voted Tuesday night not to pay the. legal fees Of Rev. Russell D. Horsburgh, who is appealing his conviction on five counts of contributing to juvenile delinquency. Rev. C. R. Plaskett, named by Kent Presbytery as interim pastor following the 45-year-old Significantly, however, the OVER by popular demand TONY VERSAGE at the HONKY TONK PIANO Nightly In The "BLUE HORSE LOUNGE" NEW! a Blue Bonnet package that contains HANDY-SHAPED' POUNDS FOR EASY STORING, SERVING! month, said however the meet- ing agreed to continue Mr. Horsburgh's salary until the end of the year. The church board voted 62 to 20 against paying legal fees. Mr. Horsburgh resigned his Park Street pastorate following his conviction. He was sen- tenced to one year in jail on each of the five counts, with minister's conviction last lsentences to run concurrently. WEATHER FORECAST ve More Light Snow Not So Cold TORONTO (CP)--Forecast is- sued by the weather office at §.30 a.m.: Synopsis: Mainly sunny cold weather is expected to prevail today and Thursday throughout the northern half of the prov- ince. Light snow in the south will gradually end this after- noon. However, mainly cloudy conditions are forecast for Thursday with snow likely again later in the day. Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, HOTEL LANCASTER 27 King St. West Oshawa and strafed five vil- lages in the demilitarized zone Oct. 16 and Oct. 17 and Nov. 25 "U.S. puppet warships' shelled Red Minister Sobolev Dies LONDON (Reuters) -- Soviet deputy foreign minister, Ark- ady Sobolev, is dead, Tass | news agency said today. | Tass said an obituary signed by Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko and other Soviet lead- ers said the Russian diplomatic service had suffered a grievous loss. | Sobolev was the Soviet resi-| dent representative at the United} Nations for several years. He was succeeded by Valerian Zo rin. Previously Soboley served in the UN secretariat as an un- dersecretary. Lakehead White River... Sault Ste. Marie. Kapuskasing .... Earlton North Bay..... {coming cloudy by evening. Not |s0 cold. Light winds. Cochrane, Algoma: Becoming mainly sunny this afternoon. Thursday sunny with cloudy riods and continuing cold. Light winds. White River: Mainly sunny and cold today and Thursday. Light winds. Forecast Temperatures Low tonight, high Thursday: Windso: 22 TT seceeeees 22 Lake Huron, western Lake On-|London tario, Windsor, London, Tor- onto: Light snow gradually end- ing this afternoon. Thursday mainly cloudy with snow begin- ning in the afternoon. Light winds. Not so cold. Niagara, Hamilton: Light snow tapering off to snowflur- ries this. afternoon. Thursday mainly cloudy with snow begin- ning in the afternoon. Not so" cold. Light winds. Eastern Lake Ontario: Occa- sional light snow this afternoon. Sunny Thursday becoming cloudy in the afternoon, Not so cold. Light winds. Killaloe, Georgian Bay, Tim- agami,' Haliburton, North Bay, Sudbury: Variable cloudiness today with a few brief snow- @urriés. 'Thursday sunny be- Hamilton ....+00.. St. Catharines.... Toronto Peterborough Trenton ....se0eebe Killaloe .6. Muskoka . eeeee Observed Temperatures Low overnight, high Tuesday: Dawson ... 36 Victoria ... 46 Edmonton . . i Regina ...... - 10 Winnipeg s.ecsecee -24 -30 | Sudbury .. Muskoka . Windsor .. London ...++ Toronto sees Kingston .. Peterborough .... Trenton .. Ottawa Montreal ... uebec | Halifax .. ete ae bas PY : The package foil-wrapped to seal in Blue Bonnet's pure 100% vegetable oil goodness! Each golden-yellow pound conveniently shaped to fit the refrigerator compartment and your serving dish. Each pound Is Individually wrapped in parch- ment. Use one, the rest stay fresh. The whole package is overwrapped in sparkling foil--you know it's fresh when you buy it! se eebedeees THURSDAY, DEC. 3rd--1:30 to 4:30; 6:00 to 9:00 p.m. at ST. GREGORY'S AUDITORIUM, SIMCOE ST. N. Regular ond new blood donors are urgently requested to attend with or without on appointment. BER Famous all vegetable, Yellow Quik quality! This new package contains the same, pure vegetable oil margarine you've always known. Blue Bonnet is made only with 100% vegetable oil...no marine oils or animal fats, Enjoy the nutritional advantages and sunny-sweet flavor of Blue Bonnet every day! For real package-to-plate convenience, Biue Bonnet also comes In the one pound package of quarters, Unwrap one quarter, slice and serve! City-Wide Delivery MITCHELL'S DRUGS 9 Simcoe N, 723-3431 Open Evenings Till 9 P.M : Our Blood Bank is in Urgent Neéd of More Blood MEET THE NEEDS OF OUR PATIENTS IN DECEM