~ 20 'THE VSHAWA TIMES, Thuredey, Cetober 7, 1968 ROUND THE GLOBE IN A GLANCE Return Visit Of Pope Paul To US. Soon, Clerics Say NEW YORK (Reuters)--Pope Paul may undertake another) visit to the United States in the near future, top Roman Catho- lic clerics here said Wednesday. A senior official. at- the. resi- dence here of Francis Cardinal Spellman said the possibility of such a trip has been widely dis- cussed during the pontiff's visit to the United Nations Monday. SUCCEEDS CHE HAVANA (AP) -- Joel Dom- enech was named Cuba's indus- euae minister Wednesday, suc- ceeding Ernesto (Che) Guevara. Premier Fidel Castro an- nounced Monday that Guevara resigned the post last April and left Cuba to conduct revolution- "ary activities in another coun- try. He did not identify the country. THIRSTS GROW WIESBADEN, West Germany (Reuters) -- West Germans downed a record 1,074,000,000 gallons of beer in the first eight months of this year, 2,700,000 gallons more than in the same period last year, the govern- ment statistical office said Wed- nesday. RECORD MESSAGE LONDON (Reuters) -- The Queen's Christmas mes- sage this year will be pre-re corded for sound and television broadcasting so that it can be transmitted throughout the Commonwealth on _ Christmas Day, Buckingham Palace an- nounced Wednesday. ORDERS AIRLIFT WASHINGTON (Reuters) President Johnson has ordered a special airlift to bring to the United States for treatment and rehabilitation 60 para- plegic South Vietnamese war Rhodesian Independence: It's A Day For Showdown LONDON (Reuters)--Rhodes- jan Premier Ian Smith and British Prime Minister Wilson seemed set on a collision course today as they prepared for what was believed to be the decisive session in their talks on Rhod indepe The rupture that seemed likely, with Smith demanding independence under Rhodesia's present all-white government, and Wilson continuing to refuse unless the colony's African ma- jority were assured of voting rights, threatened to wreck the Rhodésian economy and per- Wednesday in talks which Smith said left the parties "as farther «. . I would not say acceptable to both sides." It was understood that at Wednesday's talks Britain hammered home its determina- tion to take stern retaliatory) measures if Smith carried out! his threat to seize independ-| ence. It was understood that Smith for discussion but that Britain regarded them as incompatible fore even shatter the British) with its basic principles, Commonwealth. } President Julius Nyerere of Tanzania, one. of the African Commonwealth members, de- clared Wednesday night in a television interview that if Brit- ain yielded to Smith's demands "Tanzania would drop out of the Commonwealth. Britain has threatened to use économic sanctions against) Rhodesia if it "rebelled" by de- claring independence unilater- ally. Wednesday Nyerere de- clared that he expected Britain to go even farther -- to use armed intervention. Smith's early otimism in the talks with Wilson and Common- "wealth Secretary Arthur. Bot- tomley appeared to evaporate Rhodesian African nationalist, representatives warned that) they would reject any agree-| far apart as we were--but no) we are any nearer to a solution! put forward some suggestions) veterans, it was announced Wednesday. The veterans will return to Viet Nam to help train hundreds of other paraplegics-- people who have lost the use of their legs through severance of the spinal cord, BARGAIN BOMBS? LONDON (AP)--British scien- tists are working on research which could lead to production of cut-price atomic and hydro- gen bombs. The technique is secret but the research could also yield a valuable new tool for medical research, Britain's atomic energy authority dis- closed Wednesday. SPAKK ILL BRUSSELS (AP) -- Belgian Foreign Minister Paul - Henri Spaak, 66, is ill, it was an- nounced Wednesday. The na- ture of his illness was not dis- closed. MISSION HEADS HOME TAIPEL (Reuters)--A Cana- dian trade delegation left for home Wednesday after two days of talks with Chinese nationalist officials here. Delegates from the two countries reached pre- liminary agreement on Formo- san textile exports to Canada for the current fiscal year, Chi- nese sources reported. FOOD SHORT | WASHINGTON (CP) -- The count population in have-not countries has just about can- \celled out their increases in food production in the last 10 jyears, says the Food and Agri- jcultural Organization of the United Nations, World trade in jfarm produce has increased and prices have fallen and jprospects of any lasting im- provement in. produce prices "are not very bright." A Program For Prairies WINNIPEG (CP) -- Prime Minister Pearson campaigning in Manitoba until Friay, un- veiled planks in the Liberal party's farm platform Wednes- day including a commitment to support Prairie farm income if grain marketings fall off. He made a visit by RCAF helicopter'to one farm near Ri- vers, Man., to survey crop da- mage from wet weather. Today he motors to Winkler, 60 miles southwest of here, for a noon- hour reception and later flies to Dauphin, 160 miles northwest of here, for a night speech. His farm policy siatcment here included these points: 1, Federal payment of 29 per cent, instead of the present 20 per cent, of premiums on provincially - administered crop insurance plans pro- vided the provinces contri- bute another five per cent. 2. Purchase of uneconomic farms by the government for re-development and re-sale to farmers plus re-training and re-settlement and aid for far- mers who want to take up other occupations. 3. The setting up of a Cana- dian dairy commission with one objective being to boost the national average price for manufacturing milk to $3.75 or $4.00 a hundred- weight. There would be sim- lar steps taken for other products. 4. Unemployment insurance extension to full-time farm workers. 5. Establishment of a live- stock feed board to ensure availability of supplies in eastern Canada and British Columbia and creation of a form management service to determine market trends and plan production. 6. A mortgage program to finance firm housing. Mr, Pearson was unable to give details on most of the points. He said Agriculture Minister Hays will explain the details later in the campaign, He also cautioned that if con- tinued in office after the Nov. Captain Kidd Map Missing LONDON (CP) -- A map of treasure in Nova Scotia drawn by Capiain Ridd--this one with its bona fides firmly established -has gone missing. E, A. Furbear of nearby Mor- len, Surrey, says his late aunt SCS NN aL ®: we is the famous pirate, until some time last year. The aunt, Fliz- abeth Dick, died recently at the age of 77, Furbear said he believes his aunt may have sold the map some. timhe' last year, adding: "T would like to know who now owns it hecause a lot of would- be treasure hunters are inter-|, \ested,"" The map and a vast quantity of other Kidd possessions were ad the map in her possession, along with other mementoes of 8 election all the planks won't collected by Hubert Palmer, an Eastbourne solicitor who died in i at. 1949, at the age of 85. possessions. She auctisned Palmer never bought a relic,|much of his collection in 19 cons ¥ ar gs * ry but the map was not soid. thout having it verifie | Furbear has been British Museum, and he kept @/through her papers, pt gg careful record of his purchases.| tind some indication of. what Mrs. Dick, widow of a mer-| happened to the missing treas- chant seaman and purse-com-|ure chart, panion to Palmer for 11 years,| was with the old man when he found the Nova Scotia treasure map and other charts in the Instant beverage preparations false bottom of a sea chest. in Britain have reduced tea con- At Palmer's death, Mrs. Dick sumption 10 per cent and in was bequeathed his home and creased coffee 25 per cent, CHANGE DRINKING HABIT be implemented immediately. LARGE STOCKS ON HAND! THANKSGIVING ASHWA 'ONE PRICE TO ALL! No nonsense or small print limiting our offer to unless clearly marked os a clearance item. Shop w and save! "in-stock" items CLEARANCE OALE ith confidence ALUMINUM COMBINATION SCREEN AND STORM Screen, Storms, Closer Windchain and all hardware included. FRA Wheat Crop No Record PLAN SAWMILL A $10,000,000 sawmit!l! is) ment which did not produce Af-| |planned by Price Brothers Co. |i rican majority rule prior to in-\Ltd. for Lake Lamothe, 150) dependence, | miles northwest of Quebec City. Even before he came to Brit- |The completed mill will be able ain, Smith warned that if he re- |to turn out 40,000,000 feet of turned to Rhodesia empty-|wood annually. handed, his Rhodesian Front! an party would favor a unilateral ESTABLISH COMPANY Molson and Co, Ltd., Mont- declaration of independence, | Rhodesia has insisted itjreal stockbrokers, have estab: lished a new company for real wants independence without estate development. The comp- strings. Britain, however, has held that the internally - self-jany, to be known as Molson De- velopment' Ltd., will concen- governing colony must first give guarantees that progress|trate its activities in Ontario jand Quebec, be made toward rule by the Ne- : gro majority within a "reason-| AWARD CONTRACT British Columbia Hydro and THE BEST BATTLES -- I able"' time. Power Authority Wednesday announced that a $1,019,066 contract to provide five isola- ~ Carleton: Once 'Safe Bet', ted-phase bus systems at the Portage Mountain powerhouse has been awarded L.T.E. Cir- jeuit Breakers Ltd., of Port Cre- OTTAWA (CP)--The Domin- Statistics said \Wednesday the record wheat crop' predicted earlier is ex- pected now to fall short of the all-time mark. Based on survey returns to Sept. 15, the federal agency es- timated the 1965 crop at 703,- /900,000 bushels, the second highest production on record. It is a shade ahead of the 701,- 900,000-bushel crop of 1952. In its preliminary estimate Sept. 3, DBS placed the 1965 crop at 759,800,000 bushels, well ahead of the record 723,400,000 production in 1963. The Ontario winter wheat crop is estimated at 13,358,000) bushels, compared with 18,246,- 000 last year. The estimated yield per acre of 36.9 also is down from 40.1 in 1964. Prairie weather had settled down by the end of September, allowing the resumption of har- ion Bureau of STANDARD DOORS 2' 6" x 6' 6" $49.95 FULLY Y PRE- No. 1-1 men"| ||| BIG 100 FOOT ROLLS 6' T BAR POSTS wi83e FIRST COME FIRST SERVED WHILE IT LASTS! 3 GAUGE--CANADIAN MADE CHAIN LINK FENCING 36" - #997 a 42" . 11-97 JET CARNIVAL end BLACK MARBLE STAINLESS STEEL VINYL 2-8x6-8 2-10x6-10 $20.65 $21.35 SELF STORING DOORS ADD $1.00 LAST CALL PRICE GUARANTEED ASBESTOS FLOOR TILE TI |. OCT. 14th, ONLY! FIRST QUALITY Quality Birch KITCHEN CABINETS Arborite tops --. Steiniess Steel Sinks 54" Upper $32.55 3° SPECIAL! 54" Lower $84.65 Several Colours 72" Upper $45.85 ARBORITE STORM and SCREEN YOUR HOME ALUMINUM WINDOWS Custom Made to 7 EACH Others at 81 NAILS SPOST FORMED 72" Lower $103.40 Your Measurements 2%" $5.89 5Counter Tops 96" Upper $54.65 2t. 127.95 96" Lower $134.95 ai Length 94,95 Up to 38 united inches 3" .. $5.82 4" .. $5.69 PER 50 LB. CARTON FULL 18" x 20" x 7" UNDERCOATED COMPLETE WITH CRUMB CUP AND STRAINER $9.88 EACH FIRST QUALITY 136" INTERIOR MAHOGANY POOR'S $3.82 Quam ria 2'0 "44 $4.22 § 4.44 $4.60 EACH 2'6" x 94 2-8x6-8 $5.37 Ss 2-10x6-6 $5.52 $4.77 BUY ANY QUANTITY! BUILDING THIS FALL? vest operations. If it holds, DBS said, the bulk of the har- vest will be completed by the middle of this month 'dit, Ont. The systems will carry |power to the Portage Mountain, |switchyard for the Peace River \power project. RUG & UPHOLSTERY CLEANING In Your Home... or Our Plant PHONE 725-9961 OSHAW, 00 39teSOinches $9.70 51 te70inches $11.30 71 te 8S inches $13.25 86 to 100 inches $1-4,40 A Quality Product of Alcan Aluminum C.S.A. APPROVED 11000 SERIES 1-6x6-6 1-8x6-6 1-10x6-6: 2-2x6-6 2-4x6-6 2-6x6-8 2-8x6-6 Is Now Anybody's To Wi OTTAWA (CP)--Carleton, the "safest" seat in Parliament un- til 1963, is one of the a stable at 15,200. doubtful in this election cam-| About 40 per cent' over-all are paign with two canny pee civil servants and servicemen, funning neck and neck |who favared the Liberals in re- The sprawling constituency, /cent. elections. This pattern} taking in a large slice of-south-\could have changed because of | west Ottawa, elected Conserva-|inrest over civil service pay tives in 31 straight elections!and integration of the armed and byelections after Confeder- forces, ation--an unmatched record of Mr. Bell, 52, a lawyer who eo In = g vr ll gy ord served as national Conservative leaders Sir John A, Macdonald, |°'S2%zer for 20 years before he Sir Robert Borden and" George entered Parliament in 1957, eg banking on dissatisfaction seer political scandals, adoption of But in the 1963 vote, Liberal Hie maple leaf flag and bi candidate Lioyd Francis Scored jingualism in the civil service. @ major upset, dumping then) Mr, Francis acknowledges immigration Minister Richard)that such dissatisfaction exists. (Dick) Bell by 1,157 votes. |Local newspapers reported in Both men have been cam-|January he was displeased with paining steadily and recruiting the government's record and armies of party workers everjready to retire, but the party since their last contest. Both ap-jleadership persuaded him to "pear supremely confident this|stay: on. time and there is talk of a photo) Both men are concentrating finish Nov, 8. on door-to-door canvassing and "We didn't stop after the last|Preparing speech material for election--we just kept on go- lively contradictory meetings.' ing," Mr. Francis says. As many as six or eight such A 45-year-old real estate ex-|face-to-face debates may be ecutive with a PhD in econom- jheld, Carleton is one of the few ies and nine years experience|tidings in Canada. where this _as a senior civil servant, the|!9th-century tradition has sur- white-haired Liberal candidate, Vived. - counts on heavy support from) The third candidate nomi government employ ees and| nated so far, New Democrat white-collar workers who have|Donald Stirling, a United been flocking to new west- end| Church minister, has a big hill suburbs. to climb--his predecessor in |1963 received only 3,144 votes of 'PATTERN CHANGES the 66,000 cast. Mr. Francis Since 1963, the number of ur-jreceived 32,325, Mr. Bell 31,168 ban voters has jumped by 10,- land a Social Credit candidate 600 to 73,780 while the rural 609. electorate, heavily Conservative} in the past, has remained rela- 30" COPPERTONE $5.16 $5.13 UTILITY STUDS $77.00 4x8 PLYWOOD SHEATHING $2.49 vp OPPO EYI ROCK LATH $38.75 SHEET ROCK $53.25 M No. 1 JOISTS $99.50 FREE MEASURING CHARTS AVAILABLE OPEN DAILY 8 A.M. TO 6 P.M, SATURDAY till 5 CLOSED ON THANKSGIVING MONDAY, OCT. 11 Delivery Service Available At Very Reasonable Rates 7 BOWER § | sn"... SAWS ust $2805 5 visit OUR DISPLAY AT THE INTERNATIONAL PLOWING MATCH MASSEY FERGUSON FARM MILLIKEN OCTOBER 12th to 16th KEEP WARM THIS WINTER COOL NEXT SUMMER No. 1 ROCKWOOL INSULATION in lots of 20 certons or more 2"' 90 SQUARE FEET CARTON < 60 > 4 FEET 9. DIVISION OF OSHAWA CLEANING CONTRACTORS FANERS | 94 RANGE HOODS SAVE AND COMPLETE WITH FILTER NAME BRAND FIRST > > : Random Vee --. Grooved ALPINE GLACIER CHERRY: QUALITY Woodgrained Hardboard ; . 4x7's $3.95 4x8's $4.52 ANY QUANTITY BUY JUST WHAT YOU NEED! - SEE OUR PANELLING DISPLAY! OVER 40 DIFFERENT PANELS IN STOCK! 3 x 4 MASONITE HARDBOARD TILE : 7 Ac UNDERLAY fir Any Quentity Premium Quality OVERHEAD GARAGE DOORS Heavy Gauge All Welded Steel With A Prime Coat FULL SIZE 8' xX 6' 6" ns 8' x 7' $41.55 -- 9' x 7' only $46.75 Many other sizes end styles of tip-up and sectional doors in stock. INTERIOR DECORATOR FURNITURE DRAPERIES BROADLOOM 15 King Street East CUSTOM MADE DRAPES Phone 725-2686 DZ Super shines out of every package ¥ 52 shi And he pole podypicb peg Nay conan package. nly "IT" Shoe Polish hes 2 has a of the container. lock-top container. Just twist and it's open . Twist and it's closed . . . Sealed airtight. New full colour "IT" Shoe Polish will give your shoes a deep ri¢h shine. And "IT" actually helps preserve the leather. One shine will convince ou is. - 52 shines will make you an "IT" fan r GET OUR PRICE LIST ON TRUCK LOTS FOR HOUSE, BARN OR COTTAGE JOBS SHEET Any Quentity NAME > "on . 37 EACH RANDOM AJAX YARD AT INTERCHANGE 66 Corner Highways No. 7 4x8 > 88 "VEED" 161 DOWTY ROAD PHONE 942-1221 and No. 12 om spruce & pine Flakeboard 2-88 OFF HIGHWAY No. 401 BROOKLIN YARD PHONE 655-3313 LIKE A FREE PRICE LIST? 7 NO OBLIGATION! JUST MAIL THIS COUPON TO CASHWAY LUMBER °3: MALTON oe. 95 t i9 ner smaller lots $3.69 per carton hee irc ata 98c ST Sen Pea heeled me ae aluminum container . . . so light and ae handle. ' ANOTHER @ PropuCT « peg Pe ee i ek 4 \