ms Seen shington (Reuters) -- Home oy Jenkins said Sat- h membership of a Atlantic grouping, '0 the Common Mar- inevitably mean de. d be made in Wash- |NO FINAL AGREEMENT REACHED IN MEETINGS AT GENEVA) ondes,'ter ts, 1067 "5" World Tariff Parley Hits Big Snags 4,500,000 tons a year, for to needy countries Lightkeeper Does Landscaping VICTORIA (C)--The trans- port department filled an un- By HAROLD MORRISON GENEVA (CP)--World tariff ing prices would rise by about or 22.5 cents a bushel, basis No. 1 shipment Difficulties between _ the United States and the European leed, would be to mplete control over economic destiny," speech to a London conference. t Action E SALES! Member of the . and DISTRICT STATE BOARD List Photo als) LISTING SERVICE negotiations haggled all Sunday night without reaching final agreement on steps to cut tar- iffs and stimulate world trade. The exhausted bargainers caught a few hours sleep be- fore going into another top- level session today, At stake are thousands of proposed tariff re- ductions and a new world wheat Pact. Most details of a new, higher- priced wheat agreement. were nailed firmly into place during the marathon Sunday night ses- sion, along with an_ interna- tionally - financed grain pool te feed the world's needy, Canada's Agriculture Minisier Greene stood by during the night to make a full statement on the implications for Canada, but, retired before dawn when it became evident the talks would drag on. Fifty - three countries are in- volved in the negotiations. Common Market on chemicals and British - European clashes over steel were reported among the items causing the most difficulty. DISTANT CONFABS During the night negotiators hurried to telephones to consult with their governments over the fine points of the latest pro- posed concessions. Eric Wyndham White, British- born expert presiding at the tariff talks, said he compiled a package of cuts that would af- fect some $40,000,000,000 worth of annual world trade. He sug- gested that if confumers get even a one - per - cent price reduction as a result, the four years of hard bargaining on the Kennedy round of tariff cuts would be worthwhile. As the wheat pact was mapped out, the floor and ceil- northern at the Lakehead, with the new pact coming into effect next August, The current agreement has a floor of $1.624%4 and a ceiling of $2.0214, U.S. funds, basis No. 1. Canadian growers have been complaining that the price range virtually froze the price of wheat while their costs con- tinued to rise. BASED ON U.S, PACT The new price range--to be expressed in a different formula based on American wheat shipped at Gulf of Mexico ports would tend to increase the current world price which, in a buoyant market, continues to edge towards the ceiling. The new pact would not in- clude firm import commitments by the member countries but it would have a grain pool, some- where in the region of 4,000.00 and financed by the wealthier nations Japan has refused to partiti- pate as a donor country and so the burden of aid would be fi- nanced mainly by the U.S. and Europe, with other countries providing a minor share. Some officials thought it would take. another night ses- sion--the fourth in a row--to clean up all the details, Work on. the Kennedy round has been going forward since the late president Kennedy put the Trade Expansion Act through the U.S. Congress in 1962, Under it, president John- son has unprecedented powers 'to slash American tariffs by half. These powers expire June 30, So successive deadlines have been set and missed--in an at- tempt to give experts as much time as possible to do all the paper work by that date. usual but down-to-earth request from lightkeeper Trevor Ander- son. 7 He asked district marine agent Larry Slaght to "please send me some dirt."' It seemed Mr. Anderson just got tired of looking out the windows of his new home at barren rocks and seaweed so he decided to do some landscap- ing. Fifty cubic yards of good, clean soil was landed at nearby supply ship Estevan. HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL 313 ALBERT st, 24-HOUR . SERVICE NDP Makes Proposal |Inter-Crime Rebellion $175 Hour Minimum Sa !0Yes WASHINGTON board requiring landlords to| Local education costs should|¢time commission predicts that/and services has created an il-| justify rent increases. |be taken over from the munici-|Within 10 years there will be a_licit government," and that is) --A business code requiring|palities, the party said. To fi- rebellion within the ranks of|the entire structure of organized | manufacturers to post thelnance a provincially sponsored|°Tsanized crime as the crimejcrime run at the top by 2,000) true price of goods and reveal|system of education, the NDP)5¥Mdicate's --untutored | 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 SEARS FREE Estimates, Reasona Rates, Repair Specialist. ible | SUDBURY (CP)--A minimum |wage of $1.75 an hour, an in-| crease in paid vacation to three} weeks a year and a reduction of the work-week to 40 hours SPORT GREATS READY FOR DINNER underl-|to 4,000 "family" members, all] Add Nancy Greene to the Skiing, who lives in Ross- Taylor, former Oshawa |from 48 has been called for by| actual interest rates of all|said it would tap previously un- ings sgper pl erg access to or eh are of Italian or Si- hyde list of athletic greats who land, B.C., was greeted by Generals' idol and NHL |the Ontario New Democratic! transactions. lused and progressive forms of|Power and wealth. jciilan descent. But beneath|§ 24 Hour Tanks are flying in, from all over T. V. "Terry" Kelly, gen- star, flew in from Florida | party. | --A separate department to|taxation. The prediction was made by|'hem are workers of all races,|§ Service Installed on Saturday and Floyd Cur- ry, another hockey great, came in from Montreal over eral chairman of the din- ner, at Toronto Internation- al Airport, Sunday evening. the continent, to attend the -Oshawa Centennial Sports Celebritees Dinner, at the The proposals were made in a 21-page summary of the par- ty's election platform released stimulate the development of} Special grants should also be Donald R. Cressey, a sac tology eran pp oe gee consumer and producer co-|Made to schools in areas of low Professor and college dean at f th ay iplitatod ¥ o' x : | SEE ES "s 'niqa|further complicate lack operatives in Ontario. jassessment and an autonomous|the University of California ye iack Fast Dependable Radio Dispatched Plumbing Service. SERVICE MADE US, Civic Auditorium, Tuesday. Nancy will visit in Kings- the weekend. op op at a press conference Sunday] grants commission should also|Santa Barbara, in a research pila ar dgy knowledge of how it! Call 723-1191 Canada's champion and ton today and return to stein, famed boxing referee, |night by party Secretary John|PROPOSE REFORMS jbe set up to channel govern-|Paper made public Sunday by|® ; : queen of skiing, this year's Oshawa tomorrow after- will fly in from New York, Harney, | In education, the party pro-|ment financial help to universi-/the president's commission on| on Tuesday. winner of the World Cup of Trip To Fatima Pleases Catholic Conservatives An AP New Analysis of capitalism in the Pope's en-| The Pope's trip paid special) * By BENNET M. BOLTON J|cyclical, Development of Peo-|homage to the Virgin Mary, VATICAN CITY (AP)--Pope|ples. |whom all Catholics venerate. noon, for the dinner. "Billy" A four-point consumers' biil| posed reforms in teacher train- of rights included in the plat-ling at all levels of education form called for: jand a revision of community --A consumers' bureau withjcollege curriculum so_ their ample power to check product! programs could lead students to SS Bee quality, advertising claim s|educational and career opportu- 1gl 1 ] y crime, The task force reports! and packaging and sales gim-'nities. s Questioned were summarized in the over-! micks. | A special financial assistance --A prices review board to|should also be available for NEW YORK (AP) -- Repre-|aj] report in February sentative Emanuel Celler (Dem.\* daboaid ae asec ties to ensure their independ-|!aw_ enforcement and adminis- ence, the party said \tration of justice. oe | Cressey's paper was one of} four from consultants which | comprised part of the commis- jsion's study and recommenda: |i tions on organized crime made| public last February. The Cres- | sey report was contained in a task force report on organized| SPRING Galdeninc CENTRE it the year bees THE | investigate outstanding price| adults seeking additional educa- increases and a rent review tion. . NDP Turns Down Nine Take A Drive year Paul's pilgrimage to Fatima) The Pope went to a shrine) The Pope's presence at Fa- N.Y.( says a question remains| To 's Saturday was a gesture of en-|linked in Catholic minds with|tima also implied the church's whether Governor George Rom-| couragement to Roman Cath-|fear of communism. The appari-|highest blessing on the cult sur- ney, of Michigan is eligible for VAN BELLE a olic conservatives smarting|tions of the Virgin x oe rounding 3 Pi nig econ hap- s . the U.S. presidency. ' | P.M. Set, from the thrust of church pro-jported at Fatima in 191 y|}pening which many progressive I B d F M h : : : ea gressives in an era of rapid|three shepherd children are as-|Catholics do not accept n 1 or e rs 1 Fo see No ie veg GARDENS fy change. sociated with prayer for) The Fatima apparitions have ' : ; rege to jj All men could agree on his|Russia's conversion and preoccu-lecclesiastical approval but are} SUDBURY (CP) -- The On-|section of New Democratic| pinaican Presideatial nomination | to The cs see | major appeal for peace. But|pation over Communist peril. not a mandatory article of faith, /tario New Democratic Party|Youth, led the nine applicants Aevipo to: Amarioan meats -IT-YOURSELF id most gtnek aspecis at as op hat Bae le tence a oenig ago perrcrggent are Sond provincial council has 'turned|and three others to Sudbury for! Coline scone thud sents a @ FERTILIZER @ SPREADERS au ortugal held special appealjwhen he spoke about lan © accept or rejec em. Sev- ; ' A A ; A g § Trust M fe Cattice whe are eel where religion is oppressed. eral jeading Catholic theolo- game: membership bids. by NDP ihe eS tise WATE tres WNBC-TV 'Searchlight pro- @ TOOLS @ TOPSOILS : 4 tional in church practice and) That was in contrast with the|gians question the authenticity youth section on the grounds! Miss Stevenson said in an in- awd i there was no doubt ® SEEDS, ETC. @ Advice on your Garden Problems ration ) af conservative in politics. Vatican's steadily - growing ef-jof the apparitions at Fatima. Jihey are members of another|terview her group feels Canada|2>0Ut. Romney's American citi- | Observers of the Vatican con-/fort to get along with the Com-| None of the Pope's speeches| party lshould take an active role|Z¢Ship. But the head of the V, A Il oe Ot Noe f sidered the trip a swing to the/munist governments of tae hep ele aly auueed The council found at a meet-|against the war in Vietnam, but Bonne of bers Sbggeidie ed judic- an ele araens opposite pole after the criticism|Europe. remier vine ey le liveria ing Saturday night that thelin the NDP, "Some members aed eee at note ; that the! Subscribers To dau' FHehdly Gardun. Contre?" anville ae ree as Fdhisren would-be members belonged tolof the party are in favor of the] i> penne : ion he ates that | ane : Minutes East of Oshawa : e e ; ef bid ped wit 1 at or supported the League for So-|war." lbore'! nicer must be a "natural @ BLUE CROSS On Highway No. 2... 623-5757 " 3 f Britain Faces Shiveae is bound to have gained | ialist -- Pe " Mt ~~ Ping AS dh ira wat Romney's a rents, Gaskell' ge (1 | 7 ; ' ' ne the ti) ialist|retary of the } ; i t e) , Gas cyeeets n from being seen with the Pope| rorum, Wing aabtntacs the boas inti that youth and Anne, fled to Chihuahua, @ GREEN SHIELD wi | ae en i oagrg 10 ee alone} A statement issued by the Or-|members previously had _privi- aga along with a number ai NEED NOT tl m in private conversa-|tario NDP described the social-|leges in the adult party. Con-|°ther Mormons in 1885 when | ina Tressure arte analysing the effects of|iSt Stoups as the Trotskyite|stitutional changes last year re- raged outlawed polygamy, | PAY CASH! tha 'rip bh ies Geoctaiiats movement in Canada and said|quired that youth members who a rote Aled : i HONG KONG (AP) -- China|statement handed to D. C.|wrote that the church includes|'"e¥ ae considered a political/did not already belong to the) oi.) ents wate thobogssnis You Give Us put pressure on Britain today to|Hopson, the British charge|conservatives as well as pro-|Party. NDP members must sign|senior group become new appli- ri The Doctors A wen meet tough Communist de-|d'affaires in Peking, accused|gressives, and the Pope must|@ Statement that they do nor icant. 8 faterad: sae P pee BEHIND-THE-EAR mands in Hong Kong, and Com-|the British of "fascist atrocities|he pope of them all. His 2,409-|SUPPort another party. Miss Stevenson claimed: SURTEES WINS RACE rescription , munist newspapers in the Brit-|against Chinese workers and|mile journey was considered the| Wendy Stevenson, 20, a past/""That was cooked-up legislation) tricesTmR, England (Reut- HEARING AID... 5 ish colony urged Chinese resi-|residents" and demanded pun-\most dramatic of various steps|President of Toronto's Spadina'to keep us out. ers) -- Britain's John Surtees, We do the rest, ZENITH "EMBLEM" co dents to renew anti-British fight-|ishment of "'all those respon-|he has taken periodically to driving a Lola-BMW, won an in-| % ing. sible." . ; keep the conservative element . t fl t ternational Formula Two auto FREE Costs $100 less than But Hong Kong was generally; Both major Communist news-| satisfied, Everything he did at H l S y' I K race at Mallory Park near here ty Wi. ees rates e quiet. The British government papers in Hong Kong, Ta Kung|Fatima was bound to please aml on a S n eres een Sunday. Surtees won after his| City Wide Delivery you'd expect for ' % lifted a dusk-to-dawn curfew|Pao and Wen Wei Pao, said in|them. | . . main rival, Belgian Jacky Ickx,| MIT. ' proven Zenith quality. Sunday in the six - square-mile/front page red-ink stories: eae Sear ceiers 1a cum aenrac es Uniform Store Closin Hours had spun in his Matra - Ford CHELL S A trim, inconspicuous 2) industrial district on the out-; "We are not shai their + g while leading on the fifth Jap DRUGS model inet may help i ¢ vhe ree|concentration camps. ey are 5 i re fs of the 75- race. vas in- 'ou hear better Ss fyi ol vieieace Maagiiel iii not big enough agente all ulZ Looms HAMILTON (CP)--A 1964 by-| Kitchener's present bylaw Is|volved ag ig Fest et 9 Si N bie you ie oe reported injuries and the deathjour Chinese compatriots. We law establishing uniform closing) unenforceable, Assistant Solici-| ang finished fourth imcoe N. 723-3431 C : EW: ¢ of an 18-year-old Chinese youth,/must dare to fight at any hours for Hamilton stores may/tor Joseph Kelly said. poavceh aaasak nied eden esrcroerceeretir ir compare... test... , hit by a rock thrown from ajtime and any place." For Gordon be adopted by other Ontario) Fred Garlick, manager of enjoy. In case you The quality goes in j rooftop | The stories were addressed to # |communities. 'Walker's Department Store in EDUCATION for TOMORROW ees haven't heard. before the name goes on® | Of the 389 persons arresied|the colony's 4,000,000 Chinese-- Gerald W. Brown, a board Guelph, said he hopes to have] ae since the outbreak of violence |98 per cent of its population. member of the Hamilton Dis-ja petition ready in two weeksi} if you lack VOCATIONAL SKILL and a HIGH Ss See and Try Them at... Thursday, 115 have been sen-| The Chinese note told the Brit- @arson trict Uniform Store Hours Asso-|for merchants there to request serpot DIELOMS, you can new study at home oA tenced from one to 18 months|ish: 'The Chinese government ciation, said about 50 inquiries) uniform closing hours. : @ DRAFTSMAN AND DESIGNER Lo) oe IMPERIAL OPTICAL in jail after waiving trial and|and the 700,000,000 Chinese}! OTTAWA (CP) -- Prime Min-jhave been sent to his group) City Clerk Gordon Hall said) @ ACCOUNTANT AND BUSINESS fob tae j pleading guilty to such charges| people firmly support their com-|ister Pearson and Privy Coun-/since the summer of 1965. Guelph's present bylaw was| ADMINISTRATOR oe 11 Ontario St., Oshawa 728-6239 as breaking curfew, unlawful|patriots in Hong Kong in their|cil President Walter Gordon are| That was when the Supreme/found invalid in court four HCE RCNA on COMMIERETAG EG ee ae assembly and rioting. heroic and just struggle and|expected to face stiff question-|Court of Canada refused to re-|years ago and has not been en-|f Choc? Course ee ee TUES MAY 16th : The Communist campaign|resolutely stand behind them." jing in the Commons this week|verse a lower ruling in favor/forced since, Eorn @ "HIGH SCHOOL DIPLOMA' and "CERTI- Py ey Cc ti against Hong Kong unfolded|17EMS FROM STRIKE jabout their conflicting views onjof the law and the Ontario leg-/ Merchants in Woodstock havelf FICA bah lsta ne CoUEA. Slibereos : 3 $31 MR GILBERT L SCO ' oF etnererren 'i flatly to that in the neigh ; Pe <tpq.|the Vietnam war, anada's for-|islature made it enforceable. /asked their council for uniform Final: seamloations. in your 'crea for: geriiticare; Fe aa ce an : ee Lely Zenith Dealer, Certified 1 sportsmen Pieimscaded " M or), ute anti - British demonstra-|oi oy defence commitments, and| Mr. Brown said inquiries havelclosing hours. There is no such|f upon completion of course. All books, instruction de | Hearing Aid Audiologist will be on hand to assist boring colony of [acao. |tions resulted from a strike by| Poe ; Van-| byl id and supplies for as little as $2.00 weekly, yw ts Celebrity After anti - Portuguese rioting|Chinese workers in factories|t%iS country's treatment of for-)come from as far away as Van-|bylaw at present, said Deputy = 9 e you . i vols that a ifici ; eign investment capital. couver and Saint John, N.B.,|City Clerk Kenneth Miller. |] write: "ACADEMIC STANDARDS INSTITUTE" > 3 =, in Macao and ominous patrols|{hat make artificial. flowers. : re have 6 | 45 Dua UW, HAMILTON, Oo a) by Chinese gunboats, the celon-| The Communist New China| Mr. Gordon, 61, former minis-|but about 30 of them have been jain St. W., , Ont. ceneeeianed Sportsman Club on its 4 ial administration capitulated to demands for admissions of guilt and compensation to vic- tims. CALLS FOR REPRIMANDS A Chinese foreign ministry news agency said British au- thorities had a factory foreman beat up the workers and then sent in five carloads of police in a "premeditated sanguinary suppression of workers." Hawks Seen On The Warpath For The Scalp LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP)-- Senator J. W. Fulbright of Ar- kansas, challenger of presidents and foreign policy for 25 years, faces his toughest political chal- lenge as a dove in a state re- garded as hawkish on the Viet- nam war. Two of Fulbright's most prom- inent fellow Democrats in Ar- kansas--former governors Orval Faubus and Sid McMath--think the senator is in trouble with the voters because of his attacks on Johnson administration war pol- icy and so will be vulnerable in next year's primary. : Faubus and McMath are ser- iously considering trying to un- seat the chairman of the Senate foreign relations committee. "Most people think Fulbright's strength will depend on what happens in Vietnam," said Fau- bus in an interview, 'I think he's in greater difficulty than he's ever been before." | "He'd be defeated today be- Of Fulbright cause the majority of people in Arkansas don't support his posi- tion on Vietnam," said McMath, a marine reserve major-general who has spoken often on Viet- nam: since making a September trip' to the war zone. McMath denies publicly he is considering taking on Fulbright but it is an open secret in political circles that he is. Some prominent Arkansas businessmen, who have helped to bankroll the party as well as support Fulbright and Faubus, tend to discount reports Ful- bright is in trouble. But some of them acknow- ledge privately that if Faubus on Republican Governor Win- his life. Fulbright has not an- nounced. whether he will yun again. ' ter of finance who returned to the cabinet in January after 16 months on the political sidelines, closest political advisers, but ing government policy. His latest crossing of policy swords with the government came in a Toronto speech in which he declared Canada should demand from President Johnson a categorical undertak- ing that the U.S. will not use so - called ABC instruments of destruction. These are atomic, biological, or chemical. The Vietnam war, he said,|Closing time has had a favor- able effect on business in Ham- ilton and discount stores had their highest profits ever last His views were at cross-pur-/year. was "a bloody war," not justi- fied on either moral or strate- gic grounds." poses with government policy to maintain an essentially neu-|Goudies Department Kitchener, said merchants there presented city council petition last week asking that minister in the Diefenbaker goy-|the city update and enforce its 1958 store-closing bylaw. tral attitude towards the con- flict. George Hees, former trade ernment now campaigning for from: Ontario. : Hey S,| Woodstock and Guelph have in- is one of the prime ministers's|qicated their communities are . Ui seeking to establish uniform) } has been outspoken in criticiz- closing hours, | stores to be open until 9 p.m. Thursday and Friday. Closing time on other weekdays p.m. During the month of De- cember until Christmas and the week preceding Easter, stores can be open until 9 p.m. all weekdays. Merchants in Kitchener, The Hamilton bylaw permits! is 6 | Mr, Brown said the uniform| Stuart R. Goudie, president of Store in with a | the Conservative party leader- ship, called in Grand Falls, Nfld., for Mr. Gordon's resigna- tion because of his conflict with government policy. a T. C. Douglas, leader of the) does challenge Fulbright -- and|New Democratic Party, took | they would prefer that he take/another tack, | Montreal speech in which he| throp Rockefeller -- Fulbright|said Canada should inform the will be in the political fight of|U.S. however, that if war is intensified, 'they should not expect support from Can- ada." | q \ €XPOG7 | for which are CENTRAL M ' oney To Invest ! Bi%a% by investing in Guaranteed Investment Certificates Gueranteed--as to Principal and Interest. 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