FATA-L WR:ECK pulled out casualties by 319 light of flares on a under- ground section of the i-tack. (AP "'irephoto) cable from London). side the city's Liverpool Street station. One woman was killed and 30 persons in- ]Ui'£‘d in the rush-hour ac- (‘!iCl£‘I‘Ii. Police and firemen I Rescue workers gather near the overturned re-air car of a London commuter train yes- terday after the coach was flipped by a cierailmcnn mit- Foreign Investments Seen Outstripping HomeMoney and smelting. two per cent off F0l10V~fin8 are ill? detailed '0Wl’lel‘Slilp and control percent- lages of Canadian industries in the same three yeags: 1 By DON HANRIGHT OTTAWA tCP) — Americans.railways. and five per cent of and other foreigners investedlthe other utilities. more in Canadian manufactur-’UNCHAl\'GED SINCE ‘S7 ‘V - S said that when all these ; 5919501961 Eirlzginlsndliifo and 1961 than can ?ln(Jl)u]:ti'ies are added to Cana- Total N0|1'R-9-5139'“ 0WP°"5hiP The result was that foreignldian _merchandising and con-‘Manufaictufinfl 23 ’ ownership of Canadian manu-istruction. the total foreign o_wn- £01} _all 335 If as 60 62 facturing rose to 54 per cent ofiership of Canadian enterprises Mlljlllz - S1110 W! as 25 . the total. from 51 per cent at the in 1961 was 34_ per cent-—un- Ri§_11_W_a 5 14 14 13 end of 1959. Foreign control of changedsince 1937. {Utilities Us ow hi manufacturing increased to 59‘ Following shows the makeup. - .- "9541 41 43 per cent from ' . of all_the capital employed in l1Vl_.a!!ufaCllIl'm8 5_ "3 51 The 1960 and 1961 figuresicanadian manufacturing in the 101_1 and 885 _ 4; :2 54 were published Thursday by the three most recent years forlMH_11ng - smelting 9 9 Dominion Bureau of Statistics. which figures are available: (in lRa’11_\Yay5 12 12 11 Non - resident ownership of billions of dollars) _ %Uil11U95 ‘C tr‘ other key Canadian industricsl l9a91960 1961: N°"'R,95ld°“ 5?,“ 99 59 at the end of 1961 included 60 Total capital 11.7 12.2 12.7 Nlanufacluflnz 73 E9 per cent of the oil and gas in- Canadian 5.7 5.8 5.9 0I_1 ‘and 885 61 6'1 '39 dustry. 62 per cent of mining All foreign 6.0 6.4 6.8 ‘I\‘lll_l1ng - Smelllnll 2 2 -2 and smelting. 25 per cent of the U.S. 4.8 5.1 5.4 Ra_11_w'ay8 5 5 5 railways and 13 per cent of the The pattern is the same for Utilities 1 t -I - utilities. lboth the elroleum and _mining l_-5- C0“ 3'" 44 45 Non-resident control totalled'industries—that is. reign in- lllanufacturlnfl 64 6b 69 per cent of the oil and gas westment exceeded Canadian in- 01_l ‘and E35 _ 2 __‘ 52 industry. 59 per cent of mining vestment in all three years. Mining - smelting 5. o- Railways 2 2 2 Utilities 4 4 4 Student Prank May Backfire Britain launches Move lored l RALPH CALLBECK 5. co. - BEDEQIii All merchandise comes from our regular There are Sales and Sales—but thrifty shoppers wait for this one. price‘ for ms resources and is backed by ou reputation for styles. qualify and service reliability. The Christmas Sale are low—savings genuine-—so shop now for-Biggest Selection — The lost Values — The Most Savings. MAPLE LEAF SMOKED—“EA'l‘S LIKE RAM" 39)” lNowlan’s Annive»rsary «Honorecl I CAPITAL nunnsui . or rm: com ‘ tors and members of Paul 1 . from the antic Provinces hon- Hon. George Nowlan. MP for Digby-Annapolis-Kings on Friday at an informal luncheon. The occasion was the 151111 an- .m'V°FSary. to the day. of the first Ielection of Mr. Nmvlan to the ; ouse mmons. He won ti lby-election in his riding follow- mg the retirement of Hon. .1. L. Ilsley and has held the seat ever ‘since except for one brief period ‘when the election of a Liberal member was later declared void. 1 " the nchecm was lfleath Macquarrie. for Queens. and short addresses were 3!: ‘given by - lan’s friends. including Hon. J. ;Angus MacLean_ MP for ‘Queens. ‘with a gift from the Atlantic; Tsen-‘avtors and MPs and he ex-l {pressed his thanks in an ad 1 which recounted some of his ex-; lperiencee in political life. Mr.. l owlan is the former minister! fof revenue and minister of fin- Eance in the Diefenbakeir admin- ‘,istration. Consumer Prices jMove Upward In Seven Cities OTTAWA tCPl —— Consumer? prices in o v e d upwa lasi . month in seven of Canada's to; " s, the Dominion Bureau‘. 10 citie CLEVELAND lAP)——A iratet- of Statistics reported here in: The index—a yardstick of con- ’ I I l l Willy Drank at C359 Insmuie °’ its latest compilation of con; Technology here in which a stu- sum" price indexes. dent was kidnapped and taken‘ uld result in th By ARTHUR L. GAVSHON LONDON (AP!—The British government has launched a sep- - . to ‘:‘:..'.‘:‘ .?.‘.:...-*“:::"...‘;:‘:."..*°.*; ‘izwmewrs was placed on vu- Then on V (W ih."tion or expelled. a source at . after - da . arate effort for new high-level other correspondence. Khrushwth%0:g;g01M%a€ezs::?3,‘ ‘2'1.yea,. talks with Russia to end" the chev sent another message to Md junior who is piedgemaster East-West cold war. Sir Alec. ln it. l\'l'li‘llSllCll(‘V1l0f.the phi Kappa psi fraternity, But Prime Minister Douglas-; argued the case for some sorbwas the victim of the practical Home's go - it - alone initiative.‘ of non - aggression arrange |j0ke_ disclosed Thursday by seniori merit between East and Wcst.‘. case Tech authorities said authorities, seems to have irkcdl He put up a new but vagiiely-‘t(;eznvich was kidnapped Frida some officials of Pre s i d on t' wordcd suggestion in include night and driven to St. Cathar- ihe territory of disputed Bet-I Johnson's U.S. adminislration.l incs. Ont, where he was re- The British informants lin in any such non-aggresqleased without his_ clothes, h ported Douglas-Home and his sinn arrangement. Terms ollmoney and all identification. foreign secretary. Richard A. Douglas - Home's reply were His captors gave him old US. Butler, are in contact and hope‘ to remain in contact with Pre-l mier Khrushchev and Foreign‘ Minister Andrei A. Gromykn.‘ Butler has even suggested meet-l lng Gromykn soon. ‘ The over-all British aim is to keep searching for wider areas. of East-West. agreement. Dispatches from Washington published in British newspapers have portrayed American offi- cialdom as angr at these‘ moves. Under a newly-installed president, the administration evidently wants to stall negoti- ations with the Russians until there is a prospect of definite progress. ' not disclosed although Britisniarmy fatlguf-‘S and made him sources reported a "gencrallylW€31' his 811088 On the WYOIIE cool“ reaction to it. f0Pl -—Butlcr sent. two messages _ _ to Gromykn offering a meet.-'l“_m "‘ gem“'3 ing between the two. He saiu3p‘“5b“"3l'- he would be ready to meeti Gromykn almost any time. COMMONEST ELEMENT after 17-nation disarmament; HYd1‘08€l1 1135 been Cfilculaled talks resume in Geneva Jan il° °°"‘P”5° 90 P" “M °f 3“ St. Catharines police assisted to his home in elevating the level of the Gc- ‘Space neva parlcy to that of foreign: ministers. Gromyko has not answered Butler. ‘ Soviet Union and Britain‘ But other political factors also‘. Their countries also are oklng are at play. A one veteran for ways to range over the cru-ii LONDON (AP) — The nickel British official put. il: l cial issues dividing East and; telephone may be extinct in the four "President Johnson and Sirl Alec both face elections nexti year. In the field of East-West relation a certain immobility may be good for the U.S. ;real probing." one British offl-; ministration. But it would bc« cial explained. “He does not be-i bad for a Conservative govern-l lieve in immobile. static diplo- ment. That. le's fa ' is at macy. fact of political life." 1 The Wcsl—l'rom Berlin in Saigon.'. from disarmament to the affairs! of the United. Nations. down to three. Mr.Butlcr wants to do some; ' This is people whose friends answer the . telephone: "Hello." " 1' On the pocket book front. the British are at pains to: move to lower the price of pay The British government's ini- stress their foreign secretary calls conceivably could spread tlative looks as if it is being would do not negotiating. They} across the tlantic.lf the five- played out at two levels be- , also emphasize Butler is clear-' cent phone call returned to the tween London and Moscow; ing his plans at all stages witiii US, could nickel beer be far —Exchanges are gong on the Americans and the west‘ behind? Or the nickleodeon? between Khrushchev and Germans. whom he visited this‘ As for trouser pockets. they Douglas-Home. It began Wheh. week. Neither have raised oh- have gained a new lease on life. the Russians warmly congrat-l jections. the informants insist. That‘s because the fourpenny telephone call—The going rate Christmas Trees‘Hiiackecl, East Boston Pair-Arrested in London until the recent price cut—costs four pennies. English pennies are approxi- BOSION (AP) — A load of.Bostcn early Thursday and told cm-mm" me, {mm New ‘in to follow their car into Bos- 1‘ Brunswick that police say was 1°" .9’ "’°m°°"° “’°“ld 3 tmately the size and weight of hurt hijacked en route to Boston led manhole covers. Stores hate them. There is a thriving industry in England painting signs that read: “We do not give change for telephone 0. When they reached the mar? to the arrest of two East Boston ket district. Lindsay said the 1 men. fmen ordered him and his helper. ; Nicholas d‘Azoatlno. 33. and‘Raymond Kelly of Blantville.. Idvutge Polsonetti, were N.B.. to unload the trees. ‘ calls." They mean it. to POCKETS RUINED The result was that people who planned to telephone any- in Booholfo W1: A third man who identified charged himself as a US. customs of- of more than $100. fioer approached Lindsay and . weioroloooed on 81.000 uld tt was illegal to bring trees . - into the United States and he the two men would have to pay 8200. U sol] I I When Lindsay uld he didn't least eight—-four for each call. in case of wrong numbers. Eight pennies in one pocket caused a person to list danger- ously. Four pennies on side mined two pockets instead of one. It was a hard choice. It was hardest on fat men. They were always pushing "ton A with their ahead of time. When you mudo a telephone ‘I 21. But. British authorities in-imatter and m°"° than 99 9" sisted Butler did not suggestgcem °f matter 1” interstellar United States. but in London the fourpenny phone call has gone a boon to pocket books, pockets. fat men and which each on stomach, . 9‘ sumer prices--dropped slightly in Ottawa. stayed static in Van- couver and Edmonton-Calgary. and climbed in St. John's. Hali- fax. Saint John. Montreal. Tor- onto. Winnipeg and Saskatoon ; Regina. 1 Increases ranged from 0.1 pei-é lcent in Toronto and Saskatoon ; ‘Regina to 0.5 per cent in Win- 3 nlpeg ere is the city breakdown_f covering food. housing. clothing 1 transportation. health and pei 1 sonal care. recreation and road lng, and tobacco and alcohoi, with the October index in bracts j 1 ets: ‘ 1; St. John's. Nfld.. 120.8 1120.3). l Halifax 131.4 (131.2); Saint. John lN.B.. 133.3 (133.01: Montreal ‘l33.9 (133.4): Qttawa 134.5 (134.7): Toronto 135.2 (135.0). Winnipeg 131.2 (130.61: Saska- toon-Regina 128.7 (128.61: Ed- monton - Calgary 127.7 1127.7) 27.7l. (1 and Vancouver 131.0 tl31.1l_l. Pennies For Telephone Calls ;*:.:.:n:2:;"';:';.2‘ :’.‘§’.1.".$.’.‘.‘.’:‘.’.;|s Real Problem In Britain call. old style. you inserted the big brown pennies. then dialed the number. When the other person answered. you pushed button A. Otherwise. the other person couldn't hear you, ' was’ something North Americans could never through their heads. Button A was at waist height. a dangerous place for a fat man. An injudicious exhale could shoot the whole four cents. One‘ of the most touching of all British music hall ballads is about the fat fellow who pushed button A by mistake and got a fish market instead of his he . EASIER COIN To avoid this sort of thing, British people usually answer the telephone: "fflnch-Meadows‘ (small f'in here." its better than; ."hello." . If you want flinch-Meadows. you push button A. If you don't. you push button B and get your money back. in a cluttering cop- per stream. Got that straight? Anyway. some bright chap re- cently declded to do away with the fourpenny phone call. and substitute an easier coin to handle. He had the choice of the silver six pence. or the bran three pence-—two neat little (1 to the amazement of all chose the lower priced coin. ' The unsung genius also moved button A up where you can't hit get 3 9. but-ltb y mistake. His next target obviously is e teenager. to do away wl busy signals. Nowlan was presentedf. OLYMPIC Bologna. to 29¢ GOLDEN RIPE B. Ifigfii GRAVES WITH MOLASSES Bananas ‘ ........ Beunsr 43: ' m ' mg? MONARCH pouch §.l,‘..".Zl.?..'.T""' 29‘ i'.'!f?... 2 “"9” C«keMIx 10¢ Raisins 2 59c Peaches 99¢ ; we 0...... c....J.;£.‘Li.... FLAVOR PAK ' RED ROSE ' DUCKS - TU‘RKEYS Peas 6 89: Tea K551: ‘ .fZfj:.§fff; , govt”.../zimiia Fm. Q.,,,...,, gm” :15: soon SPECIALS C2liil':liron's ! 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ON ALL ..‘f.'.’.."‘;'..; SANTA 5*» °-=--=~-' *- Moan-ow Edison DRILL .2» mm Dsston Hand siiw srr 11 PIECE‘ Wrench Set With oiled to [lo ‘HUI prod-Io Consisting of Mt. . 1 Plastic ii . bronze bearings. ' In“ “"59 59" '95 ll||'0!|. lmlcll ‘Ill -59 1:,‘ pug; .' I95 spnom. . .. .. . 10 a. rule. rm. ~ ' ' s cm. . . 7.95. spacm. .. si-ncuu, . . . . GENERAL ELECTRIC CAN OPENER ........$23.95 GENERAL ELECT!!! HA!!! DRY $17.99 GENERAL CLEANER ELECTRIC VACUUM $59.95 OPEN ovory night ‘rt! 9 p.m. Soc our Ciovo ram AdforMoroSpociols. RALPH CALLBEOK & C0. nnnnqvn, am. . LAMPS MEN’! DELUXE SKATING to Doc. 23-—5:30 Doc. 24 oumrs-. mg. 35.95. for $25.95 LADIES‘ FIGURE SKATING OUTFITS. 12.50. for $9.95 I LARG I SMALL TABLE $3.95 for $5.95 1- $4.95 for $3.95 -.-.5) "15 minutes drive from summon-side