’ halt of U.S. cade reliable Vatican Saturday Pope have been made by Ot- tawa and so Aar fair officials | had not heard of such an/invi< tation being sent. he f- An Windsor. Ont., Extetnal Affairs Minister Martin /com- /™mented that he knew’ nothing of the reported visit. // CALLS IMPROBABLE foie ee ok e Natican saying iis ieprobetie’ the Pore rose ‘to visit Canada for Expo 67. (But Reuférs noted’ that Va- tican “sources in October, 1965, eaid ‘the ,Pope had ordered “‘ab- solute discretion” s6 soundings for his future jourdeys could be y POPE tore secret. even senior were being ° fully in- of his plans.) ‘A trip to Canada would be the ‘ope’s fourth voyage outside Italy since’ he became spiritual ruler of/ the Roman Catholic Church June, 1963. made/i that the Pope would plan a return to North America Sh soon after his one-day neace to United Nations headquarters in New York Oct. +4, 1965. He also said it might appear surprising for a pontiif te un- dertake a visit-to:4. world's fair, would have significance ‘“r enti hitemnaniangg me Christian. unity. but added “that such a> visit / senpoteoed pa plans the an inter- Bs: pavilion planned for the . 7 / PIETA ¥ wae the New York . 1964-65 s fair, the Vatican set up [ipa pavilion and sent from St. Peter's/ Basilica one of the | Roman Catholic Church's price- less Pieta Christ, Af the Montreal fair, * Rain ic, ‘Methodist, B a ptist, ynglican and other faiths will py a single pavilion: The Pope was said. to have informed his apostolic delegate to Canada, Archbishop Sergio Pignedoli, of his decision to a Canada several weeks be- “the archbishop went to Suk Viet’ Nam last montif. on a fact-finding mission jo: the pontiff. In— Ottawa; fasures, -Michelanzelo’s tatue of- Mary. ant station i .as ssed a visit with the Pope when was in Rome but talked only a- radio The/Vatican source expressed | Ganada Ever since Pope Paul made history with his trip to the Holy in January, 1964, his de- to other The source said the Pope wes ~ Soviet Union Shift OF Er BS Noted On War In Vi By HENRY 8. BRADSHER MOSCOW.LAP)—Shifts: of-em- phasis in the Soviet position on. Viet Nam are being studied. by- diplomats here for. ‘hints ,, of |’ Kremlin willingness te try to ar range peace. Taken at their most extreme interpretation, the shifts might mean that the Soviet-_Union. now. is moving cautiously toward set- ting up a settlement, with North Viet Nam's approval. : Clues pointing’this way might be read into Speeches in recent Brezhnev, Com- Van Dong of _Nortfr- aiid’ his” defence isi cretly visited the Soviet ‘union ‘for talks in August. Then the Soviet Union began a series-of bilateral talks with its East European alliés. They will culminate this--week. in_a Soviet bloc sumimit meeting in Moscow. Perhaps these events are not directly related in a way that shows a sequence of develop- ments_leading to the shifts of emphasis: Diplomatic analysts cannot be. sure, but sney are in- / But any” rustr toward 1 sé, tle ment would weaken the er munist negotiating. position and go there now is a cautiously slow ‘movement, hoot analysts claim. Maybe Koaygia offered a clue. he said Thursday that the Viet- nameseé war would have been stopped if China had co-opera- ted with Communist aid efforts. Brezhnev in a speech’ Satur- day said that to remove the main obstacle to better Soviet- American relations, the United States must stop air raids on munist party general secretary, and Premier Alexei Kosygin. But this is far from certain. At the other extreme, the shifts |/ could be interpreted simply as tactical responses to American statements, lacking any ripe significance. TAKES TOUGH STAND: The no - significant - change Some of them suggest this teritative interpretation: . ; Hanoi decided the war cannot sorts ou'right. With China unstable and refusing to facilitate aid deliveries from other Communist ‘countries to Hanoi, the North Vietnamese government decided that a set- tlement would be better’ than ; he-age gressive war against the Viet- Mamese people, respect not in words but in deeds the indepen- dence, sovereignty and territo- rial integrity of other countries and peoples.” Brezhnev omitted a clear de- mand for a U.S, withdrawal and a Viet Cong-dictated settlement, although these reappeared im Polish-Soviet communique, Edward Island Like The Dew” WN, CANADA, MONDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1966. WEA THER Cloudy, scattered showers and. drizzle ending this afternoon. Winds pecan: northwest 15. Low-high 48 and 53. 16 PAGES MOOSE JAW (CP)— Opposi- tion Leader Diefenbaker said servative ey “for some time to come.’ _DETROIT (AP)— They. un- covered Perry Andrews’ 1913 Model T Ford Sunday to the . strains of a rock ‘n’ roll tune composed on the spot in its honor, While the song shows a lot ot promise, the old car buried ago shows little. The 300 or more people. who were there for the end of the second-straight: day of digging fairly well agreed they don’t make ‘em like they used to. Besides axles, drive shaft, running boards .and fenders, rusty but recognizable, some “f bolts on the car's rear- end:- still bore grease that was fairly clean. “T've seen worse taken off my own car, which is only a couple years ies then ‘they took off that,’’ said Harvey Versteeg of the Detroit Histor- ical Museum. It was his idea, _ to dig. : All things consi was sjuite a lot Jeft oft : tin lizzy buried by the senti- mental Andrews because he couldn’t bare to see someone alter its classic — JUST AS IS “Most. collectors would give their eye teeth for the chassis— on one of these old cars,’ said under an apple tree 40 years Speaking to about 400 persons at.a rally after the Saskatche- ‘Saturday.-he-expected.to_remain wan ° Progressive _ Conservative leader of ‘the Progressive Con- party convention, Mr. Diéfen- baker said ‘that ‘‘as long as I am in this position and I have LONG:BURIED MODEL T IS DUG UP IN DETROIT V . “But we'll probably put it on display just as it is because it would cost too much to clean.” _. “It was like one’ of our chil- dren. coming home,” ‘said & representative of Ford Motor Co. which wasn't about to miss such an ty. Andrews buried the car in his back yard in 196 after he could find no one who would promise to preserve it intact. He offered it to 43 son-in-law, William Morris Sr., ow but Morris said he planned to put a sport car body on it. Old. Perry apparently couldn’t bear the thought... He died in the 1930s: and it’s probably a good thing he wasn’t: here Saturday to See what mother nature did to those classic lines. ’ But it didn’t make any dif- ference. Everybody. had a high old time: DOUGHNUTS _am-auto-parts smaker showed up with free coffee and doughnuts and lit- ‘tle-lapel stickers that | said, “happy digging.’ The Model T Club also showed up. U.S. Senator Robert P. Grif- fin, a Republican in a close -election race, also showed. up ; to pump some_hands._ Saskatchewan PCs Are Informed Dief Expects To Remain Leader health and party support, the leadership will not be turned over to any small group. who- ever they” may “be.” He referred to critics within his own party as “small: groups who go about the country acting as custodians of the human On the récent Liberal party convention at Ottawa, Mr. Die- fenbaker said the Liberals. had fallen into the hands of power- ful interests, and referred spe- cifically to <Finance Minister Sharp who, he said, “is the pampered pet of power.” , Mr. Diefenbaker_ said Mr. Sharp laughed at Walter Gordon during the Liberal convention. (Continued on page 3, col. 3) _}| woman. ~ Viet Cong Mine Fired In Saigon SAIGON (AP)—The Viet Cong }- set off a mine near a bus stop for U.S. servicemen in Saigon today, killing an American sol-> dier and an aged Vietnamese Six other American service- men and two Vietnamese were wounded by the -homemade Claymore . mine, apparently set. 4 off by a timing device. The Claymore, which can be pre-aimed, went off about the time American servicemen from. three nearby enlisted men’s billets start to gather at the bus stop. It was the first attack at or near an American billet in Sal- gon since April 1, when the Vie- toria officers’ billet was at- tacked by the. Viet Cong with bombs and machine-guns. Three Americans and three Vietna- mese were killed and 113 Amer- icans and 30 other persons were injured in that attack. WASHINGTON (AP)—After a final flurry of domestic - activi- ties, President Johnson sets off rene on an_ historical 25,000- mile journey ‘through the Far East. Johnson plans. to visit six countries ‘during. his 17 - day jaunt. ‘Ht will be the first time American president has set nafland- andi Malaysiay af -weli | 8 as American Samoa. The other two eountries on Johnson's list, the Philippines and South Korea, were visited by Presi- dent Eisenhower in 1960. It will be Johnson’s first trip cutsian the Western Hemisphere since. he became president in- 1963although - he did. visit 34 countries as vice-president. un- Johnson. *'On Tour Today HALIFAX — The soaked pages of a log book with a final entry on Sept. 3 indicated that disas- ter in the form of hurricane Faith overtook two Britons try- ing to row the Atlantic after half school of Ay a Polish communique, In effect, |. it reiterated Hanoi’s tough posi- tion dating Hack to April, 1965. This includes demands for a air raids on North Viet Nam, an American with- drawal from—South Viet Nam and a long - range settlement AMictated o tite Viet Cong. This. position is paeccepteee Washington.. Shifts of emphasis from ‘the basic Communist position have been noticeable long enough to suggest a possible connection | with two recent developments. |. They are the checking of com- " Inunist offensive action in South Viet Nam by the massive Amer- fean forces and the “great cul- | _ tural revolution” that has shown China to be an unstable ans pos- _sibly unreliable ally for Hanoi. ~ After these developments be- ‘came obvious,. Premier Pham Bus-Train | ‘CrashToll © Reaches 20 MONTREAL (CP)—Guy Bon- eher, 15, of Dorion, Que, died in hospital Saturday night of im- juries suffered in the Oct. 7 * bus - train collision in Dorion, Que., bringing to 20 the number Of fatalities from the mis‘iap. ’ A total of 19 persons, includ- ing the bus driver and teen-aged students going to a dance, died during ‘the evening collision or |” shortly afterwards. More than ‘anguage | continuing to. absorb losses. " Mrs. M. K. Hildebrant, a ‘ Toronto housewife, can’t, con- CAUGHT IN CURLERS caught her in her ‘curlers’.. Mr. Hildebrandt won with a ticket on Isis, the second-place finisher in the Cambridgeshire en at Gr Wea Eng- their voyage was completed. The 15-foot rowboat Puffin was found upside down with no sign of the two men 600 miles south- east of St. John’s, Nflid., Friday night by the Canadian destroyer escort Chaudiere. David Johnstone, 34, and John Hoare, 29, jteft Norfolk, Va., May 26 on the . voyage which they hoped would end at St. 4ives;England,-55. days..-later, . The log entry of Sept. 3 read in. part: ‘No rowing because of north-northwest wind. . ..“‘Heavy rain was also mentioned for that morning. The entry - was signed “John.”” ‘Hurricane Faith swept the area Sept. 3-4. The overturned boat was spol- ted about half-mile from the Chaudiere’a.track by the’ ship’s duty lookout, Atle Seaman W. Poirier of Ste Anne de Bellevue, Que., at about 7 p.m. ADT Fri- day. TAKEN ON DESTROYER The destroyer pulled along- side and two divers, Able Sea man D. Nook of Dartmouth, N:S., and G. Pimm of Pointe and searched the Puffin to see if any bodies were trapped be- neath. The Puffin .was then hoisted aboard the Chaudiere. A navy spokesman in Halifax will be handed over to’the Bri- tish embassy in Lisbon. The Chaudiere is expected to reach the Portuguese. capital mid-af- ternoon, Tuesday, local time. TR OE a, TT INSIDE TODAY Island news ....... veeesee @ Editorials .....¢....4 Kings, Queens, City f - Women’s ! Sport ........06 wicves a Comics ......5 iwaeescse 13 Classified ......0...:. 14,15 land, CP Wirephoto) Claire, Que., entéred the water said the Puffin and its jcontents ; Found secured in the Puffin with the log were a pair of oars, binoculars, cameras, film, charts and personal items. There ‘was no sign of a liferaft the ‘Paffin was believed te have been carrying. : The Puffin was last sighted in good order by the weather ship Delta Aig. 11. She was found by the Chaudiere 120 miles northeast of Delta at latitude 4 degrees north, longititude 38 de- grees 25 minutes west. No scale search had been instituted after her last sight- ing but all aircraft and vessels passing along the Puffin'’s route. had been asked by the air-sea rescue centre here to keep a look out for her, The parents of the {wo men expressed distress in England over their loss. SET ON PROJECT Nothing could have persuaded them to give up the project, Johnstone's parents said. “But it was a great pity i Hurricane Faith Is Blamed For Death Of Puffin Crew — end like this. % was, not impossible—this had been proved. They just had bad luck. “When young people want to undertake something like this, you can do nothing but Jet them ido it. They were aware of all the hazards and would have been frustrated for the rest of their lives if the families had brought pressure to stop them.” ’ Ironically, two other Britons rowing the Atlantic stepped ashore on the Aran Islands off Ireland’s west coast on the day that the last entry was made in the Puffin’s log. Paratroop Capt. John Ridge- way, 27, and Paratroop ~ Sgt: Shaw Blythe, 26, crossed in a 20-foot ‘rowboat. : Capt. Ridgeway said he was ‘extremely sorry” to hear that the Puffin had been found over- turned with no trace of her crew. He ‘added that ‘knowing what I know about the ‘venture’ he would not make the crossing a second time, ‘and I wotld not advise anybody else to do it.” Leaves der. John F, Kennedy. ference also is the--first -multi- nation. summit conference - ia Asia to be attended by a U.S. president. HAS BUSY SCHEDULE — -The Oct. 24-25 Manila meet- Abels sider sii gin ga arid peace in Southeast Asia, is wor pearoarlinees "8. At dawn Tuesday he Is off to Pago Pago where, Tce a brief- ‘refuelling stop, ‘‘he’ tours the island and sées native dane- ers. Then it is on to Wellington, ‘New Zealand, ‘for a crammed 24 Korean border. before returning _|to Washington via Alaska Nov. "Mrs. Johnson will be with Ker husband much of the way, but also will make side tours of her own. Threats Heard On LBJ's Life re oe ‘seven-nation Manila: con pe By WILLIAM N. OA UNITED NATIONS TB The idea that the United Na- tions_should.move out-of the United States ill “be revived this week in the General Assem- bly’s budgetary committee. Ambassador Jamil M. Ba- roody of Saudi Arabia said Sun- day he wil) suggest tothe com-" mittee that they consider ‘trans- ferring UN headquarters to Eu- rope—preferably to Switzerland. He expects: to: speak in the 119-nation committee today or Tuesday. He told a reporter he would urge the delegates to think twiee before giving Sec- retary-General U- Thant a go- ahead. to plan another building for the present headquarters Baroody, a 61-year-old UN) ‘| veteran, said. he had been | thinking about making the speech for a year or more as other delegates came to him with complaints about life in New York City. He said he had decided to do it even before 19 American Zionists invaded . the a, protest -from. the Syrian UN Mission Friday, |t é Fou Factors Noted ‘Against Present Site Soviet premier, he complained that the United States infringed upon the rights of some UN rep- resentatives, especially. Afr t ‘Cane’ and Asians, and-su - tell the U.S. it must safeguard UN members in tivss and ‘the mis-|— sore wrong \three ambassadors’ who gave) ORILLIA, Ont. (CP)—A wor w 3 him the protest from : ‘s.| ane alae be she hun atThieed-s, bor | . the Asiam,| ania bod. : ‘destin Hone: | 4 UN later an-| Ching close to to the a ie tes ee nounced that. Thant had asked | Wealthy «Toronto widow, who At Honolul heads oe eee gene ne Senet disappeated three yearé ago." iN Johnson ey with Ambassador Minnie Ford was : last seem” into a busy round of speeches | > ” Gol ee ie a are s last 5 When Nikita Khrushchev was The coast guard vessel Mont- caim, a helicopter, and an Al- batross aireraft from CFB Greenwood searched the area off the Labrador coast near the Spotted Islands Saturday but ) ‘The air-sea rescue centre in Halifax eaid the search has been suspended ‘for the time being’”’ but should further leads develop they will resume the hunt. _..Mhe_two_- masted, 58; foot schooner sailed from Cart- wright, Labrador, Oct. 2 with Schooner Survivors Search 2 ite 3 ipeg7e uj Ht 242 il i iH i | MAGNOLIA, Miss: (AP)—A doctor said he delivered @ baby at a hospital here more than one hour mother, died—a feat he HG i ies ggete Baby Delivered Alive After Mother's Death i g z ; ease il 5 i 2 z 2 Drake i | riastl efir re g Esk ile hi f lM fev i z ; : 8 1 i : z i Q i i i : : eee <