. .. WARDIAN - PATRIOT HOME OFfl-IE WEEK :A- » . :; , '. at?! ’ (‘...>~"a..i.-'-.-.£;.u§. .1...:.=..=.;-..,..;,.. ‘3 3 - . ‘1; at, -"“'—"— .1 r... ' I pinata, _l:t bipfill.‘ ‘ gt; . .355; I no we ‘ Ins-lob IT- a ;. Shit-1U ,ézf“ DEN. . unl- o'uo-o ~v :- - curport 1 twine, . 3;; ,0. 1010.246 I l2-9-l5-o E, g i. '9 _ CL 3;: r; a 6.. . 3 . a: . '4?" us. NOW. 02“le . PW l0-O-ll-5 5.0.4.0 CL n- w°§.i. .. bio-642 in 1055 SQ-FT. 39!. 0| J Blueprints include complete details for both BRICK VENEER and FRAME construcliom An attractive comp a c t house which has been design- ed for electric heating. How- ever, provision has been made for chimney space if dc- s‘ room could be used as extra bedroom. it has a RCMP Jumpin-ess closet over the stair. Without carport, house could be built on a 40 foot lot. Design is for Brick Veneer, but full details for building in Frame are in- cluded on the blueprints. titled Home Planning and Design," is now available at the offices of The Guardian and The Ev- ening Patriot for $1, tax free. This new edition includes in« I : ll‘ . HOW TO OBTAIN lllé’ileiesrfiiliiiita’lor “stimuli: DESIGN 300K The latest design book on "Canadian Guide to formation on financing in de- lnfeci's Yanks By DAVE McINTOSH iurnpiness by the Queen's visit approaches ‘ seemed to have infected secu- rity guards at the United States 1 Embassy Thursday. Reporters, including Ameri- cans, who had been asked to; attend a press conference lni the embassy held by U.S. spa-i cial envoy Henry Cabot Lodge .of honor and band from the ' ser- {Royal 22nd Regiment of Quebec were asked b geant to produce identification. 3 Nobody here could recall any niversary of its founding. similar action ever being taken by the usually cordial embassy, Christian Rusk. An embassy spokesman saidl ,been applying himself too as; OTTAWA tCP)—An apparent15iduously. l RCMP as the‘ Ti Parliament Hill wildered that RCMP lines kept even during Visits by state sec- them a good distance—at least retaries John Foster Dulles, 25 yards for those without spe- t e RCMP I son an e embassy is directl around Prime Minister Pearson Quebec, were assigned to Pearson in the capital as well ’as outside it. a dozen uniformed Wednesday. INSPECTION 0]“ 22nd The occasion was an inspec- tion by Mr. Pearson of a guard which is celebrating the 50th an- Some spectators appeared be- e guard of honor. been among tail, landscaping. color selec- tion, etc., plus over 100 popu- lar new designs to choose from. Also included are full etalls on how to order blue- P . 5’ across Wellington Street from him, had been used to strolling unit that ere the about alone on Parliament Hill. said then that it was eXpécted RCMP threw a tight screen Following terrorist activities in both Washington and Ottawa RCMP phinclmesmen could be reached before such u At least constables Wednesda held up visitors who tried to en- ter the Parliament buildings behind Mr. Pearson at the con- clusion of the brief ceremony. wo Members of Ptar- liament were reported to have those stopped by Herler a n d Dean icial invitations—from Mr. Pear— guiding neg", $1: P21113183: pushed slightly. Oneort l! snowman-sums.“ WASHINGTON (CP) — Fresh interest has been armsed in a main United States election is- on Barry Goldwater, the Republi- can presidential candidate, he- lieves one of his demands ac- tually has been in effect for: some time. , He has been urging that the, commander of NATO have dis-j cretion in employing tactical or' limited - use nuclear weaponsl Now he says he believes that: situation exists. . i This contrasts to the stand of President Johnson who told a Seattle audience last week-on I a theme he has sounded fre- quently: “The responsbility for the control of the nuclear) weapons rests solely with the president who exercises the control of their use in all fore- seeable circumstancu. This has been the case since 1945 under four presidents." ‘ President Johnson and the ,Dcmocrats by inference or di- lrectly have used this particular ; part of Goldwater policy as an. iother example in their claim Lthat he is rash. imprudent and i extremist-prone. lnEFLEcr CONCERN The Arizona senator is said Whose Finger Now On U;ySA;wi:lIIEgzlEear trigger? that it had reached agreement on nuclear arms for its NATO and NO AD carriers, said “these nuclear warheads can not be used operationally with- out the authorization of the Canadian government. Joint control is thus assu ." leslie Carson Reports Career Is Going Fine By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD (AP) —— “When you get to be 30, you begin to realize that you only live once. Then you must start to make the most of your life." Leslie Caron was back In Hollywood where she had first met fame at 18 as Gene Kelly’s dancing partner in the Oscar- winning An American in Paris. Always a thoughth girl, she is more reflective at 33, more con- scious of the direction she wants her career to follow. Her career is going fine. Once counted out in Hollyw , she has returned to co-star in films with Cary Grant and Rock Hud- son. That’s as high - powered company as any actress could wish. to feel this issue more than any other is the reason for his trail- ‘ing behind Johnson. His latest lspeeches reflect that concern. ‘ He also let it be known that the has proof that some military lcommanders in fact now can lorder the use of nuclear weap- i‘ons without getting in touch twit'i the president. Some of the records bear him out — specifically a 1958 inter- ;view with Gen. Earle E. Part- ‘ridge. who then was com- mander of the North American A' Defence Command which fence of North America. ‘ The defence department de- ;clines to comment on the sen- iaior‘vs assertion but there is a icertain amount of acceptance 3here that certain military com- -manders in the field have been lgiven the rig to use tactical iweapons of nuclear nature on their own under certain specific conditions. , These would be military lead- lers in defensive formations such as NORAD or NATO, it is believ However. Partridge in 1958 said NORAD had the right to llaunch nuclear weapons on its own but was the only military had that right. He Picfou launches Steel Trawler PJCTOU, N.S. (CP) —- The first steel fishing trawler to so constructed at Ferguson Indus- tries Limited here was chris- tened in ceremonies Thursday. Mrs. P. K. McGrath, wife of a director of the owners, Job Brothers Limited of St. John's, Nfld., christened the 350 - ton Blue Crest with the traditional bottle of champaign. The 130-foot ship has accom- modation for 19 men and is equipped with a fish hold ca- pacity of 8,700 cubic feet. A second trawler is to be de- livered to ' Newfoundland owners next month and the con- struction of two others for Bur- geo Fish Industries Limited at Burgeo, Nfld., will begin imme- diately. i ‘ East German soldiers guard ‘ Oberbaum Bridge crossing point where this hole in the Berlin wall was made Friday. The opening was made appa- Talks Continue O’I'I‘AWA (CW—Negotiations are continuing between the fed- eral health department and the Quebec government on the ques- tion of grants to the proposed national winter games to be held in Quebec City in 1966 or 1967, the Commons was in- formed Tuesday night. John Munro, parliamentary secretary to Health Minister Judy LaMar-sh, said the federal government is prepared to co- operate with the provincial gov- ernment in supporting the spe- cial competition. Replying to Auguste Chequ- ette (L—Lotbiniere in an ad- journment debate, he indicated that the negotiations deal With a possible provincial grant and its size. Mr. Choquette recalled that the national fitness council rec- ommended a $500,000 ederal On Winter Games ganglia ently to prepare for the ex- pec heavy crossing when passes are issued again to West Berliners to visit rela- {grant early in 1963 and asked what was holding up the grant. present uncertainty, might have to be put ff to 1967. He said the span- Isor, la Societe des Jeux d’ Hiver de Quebec (Quebec Winter Sports Society) originally plan- ned the games for 1966. He wondered if the provrncial government objected to federal aid and wished to support the games alone, claiming full credit like a big Santa Claus. July Exports Show Increase OTTAWA (CH—Canadian ex- ponts in July were 30-per-cent higher than a year earlier. Wheat shipments accounted for about half the increase. The July advance brought to- tal exports for e first seven months of 1964 to $4,606,078.000, up 23.3 per cent from the same BERLIN wu. PENED 10 WEST BERLIN VISITORS an agreement Friday permit-' ting West Berliners to pass through the wall. tives in the Soviet sector of the divided city. East Ger- man and West Berlin Govern- ment representatives signed period of 1963, the qu-eau of statistics said here. Gains were spread across all in the seven months at $2,382,372,- 000 were 10.7-per-cent higher than a year earlier but the U.S. share of all Canadian exports slipped to 52 per cent from 57 ast year. Sales to Britain in the seven mon rose by more than 21 per cent to $691,626,000. Exports to the uropean Common Mar- ket were up about 21 per cent to $297,961,000. Sales to Japan increased about 18 per cent to $187,391,000. Wheat shipments, led by the big Russian order, shot up to 56m,223,000 from $358,769,000. Newsprint sales abroad also ad- vanced by 11 per cent to $465,- ,000. All the other major commodities also increased. H The Muskox, now found only in the Arctic regions of North America and Greenland, roamed Europe and Asia. Separatism Said Only Minor Move SUDBURY, Ont. (CP) — The problem of separatism is blown all out of proportion, Robert Choquette, Montreal poet, author and cochainnan of the Canadian Centennial Commis- sion, said in an interview here. Mr. Choquette. who shares the chairmanship of the com- mission with John Fisher of Ottawa, was in Sud-bury to add- ress the Canadian Club. The French-Canadian on the whole is a level-headed and re- sponsible Canadian, he said. "There are a few hot-heads.“ said Mr. Choquette. but he once added that these people exist in every country of the world. Home & McLeod Ltd. a nee . The Canadian government, in announcing in August last year ‘ MARBLE GRANITE Mr. Pearson, like all Cane~ later an over-zealous guard has ldian prime ministers before! i bummer-r. an. .‘M‘ h, ' use 7; -‘ PRESIDENT IN NORTH st Whitehorse. Yukon Terri- Mysnelsmaklustoursf faorthernlODEchapters. 0 URGES CEASE-FIRE BRONZE . Prime Minister ‘ Tuesday appealed for a cease-‘ fire in The Congo. Speaking as chairman of the Commission on Reconciliation appointed he called on brothers" to cease fighting at ace and lay down their arms NAIROBI, Kenya (Reutersi—i Jami Kenyattai by the rganization for African Unity, "my Congolese * o “in the spirit of African unity." 1.1» i V .; (CP Wirephsts) Day Night Come to us finst for first rate repairs. All appliances re- paired safely and quickly! And our rates are low! 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