The to Prince Edward Is- By GREG MacDONAI.D Canadian Press Staff Writer The takeover scene was busy again last week with the Shell Investments Ltd. offer to pur- chase Canadian Oil Companies Ltd. holding the spotlight. The Toronto Stock Exchange, after an investigation into trad- ing by one of its member brok- erage firms of Canadian Oil shares before and after the of- fer was announced last month, fined the sitting member of the firm $15,000 and suspended him from membership for one. month The fine. heaviest levied by the Exchange. was imposed on P. J. Anderson of G. H. Rennie and Co. Ltd. The Exchange said it found the firm guilty of a violation of its bylaws and of conduct, pro- cccding or method of business, unbecoming a member an trimental to the interests of the Exchange. The firm disclosed Oct. 11 that in a three-day period from or its clients following announcement of the Shell offer Sept. 25. The Exchange in- vestigation included the period ' from Sept. iii to Oct. 3. 0 ROBE Q. G I Meanwhile, the Ontario attor- V ncy-gcncral department has or- dt‘l‘t‘fl an Ontario Securities Commission investigation into trading of a n a d i a n Oil shares slirrounding‘the Shell of— fer Elsewhere on the takeover Ltd, Calgary, made a second bid to purchase all the outstand~ An earlier offer for 65 cents a share was rejected by Devon Palmer on the grounds that it s not enough. There is also objection to the new offer. RC Church Seeks To Make Symbols More By GEORGE W. CORNELL VATICAN CITY (AP) - A handclasp, a smile, a tilt of eye- brow. These are parts of an un- spoken and unwritten vocabu~ lary that no dictionary can fully define and no linguist translate. Yet they carry, for all men. a Wealth of meanin This in a similar way. is the kind of voiceless language that the Roman Catholic Church is examining today in an effort to the expressions more vivid and significant to modern man. The church has its own spe- cial terminology —- the bowed cad, the genuflection, the the fingered ncense, statues. bells, the hands that trace the symbol of the cross. ere are many other word- less phrases, throughout the liturgical lexicon of the church. “The objective is to mak them more understandable and more comprehensible," said Rev. Frederick McManus . Washington, a liturgical sultant to the Vatican ecumeni- cal council. or two weeks, the world- wide assembly of more than 2.200 bishops, archbishops and cardinals have been weighing proposed revisions in the vari- ous practices of worship. of GARRii‘SON Special Entertn ' land women who travelled to . into one new COI‘I- ' Remembrance Day DINNER and DANCE Charlottetown Hotel Nov. 8,1962 Tickets to be obtained by Nov. 6th New York for a full week's visit as a result of the recent Canadian Oil Share Trading Sparks Probe By Exchange l Five of the eight Devon Pal- imer directors have asked share- holders not to act on the Triad loffcr immediately. 1 They said in a statement that 1the price offered is too low and {that substantial companies other jihan Triad have expressed in- terest in the purchase of the icompany or its shares. , Devon Palmer, with head of- ‘fice in Winnipeg. has gas and oil interests in Alberta and Sas— katchewan. Triad is affiliated with British Petroleum Co. Ltd. BUY ASSETS Neon Products of Canada Ltd. Vancouver. purchased the as- sets of Neolite Ltd., its biggest icompetitor in British Columbia. Purchase price was not dis- closed. Neon Products, with op- erations across Canada, has as- sets valuc'd at $9,000,000 Dow Chemicals of Canada Ltd. purchased Davenport Con- tainers Ltd., Toronto, Canada's largest maker of plastic food containers. Purchase price was not disclosed. On the mining scene, Patino Corporation Ltd. announced I plan to merge with Coppper ,Rand Chibougamau Mines Ltd. into a new company called Pa- tino Mining Corporation. Patino, the Canadian arm of the international Patino inter- ests, former big Bolivian tin op- erators, has a large interest in Copper Rand. Under the plan shares of Cop- per Rand would be consolidated share shares now held and Copper Rand would acquire all the un- dertakings and assets of Patino Eexcept shares of Copper Rand already owned by Patina. Pa- jIInO would then distribute to its ishareholders one new share of iCopper Rand for each Patino share held. Meaningful l, Still further discussion of the ,subiect lies ahead, following 'the weekend's four-day recess. .The changes may be many, or lfew, but when they come, they will affect 500,000,000 Catholics iaround the earth. And the possibility also has ,been cited that they may help build fuller understanding with other Christians. “We want to get rid of those things that detract and that are without real meaning," Father McManus said Under one proposal, Catholic worshippers would receive com- munion in both bread and wine. in celebrating of the Lord's supper. At present they receive lonly bread. while the consecrat- ing priest takes both bread and wine "If everyone received both the bread and wine. it would bring out more vividly the unity of priest and people," said Rev. Eugene H. Maly of Cincinnati, a council liturgical expert. Larry's Restaurant Free Delivery from 11 a.m. to 1 sum. Dial 41841544028 SGTS. MESS inment Planned circulation contest sponsored by The Guardian and The Ev- ening Patriot were royally en- tertained last week especially at the United Nations Build- ing where they met the entire Canadian UN delegation. The ladies were entertained in the Canadian council chamber at the UN where they heard a brief address by Paul Tremb- lay, Canadian ambassador. Montreal and other dignitar- ies. Heath Macquarrie, MP for Queens and parliamentary sec- retary to External Affairs Mi- nister Howard Green, arrang- ed for a social evening in the Canadian lounge of the Bar- clay Hotel. Pictured with the Island ladies are, front row. left to right, Mr. and Mrs. —gives you premium benefits at' regular pn'oes. Fuel Chief is a clean-burning fuel oil that protects your burner against damag— ing deposits, while it gives you warmth-without-worry. Chief ‘heating oil is ash-free, and has remarkable storage stability. 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Whites and blacks are draw- ing apart in Rhodesia, this wide and booming frontier land that once hoped to become a happy proving ground for the theory of racial partnership. The unrest has bee building up. Ramshackle churches where early missionaries preached the Christian gospel are burned to the ground in the name of Ne— gro nationalism. Demonstration riots are led by aspiring politi~ cians armed with stones and broken bottles. The spirit of compromise has disappeared. Negro resistance 0 white domination has hard- ened. and the whites of Rhode- sia are casting envious looks at the South African system of apartheid. LOOKS HOPELESS This was the seemingly hope— less impasse as the premier of oil Southern Rhodesia, Sir Edgar Whitehead, appeared before a trusteesbip committee at the United Nations in New York. 1 He insisted there that the country's white minority, out- numbered 14 to 1, was no in- tention of clinging to power de- vote for every Negro -- nothing spite a new constitution that goes into effect next month. Ne—l Nautically speaking you can lower the boom on cold . . . . o noneedtoclearlowerdeck—just asimple signaltoTexaoowiIl bringyou the comforting warmth of TEXACO FUEL CHIEF Heating Oil, all winter long. This economi- cal, clean-burning heating oil by Texaco—the manufacturers of quality petroleum products "Surging Negro Nationalis Is Threat In S. Rhodesia 3 groes object that this constitu-, tion gives them only 15 seats in i say r a c 1 al Parliament while the whites have 50. Whitehead expressed belief that th e Negroes probably would have a majority of seats within 15 years. Negro leaders, spurred on by nationalists from other African countries, seem in no mood to wait that long. Some want to suspend the constitution and elections scheduled for Dec. 14. The UN General Assembly last week supported the Negro leaders' viewpoint, voting to de- ment annulment of the constitu- tion and the framing of a no one under auspices of Britain and the UN secretary-general. Though legally Southern Rho- desia is a British responsibility, the country has long been a self-governing colony, one of the three parts of the shaky Central African Federation. UNDER FIRE Britain has been under fire at the UN for not intervening. But the British claim that only the Rhodesians can come to grips with their particular crisis. ‘ cad last september banned the main opposition party, known as ZAPU and sent the nationalist leaders into ex- 5 e. Tentative moves by White head to give the Negroes more say have been brusquely re- jected, even by moderate lead- ers like ZAPU’s Joshua Nkomo who. pressed by extremists, had to demand all or nothing. i less would d HEATING OII. o. Whitehead also is under fire 1 BIG INDUSTRY Nearly 000.000 tourists from abroad visited Britain during m the first half of l962. Yourself a happy feeling F GIVE THE from right—ping settlers who partncrship has failed. They propose a program of allouing the Noni-nos to de- velop by thcmscl\'cs~—that is, separate from the lives of the white men. The Rhodesian whites in re- ality are asking for Hpal‘illi‘ld. If the nationalists boycott or disrupt the Doc 14 elm-tion. the stalemate will remain unbroken. If the right-wing settlers throw out Whitehead and the moder- ates, their eventual goal will he apartheid. Either way, Rhodesia is in for difficult days. After October I“, EUROPE IS , $119 CLOSER , by TCA! 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