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Oshawa Times (1958-), 25 Sep 1963, p. 22

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wheat crop. The government s Tie Rivan~ won't ieei-- tie; - conducting a campaign to cut|shortage as much as other down bread wastage. Ther e/parts of the Soviet Union. Flour : QQ. THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, September 25, 1963 Express Firm Guards Boxes After Threat TORONTO (CP) -- An om press company will be in ot eT advance poll ballot boxes a * Toronto St. Andrew riding to ay oe ca Es | , the riding's returning of- ficer, Murray Caplan, said Mon- . Caplain said his clerk re- a telephone call stating squad tactics would the riding during the On- ie peli SETTERS TEA ROTH ROSE ETH eH EES 2 ge -| drought has afflicted the -| country. As a result, the .|bright green, Crops df wheat 'land corn have been cut and -| wheat, 'lof the Caucasus. The soil is as The Soviet Union is hav- ing crop trouble, Its popula- tion is growing faster than its harvests and this year Kremlin has been buying huge quantities of wheat and flour abroad to feed the Soviet people and meet its commitments to supply Cuba and Communist allies. AP correspondent Preston Grover reports on a trip into the Russian farm belt and how its people have been affected. By PRESTON GROVER KRASNODAR, U.S.S.R. (AP) In the countryside around small city the roadsides are much of the land plowed up again for reseeding to winter For this is the Kuban, north * Month At Labor '| For Careless | Driving Count MILTON, Ont (CP) -- Stege Changes Foreseen : In Immigration VANCOUVER (CP) -- Sweep- gov-|shoulder of the Queen Elizabeth immi fenmet Monday night by Im- migration Minister Favreau. : He also told a meeting of the ~ Canadian Chinese community * that he plans to visit Hong Kong ; Inter to the year to invest tigate : grants from that city to Can- * ada. : Mr. Favreau said he intends * to "seek a fair and just solu- ~ tion to the vexing problem of _---- immigration to Can- = ada." * Referring to the illegal entry . of Chinese immigrants, Mr. : Favreau said: "Before a policy satisfactory te this country and to: the Chi- -- community can cng ay worked a there must a clear understanding that absolute sincerity and con- ere must _BD- Sate to to be iatooiened. " 88 + « - ~ - - - - * : Workers Postpone Threatened Strike MONTREAL (CP) -- Mont- real longshoremen have post- their threatened strike . Be could hamper the shipment Canadian wheat to Russia. : Paul Asselin, president of Local 375 of the International Long- eatere * gress of @ conciliation board's ' attempt to solve the dispute, 4 and have called off a strike * echeduled for Thursday. -|roof. One women's arm was Yannacacos, 51, of Smithville, Ont,, father of six, was sen- tenced Monday to one month of hard labor for careless driving. Magistrate Kenneth Langdon told Yannacacos, whose car was seen to force others on to the Way last May that he was not it to drive "in spite of the fact you have had a licence for 12 years." Police said afer the incident on the highway, Yannacacos drove into the rear of a' con- yertible. Four persons were thrown out--one through the broken and another woman suf- fered foot injuries. Yannacacos contended the black as mud and rune two yards deep. It is Russia's rich- est land. This year, despite poor crops almost everywhere in the Soviet Union, the Kuban turned in a bumper crop of wheat and delivered more to the govern- ment for distribution in the cities than it ever had before. But after wheat, the story changes. People in the towns stand in queues to buy certain types of vegetables. For even in the rich Kuban, the drought of last summer hit hard. A group of Western and Com- munist correspondents toured this rich area at the invitation of the Soviet government while|© Premier Khrushchev took a this swing through another part of the crop area, not far away, lambasting the farmers and party leaders for poor crops. CHASED AWAY Reporters who tried 'o phto- graph the queuess of people buy- ing vegetables were chased away by irate Russians. "It isn't necessary," they told one correspondent. Constantin Stalarov, first dep- uty chairman of the executive committee of the Kuban, reeled 'off figures on tractors, mechan- ical harvesters, acreages and yields of wheat, corn and cab tle and in a talk with corre- spondents was happy to report a bumber crop of wheat. On more than 5,000,000 acres of wheat in his area the yield was better than 41 bushels an acre, some as high as 65 bush- els, he said, Ten years ago the Summer Drought Hits Even Soil-Rich Kuban yield was about 30 bushels an acre, showing that there has been a great improvement in Soviet farming methods, Star- larov said. But correspondents. used to Soviet statistics simply asked him what the yield was in 1958, another bumper year. It was just about the same as year in wheat, and much bet- ter in all other crops. This fall, for the first time, wheat is. being sown with a heavy dose of fertilizer. RIPENS EARLY Wheat in the Kuban ripens early, which was fortunate this year. Much of the harvesting was finished in June, before two months of drought set in. In those two months almost no rain fell. The result was that the corn yields fell sharply, as did crops of vegetables, fruits and oil producing Geen iting a vital crop. "This was a very bad year for the farms," said Stalarov. Some acreage simply was aban- doned. In his area live 4,000,000 peasants. The pinch of supplies caused by the bad harvest is being felt in the Kuban despite its bis of points, a rare sight any where in Russia before t year. n't. were bread queues at a numberjis hard to buy in Moscow. his Y/Flour can be hoarded. Bread THE MILE HI-LARIOUS STORY OF THREE LITTLE AIRLINE @4HOSTESSES... WITH THE : oan MOSTESS' TNA AND JERRY COLOR CARTOON FEATURE TODAY AT: 2:30-4:45-6:55-9:10 SOW PLAYING. THE FIRST JAMES BOND FILM ADVENTURE! "DR.NO" IN COLOR How Does A Girl "Prove Her Love" To The Boy She Is Going Steady With? 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