se Sea yg 4 Sibi ao ote eR Pe tera ee i eI Ow | ee HONOR BLACKMAN STEPS OUT NO MORE BOOTS Bond Draws Curtains On 'Tough Girl' Roles "8 POLITICAL PUNS STILL CRIME Of all the Communist re- gimes in East Europe, Bul- garia is the most firmly tied to the Soviet Union. While change sweeps through r Communist countries, garia remains faithful the Kremlin. Richard O'Regan, Associated Press chief of bureau in West Germany, explains the rea- sons behind this in the fol- lowing last of four articles on the situation in East Europe. By RICHARD O'REGAN SOFIA (AP)--Despite all the troubles he is having with .his Communist allies, Soviet Pre- mier Khrushchev has one true and faithful friegd in East Eu- rope--Bulgaria. Romanians may be turning their backs on Moscow, Poles and Hungarians may be pursu- ing their own brands of com- munism and Czechs may be flaying around looking for ways out of the economic mess com- By THE CANADIAN PRESS Manhasset, N.Y.--Herb Shel- don, 51, who appeared on net- work radio and television for 12 hours a week during the 1950s; of a heart attack. London--Douglas Jerrold, 70, journalist and historian who claimed he helped Generalis- simo Francisco Franco to power in Spain. Liberty, N.Y.--Harry Grossin- ger, 76, sole owner and a foun- der of the Grossinger Hotel in By CAROL KENNEDY _|tify her with the TV character, | DENHAM, England (CP)--| who as well as being a judo ex-| Honor Blackman feels the time|Pert was also an intel'ectual | is coming when she must hang|Prodigy, forever amazing her up her pistols and swap her|male colleague in The Aven- boots and leather suits for more gers, the suave man-about-town feminine garb. | played by Patrick MacNee, with Until last year this honey-| Knowledge of the most obscure! blonde, blue-eyed actress was a subjects. 4 little - known name who had| Most of her fan mail during} played English rose types in|the series came from women, some 20 British movies. Now|and most of the disapproving she is known across the nation|!etters--some violently abusive the Catskills which he built up from a farm boarding house to a resort of international fame; of coronary thrombosis. Toronto--James B. McRae, 39, director of broadcasting for Leo Burnett Company of Can- ada Limited and former produc- tion manager of radio stations CKRC Winnipeg and CKUA Ed- monton; of a heart attack. Quebec -- Anna Berthiaume, 85, daughter of the founder and president of Canada's largest French - language newspaper, Montreal La Presse. as the girl whose way with men|/--Were written by men. is to bounce them off the wall, "They seemed to feel the like' basketballs. overeat bay rg rt oy Fa ; su 0 eir sex. Som e wee Wels ot a teiey.| letters were so bad the televi- sion espionage series called The| sn Prose tage wouldn't let me Avengers decided to cast aj" " | woman as one of the two chief ACTED IN ONTARIO | characters, a pair of trouble-|) Honor Blackman's real per- shooting secret agents who spe-/sonality is far removed from| cialized in unarmed combat.|/her TV. self--warmly feminine} The experiment was so success-|and with a spontaneous charm superintendent San Rafael, Calif.--Mrs. Alice Nesbit Mahon, 92, widow of Judge George F. Mahon of Windsor, Ont. Stockton, Calif--Mrs. Amos Alonzo Stagg, 88, who knew more about football than most men through helping her hus- band, now 101, coach the Uni- versity of Chicago team. Toronto--Herbert Riley, 66, of eastern ~Gale* with her| not in the least "actressy." She) branches of the Imperial Bank judo and her "kinky" leather/has no qualms about revealing! of Canada from. 1957 until his outfits became something of a/her age--37--and reacted with] retirement in 1962. cult among British girls. | delight- to a reporter's sugges- Coinciding as the series didjtion that she might be success- with the Paris fashion for\ful in the maturely seductive NET EARNINGS leather and knee-boots--invar-|type of role played by France's) iably worn by Cathy when pre-|Simone Signoret--"'if I were) paring for action--it sometimes|only half as good an actress as By THE CANADIAN PRESS Hudson's Bay Oil and Gas Co. seemed as if all Chelsea' was} full of female avengers. WANTS SEXY ROLES "T must have been the only) women in London who didn't! own a pair of boots last win-| ter," chuckled Miss Blackman) as she reclined in skin-tight! mauve suede pants on. the set of| the new James Bond picture) "Goldfinger," in which she plays the female gangster Pussy Galore. It may be the last tough-gal part for some time. If Miss) Blackman. gets her way, she would like to play softer roles) with more sex appeal, though she says the film version of Pussy Galore. has plenty of| "oomph." ' She finds the image of Cathy Gale hard to shake off even in private life. Fans tend to iden- she is." |Ltd., 6 months ended June 30: Like her TV partner Patrick) 1964, $6,184,000, 34 cents a MacNee, Honor Blackman has|share; 1963, $5,909,000, 33 cents. had acting experience in Can-| eesyige rie pamaemnarenc nd ada. In 1952, visiting Toronto) POPE TAKES REST with her first husband, she) CASTEL GONDOLFO (AP)-- played in Crime Passionel at) Pope Paul is at his summer res- the Museum Theatre, and also'idence at Castel Gondolfo, near a summer season in The Im-|Rome, for a rest, but he also portance of Being Ernest and|took along "mountains" of work The Glass Menagerie in On-|in preparation for the next ses- tario's Muskoka district. sion of the ecumenical council. Although she says her idealHundreds of townspeople way of life is "really very nhel-|grected his arrival Wednesday i tered," she confesses to getting|™8 munism has led them into, bat-- Bulgaria is cooler in its rela- tions with the United States than Moscow and Bulgaria has given the Soviet Union almost complete say over its economic life. It is the most Stalinist of East European Communist countries. Much of the reason for the close ties to the Kremlin is due to the traditional friendship of 8,000,000 Bulgarians -- whether or not they like communism-- for Russia, Bulgarian pride in giving the Russians the cyrillic alphabet and the fact that for almost 1,200 years Bulgaria has never considered itself part of Europe. Said one Western diplomat working here: "You can be sure that if other Communist nations turn more toward the West, Bulgaria will be the last to do so. If they, get tougher toward the West, Bul- aonb Were SR Nog eR aT Bulgaria Remains Frigid Amid Thaw In Cold War garia will be the first after Moscow." It is perhaps Bulgaria's lack of identity with Western Europe which accounts' for a striking fact that meets the Western visitor on arrival: Border con- trols to the West are less strict in Bulgaria han elsewhere in East Europe. "Very few Bulgarians think of escaping to the West," a diplo-| mat explained, | The diplomats and _ other Westerners in Sofia report: Bulgarians still are discour- aged from talking to Western- ers. Political jokes are a pun-| ishabe offence, even though) they are a favorite pastime elsewhere in the East. Deportations of "political un- réliables" from the cities to the countryside are still occurring frequently, although shortage of housing is often given as the Ht ye emery semen yaitr reason. hei nee we hp A A spy mania has been built) up around all Westerners and the public has been urged to report on the movements of foreigners. Bulgarians are barred from entering the American legation and there now are two militia- men to stop them, Six months ago there was only one. Next door is a big anti-American display. The current policy of Bul- garia was summed up by Com- munist Chief Todor hivkov when he told a party congress: "There must be an intransi- gent struggle against bourgeois ideology and the decadent influ- ences of the capitalist West." He charged the West with) using press, radio, movies, mu-) sic and dancing to corrupt Bul-| garian youth and declared war on all attempts by artists to in- troduce Western ideas into liter- ature, theatre and ar. x apalgaaie Ne 6 Relaions with the U.S.--inter- rupted for 10 years between 1950 and 1960--came to a new freeze after youths rioted in front of the American Legation iast December and overturned American cars. But since the Bulgarians apol- j ogized, there have been indica- tions that Moscow has told Zhiv- kov Bulgaria is lagging in co- existence and should loosen up a iiitle. ot Diplomats in Sofia are not certain, but they believe a struggle may be going on for power within the Bulgarian gov- ernment among three factions: Old-time Stalinists; a group. of young Communists with more modern, more Western ideas, and the men in power, They think Bulgarias' secret police, still very much in evi- dence, may be run by Stalinists who are still making it difficult for the party to carry out any changes at al. * On the other hand, the party leadership also recently criti- cized liberals who want more radical solutions to Bugaria's probems. The regime evidently is afraid to give them more power for «fear liberalization would get out of hand. TRADE WITH RUSSIA Eighty per cent of Buigaria's total foreign trade is with the THE OSHAWA TIMES, Friday, July 24, 1964 13 Soviet Union-and her trade com- mitments are of long term, Before communism took over, agriculture was Bulgaria's ma- jor industry. The Communists have been placing emphasis on building up industry and now industrial production exceeds agriculture in value, This has left Bulgarians short of food. Last winter there was a major bread shortage in towns and cities. Economic observers here say the standard of living has im- proved over the last two years, but it is harder for the average Bulgarian to get by on his pay than any other East European. Life in' the country villages-- where farms are all either col- lectivizéd or part of co-oper- atives--is said to be better than in neighboring Greece. "T'll say this for the Bulgarian Communists," said one agricul- tural expert. "Their peasants no longer are living in mud huts and many have their own homes, with electric light and power--which they rarely had before communism took over." But he added: "As long as Bulgarians feel so much affection for the Rus- sians, there is not likely to be much change in Bulgaria." Research On TB School Continuing LONDON, Ont. (CP)--An in- © tensive investigation into a tu- - rece fare a at a Beparate Shoe here as Be " i a the eon My af Dr. D. A. Hutchison, city © medical officer of health, said Thursday hundreds of persons have been checked in the inves+ . tigation which may become a summer-long task. - Health authorities have gone through the wide circle of per- sons directly or indirectly in- . volved with the parish and re- sults have been negative: Now, Dr. Hutchison says, the investigation will widen in scope to reach those "remotely" in contact with the school. This in- - cludes area variety stores and soda shops, Dr, Hutchison said. Thirteen pupils from the school were admitted to Beck Memorial Sanitorium. since the outbreak was detected two months ago. Seven other per- sons, including two teachers, received drugs as outpatients With a CASCADE 40 electric water heating appliance you can For information, call: your hydro LIVE BETTER ELECTRICALLY use all the hot water you want at ONE LOW FLAT RATE. The CASCADE 40 produces hot water electrically 6 TIMES AS FAST AS AVERAGE USE DEMANDS... but... your water heating bil never increases, OSHAWA PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION, PHONE 723-4624 -- In Co-Operation With -- WHITBY PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION. ....... AJAX HYDRO ELECTRIC COMMISSION PICKERING PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION PHONE PHONE 668-5878 PHONE 942 0500 942-2930 a kick out of physical violence. She became a judo Yellow Belt training for the part of Cathy Gale. "IT was a mass of bruises after every performance and I |still have a scar on my back nat will never heal. But it was fun,"" . Speculative Mine Issues Continuing In Limelight TORONTO (CP) -- Specula-;Bridge, which Algoma contro)s, tive mining issues dominated| climbed 1 and 1% to 74 and 23% activity on the stock market|respectively. Thursday as the volume) Base metals were higher. reached 9,479,000 compared with/Steep Rock added 10 cents to 8,396,000 shares traded Wednes-|$5,60 and Opemiska 15 cents to day. |$8.55. Raglan, the company with a Golds were led lower by Giant nickel property in the Ungava) Yellowknife's loss of % to 11% district of Quebec, jumped 47 Dickenson and Cochenour Wil- cents to $2.60 and traded in aiams eased five cents each to $2.11 to $2.65 range. Canadian| $4.85 and $3.10, Dome countered Dyno, which owns 2,800,000 with a % gain to 3014. shares of Raglan, advanced 15) On index, industrials were un- cents to $1.81. : changed at 160.44, golds were Rowan gained six cents to 21\down .12 at 133.35 and western cents, National Exploration four ojls .95 at 98.19. Base metals cents to 51 cents and Sand River|adyanced .71 to 65.54 and the --a relative newcomer. to the\exchange index .02 to 149.65. speculative sweepstakes -- and Windfall dipped 25 cents to Distillers Seagram continued Aug. 14. magnet 1% cents each to eight $4.65, Genex two cents to 48 By THE CANADIAN PRESS General Foods Ltd. common The BIG ALE in the big land | cents and 19% cents respec- tively. cents and Gulf one cent.to 36 Ford Motor Co. of Canada Ltd., cents. common $1.25, Sept. 15, record to increase in price with a % gain to a 1964 peak of 63%. Walker Gooderham and Cana- dian Breweries: were %4 gainers) at 37% and 11% respectively,| the latter a 1964 high. Lauren-| tide Finance was up 1 to 16%! after the Senate banking com-| 50 cents, Sept. 4, record Aug. 7. Investors syndicate of Can- ada Ltd., common 75 cents, class a 75 cents, Sept. 30, rec- ord Sept. 10. Reid Lithographing Co. Ltd., pid. 78% cents, Aug. 15, record July 31. mittee approved granting S fis ; charter to the Laurentide Bank.| , Selkirk Holdings Ltd., class A {1 % cents, Sept. 16, record HITS NEW HIGH Sept. 2. R. L. Crain, the business) SimPsons Ltd., common 12% form maker surrounded byicents, Sept. 15, record Aug. 414. take-over rumors, climbed to a| Standard Brands Inc., com- new high of 18 with a % gain.|mon 55 cents (U.S.), Sept.. 15. Algoma Steel and Dominionjrecord Aug. 14.