AD 1 PG ON CE a gS 14 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Pridey, July 30, 1965 IN US. Senate hee yo d a system i [E é s : 5 z Er existing programs will and payroll taxes will mext year. The bill has three major bene- fits: - 1, It provides up to 190 days of hospital and nursing home! 'at low cost to all Ameri- apist or home health aide. 2. It offers the elderly an op- portunity to pay $3 monthly for voluntary insurance that would pay up to 80 per cent of most doctors' bills each year. The pa- tient would pay the first $50. 3. It increases by seven per = benefits under already ex- pow Be old - age, survivors and ility insurance programs. The benefits are retroactive to Jan. 1 and a lump sum pay- ment will be mailed along with the first increased social secur- ity cheque, Old At 32? AC Says So MONTREAL (CP)--Is a girl too old at 327 Yes, says Air Canada. Def- initely not, say 800 steward- esses, members of the Cana- dian Airlines Flight Attend- ants' Association. The issue of a retirement age for stewardesses has been taken to Allan MacEachen, federal labor minister, an association spokesman said Wednesday. The problem was raised be- cause within the next few weeks three girls will reach their 32nd birthdays and will have to re- tire as stewardesses. They have been offered other jobs at sim- two have accepted. Miss Imelda Power, spokes- man for the CAFAA, says the company policy is bad, and the association believes the age limit should be extended to 50. She said legislation is being sought to effect this change. The association claims it has mever been shown anything stipulating a retirement age of , but an Air Canada spokes- man eaid a letter to that effect int why Air Canada feels|!mately $350. the age limit should be 32, the said: feel that because of the the job, the it should be 32. There is a certain alertness and agility re- quired as a safety considera- tion, and a certain resiliency is also required to cope with the long working hours that ps sometimes be encount- e ve A FELON IN THEIR MIDST SALT LAKE CITY (AP)-- The message from Mult- nomah County, Ore., police asked Salt Lake City offi- cers to arrest and serve a felony warrant on a man wanted in Oregon. 'He is reported to be residing at 244 East Fourth South, Salt Lake City," the letter said. Local police weren't able to locate the man. The address is that of the police depart- ment. Township farm will observe 8 birthday Aug. 1. Owned by Charles Fuller, Pickering vil- lage, the 50-acre farm will be 110 years old and it could be ilar pay with Air Canada andiine jast 'birthday under the looking for a buyer. the Fullers arrived on the land. He was Charles Fuller, grand- father of the present owner. The deed to the property, Pre-leq it until 1951 when he built a served in a Pickering bank, states the land was purch on the south half of the north lot of Lot 16, Concession 4, The land was bought from the age| struction of a cabin and fences. A wounded Buddhist monk is comforted by a fellow monk on moyntainside near Long Huong Wednesday MONKS SUFFER FROM U.S. BOMB-BOOB after erroneous bombing by U.S. planes. The U.S. air- craft were seeking out Viet Cong forces in the area. Birinology, the drug gonado- g|hormone -- first became avail- Close Watch Can't Prevent Multi-Births AUCKLAND, N.Z. (AP) -- A hormone administered to Mrs. Samuel Lawson who gave birth to quintuplets Tuesday was carefully controlled but even under these conditions the pros- pect of multiple pregnancy re- mained, Dr. D. G. Bonham said tonight. Professor af the postgraduate schoo] of obstetrics and gyne- cology at Auckland University, he was commenting on news-| received a special hormone de- veloped in Sweden. other patients, requested treat- ment with the hormone because of her strong desire to have "The dosage was selected on the basis of overseas studies mations. Experience has shown trol the possibility of multiple pregnancy remains." He said as a result of a na- itary glands organized by the trophin -- an ovary stimulating able in New Zealand in August, Monks and civilians injured in the strike were aided by U.S. paratroopers who were operating in the area. (AP) Fuller name as Mr. Fuller is Farm Older Than By 10 Years In Pickering PICKERING -- A Pickering; The cabin lasted until 1872; Mr. Fuller has seen many when it was replaced by the two-storey, house which occupies the land today. The two cornerstones were cut from the same rock that was used as the entrance to the log cabin. The Whitby man who built the house charg- ed $1-a day for Yr es The pioneer Fuller turned the On Aug. 1, 1855, the first of/iang over to his son, Henry, the father of Charles Fuller, at the turn of the century. Charles was given the land in 1939 and work- large house in Pickering village. Canada changes over the years. field stoncicoming of electricity was one of the biggest changes. Previous- ly oil lamps had been used. The horse, once the mainstay of the farm, has been replaced by the tractor and moderm machinery. THEATRE GOES theatre. Midsummer Night's Dream she signed and said: "Oh, if I could only see it again." Mrs. Watts for the last nine years has been living at a local hotel managed by Mrs. Edna Clarke. Mrs. Clarke is secretary of the theatre company. She told the cast of her aged ten- ant's wish. Tuesday night the 65- member cast performed the Shakesperean comedy in the hotel garden for an audience of one -- Mrs. Watts. "I never enjoyed any- thing so much," she said. He recalls when two slim ruts constituted the 4th Concession in the late 1800's. In winter the road was virtually impassable. Mr. Fuller, who is 78, has a brother and a sister. Each have 50 acres of land -- one to the east of his property and the HONOR CHILEAN POET OFORD, England (AP)-- Pablo Neruda, 60, the Chilean poet, is the first South Ameri- can writer to be honored by Ox- ford University. He was awarded an honorary doctorate other directly to the north. of letters. Vanished Soviet Leaders Enter-And With Alarums By WILLIAM L. RYAN Associated Press Staff Writer delivered in the Murmansk area|ium members with such markea\™°"t_ins Four Soviet leaders who|stressed the need for a reasser-/prominence--after two. months seemed to drop from public|tion of "party and state discip-|in which their names could not view two months ago have sud-jjine." He ran down the list of|be found in either Pravda or denly reappeared--and with @/.in. attributed to Khrushchev/Izvestia--seems to point, at the Their prominence in. the So-|¥ithout mentioning his name, viet press this week suggestsjand then said that all must/decision at the top of the Soviet that the collective leadership is|javoid such transgressions "nojhea| | involved in a behind - scenes|matter what post he occupies in) struggle over internal and ex-|party or state." bang. . ternal policies. Critical and worrisome the Southeast The four leaders who have re-/but much of their discourses) appeared are Nikolai V. Pod-|concerned the economy and anjj further children," Bonham said. gorny and Pyotr' Y. Shelest,jimplied need for tightening _ one ror omy the Navy forthelll | sia s on|casion to voice concern for paper reports that Mrs. Lawson may be for the"Kremlin leader-|defence might of the father-| ship, the tugging and pulling|land" in view of the situation is now seems to centre mostly on "8 Viet Nam. This was a bow) Mrs. Lawson, along with domestic affairs. ) R. BLACK 0.D. OPTOMETRIST Shelepin, like Podgorny and| a in the direction of the military, | both party presidium members Demichev, a high-ranking party and was meticulously controlled J by daily chemical hormone esti-|Secretaty and a bright young that even with such careful con- big Russian Republic. jan element favored by Khrush- New Zealand Society for Endoc-| 44. and others closely identi- fied with him was being pushed 1964 "\given significant prominence in f Pravda and Izvestia Sunday and Monday, along with the power- ful A. N. Shelepin and A. P. Kirilenko, both members of the TO MRS WATTS ruling party presidum, The ° play 'given Podgorny over- BURLEY, England (AP) jshadowed that given Premier At 99, Mrs. Diana Watts |Alexei N. Kosygin in commem- was too feeble to go to the jorations of Soviet Navy Day. When she heard that Bur- |up again in the press as having ley's open air theatre was jappeared a day or two prev- presenting Shakespeare's A jiously at public functions. and both Ukrainians; Pyotr N. man of light industry, and Gen- nady I. Voronov, premier of the All four came up under Nikitalon the defensi Rarushcher, They dropped from Dee eee i¢./view early this summer at a Honal collection of human' pitu time when it seemed the Ukrain- Podgorny and Shelest were Divided City But Air Free BERLIN (AP)--The air above Germany re mains undivided and even a Russian has been known to use it to send personal greetings. It's done over a radio station the Communists call the "agents' radio."' But that did not prevent a Russian soldier from writing in to a listeners' mes- sage exchange program. "Tell Panjinka I send her my regards,"' he wrote. He said his sweetheart lived near a Soviet garrison town in the Lausitz area of East Germany. He added he was now back home in the Urals. The radio is RIAS--Radio in the American Sector of Berlin--- which is sponsored by the U.S. information service. and a few shillings -- approx- The deed provided that trees and bush cut on the property could only be used for the con- As a result the pioneer con- structed a log cabin with a stone walkway and fences. Car-Production Setting Record OTTAWA (CP) --A 10.9 per- cent increase in new passenger car and commercial vehicle sales in May brought the num- ber of units sold in the first five months of 1965 to 360,774, up 5.9 per cent from sales in the same period of 1964, the bureau of sta-| tistics reported Wednesday. | The 89,545 cars and commer- cial vehicles sold in May this year hada retail value of $293,- 883,000 12.4 per cent higher than last year's May sales of $261,- 534,000. Value of sales in the five- month period was $1,183,739,000, BEATLES BOFF BERLIN BERLIN (AP) -- The Com- munist government of East Germany is planning to cash in on the Beatle boom. The official news agency announced a Beatle doll--complete with wig and guitar--will be sold at the up 8.1 per cent from last year's $1,095,406,000. Sales of Canadian- and Am- erican-built vehicles were up 5.3 per cent in volume and 7.9 per cent in value in May this year, while vehicles of overseas man- ufacture sold 12.4 per cent more Leipzig trade fair this fall. in volume and 11 per cent more in value. ( Just for fun, stopover in London before visiting Europe! Fly BOAC across the Atlantic this fall and it won't cost a to visit London en route to Europe. Shop for antique treasures at bargain prices. See next year's Broadway hits this year. Visit the Abbey and the Tower of London. Stay a week or choose from 200 flights a day to 63 European cities. = B BRITISH OVERSEAS AIRWAYS CORPORATION WITH AIR CANADA penny extra in fares a month--then OAC | Oshewo's Authorized Agent | FOUR SEASONS TRAVEL | (OSHAWA) LIMITED 57 King St. East 728-6201-2-3 E> labs ap fa) nt Pity P THis LONG WEEKES mave with the fift Ale in bottles or in conv + Fit) Cans. Enjoy yourself: "Take Fve ** ta ot \: owe who might be the targets of ad- dresses like these, but the treat- ment of the occasion by Pravda and Izvestia suggests that Pre- of this year. The chances now are that the Communist party, despite a statute which would side require a congress this year, is : not going to hold one. The con- gresses, theoretically required every four years, are supposed to lay down guidelines for the country. to be over internal rather t'.an external affairs, although these also probably play a part. Dis- cussion of economic affairs in the press has provoked sharp Vornov and Demichey showed|debate, as if there were a con- test going on between conserv- ative Communists who resist chang and the so-called liberals who stand for reform. party control. It is difficult to determine just No, 1 ONTARIO FIELD TOMATOES 2. 29° mier Kosygin, if anybody, was More will be known about the internal situation toward the end 6 « 49° or 1.79 case Basically, the conflict appears GLECOFF'S | surenmanxer 174 RITSON ROAD SOUTH Dh OS. K-mart CER DEE FREE ROLL OF FILM! BLACK -&- WHITE OR COLOUR FOR EACH ROLL LEFT FOR DEVELOPING & PRINTING YOU NEED NEVER BUY ANOTHER FILM! eeoeeeeee SIMPLY LEAVE YOUR NEXT FILM BLACK -&- WHITE OR COLOUR AT K mart's CAMERA DEPART- MENT FOR DEVELOPING & PRINTING. YOU WILL GET A FREE ROLL OF THE SAME SIZE. eoeoeo ee 0 @ FAST, EFFICIENT SERVICE ! FINEST QUALITY PRINTS ! SATISFACTION GUARANTEED! eeeee#e#e?e@ FREE! SAME SIZE OF FILM WITH EACH ORDER! ON HIGHWAY No. 2 BETWEEN WHITBY AND OSHAWA