CELEBRATE 25th ANNIVERSARY By BRENDA LARGE OTTAWA (CP) --_ The first binding continental defence legreement between Canada and ithe United States; made 25 years ago this month, will be publicly re-affirmed by top offi- cials of the two countries. External Affairs Minister Paul Martin and Averell Harri- man, U.S. ambassador-at-large, will meet Aug. 18 at Ogdens- burg, N.Y., on the Canada-U.S. border to celebrate the. Ogdens- burg Declaration. The declaration, made jointly Aug. 18, 1940, in Ogdensburg by Prime Minister Mackenzie King) recommendations to the iwo governments on joint defence questions, was authorized to "commence immediate studies relating to sea, land and air problems, including personnel and material." GAVE POWER The declaration, which gave the board power to "consider, in the broad sense, the defence le, aarti Later, and Ambassador Harriman are to give speeches|three defence radar systems, at the afternoon ceremony. Mr. Martin will be taken to Ogdensburg from Prescott, Ont., on an American destroyer. The joint defence board set up in Ogdensburg 'was closely involved in planning North American defence during the Second World War. Canada-US. Defence Pact played a part in planning the the Pinetree, Mid-Canada and Distant Early Warning lines. The board was 'also indirectly involved in the establishment of the North American Air De- fence Command in 1957 and in the controversy over Canada's acceptance of nuclear weapons itlin 1963. of the north half of the Western Hemisphere,"' was the first for- mal move for defence co-oper- ation taken by the two .coun- tries. The ceremony in which Mr. Martin and Mr. Harriman will Spence Designs British Pavilion MONTREAL (CP)--The de- Basil is also a special adviser to the New Zealand govern- ment, which is putting up new parliament buildings. : Sir Basil said the Expo '67 ' THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursdey, August 8, 1965 3 Labor Stands Stamp Ground LONDON (Reuters) -- The government stood its ground Wednesday amid continuing criticism of an issue of stamps to commemorate the Second World War Battle of Britain. The stamps, to be issued Sept. 13, show British and Ger- man aircraft and feature Nazi swastikas as well as a portrait of Queen Elizabeth. Conservative Lord Braye said in the House of Lords there is widespread public dissatisfac- tion over the Nazi emblem ap- pearing on the stamps. His speech followed criticism in Hobson : "Since this is what the Battle of Britain was all about, we do not propose to withdraw the stamps." An official of the board of deputies of British Jews said in a letter to Postmaster-General Anthony Wedgwood Benn: "We are aware that the pur- pose of this stamp is to demon- strate the defeat of the evil forces which used this symbol. But we feel strongly that-the illustration does not convey this impression." HELP KIDNEYS PASS hae? site in the St. Lawrence River is "the creation of a Venice in Canada, . . . The architectural possibilities are almost bound- less." He has designed exhibi- and President Roosevelt, set up the United States-Canada per- manent joint board on defence. The board, today an active advisory body which makes take part was. not originated by the two governments but was suggested by the Ottawa Ki- wanis Club. Both External Affairs Minis- signer of the $7,500,000 British pavilion at the 1967 Montreal World's Fair will be Sir Basil Spence, who earned world re- nown for the new Coventry newspaper letter" columns. A Labor government spokes- man, Lord Hobson, said the public is under no obligation to buy the stamps. ' 3 LBS. A DAY fost y about three of Mrald'a hay of, slant these, potinas. of iquid-waste. Now, if kidneys become urinary irritation and blad- SKIRTS FLY -- AND IT'S ONLY A REHEARSAL Skirts fly as Tina Greedy .of Toronto rehearses a dance number with other members of the Canadettes, the chorus line of the Cana- dian National Exhibition grandstand show. The $375,000 show will be open- ed by Prime Minister Pearson Aug. 20 and will star Bob Hope and Victor Borge. --CP Wirephoto Economic Planning In U.K. Plagues Labor Government By CARL MOLLINS Canadian Press Staff Writer The British government's idea of placing economic planning at the fulcrum of power is suffer- ing some rude knocks. The necessity for dealing with deepening economic cris es-- borrowing abroad to support sterling, restricting trade to cor- rect the surplus of imports over exports, paring public spending to contain inflation--has plagued | hg Wilson's Labor govern- ent since it took office last October. ' The urging of short-term res- gue efforts has put the focus of! attention on the treasury under| James Callaghan, chancellor of the exchequer. The department of economic affairs, set up last fall under Wilson's deputy, primary agent in creation of we new Britain that Labor was promising. ; | The ebullient Brown, who as- sembled a corps of able econo- mists in a section of the treas- ury building assigned to his| ministry, has been an apostle! of growth and expansion. | CUT SPENDING The draft of a bulky five-year plan to stimulate growth of 25 per cent in the gross national product by 1970 was completed under his stewardship even as Callaghan was taking a step into austerity with cutbacks in public spending. Browns' plan is under scrutiny by the cabinet. Many experts believe his growth target -- an average annual expansion of 3.8 per cent--is unrealistic in the George Brown, has been backed face of deflationary pressures is reported cause his grand design has been undermined by short-term treas- ury measures. Critics claim Cal- laghan's.latest squeeze will have a delayed impact that will merely intensify the predicted recession next year. The economic affairs minister for Labor in a debate last Mon- day on an Opposition motior censuring the government for its economic policies. When Cal- laghan took over the assign- ment some observers suggested Brown was reluctant to lead the defence. ATTACK PROGRAM Political opponents attack Brown's program to put muscle into productivity through a prices and incomes board as a failure in the face of evidence WASHINGTON (AP) A study looking toward elimina- tion of U.S.-Canadian frictions and expanding mutual under- standing and co-operation is un- der way by a small group of Republican members of the House of Representatives. The study group is made up of six members of the Wednes- day Club, self-designated Re- publican moderates, and is headed by Representative Stan- ley Tupper of Maine, a member of the U.S.-Canadian interpar- liamentary conference. Dr. Douglas Bailey, staff di- jrector for the study group, said Wednesday that letters and | | | | to be ruffled be-|questionnaires have been sent\ford Morse, Massachusetts. to more than 200 persons and organizations in Canada and the United States, asking for their Views, specifically and gener- jally, on means of improving re- lations. |ASK QUESTIONS loriginally was scheduled to lead| Three specific questions on which suggestions were asked were: | --Should the United States and Canada form a free trade area, and is the time ripe for the United States to initiate such a move --Would Canadian member- ship in the Organization of | American States and more active participation in the inter-American system be to the common interest of Can- ada and the hemisphere? Are Republicans Studying Two-Nation Relations Cathedral. Among his other successes are the British Embassy Rome, a civic centre for the elegant Kensington district of London, and hte nearby cavalry barracks in Knightsbridge. Sir tion buildings before, for the 1939 Empire Exhibition in Glas- ow. ; The British architect was knighted in 1960 and appointed to the Order of Merit in 1962. in The stamps depict various as- ¢ pects of the historic air battle. On one a broken swastika ,half- covered by the sea, is on the| tated shattered tail of a German bomber. Another design shows a German cross on a fighter dian foreign policy could be encouraged? --Are-new structures or poli- cies warranted to improve joint consideration by the two countries of foreign policy and defence problems? Bailey said the group feels that there has been too great a tendency to take Canadian support of U.S, policies for granted, without any common understanding. The informal congressional group includes, in addition to upper, representatives Robert Ellsworth, Kansas; Frank J. Horton, New York; Ogden Reid, New York; Charles McC. Ma- \thias, Maryland and F. Brad- Hospital Insurance Coverage Extended | TORONTO (CP) -- Family jpremiums under the Ontario |hospital insurance plan have jpeen extended to cover depend- ent persons to their 2ist birth- day starting Sept. 1, the Ontario hospital services commission announced Wednesday. The present age limit is 19. Dr. John B. Neilson, commis- sion chairman, said the aim is to help students at universities and training schools who now have fo pay their own premi- ums on reaching the age of 19. The extension applies to all those under 21 years of age who don't have regular jobs. Think of all the things you'll do, the places you'll go and the fun you'll have this summer in that new economy car you've decided to buy. Now consider this: doesn't it make sense to do things, go places and have fun in the economy car that gives you « a 50 hp engine; + up to 45 miles to the gallon; * a 10.76 cubic foot trunk; + ample room for you and family; + looks you can be proud of; and will costyouonly . 1,7 63.00* a Price quoted includes delivery and handling charges, Federal and Excise taxes, Provincial and local taxes and licence not included. these specific means by which these new directions in Cana- into the shadows. jand widespread predictions of a Economic affairs, essentially downturn in world trade. a ministry of long-term plan-| Brown, a rotund, owlish man ning, was to have been thejwith a mercurial temperament, Toronto Council Votes For Two Slum Inquiries TORONTO (CP)--City coun-|quiry will determine whether cil voted overwhelmingly Wed-|civic departments deliberately nesday night to conduct t wo\failed to carry out inspections separate inquiries into down-|and enforce bylaws, and if there town slum housing conditions.|was negligence or misconduct The decision, oh a 16-2 vote,|by city employees and officials. followed weeks of controversy; The second inquiry, to be con- over allegations by Aldermanjducted by sociologists, will in- June Marks that officials of the|vestigate slums, slum clear-| Brown's grand design for con- ; city's welfare department had ance, and public housing. trolled growth in productivity |rouse Sade chee contributed to slums. Among other things, it willjdepends in large measure On| mittee with its plea for $1,700,- Judge Robert Forsyth was| determine the responsibilities of|controlling prices and income. 000,000 more plus a 340 000-man appointed to conduct. one in-|landlords, owners, tenants, andjIts future rests on the degree! nijitary manpower boost for quiry starting Sept. 7. |government agencies involvediof support the planner gets from|the Southeast Asian war To cost about $25,000, this-in-|in housing. this government colleagues. ' President Johnson got a two- 5 hour. briefing from Taylor late Police Hol d Rivar d os & Gee te At Secret Location tiring ambassador's knowledge/|fully aware of their own vulner- By BOB M. GASSAWAY jcal. It is going to be difficult) from his year in Saigon that he|ability." LAREDO, Tex. (AP) -- Thee prepare his defence while he) A family premium under the plan remains at $6.50 a month. ithat wage awards have been outstripping his target increase rate of three to 3.5 per cent a year. | The Organization of Economic) Co-operation and Development, | however, said in a report last month that success of the prices} Taylor Briefs LBJ mince ccc On Viet Problems : Prime Minister Wilson hinted) WASHINGTON (AP) -- Com- in Monday's debate at the p0S-\hining hope for the future with sibility of coming to Brown's|acknowledgment of "serious aid by putting statutory teeth)p»obhlems" in Viet Nam, Max- into the policy, Any proposed) wel! p. Taylor turns in his final increases above the targetiambassadorial accounting to- might be referred to the prices day at the White House and incomes board for approval,| And on Capitol Hill he suggested. \administration moved to "is certainly far more hopeful than it was a year ago." CHINA MAY STAY OUT Meanwhile, William P. Bundy, assistant state secretary for Far Eastern affairs, voiced doubt in a television interview that Red China would enter the Viet Nam conflict any time soon. Bundy figured Peking might get into the war quickly if the United States sought to over- throw the Communist Hanoi re- gime. But he noted this is not Was: ington's aim, so the Chinese will "hesitate a long while" about involvement because "they're the the # called a whole array of admin-| Johnson also got a_ report istration policy-makers to this|Wednesday from his roving am-| ¢ afternoon's session. Included is|bassador, W. Averell Harri-| Henry Cabot Lodge, Taylor's)man, just back from a trip to| * successor in Saigon. |various European capitals after| © The president also announced| conferring in Moscow with Pre-| © lien Gagnon, and Charles-Emile he has asked Taylor; 63, to. be|mier Alexei N. Kosygin. Le Groleau, all from Montreal, are|@ Senior adviser to the president} Harriman said the Russians| © _ lawyer for Montrealer Lucienlis being held several hundred|in Webb County Jail in lieu of military and diplomatic mat-|would be on the Communist Rivard, accused of directing a miles away." $100,000 bond each on the samejters and has named him to thejside in any negotiations on Viet dope-smuggling ring that oper- CITES RIGHT ' charges. Another man charged/intelligence board which super-/Nam but "'they'd like to see this ated in at least four countries,| Wright said the defence hasjalong with Rivard, Frank|vises U.S. inetlligence activi-|thing settled." He said the said Wednesday his client is be-|a right! to object in court to Ri-\James Cappola of Bridgeport. |ties. |Kremlin wants an international ing held in a manner that could! yard's inaccessibility, and said|Conn., is free under $100,000 "The future," Taylor told re-agreement on nuclear weapons) : deprive him of his constitutional|that if Rivard is convicted, the bond. porters after seeing Johnson,!control. ; rights. complaint can be reviewed in| Jones, Gagnon and Groleau Lawyer William C. be appeals courts, "especially the| were ee French interp-| : said Rivard was whisked sev-\Syupreme Court of the United|reters for their preliminary/ eral hundred miles from Laredo States." . ee and arraignments. } MONEY TO INVEST ? after his arraignment Monday. | He said the indication is that) Wright said federal District) "Keeping the man several|U:S. federal authorities are go-\Judge Ben C. Connally gave| Earn the highest rate -- hundred miles from here par-|ing to try to call Rivard's|case|him 10 days to file additional] tially or completely deprivesito trial the week beginning) motions in the case. Wright said} him of his constitutional rights\Sept. 6, or the week beginning|he is considering filing a mo- to counsel," Wright said. "TI)Sept, 13. tion for a separate trial for Ri- will file a motion in federal) The 50-year-old Rivard, a re-|vard, being held in lieu of $500,- court if he is not returned \sort-owner in Quebec, was de-}900 bond "Federal officials told me|ported from Canada July 22| Joseph Michel Caron of Mont- where Rivard is being kept.Jamid charges from opposition|real is under a 10-year U.S.| and asked me not to disclose|political parties that he was be-|Prison sentence for bringing 75 that," the lawyer said. "I shail/ing hustled out of the country to|pounds, two ounces of almost honor that request." * "They told me I can see him here he is being kept, but that is very difficult and impracti- 'Hormone Drug Used, Toronto TORONTO (CP) -- Several Toronto women have been treated with a hormone drug which has been linked with re- cent multiple births, 'a Toronto' doctor says. Dr. Louis Harris, chief of ob- stetrics and gynaecology at New Mount Sinai Hospital, said a number. of women have been treated for sterility with chlo- miphene citrate, which in ex- perimental use has been associ- ated with multiple births in a few pregnancies. He said it was too early to tell if any of his patients who have become = pregnant while taking chlomiphine treatments will: have multiple births. end a controversy that arose last year and had repercussions| in the ranks of the ruling Lib-| eral party. | In one of his motions, Wright alleges Rivard is a_ political prisoner and was deported as part of a political conspiracy. | A charge of offering a bribe to obtain Rivard's release on jbail in Canada has been laid against Raymond Denis, former executive assistant to Immigra- tion Rene Tremblay. SECURITY TIGHT The five-foot-two Rivard has been held under tight security and secrecy since he was brought to the United States. States. | He was arraigned in Laredo |Monday on charges of directing ja group of men who conspired ito bring heroin or have it brought into the United States. The indictment alleges the con- |spiracy was carried out through trips and meetings in Canada, the United States, México and | Holland Joseph Raymond Jones, Ju- pure heroin, valued at $33,000,- 000 to $56,000,000 on the under- world market, into. the United| |States Oct. 10, 1963, as he and his wife returned from Mexico City. Mrs, charged. A Flavoured Wine "SERVE COLD ON TE DOCKS OR WITH vouR FRYOURITE wrx" | per annum for 5 years (and up to 10 years) A GENERAL MOTORS VALUE Caron was not) CENTRAL ONTARIO TRUST | GUARANTEED INVESTMENT CERTIFICATES are Gueranteed -- cs to Pr Flexible -- may be used as Collateral for loans Redeemable -- upon death Authorized -- as Trustee Act Investments ap 3) YPrM7e4 5} i SAVING HOURS: Mon.-Thurs. 9t06 Friday 9t09 Seturdey ee a | } 888d» a 9teS FOURTARAEAD Tel. 723-5221 incipal and Interest bse SSS58 95! ae i Ms Heod Office: 19 Simcoe St. N. 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