Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 2 Dec 1965, p. 16

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ursday, December 2, 1965 7G THE OSHAWA TIMES, Th "ROUND THE GLOBE IN A GLANCE 4 Heart Disease Siill First Cancer Second Of Killers --Heart dis- No. 1 OTTAWA (CP) ease is still Canada's killer. Of Canada's 145,000 deaths in 1964, this and other disorders of - the circulatory system claimed 57,798 lives--about 40 per cent of all deaths. These and other . facts emerged in the most recent re- port of the Dominion Bureau of Statistics on the causes of death in Canada. Canggr took the second-high- est toll with 25,958 lives. This represents 18 per.cent of the total. Within this category, can- cer of the digestive organs, breast and genito-urinary sys- tem were most common. Cerebral hemorrhages, men- ingitis, epilepsy and diseases of the nervous system took another 11 per cent. Accidents, poison- ing and violence accounted for nine per cent. This also includés 1,584 suicides. Diseases of the respiratory OR: OUT! OUT! DAMNED SPOT! WHITCHURCH, England (AP)--The scene: A garden in Shropshire. The time: Midnight. Frank Rawlings Grocott, retired actor, lies reading in a summerhouse, a copy of Anne Hathaway's Cottage. Enter a burglar. Grocott emerges from summerhouse bearing lan- tern and sword and shouts: "Avaunt! and quit my sight! Ler the earth hide *thee! Thy bones are mar-: rowless, thy blood is cold!' Exit burglar, running. Grocott said he saw the prowler fiddling with a win- dow of the main house. "Tt called," he said, "for drastic action. Macbeth seemed to fit." > system were next in statistical, importance with six per ceft.| The greatest proportion of these 8,053 deaths were from pneu- monia. Diseases of early in- fancy, including birth injuries nd malformations, follow with Your fer cent. ANNOUNCES ORDER MONTREAL (CP) -- H. J. Lang, president of Canada Iron Foundries, told a meeting of the Montreal Society' of Financial Analysts Wednesday night that the firm will provide 7,000 tons of steel for the recently-an- nounced Ford assembly plant) at Talbotville, Ont. HONEY HITS HIGH SASKATOON (CP)--The 1965 Canadian honey crop totalled 46,100,000 pounds, largest pro-| duction in history, John King of! Ottawa, executive secretary of the Canadian Beekeepers' Coun- cll, said Wednesday. RIVARD PAL JAILED MONTREAL (CP) -- Armand (Freddie) Cadieux, 48, of Mont- real, was sentenced Wednesday to 10 years in penitentiary after. he pleaded guilty to charges of forgery and uttering. Cadieux and Sebastian Boucher, 41, were with jail escapee and nacotics kingpin Lucien Rivard when he was arrested in a rented sub- urban cottage July 16. PROMISES AID KINGSTON, Jamaica (CP)-- Prime Minister Pearson has promised $500,000 in educational aid to Jamaica. He made the promise at a press conference Tuesday. He said that in addi- tion to the $6,000,000 in grants and interest-free loans Jamaica has already received from Can- Nine Landlords For Test Case TORONTO (CP)--Nine land- lords and one tenant have been gummonsed by the cityin the first test of a standard-of-hous- ing bylaw passed last July by council, Several of the landlords are to appear in court Dec. 14. The bylaw sets standards of| fitness for human habitation| and aye must clean, free from rub- bish and must not contain health, fire pr accident hazards. Maximum fine on conviction is $300. -- J. W. Bond, chief housing in- spector for Toronto's buildings department, said Wednesday more than 1,000 notices have been sent to landlords and ten-| ants advising them to cléan up| their property or face court ac- tion. Escapee Stops To Eat, Caught KINGSTON (CP) -- Gaston Cloutier, 21, of Valleyfield, Que. was arrested in a snack bar at nearby Westbrook Wednesday} nearly 24 hours after escaping from Collins Bay penitentiary. Cloutier was sentenced at Alexandria, Ont., April, 1964, to 3% years on two charges of breaking and entering and theft. He escaped from the pris- on's farm annex about 6 p.m. all parts of a dwelling| | ada, another $500,000 will be granted for the island's rural school building program. REJECTS DEMANDS UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) Britain rejected Wednesday Af- rican d ds for i t ec ic sanctions against South Africa, ernment that its race-separa- tion policies might make future international intervention "inev- itable." LEAVING POST OTTAWA (CP) -- Richard D. of the Progressive Conservative Party, will leave his position devote full time to his law prac- member of Parliament for Es- but warned the Pretoria gov-| sex South, he was defeated in the riding in the Nay. 8election. FALL INJURES TWO HAMILTON (CP) -- Arthur Raynsford, 74, tripped and fell head-first into a manhole Wed- nesday as Philip Perrelli, 22, was coming up its ladder. Mr. Perrelli broke a leg and Mr, Raynsford suffered head injur- ies. Both are being treated in the same hospital, RULE ON DEATH HAMILTON (CP) -- Robert James Vance, 22, of Guelph was killed Nov. 19 after chasing into the rear of a trailer whose distance and speed he had mis- judged, a coroner's jury ruled | Wednesday. | HE' FIRST MALE GUELPH (CP) -- Macdonald \Institute, a women's college af- filiated with Guelph University, got its first male student this week. H. B. Patel, 23, of Ud- handa, near Bombay, India, is studying for a master's. degree in textile science and is the first man to attend the institute founded 62 years ago. ¢ ENLIST BEER BRAMPTON (CP) -- Bruce Beer has been enlisted by the Ontario Young Liberals' Asso- ciation to assist in preliminary |preparation of a brief on agri- jeulture to be presented to the lassociation's annual convention in January or early February. He is member of Parliament for |Peel. | SENT TO TRIAL Thrasher, 43, national director. SAULT STE. MARIE, Ont. \(CP)--William Raymond Lu- ikala, 41, of Sault Ste. Marie was near the end of this month to|committed Wednesday for trial jon a charge of capital murder tice in Windsor, Ont. A former|in the fatal stabbing Nov. 14 of Harlin Clarence Hurley, 45. 728-6218 Be "Santa" To Yourself FLOORS 80 SIMCOE ST. N. 728-6218 DAVIDSON SHOES IN DOWNTOWN OSHAWA GIVE Tuesday. SPECIAL WEEKLY MESSAGE TO MEMBERS OF Clb> FOOD CLUB NEW SHOPPING HOURS UNTIL CHRISTMAS Tuesday - Wednesday end Thursday Evening 7 p.m, 'til 9 p.m. Fri. -- 1 p.m. 'til 9 p.m. Set. 9 a.m. 'til 5 p.m. December Prices in Effect November 20th DON'T KNOW THE SIZ A] DAV SHOE 31 Simcoe St. N. SHOES SLIPPERS GIFT CERTIFICATE. AND BE SURE! IDSON SNOW BOOTS ¢ E? -- GIVE A : STORE Downtown Oshawa A LONG ROAD AHEAD... By KEN PRITCHARD Canadian Press Staff Writer Robert McNamara, United States defence secretary, ré- turned to Washington from South Viet Nam. this week and declared: "It will be a long road ahead." . The secretary is the man 'who in 1963, against state depart- ment advice, told the: public the war against the Viet Cong guer- rillas was going so well that all U.S.. servicemen would be able to return home by thé end of 1965. But the education of Mc- Namara has proceeded apace. After this most recent trip to South Viet Nam -- his seventh --the secretary did not even say the South Vietnamese and their U.S. allies are winning. He just' said: "We've stopped los- ing the war." The sober appraisal in 1965's jwaning days comes against a - McNamara Learned A Lot About Viet In Two Years Cong as refugees immune from ground attack. These strong- holds have come under heavy air attack whenever identified but the only way to make them untenable is to overrun them. The 165,000 U.S. troops in Viet Nam have been preparing to do that job. The hard fighting in the Ia Drang Valley in November re- sulted directly from the placing in jeopardy of a principal Viet Cong stronghold by U.S. First Cavalry troops. The Commu- nists had either to abandon a key base or stand and fight. As other strongholds are men- aced, further heavy fighting can be expected. North Viet Nam has met, head-on the threat to the Viet Cong movement tured so many years by send- ing regular-army troops into South Viet Nam. An estimated it has nur-| imen--have been moved. south oyer-the Ho Chi Minh Trail, which. gees..throush. part of Laos. The U.S. says the infil- tration of men into South Viet Nam has tripled recently. It may be necessary, some observers feel, for U.S. and South Vietnamese troops to take physical possession of part of the Ho Chi Minh Trail, The Lao- tian premier, Prince Souvanna Phouma, is unlikely to oppose such a move. He doesn't con- trol that part of Laos. In the meantime, air attacks oy the trial, carried on quietly for a long time, are likely to be stepped up dramatically. AIM UNCHANGED The U.S. objective remains unchanged--to bring an end to the attacks on its ally, South unconditional offer to begin ne- gotiations on Viet Nam still cation it is listening. 28 and McNaniara repeated this week that the U.S. will commit jas many troops as are needed to ensure the independence of South Viet Nam. Eventual buildup of U.S. forces to 300,- 000 men is being predicted, nine regiments -- about 18,000 background of lengthening, American' casualty lists _and| growing demonstrations within} the U.S. against Viet Nam pol-| icy. Bombing attacks against) limited North Vietnamese ob- jectives and the use of prodi-| gious firepower in the south has failed to force Communist leader Ho Chi Minh to the ne-| gotiating table. | ATTACK BASES The sharp increase in U.S. casualties during Noveniber was no surprise to close observers. | Large areas of South Vietnam- ese jungle and swamp have \been used for years by the Viet DON'T FORGET The Rik Room Served Daily 11:30 - Continental French Buffet 2 p.m. -- 5 to 8 p.m. GENOSHA HOTEL with COISER'S Wiser's Oldest, 18 Early Canadian rocking chair -- from the Wiser's Collection dedicated to the preservation of good Canadian craftsmanship, For good value in well-aged Canadian whisky drink one that's older and Wiser's years old: Wiser's De Luxe, 10 years old: Wiser's 101, 6 years old: Wiser's Old, 5 years old: Wiser's Special Blend, 4 years old. WISER'S DISTILLERY LIMITED, BELLEVILLE, CANADA _ Enjoy relaxing f air strength and an escalation of the-attacks on North Viet Nam, Despite home-front agitation i R honorable course for the U.S. It|costly for the Communists and ither diecantinus will increase the military sure--against:the foes of Saigoniarmad: they * quietly ection in South Viet Nam against the Viet Nam struggle-- as expréssed 'by: the march of 25,00 O persons in Washington last weekend--the U.S. admin- istration is determined to pur- sue what it regards as the only ORDERS BARRED WOMEN VATICAN CITY (AP)--There is no chance of women becom- ing Roman Catholic priests, the Vatican daily L'Osservatore Ro- mano reports. The paper said the early saints held the ordi- nation of women was a heresy and '"'the traditional doctrine . .. 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