Oshawa Times (1958-), 30 Nov 1965, p. 3

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TOP CAT AT Shawnee Nylana, a white Persian cat, appeared to be a bit surprised when she was selected by the judges as the best kitten of the show THE SHOW at a catshow held in Indian- apolis, The six-month-old kitten is owned by Mrs. Mercedier de Preitas Good- win of Chicago. Inflation Evil Grows For Indonesian People By ANTOINE YARED JAKARTA (AP)--A new eet M economic rules has heaped more hardships on the Indo- nesian people, already gripped in the vise of inflation. The Indonesian economy was sick before the Communists and their allies tried to stage a coup Oct. 1. It is sicker now as the army chases Communists and Chinese businessmen, fearful of being caught in the roundup, take to cover. The common people are ap- prehensive as the cost of living skyrockets. The price of rice (second quality) has reached 2,000 ru- piahs a litre. In the last week of June it was 310 rupiahs. This is a 677-per-cent increase. Other essential commodities have risen in the same propor-| tion. | The price increases are at-| tributed to these reasons: An unstable situation in trade circles resulted in a near panic among business- men, notably Chinese, who are reported smuggling their capital abroad. A presidential decree gave the government the right to seize control of key private enterprises. The price of gasoline-was Says Viet Cong | "People's Choice" PHNOM PENH (Reuters)-- One of two American soldiers freed by the Viet Cong guerril- las as a gesture to anti-war groups in the United States said today the Saigon authorities were not the government in South Viet Nam. "The Viet Cong, they are the people," Sgt. George Edward) Smith told a press conference here. Smith and specialist Claude D. McClure were freed two days ago on the border between Cambodia and South Viet Nam. CLs Both said they were™reated'® well in captivity. McClure, who was wounded at the time of his capture, said he was fed"in the same way as the Viet Cong fighters McClure said his captors eared for his wounds, shared their food with him and allowed him mail from his family -and Red Cross packages. | "Had it been the Saigon gov-| ernment I would have been tor-: tured,"' said McClure. Good Names To Remember hen Buying or Selling wi REAL ESTATE increased along with rail- way and inter-island ship- ping fares. Finally, a new economic- financial policy for 1966 was decreed by President Su- karno. This called for an austerity program in development proj- ects but stipulated that spend- ing would be continued on Su- karno's political and prestige enterprises. The policy put all imports and exports under increased government control. The new policies were issued either by Sukarno or by his civilian aides apparently with- out the consent of the army, which has been virtually ruling the countny since the attempted coup. Army - controlled newspapers and sympathizers criticized the increase of gasoline and petrol- eum products prices, saying this could obviously raise the prices of food and clothing since transportation is involved in both. Supporters of the military fear that the army may be blamed for the deteriorating economic conditions, Political quarters say that time_is_on Sukarno's side. Su- time he may regain the full powers that he partly lost to the military after the attempted coup. jrepublics efids today after lay- RIO DE JANEIRO (AP)-- The conference of 19 American ing the groundwork for a sweep- ing overhaul of the inter-Amer- ican system. 19 Republics Plar Big OAS Overhaui The conference early today approved by acclamation an "Economic and Social Act of Rio de Janeiro" containing a se- ries of proposed amendments to the OAS charter. It. is a com-jintegration of the hemisphere ; to political recommenda- Chief U.S. del Averell Harriman said the meeting's most significant action was a proposal to incorporate into the charter of the Organization of American States the social and leconomic principles of the Alli- ance 'for Progress. tions approved Sunday. Both will be submitted to an- other conference in Buenos Aires next July for incorpora- tion into the OAS charter. The act calls for more equi- table distribution and-better use BEFORE THE MAGISTRATE An Oshawa police force undercover man helped to se- cure at Oshawa Magistrate's Court Monday the conviction of Stephen Wasylyk on a charge of selling liquor. Wasylyk, 50, of 766 Gifford st., was fined $250 and costs or| three months in jail after he pleaded guilty to the charge before Mgistrate H. W. Jermyn, His home was also declared a public place for a year by the magistrate. | Acting Crown Attorney John} Humphreys told t PC John Wilson bought a 24-) bottle case of beer from the accused Noy. 20, for $9. The serial numbers of the notes had) them over to Wasylyk. | A search of the Giffordst. | premises later uncovered the) money in the accused's posses- sion. Found in the house were 207 pints of beer, nine bottles of} wine and four bottles of; whiskey. Mr. Humphreys said that the offence was the first on record| |for Wasylyk. A $150 fine plus costs or 15) days in jail was levied on Gary Preston Shaw, 19, of 541 Philip Murray ave., who pleaded guilty to charge of impaired driving. Mr. Humphreys said_ that Shaw was picked up by Oshawa police Nov. 19, at King st., and Park rd. The accused's car was| facing west on an east-bound) one-way street, he said. Mr. Humphreys said that offi-| cers at the police station thought the accused was under| the influence of alcohol. Shaw' was quoted as telling the offi-) cer: "I am a drunken slob." | 1 Having possession of alcohol while a minor brought a $50. fine plus costs to Joseph Mar- cellus Roberts of Toronto. Twenty-year-old Roberts plead-) ed guilty to the offence which| Accused Gets $250 Fine For Selling Liquor theft was Vincent Fitzpatrick of Oshawa. The * accused placed on suspended sentence for 12 months. Restitution of stolen money and a six-month suspended sen- tence was the verdict made by Magistrate Jermyn on J Crawford on a charge of over $50. Crawford, 66, of London, Ont., theft lentered a plea of not guilty tojground -- a permanent inter- the charge. An Ajax businessman, G. S. he court that/Small, told the court that he) gave a $67.95 cheque to the accused in April last year in | payment for golf trophies and| plaques needed by his golf club} been taken before he passed for the coming season. He said) jthat although the cheque was) cashed. the goods were never received. Mr. Small said that repeated attempts to reach the accused didn't help. Sgt. Richard Bodley of the Pickering Township Po- lice said that the accused had admitted to him that he had) used Mr, Small's money, Bench warrants were issued by Magistrate Jermyn for the arrest of David Alexander Haynes of Oshawa on a charge of damage, and for Russell Young of Oshawa on a charge of impaired driving. . THE GSMAWA TIMES, Tuesday, Movember FU, tve5 3 of land, : better cities, stable prices and an end to inflation, fair prices and access to mar- kets for exporters, reduction in barriers to trade, and economic with a Latin American common market as the goal. The act also calls on all OAS members to refrain from carry- ing out any economic policy likely to affect another member adversely. The act urges joint action to beat down barriers against Latin - American products abroad. The next hurdle for the pro- posals in the act will be a con- ference in Panama City early next year at which amendments to the 17-year-old OAS charter will be drafted. If these are adopted by the foreign minis- ters in July, they will be sub- * was) mitted to the legislatures of the |OAS nations for ratification. | Diplomats at the conference agree that the meeting marked a major.turning point in hemis- phere relations. They say that by agreeing on the need for re- form of the OAS charter, the |delegates took a step toward a istronger organization. | | One issue that could have! BRITISI ATU? -CLERGYMEN RUN NEW NARCOTICS ANONYMOUS LONDON (Reuters)--One of Britain's" growing army of drug addicts lay in bed Mon- day in a parson's home, the first heroin addict picked up by, Narcotics Anonymous, a new voluntary service manned by clergymen. The youth was found col- lapsed in a telephone booth during the weekend. The min- isters say their telephones "have never stopped ringing." .A group of Baptist ministers' started the round - the - clock telephone service last Satur- day following a startling gov- ernment report that disclosed a boom in drug taking in Brit- ain. Edward J. Erswell Rev. said he had taken 50 calls alone. "Some are very frightened people," he said. "The diffi- culty is reaching them. Some- times they put the phone down when we ask where they are." The co-director of the serv- ice, Rev. John MeNichol, took the night cail from the young heroin addict and immediately had him collected at the phone booth for treatment. Fifteen voluntary workers jturned the meeting into a battle-)| |American peace force -- was quietly dropped by the United [States after a head count. Tom Rolfe' Best | ls t SAN FRANCISCO (AP)--Tom|t Rolfe, out of once in 13 starts and winner of| 3-Year-Old Colt | : e money only/ progress. Cites Reform Of Education PARIS. (CP) -- Paul Gerin-) Lajoie, Quebec minister of edu-| cation, said Monday the French-| Canadian community has made} e reform of education one of} he basic factors in its plan for| He was speaking at a confer-| $444,901, was a landslide winner/ence in Paris on "the reform 0: | ipionship in balloting by the} f the three-year-old colt cham- | of education in Quebec." Mr. Gerin-Lajoie is in France |Thoroughbred Racing Associa-iwith Pierre Laporte, Quebec' tion's board of selection. jminister of cultural affairs, on) Raymond Guest's son of Ri-j|a mission to improve France-| i} have offered help. The clergy- men will put up the addicts in their own homes during treat- ment. "Pep pill" clubs for all- night teen-age dancing have mushroomed. in London and other cities in recent K Many youngsters are feared to be graduating from mari- juana to heroin and cocaine. Doctors were criticized in the government report for over-prescribing drugs under hag national health serv- ce. * One doctor issued 600,000 heroin tablets to addicts in a | single year. MEL KRUGER REPRESENTATIVE SUN LIFE Assurance Company of Canada BUSINESS: 725-4563 HOME: 723-7900 bot-Pocahontas received 43 of|Quebec relations. the 52 votes announced today.| He was the only sophomore to finish in the money in all three} events comprising the triple lerown. He ran third in the Ken-| ltucky Derby, won the Preak-| Iness and lost by a neck to Hail Ito All in the Belmont Stakes. | Why Pay More. $ AVE! C | i | PREMIUM QUALITY FUEL OIL gal. Phone 668-3341 DX FUEL OIL Serving Oshawa -- Whitby & Ajax Districts HAFPINESS IS 442% HAPPINESS IS 4% cio HAPPINESS IS 6% @ HAPPINESS IS SWITCHING NOW TO CENTRAL ONTARIO TRUST & SAVINGS CORPORATION HEAD OFFICE: 19 Simcoe St. N., POUNTAINHEAD or sanvics Oshewe Bowmanville ON YOUR SAVINGS ACCOUNT ON YOUR UING ACCOUNT ON GIC's 3-4 AND 5 YEARS OPEN SATURDAYS 723-5221 23 King St. W, 623-2527 occurred Nov. 20. Testimony of Sgt. Jack Mac- Dermaid read into the record disclosed that he arrested the accused outside a local dance hall. Roberts was seated in his parked car where a part. bottle of vodka was found by police. An option of seven days in the! county jail was given by Magi-| strate Jermyn with the fine. Another guilty plea to a minor |possessing alcohol was made by Robert Schneider, 19, French st. The court was told| that police officers checked the} accused's parked car and found) one_ bottle of beer, with another} | three bottles lying on the ground beside the passenger door. Magistrate Jermyn levied |kKarno apparently feels that with|another $50. fine plus costs or) jseven days in jail. | | Remanded until Monday for! 'sentence on a charge of auto; Fresh Christmas NUTS Delivered to Your Door SAVINGS All Orders €.0.D. AT 10 % REG, CASHEWS :'; MIXED NUTS 14-07. REG, 2.19 OuR PRICE OUR PRICE _ Call Today - 725-7151 THE GOODIE SHOPPE DON'T FORGET Che KRih Room Continental French Buffet Served Daily 11:30 - 2 p.m. -- 5 to 8 p.m. GENOSHA HOTEL Reg. Aker--President Bi MeFeeters--Vice Pres. Schofleld-Aker Ltd, 723-2268 DEALING YOUR HOUSE? the "Action" Man to See Is ERNIE HOLMES | ACTIVE REALTY LTD. 728-5157 74 Celina Street FOR THE FINEST Custom and Ready Made rp Frre &JELEAE Ea in the letest Shodes end Fobrics . . . see Mé&C DRY GOODS & DRAPERIES DRAPERY TRACKS HXPERTLY INSTALLED vs NOT ICE TO MOTORISTS -- TO PEDESTRIANS CROSSWALKS 723-7827 WI LL BE INSTALLED .SOON ON... 1 2 3 4 5 6. SIMCOEST. NORTH - at ROBERT ST. ADELAIDE AVE. WEST -- at GOLF ST. BOND ST. EAST ~at DIVISION ST. KING ST. EAST - at DIVISION ST. . WILSON RD, SOUTH - ot TAYLOR AVE. RITSON RD. N. - at WILLIAMST. E. Crosswalks are a proven method of assisting both Pedes- trians and Motorists in traffic with the least possible delay to each. r In order to obtain moximum benefit from the Crosswalke both the Pedestrian and Motorist must respect the rights of eoch other. PEDESTRIANS DO--Wait for a gap in traffie before leaving the curb, MOTORISTS DO--Watch for Pedestrians as you 'approach a Crosswalk. ALD. J. G. BRADY, Chairman, Traffic & Public Safety Committee City Council. THE RYE WITH UNSINKABLE FLAVOUR This great Canadian whisky keeps its flavour right to the bottom of the glass. Compare the robust goodness of Adams Gold Stripe rye whisky... you'll see why we say it's Gold Stripe for unsinkable _ flavour, at Ontario's most popular price.

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