14. THE OSHAWA TIMAS, Tussdey, August 25, 1964 BIRTHS BICKLE -- Ronald' and Carole (nee to announce rth Brown)|of a survey 8 daughter, Mary Anne, - Frisay, August 21, 1964 at the Oshawa) General Hospital. Special thanks to Dr. Miller-and Dr. Spragge, also staff of 4th oor. , J are . c. We . McClelland et x oe wandddaughter for Mr. 2 Mrs. T. fore. Special thanks to Drs. Anderson and Beckett and fourth floor staff. TOPP -- Cyril and Saundra (nee Elias) happily announce the birth of @ son, Saturday, Aug. 22, 1964, at the New Mf. Sinai Hospital, Toronto. WHALEN -- To Mable and Wyman, a son, 7 Ibs. $ ozs., on Sunday, August 23, 1964, at the Oshawa General Hospital. A brother for Stephen. Special thanks to Dr, Becket? and staff of 4th floor. DEATHS BELL, Arthur Henry ;|hampering both research work- Need Alleged For Canada Nutrition Quiz of Canadian food habits and health standards is ers and homemakers, the Ca- nadian Home Economics Asso-| ciation was told Monday. Dr. George Beaton of the Uni- versity of Toronto's School of Hygiene told the group that Ca- nadian food researchers have to rely on United States surveys so 'we do not have a true pic- ture of conditions here." i A spokesman at the federal department of health and wel- fare agreed there is need of a national nutrition survey. He es- timated the cost of such a sur- vey at $1,000,000. lago and married the. former JAMES TELFER LINDSAY James Telfer Lindsay, who was employed by Col. R. S. Mc- Laughlin at Parkwood, for 44 years, died Monday at his fam- ily home, 68 Alma street. He was working on Sunday, and was in his 79th year, Mr. Lindsay was born a son of the late Mr. and Mrs. William Lindsay in St. Boswells, Scot- land, He came to Canada 45 years Davina Cowan in Toronto. in 1920. He was a member of the Masonic Order and during the First World War he served with the King's QOwn Scottish Borderers. Mr. Lindsay is survived by his wife, a daughter, Mrs. J. A. Bal- lantine (Jean), Erindale, Ont., two sons, Eric, Vancouver, and Douglas, Oshawa: He is als9 sur- vived by a brother, Robert of Scotland. There are 11 grand- children. Resting at the Armstrong Fu- Dr. Beaton said there is a widespread availability of food) in Canada and most of the nu-| tritional problems are due to) inadequate food education. He) said otosity is the main nutri-| tional problem among Canadian} adults. Bec: use of the number of new) neral Home for a service in the chapel, Thursday, August 27, at 2 p.m, to be taken by Rev. N. F Swackhammer, minister of First Baptist Church, who is acting for Northminster United Church. Interment will be in Mount Lawn Cemetery. food rroducts available -- some that are nutritional and some that could be harmful -- the hon -maker must be confused, he :aid. He told the association the' without a proper survey, re' sarchers 'cannot compare tho effects of foods and so ¢an- Suddenly at 2) Prospect Street, Bowman. ville, on Sunday, August 23, 1964, Arthur Henry Bell, in his 54th year, dear son of Beatrice and the late Melvin Bell, brother of Dave, Jean (Mrs. Ralph Dawson) and Rowell. Resting at the Morris Funeral Chapel, Bowmanville. Service in the chapel on Wednesday at 2 o'clock. Inter ment Bowmanville Cemetery. CALLISON, Alice in the Oshawa General Tuesday, August 25, 1964, beloved wife of Richard Caii'son and dear mother of Mrs. Gordon McDonald (May) of Kitchener and Mrs. Douglas Lavender (Sadie), Oshawa, in her 64th year Mrs. Callison is resting at *he Mcintosh © raer- son Funeral Home, 152 King Strer East, for service in the chapel on T "rsday, August 29, at 2 p.m, intermesi Mount Lawn Cemetery. Hospital. on Alice Boyd, COLLINS, Joseph Richard At the Oshawa General Hosp'tal on $un- day, August 3, 1964, Joseph . Collins {of Whitby), beloved husband of the late Ada Allan, dear father of Richard of Osh- awa, William of Toronto; dear brother of Mrs. H. Heyden (Virginia) of Toronto; in his 77ht year. Resting at the W. C. Town Funeral Chapel, Wthitby for service in the chapel on Wednesday, August 26th at 2 p.m. Interment St. John's Cemetery, Port Whitby. The minister the Rev. 5S. Armstrong. JARDINE, Albert Frederick Entered into rest in the family residence, 237 Verdun Road, on Sunday, August 23, 1964, Albert Frederick Jardine, beloved husband of the late Ada Florence Jane Ward and father of Mrs. Richard Smith (Phyllis) Oshawa and John Jardine of) Oshawa; in his 69th year. Resting at the) Armstrong Funeral Home, Oshawa with) funeral' service In the chapel on Wednes- day, August 26, at 2 p.m. Interment Osh- awa Union Cemetery. LINDSAY, James Telfer Entered into rest in the family resi- dence, 68 Alma Street, Oshawa, on Mon- day, August 24, 1964, James Telfer Lind- say, beloved husband of Davina Cowan, and father of Mrs. J. A. Ballantine. (Jean) of Erindale, Ontario, Eric Lindsay of) Vancouver, B.C., and Douglas Lindsay of Oshawa, in his 79 year. Resting at the Armstrong Funeral Home, 0: a, with funeral service in the chapel on Thurs- day, August 27, at 2 p.m. Interment Mount Lawn Cemetery. (Friends are ask- @d not to call at the funeral before Wednesday.) Kindness beyond Price, yet Within reach of all GERROW not educate the buyer. | Dr. Beaton'said there is -a \ehanging pattern in Canada's }>opulation and that nutrition 'or the aged will have to re- ceive more attention. | '| ULASSIFIED ADVERTISING (Continued from Page 13) 32--Articles for Sole FABULOUS MATTRESS SALE famous brand names SERTA - BEVERLY - SEALY RESTONIC - MARSHALL smooth top and quilted PRICES SLASHED from $27.00 WILSON FURNITURE'S Wages Up, But | Can't Keep 'EmOn Farms | LONDON, Ont. (CP)--While average farm wages have risen six times since the end of the Second World War, workers Venezuela almost held its breath as its first orderly transfer of power from one elected president to another took place this year. Now, Latin affairs expert Paul Kidd reports in this story, the nation is moving ahead again, By PAUL KIDD CARACAS (CP)--As political stability grips Venezuela, a new-found sense of economic confidence is surging through the nation, One sees evidence of it every- where. All over Caracas, build- ings are soaring. skywards while lavish public works pro- jects are changing the face of the countryside. For the most part, this build-| ing and construction boom has) taken place during the last six! months. | When I was in Venezuela earlier this year, the December election' had just taken place and tough anti - Communist) President Romulo Betancourt | | was still the occupant of Mira- flores Palace. : The nation was awaiting, al- most ,breathlessly, the first or- derly transfer of power from N.E. Georgian Bay Waters Surveyed have been leaving Ontario agri- culture at the rate of 1,000 a month over the same period, | Dr. L. H. Patterson, director of} the farm economics and statis-| tics brahch of the Ontario de-| partment of agriculture said Monday. Speaking to the rural section of the annual convention of the Ontario Municipal Association, Dr. Patterson said one resuit of higher farm wages has been a "scramble"' to avoid them by as much mechanization of farm production as possible. Very small farms can not sup-) port the increased wages outlay) land many of them have been labandoned as full time farms,| he added. | The swing to mechanization has decreased the need for hired help in livestock areas of farm- ing and has increased the out- } Mattress Palace __20 Church Street, Oshawa CLEARANCE ! Cabins -- Camping Trailers Trailer Equipment ALL REDUCED AJAX 942-3491 Patio Stones, Screen Blocks, Sand, gravel, top soil, stone, Plastering - materials _wall- boards, Bricks, Cement, Roof- tng. Tile 668-3524. SAWDON'S (Whitby) LIMITED Fuel ond Builders Supplies { 244 Brock St. S WHITBY, Ont, | OLD GUN WANTED. Telephone 725 8183. + Sell and exchange used furni- Treding eed you da gd the" city 0s! " mn, . om FUNERAL HOME 390 KING STRET WEST TELEPHONE 728-6226 ~~ LOCKE'S FLORISTS Funeral arrangements and yRiPLs bunk 'bed and 3-piece bedroom wi mattresses, Dia | 263-2433 after six. i igdekes ORIGINAL orchids in bioom, from" " abroad | saeceratine for weddings, parites,. etc. |TYPEWRITERS, adders, cashiers, dupll- cators, cheque writers, comptometers, put per man to the point where many farms are no longer big enough to provide full-time em- ployment for one man, he said Dr. Patterson said that present forecasts indicate that by the year 2,000 a '"'huge part" of southern Ontario bounded by St. Thomas, London, Stratford, Orangeville, Peterborough and Cobourg will be lost to agricul-| ture due to urban development.| He said municipal taxes in| Ontario have risen from about} $110,000,000 in 1946 to more than| $640,000,000 in 1961--a jump of) more than six times during a period when taxable assessment rose only about three times. Taxes based on assessment are likely to bear more heavily on farm incomes than on those of town dwellers, he added. DIVIDENDS By THE CANADIAN PRESS Canadian Breweries Ltd.,pfd. Georgian Bay, described "a hydrographer's nightmare,"') now has been charted by the Canadian Hydrographic Servs ice in the detail sought small-boat owners. The service said Monday its first chart covers a sheltered|dock and road construction to} route. along' the shore from Parry Sound to Byng Inlet. It will be followed by a. chart) from Byng Inlet to Killarney.,ment program includ Existing charts of the area OTTAWA (CP)--Northeastern|™ Rule Without Revolt Brings Trade Boom one freely elected president to another in Venezuela's 154 years as a republic. The changeover came in March when Betancourt, 55, re- moved the tricolor presidential sash from his broad chest and placed it around his successor and fellow Democratic Action leader, 58-year-old Raul Leoni. 20,000 NEW JOBS : Then the nation rocketed for- ward. Development . programs planned during the last two years, while the government was battling Communist terror- ists, suddenly leaped from drawing board to location site. Construction projects this year are already up 70 per cent from 1963. A $20,000,000 tele- communications system is be- ing. built across the country while the government has just launched a four-year, $850,000,- 000 public spending program. Under the national improve- ment scheme, some 20,000 new jobs are expected to be created --giving some relief to Venezu- ela's whopping 13.7 per cent un- employment rate. : The program, which will sup- plement the oil producing republic's annual $1,300,000,000 budget, is aimed at developing the country's interior and stim- ulating more private invesf- ment. The money will be used for irrigation and flood control de- velopment to bring 3,000,000 ore acres of cropland into production by 1980. This would parts of the country. Finally, about 10 per cent of the Congress - approved funds will go toward public health and bolstering debt-plagued re- gional and district govern- ments. ae All this economic activity means, simply, that the Vene- zuelan bolivar is in extremely healthy shape as a currency on a continent notorious for its uncertain inflationary antics. Today, the national' budget balances and the republic's gold and dollar reserves--$700,- 000,000--are the highest in Latin America. When the list of nations re- ceiving increased Alliance for Progress aid was recently an- nounced, Venezuela's name was missing. nation, at least, which is pro- jgressing on its own, zuela to 'central and western' Hoodlum Hunt Launched By Land Owners TORONTO (CP) -- An all- out offensive against hoodlum gangs that have made shoppi CAPSULE NEWS plazas the favorite targets for their vandalism was announced Monday by the shopping centre ;committee of the Urban Devel- opment Institute, a non-profit body of land and property de- velopers. Mrs, Greta' Allen, executive director of the Ontario oranch, said the committee, headed by Bruce Pattison, general mana- ger of shopping centres for Don Mills Development Limited of Toronto, is drawing up an ac- ition program designed to clear 'hoodlums from the plazas. Mrs. Allen. said the cost in money runs into "hundreds of thousands of dollars'? annually but the situation has now reached a point where physical safety of people is at stake, She said the UDI committee wants | the legal status of shopping pla- zas more clearly defined, end- ing the confusion it feels eX? vate property or in. the public domain, : U.K. Parliament Record Reviewed By M. McINTYRE HOOD | Special to The Oshawa Times shown labor gaining a substan- jtial lead, although it has been TORONTO (CP) -- The Nor- wegian training ship Christian Radich, featured in the movie Windjammer four years ago, sailed into Toronto Monday. The sailing vessel, which serves as a_ training school for 88 youthful sailors, is expected to leave for home today after visit- ing the Canadian National Ex- hibition. CHOOSE OFFICERS PETERBOROUGH (CP) Chief H, S. Knight of Saint John, N.B. 'Monday was elected president of the Cana- dian Association of Fire Chiefs at the annual convention. Elected first vice - president was Cecil Upper of Welland. Al- lan Clark of Lakefield, Ont., was elected secretary . treas- urer, | wy LEAVE FOR HOME This is one South American|as to whether the plaza is pri-) s BRIDGE TOWN, Barbados (AP) -- Twenty cadets from Canada and 11 from Jamaica left for home Monday after a six-week camp: in Barbados as part of an exchange program jamong the three countries. Twenty Barbadian cadets who} lwere in camp at Farnham,| {Que., returned to Barbados Sat-) jurday. |. PRESIDENT IN HOSPITAL DUBLIN (AP) President LONDON: -- The Parliament|"educed substantially in recent|Eamon de Valera of Ireland elected on October 6; 1959, i jvirtually at an end. It will jassemble for only one more day, jlate in September, to be pro- jrogued. This will quickly be fol aS! make the country self-sufficient|lowed by dissolution, so that the i,|weeks. And the municipal elec-|underwent emergency |tions for the past two years |have seen the Labor party wip- jing out all of the gains made ithree years. in farm production, Last year,/general election can be held in| This loss in popular esteem by Venezuela spent almost $60,-/October, and 'the latest and best|the' government was due very) 000,000 on food imports, PLAN POWER GRID Funds will go toward airport, link remote towns with more heavily populated centres. Other facets of the develop: e new plant, schools, an explosives and a guess of the election date is October 15, bs There have been many changes in the political scene since that day in October, 1959, when Harold Macmillian was re- elected_as prime minister of the \United Kingdom with a major-| jity of almost exactly 100 seats lare designed for commercia!|expansion of the government's|in the House of Commons, |shipping and- do not show the|petrochemical industry Mr. Macmillan has passed out jlargely to a series of misfor- tunes which had little to do jwith party politics. The Lons- \dale and Vassall spy scandals and trials; and the deplorable |Profumo affair were most dam- jaging to the government's pres- tige, and since they involved |the security of the nation, they \provided splendid ammunition for the opposition to put the |government on a weak defen- information sought by yachts- high - tension distribution grid|of the picture, his departure,|sive. The unfortunate things men who prefer to stay off the carrying power from hydroelec-| which might have taken place in|about these incidents was that open bay. tric projects in northern Veve- any event, being hastened by ill-|they shook the country's faith in f AN : pe lhealth, In his place ds prime|the competency of Mr. Mac- Rhodesia Seen Relying On Welensky's Wiles |minister and leader of the Con-|millan ag head of the govern- |servative party is the former|ment, and might, indeed, have |Earl of Home, who relinquished|brought about. his resignation his title and became Sir Alecjhad his ill-health not intervened Douglas-Home in order to take'to give him a way out. By DOUG MARSHALL Canadian Press Staff Writer Southern Rhodesia's future now seems to depend on the re- sults of two byelections and the ship. : In spite of the scandals and The difference between these thei ph ; port for a break with Britain.|two party leaders is wide. but|"©" Tepercussions, the parlia- | ment elected in 1959 had done Finally some Friday in Oc-|certain events during the Mac- ; c tober, while Britain is preoc-|millan regime rather tarnished|S°™e splendid work, and has cupied with its own general|the party 'image, which is only produced some worthwhile legis- election, Smith would simply|now being slowly restored under|/@tion. Some of its achievements declare independence. theview leader: will" have Jong term, effects. over the mantle of the premier- GOOD WORK DONE | political cunning of Sir Roy Welensky. Seasoned commentators on| the turbulent Rhodesian situa-| tion have been hearing intima-| tions of an illegal, unilateral) |declaration of independence. all lsummer. They now seem lagreed that the middle of Oc- \tober is the most likely date if lit comes at all, | The theory is that Premier \lan Smith may be following a itime-table calculated to achieve jindependence within a maxi-| imum of support from white) |Rhodesians and a minimum of linterference from Britain or the United Nations. Originally the timetable was files, furniture. We buy, sell, rent, serv-;Series A 55 cents, pfd. Series|this: After that the survival of the F ' NEW LABOR LEADER intapenoent: Bhagesia WOU1E T, the. 160 general election, Fe ne ot nepex.|Hugh Gaitskell led the Labor tent to which"Britain and other|P@tty to its third piers de- "7 j ; ./feat. Mr, Gaitskell's death, how. Western nations would apply lever, placed a new leader at sanctions. Smith's hard - core} supporters believe the majority of white Rhodesian would soon swing behind the government. WELENSKY IS THREAT The major threat to this time- table is the rhinocerous-like fig- ure of Welensky lumbering back into Salisbury from the political wilderness. the helm of the Socialist party, and Harold Wilson now has the task of leading it in a general jelection, Mr. Gaitskell's death |was a sad loss to the party, as even Mr. Wilson's closest friends will acknowledge that he 'does not measure up to his predeces- \sor's stature as a party leader and as a politician. There was, of course, the bitter |squabble over Britain's desire to enter the European Common Market a subject which split the Tory party. The government was saved on that issue by the abrupt intervention of General de Gaulle of France who put his veto on Britain's entry and took the question out of active politics. On the credit side for the government can be listed the fol- lowing legislative enactments: Reform. of the betting and licensing laws of Britain. Reconstruction of Britain's Welensky intends to contest) These changes in the leading)rating valuation system, Arundel. So seriously does Smith view this challenge that he has asked Deputy Premier personalities of the two parties have changed the tone of events in the House of Commons. Sir Reorganization of the British) railways and the appointment of} Dr. Richard Beeching as chair-| surgery Monday for a hernia. The 81- year-old president, who entered ja nursing home earlier in the .|by the Tories in the previous|day, was reported making fa- |vorable progress. SEVEN SOLDIERS KILLED | KARACHI, Pakistan (Reut- lers)--An official announcement \here Monday said seven Indian soldiers were killed and five others wounded in encounters with Azad Kashmir volunteers at Polas and in the area north of Poonch along the Kashmir ceasefire line during the week- end. 'We're Destined To Join OAS Says Martin BANFF, Alta. (CP) -- Exter- nal Affairs Minister Martin said Monday night that Cana- |dian membership in the Ongan- lization of American States is "part of the ultimate destiny of Canada as a country of this hemisphere." ' | He offered no clue as to when {this might occur. In a speech to the Banff Con- ference on World Development, Mr. Martin said he has made tentative plans to visit several Latin. American countries around the end of this year. He said Latin America should be given a prominent place in Canada's external relations "such as it has not; generally speaking, enjoyed in the past." Latin America had been sadly neglected -by Canadian schools, icolleges and newspapers, though there were "hopeful signs" this situation was chang- | | ing. By the end of this century, Latin America would have up . | Windjammer Visits Metro TYPHOON LEAVES JAPAN. TOKYO (AP) -- Typhoon Kathy cut through southwestern tgs = ye pro on 'onday night, dead, five son it in- jured, The t , after land- ing on the southwestern tip of Kyushu, roared over western Kyushu, the inland: sea and passed west of Osaka, an in- dustrial city, into the Japan Sea. Weathermen said the ty- phoon now has been down- graded to 45 miles an hour. TOLL RISES | HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) -- The number of suspected encephali- tis cases spurted to 179 Mon- day as the geographical spread of the disease widened over this city of make than 1,000,000 resi- dents. F insecticides are to be distributed to all citizens at the city's fire stations begin- ning today. A U.S. Coast Guard heli@pter dumped thousands of pounds of insecticide dust along city bayous Monday in an ef- fort to eradicate encephalitis- bearing mosquitoes. FREIGHTERS COLLIDE KOBE, Japan (Reuters)--A British and a U.S, freighter col- lided at the entrance of Kobe Harbor Tuesday and were only slightly damaged, maritime of- ficials reported here. There were no injuries. NEWSMAN DIES CHICAGO (AP)--Harrison B, Roberts, 61, former Associated Press war correspondent and | photographer, died Monday in a | Chicago hotel. Following assign- ments for the AP in wartime Northern Ireland and Tunisia, Roberts joined the U.S. state de- partment and served for six years in South America. At his death, he was working for mili- tary publications. -- REQUESTS QUEEN'S HELP SANTIAGO, Chile (AP)-- Chile sent a diplomatic note to Argentina Monday night and re- quested that Queen Elizabeth act as an arbiter in a frontier dispute, The two countries have been arguing about 96,000 acres dealt with a 1902 treaty in which Britain was involved. | U.S. PUBLISHER DIES WEST HARWICH, Masa (AP)--N.S. MacNeish, 64, fon mer assistant publisher and business manager of the New York World Telegram and Sun died Monday after suffering a heart attack at his summer home here. He retired a year ago. : MICHENER IN ENGLAND SOUTHAMPTON, England (CP)--Roland Michener, Cana- dian high commissioner to In- dia, arrived here Monday on the Queen Mary. liner from New York. He and his wife will stay in London until Aug, 31 when they will fly to India. Exports Slip From Pace Of Imports OTTAWA (CP) -- Canadian imports rose so much faster than exports during May that the month's trade surplus was pared to less than half the level of May, 1963, The bureau of statistics said Monday the country's surplus in world - wide ' commodity trade was $27,800,000 compared with $57,100,000 in May last year. Howeves, the January - May surplus, fattened by sharp in-. creases in exports earlier this year, stood at $116,800,000 com- floral requirements for all occasions OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE 24 HOUR PHONE SERVICE 728-6555 iN MEMORIAM FERGUSON -- In loving memory of a|BEDROOM suite, red maple, "2 pieces, dear brother, Elmer Ferguson, who pass-| $50. Telephone Whitby 655-3814. ed away August 26, 1959. | RANGE, Generali Electric push button, 40- ' Brother, you are not forgotten, |inch size, like new, $50. Telephone $3,067,163; 1963, $2,482,971. Though on garth you are no more, Brooklin 655-3814. j Still in me@fory you are with us, ---- Charles E. Frosst and Co.,/win the two September byc Alec Douglas-Home has not the} suave manner of Mr. Macmillan, but he has a biting repartee in| "4 © B answering questions from the|WeAnon of the municipal struc-| opposition, and has more than/ture of greater London. Concentration of the three held his own in the cut and thrust of political debate. armed services under the min- On the other hand, Mr. wil- istry of defence. son's chief problem is to keep| Modernization of Britain's the diverse wings of the Socia!-|police administration, ist party, with its extreme right,! The abolition, subject of safe- oe Ferre Bho ppboa Me bogy guards, of resale price mainten. s jance i ixi election campaign in which) Tak soa tie Pegg too that Labor will be speaking withithe people of Britain. generally 4 cents, common 10 cents, to 600,000,000 people and: North America not many more than 300,000,000, he said. Yet total Canadian commerce with Latin 'America constituted only four jor five per cent of Canada's world trade. | Prices Mixed, Flaccid Tone ice. Largest stock, budget terms. New DB 661 and used. Low overhead, low price. Bill > y Hamilton, Raglan.- Oct 1, record Sept. 4. \GANVAS awnings, "curtains, canopies; Grafton's Ltd,, class A 25 Smith will meet Prime Min-|Ctifford Dupont to resign his) ister Sir Alec Douglas-Home of present seat and fight Welenskv Britain in London Sept. 7 and,!in the byekction. ike his predecessor Winston; yj, wolensky and his Field, will probably fail to sway/phodesia party win both byelec-| \the British government from its | tons -- observers give them a jrefusal to grant independence] pod chance -- a possible coup Complete service. Free estimates. No Gents, Sept, 1 , record Sept. 1. waiting. Mil Jelinek, 728-1993 anytime cents, Sept. 15, record Sept. 1: |without adequate Negro repre-| jay be frustrated. Sir Roy, sentation. \ would then have to bring all his TWO new 650 x 13 ihch first line white- NET EARNINGS | | |political talents to bear on the Hb tires, mounted on Corvair wheels. ; : CAN S$ |SEEK SUPPOR | He By. THE CANADIAN PRESS |SEEK SU T ltask of toppling Smith's govern-| man of the railway board. A drastic measure of reorga-| new | 728-2807 | TRADE-IN sale! Three, two-brush polish. ers; also fine used vacuum, all in good Laurentide Financial Corp,|. Having. proved Britain to be} Lid., year ended June 30: 1964,|intransigent, Smith's Rhodesian) ment. Front Party would then hope to| But if Welensky fails, observ- condition. From ($10. up. T 72%- 6956. ters believe Smith would find the . As you always were before | --Sadly missed and ever remembered by) sister Isabel, and brother-in-law Bert, and family. PARKER -- In loving memory of a dear son and brother, William Kevin (Billy), who passed away August 25, 1962. He was a flower too great for earth, Sent_here but for a while; God 'for a few months gave him life And took him with a smile. Lovingly remembered by Mom Dad, Wendy, Michael and Debby. and For courteous, qualified mem- orial consultation, call or see Wm. Greehalgh MOUNT LAWN. MEMORIAL DIV. ot the Mount Lown Office in the centre of Oshawa's green area. King St. West. TELEPHONE 723-2633 wii oe eS MONUMENTS -- MARKERS RIMAR MEMORIALS 152 SIMCOE ST. S. OSHAWA OFFICE 723-1002 EVENINGS 728-6627 CARD OF THANKS ances. 263-2695. 1964 ALSTATE scooter, in very" ~ good 555, $1.31. condition. Purchased in April. Very rea-| sonable. Whitby 668-8956. |SNOW SKIS, safety bindings, plastic base, laminated Hickory. 5 to 7 p.m. telephone | 725-2181. DANISH styied sofa and chair, brown and beige reversible cushions; matching step and coffee tables. Good condition. Dia! 668-8262. GENDRO jblond finish, new condition; |high chair. 728-7885. |24-INCH heavy duty range, good working |condition. Telephone 725-1766. OLDSMOBILE radio, fits from 1951 to 1955, Reasonable offer. Telephone 728-0810. 2 REPEATER with scope. Telephone | 728-4198. |HI-FIDELITY record player; new front |door; 40 gallon hot water tank; maternity |clothes; myskrat back stole; car-top car- \rier; revolving clothes dryer: 723-3889. |SHUTTERS for home or coltage. | Whitby 668-5629. |KELVINATOR refrigerator (small), Can |be seen in use. Suitable for summer cot- |tage. Apply 795 King Street East, 723-9292. |i4 FY, BOAT, 25 H.P. motor with trailer. |Dial 668-8557. | THISTLE DELUXE BABY CARRIAGE, |brown and -beige, like new condition, $25 After 6, telephone 725-0479. POLAROID automatic, $125; Zelss Ikon Super, 1.28 lens, $100; mechanic's tools, $10. 728-3067. FOR SALE one complete drafting outfit, "baby crib with mattress, also chrome BLAIR -- The family of 'the late Mrs. Duncan G. Blair wish to express their sincere thanks and appreciation to reia- tives, friends and neighbors for kindness and sympathy shown in their recent loss. Special thanks to Hillsdale Manor for their many kindnesses and care. WEIGH LOSS WINNIPEG (CP) -- The 359 members of the Winnipeg branch. of the Manitoba Stream-|Store, goid ber pin with 3 pearls in/ police liner Club, a women's group dedicated to weight reduction, had a net weight loss of 2,75219 pounds in the year ending June 8, The club's "queen" was Mrs. Janet Kutasiewich, who lost more than 68 pounds. Ger de drawing instruments, like new, excellent for high school. studert. Phone Norman, 668-4928, . 33--Market Basket ORGANICALLY grown beans, corn, cu- cumbers how available. Bring containers Pick your own. Open weekends. Mooro- croft Organic Gardens, Sprucehiil Road, Dunbarton. Democra Draws Varied Types | By ARCH MacKENZIE ' ATLANTIC CITY (CP) -- It| takes all kinds to make an) Amejican. political convention and the Democrats have them lfor their 34th national show. The variety is infinite both) inside and outside the delega-| Dial/tions, comprising 5,260 voting/saudy row. delegates and alternates. Perle Mesta has set up her) high-society social shop in aj lrented Atlantic City mansion} for a week of champagne-and-) leaviar functions celebrating her return to the party fold. She had been forced to take jher hostessing talents to the Re- publicans during the -reign of the Kennedys because they, didn't get on. There is seemingly one new person for every delegate and television is everywhere---cam- jeras projecting from every an- lgle of the huge hall, on mobile boardwalk electric carts outside {34----Lost and Found LOST; Saturday night at the Dominion centre, reward. Telephone 668-3612. LOST -- Power lawn mower, No. 2 High way, between Garrard Road and DX % on Sunday morning, Talevhone 728-0347 GIRL'S jumbo knit swealer found in Dis- play Building at the Oshawa Fair on Sal- urday, August 22nd. Owner may have same by identification and paying for ad 725-4546, « jand on specially-fitted autos. RINGED BY POLICE There. are New Jersey state ringing the seven-acre convention hall. Mostly there jare 'tourists--the Atlantic city bread and butter trade--passing in slow procession back and forth along the boardwalk On one side is the Atlanuc,/as opposing integration. \breaking in slow rollers against] Inside the convention hall is}man missing. |BUYING or selling furniture or appli-| year ended May 31: 1964, $717,-\tions at Arundel and Avondale. -- Elmer, Hampton 263-2294 or! o¢6 ¢1 35 a share; 1963, $693,-|Victory would be interpreted as pressure to go ahead with a declaration of independence ir- many voices, and probably speaking are better off than many of them in different tones.|/they were when the present LABOR GAINS |government came into office in The picture is different from|1959. The people are paying) that of 1959 in that the Labor)!ower taxes both in income tax party has gained considerably and purchase tax, They are in public support in the last five|S@ving more money than ever) years. By-elections have gone before. The old age pensioners definitely against the govern- have had substantial increases ment. Public opinion polls have it their pensions and national jassistance has been made more easily accessible to the needy. Employment, which dropped off slightly two years ago is now at a very high level with the percentage of unemployed| |down to 1.4 per cent over the} \whole country. And the meas-! jures taken by the government |to move industry into depressed jareas in Scotland the north-east jof England and Merseyside have borne much fruit and im- proved conditions in these areas, Thus the parliament which was elected in 1959 was a fruit- ful one and during its lifetime the government played a leading role in the easing of interna- tional tensions and forwarding |the cause of peace. Unfortunate- ly the matters on which it proved vulnerable were really extraneous to the political econ- a demonstration of public sup-'resstible, t Convention another world--from the base- ment fully occupied by news media to the hall itself which) can hold about 60,000 and the! adjacent corridors where the national party officials have been laboring. The hall resem-| bles a huge prairie curling rink in the quonset style. | The tone is set at the entrance|Ho ; by a soundtruck blaring a song of the Canadian Institute of endlessly with the main refrain: |Chartered Accountants to come "Hurray, hurray, hurray forjcut from behind their "barri- LBJ." The next attraction is a/cades of technical jargon" in lhuge display of items from|order to provide truly informa- jewelry to hats; ashtrays, rec-|tive financial statements as the ords and books emphasizing the|institute's 'three-day conference Johnson name and initials and opened Monday. a available at a price. In an address to 1,200 dele- Sample: Dining with Demo-|gates, Mr. Ross said chartered a wide and dirty beach jammed with people. On the other is perhaps the most teeming com- mercial area in the country joining taffy houses, 'unch joints, ferris wheels, amuse- ment parks, bars and other tourist attractions in tight and) Drop Jargon Chief Advises Accountants MONTREAL (CP)--President ward I, Ross told members Tourists stand and stare at the convention hall entrance, mixing with the peaceful civil rights picketers from Negro as- sociations., 'Tne hierarchy of the Negro groups are here. So is the other side of the coin represented by segregationist George Wallace, Alabama governor, and dele- On Metro Mart TORONTO (CP)--Prices were mixed on the stock market Monday with a general under- tone of weakness. Industrials. showed a .02 gain to 159.30 on index as the group wandered aimlessly throughout the day. Chrysler climbed to a 1964 peak of 60 with a 1% gain while Moore Corp, lent support with an advance of 1 to 56%. Trans-Canada Pipe Lines and Dominion Stores tacked on %4 each, to 41 and 21%, respec- tively. Rothmans was at a 1964 top of 15 with a % gain as cigarette swing after a depression in the first part of this year. CPR dipped % to 47 while Bank of Montreal and Toronto- Dominion Bank lost the same amount,- at 68 and 77%. the speculative section, gaining 16 cents to $2.15 in active deal- ings, New Calumet advanced nine to 88 cents, Norpax 1% to 16% cents and Joburke 4 to 20 cents, Windfall continued to de- gates from the south who buck crats. "Favorite recipes of fam-jaccountants may lose theft é ; ' 8. : ' s may los po- integration openly: or tacitly. lous Democrats." The price is|sition as '"custodians of the art Two full-page newspaper ad-|¢9 95, lof financial reporting" if they |vertisements appeared in the' The theme. throughout is/continu to be "so worried Atlantic City press Monday,|«,ByJ for the U.S.A." which|about the possibility that some- jeach inserted by segregation reaches its highwater mark injone might be misled that they forces. One said it was paid for|the convention hall. with twojforget' the- importance of pro- by the Independent America®, |huge pictures of Johnson domi-|viding information." 'a national conservative politi-inating the platform under like-| He said the job of producing cal action. newspaper" published |nesses of the late President|improved financial statements jat New Orleans, and called foriKenney, Franklin Roosevelt}may be taken over by data- Democrats to back Republican! anq Harry Truman. processing technicians without omy of the country but were such that they gave the opposi- tion strong grounds for. attack and provided week after week sensational 'headlines in the newspapers. That more thun janything else caused the de- cline of the Tory party in popu- lar favor. But these incidents have largely been forgotten and will play no part in the election cline, losing four to 52 'cents. Senior base metals were weak. Labrador gave ip % to 34, Inco % to 85 and Falcon- bridge. % to 75, Opemiska dipped.15 cents to 8.60. Noranda countered with a %& gain to 48. Golds were quiet and steady. Dome stood out with a gain of % to 30%. campaign. The achievements of the parlaiment of the last few) years will remain for the bene-| 'it of the people long acter the} names of Vassall Lonsdale and) Senator Barry Goldwater) But Johnson himself won't be an accounting background. jagainst President Johnson. on hand until Thursday al- Providing satisfactory 'valua- The other from the Citizcns'|though his personal hand is ev'+|tions was~corhplicat'd by the Council of America at Jackson,\dent everywhere in the conven-jfact .that some o!. the. factors Miss., quotes Thomas Jefferson'tion operations. which go to make up the value | He seems to be about the oaly|o{ a corporation were not meas- urable in terms of money, anything politically. On index base metajs fell | to 67.52, western oils .29 to 96.04 and the exchange Index 0) to 148.76. Golds gained .51 to 134.91. Volume for the ses- pared with $102,200,000 in the first five months of last year. The five-month Cana ian trade deficit in the United States was sharply higher at $447,700,000 as against $265,400,- 000 a year earlier. However, the surplus in trade with Britain widened to $244,- 700,000 from $196,000,000, trade with the rest of the Common- wealth was practically un- changed to produce a $43,300,- 000 surplus, and the surplus with the rest of the world soared to §$296,600,000 from $128,000,000. In May, Canadian imports rose by eight per cent to $657,- sales appear to be on the up-|600,000 compared with a year earlier. Exports rose only 2.9 per cent to $685,400,000. In the five-month period, im- ports were 17.2-per-cent higher at $3,022,300,000 while exports were up 17.1 per cent to $3,139,- Raglan brought some joy to|200,000. Floods Hit Crops, Indian Villages NEW DELHI (Reuters) Thousands of village homes around this Indian capital were flooded Monday following two days of torrential rains. Official sources said 150 vil- lages with a population of 200,- 000 were under two to four fect of water. Some 60,000 acres submerged and 15,000 acres of standing crops destroyed. New Delhi and the surround- inr areas have had about 37 inches of rain since June com- pared with a normal rainfa!l of Profumo have ceased to mean/sion was 3,021,000 shares com-jabout 15 inches for the June- pared with 3,555,000 Friday. August season, +