me ea eat sia onte- wires tm i I ea A WADE IN THE WATER A Vietnamese soldier wades through the Mekong River carrying a 30 mm submachine gun over CNE Ends Up Profits Top $2,961,623 By IAN MacLAINE TORONTO (CP) -- The 1965 Canadian National Exhibition ended on a healthy financial note Monday, Treasurer C. 8, Walters said profits may exceed last year's figure of $2,961,623 despite ad- verse weather that reduced at- tendance in the final week of the 14-day show, | A CNE spokesman said al- most every revenue-producing phase of the exhibition re- ported records in gross in- comes. J. W. (Patty) Conklin, president of Conklin Shows Ltd., said the midway alone grossed $1,082,284. It was the first time in the history of the 87-year-old fair that the midway had made! more than $1,000,000, i The figure was $128,375 more} than last year and $124,284 higher than the previous record gross established in 1963, Final attendance figure reached 2,962,500, a decrease of 31,500 from last year, On the last day Monday of the exhibi- tion 261,000 persons § clicked grandstand show last year. his shoulder, Government forces were on search oper- ation in True Giang Dis- trict in Mekong Delta yes- In The Black! through the turnstiles into the 262-acre fair grounds, up 2,500 from the 1964 labor day total, PLAN AFTER STUDY "Any long range plans we ave will depend on_ that study," he said, CNE officials are aiming for a more national exhibition with more participa- tion by provinces, and more concentration on year-round fairs, Only Nova Scotia and Al- berta staffed provincial exhibits in the government buildings. In the multitude of competi- tive events, judges, sports offi- cials and adjudicators handled nearly 10,000 agricultural en- tries, 5,500 athletes and 3,500 musicians and vocalists, Comedian Bob Hope and pian- ist Victor Borge, headliners of the evening grandstand show, attracted a record gross rev- enue of $363,068, Of this amount, Hope's seven shows produced a $255,457 gross. The total amount with $261,176 for | compares the . 14-day 500 Quit Jobs CPR Hostelry QUEBEC (CP) -- The mas sive Chateau Frontenac Hotel stood nearly empty today fol- lowing a walkout by some 500 employees. Some 800 guests left the CPR- operated hotel Sunday, having been warned of Monday's im- pending strike. At strike time, 11:15 a.m. EDT, the building, on the heights of Quebec City over- looking the St. Lawrence River, had been deserted by ali" tut some 200 guests and a skeleton staff. | The registration desk early teday was refusin: reserva: tions. "We are on strike," an employee said. The employees, members of the Canadian Brotherhood of Railway, Transport and Gen- eral Workers ( ) are out for | | wages, 'here were signs easly Mon- day that the strike would be averted by. a last-minute com- pany offer but it was turned down by a meeting of the un- ion's rank-and-file. The company proposed a 2%- year contract and offered a five - cent increase effective Sept, 1, a three-cent increase on the same date next year ood a Guerrilla War "| Dies Of Heart Ailment | LOS ANGELES (AP)--Bert (Yank) Levy, 6, a soldier of fortune and guerrilla warfare' expert who wrote an interna-| warfare at Concord, Mass. Inia possible association between used textbook on the 1943 he trained Canadian| contraceptive pills and throm- subject, is dead, victim of a heart attack, his family re- ported Levy saw action in both world, wars, the Spanish civil war and insurrections in Nicaragua and Mexico. His home was in Los Angeles, where he died Thurs- day, Born in amiltton, Levy learned guerrilla warfare in the First World War as a machine- guaner with a British unit in the Middle East. When Britain was threatened with the Second World War, Levy was asked to be a guer- rilla warfare instructor at the Osterly school He returned to the United States in 1942, where he became RRURECK BEGAN YOUNG Dave Brubeck played profes- sionally with California dance bands from the age of 13. SULLIVAN SCORED FIRST The Fd Sullivan Show was the first American variety show to perform in Russia for television audiences. ers, At Chateau Closes Doors | final increase of the amount Sept. 1, 1967. USE SLIDING SCALE The increases would have been applied on a sliding scale to the different categories of workers, such as cooks, main- tenance engineers and paint- same The employees want a 12- month contract, a general 15- per-cent wage increase and bet- ter-working-conditions: Salary scales now run from a maximum of $2.65 an hour for maintenance engineers to 85.6 cents an hour for chamber- maids, who also receive room|! and board. } Last Wednesday, the govern-| ment - owned CNR averted a' strike 'at its Ottawa Chateau! Laurier Hotel by agreeing to pay employees the federal la- bor code minimum of $1.25 an hour, A spokesman for the pri- vately-owned CPR said the fed- eral minimum wage did not ap- ply to them as wages in its ho- tels were determined by provin- cial rather than federal wage standards. The union has not stated its position on legal mini- mums, | Esper 7 a citizen and chief instructor at _the ist U.S. government training school on guerrilla troops. Between wars, Levy worked as a seaman, and after the Sec-| ond World War he became a printer in Las Angeles. | His book, Guerrilla Warfare.) was recently reissued, : terday, but Viet Cong fied to outlying areas after learning of their arrival, (AP Wirephoto) Margaret Plays In Home Movie LONDON (AP)-- The Daily Sketch says Princess Margaret, the Earl of Snowdon and movie comedian Peter Sellers have taken part in a slapstick home- made movie, The report said the princess and her husband did a song: and-dance routine, in a short skit, The Sketch says the final scene consists of Margaret, Snowdon and Sellers doing a high-kicking dance routine. Pollution Key Topic MONTREAL, (CP) -- Repre-| sentatives of government, in- dustry and other bodies meet here Oct, 31-Nov, 3 to discuss pollution, described as 'ore of the country's most pressing problems," and what to do about it. In the official terminology of the Canadian Council of Re- source Ministers, the meeting's sponsor, "the conference is be- ing convened to consider how the contamination of water, air and soil affects human and ani- mal life and impedes the achievement of desirable social, esthetic and economic goals in Canada," In a statement released to- day, Council President R. G. Williston, British Columbia's minister of lands, forests and water resources, gives the "pressing problem" description to pollution. The statement says leading Canadian authorities have been invited to provide background papers which will review pollu tion's nature, extent and signifi- cance, the techniques for con- trolling it and the programs now operating to abate it, The goal of the conference is "the Subsequent formulation--of improved program measures designed to reduce pollution and control its effects." Link Seen With Pills NOTTINGHAM (AP)--An in- quest into the death of an Eng- lish housewife was told Monday that it might be linked with the }highest total on record, ..|bridge and a boy killed under "|from 64 two years ago, officials) drowned last Friday in the St. [HIGHEST TOTAL ON RECORD By THE CANADIAN PRESS At least 103 persons died in accidents in Canada during the Labor Day weekend, two more than last year and the second More than 100 persons have died in accidents every Labor Day weekend since 1962, with the record of 121 set. in 1063, Highest number of fatalities for la three-day weekend was 172 in the 1963 Dominion Day week- end, -A Canadian Press survey from 6 p.m, Friday to midnight Monday, local times, showed 67 persons died in traffic accl- dents, eight short of the Cana- dian Highway Safety Council! prediction of 75, There were also 10 drown: ings, six fire deaths and 20 deaths in unclassified mishaps, Quebec reported 46 fatalities, including 34 road deaths, eight drownings and four miscellane- ous deaths, one of them a man gored by a bull, ONTARIO HAS 20 DEAD Ontarlo had 20 deaths--14 on the highways, two drownings, a boy burned in a hut, he was building, two men killed when |their tractor 'broke through a the wheels of a wagon pulled by his father's tractor, New Brunswick had 13 deaths, six in traffic, four in fires and three in other accidents, Saskatchewan had six deaths | | By DAVE McINTOSH | OTTAWA (CP) -- The Royal }Canadian Navy's Atlantic and Praidie fleets have been numer- ically reduced to 39 active ships| disclose | And these 39 include a repair) ship, a diving tender, a supply ship. a training yacht and 14 warshins--10 frigates, three de- stroyers and a submarine-- which are some 20 years old, A senior naval officer. said that apart from three subma- rines being built in Britain for the RCN no new warships have been laid down since 1960, Con- struction of four new destroy- ers is not scheduled to start un- til early 1967 -- a seven-year gap. Government officials say that though numerical strength of the navy has been reduced, sub- marine kill capability has ac- tually increased because of the introduction of new equipment and methods, Seven destroyers and eight frigates have 'been sent to the scrapyard in the last two years Accidents Kill 103 During The Weekend by carbon monoxide poisoning when a car carrying three men and three women became stuck in the mud, Alberta had four traffie deaths and a death in a plane crash, British Columbia had a traffic death, a fire death and three deaths in falls, Nova Scotia had four traffic fatalities, Manitoba and New: foundiand two traffic deaths each, Prince Edward Island re- ported no accidental) fatalities, The survey does not include industria' or natural deaths or known slayings or suicides, The Ontario dead MONDAY Leonard Hoffman, 55, Golden Lake, in hospital of injuries suf- fered in a two-car crash near Pembroke Saturday. Henry Joseph MeFaul, 70, when his car collided with a truck in Campbellford, Emily Perry, 48, Windsor, in a two-car collision at Cottam, William Lemay, 87, Barrie, struck by a car near his home, Mrs, Bertha Beadman, Wood- stock, in a car-truck collision, SUNDAY James Johnston, 22, Durham, in a two-car, head-on collision 10 miles north of Port Severn, Brian Jones, 6, when struck by a-car near his home in sub- urban Toronto, Gladys Wray, 57, Bratnford, in a two-car, head-on collision near Barrie, Natalie Taylor, 7, Peterbor- ough, struck by a car in Bur: leigh Falls, Ross Robertson, 28, Toronto, who died in hospital of injuries suffered in a two-car collision on Highway 400 Saturday, _ SATURDAY ; Ralph Leroy Robertson, %4, Toronto, in a two-car collision on Highway 400. Ronald Norman Treble, 31, Toronto, who drowned when his boat overturned on a lake near Minden, Norman Leclaire, 6, Sturgeon Falls, when the small hut he was building caught fire, Roy Smith, 52, Huntsville, drowned in Skeleton Lake, 15 miles southwest of Huntsville. Ross Petit and his brother' George, both in their 50s, North Ekfrid, when the tractor they were riding broke through a bridge near Appino, David Hilton, 3, Essex, who died under the wheels of a wagon being pulled by his fa- ther's tractor, Ronald Molzan, 63, Elverston, and Emily Tell, Winnipeg, when their car went out of control near Hearst, FRIDAY Mrs, Murphy Dupuis, 21, Madawaska, when the car in which she was a passenger swerved into a ditch, six new destroyers have been added in that period and the first of the three British-built submarines, the Ojibwa, will join the Atlantic fleet this fall. RECRUITS MAIN WORRY Officials say their main worry is how te recruit, train-- and hang onto--the technicians who keep the fleet in operation. There are at least 17 war- ships in reserve on the East and West coasts and one of the chief reasons they are tied up is that the navy simply hasn't enough technicians to. keep them at sea, The Atlantic fleet comprises the aircraft carrier Bonaven- ture, 18 destroyers, three frig- ates and three non - combat ships. The Pacific fleet has five destroyers, seven frigates, the submarine Grilse and the train- ing yacht Oriole, By 1971, the navy is expected to have got rid of 14 more ships but to have added nine new ones for a total of 34, These 34 will comprise a car- rier, 24 destroyers, three sub- marines, three support ships and others put in reserve but and three non-combat ships, VICTORIA (CP)--A $500 a month allowance for the Good Shepherd Animal Shelter has been cut off, says Mother Ceci- lia Mary. The allowance is normally paid at the end of each month by St. Mary's Priory for the Abandon Hunt | | | i | For Father, Son | i KINGSTON (CP)--The search | has been abandoned for Dale Thompson, 37, an Almond, N.Y., insurance underwriter, and his l2-year-old son Dale Jr., who Lawrence River off Kingston Harbor, The search by 30 skindivers, a helicopter and a score of pleas- ure boats, was abandoned Sa- taking of birth control pills. Coroner Anthony Rothera re-| corded a verdict that Mrs, Cyn-) thia Leigh, 22, died from throm-' bosis, and then said: "Tt is important that some! publicity be given to this, not) so much as a warning that peo- ple should not take contracep- tive pills, but so they can ap-| preciate that there is a possibil-/ ity of these unfortunate conse-| quences." | Pathologist Dr. G. F. M. Hall) said "there have been reports) recently in the medical press of "Because of this I made in.) quiries and found Mrs, Leigh was taking these pills . my feeling is that the association is just too much to be a co- incidence. This is @ Greode 13 Program Students living in neighbourin: Interested persons should epply ploces in the clea. FIRST YEAR TECHNOLOGY SOMETIMES REFERRED TO AS "FIRST YEAR RYERSON" offers the epportunity for students te work off the first yeer of the Institute of Technology Course while living et home. tend with the epprovel of their own scheol boerd. The McLoughlin Collegicte and Vocational Institute Telephone: Oshawa 728.9407 Ade: ssa; 570 Stevenson Reed North te Engineering Technology. i . eg districts ere eligible te et- a turday night, | Mr, Thompson jumped over-) board to rescue his son who had| toppled from their 27?-foot cabin cruiser in rough water, FOOTBALLER DIES FARGO, N.C. (AP)----A 17. year-old high school senior, in jured Friday in a football game) at Lakota, N.C., died Saturday | in hospital. The death of Eldon Hinegardner, a lineman at) Cando high school, pushed the! toll of football fatalities) Church Stops Allowance For B.C. Animal Shelter nuns who operate the shelter and who are members of the same order, "The allowance has been cut off," said Mother Cecilia, 76, She predicted two weeks ago this move would b taken by the church to try to force her from the shelter, 'We'll just _have to do a little! i more work ourselves and cut down a bit," she said, "IT think people will rally around us, I'm not crying over ead There are six nuns at the shelter besides Mother Cecilia. The Roman Catholic Church has twice ordered Mother Ceci- lia to abandon her work at the shelter, maintaining the nuns are not leading an "accepted RCN Reduces Tts Fleet Steel Unions From 64 to 39 Vessels Get Increase PITTSBURGH (AP)--United States steel union and industry chiefs Monday night signed the White House labor contract guaranteeing 35-months of labor peace and providing steelwork- ers near 50 cents an hour in increased wages and benefits, President I. W. Abel of the AFL-CIO United Steelworkers Union and chief industry negoti- ator R. Conrad Cooper signed the contract, putting the final touch on the agreement negoti- ated last Friday to avert a ma- jor strike, _ The pact assures labor peace in the basic steel industry until at least Aug. 1, 1968. A strike would have made idle some 450,000 steelworkers and shut off 80 per cent of U.S. steel- making capacity. Approved by the union's wage policy committee Sunday, the agreement gives basic steel- workers increased earnings and benefits estimated by the union at 47,3 cents an hour, Steelworkers already were among the highest paid indus- trial workers in the country, av- eraging $4.40 an hour in wages SPIES SHRIEK PARIS (Reuters)--France's sples are reported angry t a meagre increase in the 'secret service. allotment in the 1966 budget, The weekly news magazine L'Express says the French sples, 'badly paid, lacking in resources, and short ted by the amateurs," have been pressing the premier for two months for a raise. In the budget estimates circulated among members of the National Assembly, the secret service was allotted 33,500,000 francs $6,700,000), 2,700,000 francs more than this year. oe Quoting the "average spy," L/Express says: "Not enough, There are 1,400 of us, pald the ordinary civil service salary, and for the most part recruited from the army. There are also the 600 auxiliaries, "With this little army we have to cover the world and try to outwit the vast Ameri- can, Russian, Chinese, Ger- man and British services, who have money to throw around, "It is no longer a decent job, Soon they will be count- ing out the number of pencils and bullets we use... ." a Role Outlined For Government ST, JOHN'S, Nfld, (CP)-- Forestry Minister Sauve Satur- day told the study conference of the new Newfoundland that government has assumed a new role in Canada's society, 'It must be the executive arm carrying out the will of the people, the guardian and de- fender of their freedom, inter- preter of their interests, cus- todian of the basic welfare of every citizen, and repository of the ultimate aspirations of soci- ety," he said, Mr, Sauve said government must resist the tendency to be- come paternalistic or pretend that it knows what people need better than themselves, "In- stead, and above all, govern- ment must lead dynamically and positively with foresight and planning. a8 Refiring! 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