PINEWOOD The 12th Oshawa Cub Pack held a father-and-son banquet at Harmony United Church Hall on Saturday evening. Photo shows four of the Cubs pvho won hon- ZAdental Death Toll "Jim" Edwards, 9, and his father 'Mel' Edwards; Gary Welker, 11, and his father Maxwell Welker and Bill Dressing, 9, and his father, A. W. Dressing. All four ors in the Cub Pinewood Derby for model race cars recently, From left to right (boys with their father) they are: Brian Wilson, 9 and his father, Everett Wilson; Hits 54 On The Weekend By THE CANADIAN PRESS | riding leM the road near Brace-|Ont., in a two-car collision near wage guerrilla war in an effort Canada's accidental death toll reached at least 54 during the weekend. A Canadian Press survey from 6 p.m. Friday to midnight Sunday, local times, included 44 persons killed in traffic mis- haps, four drowned, one fire death and five miscellaneous deaths. Ontario recorded 26 deaths-- 22 traffic, three drowinings and one man killed when his plane crashed on takeoff from a lake in Northern Ontario Four per- sons died and seven were in- jured in a car-bus crash near Ottawa. Quebec had 12 traffic deaths) and one person killed when a) snowmobile and a train col lided. Alberta reported five traffic) deaths and three deaths appar-| about 32 miles east of Cornwall.) ken, ently caused by asphyxiation. Nova Scotia had two traffic] pine, in the flaming wreckage and New Brunswick,| of deaths bridge. Sudbury. Banke Altbauer, 25, Windsor,| Ronald Pringle, 13, Toronto, in hospital when the car he was|in hospital after the bicycle he driving was involved in a col-| was riding was struck by a car lision with two other cars. at Painswick, Ont., near Bar- Ian Deschatelet, 18, Sturgeon! rie. Falls, when struck by a car| David Panter, 7, Peterbor- near his home ough, drowned when he fell Humphrey William Sicles, 24,/through ice on the Otonabee Southwold, Ont., in hospital) River after the car he was driving) George Mcllveen, 74, Edwin crashed into a tree near his|Anold Myers, 71, William Ar- home. nold Cross, 72, Thomas Sismey, Ralph Frederic Autier, 53,/55, all of Cardinal, Ont., when Picton. when his car pvent out|their car collided with a bus of control and struck a tree/near Stittsville, 16 miles west near Picton. of Ottawa. Leroy Norman Lohrka, 31,; Gloria Sarazin, 7, and her sis- 'ort Colborne, when _ his car) ter Peggy Ann, 4, drowned left the highway and struck ajafter breaking through ice on a mailbox near Fort Erie, Ont. /river near their home on the Francois Lauzon, 26, Corn-| Golden Lake Indian Reserve. wall, when his car left the road) Edward Johnson, 24, Oshwe- when his car hit a tree P. B. Purdie, 44, South Pocu-| near Cayuga. Donald Buchanan, 57, Ottawa, a car in Ot- P his light plane after it|when struck by Manitoba and British Columbia] crashed after takeoff from Lake tawa. | each reported one. B.C. also): had a fire death and a drown- east of Timmins. ing. Saskatchewan, Newfoundland and Prince Edward Island were fatality-free. The survey does not include known slayings or suicides, in- dustrial or natural deaths. The Ontario dead: SUNDAY Lulu Tilly, 74, North Bay, after the car in which she was! Marxist Ghana Radio By SIDNEY TAYLOR ACCRA (Reuters)--The Marx-| ist editer of Kwame Nkrumah's paper The Evening News has been arrested by the military} government which toppled the Nkrumah regime, Ghana radio announced today. The editor is Eric Heyman, one of Nkrumah's close advis- ers. The paper he edited was! founded by Nkrumah himself. Heyman and the editor of the government morning paper, T D. Balfour, were both on the wanted list put out by the Na- tional Liberation Council after Thursday's coup d'etat. Hey- man was generally considered in Ghana to be one of the inner circle of officials of Nkrumah's Convention People's party who made the main national policy decisions. The liberation council today legalized all laws passed by the Nkrumah regime except those superseded by a decree of the council. A proclamation the council also ruled that all judges and) civil servants were to remain in office and legalized all acts and decrees made by its members since the coup. City-Wide Delivery MITCHELL'S DRUGS Simcoe N. 723-3431 Open Evenings Till 9 P.M Azure, when he walked into the path of a car Editor Held about 30 miles south FRIDAY Anne Hebert, 74, Chatham, SATURDAY when struck by a car while re- Harold Green, 61, Hamilton,| turning home from church Edward Gondor, 83, and Mrs. Leslie Gondor, 41, in a three- Elizabeth Davidson, Tor-;car accident on icy pavement 5, onto, in hospital after she was|four miles south of Graven- tion, who had been leading a} run over by her father's car in, hurst a driveway. Robert Nebeau, 9, Sault Ste Danield Flood, 9, Toronto, in| Marie, Ont., of injuries received hospital when struck by a car.| when struck by a car near his Andre Gagnon, 69, Lively,i home. |there was a good chance that |the new regime would be able \to attract both short- and long- term credits which Nkrumah was unable to obtain. DMIRE COMMITTEE Announces night that the chief justice and A other judges had sworn an oath They expressed admiration \for the economic committee--) of allegiance to the new regime. | ' composed of financial experts} Meanwhile, the country was) ; - whose advice Nkrumah rarely quiet following a weekend of M celebrations welcoming the new|heeded--set up by the liberation government, E very where the council. legend of Kwame Nkrumah,| The new regime appeared to built up since Ghana gained in-|be well consolidated today, with dependence from Britain in|no recent reports of resist- 1957, was being systematically | ance. crushed. Thousands of white sheep-- Portraits of the "Redeemer" | the festive dish for auspicious} which stared down from walis|occasions--were roasted during| everywhere were destroyed and|the weekend to celebrate the| the giant bronze statue of Nkru-| overthrow of the Nkrumah gov- mah which stood in front of the|ernment and welcome the re- Parliament buildings was top-|lease of some 506 political. pris- pled and broken up. oners since the coup. The coup, carried out by the Hundreds of copies of Nkru- military and supported by the|mah's books on neo-colonialism | nation's police, was thought were tossed into bonfires. The likely to give a big boost to the ex - president's favorite brain- country's near - bankrupt econ-|child, the Ideological Institute omy. at Winneba, was closed soon Western diplomats believedjafter the coup. OVER 40 YEARS EXPERIENCE! take advantage of it! 24 hour ser- vice; and radio dispatched trucks al- woys on the ready to serve you, Fuel Oi! Budget Plan aveilable. FUEL oll TO CONVERT AND CALL McLAUGHLIN 723-348 l KING ST, W. COAL & SUPPLIES NOW OPEN! ALCAN Furniture & Appliances 452 Simcoe St. S. 723-0011 Oshawa's. New Furniture and Appliance Store feat- uring Admiro! T.V., Zenith, Top Service and mony tom lines of furniture and appliances DERBY RACE TESTS ADVANCE TO "AN UNKNOWN PLACE" TORONTO (CP)--The Team- sters' Union plans a march to "an unknown place" by more} than 1,000 men today as On-| 1ario's trucking Sirine enters its sivth wee A union spokesman said the demonstration should be able to win for the 8,500 striking mem- bers of the International Broth- erhood of Teamsters (Ind.) the coniract they want from the Motor Transport Industrial Re- lations, Bureau ,representing 55 trucking companies. The march will involve mem- bers of the union's Toronto lo- cal, one of five involved in the wage-and-working - hours dis- pute. The other locals are Ham- ilton, London, Windsor and Kingston, The spokesman said Sunday night that the men were to meet} lat Teamster headquarters at} /6:30 a.m. and begin the marci* an hour later. \ boys will be competing in the next Pinewood Derby which opens next week. Some 700 city Cubs will be competing. --Oshawa Times Photo Talks 'Resume By CARL HARTMAN BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP)-- Guerilla War Seen Possible sures connor tarot com --Anti -| Session in nearly eight months, | SINGAPORE (AP) i Communist students in Indone- | looking for a way to get going | sia may go underground and|a@gain on the Kennedy round of| - |talks for breaking down bar-| to topple President Sukarno, in-| Tiers to international trade. formants said Sunday The Kennedy round derives) Military forces loyal to Gen. its name from the Trade Ex-| Abdul Haris Nasution, the|Pansion Act which the late pres-| ousted defence minister, may|!dent Kennedy put through in| support the students, the in- 1962. It seeks to reduce customs formants said. duties by half. Radio Jakarta said today,| The scheduled two-day Com-| however, that Nasution has de-| i clared' his support of Sukarno. |@8 usual behind closed doors. It} It said that Nasution, in a re-|Will be attended by cabinet) cent written message to a Mos-|members for the six member lem Mohamadian party confer-| countries --France, West Ger-| ence, said the Indonesian peo-|Many, Italy, Belgium, The ple 'must always maintain and Netherlands and Luxembourg. defend the unity of the armed, There is a new interest in forces, the masses, and the|bringing in Britain and other great leader of the revolution,|West European countries and Bung Karno (Sukarno)." Nasu- Britain's membership will be a tion was removed as defence subject of lively discussion in minister last week. the corridors. The Singapore informants on MUST GIVE SIGN the students' alleged anti-Su- ¢ f saghes . But nothing new can happen karno plans said they gathered until President de Gaulle of} 'was recommended by a concili- | treatment 1000 Teamsters Pian For March He said that if the destination was known, "'they might pull the troops in." The union is demanding a re- duction in ihe work ween to 30 hours from 48 with no pay re- duction, restrictions on the use of non-union drivers and other} benefits. REJECT OFFER The companies have offered pay increases -up to 56 cents an hour for a 46-hour week, reduc- ing it to 43 hours in a 34-year contract. The companies' offer ation board report which the un- ion rejected. Before the strike, city drivers received $2 an hour while high- way. drivers were paid on a mileage basis. The union membership voted to strike when it rejected the) conciliation board's recommen- dations. THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, Februry 28, 1966 3 The strike was planned to start. Jan. 2 against one com- pany, Consolidated Truck Lines Ltd., but teamsters walked out at several other Toronto com- eer ee oe eee eee The bureau retaliated by clos- ing all its members, saying a strike against one was a strike against all. The strike has been marked by violence, arrests and: dam- age to trucks. Meanwhile, the Toronto joint council of the Teamsters' Un- ion, which embraces most of the province's locals, has proposed that the union tny to regain its affiliation with the Canadian La- bor Congress. The CLC expelled the union six years ago after a raid by the union's Vancouver section against the Brotherhood of Railway and Steamship Clerks (CLC) in British Colum- bia. | KILLED Market ("BOILED AS BOOT" HERO STABBED IN SKID ROW FEUD VANCOUVER (CP)--Boiled | as a Boot, hero of a hotel fire in Vancouver's skid road last weekend who later appealed to people to leave him alone, is recovering from wounds | suffered in a stabbing. Boiled as a Boot, the name he gave to police after he had rescued 'six elderly men from the hotel, received emergency after being at- tacked Friday night in a skid road beer parlor. He told police a man came up to him and said: "You're Boiled as a Boot. You're a hero. Could I shake your hand?" Donald W. Buchanan, a trustee of the National Gal- lery, was killed in Ottawa Saturday when struck by a | | ris | | He said the man_ then stabbed him twice and ran out of the beer parlor. Eight | car. Mr, Buchanan, 57, was stitches were needed to close the wounds. | co-ordinator of the Expo "67 Boot, 35, says his real name fine arts exhibit. is Jaydee Dymons. But his | sister in Edmonton says it is | James D. Breland, and Ed- monton friends confirm this. Whatever his real name, | Boot says he just wants to be left alone. He says he is happy in his drifter's life on skid road and is not inter- ested in offers of jobs, money | and clothes that have come | his way since the hotel res- cue, } HEAT WITH OIL DIXON'S OIL 313 ALBERT ST. 24-HOUR SERVICE 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER WILL DENY PASSES | LONDON (AP)--The British} mon Market session will be held| government ruled Monday that) sports writers from Communist East Germany will not be al-| lowed into England to report the} world soccer championships | next July. Sports Minister Denis | Howell announced the decision| in a letter to the British Sports Writers Association, The British | pire in mid-1967, and a lot of| hard bargaining will have to| |\take place even after the Com- mon Market makes its propos-| als. vad hyp eden eee 2 tie. | France gives some official sign yeas do nse ree 4a a hero ©S-\that he has changed his mind. | ndonesian radio and =more/ He blackballed Britain three) confidential information" re-| meaner eal |years ago. ceived directly from Jakarta. First order of business at the Sukarno outlawed the anti-| meeting is to determine how to Communist student organiza-|share the burden of subsidizing tion -KAMI after the group car-|the export of farm surpluses, ried out demonstrations 1 as t| mostly grain produced in Wednesday and Thursday pro- France. There is little doubt testing Nasution's ouster. Nasu-|that West Germany will bear a considerable part of the burden but the exact percentages are still in dispute. Closely connected with this donesian broadcasting agency,,problem is the question of har- announced Sunday that four|monizing prices for beef and members of Sukarno's palace|dairy products throughout the guard were shot and wounded|six countries. Chancellor Lud-| during the student demonstra-|wig Erhard's government will tion Thursday. It claimed the|strongly resist efforts to cut guards were sprayed with ma-|subsidies to its dairy farmers, chine-gun bullets by '"'counter-|but will probably have to yield. revolutionary elements' in aj} President Johnson's authority crackdown on Communists, is reported to have left Jakarta. Radio Jakarta, the official In- NOT FOR THE DEAF The "SPECTRA", a new tiny aid -- so small it con barely be seen when worn --a miracle to say the least. Fantastic, for anyone with nerve deafness, As powerful as aids three times its size. Once you see and try it you'll be convinced that this is. what you have wanted for yeors, Ask about our 5-year guarantee. Just phone or write Poul Bellinger, 723-5401. (Acousticon Hearing Aids) 1119 Northridge St., Oshawa blue jeep. 'to make the tariff cuts will ex- earning only 3%--that's not as much So why settle for less ? Our special account is called a Savings Deposit Receipt Account. Here's how it works: You are given a special pass book and can withdraw your money at any time on demand, but you do not have chequing privileges. The minimum deposit is $5,060. Interest at 4\,% is calculated on the daily balance start- ing from day of déposit. However, interest is not paid on money withdrawn within 30 days of deposit. like yourself. Please visit, wr Savings Deposit Why settle for A Federal Trust Company--Capital and Reserve § Deposits over $350,000,000 32 KING ST. E., OSHAWA JAmeES 1. VESSEY, Manager New kind of account pays 50% more interest You may have $5,000 or more in savings which is Guaranty Trust has a special account for people in your position which pays 442% on the daily balance. The Savings Deposit Receipt Account is used by corporations, trustees, clubs, hospi- tals and churches as well as by individuals of the Guaranty Trust office nearest you. He will arrange for the opening of your 414% with safety guaranteed. Guaranty Trust Company of Canada journalists had asked that the| 50 YEARS East Germans be allowed visas. ! IT'S THAT TIME AGAIN! Income Tax Returns Prepared BOB CLANCY ACCOUNTING 299 Simcoe St. S. 725-0397 Returns also being completed at The United Auto Workers Hall 44 Bond Street East (CP Wirephoto) | DON'T FORGET Che Rih Room NOW OPEN SUNDAY 4 TO 7:30 P.M. 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