Z 'THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, April 20, 1966 RONALD E. MACBETH, 55, of Moncton, N.B., was elected Tuesday as presi- dent of the Royal Canadian Legion at the Legion's 21st annual convention in Mont- real, Fees Boost | For Legion | Protested MONTREAL (CP) --Pro- posals for an increase in the fees paid by members to the} Dominion Command and for} dropping the annual Legion bon-} spiel threw the national conven- tion of the Royal Canadian Le- gion into a turmoil of debate' Tuesday. The proposal to eliminate the bonspiel was rejected over- whelmingly after an hour-long debate that saw Ontario dele-| gates standing in line to reach microphones. Opposition from other 'provinces was 'just as strong. The suggestion for a 50-cent increase in the per capita tax,/17th - century transaction is in now $1.90 a year, was still being! the Jimbo of forgotien things. debated when the convention recessed until today. Both proposals were part of; a 13-recommendation report from the ways and means com- mittee which pointed to a budget deficit in 1966 and urged stringent economies on the le- gion. Committee Chairman Robert Kohaly of Estevan, Sask., of-| fered a report showing revenues of $094,586 and expenditures of $1,045,602 for a deficit of $51,016, CAUSES CONCERN Delegates expressed great concern over falling advertising revenues of the Legion maga- nounced that Joseph Luns,/which rises in Brazil, ing to London Wednesday tojand for generations served as make a new try to settle an old!a natural frontier between headache about Surinam's dis-|rinam and British Guiana. puted frontier with the colony of British Guiana. runs its own domestic | but foreign and defence matters east 6 AMERICANS TOLD: "GO HOME" South Viet Crow Insults Pacifists have said in the United States!the University of Saigon called in many cities." | off a three-day hunger strike After agreeing to let the | protesting a Buddhist leader's group. meet the press at the city|charge they had accepted hall, the government refused to|bribes to support Premier Ngu- extend their seven-day stay injyen Cao Ky's military regime. South Viet Nam and ordered; The students said they were North Viet Nam!" them to leave the country "as = the strike to cag ee ix pacifists rs soon as possible," their protest was not directe Ahig they i ogg ng Sd The group said they would against the Buddhists generally. violent Action, had expressed;march to the U.S, Embassy, Saigon's 23 Vietnamese - lan- their opposition to the war in| Thursday and hand out pamph- guage newspapers announced Viet Nam. lets demanding an end to the they will not publish Friday to The group, making a week- war. They would then leave Sai-' protest pressure and harass- long "peace mission" to Saigon, |2°"- on este Meer aacuan Ys includes William Davidon, 39, a|}MINE KILLS THREE Buddhist mobs during Na ceant physics professor at Haverford) Jn the northern coastal citv of|demonstrations in Saigon, an College in Pennsylvania, Rev./Quang Ngai, a mine set off at|assassination attempt was made A. J. Muste, 81, a Presbyterian |the headquarters of the Vietna-|on an editor Saturday and some minister from New York city,/mese National party Tuesday! reporters have been threatened. and Karl Meyer, 28, associate/killed three persons and! 'The English-language Saigon editor of the Catholic Worker in' wounded four. Hue and Saigon Daily Rows Chicago, Armed Buddhists earlier tried caiq they would join the black- Mr, Muste said the pacifists.to stop a march through Quang | oy; : felt they had a "moral obliga-|Ngai by 2,000 supporters of the tion to say here, where the!party. Some shots were fired. fighting is going on, what we! Pro - government students at SAIGON. (CP)--A press con- ference called by six American! pacifists wound up in pandemo-) nium today as angry South Vietnamese youths hurled toma- toes and eggs at the Americans and shouted "Go home, go to HELLYER, "DIEF" Damage At Birth Linked | AS PEACE TEAM? OTTAWA (CP)--The possi- bility of Defence Minister Hellyer and Opposition Leader Diefenbaker touring Canada as a two-man peace team to prevent fights in officers messes was raised in the Commons Tuesday. J. Patrick Nowlan (,C-- Digby - Annapolis - Kings) asked Mr. Hellyer whether he knew of a fight in the officers | mess at RCAF Station Green- wood in Nova Scotia that arose over the recent pay increases to pilots. Speaker Lucien Lamoureux ruled that question out of order along with a similar one by Mr, Diefenbaker. Then Mr Hellyer suggested Opposition leader might join him in a tour of messes to "act as a moderating influ- ence." Mr. Diefenbaker thought this was a "good idea' but wanted to know how the team would explain the '"'discrimi- nation" inherent in the recent increases to pilots when other aircrew ranks had not re- ceived similar raises. The Speaker halted the ex- change at this point. WEATHER FORECAST Surinam In Dispute Over British Guiana LONDON (AP)--Three centu- ries ago the Dutch gave Brit-! ain a hunk of North America in exchange for a slice of South America. The bit of North America the Dutch released became New York. : The land they took over from the British now is called Su- rinam, 62,500 square miles in area, population 350,000. But don't ever think that old {still are vested in The Hague TORONTO (CP) -- Forecasts and London. issued by the weather office at The border dispute for years 5.30 a.m.: has baffled diplomats, lawyers, Synopsis: Generally cloudy and politicians of the two coun- weather with occasional show- tries. They blame it all on those|ers is expected to continue to- oldtime British, Dutch, Spanish, day throughout the province French and Portuguese who, in| However, temperatures should searching for the legendary city be onthe warm side, Colder air of El Dorado in the 16th and/from the west will spread into 17th centuries, opened up the Northern Ontario tonight and northeast shoulder of South'cover the entire province by America late Thursday. mae 5 a5 Lake St. Clair, Lake Erie, Ni- RIVER 1S BORDER ; agara, Lake Huron, Lake On- These trail, blazers saile d tario, Southern Georgian Bay down the Courantyne River, Haliburton, Killaloe, Windsor, cece London, Ha milton, Toronto: : Variable cloudiness and warm The foreign office has an- Dutch foreign minister, is com-|northwards into the "° with a few scattered showers or Su- thundershowers today. Mainly cloudy with occasional showers and turning cooler .Thursday. Winds southerly 15 to 25. Not long ago it was discov- ered that 250 miles or so from its mouth the Courantyne forked in two directions -- one south the other southwest. The British, on behalf of the Guianans, have been insisting |that the eastern branch of the| Lack Scored Courantyne is the true frontier The Dutch assert the western. MONTREAL (CP)--Paul. As- branch should be taken as Su- Selin, president of Local 375, In- rinam's frontier ternational Longshoremen's As- In between lies dense, unpop-|sociation (CLC) today blamed Surinam, like British Guiana, aftairs| Communication Brazil Demands Cuba's Inclusion MEXICO CITY (Reuters)--A zine, The Legionary, The mag-|21-nation conference aimed at azine is expected to produce ajmaking Latin America a nu- profit this year of $17,654, and|clear-free zone had before it to- other profits of $51,451 are ex-)day a draft treaty from Brazil pected from building revenues, |insisting Cuba must be included but these are not enough to off-'in the pact. set predicted losses in service,' The new draft differed sharply administration and sports train- from the original submitted by ing plan accounts. the conference's 40 - ordination Financial portions of the re- committee with Mexico's back- port were adopted by the 1,049/ing. The conference opened -. : ; voting delegates at what may Tuesday. by Guianan representatives, will be the largest convention in.re-| Mexico's desire to go ahead|'@lk with him. Both Surinam cent Legion history. There are without Cuban participation | 24 British Guiana are heading several hundred fraternal dele- sprang from hopes that growing |'0¥@'d statehood. gates also present. pressure would force Cuba to PM Buys Home ulated jungle. But- it could be rich in minerals. Perhaps the El Dorado of olden-day dreams may be uncovered there. Luns, accompanied by Surin- amian envoys, is hoping for a friendly settlement and he may have acompromise up his sleeve. Lord Walston, a junior \foreign office minister flanked Hack of communication for con- fusion which resulted in 3,500 longshoremen continuing a walk-out Started Tuesday. Mr. Asselin said it was sim ply a matter of being unable to inform all the men that the strike had been settled, He said he expected the men would be back at work by one o'clock today. The men struck at lunch time Tuesday after six of their peers were given parking tickets by harbor police The matter was presumed settled by the union and the Na- Study Asked | On Deaths KENORA, Ont. (CP) -- A Crown attorney said Tuesday he believes a scientific study should be made of the deaths of several Indians under trains in northwestern Ontario. Ted Burton, Crown attorney for the Kenora district, said in a telephone interview that a number of Indians have been killed lying on railway tracks, while others have been maimed and many pulled from the tracks in the last five years "These deaths have been damn peculiar. There is more CPN TG COS AG OF Ooms don't know whose responsibility. it is to launch a study but I do think some study should be) MONTOUR FALLS, N.Y. made."' (AP)--Supposedly wily trout bit Mr. Burton said Indians walk on pieces of cloth, petroleum |; the tracks continually because jelly balls and worms on the there are no foad links, and opening day of New York state's they often drink wine and home- fishing season. Terry Oderkirk brew. Most of the deaths have|of Lavonia, N.Y., caught a 9!4- occurred on a 70-mile stretch of pound rainbow trout in Naples | CNR tracks between Minaki|Creek with a piece of orange! and Quibell, north of Kenora. sponge for bait. NO CULT INVOLVED Although Mr. Burton said in a letter in July, 1964, to Dr. H. B. Cotnam, supervising coroner for Ontario, 'I... have it on my mind that there is a re- ligious aspect to this type of death .. ." he believes Indians have not developed a suicide cult. HERE and THERE Whitby Town Council Mon- day night authorized Town Ambulance Service to charge | $10 plus 75 cents per mile for out-of-town calls and not $8 |= plus 75 cents per mile as pre- viously reported. The rates to be charged by the Whitby firm are the same as those charged by the ambulance service in Oshawa, Oshawa Fire Department dealt with two minor calls yes terday -- a grass fire and a small car fire. City ambu- lance answered seven routine house calls. sign a treaty. | Rockliffe Park |tional Harbors Board when the GO " GO GIRLS latter said it would not only ig- OVERCLOTHED | OTTAWA (CP)--Prime Minis- nore the tickets but would al- jter Pearson confirmed Tuesday |!0w parking in what had offi- TORONTO (CP) -- These he has purchased a home in|Cially been a no-parking area. go-go girls Kad too many Rockcliffe Park but said he clothes " 'no plans to move into it Rhona Moore, 16, and |S®me years. Nora Moore, 18, told Ma- Mr. Pearson told reporters gistrate S. Tupper Bigelow, (after a cabinet meeting he has Tuesday they had been (driven by the home, which he hired as go-go girls by a iS renting out, but is unsure of recreation club, had bought {he street and address. $140 worth of clothes and "It was all done through a were returning the clothes (trust company," he said when police arrested them Purchase of the home raised They were convicted of Speculation that Mr. Pearson stealing the goods from a |Who now lives in the residence department store and put 'Set aside for prime ministers, on probation. planned an early retirement kas $s ba for NIGHT FISH EAT ANYTHING Fa 4 Remember When you could get excellent meais at reo- ces? you sonable. pr Well, still can*at the HOTEL LANCASTER 27 KING ST. WEST, OSHAWA Se: eh PBA oi Hi Bi ATTENTION FARMERS! AVE ... Why Pay More on Premium Quality GASOLINE - DIESEL & MOTOR OIL$ Farm Tanks Available. Out of Oshawe, Whitby and District X 0 [ L CALL COLLECT 668-3341 Che Rih Room NOW OPEN SUNDAY 4 TO 7.30 P.M. Continental French Buffet Served Daily 11:30 - 2 p.m. -- 5 to 8 p.m. GENOSHA HOTEL ¢ ANIMALS CHEW AGAIN LA PLATA (AP)--The Argen- tine ministry of agriculture is trying out plastic false teeth for needy cows and bulls. Veteri narians at an experimental farm say resulta are excellent so far, | _ Cloudy And Some Rain _ Turning Cooler Thursday Northern Georgian Bay, Al- goma, Sault Ste. Marie, Tima- gami, Cochrane, North Bay, Sudbury: Mainly cloudy with scattered showers or thunder- Showers this afternoon and to- night. Cloudy and cooler Thurs- day with occasional showers. Winds southerly 20 today north- erly 20 Thursday. «White River: Turning colder with occasional snow by eve- ning. Thursday cloudy and colder with a few snowflurries. Winds southerly 20 shifting to northwest 20 by evening. Ottawa region: Cloudy with a few rainshowers today. Thurs- day cloudy with sunny periods 'and scattered rainshowers. Con- tinuing warm. Winds southerly 15. Forecast temperatures Low tonight, high Thursday Windsor .. 50 65 St. Thomas... 52 65 LONdON ....cccccess 92 65 Kitchener 65 Mount Forest .... Wingham Hamilton St. Catharines Toronto Peterborough Kingston Trentan .. Killaloe .., Muskoka . North Bay Sudbury .. Earlton ...ecees . Sault Ste. Marie .. Kapuskasing White River .. Moosonee ... Timmins Good Nemes To Remember When sth or Selling REAL ESTATE Reg. Aker--President Bill MeFeeters--Vice Pres. Schofield-Aker Ltd, 723-2265 the | speak for other hespitals, but {t|cause of brain injury." isn't done in my unit and I| He said Mr. Shannon sh doubt if it is donc anywhere."| provide names of hospitals a: Asked if such treatment could| patients. + "Anybody who gets up and makes statements of this kind should back them up,"' he said. 50% MORE INTEREST 100% MORE HOURS Central Ontario Trust OFFERS the Oshawa 50% More Interest working men on sovings (We ALWAYS here) 4%2% paid and compounded quorterly from the day the sccount is opened, No waiting bd | period. Minimum account, -- 100% More Saving Hours 9 om. Phd ro Mendey te 9 a.m. te > p.m. Friday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Seturdey Estote Plonning Mortgage Loans Real Estate Sales end Purchases Pre-paid Save-by-Mail kits Free Hockey Ticket Draw | | cause brain injuries he said: To Slow School Learners (csceti essen, TORONTO (CP)--Many chil-|epilepsy, but these are Bross) |dren are slow learners OFand obvious brain damage. |trouble makers in school be-} "Tt submit that there are jcause their brains' were dam-| ry Baar ; aged just before birth, a divis-|™@ny more injuries of a more ion of the Council for Excep-|Subtle nature which results in jtional Children was told Tues- learning disabilities" = =-- He said the community is too} | day. : Z apathetic about "the terrible Robert Shannon; former-presi- J |dent of the Ontario Association) Penalties associated with an ir- regular, induced, arrested or) for Children with Learning Dis- abilities, said he saw a bleedingjOtherwise crude or careless pregnant woman, in immediate] birth." Dr. W. M. Paul, professor of need of surgical delivery, kept waiting 20 minutes in a hospital) obstetrics and gynecology at the admitting room while forms] University of Toronto medical) were signed, school and head of the depart-! 'An infant brain is damaged| ment of obstetrics and gynecol-) after eight minutes without oxy-}ogy at Toronto General Hos-) gen, he said. 'That child is| pital, said later he doubts moth-| damaged for life. ers now ever have their legs! "Tl have another letter from held to delay birth. one mother in which she de-- "This is away out of date," scribes the ordeal of having her|he said. 'It would be ridiculous) legs held together to arrest the|--just bad obstetrics, I can't birth as the doctor was not on|-- -------- }hand. "I have talked to a woman) who had this happen twice, for two children, neither of which) finished public school but were} a tremendous burden on the school system while they were lin it, "Word from all over North America indicates that subtle damage arising at birth with re- spect to current delivery and medical practices is an impor- ' . tant cause of later learning dis- REED $ Florists abilities. We have been aware) Downtown that birth injury is a cause of|f Simece & sae retardation, cerebra) palsy and' ' REED'S WEEK-END CASH, CARRY Flower Special ROSES A ga: BUNCH Plus ! @ 4% Personal Chequing Accounts--no service cherges @ 6% Guoranteed Investment Certificates--1 to $ years @ Investment Funds e Central Ontario Trust & Savings Corporation 19 Simcoe Street North, Oshawa 723-5221 Drive-in 163 Bloor W. WA LOCAL IMPROVEMENT NOTICE TAKE NOTICE THAT 1. The Council of The Corporation of the City of Oshowa intends to construct asphalt pavement with concrete curb and gutter; aspholt pavement on granular base, with concrete curb and gutter; and gronular base, as a local improvement, and intends to specially assess o part of the cost upon the land abutting directly on the work: ESTIMATED COST i Owndi's Annual Rete Per Ft. Fige. Totel Owner's ~- - Oost Per Ft. Ftge. To City's Share NAME OF STREET FROM Width Side ASPHALT PAVEMENT WITH CONCRETE CURB AND GUTTER 18' $7,457.99 $3.30 S. Olive Ave. $. Limit Lot East $9,797.51 $0.45 Plan 823 Grandview St. 115, Grandview St. S. Olive Ave. N: Limit Block 28' 4,767.61 3,243.64 0.45 Plan 74] va, Oxford St. 465.38' South of S. 18' 1,764.71 1,302.71 0.45 Limit Malaga Rd. 605.38' South of S. Limit. Malaga Rd 19° East of E. Limit Gibbons St 119' East of E. Limit 28' 1,773.00 1,773.00 0.45 Gibbons St. Ridgeway Ave. 119' East of E E 4,013.00 2,572.17 0.45 Limit Gibbons St. St. Ridgeway Ave. Limit of Nipigon N. 5S. Limit Lot 43, 3,413.59 3.30 0.45 Plan 593 16' North of N Limit of Annapolis Ave. Waverly St 3,327.79 ASPHALT PAVEMENT ON GRANULAR BASE WITH CURB AND GUTTER 30,549.13 0,90 344,040.00 0.90 E. 46' 35' Adelaide Ave. Wood St Bond St Wood St. Rossland Rd. E, 40' North of S$. Limit Lot 25, Plan 120 28,651.89 306,912.36 6.60 6.60 E. 35° 14,554.88 12,706.68 GRANULAR BASE 218.39' South of N. Limit Lot 23, Sheet 6-C(4) Plan 357 N. Limit Lot 30, Sheet 6-C(4), Plan 357 Wilson Rd. N. 215° East 24,711.90 21,955.38 3.30 2. The estimated cost of the work is $439,385.33. The special assessment is to be paid in ten equal annual instalments. 3. Application will be made by the Corporation to The Ontario Municipal Board for its approval of the undertaking of the said work and any owner may, within twenty-one days ofter the first publication of this notice, file with the City Clerk his objection to the said work being undertaken, 4, The said Board may approve of the said work being undertaken, but before doing so, it may appoint a time and place when eny objection to the said work will be considered. DATED at Oshawa this 13th day of April, 1966. L. R. BARRAND, Clerk, City of Oshawa. MONDAY IS BLITZ NIGHT... for OSHAWA Monday--April 25 | eee tenet 1 FIGHT CER 9 check-up = ' § cheque CANCER WELFARE SERVICES d re EDUCATION | re | CANADIAN CANCER SOCIETY ONTARIO COUNTY UNIT A complete house-to-house canvass of Oshawa, will take place next Monday Night, April 25th, by the Kiwanis Clubs of Oshawa, and the PIYAH Chapter of HADASSAH, assisted by many other organizations and volunteer workers, Cancer MUST BE LICKED. . . and we appeal to all citizens to please stay at home Next Monday... Keep your porch lights on and... PLEASE, Give what you can to this vital effort. Bowmanville, Brooklin and Whitby will be canvassed from April '18th