PAPAL BLESSING Pope Paul VI blesses crowd from balcony of his summer residence at Castel Gandolfo, Italy, after arrival today from the Vatican, The Pontiff drove to the sum- mer palace for two months U.K. Seen Ready To Slash Defence, Overseas Cost LONDON (CP)--The British| | AFTER 16-18 HEAVY DRINKERS DIE WASHINGTON (CP) -- The Washington Post reports that Omaha, Neb: has experienced 16 to 18 deaths among heavy drinkers, All the victims dis- played heart-tissue damage, says The Post. As a result, says The Post, lall United States use was halted | June 13 and 14 of a beer foam- leontrol agent called cobaltous salts... The. U.S. Food and..Drug) Administration \ proposed _June 29 that all. further use of the agent be discontinued "to be on the safe side," although an offi- cial said it has not been proved that the salts had caused illness or death. The Omaha cases recalled the |deaths of 18 beer drinkers in the Quebec City area earlier salts, The deaths linked with|ministration as saying that de-| | this year of a rare heart disease | known as cardiomyopathy. On /March 30, Dow Brewery closed its Quebec City plant after re-! US. Puts Curb Beer Foam Salt calling and destroying some 1,000,000 gallons of beer. A Spécial committee formed by the Quebec government to determine the cause of the ldeaths did not turn up any harmful substancés in Dow or | are added in minute quantities to beer to control gushing from containérs and improve foam stability. The Omaha cases declined when the brewery stopped using cobaltous salts, says The Post. LABOR WORLD AT-A-GLANCE By THE CANADIAN PRESS Nova Scotia--About 450 tex- tile workers on strike at Cos- | mos Imperial Mills. at Yar- mouth, Quebec--A strike by 32,500 non-medical hospital employ- ees. spreads to more hospit- | als; strikes continue for 5,000 Dominion Textile workers, 1,- 900 Empinyees of Quebec Car- tier Mining Co., 1,600 civil servanis, 400 workers On the North Shore and Labrador Railways, and 215 employees ¥ Quebec Iron and Titanium 40 North American breweries had begun using the «uhstance afier considerable European ex- perience, which apparently re- any other beer and late in June reported the causes of the cardi- omyopathy--a deterioration in the heart muscles,-- had not heen. determined. . vealed no human. hazard. The Dow plant reopened June) American beer authorities, 27. jwho had followed the Quebec STARTED IN 1964 |case closely, moved to end use The Post says cases of heart-jof the substance after the tissue damage among beer|Omaha situation was revealed drinkers began showing up injand have put aside $5,000 for Omaha hospitals as early as Au-| research into the cases, gust, 1964, after a brewery in| The Post quotes J. Kenneth that area began using cobaltous | Kirk of the Food and Drug Ad- heart-tissue damage may now | spite the move against cobaltous total 16 or.18, says The Post.|salts, 'there is no basis for say- Cobaltous salts come in the|ing cobaltous salts made any form of a pink powder. Theylone sick or killed anybody." 16,000 At INCO Idled | Wildcat SUDBURY (CP)--An airborne reconnaissance force and oul- breaks of vandalism were re- ported Sunday in an explosive wildcat 'strike that has para- llysed all district operations of the giant International Nickel Co. of Canada Lid Executives of the and the bargaining committee of Local 6500 of the Unitéd Steelworkers of America (CLC) were scheduled to meet with government officials in Toronto today in an effort to get more \than 16,000 workers back on the of study that will lead him to a decision on the Roman Catholic stand on birth control. (AP Wirephoto via cable from Rome) company visers take the view such a step government is reported ready|could start a world money cri- job to cut defence and overseas|sis, drag the dollar down ~with spending by more than $450,-|the pound and within a year or formed over the was a force weekend, The airborne 000,000 to stave off devaluation|two leave this country and the! striker said, to try to locate an of the pound. The crash program seems certain to include some sort of wage - price - dividend freeze, qualified informants said Three decrees drastic plans to deflate spend-| ing at home are being prepared for cabinet approval . Tuesday and announcement in the House of Commons Wednesday To make the emergency measures more palatable for| 8,000,000 British union mem-} bers, the Labor government is expected to set up a national minimum wage scheme, enabl- ing lower-paid workers to earn more despite a freeze. | Behind all these moves, in- formants said, lies a fundamen- tal policy decision reaffirmed by the cabinet when world pres-! sure on the pound was at its peak last week: | It is that devaluation of ster- ling below the pound's present level of $2.80 U.S. and $3 Cana- dian has been rejected as a so- lution, short-term or long-term, for the troubles besetting Brit- ain's economy. COULD START CRISIS whole Western world weaker Inco helicopter base | widely predicted in the British |press, informant |knows strike at the consumer market, probably in the form of higher jpurchase taxes and down pay- Prime Minister Wilson's ad-'ments. He said than ever the company 'is using a large A cutback of British overseas |helicopter to shuttle provisions spending in the region of $400,-|to supervisoary personnel inside 900,000 to $500,000,000 is likely|plant and mine gates coupled withito mean Meanwhile Sunday, a few --A speeded but phased with- families _were evacuated from drawal of between 25,000 and|Inco's Crean Hill mine after 30,000 troops from Britain's) power and water services were east of Suez forces now total-|cut off during the, night by un- ling around 60,000 men. known persons --A. final demand to West 'cue anni . f iS SESS Germany to take over the aco aged " t ci woe Ae $270,000,000 foreign exchange ranged' by W. E Dickie, ohiat petal < Dbl a -- conciliation officer for the On- Britaic P as ; ; f artme: f labor. Britain will ask the Atlantic SF eee uipoatih the hare sooo eed po gl union said the workers are firm! 000 men in West Gara, " lin their determination to ste --A quicker miliout fro 1 Brit joff the job until the company int Middle Fast ih 'clarifies its position on '"'the in- points including the Adu, | discriminate and_ wholesale" ieee whi ae Aden! distribution of penalties to em-| ase which is due to be evac- ployees uated by 1968. a : aie rastic epee "he union also said it wants} She dramis m¢ a gUr 8s are guarantees that no reprisals will be: taken against any em- ployees and an early and sub- stantial settlement of current) contract negotiations. ' g although a government said Sunday that he will all is austerity er Cae Death Toll 66 _ On Week-end By THE CANADIAN PRESS Accidents across Canada this weekend resulted in at least 66 deaths, all but 25 of them on holidays A Canadian Press survey from 6 p.m. Friday to midnight Sunday, local times, listed 41 Sunday local times listed ings, two persons killed in a gas tank explosion, one froma fall and another in a fire. Quebec had. 27 dead-17 high- way victims, seven drownings, and the fire death. Six persons died on Ontario highways and two were drowned, There were two traffic vic-' Two Explosions Rock Homes Of Magog Textile Employees MAGOG, Que. (CP) -- The homes of two Dominion Textile Co, employees in Magog, Que., were rocked by explosions early Sunday No injuries were reported in either case The first incident occurred at | at the home of Jeff | 2:30 a.m Bonhomme, personnel manager for the company in Magog Police said a Molotov cocktail was thrown some 25 feet from Mr. Bonhomme's home. The impact sent stones flying through a picture window and also caused a little damage in- side the house The second explosion curred less than an hour at the home of Clarence Stvan oc- later THIS IS FOR YOU! MOTEL LANCASTER 27 KING ST. WEST, OSHAWA , fices by what can only be de- |plosive nature of the situation 54 SIMCOE NORTH TUES. and WED. SPECIALS Strike Explosive The previous three-year con-| tract expired July 10, 1965 and|by union officials as one of the negotiations for a new one be-|most effective and tightest in gan May 4. Since then, the|the company history. One steel- Steelworkers joint bargaining| worker said Sunday he has be- committee has had more than|longed to five unions and taken 20 meetings with Inco. jpart in several strikes but has A union official said the com-|never seen one that so effec- pany has made two offers, but|tively tied up management. both were rejected b y union membership. The union is seek- TRUCK OVERTURNED ing substantial wage increases, Friday, a truck loaded with through shsepeghirs a C0-OP-|groceries which were to be erative wage - study program,|figwn by helicopter i longer vacations and earlier re- Rang ae? pter into the tirement Murray Mine was overturned. , ; arted|in other incidents, a car was The wildcat walkout started)" ' , ' ' Thursday at Levack Mine, 35|8Prayed with paint, windows miles northwest of here, A|Were broken and an unidentified striker said a shift boss ordered|™@n was beaten up. several men to the surface after} Thursday, Elton Turcotte, 29, they opened lunch. boxes to|of Azilda, was stabbed at the have a sandwich while awaiting|Levack site. He is recovering in work assignments. More than| hospital here, 200 workers followed them out.| Meanwhile a move was re- : : : ye = ported under way Sunday night SPREADS QUICKLY -- to factultet lack Cie ween The strike spread quickly to to man the picket line at Inco's nearby mines and by Friday morning, all Inco operations were shut down. In a company statement Sat- urday, Inco said the continuing work stoppage is completely il- lday to prevent salaried staff from going to work Ontario -- 16,000 employees | Of International Nickel Co. of Canada in Sudbury on strike; | 5,300 Canada Packers Lid, | workers have voted to strike. | at plants across the country Wednesday; 400 workers at Dominion Magnesuim in Hal eys on strike; 200 Hamilton longshoremen still on strike. | British Columbia 5,399 | workers at Cominco smelter THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, July 18, 1966 3 Landymore Ouster Seen As Imminent OTTAWA (CP) -- A defence department spokesman said Sunday wight Rear - Admiral William Landymore will be re- lieved" Of "his" post "as Atlantic Fleet commander, But he de- nied emphatically that other top naval personnel are threatening to quit over the government's handling of integration of the armed forces. The spokesman said Admiral Landymore, 50, chief of the in- tegrated Maritime__Command., has placed himself in an "in- tolerable" position by criticizing publicly unification of the forces, The admira] has claimed integration will wipe out the navy's. traditions while at the same time failing to save the | plants Sunday cancelled a strike deadline for today, but | | served a 48 - hour strike not- ice; 1,800 Aluminum Co, of Canada employees have voted | in favor of strike action at Kitimat, Kemano and_ Kil- dala, Prince Charles Switches Planes BRISBANE, Australia (AP)-- {Prince Charles switched planes today after an anonymous! was a bomb aboard the com- mercial aircraft he was to! board. Charles, scheduled to join the domestic flight at Mackey, 'North Queensland, for Mel-| |bourne, made the trip in a spe- cial aircraft Officials searched the plane when it touched down, but no} bomb was found, But the au-| \thorities took no chances and provided a special flight for the | taxpayers' money. The spokesman said in an in- terview Defence Minister Hell-| yer will be 'absolutely firm' in dealing with the admiral. | "Admiral Landymore has con travened the regulations. We don't think he has a leg to anal on. He will be relieved. This has) to be done. "We cannot have a man in his position speaking this way in) a democracy and remaining in! his position, Admiral Landy- more had several courses of ac- The strike has been described {caller told airline officials there|tion open. He could have gone on television or run for Parlia- ment or he could have written} a book--as long as he did the honorable thing and resigned." The spokesman said the de- partment might take one of two courses in action in addition to relieving the admiral of his} duties. It might dismiss him| from the service or it might go as far as to court-martial him |prince, who has been vacation-| ing on Brampton Island in the) Great Barrier Reef for three! days. DISCOVER TALL WHEAT SWIFT CURRENT, Sask. \(CP)--Scientists at the experi- mental farm here are congrat- julating each other on the de- velopment -of Orbit tall grass, formerly thought im- |practical in Canada and the \United States. The variety has general office in Copper Cliff to-|been licensed but there is not! jyet enough seed to start com- mercial sales. wheat | Good Names To Remember When Buying or Selling REAL ESTATE Reg. Aker -- President Bill McFeeters --- Vice Pres. SCHOFIELD-AKER | LTD. 723-2265 | He said it would not be known which course of action would be taker untit department officials had seen all the evidence, The spokesman denied flatly that any of the other three ad- mirals said to be on the verge of resigning are unhappy or plan to quit. | He said the three--rear-ad-| |mirals, Robert Welland, 48, dep-|With the government's me uty chief of operations at Cana- dian Forces headquarters; M.-.G,-Stirling; -51,-deputy-com- mander of Maritime Command and Pacific Fleet commander; and H. C. Burchell,' 54, deputy chief of technical services for logistics -- all hae indicated they plan to remain at their posts. : "This confrontation is with Admiral Landymore," he said. trary to some reports, Mr. Hell- yer has never -asked military leaders. {o- swear- an- sath. of loyalty to him but has simoly asked them to pledge their sup- port for government policy. "On at least two occasions he gave them all an opportunity to resign from the service with full honors if they disagreed Helps Solve 3 Biggest FALSE TEETH © Worries and Problems A little PASTEETH erinks on your dentures does all this: (1) Helps hold false teeth more firmly in Hi (2) Holds them (3) Lets you bite up to 35% harder without discomfort. FASTEETH Powder is alkaline (non-acid).Won't sour. No gummy, gooey, pasty taste or feeling Avotd embarrassment. Get The spokesman said that con- PAS' at all drug counters, 90 Redeemable MINIMUM MORE INTEREST 4 2 SAVINGS DEPOSIT RECEIPTS Interest on daily balance DEPOSIT $5,000.00 GUARANTY TRUST FEDERALLY INCORPORATED AND SUPERVISED Capital and Reserve $25,000,000 Deposits in excess of $350,000,000 F. R. Cordick, Manager \ % % ANY time 32 King St. E., Oshawe, Tel, 728-1653 legal. "Moreover, all supervi- sion and staff personnel have been denied access not only to the plants but also to their of- scribed as illegal mass picket- ing." Police 'officials said Sunday night they are aware of the ex and are using discretion in handling the strike. "We're playing it cool," one officer said, "and as long as there is no. violence, we are leaving them alone." tims and three drownings in Al- berta and four highway deaths and a single drowning in Nova Scotia. LEAN, TENDER MINCED STEAK Prince Edward three highway fatalities, an- other three persons died in Island had 69° Manitoba, two on the highways and one drowning, and Sas- katchewan had one road death and two drownings New Brunswick had a single road death and Newfoundland was fatality-free. BACON LEAN RINDLESS SLICED efic wu LEAN MINCED BEEF The survey does not con- tain natural or industrial deaths, known suicides or slay- Ings, 39% FRESH CUT, SHANK a foreman with the company's print plant Boneless BEEF 69: taste can keep a gin famous for generations i} it } Oshawa To See Unidentified Flying Murray Johnston's Half Yearly Sale one in Oshawa knows that this Half Y finest in the land, so why deprive our Outer Space the pleasures that have been yours? YOU JUST MAKE SURE THAT YOU GET YOUR SHARE OF GOODIES at Murray Johnston's Sale that starts on Mon- day 18th. of July -- Make way for the Martians. on both sides of the ocean----we wouldn't dream of changing it. What we have done, though, is change the White. Satin bottle. It's the best way we know yto salute a celebrated gin. Have a look. Have a buy. Objects If, any time after Monday 18th of July, you sight a few UFOs (unidentified flying objects) in the Oshawa area, please do not be alarmed. We cannot help it if the news of of Fine Clothing reaches the people of OUTER SPACE - after all, every- early Event is the neighbours from The Prem White Satin! That's how a gin should be "white satin um Gin with a smooth new bottle celebrated taste... that'show _ gin should be! Thats now White Satin is, Still made to Sir Robert Burnett's original 1770 London Dry formula; still exactly as dry and satin-smooth today as it ever was. Afterall, when great SIR Ri WHITE SATIN TF? Hooter f Surnett & E LONDON, ENGLAND R -- MA DISTILLERS CORPORATION LIMITED, MONTREAL, C anda -- BURNETT'S 4 ~) ~B ANADA