20 THE CSHAWA TIMES, Saturday, August 20, 1966 a BEFORE THE MAGISTRATE pe Paeshtett Bastett, a hair- less and wrinkled tomcat on: display at the Canadian National Exhibition in To- ronto Friday, is held by owner, Mrs. Yania Bawa who claims his baldness is a heredity factor. Paesh- tett's ancestry is uncertain NEWS IN BRIEF TO BUY LAND LEAMINGTON, Ont. (CP)-- The Federal government ex- pects to spend more than $1,000,000 acquiring the 110 acres of private property which remain in Point Pelee National Park, Northern Affairs Minister Arthur Laing said Friday. Mr Laing said there is no timetable for buying up the land but he thought all 3,500 acres within the park would be publicly owned within the foreseeable fu- ture. LAUNCH SHIP OTTAWA (CP) -- Launching of the Canadian Coast Guard ship Nicolet was set for the Col-| at} lingwood, Ont., shipyards noon Saturday, the transport department announced Friday The 166-foot ship, a twin-propel- ler diesel engine vessel, will carry out sounding services with the department's St. Law- rence ship channel division. BOOSTING WIN MOSCOW (Reuters) -- Soviet crime experts are calling stepped-up production of wine and soft drinks and an adver- tising campaign to make them more popular among vodka- loving Russians. The experts blamed the country's current wave of youthful crime on bad homes, where there is only one parent, or the father drinks too much or mother and father quarrel STOP BOMBERS BRUSSELS (Reuters) Po- lice said Friday night they have foiled an attempt by extremist Flemish nationalists to set off time-bombs in various parts of Belgium. <A police statement said. the attempt was frustrated Thursday night and nine of the Flemish extremists were ar- rested as they were about to leave a secret meeting place, each carrying a time-bomb to be placed in various parts of the country and to explode dur- ing the night TO EDIT PRAYERS OTTAWA (CP) -- The Cana dian Interfaith Conference has commissioned Rev. Ramsay Armitage, 77, secretary of the Anglican Prayer Book revision committee and former principal! of Wycliffe College in Toronto to edit a Canadian centennial prayer anthology. The pre anthology is to include ers of thanksgiving prayers and litanies, prayers and prayers of Canada's provinces for young people, and a chapter offering a look ada's future NAMED DIRECTOR OTTAWA (CP) Gilles E Chiasson, 39, of Ottawa been appointed director of pub- lic relations and information with the department of and technical surveys partment announced f pr historica fo es final nto Can- has mines de- iday German, U.S. Bomb Research Spurred Russian Atom Quest MOSCOW (AP) -- The Soviet Union decided in 1942 to launch an urgent project to develop an atomic bomb, because it learned both Germany and the United States were working on one a new Soviet book says The timetable of Soviet e indicates that wartime slowed the Russian pro. The Soviet was four years behind the United States on achieving a controlled atomi chain reaction and a more than four years behind in ploding its first atomic bomb The United States exploded its first in July bil ex: 1945. Soviet cess came in September, 1949.! research WHAT'S NUDE, PUSSYCAT? for} r of the United Church of Canada centennial j s of the Man, 25, Draws $200 Fine AJAX (Staff) -- A Scarboro Dog Killed With Lunber Nodals Civen |lage, was ordered to pay a $200 |fine when he pleaded guilty to leausing unnecessary pain and jsuffering to his dog. | John Horning, 25 was charg- fed on July 26 at 66 Church St. in the Village after neigh- jbors complained that he had |killed his dog with a "'two-by- four' piece of lumber. Pickering Township Police Sergeant B. Box investigated |the complaint and informed the |Court that he found a mixed |breed dog dead in a field at the rear of 66 Church St. and |a length of two - by - four near- | by. _ | Sergeant Box said that when |Horning .was questioned he said that his wife had bugged > jhim to get rid of the dog. He * said he struck the animal three jtimes with the length of lumber. Assistant Crown Attorney Ed- ward Howell said that his opinion it was a "disgraceful and disgusting' matter and that the prime intention had been to kill the dog. Magistrate H. W. Jermy said it was a "horrible crime' and ordered the accused. to pay a $200 fine or spend 30 days in jail. The. accused was given one month to pav his fine. SENTENCES SUSPENDED Two Highland Creek men were given 12 month suspended sentences when they pleaded guilty to indecent assault in Ajax Magistrate Court Thurs- day Kenneth V Daniel: T. Maelbrae, 23 had charges of rape of a 15-yeur- old girl withdrawn against them by Assistant Crown Attorney Edward Howell Attorney Howell evidence against after they had before Magisgrate H. myn. At 12.30 a.m., the 15-year- old complainant was walking east on Lawson Rd. when she OTTAWA (CP)--Two feder; accepted a ride from the ac- ally-financed refresher courses cused who said they would for civilian flying instructors' drive her home, will be held during the winter, When the accused's car turn- the transport department an- in however; although it is be- lieved his mother was 'pure' alley Mrs. Bawa says she would like him to meet friends of his type with a view to extend- ding the line perhaps as a centennial project. (CP Wirephoto) Massey, 21 and read in the both accused elected trial W. Jer- TO REFRESH FLYERS je dwest on Port Union Rd., in-| blank pistol fire will rece:y< |man, formerly of Pickering Vil-|stead of in the direction of her British Empire medals ior Gal- 'called police. suzt. EATON'S faced _point-| EATON'S | é : > ee % VIUTHLYUIY men that they had had a few|?: F. Fitzgerald' of Chatham beers and wanted ts drive|Were announced today in the she was assaulted" by the men for two hours before being ineq the child said even another | minute's exposure to the intense home, the girl demanded to|!antry. | around a bit. | Canada Gazette. | dropped off at Markham Rd. OTTAWA (CP) -- A fireman} who risked asphyxiation and a} who policeman ; here sh ing.| The awards to Thomas Mc- : , : j 4 vagal sid og oo Dade of Hamilton and Constable ? % " , Fireman McDade saved a! i ee { ; : The girl was taken to a dead- ; i : zi ' 3 Ay 2 A x» ed $ f; baby from a crib on the second F ie ' E end road in the Township where floor of'@ burning home last i 3 : be Nov. 18. The doctor who exam-| g »~ High Fashion at a Reasonable and Sheppard Ave. She imme- é diately proceeded to her boy- Se have taken the Price ! friends home in the area and = SPORTS JACKETS Choose from an excellent sel- ection of Harris and wool tweeds in new hues for Fall '66. Handsome 3-button style with patch pockets and smart contrasting linings. A wise choice for work, back-to-school or casual wear, Predominant colours of blues, olive greens, greys or browns. Sizes 36 to 44, some short and tall models in the group. EACH 27.95 DRESS SLACKS 100% wool flannel slacks treated with 'Wonder-Crease' for continued good looks. Choose plain or contin- ental style. Continental style in sizes 30 to 36, pleated belt loop style in sizes 30 to 46. Colours of charcoal, brown, forest green or medium grey in the group. These neatly tailored slacks are also a Constable Fitzgerald of the oe : a provincial police was sent with Counsel Howell said the men two other constables to a farm| had no' previous criminal rec-| home last Oct. 12 to arrest a) ord and appeared to come from} man suspected of robbery and_ a "reasonably good" back-! assault, ground. He said the accused Maelbrea was married. tified in the citation as McEllis-| Magistrate Jermyn in sent- trum, from the house and de- encing the accused said they) spite suffering three gunshot would report to a probation of-| wounds to the legs caught the ficer monthly and ordered them! man and handcuffed him. not to touch liquor for the period of one year. He pursued the suspect, iden-; The citation said the only rea- son Constable Fitzgerald was AJAX (Staff) -- A Claremont) not killed was that McEllis- man was fined $100 when he. trum's automatic pistol jammed pleaded guilty to driving while|in the last seconds of the pur- under suspension in Ajax Mag-' suit. istrate Court Thursday. it de conmdeved that< Con: Garnett Mailes charged) stable Fitzgerald took consider- on June 26 by Pickering Town- able risk with his life in appre- ship Constable H. Reatson after hending this criminal without a one-car accident at Highway resorting to the use of fire- 2 and Audley Rd. at 1.56 a.m. | arms," Reatson said the accused's ~ vehicle was a total wreck and had apparently been heading south: on Audley Rd: when it crossed Highway 2 and left the road The accused said he had ap- parently fallen asleep while driving and admitted being put under suspension in September of last year news agency to distribute its of- Magistrate H. W. Jermyn /ficjal information are '"'abso- fined the accused $100 and gave |ytely false and without founda- him an alternative of 15 days tion," in jail The reports originated with $10 FINE the legislature correspondents AJAX (Staff) -- Temple Taxi for l'Action ad Le Soleil, Que- owner Thomas Austin of Bay|bee City evening dailies, Their Ridges was ordered to pay a Stories, attributed to official $10 fine when he pleaded guilty sources, said the English-lan- to having an unsafe vehicle on guage agency concerned would the road set up a French section to dis- tribute government information Quebec Denies Publicity Move QUEBEC (CP) -- A spokes- man in Premier Johnson's of- fice said Friday reports that the provincial government plans an agreement with an international nounced Frday. One,. for east- ern instructors, will be at the Brant - Norfolk Aero Club in Brantford March 28-April 6, next year BIRTHS DECLINE OTTAWA (CP)--Births dur ing July were again lower than that month in recent years, the Dominion Bureau of Statistics reported Friday. Registrations numbered 31,174, a decrease of} 12 per cent from 35,335 in July,} 1965, bringing the total for the! first seven months of the year) to 230,040, down 7.9 per cent from 1965 WILL COMMAND LONDON, Ont. (CP)--Major C. G. Kitchen, 36, of London, will command the reconnais- sance squadron of the Fort! Garry Horse during six months| of peacekeeping duty in Cyprus} starting in October. He is cur-| rently attending the Canadian Army Staff College in Kingston ACTOR AILING DETROIT (AP)--Actor Rob- ert Young, 59, described as suf-| fering from physical and metal exhaustion entered hospital! here for observation Thursday NEW YORK (AP)--A Co- lumbia University ocea- nographer proposed Thursday that Long Island Sound be dammed. He said it would cre- ate the largest fresh water reservoir in the United States and provide New York City with 12 times the amount of water normally needed each day Dr. Robert Gerard's idea was outlined in the current is- sue The Journal of Science. The federal water, resources committee had asked for "far- out ideas" to increase the wa- ter supply in light of the seri- ous water shortage in parts of the United States. Glard, of Columbia's La- mont Geological Laboratory, proposed building one bridge- dam in the vicinity of the Whitestone Bridge, which con- 125 MILE-LONG DAM MIGHT SOLVE CITY'S WATER PLIGHT in Quebec and would deliver it | in English outside the province. Montreal La Presse reported Wednesday that. by order-in- council about a month ago the Union Nationale government placed the information office di- nects Queens and the Bronx, (rectly under cabinet control,| and another at the eastern | taking responsibility for its op- end of Long Island Sound | eration out of the hands of the some 125. miles from New /|provincial secretary. York City. The latter bridge- La Presse's cnief correspond- dam would connect Orient |ent at Quebec said the govern- Point, L.1., with a point about | ment was placing increased re-| five miles east of the Connec- |liance for distribution of official | ticut River outlet in that state. | news on an organization called The two dams, Gerard fig- |Telbec, created some months| ured, would entrap 14,000,000,- | ago in Montreal to distribute in 000,000 gallons of water--all |the province information on be- salt water to begin with. But | half of clients--mainly commer-| within 744 years or more, he | cial enterprises -- subscribing said, fresh water from the | to its facilities for transmission | Housatonic: and Connecticut | by teletype to newspapers and rivers, plus that from streams, | broadcasting stations, ground water and precipita- |---------- tion, will have "pushed out" enough salt water to make the Sound water drinkable. He said the salt water would wash over the dam into the ocean on one end of the sound, and over into the East River here on the other end. wise choice for school, work or casual wear, EACH 13.98 EATON'S MALL LEVEL DEPT. 929 PHONE 725-7373 = 4 sail Save On These Specials In EATON'S Fabric Department! CLEARANCE OF 45" WIDE PLAIN and PRINTED RAYONS You have a large selection of weaves to chocse from, thot will suit a wide range of sewing needs, including dresses, blouses or 2-piece outfits. A large variety of colours in the group Teen-agers Sing Beatles' Praise Two Oshawa teenagers who Wednesday per- formances of the Beatles at attended the night. The star of the television show Father Knows Best had} been playing in the comedy Generation here. He hoped to be back in the play by Monday. RECALL LIBERATION PARIS (AP)--A brief cere- mony in the courtyard of the Paris police prefecture Friday SAIGON (AP) -- Inflationary marked the beginning of a week foyer is cooling, South Viet of celebrations commemorating Nam's sick economy is improv- the liberation of Paris 22 years ing, and the prognosis is good ago. It was in the prefecture,' Phat is the verdict of U.S across the square from Notre and Vietnamese economists who Dame Cathedral. where resist-|haye been doctoring South Viet ance fighters and police sympa-|Nam with such measures as a thetic to Free France set up a devaluation June 19 of the pi- strong point to fight the German actre. the monetary unit. ccupation force The cost of living continued to soar after devaluation, but since about July' 20 prices have levelled off. This has led to a Black Brant Flight Success FORT CHURCHILL, Man Miss Douglas, a native of Ca- (CP)--A Black Brant 58 rocket yuga, Ont., first came to Japan|carrying a barium payload to in 1930 and taught English and create an artificial aurora bor- at Shizuoka and Yama- ealis was fired 215 miles into wa (English-Japanese) the atmosphere at dawn Friday schools until 1941 when she was; A spokesman for the National forced to leave Japan because!Research Council, which oper of the Second World War. ales the range 610 miles north Miss Douglas returned to Ja-/of Winnipeg, said the firing pan in 1947 and has since been)"was nearly perfect.' teaching at Eiwa Gakuin schools .in Yamanashi and To- KVO. Missionary, 68, To Return Here TOKYO (AP) -- Miss. Leona Douglas, 68-tear-old missionary left for home today after devot- 30°) education in Japan ars to of a two-part series for experi- ments conducted by a team of jseven scientists from the Max | Planck Institute of Munich. The {group now goes to a National }Aeronautics and Space Admin- jistration base in West Virginia to conduct similar tests | in the first rocket shot, The disclosures on the Soviet|barium was dropped from the atom bomb project were pub- payload at altitudes of 145 miles lished in a recent series of ar-.and 215 miles, the first at two ticles in the official newspaper| minutes after liftoff and the Sovietskaya Rossiya (Soviet second three minutes later Russia) Purpose .of the experiments The articles were. chapters;|was to give scientists a visual from a forthcoming biography/pattern of geomagnetic ines late Soviet nuclear physi-|and shift, providing an indica Igor Kurchatov, by another tion of the electron flows at two Soviet physicist, Igor Golovin different levels Golovin wrote that G. N. Fle-| In the first shot, fired at sun roy, a colleague of Kurchatov, down, the vapor trail travelled a letter to the Soviet gov-|from east to west while today's ernment in 1942 urging the start| vapors travelled east and then of an A-bomb project because! veered south. he was convinced Ameéri-; The second shot been cans were keey their uranium)postponed twice because of un- secret.' 'favorable weather conditiong cist sent the has Financial Experts Predict Viet Nam Improvement "| warfare. The launching was the second, jand shortages will be avoided.|Rex Harrison, Maple Leaf Gardens, say the British quartet have not lost popularity but are just "fab" (fabulous). | "When the Beatles appeared }on stage, the fans went hysteri- ; cal, and when Paul sang 'Yes- terday,' they all but brought SPECIAL, yard.. "VANITY FAIR" 45" WIDE "REQUEST" RAYON BOUCLE REG. 3.50! The textured look for Fall fashion! Hand-washable and crease resistant in plains, two-tones, and small checks! 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Go-Go boots are zippered up the back love the matching shoulder satchel that captures the same . sport the new little heels and'oval toes, And you'll mood, Shoe sizes 5 to 10, medium width, A. Go-Go Boots. SPECIAL, yard. . = .- @ PHONE 725-7373 omAT® B. Shoulder.Bag. A big pouch on EATON'S UPPER LEVEL, DEPT. 233 smaller ones on the other! EACH one side and two 8 98 iJ EATON'S MALL LEVEL, DEPT. 239 PHONE 725-7373 EATON'S UPPER LEVEL, DEPT. 233 GIRL FROM A.U.N.T.? Stefanie Powers will star in} the new Girl from U.N.C.L.E.| |series this fall | EATON'S TELEPHONE ORDER SERVICE OPEN MONDAY TO SATURDAY 8:30 A.M. TO 6 P.M. THURSDAY AND FRIDAY 8:30 A.M. TO 9 P.M. cautiously optimistic outlook by = ac Hp i vane U.S, and Vietnamese officials. "The girls kept vive Ciniy In a recent report, Au Thru- | aims and screaming 'Ringo,| ong Thanh, minister of econ- turn around.' When he turned omy, said the need for such around, and waved, everyone basic commodities as steel, | screamed again," said Judi Roe | wire, wheat, sugar and ciga- 1030 Regent Dr. : i rettes has been met and their "tf the afternoon performance rising costs have been stopped. was fab. the evening show was| He also said import licences superfab,"" echoed the two girls| issued since the devaluation of whose devotion they felt had| the piastre amounted to more been expressed by taking in| than $100,000,000 U.S both shows. ' | "Furthermore more than 120 'fhe heat was stifling, the companies, capitalized at more Gardens was packed and the | than 1,800,000,000 piastres (more St. John Ambulance had_ their than $15,000,000), are being ac-| hands full," the girls recalled tively established to infuse a ------- "oe -- é : new spirit of competition in the * . market with a subsequent drop Lost Tribe Lives in prices and lowering of living costs." MH PLAN NEW PROJECTS In Rain Forests Silk, automobile tire and tex-| MEXICO CITY (Reuters) -- lile factories were among the} lost tribe descended from the | new industrial projects planned. | ancient Mayan civilization is be- | American economists he re} lieved living somewhere in the agree that Viet Nam's economy | rain forests of southern Mexico is out of joint after 20 years of} The leader of a five" than They say many ob-/expedition just' returned from stacles must be overcome be-|three months in the Yucatan! fore the country can rise to its! Peninsula reports finding defi- full potentialities. |nite evidence of its existence. | The United States' largest sin-| 'The group's leader, a 21-year-| gle aid program is being car-'old Londoner, Michael Blair, | ried out in Viet Nam. For the|said they did not meet any three-month period ending Sept.|members of the lost tribe but | 30 the cost will be $160,000,000! saw banana and maize planta- for commercial import and sur-|tions which could' have been plus food allotments alone. The! planted by Indianrzl etao shrd sum does not include loans and | some 20 years a00. He thought services and similar outlays. In} jt possible the tibasthen wre the last fiscal year the United | {acandon Indians States placed $400,000,000 in Viet) Only 168 Lacandon Indians Nam's commercial export pro-!are known to exist. The Lacan- gram to bolster the country's dons. in two main groups in economy, ; Chiapas province bordering Gu-| South Viet Nam exports | atemala, are dying out because | mainly rubber, tea and siliceous of jnbreeding and diseases sand, which is used in glass!cuch as yellow fever. endemic making in the aréa. Hoarding, except of a few lux- - ury items, has ceased, Ameri- can Officials said, and goods are getting to market Import restrictions have been liberalized. It is hoped, by cre- ating greater competition in the mer import field, that commodities | FAMOUS FATHER | will reach the market in ample| TV actor Noel Harrison is the quantity and at the right..fimejson of stage and screen actor