\ 1Q THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mondoy, June 12, 1967 i) COUNTY LINES Family Members Honor Mrs. Everett Mountjoy KEDRON (TC) -- Eighty members and friends of the Mountjoy family gathered, June 4, at the Mountjoy picnic grounds, to celebrate Mrs. Everett Mountjoy's 80th birth- day. The youngest member of the group was Scott Branton, Mrs. Mountjoy's first great- grandchild. The guest of honor was surprised with a large cake and full complement of 'candles as well as numerous gifts. Life Membership KEDRON (TC) --. Kedron UCW honored Mrs. Everett Mountjoy by presenting her wtih a life membership pin. Mrs. William Skuce, president, pre- sented the pin; while Mrs. J. Starkoski, Mrs. Mountjoy's niece and a former president of the UCW, presented a corsage of roses. Mrs. Mountjoy is the only charter member of the Kedron Ladies' Aid formed in 1913, who is still active as a worker. She was always a valued member of the WA, taing the lead in mis sionary studies and relief work. Cycle Tour COURTICE (TC) -- Pete Grove and Chris Wright, of Surrey, England, who plan to cycle across Canada and through the United States to Mexico, are guests of Mr. and Mrs, Norman Adair. Their next stops will be Toronto and Kitchener. They expect to reach Mexico by Jan. 1. Their North American trip, which was financed by working on a Norwegian tanker, is equal distance to their trip last year from England to Athens, Greece. Meditheatre Packs 'Em In,| | \/ i Although 'Drop Like Flies' «;pwotp PALMER" iy oa teas tows) AQT AAD By ROSEMARY SPEIRS MONTREAL (CP) -- Medithe- atre, where Expo visitors "drop like flies'? while open-heart and brain operations are flashed be- fore their eyes in all-too-vivid technicolor, has been packing them in faster than almost any ---"@ther fair attraction. On good days 3,000 visitors an hour pass into the wooden Man and his Health pavilion to reach the theatre's half-hourly shows. And on really good days, up to 300 of them may require first- aid attention during the 12 hours the pavilion is open. "We have no objection to you using these figures,'"' one public relations officer said Friday. "The more people hear about the faintings, the more come crowding in here to see the show." The health-theme pavilion is built around Meditheatre--a six- sided room where live actors display the latest medical tech- niques while three large screens above them flash with scenes showing a thalidomide child's adaptation to life, modern kid- It's a warning well taken. Two weeks ago a man swooned and fell from one of two ramps where visitors stand to watch the screens--a drop of about 15 feet. "This is the part that really as surgeons on the screen delved into a red chest cavity to operate on a pulsing heart. The sequence comes about halfway through the show and by that time half of the audience was sitting on the floor. St. John Ambulance volun- teers who man pavilion first-aid stations equipped with smelling salts said the number requiring help because they feel dizzy or actually pass out has dropped considerably since recent im- provements in the air condition- ing. "On the worst hot weekends we got about 300 a day but the last few days it's been more like 10 a show," one volunteer said. "Today a lady walked right ney treatment and several oper- ations. "If for any reason you feel sick, please sit down to avoid|door and saw her | lyi falling," a voice announced Fri- there," But atin past me saying she was fine and then dropped once she got out- side the pavilion. I opened the Starvation Can Kill More Than All Wars, In Decade OTTAWA (CP)--More people will die of starvation alone in the next decade than all the people who died in all the wars of history, J. Duncan Edmonds of Winnipeg told the Presbyte- rian general assembly Friday night. Mr. Edmonds is a United Church elder who is. part-time executive director of the gov- ernment's international devel- opment program and a former executive assistant to External Affairs Minister Martin. He said Canadians have to upgrade the priorities they are giving to international develop- ment as a matter of "stark human survival." He chal- lenged church people to lead a Canadian crusade to do more for underdeveloped nations as a climax to centennial celebra- tions. Margaret Kennedy of Mont- real said conditions in India have not improved over last year, but the missionaries and government are better organ- ized to cope with them. Miss Kennedy, who returned to Can- ada last week, has served as a missionary in Bhil -region for the last 30 years. HUNGER PERSISTS She said fear and hunger still persisted in the villages. The Presbyterian Church in Canada raised $157,976 in 1965-66 for relief in India. Another speaker, Rev. Dr. E. H. 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