mises eather y and Tuesday. southwesterly 15, Temperatures t, High Tuesady seven 00 82 «» 60 80 . 35 80 55 80 sress of Racial ngaged in organ- operative among 0 farmers in a alert" project un- verty program. on a newspaper s year, the Lou- ure's committee n activities said that Zippert be- olicy committee delegates to the jominated World in 1965. GA.*, JUET /ENTION ING ; Facilities 400 Guests id vice a d Staff | ] E YOUR N NOW! 4641 | ASSOC. 16th P.M, BRITISH INFLUENCE LINGERS 20 YEARS By R. SATAKOPAN state legislatures, the prece- various British monarchs and some have British staff mem- THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, August 14, 1967 3 59 Die Across Canada "The Englishness has come to the successive viceroys of India bers. Huge portraits of former NEW DELHI (AP)--Britain's colonial rulers pulled out of In- dia 26 years ago Tuesday but they left behind a cultural, ling- uistic and governmental way of life that lingers. There are today still zealous nationalists who complain that India is more British than Brit- ain. When the British were here as rulers, imitation of their way of life had an odium of slavery. Now that they are gone, it is -- to look and act Brit- ish. J. B. Kripalani, one of the country's most respected inde- pendence fighters, asked critics of continuance of the English language in India not to waste their breath. mn sgn tnt stay... More families using English in their private conversations at home and "when they get angry they switch to English because it has a richer vocabulary," he added. More boys and girls are in public schools or schools run by Western missionaries or Anglo- Indians, and more Indians are going to the United Kingdom for higher studies, he said. He quoted the example of the children of the late Prime Min- ister Lal] Bahadur Shastri study- ing in St. Columba's high school in New Delhi, run by Irish mis- sionaries; and of both sons of Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, studying in the United Kingdom. In Parliament and in the 17 dent of the British House of Commons is quoted whenever there is doubt. In Parliament, speeches are made in English more than in any other language. Even the controversy for and against the replacement of English by Hindi is conducted--often heatedly--in English. British statues are slowly be- ing removed from the parks. But two statues' of British royalty still dominate the scene in New Delhi -- King Edward VII, on the spot where his son, George V, announced the shift- ing of the capital to Delhi, in December, 1911; and George V himself behind India Gate, me- morial te First World War dead. Life-size oil paintings of the sn natngnagst ts En in the presidential mansion will remain there for many more years. British names of roads, cities and clubs remain, Many of the games which the British made popular persist, with cricket topping the list. Polv is a prince's game in which India has world ranking along- side Argentina, Spain and- the Uniied Kingdom. Horse racing is another of the British pastimes. The Indian armed forces are patterned after the British. The Indian navy has combined ex- ercises periodically with British or the Commonwealth navies. The Indian academies are patterned after Britain's and British commanders-in-chief of the Indian army hang all over the place. Most books in the li- brary are British. In the business world, the British also dominate. The ma- jority of the top 18 industrial concerns in India are British. But India's deepening poverty and crowding resulting from the overpopulation are taking their toll of things British. Build- ings built by Britons verge on collapse for lack of repairs, or- iginal British architecture is hardly discernible behind make shift mud huts and the thou- sands of tiny business stalls which line streets and alleys. Even the ornate government. ministerial buildings now are crowded beyond capacity. ' mummers nnn samme By THE CANADIAN PRESS At least 59 persons died as a result of accidents across Can- ada during the weekend. A Canadian Press survey | Sunday, local times, showed 41 persons killed in traffic mis- haps, 15 drowned and three died in other accidents, Quebec's traffic toll of 16 in- cluded a Pointe Gatineau woman and her three daughters killed when a self-propelled rail- | way car crashed into their car} stalled on a level crossing near | Pointe Gatineau. The province also reported four drownings | and one person accidentally shot to death. [Boonies nnn DIES OF STINGS In Weekend Accidents Edward Island and Newfound-; Donald Alexander Robertson, The Ontario dead: SUNDAY Heather Crotty, 9, Toronto,|miles southeast of Cornwall. from 6 p.m. Friday to midnight| when struck by a car as she ran across a downtown Toronto Street Falls, FRIDAY land had no accidental deaths. | 54, Ville La Salle, Que., drowned | while swimming in the St. Law- rence River near Lancaster, 1@ Guy Leplante, 18, Grand N.B., when the car An elderly, unidentified man|which he was riding crashed when struck by a car whilejinto a ditch near attempting to cross the Queen} Ont. Stratford, Elizabeth Way at St, Cath-| arines. | Thomas Good, 27, Hamilton, | drowned when he fell from a! boat in the Grand River near Port Maitland, 35 miles south- west of Hamilton. Lloyd Hector Clement, 46, Orillia, several times by hornets while Ontario had 12 road deaths, {picking berries near Victoria| two drownings, one boy crushed | Bridge, 36 miles east of Orillia. after he was "rae | VISITOR FROM KREMLIN Tough Talker To Tackle PM | i LOVE NOTE PROVES COSTLY TORONTO (CP) -- A love-note in red and black letters two feet high is cost- ing an unidentified woman $90. The woman rented a bill- |when a tractor rolled on him and a man who died after suf-| fering several hornet stings. | British Columbia reported four persons killed in traffic, three in a single accident south of Vancouver, and two drown- ings. Two persons drowned in each of Manitoba ,Alberta, and Sas- |katchewan .Manitoba also re- ported five traffic deaths while the other Prairie provinces and New Brunswick and Nova Scotia each recorded one road death. One drowning was SATURDAY Brian Raun, 15, Orangeville, ARB Ont., when a tractor he was riding tipped over into a ditch and crushed him on a county road north of Goderich. Mrs. Edward Fila, 25, her} 16 - month-old son Bruce and Cheryl Cindy-Lynn Stephenson, 19, all of Sudbury, in a two-car jcrash on Highway 103 east of Midlana Gabriel Vachon, 34, Dalkeith Ont., when his car left the road 'and struck a tree near Dalkeith, Subscribers To see @ BLUE CROSS @ P.S.I. @ GREEN SHIELD NEED NOT PAY CASH! board for a week to pro- OTTAWA (CP)--Dmitri Poly-|Polyansky's address was. re- claim: "Oh Harold, I love ansky, a tough-talking Kremlin |leased to the press afterward you." leader with a deceptively mild|by the embassy. | She refused to give her appearance, was scheduled to| Mr. Pearson, who had _ in- name or telephone number confer with Prime Minister |tended that his own prior ad- when she ordered the sign through telephone calls. When her money order ar- rived, the signature was il- legible. James .Gubb, sales pro- motion manager for E. L. Ruddy Co., said the roman- | tic message will be on view until Tuesday. Pearson here today and the|dress would be off the record, talks could produce some verbal |thereupon agreed to make it fireworks. |public in general outline. Mr. Polyansky, Soviet first = deputy premier, arrived Sunday AWARE OF NEIGHBORS for a Centennial visit and pro-| The prime minister struck a ceeded to lay charges of ag-| conciliatory note in his remarks, gression against two friends of |Saying Canada had grown more Canada--the United States and |conscious that both the U.S. and Israel. |the Soviet Union, who because The slight, pale-looking mem-|f their immense power bore ber of the Soviet Communist|Prime responsibility for main- party's ruling politburo did not|taining peace, are its neigh- cite either country by name in| bors. a an address Sunday evening at} Canada rejoiced in every step) dinner given in his honor by Mr, |that led to better understanding | Pearson. between the two powers. But his accusations were in| He told Mr. Polyansky that line with frequent charges that|Canada was not a satellite de-| the Kremlin has aimed at both|Pendent of any country. Canada} the U.S. and Israel in the past.|Cherished its independence and) "At present the international Unity. situation has seriously deterior-| Mr. Polyansky's charge of} ated as a result of the aggres-|'aggression" recalled a clash sion against the Vietnamese|he had with External Affairs people and against the Arab Minister Martin the last time he} countries," said the 49-year-old/was in Ottawa. Polyansky, making his second) That also occurred at a pri-| visit to Canada in little more|vate dinner, and grew out of| than a year. jcharges of aggression that the The dinner was billed as a|Soviet visitor levelled against private affair, but a text of Mr. the U.S. | Violent Robbery | Charges Faced INGERSOLL, Ont. (CP) -- {Two Ingersoll brothers were |charged with violent robbery ljafter two men and a woman lwere beaten and robbed of between $40 and $45 by house- | breakers early Saturday morn- ling. Ingersoll police arrested Gor- don Matthews, 40, and Archie Matthews, 37, later Saturday. Mrs. Martha Keightley, one \of the victims is expected to remain in hospital here for several days. She and her 57-year-old hus- band Sidney and 78 - year - old John Porchak, owner of the house in which all three live, jhave severe facial cuts as well \as cuts and bruises elsewhere, DEAN ANDREWS JR. (left) flashes a smile as he is held on all sides by sheriff's deputies as he is (AP Wirephoto) we age 'Lawyer Guilty Of Lying Praying Helped Save Me 1, JFK Probe, Jury Finds escorted off to jail Monday morning following his conviction of perjury in connection with his grand jury testimony in an alleged New Orleans plot to assas- sinate President Kennedy. early days Boy Trapped In Well By BILL CRIDER |be eligible for bond until he has|vised Lee Harvey Oswald on Police said . i | | Ingersoll is about 15 miles been sentenced. Maximum Ssen-! minor legal matters, were filed ' reported |39 miles north of Cornwall from New Brunswick. Prince' Keith Wakefield, 44. London, re ee One, ane bis: nine « years old daughter Daisy in hospital fol- Ronald Bevan lowing a two-car crash on High- Police President Burk's way 2 east of Chatham. Donald. Crozier, 19, OTTAWA (CP)--Ronald Falls, Ont., when struck by a Bevan of St. Catharines was |car while crossing Highway 400 elected president of the Ontario near Maple Police Association for a one-| Robert Archer, 21, and Max year term at its convention Fri- McLeod, 29, both of Tedford, av Ont., when the car in which Directors elected were James they were riding crashed into, Cooke, Hamilton; John Gars-/a ditch near Park Hill, 25 miles |wood, Windsor; George Rosset, {northwest of London. |Sudbury; and Finlay Smith | Kingston. Delegates 'also unanimously ee $ fat | approved a resolution in favor of members of the Emergency | | Measures Organization wearing a uniform that is noticeably dif- {ferent from regular police uni- forms. | CALL OR SEE directs pharmacists to consi a people they serve to be m DIXON'S | ==: FOR OIL FURNACES for all your sickroom needs. The Code of Ethics governing the practice of Pharmacy We sincerely always try our best to obey our Code of Ethics and all other laws regulating pharmacy. We in- vite you to make this pharmacy your personal source You Give Us The Doctors Prescription We do the rest. FREE City-Wide Delivery MITCHELL'S DRUGS 9 Simcoe N. 723-3431 ce I oe hy Sly a THIS PHARMACY IS DEVOTED 9 TO BETTER HEALTH : der the better health of the ore important than greater . When our advice is asked SERVING OSHAWA OVER | 50 YEARS 24-HOUR SERVICE 313 ALBERT ST. 723-4663 Ss OP, PO or we will deliver prom great mony entru: May we compound and d NEW ORLEANS (AP) -- A} si iva years east of London. WILLIAMSON, W.Va. (AP)--|would send tons of rock and)iyry convicted Dean Andrews gg ayy acl ob va five.|Primarily because he said he)|----------- a A 15-year-old boy who spent 2t/earth down on the boy. : early today of lying to a grand| man jury because the charge of| said he could not identify Clay pats hg os i hee onl no gets orpsvriage or pass jury about a mysterious figure perjury 'is a misdemeanor ake Shaw as the mysterious Clay caved-in well said from his hos-|well by tons of rock and earth/in the alleged New Orleans STEERS en oe . § E : y pital bed here Sunday that|since 5:15 p.m, Friday. He dis-|t9 assassinate President John ta TRAD oreathcata, the: aicta Bertrand. | "praying helped pull me/lodged a rock while inspecting|} Kennedy. scéuiet Heep dln ae vine 'te District Attorney Jim Garri- through." __,|the well before cleaning it, and} Andrews was found guilty on| play games" with the Orleans|$0" contends that Shaw, 54, a Leonard Boyce was described|the walls gave way. He WaS|three of five counts of perjury| parish grand jury which is Ee iis New Orleans businéss- in? ition." | d up to his shoulders, about) py imi lateiit a | : : as in '"'good condition | buried up by the criminal district court | vestigate an alleged assassina-' man, used "Bertrand" as an| about any product we are p a prescription, you will receive our honest answer. We do not comment about prescriptions. YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US when you need a medicine. Pick up your prescription if shopping nearby, ptly without extra charge, A jst us with their prescriptions: EASTVIEW PHARMACY gm 573 King Street East d to supply ispense yours? Oshawa PHONE 725-3594 r Fast ---- Free --- Motorized Delivery : ] ) did y He was without food; except)14 feet below the surface in the for sips of water and hot choco- |21-foot well. erated two hours and 40 min.|0" Plt: UAS $0 DION le MLURG et Of Sent late fed him through a tube, After he was pulled to safety/ utes, OSWALD ADVISER nedy. .during his ordeal. through a 30-inch opening in the} Defence lawyer Harry Burg-| Five counts of perjury against. The Warren: commission His confinement in the well) wall of the well he said he was | lass said Andrews, 44, will not! Andrews, a lawyer who once ad- at nearby Lenore, in southwest-|through with working on wells.' ern West Virginia near the Ken-| Young Boyce, who lives with) tucky border, ended at 5:07jhis 10 brothers and sisters at| p.m Saturday when weary but|Parsley Bottom, W.Va., is a cautious rescue workers pulled|Grade 10 student. He was try- him to safety. ing "to make money for school Their efforts had been slowed | clothes" by working at well- by the fear that a wrong move'cleaning. jury at 1:30 a.m. after it delib- Tobacco Trouble Spots Patrolled "tse seicice ssiet ss cae By Augmented said Oswald acted alone in the ~~ 11963 assassination at Dallas, jafter playing a voice tape of | Andrews' replies to state inter- |rogation before the grand jury Police Forces MORTGAG Decline In City Births Despite More Marriages iv' tt® tacts ge renee § The birth and marriage rales} for Oshawa, and for Ontario) and Durham Counties during the second quarter of 1967 are typical of those all over On-|14:6 in the second quarter of| tri F , ' Lake Erie, sev shts broke! bec i 1967 to 15,508 from 14,445 in thelon in the aeeity upits broke/bec and Northern Ontario. Be- ¢ tario. This was revelaed by figures released by the Regis- trar - General. There was a decline in the birth rate in both Ontario and Durham Counties from the same period of 1966, A slight increase in the marriage rate for the period took place. The city of Oshawa is typ- ical of Ontario centres in this respect but differs as far as| the death rate goes. | Deaths in Oshawa rose sligh'- police made numerous arrests-- 34,066 for the same period in 1966. in Ontario; ber of marriages same period of 1966. the Ontario population will rise, because the province is experiencing a declining death rate. The number of deaths in Ontario during the second quar-| 13,956, as op- in the second 19 quarter of 1966. The two major causes of the {mented police forces were onjof Delhi, |duty three potential trouble spots in| minor incidents. The augmented )Norfolk County. mainly on } : . hall, but police were able to and many are without funds, If this trend continues, it will/prevent the trouble from ex- some sleep in fields and hay- mean that the average age of/panding. also| --------------- -- - --- 7 March 16. BRANTFORD (CP) -- Aug-|pular Turkey Point merit I | Saturday during the weekend in|police kept control area south night, but DX oe DX -- DX -- DX | except for police forces will charges -- WTH -- DX swarmed through the Migrant workers, here for the ¢ annual harvest, come across At the Long Point resort, on;Canada, but mostly from Que- OIL nity of a dance cause accommodation is limited BE WISE: ECONOMIZE! $ iavolvi Delhi, a community of 3,600, | SAVE " Involving jis the centre of a rich tobacco | drinking as transient tobacco area of about 1.500 farms workers x . On the other hand, the num- area. ; FUEL Phone 668-3341 $ e No bonuses stacks in the area. DX -- DX -- DX -- DX Crowds also thronged the po- ,- EDUCATION for TOMORROW VOCATIONAL SKILL and HIGH If, you lack vay ear \§ SCHOOL DIPLOMA, ypu can now study at home to qualify as G i d @ DRAFTMAN AND DESIGNER @ ACCOUNTANT AND BUSINESS ADMINISTRATOR Investment Certificates Through a TECHNICAL or COMMERCIAL High e@ Terms up to 10 years @ No brokerage fees e No hidden charges For a FREE brochure on SUPERIOR mortgages, write, phone or visit the SUPERIOR office nearest you SUPERIOR CREDIT CORPORATION LTD. Don Rees, Manager 31% Simcoe Street South, 725-6541 Daily to 5:30 p.m; Friday to 8.00 p.m.; Other evenings by appointment, 31 SUPERIOR offices to serve you TROUD' - Tuesday and Wednesday Specials - ¢ All or part can be prepaid at any time without notice or penalty aN 'Bebe ES P. B. Francis, Phm.B. -- J. R. Steffen, B.Se.Phm. E WE ARE LAUGHING ALL THE WAY TO THE Becouse the Real Estate Dept. of CENTRAL ONTARIO TRUST just sold our house for us AND CHARGED US | @ PRIVATE SECRETARY OR ROOKKEFPER | i] ly, from 149 for the second |birth rate decline are the rel- ony go es quarter of 1967. Most other On-|ative boom enjoyed in the pro- NOW EARN Eorn a "HIGH SCHOOL DIPLOMA" and "CERT! eee: tarin municipalities reported ajvince, which always causes a FICATE OF PROFICIENCY" in the vocation of Serotec ne i hy h ly r S 18 : be id decline in 'the death rate. birth rate to decline as people dina exons tenn te Sour urbe toe cartifieates; Pee Despite a rising marriage|seek luxuries and material pos- upon completion of course. All books, instruction ee rate, the birth rate for Ontario|sessions, and the effect of the 2 (a) iJ] ond supplies for os little as $2,00 weekly. w ¢ \ continued to decline in the sec-|widespread use of the birth |] write: "ACADEMIC STANDARDS INSTITUTE 28 & GRADE "A" -- SMALL ond quarter of 1967. control pill. per annum 40 Main St. W., HAMILTON, Ont. Pies 2 This trend was first noticed for five years = ee in 1961 when the number ofl} births fell from 159,245 to 157, 663. There has been a continual CANADIAN HEARING AID by investing in Gueranteed e Investment Certificates 29° That saved us $250.00, to us! Why don't YOU which are Guaranteed--os to Principal and | Interest. | Flexible--may be used os Col- | lateral for loans, | Red bi y Executors In | the event of death. || ih Trustee Act In- decline in the yearly number of births since then, and when the figures for 1966 is complete it is estimated that the num- ber of births will be almost 28,000 fewer than the number CONSULTANTS 10 Bond St. E. 725-2771 LEAN BEEF -- BRAISING they charge you ONLY property ! 29: | for ee is at f The number of births in On-| tario in the second quarter of| MOVING ? ? ? 1967 is 33,821, as opposed to SUMMER BACHELORS vestments, CENTRAL ONTARIO TRUST & SAVINGS CORPORATION 19 Simcoe St. N., Oshawa 723-5221 LEAN TENDER CLUB : Factory or Warehouse 10,500 sq. ft., divided, new modern office included, priced to sell at $43,000 Local & Long Distance Packing .@ .Storage .@ .Crating 23 King St. W., Bowmanville 623-2527 STEAKS » CENTRAL TRUST CITY CARTAGE with reasonable down payment. Possession availa- 1 food You cen still enjoy good ble October 1. BONELESS while the family ts owey athe Agents for: sae LANCASTER" HOTEL MD noregn na Lloyd Metcalfe Realty STEWING BEEF 27 KING ST. WEST Parking Rear of Hotel Morsenice 40 King St. E. 728-4678 for free estimate, Allen Th Harvey Relph S$ FOUNTAINHEAD 'OF SERVICE ON LY 4% COMMISSION where they olso have their own mortgage money. This meons they can get you more cash for your CALL | Tom Houston 668-4416 which is a lot of money list YOUR home where 4% TO SELL IT, and ONTARIO Real Estate Dept. 723-5221 jompson 728-2820 Hogan 655-3663 chofield 576-1680