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Oshawa Times (1958-), 30 Jul 1962, p. 2

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& oA * : tie : SPILLS NET $3000 like a cowboy earned a living, police say, by deliberately fal- ling down in some of the big stores in the country and then collected insurance (AP Wirephoto) Ron B. Crowley, 35, of Pet- erborough, right, who Police claim faked a fall in a Phila- delphia department store and collected a $750 claim, is handcuffed to a County detec- tive. Crowley who dressed ! 30 Centres Get // commission ' Mercy Killing Study Urged In Deformities By THE CANADIAN PRESS "The most sensible way of|ment and not from the effects Canada's toll of thalidomide-| dealing with this situation is for | of" thalidomide. deformed babies rose to more|a commission with good medi-| The woman, Mrs. Joseph Bag- federal authorities disclaimed|ple to study it and make rec-|month-old son and other chil- any financial responsibility to! dations to the govern- dren and went to the United the stricken families. ment in Ottawa." States for help at the Children's The latest case was reported) Whether it would be more} Medical Centre in Boston. Saturday in Hamilton where alcruel to let these babies live) Meanwhile, the director of woman disclosed she had seven-|than to kill them at birth) Toronto's Hospital for Sick Chil- month-old twin boys with mal-|"should be the subject for a dren, John T. Law, said the formed arms and legs. - study by the best qualified per- hospital is not considering set- Federal Health Minister Mon-|sons available," he said. ting up a special clinic for treat- teith, reached at his Stratford) The Hamilton mother, who| ment of cases linked with thali- home, said his department sym-|asked for anonymity, said she | domide. ; pathized with the parents but|too thalidomide pills early in) There's not a great deal we confirmed earlier Ottawa state-| pregnancy. Hospital authorities| can do, except see about arti- ments that no financial help|have refused to link the defor- ficial legs and arms," he said. would be given. | mities with the tranquillizer. There's really not a great deal Meanwhile, authorities in the| In Laat, - a au- hl cig to offer these chil- ited States, where federal|thorities denied published re- a be ee ce hae officials banned the drug|ports that a baby had been born, Pie omg met ' once ponnidered before it could be sold, said the|deformed because of thalido-|' le rps rug ve cur ing morn- alarm over the deformities has|mide. They said the baby, born | !N8 sic stig anc a in early prompted them to revamp meth.| to an obstetrician's wife was un- Oe ak vy -- in _ ods of controlling new drugs. | dergoing surgery. a Mare after reports o: | malformations in Britain and The drug was kept off the/ REPORT TORONTO CASE West Germany. But by then U.S, market by Vancouver-born| 'Toronto's fourth case of a thousands of pills had been sold. Dr. Frances Oldham Kelsey of |+nalidomide-affected birth was) The Ontario Society for Crip- the Federal Drug Administra-) reported Saturday by authori-|pled Children has indicated it tion. ties at St. Michael's hospital.|will provide braces for the The child was reported born|Hamilton twins and a wheel- July 17 with stumps for arms chair for one of them who may and a foot protruding from its)never be able to walk. hips. Hospital authorities de- The Hamilton woman, whose clined to discuss the case. husband is a plumber, has A Vancouver woman whose asked her lawyer to see jf the son was born deformed after|Canadian firm which im» \od she took the drug was told by the drug w W provide help for her doctor that the child may be the seca pet hea pragerin 4 ; 1. , estimate wou suffering from 6 commpntet 4f cost $6,000 a vear for treatment. Health Minister Monteith said the Disabled Persons Act might apply to the children a'ter they reach the age of 18 "We are sympathetic, but we |feel we have done everything jany government could do in such. a situation." Dr. Jean Webb, chief of the SUGGESTS STUDY i At Victoria, Dr, Brock Chis; holm said a_ special federal) should decide whether or not babies deformed by the drug thalidomide should be allowed to live. The former director of the World Health Organization said: Foot Restored By Boston Surgeons BOSTON (AP)--A team ofjwho happened to be standing child and maternal health divi- surgeons at Massachusetts Gen-|nearby, quickly applied a turni-|<ion said several hundred eral Hospital sewed back the|quet to the leg. Ottawa doctors will be asked to severed left foot of a motorcy-| Scimone was wheeled into the) join in a pilot study of the clist Saturday night followingjoperating room at 4:20 P.M.|qrug's effects, . an accident in nearby Revere. |Meanwhile, rs _ eS ae ealali. : As doctors finished the 5%4-|been cut completely away from hour operation, a hospital|his ankle and packed in ice to spokesman said: "'the operation prevent rigor mortis from set-! than 40 during the weekend as | cal, psychological and legal peo-|narol, gathered up her six-) | JFK Supporter Wins Primary in Louisiana NEW ORLEANS (AP)--The moderate wing of Louisiana's Democratic party--headed by! |representative Hale Boggs and! |two members of the Long fam.) jily--today celebrated victory in \a primary election that saw the rout of extreme conservatives. Boggs, 49, a solid backer of the Kennedy administration and the third-ranking officer in the House of Representatives as majority whip, Saturday de. jfeated three anti-Kennedy can- }didates who campaigned on strong Conservative and segre- |gationist platforms. Senator Russell B. Long, 44- year-old leader of the Long dy- nasty that has dominated Louis- iana politics for 35 years, rolled up a 4-to-1 margin over his only opponent, retired U.S. Army} Lt.-Col, Phil St. Amant. | And his. cousin, Gillis Long, 39-year-old Alexandria lawyer, made a successful political de- but by unseating Conservative jrepresentative Harold Me- |Sween, 36. | | Polaris Subs | Will Replace Rocket Bases LONDON (AP)--Polaris sub- marines are likely to replace rocket bases in the defence of Britain, says The Daily Sketch, The tabloid says the switch is expected to be made after Nov, 1, when U.S. Gen. Lauris Norstad retires as NATO com. mander in Europe. ¢ Mrs. Josephine Bagnaro!, of Vancouver, B.C. who took the gnacy, is shown holding her six-months old son Antonio, whose arms and legs are de- Phenobarbs Pills Included In Theft PETERBOROUGH (CP) More than 11,000 phenobarbital drug Thalidomide carly in pre- | | formed, is flanked by daugh- ters Nadine, 11, and Caroline, 9, after their arrival here for treatment of the baby. Antonio was the third known case in Canada where expectant EP SEEKS HELP AFTER TAKING THALIDOMIDE mothers took the drug and their infants were deformed. Treatment has been arranged at the Children's Medical Cen- ter for the baby. (AP Wirephoto) Reds Claim Navy | } Fastest In World The newspaper gives no source for its report, which says 30 or more United States atomic submarines will patrol European waters carrying nu- clear missiles and manned by, crews from NATO countries un-! de: command of U.S. naval of- ficers. The defence department in Washington declined to discuss tablets were stolen from a drug! store at the Brookdale shopping' \iogcow (AP)--Russia has;American nuclear sub Nautilus centre, city police reported Sun- ) 1° the world's most modern|in August, 1958, day. ao navy, its chief claims. Admiral] Trud, the labor union news- The narcotic, a sedative which| sorgei Forshkov said the fleet's paper, carried an eyewitness appears on the RCMP control/basis is atomic submarines|account of missiles weighing list, was taken during a break-j|armed with rockets and torpe-|"several tons'? being launched in. About $200 in cash and a does with nuclear warheads. from submarines during last : of codeine-type _ The. Soviet naval commander | week's Barents Sea. fleet exer- : "|Pravda article commemorating) cises, tablets, a pain-killer, were alsO' made the boast Sunday in. al Reports of the Barents Sea large quantity this Medical Clinics REGINA (CP)--An estimated|not yet been decided who will 3,000 Saskatchewan fa milies|pay such clinic employees as have taken out memberships in|nurses and secretaries. non-profit co-operative medical) The agreement reached by clinics that are flourishing in| the doctors and the government the ashes of the recently settled|last week says the role of the medical care dispute. citizens' group in setting up co- Clinics have been set up in| operative clinics is only that of five centres. Ten other commu-|a landlord. nities are making final arrange-| Clinics are operating at ments for clinics and 15 area|Regina, Prince Albert, Saska- associations are being set up.jtoon, Biggar and Weyburn. All told, the idea: has caught on'Those making final arrange- in 30 communities. ments to begin operations are Bill Harding, chairman of the|at Estevan, Radville, Moose provincial council of Commu-|Jaw, Swift Current, North nity Health Services, said Sun-|Battleford, Kindersley, Eston, day membership drives are|Melville, Unity and Kinstino. under way in almost every!~------ ---- -- centre. --as far as it's gone at ting in. time--can .be termed success- The hospital spokesman said "the ankle has been rejoined,| Captain Snubs Navy Day. Part of the celebra- exercises, which were witnessed The Daily Sketch article. taken. tion included a television pro- jgram from the Baltic port of Seaway Route The surgery was described as Mac Continues a "re-implantation," the same) jraripa (CP)--Ca mi ALIFS --Capt. R. M. term used in the Knowles sur-iiay 'of the British freighter ery. . P ; ; Crystal Sz nave , A similar re-implantation was 795 al apphire wnbe he would adored ak Calanin jue 40 rather pick up cargo in the percorme eigety. Uy Maritimes than go through the but not disclosed until Friday. | cy Lawrence Seaway to get it. "They don't understand sea- attempt to restore nerve func- There, doctors saved the arm| tion in the arm. / A g, | of Hazel Donilin, 17, of Clear| raring enble fir Moatreal and {Toronto like. they do in the Mon or is aveee Lake, Calif. who had nearly Scimone, 24, of Revere. His) severed it in a 50-foot fall from) ve > F ; |motorcycle and an automobile|a carnival ride, The arm was coral a brag collided and the foot was sev-|pinned back together and the| 99° tone AE AGL ae ake ered except for a small flap of/muscles _re-attached. Doctors|; ake. ports tee skin just about the heel tendon./said further surgery would be Ott Sed ES REV State Trooper William A. Jar-|necessary to restore nerve get pretty exasperat- | k , ing when they stop your ship rett of the Middleboro barracks, | fibres. _|three times in locks because lyou're one-quarter of an inch ful."' ' the foot is warm again, there is More than two months ago a pulse and there is blood flow- surgeons at the same hospital ing."* pioneered medical history by successfully sewing on the sev- ered right arm of 12-year-old Everett Knowles Jr., of Somer- ville, Mass. Young Knowles un- dergoes surgery again next week as the hospital team will He estimated the. clinics he F : knew to be functioning had sold}. - a total of 3,000 memberships.) + "This exciting development) , assures doctors of a stimulating] } opportunity to work with people) } in their communities to pre-| ; serve medical services," said Mr. Harding, a community de- velopment expert who recentty returned from a one-year stint with the United Nations tech- nical assistance organization in Liberia SERVE AS MODELS Clinics at Prince Albert and Regina are expected to serve as models for others in the province Citizens who supported the government's compulsory, pre- paid comprehensive scheme started organizing the clinics before a doctors' boycott went into. effect July 1. Doctors with. drew services, except on an emergency basis, to protest implementation of the govern- ment plan. The clinics operate on the co- CLOUDY WITH SHOWERS ACROSS THREE PROVINCES operative principle -- the con- sumer has a say in how his medical care is organized. WEATHER FORECAST over the draught limit. "One-quarter inch, mind you, and the ship weighs 11,000 tons . ., They threatened to fine us 1,000 too. I'm sure the lock had a few feet to spare." The seaway administrators ) |are the main reason many deep , |Sea captains and crews face the ., |Prospect of sailing to great lakes with distaste, he said He said the lockmaster on the Iroquois lock got angry when jsome water from the ship |splashed a flower bed on the lock "We almost scraped the ship the concrete and he com- plains about his flowers." The ship sailes Tuesday for Sydney to load steel billets for India. | @ jon _ New Home Building _ Shows Spring Rise e | OTTAWA (CP)--Nearly 40,- 000 Canadian families began construction of new homes in April, May and June, the bur- eau of statistics reported today The 39,923 starts are an in- Forecast temperatures The clinic at Regina is staffed by five doctors recruited by the government in the United King- dom. None of the doctors have hospital privileges but Mr. Harding said applications have been made to the two hospitals here. MEMBERSHIP COSTS $5 The life-time membership fee Official forecasts issued of $5 covers the cost of such the weather office at 5 a.m things as rental on halls in Synopsis: A trough of by low which organizational meetings pressure from James Bay to = are held. A person need not be Lake Superior and southwest- a member to obtain treatment.|ward is moving southeast and The doctors send their bills|is expected to reach the lower to the Medical Care Insurance |akes late tonight. Thundershow- Commission, which reimburses|ers are occurring along the them. Mr. Harding said it has}trough. Behind the trough cooler 'air has covered northwestern Murder Charge 0- light toni and Lake St. Clair, Lake Huron southern Georgian Bay. Lake Ontario, Haliburton, Windsor, London, Toronto: Cloudy with Betty MacDonald, 29, wasiing southwest 15 this afternoon charged with non-capital mur-!and shifting to northwest 15 t der Friday night in the stabbing|night and decreasing to death of her husband. Clifford,/Tuesday afternoon Thursday in a ¢ottage at Lan- wartiy ¢1 eG caster, about 18 miles east of che nta portly cieady here. He was wounded in the stomach with a foot long EYE EXAMINATIONS y eppointment here, was remanded to ap- pear at Alexandria magistrate's court July 31, She has four chil- dren, aged 1-12 Ontario and will bring lower | temperatures to all of the prov- Laid Against . Housewife Scattered thundershowers to- night. Tuesday partly 97. Lak Sri Ni r I il. Mr. MacDonald, an unem. saat Scceatins cece Gk Gee butcher's knife Mrs. MacDonald, under seda- > PHONE 723-4191 F. R. BLACK, O.D. ince Tuesday CORNWALL (CP) -- Mrs./and cooler. Winds light becom- ployed truck driver, died late!:ereq thundershowers tion in the United Counties jail 136 SIMCOREST. NORTH Partly Cloudy, Cooler Tuesday cloudy} crease of 2.038 over the same period in 1961. They bring to 56,008 the number of new homes started in all provinces during 1962, an increase of three per cent over the same 1961 pe- riod Completions the six months totalled 52,474, up 10 per cent from the same period: a year ago. Units in various stages of construction at the end of June totalled 76,865, up 7.3 per cent from the year-ear- lier total Low tonight High Tuesday 60 58 55 52 50 58 60 58 Kitchener Wingham ... Hamilton st. Catharines. Toronto Peterborough . Trenton ' Killaloe ... Muskoka .. North Bay. Sudbury . fipet ooler. Winds light increasing to hwest 15 this afternoon and g to northwest 15 late to- and diminishing to light Tuesday Europes Future Boll Baffles Experts GENEVA PARK, Ont. (CP)-- tity. In terms of state I. hope it Two French experts disagreed will be tomorrow, but I don't on whether or not economic ia- believe so tegration in Europe will lead to) The session, whose topic was political union, at a session of|"isms and attitudes" in the new the summer conference of the|/Europe, also heard its first Canadian Institute on Public Af-' word from Eastern Europe. fairs. Dr. Jerzy Sawicki, vice-direc- Prof. Raymond Aron, of the tor, Polish Institute of Interna- Ecole Pratique des Hautes | tional Affairs, Warsaw, said Etudes, Paris, said he does not several European countries do think political union will result,|not constitute. the whole of Eu- at least not at any foreseeable! rope. He added that he does not) importance} date, while Etienne B. Hirsch,|underestimate the until recently chairman of the|of the Common Market, but he commission of the European|would have expected to hear Atomic Energy Commission, some words from the speakers said such union is inevitable. |on how to improve relations in They also disagreed on the. Prof. Aron replied: importance of the institutions|Europe. He was not impressed set up under the. European'with old cliches Common Market. Mr. Hirsch) Prof. Aron replied: "Western said.their strength is a primary | Europe is the subject of the con- reason for the Market's prog-|ference and I was asked to ress, Prof. Aron said that while|speak about the Common Mar- rules have been put on paper,|ket. Improving relations be- they have no power without the tween Eastern and Western Eu- will of the six governments. rope is not our subject but in Mr, Hirsch felt that economic any event I have no blueprint decisions govern political deci-|for peace. sions but Prof. Aron thought) "It is not a question of this was only partially so. whether we have anything new He commented: 'Foreign pol-|to say but whether we have any- icy, for instance, is not a mat-! thing true to say." ter of economics but a condition Asked whether, in the event for survival that Britain joins the Common "Mr. Hirsch convinced| Market, the Commonwealth and there will be political integra-|the market will coexist, Prof tion but he is not sure. I say I/Aron said the general attitude am not sure but also that I/of the European "six" appears don't think it is a necessity.' to be that if Britain enters it At another point Prof. Aron will not be possible for her to commented maintain the special Common- "In terms of culture I hope wealth arrangements that have is |Leningrad showing a submarine |that resembled U.S. nuclear- }powered underwater craft. | Many western experts believe \the Soviet Navy includes Subs |capable of underwater firing of missiles similar to the U.S. Po-| laris. "The Soviet fleet is now more modern than the navy of any capitalist country," Gorshkov! wrote in Pravda. "The basis of our naval fleet atomic submarines armed with powerful rockets and hom- ing torpedoes with nuclear war-) heads. They have high speed, great depth of submersion and can operate for extended peri- ods in the most distant re- gions.' ' SUBS ARE FAST Soviet Vice-Admiral S. Zah- karov said Saturday Soviet nu- clear submarines are faster and more manoeuvrable than Amer- ican subs. In another Navy Day article, Gorshkov said in an interview with Sovyetskaya Rossiya that his new submarines have jour- neyed under the Arctic ice cap, a feat first accomplished by the is by Premier Khrushchey, con- vincd some Western naval spe- cialists that Russia now has the Polaris - type weapons systems which it has boasted of for some time. The three-hour telecast of So- viet fleet units in Leningrad's Neva River showed mostly con ventional cruisers, destroyers and minesweepers anchored in midstream. MORTGAGES Ample Funds for Ist MORTGAGES 2nd MORTGAGES We Also Purchase Ist and 2nd Mortgages N.H.A, LOANS ARRANGED You Will Find OUR SERVICE IS FASTER OUR COST IS LOWER SCHOFIELD-AKER Limited 723-2265 -- 360 King West After Hours -- 728-3376 we never have a common iden-' existed. WHY BORROW MONEY WHEN YOU BUY A CAR? It pays to finance through your dealer. 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