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Oshawa Times (1958-), 25 Oct 1963, p. 4

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j { | 4 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Friday, October 25, 1963 $500 FOR HOSPITAL F. Hackl (right) of be shown handing a $500 dnc. tion to R. D. Thompson for the Ajax and Pickering Gen- eral Hospital Building fund. Werner of Canada Ltd. a3 Behind the two men a heavy crane prepares to lay the pre- cast concrete roof beams. The hospital will be completed by the fall of 1964. Ceremony Will Change Dilco (Ajax) CNR Name AJAX (Staff) -- Canadian National Railway passen- gers and shippers will soon be able to find Ajax on their timetables. A ceremony Monday, Oct. 28 at 4 p.m. will offic'ally change the previous 'Dilco' sign on the tracks to Ajax. Dilco was a wartime term for Defence Industries I im- ited. The CNR has still kept the name on the timetaaics. Feud Over Leaves Costs $20 Freight being shipped to Ajax was always designeted as going to Dilco. The name-change was sponsored. by Ajax Chamber of Commerce officials. Ajax will also keep its maritime link, Mayor Wil- liam A. Parish announced recently. The town has adopted a new frigate to be commis- sioned for service :n_ the Royal Navy at Birkenhead on Dec. 11. The town was named for the HMS Ajax which d's- tinguished herself at .he battle of the River Plate .n 1939 after which the German pocket battleship Graf Spee was scuttled. The HMS Ajax was scrap- ped at the end of the war. AJAX (Staff) -- An argument} Had Beer In Car Sanitary Conditions At Fall Fairs Rapped the September Health to make a sanitary in- spection of all schools in his municipality annually and to make a report to the Depart- ment of Health regarding them,!of the Canadian Institute of- using forms supplied by the! Sanitary Inspectors during the Department for the purpose./week starting September 30. Forty-two such inspections were made by the Medical Officer of Health's representatives, and COBOURG -- The following is|temity patients newly home,cuitural fall fairs were made in|50 water samples we-e taken) Northumber-|from hospital, 271 other visits|respect to water supplies, san-|for bacteriological °xamina- Hand - Durham health unit re-|o~ behalf of infants and 154jitary facilities and food hand-|tion. port, as submitted by the medi-|home interviews with parents|ling. Generally, it is found that Fifty-seven inspections of eat- officer of health, Dr. Char-|concerning pre-school children.|Faizr Soards do not place muchjing establishments were made, lotte M. Horner, SCHOOL COMMUNICABLE DISEASE | Schools opened in the Unit- Diseases reported during the|ed Counties with an estimated importance on the provision of|and one was ordered closed be- satisfactory sanitary faciities|cause Of unsatisfactory mainte- to serve their patrons for the|Mance and operation, month included red measles,\enrolment of 16,000-elementary|°™€ oF two day duration of their) weap insPECTION erman measi.3, whooping|and 5,000 secondary school stu- 8 sp Seciivi 37 (5) of The Public » Mumps, salmonella and|dents. infectious hepatitis, with a total cf 41 cases reported. Four rabid animals were re-|when schools re-opened after ported -- 2 feline and 2 bovine,|the long vacation, have become in Hope and Cavan Townships,|jess frequent, although during and ten persons wre given anti-/September Public Health rabies vaccine. Nurses had 107 children re- ferred by teachers because of TUBERCULOSIS i is- At the four chest clinics, held} suspected communicable dis monthly, 76 persons received rr x-rays, Final figures released|, Nurses made @ complete in connection with the Mass|health assessment on 188 chil- survey held in Durham County|dren, mainly beginners who show that 24,909 persons were|had not had medical examina- processed, There were no cases|tion by their physicians. There of active tuberculosis diagnosed|Were 24 nurse - teacher class- and no admissions to sanator-|room conferences, the nurse ium were necessary. and teacher sitting down to- gether to consider each child in IMMUNIZATION ithe classroom. There were 157 Twenty immunizaticn clinics|home visits to confer with par- were held. Thirty-seven infants|ents concerning school children. and pre-school children com-|Five teachers' meetings were pleted the initial series ofQuad|attended. vaccine and 43 received a re- inforcing dose. There were 9g AUDIOMETRY p-imary vaccinations. There| During September, audio- has been a decrease in the num-|meter testing resumed in the ber of children attending Health|elementary schools for the 1963- Unit immunization clinics, This|64 school term. For the second is a general finding and is the|consecutive year, we are Con- result of the availability of|tinuing our special survey on medical insurance schemes andjrepeaters in all the elementary more children being taken to|schools. Special referrals and their family physicians. This is|requests were done first with the ideal situation where the|some routine testing completed physician cares for all the|toward the end of the month. How-|/Seymour and Hope Township "except on Mondays ineeds of his patients. ever, the Health Unit clinics|were the areas in which most are maintained so that thesejOf the work was done. services may be available for| A total of 505 tests were! those who for one reason or/completed of which 12 indicated another do not get their im-jsome hearing loss and 6 were from their own| previous defects now normal, ENVIRONMENTAL pega AE TI So |SANITATION AND PRE-' | i e For the fall series of pre-|_7ourteen_inepections of agri natal classes there was an en- rolment of 12 in Bowmanville, FIRST BROADCAST 9 in Port Hope and 18 in| The first radio broadcast of Cobourg. In these classes, held|the human voice in Canada was weekly in series of nine, there|at Montreal in the winter of is class. discussion to prepare|1919 by the Canadian Marconi young women for the bearing|Company. | and rearing of children, accom-| panied by practice in relaxa- tion and followed by a social half hour. | Public Health Nurses also made 33 home visits to pre- natal patients, 42 visits to ma- HOWARD'S 926 SIMCOE N. 725-3144 munizations doctors. The annual meeting of Ontario Public Health Assoc'a- tion was held in conjunction 'with that of the Ontario Branch Topics considered at these \meetings included, among {Royal Commission on Health \Services; swimming pools and \virus infections; home accident © prevention; mental health de- velopments; the investigation of new drugs; the effects of pesti- cides on human life. itd the Health Unit and ve Youth Given 30 Days For Kent 'Dr. Gordon K, Martin, Pub-|already on probation for a pre- lice Health Administration, On-|Vious offence of drinking under Of 959 guitaals inspected by|tario Department of Heaith vis-|age, pleaded guilty to the a veterinarian, 949 were ap. Minor communicable skin in-Health Act states that it 1s the|proved. Animals condemned in-|attended the meeting of the| Evidence showed that von- fections, formerly a age duty of the Medical Officer of'cluded cattle, calves and swine.|Board of Health. stable Fred Crawford, of the Ajax Police Department, spot- ted two people recently runni mscgbag -- When stopped one © em proved Marple. ASK MANUSCRIPTS -- LONDON (CP) -- The Arts AJAX (Staff) -- An 13-year-|Council has asked poets and the lothers: presentations to thejold youth who was told ny Ma-jheirs of poets who died recently trate Harry W. Jermyn "that|to contribute original manu- thing we do for you has much|scripts of their works to a na- "', was sentenced io s0jtional collection, to be housed ys in jail yesterday for drink-|at the British Museum here. under age. = Gary Alexander Marple, of SEWING MACHINE Tune-up Special 3.99 St., Ajax, who was FAST SERVICE Oshawa Sewing Centre 329 SIMCOE ST. S$. ge. TCA Silver Dart--only non-stop jet to Vancouver! FASTEST; TOO:::YOU'RE THERE IN JUST 4 HOURS, 40 MINUTES! Travel across Canada on TCA's DC-8 Silver Dart--daily service*! Or take your choice of other frequent daily flights. Fly First Class or Economy.;.Economy Fare: $218 return: SEE YOUR TRAVEL AGENT FOR COMPLETE DETAILS OR CALL TCA 826-2311 TCA Sive-Dat DONALD TRAVEL SERVICE TRANS-CANADA AIR LINES OSHAWA--WHIT BY--BROOKLIN 300 DUNDAS ST. EAST MEADOWS TRAVEL SERVICE 22, SIMCOE ST. SOUTH WHITBY PHONE 668-3304 PHONE 723-9441 over some fallen leaves cost a Pickering man $20 and costs or six days in jail after he was convicted of wilful damage, in Ajax Court yesterday. youth who had a smell of al- Lorne Purdy, 35, of Grand|cohol coming from him was Valley park, pleaded guilty to|fined $50 and costs or 15 days Youth Fined $50 AJAX (Staff) -- A Pickering the charge. Purdy, evidence showed, had|under age. j Robert Debaie, 20, Lincoln av-/ an argument with William Dob- on whether Dobbinjenue, pleaded Jr., guilty to should pick up leaves that he|Charge. had knocked off a tree. Dobbin refused hands and flattended it. tution for the bugle. and Purdy FIRST RAILWAY Canada's first railway was grabbed a bugle out of Doyb'n's|the 16-mile Champlain and St. Lawrence, built in 1836 between Purdy was told to make resti-[La Prairie and St. Lower Canada. NOW ON AT... Jean a in jail yesterday for drinking |i the} @ DRAPERY @ BROADLOOM @ SLIP COVERS @ BAMBOO @ UPHOLSTERING PHARMACIES ONLY 2 MORE BIG DAYS To-day and Saturday Only PRESCRIPTION CHEMISTS CITY WIDE FREE DELIVERY 8 KING ST. E. 530 SIMCOE ST. S. PHONE 723-2245 OSHAWA PHONE 725-3546 | ROSSLYN PLAZA - 728-4668 | ALSO STORES IN BOWMANVILLE AND WHITBY PLAZA

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