Durham Region Newspapers banner

Oshawa Times (1958-), 7 Sep 1965, p. 22

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

BE RE AIRE A NS EE TSG RE HER TRAE MICKEY MOUSE YOU MIND YOUR OWN BUSINESS / CHLORINE FROM CANADIAN TRENCHES AST OF a. THE GERMAN LINE ROLLS INTO THE NORTH' SECRET AGENT X9 King feeturas Spmdacate, ine. 165. iw World righte reserved SPEED LIMIT, SIR! 1 KNOW, DONALD DUCK YOU WERE BREAKING THE BUT IT'S AN THAT'S A NEW ONE! WHAT DO' MEAN, GOING BANKRUPT? » tp FOLLOW ME TO ' REPAIR SHOP, $7. THE sir! 3. Expert 1. Incite 4.Go down 5. British 5. Lukewarm dandy 6. Crew 9, Am, play- member wri 7. Back 10, Nobleman 8, Dealer in 11. Flowers flowers 12, Evidence 11, Congress- 14, Twilight man: abbr. 15. Greek 13. Confronts letter Torrid 17, Sun Greek god physician 18, Hebrew . Uneven "a ard = Sediment . Geodetic Separati 22. Storm ie 23. Slight from sleep 25. Masses rock 26, Siouan Indians 28. Sow 30, Ven- Yesterday's Answer tures 31, Pocket- 35, Shape book 37, Compete $2, Cape 38, Newt --, 40, Hawke Mass. parrot 24, Handle incline ee a a 77) eo 26. Simpletons 9 Y 27,----~- of D Cleves 28, Tense ZG [ L 29. Gold rush territory 16 WON 31, Father: colloq. 20 jel 33, Indonesia: abbr. 34, Bygone 35. Merriment Channel 2~Buftalo 4--Dick Va jarrie 7--Peyton 4~Buffalo 6~Toronto T--Buttalo 11--The Mer' 9--Toronto 6-2--Hullabal 4--Doctors 5:00 P.M. 9--Country 1--Family Theatre 6-3--News 6--ivanhoe 3--Tugboat Annie iy toy &--Lloyd Thaxton ee Th} &-Leave it Te Beaver 6--Take Thirty 3~Rawhide Tr4--Late $I 6--Lets Talk Music 4--| Chuck Healy rts a--Today, 1965 Movie i--News 9--Scarborb o:38 PLM. College Ni--Family Theatre é--Internat 9-4-3--News) Weather, Sports a aies 4--Maverick i | Cenede 1--Schnitzel 36, Cut 39. Spine 41, Prevalent 42, Affected rs 43. Arranges 44. Identical DOWN 1. Coppice 3, French river YOUR HEALTH WHY, I THOUGHT THIS IG THE DAY SHE GIVES A iING I WiSH SKEETER STARTED WOULD EAT YouTe TO LIKE IT : By JOSEPH G. MOLNE: Dear Dr. Molner: I have just jread your booklet, How to Heal Peptic Ulcers and Keep Them Healed. No doctor in this day of hurry would take the time ne- cessary to explain to his pa- |tients what you have done in your booklet. I have learned a jgreat deal from it.--Mrs. 8S. C. Thank you for your kind words, and naturally I am glad that the booklet helped you. But let me also explain something else. It isn't always a question of what one would do, but rather what one can do. Doctors would explain peptic ulcers, and many other problems, if they had the time to do so. Why don't they have time? Because, in the simplest possi- ble statement of the facts, some stretching is necessary to make the supply of doctors meet the demand for their serv- ices, In many oher parts of the world the condition is far worse. In India many people are blind because there arent enough eye surgeons to remove cata- racts, Babies die in China from diseases which pediatricians in the United States or Sweden or New Zealand would cure read- ily. The hospital-medical ship 8.8. Hope visits Indonesia and Africa and finds swarms of suf- fering people who-never in their lives have seen a doctor. } Here at home we do not have} this abysmal "absence of medi-| cal care, but we do have a shortage. We don't have the problem of a.patient needing at-| tention that simply doesn't ex-| ist. Rather, we have the prob-| |squeeze in an emergency pa- Demand Exceeds | Supply Of Doctors R, MD lem of a patient needing atten- tion that simply doesn't exist. Rather, we have the problem of not getting as much attention as we would like (and can uae and not always getting it right) when we want it. | Have you ever arrived in your) doctor's office on time and then | had to sit and wait? Who) hasn't! It isn't because the doc:| tor benefits by having you wait. It is because he has had to) tient, or has had to take extra time because of some compli- cated case, or, let's face it, his secretary, trying to give ap- pointments fo everyone who called; scheduled an extra one. That's the way things are. That's why doctors can't take the extra 15 minutes to explain things. Somebody else is wait- ing, and wondering why the doc- tor can't hurry. And that's the story of why 1 think my booklets on various subjects may be worth their salt. If one booklet saves 10 minutes of some doctor's time, a thousand booklets on the same subject will save 166 hours of "doctor time." And if each doc tor has, let's say, three patients wailing an extra 10 minutes each, hundreds of hours of "patient time" are saved. I gather that the booklets fill a real need for readers. They also help stretch the amount of medical care that can be given by our doctors. Dear Dr. Molner: My hus band has a thyroid deficiency Does this mean our children &<Captain --Shindig 11--Topper 9--The Littlest Hobe 7--Dialing 8--Blography With Gi 6--News, Weather, 3~Gilligan's Isiand 9=-Dear Ch 2--The Detectives 9:30 1:90PM. | 9--The Mil | S=Let/s Sing Out 4-Leave if | d2--U.S. Foreign Policy 7--Combat é--On The Scene 11--Nurses 4--Danny Thomas | 2--Romper 3--Wendy and Me Conseq| 11--Specia! Movie 9--Petticoat Junction 9---Bingo 63--The Great War 8-2--What's 4--Joey Bishop Show 7--Donna R 6:30 PLM. \ Best ala Talent eanconten) 7--The You 1:00 P.M. 4--Andy of 2---Cloak of Mystery *:90 PM. 9--Summer 6-3--Gideon's Way | 1:90 4--Patticoat Junctiion 1--Albert. J. 2--Mickey Mouse Club 8-2--Jeopardy @--Rochester 9--Peyton Place Channel 11--Hamilton 7--The Fugitive orators nee &--Superman 100 9--Metro Final 6--Viewpoint Racing Forum 4--Zane Grey 20 Pom. 6:00 PLM, é--Night Metre J--News Central 11:98 PLM, 11--Ghost Squad News, Sports %-2--Tonight Show 4:20 P.M, 41:40 P.M. 8-4--Huntley-Brinkley WEDNESDAY News £:00 AM 200 PLM, z ne 7--Where The Action Is 7100 PM, 9:00 A.M, 4--Mike's Carnival . 2--Mickey Mouse. Club |:4--Linkletter's Party 4--Car 54, Where Are 9:15 AM | 3--Movie You? i theta 2--Ann Southern Show 4--To Tell The Truth 10:00 A.M, | 3:90 P.M, 6:00 PLM. 4---| Love 10:38 4--The McCoys 11:00 A.M, 11--Bonnie Prudden | 7--Rocketship 7 9--Does Mother Know 7--F Troop 1:15 AM, TELEVISION LOG in Dyke Show 12:00 NOON Place 6-2--Call My Bluff 7--Money Movie W100. P.M. 4--News and Weather v Gritfin Show] 3--Popeye and Pale an 12:18 PM, 4--Speaker of the House and Nurses = '" PM. 9--Dear Charlotte 'Music Hall 12:98 PLM. Magaine 11--News : 9---From Scafbore College -- 02--I'll Bet 4--Search for Tomorres 3~Noon-day Report 12:48 PLM, 1--News and is P.M, 4--Guiding Light how 1:00 PLM, 7--Trailmaster 6--Music And News 4--Meet The Millers 3~--Summer Carousel 2---Mike Douglas Show 1:30 PLM. N--Mid-Day Matinee And First Four Reces ugh onal =Cineme Movie No. & 12:10 P.M, oo Movie Fisher 5-3--Luncheon Date 4--As The World Turne House 4--Password Kangaroo 2--Moment Of Truth 2:30 PLM, For Dollars | &2--The Doctors rl Talk 7--A Time For Us | 6--Movie Matinee arlotte | 3:00 PLM, AM. j\--Father Knows Best Ed Allen 9--People in Conflict lionaire 8-2--Another World To Beaver --|--7--General. Hospital. 1)--Funny Company Room %---Its Your Move | @2--Truth or $-2--You Don't Say 7--The Young Marrieds ey 6--Public Service A.M, Announcements | 4--Edge ot Night This Song 4:00 P.M, oe }11-Wild Bill Hickok 9--Peyton Place &The Match Game 6-3--Vacation Time | 4--Secret Storm ration | Rocky and His ing Set | Friends Mayberry | 4:30 PLM, |11---Huckleberry Hound 9--Movie shu | 7--Early Show A.M, |6-3---2Sunshine Semester Steed 4--The 4-Thirty Show 2-B'wane Don Tougher Competition Possible For Canada In Forest Products By J. C. GRAHAM Canadian Press Correspondent WELLINGTON, N.Z. (CP)-- Tougher competition in paper and forest products could be the chief effect for Canada of the free trade area agreement just reached between Australia and New Zealand. The agreement provides that from the beginning of 1966 tar- iffs will start to be phased out for commodities covering some 60 per cent of the value of trade between the two countries. Hopes have been expressed that eventually almost all trade be- tween New Zealand and Aus- tralia will be freed. The present pact contains many provisos, safeguards and escape clauses to permit each country to protect industries which seem to be threatened by free trade. It also excludes some important products like have been told so.--Mrs. J. 8, No, that is not true, Complete failure of the thyroid gland in a child will cause serious re- tardation, but that is a far dif- ferent condition from an under active thyroid. And even when a baby is born with this prob- lem, thyroid medication pre- will be mentally retarded? We vents retardation. butter, certain meats, clothing and most steel. However, the provisions re: lating to forest products are re- garded by New Zealand at least as the core of the agreement and the feature by which trade can be restored to a more even balance. At present New Zealand land buys four times as much annually from Australia as it is able to sell to its larger neigh- bor. The lis of items to be freed from tariffs between the two countries includes newsprint, pulp, timber, plywood, veneers, packaging papers and board, jand' other papers. Some ply- woods and veneers will come jinto New Zealand in increased quantity from Australia as a result, But the balance in forest |products generally should be jstrongly in New Zealand's fa- |vor, |DEVELOP PLANTS The paper and forest industry has come prominently to the fore during he las few years as a New ealand export indus- try owing to the maturing of big ;man-made forests and the 'de- velopment of processing plants. | The annual return from forest jproduct exports, however, is |still only about $72,000,000, THE OSHAWA TIMES, -- uesdey, September 7, 1965 | BRIDGE =~ shee meee 7 7 7 om Seensn de: East-West vulnerable, NORTH @Q108 @A2 many forms. The mere oppor- tunity to take a trick at a given point certainly does not create an obligation to de so. On the contrary, both the declarer and the defenders are frequently better off to refuse a trick which can be won. ~ In most case, the holdup play is used by the declarer and oc- curs in connection with no- trump contracts, Declarer fre- quently declines to win a trick in a suit being pressed against him until one of his opponents is exhausted of that suit, The purpose is to interfere with communication in that suit be- tween the defenders. There are also cases where a trick is refused for an entirely different reason. Today's deal shows such a case. It involves defensive play. West made a good shot when he led a club. The ten held the trick and West continued with the jack and then played the king. Deciarer fretted for a time and finally ruffed with the ten. West overruffed with the jack and shifted to a diamond. South won it with the 'king, led the queen of hearts, and West was a deceased pigeon whether he covered the queen or not. As a result, South made four hearts.- However, it must: be said that West slipped mightily when he overstuffed South's ten with the jack. He should have discard- ed a diamond instead. By jp ag the K-J-8 intact after South had played the ten, West could have assured him- self of two certain trump tricks and defeat of the contract. Re- gardiess of which heart declar- er led next, West could cover and thus obtain two trump win- ners. There is no ready guide to govern the question of when to take or refuse a particular trick, Each case rests entirely on its own special circum- stances. Tricks are taken more often than not when the oppor- tunity arises, but the impor- tant factor in reaching the right conclusion is good judgment. NEWS IN BRIEF MINK TOO COMMON Wild mink are becoming a menace to the balance of na- ture in Sweden, where 10,000 are killed yearly by government in- spectors. SATURDAY 1§ BLACK More than a third of London's 78,471 road casualties in 1964 re- "lsuited- from accidents at- night, mostly on Saturday nights. FIND MORE CUBANS The population of Cuba now is 7,630,000, an increase of 1,800,- 000 since the last census in 1953. ROLL BLOCKS VIEW The sheepskin roll on the nose of a trotting or pacing horse cuts: off his view of the track so he will not shy at shadows, SUPPLY RIVAL MARKET The Roman Catholic Carme- lite monastery at Peabody, Mass., makes silver religious medals for sale to Protestants. LOBSTERS MEAN CASH The lobster fishing industry is worth nearly $20,000,000 annually to the Maritime provinces. EARLY LIST WAS SHORT The first telephone directory, issued at New Haven, Conn., in 1878, listed 50! subscribers on one sheet of paper. MOST ACCEPT BREAK About 97 per cent of Amer- ican businesses now allow time off for coffee breaks, compared with 65 per cent in 1955. NEW ROADS SAVE LIVES Modern superhighways have an accident rate of 2.8 deaths per 100,000,000 vehicle - miles, compared with 9.7 deaths on older roads. SALLY'S SALLIES

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy