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Oshawa Times (1958-), 24 Jan 1966, p. 3

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FAR FROM THE SWAYING PALMS OF SOUTH The thought of swaying put out a fire which gutted palms and sun - baked the Michael Building in beaches gets stronger when downtown Calgary. At Least 27 Persons Die Plane Landing In 6 Provinces Weekend (Seen 'Miracle By THE CANADIAN PRESS {1 PITTSBURGH (AP)--A Cane- At least 27 persons died in °% accidents in six of Canada's 10 provinces during the weekend. A Canadian Press survey from 6 p.m. Friday, to midnight Sunday, local times, showed SUNDAY that 21 of the deaths were in| Gertrude Petrie, 44, Toronto, traffic mishaps. Fires ac-\in hospital of injuries suffered counted for two deaths, one per-|when she fell down a flight of son died in a hunting accident stairs. and three in unclassified acci-| Major Gerald Kelly, 42, Riv- dents. jers, Man., when a car in which Newfoundland, Prince Ed-|he was riding crashed on high- ward Island, New Brunswick/way 50 near Bolton. and Manitoba were fatality) SATURDAY free, | Edgar Ayotte, 40, Embrun, Quebec reported seven traffic |Ont., when his car left the road viewed through this frame of icicles, a phenomenon re- maining after firemen had ario after falling down a flight f stairs. The survey does not include |industrial or natureal deaths, /known suicides or slayings. The Ontario dead: with his wife and two sons made an emergency landing on |a football field Saturday during ja heavy snowfall. Police called jthe landing magnificent. Jacques R. Bouchard, 31, of Brockville brought down _ his single-engine piper Cherokee on the North Hills high school foot- ball field about 12 miles north of Pittsburgh. Bouchard, his wife, Betty, 29, and their .sons, John, 9, and Ronald, 8, were not hurt, police said. Bouchard had been iin radio deaths. Ontario and British Co-|and crashed into a hydro pole|contact with the tower at Pitts- lumbia had four each. Three/near Russell. |burgh Airport, but lost contact. persons died on Nova Scotia's| Allan Wagner, 2, Chelmsford, With visibility nearly zero, he highways, two in Saskatchewan of injuries suffered when the|circled the area looking for a and one in Alberta. jear driven by his father went|place to come down. Quebec also reported twojoff the Queen Elizabeth Way| 'The football field was the deaths in fires and two other|and crashed into a ditch. foniy place in the area he could deaths--a gir! hit by a train and} FRIDAY |have landed," said a policeman a man killed in an explosion. | Richard Henry Banbury, 78, 'We heard the plane and rushed One person died of a hunting |Ingersoll, when struck by a car/to the field to put out flares accident in Nova Scotia and a|while crossing highway 19 in|put he came down about two woman died of injuries in On-/front of his home. minutes before we got there." Teamwork Seen PRESIDENT READY TO ) a Sg sawe WASHINGTON (AP) -- Pres- ident Johnson is expected to de- cide this week whether to re- sume the bombing of North Viet Nam, but any major new escalation of the Vietnamese war, such as bombing Hanoi, is considered unlikely at this time. State Secretary Rusk said Sunday night the decision on re- newed bombing is still to be Hmade, He refused to say what he favored or predict what course Johnson would choose. The president is caught be- tween advocates of totally con- tradictory proposals. Many for- eign governments, some mem- bers of Congress, some officials in the administration favor pro- longing the pause. Others, in- cluding military leaders, and top American officials in Sai- gon would like to start pounding \North Viet Nam again quickly. | Rusk said Johnson is taking lall elements of the situation into |consideration, including the fact ithat "we must do all we can to assure the safety of our own and allied forces' fighting the Viet Cong in South Viet Nam. Rusk said Sunday night in an/try forces into South Viet Nam, eee ee 5g eae i ~~ year of the study and expects} Decision On Bombing Expected This Week NBC radio-television interview on Meet the Press that escala- tion of the conflict depends on the aggressor. Johnson had said last week that he wants to keep the war limited if possible. MANSFIELD FAVORS PAUSE Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield said in an in- terview he hopes the president wil! continue the bombing pause as long as there is a "faint glimmer of hope" for peace ne- gotiations. Gen. Earle G, Wheeler, chair- man of the joint chiefs of staff, said that a permanent cessa- tion.of U.S. bombing raids over North Viet Nam would be throw- ing "'one of your blue chips for negotiations over your shoul- der." | Wheeler said in testimony be- fore the Senate armed services | committee, made available dur- ling the weekend, that there are three of these blue chips. | "One of them is the bombing of North Viet Nam," he said. "The second is the deployment lof United States and third coun- Curious Heart Defecis Seen Cause Of Deaths NEW YORK (AP) -- Curious defects inside the heart appar- lently are the reason some peo- ple die suddenly and mysteri- dian flying in a small plane ously, a team of physicians said type Sunday. And they said they suspect) that long, heavy use of various tranquillizers might be a cause of the heart damage, This new research to explain sudden deaths in which no obvi- lous cause appears even on au- |topsy is described in the journal of the American Medical Asso- ciation by Dr. Howard L. Rich- ardson, Dr. Kathryn I. Graup- ner and Dr. Mary E. Richard- son of the Veterans Administra- tion Hospital, North Little Rock, Ark., and the University of Ar-; ---- |kansas medical centre. | Dr. Richardson and associ- lates, one of them his wife, found the strange heart defects through careful study of the hearts of four men who died in 1964 and 1965. The defects showed up in the inner heart muscle tissue and CANADA LOSES LIVINGSTONE, N.Y. (CP)-- The United States team de- feated Canada 26-24 Saturday lin the first of two matches to jdecide a Norht America repre- lsentative at the world handball |team championships in Sweden jin tiny blood vessels, either as jdegenerative changes or over- jgrowth of some kinds of tissue. | The defects "appear to be unique,"' they said, and of a that might affect the heart's electrical conduction system and hence its rhythm. Some of.the victims, in life, had jshown non-specific changes in \their electrocardiograms. The physicians said they had jproduced similar defects in the jhearts of animals fed phenothia-| jzine tranquillizers, and then subjected to chronic stress. | They speculate that "the heart} lesions may in some way be} due' to the effects of various! |tranquillizers in blocking the jaction of chemicals from the adrenal glands. vi and the third is the prospective withdrawal, under appropriate circumstances, of our forces and third country forces." Assistant Defence Secretary Arthur Sylvester said Wheeler explained to him that he was not against any halt in . the bombing. Wheeler, Sylvester said, approves of the present in- terruption as an effort to per- suade the Communists to nego- tiate, but is against any per- manent cessation, Retired Gen. James M. Gavin had suggested a permanent halt to the bomb- ing.. Survey Set On Morality OTTAWA (C)--The Canada ;Council is going to finance anj extensive study of the morality jof adolescents in the Montreal region. Announcing a series of grants today, the council said it is con-|" tributing $26,000 for the first| jto finance it for years. The work is being done by a} group headed by Professor) |Dennis Szabo, director of the |University of. Montreal's de- 'partment of crimonology. A $25,000 grant is being made| jto Professor John Meisel, so- \cial director of the department of political studies at Queen's University, to do research on the behavior and attitudes of |Canadian voters during the |Nov. 8 federal élection cam-| paign. Other clude: --$8,000 to Carleton Univer- sity, Ottawa, for sociological research on the influence of a generation of students on| the university they attend, and its influence on them. --$4,000 to Trent University, | Peterborough, to allow Pro-| fessor Bernard Blishen to re-| vise his occupational class scale. two more research grants in-| Actor Herbert Marshall, who lost a leg in World War I, but enjoyed 50 years in ; Grandmother, 92 | Enjoys Her Sail | MAHE, Seychelles (Reuters) | A 92 - year - old grandmother, | Mrs. Emmy Cole, arrived here} Sunday after a 1,000 - mile voy- age on the Indian Ocean from Mombasa, Kenya, in a 12-ton/ \trimaran. | "IT never enjoyed a sail so much," she said. | The 40 - foot, triple - hulled) yacht Galinule, which also -- ried Mrs. Cole's son, his wife dult children, reached re, eight days over-| due, after leaving Mombasa | Jan. 8, | Cole is emigrating to New) Zealand with his mother, his) wife Jean, and their children) Jane, 23, and Charles, 19. and two harbor THE OSHAWA TIMES. 'No Drilling In -- 'Canada Waters SARNIA (CP) -- No drilling 'for. gas and oil will be per- mitted in Canadian waters on Lake Huron or Lake St, Clair, the Canadian ~ American com- _ mitte on water pollution 'was HERBERT MARSHALL DIES show business, died Satur- day morning at his Beverly Hills home. He was 75,. assured Friday, i Rene Brunelle, Conservative MPP for Cochrane North and chairman of the legislature's select committee on mining, told the water pollution com- mittee in a letter that ho change is contemplated in de Ontario government's present |prohibition against drilling on the lakes. : : He used to be bothered by, backaches and tired feeling. When he learned that irritation of the bladder and urinary tract can result in backache and tired feeling, ke "s | Kidney Pills. Smart man. Dodd's Pills | stimulate the kidneys to help relieve the condition causing the backache and tired feeling, Soon he felt better --rested better. Te you are bothered by backache, Dodd's Kidney Pills may help you, too. You ean depend on Dodd's, | New large size sayes money. * PRESTIGE DISTINCTION BEYOND COMPARE * UNDERGROUND PARKING * GeorGcian mansions 124 PARK ROAD NORTH: OSHAWA Ce eel A FEW 1 AND 2 BEDROOM SUITES AVAILABLE * Only By Appointment 723-1712 or 728-2911 Vital Necessity cent . . . with the short area for landing." The plane clipped a tree on the way down, hit the snow- covered field and rolled into a MONTREAL (CP)--The vital| vival work has been done on necessity of teamwork in both| patients virtually dead from medicine and the national life| sudden stoppage of their hearts taken GH co deoekstila: Beane s jor themes of) - : rockville nd | -- ger ee oy *foctors| SAVE 15 PER CENT for Wheeling, W. Va., on a which ended here this weekend. | _About 15 per cent of 500 "car-| pleasure trip. In the field of medicine, doc-| diac arrest" patients treated in| gan tors told of how, by pooling| team fashion by Royal Victoria) their talents, they could bring|SPecialists had been brought) fach youth on the British some humans back to life from| back, or resuscitated. Pacific island of Tonga receives| a state of virtual death. Mr. MacLennan spoke to the|814 acres of land when he turns In a talk dealing with the life| convention at its closing dinner 16. of Canada, a well-known Cana-| Saturday night. The meeting --- macomcaninn dian novelist, Hugh MacLennan/ had gone on for three days. A Red Cross Water Safety pleaded for teamwork between! The novelist said a great} the nation's two main groups, | handicap for Canala in the past! Will be held ot the whose existences he has chris-|was lack of understanding be- SIMGOE HALL BOYS' CLUB -- EASTVIEW tened "the two solitudes."' }tween its French- and English- Commencing The feats of revival at|speaking citizens. FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 4th death's door were described to| The modern state must be ot 7:30 P.M. flag pole at the end of the field.| January, 1967. The next match One wing was nearly ripped off.| will be played either in Mont- Two to three inches of snow|real or Toronto before March was on the ground. 5, with Canada to set the site Police' said the family had and date. | Good Names To Remember | When Buying or Selling REAL ESTATE Reg. .Aker--President Bill, McFeeters--Vice Pres. Schofield-Aker Ltd. 723-2265 OFFER FREE LAND | the convention by a team of| made 'to function while giving doctors from Montreal's Royal| due respect to individual dif- Victoria Hospital. iferences, he said. There must One of the medical men, Dr.|be "a decentralization of the Arnold Johnson, said. the re-' mass spirit," Alabama Negro Is Slain White Man Faces Murder man, is charged with. shooting to death David Colston, 32, of Camden, after the two began arguing about an auto collision. | The incident occurred in front of the Antioch Baptist Church, ia Negro church, where a fu- : 4 : neral was being held at the About 50 Negroes tried to time, Sheriff Jenkins said. march in Lhapaderne the cosa Reeves drove to the county dent, but were turned back. |jail after the incident and told Sheriff Jenkins said that/|a policeman to call Sheriff Jen- James T. Reeves, 46, a cattle|kins, the sheriff said. Applicants must by 16 yeers and over end holder of the Red Cross Senior Swimmers Award or the Royal Life Saving Bronze Award, This course will qualify @ person for lifeguard duty under the s 1965 Provincial regulations for swimming pools if 17 yeors CAMDEN, Ala. (AP)--Wilcox| County Sheriff P. C. Jenkins| ida said a rural Camden white man was charged with murder Sun- day shortly after a street ar- gument led to the shooting death of a Negro. man. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION PHONE POOL MANAGER AT 728-5121 TROUD TUES., and WED. SPECIALS ! 1 to 5. year G.1.C.'s AY%% * Investment Funds LEAN TENDER Club Steaks 59: 65 69) 29 Sevings accounts Paid and compounded quarterly LEAN RINDLESS BACON LEAN Minced Steak BY THE PIECE OLOGNA * Estate Planning * Executors & Trustees' Open Friday Nights and All Day Saturday CenrraL Ontario Trust & Savings Corporation 19 Simcoe Street North 23 King Street West 723-5221 623-2527 Oshawa Bawmenvitie ih CENTRAL ONTARIO TRUST & SAVINGS CORPORATION is pleased to announce the appointment of Mr. Ralph L. Schofield as Supervisor of the Real Estate Department operating from the Head Office of the Corporation, 19 Simcoe Street North, Oshawa. Mr. Schofield has for more than twenty-five years been successfully and prominently associated with Real Estate in Oshawa and district:and is expertly informed on all facets of Real Estate, particularly in Oshawa and the surrounding area. Assisting Mr. Schofield will be Mr. William Taylor, long - time Oshawa businessman, Mr. Ron Armstrong and Mr, Tom Houston. Mr Schofield invites his many friends and "associates to call on him and his staff with all matters of sale, purchase, development or lease of residential, commercial and in- dustrial Real Estate. CenrraL ONTARIO TRUST AND SAVINGS CORPORATION ¢ Estate Department, Ralph Schofield Sup'r. 19 Simcoe St. N., Oshawa 723-5221 FOUNTAINHEAD OF SERVICE Real

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