Medicare Lag Hurts Minister OTTAWA (CP) -- Differences Thursday between Fi- nance Minister Sharp and Health Minister MacEachen in- valva nat only the issue of medi- CAl CEFO mDULenLE wer erey cone bids for the future le ip of the Liberal party. For Mr. MacEachen, 45, post- of the starting date for one year to July 1, 1968, marks one of the few defeats he has suffered during his three years as a cabinet minister. It was around the medicare that the bachelor ith minister hoped to re- a public following that had waned after the widespread attention given him as_ labor minister in handling Hal C. Banks and important labor leg- islation. WAS A DARKHORSE Mr. MacEachen has been a dark horse in the leadership) race, drawing his support in| night school while working. He) cabinet and in the Liberal party took post-graduate studies at from elements favoring early|the London School of Econom-| social security| enactment of measures. Mr. Sharp, on the other hand,| is on record in favor of a more cautious approach. "I'm inclined to be cautious, he said in a 1964 interview, Berlin Police | } Arrest Suspect | BERLIN (AP)--A 19-year-old) man has been arrested in con-| nection with the kidnapping) Aug. 28, four-year-old Montreal girl who} was later found unharmed. " Police said Peter Uloth, ar-|friendship with Prime Minister] rested Wednesday, supplied the| kidnapper with a mask and the! chloroform he used on the mother prior to taking the girl. The kidnapper left a ransom note demanding 35,000 marks) ($8,350). The child was found Aug. 29 before any ransom money was paid. | The child, daughter of Regina) Klewer, a Montreal secretary, was taken from the home of the child's grandfather, a wealthy) antique dealer. | Arrested earlier were Anni Henschel, 49, and her son Joa- chim, 18. Still being sought is) Juergen Henschel, 22, Anni Hen-) schel's oldest son. The other| Henschel's are being held as accomplices. COUNCIL BRIEFS Oshawa planning board in- formed council that H. R. Stark has withdrawn his ap- plication for the rezoning of the properties at 254 and 256 Celina W. A. Twelvetrees, engineer | and secretary for the Oshawa Suburban Road Commission acknowledged the city's request for a reduction of the speed) limit on Harmony Rd. N. The) request will be submitted to the commission at its next meeting and if approved will appear on the October agenda of the) county council as a proposed "looking very carefully at the implications of various propos- als and not jumping quickly into things." The decision to. move cau-| RT Fy Livusay vie sausves wee e.. esresn ance is in line with the views of several provincial premiers and many members of the busi- ness and financial community. The differing views on eco- nomic issues reflect the educa- tional and occupational back- ground of the two men. Both come from families with little money. Mr, school at 14 to help support his family. Mr, MacEachen is the youngest of three sons of a Cape Breton coal miner. But there the backgrounds tend to part. JOINED CIVIL SERVICE Mr, Sharp, now 55, com- pleted high school and Univer- sity of Manitoba courses at ics. In 1942 he joined the federal finance department and was soon part of the Ottawa estab- lishment. Mr. MacEachen says _ his early school studies taught him that poverty needn't be inevita- ble He studied at St. Francis Xavier University in Antigo- nish, N.S., the University of Toronto, the University of Chi- cago--where he specialized in Sharp left! jf é New York State Gover- not Nelson A. Rockefeller glances at his confetti cov- ered notes before making his acceptance speech as he was nominated for his third consecutive term for Gover- IT'S A HAPPY OCCASION, BUT... nor by the GOP at the Re- publican State Convention in Rochester, Large amounts of confetti were released from the ceiling of the hall as the demonstra- tions took place. --AP Wirephoto | DOCTORS BATTLE EMPHYSEMA The fastest growing crip- pling disease in the United States today is emphysema, a lung disease. At the mo- ee Anneke nae nen aaawene eee anew we tically nothing about its ba- sic cause or causes or how to reverse its effects. But the fight goes on. The fol- lowirg is the first in a four- part series dealing with this disease. By FRANK CAREY AP Science Writer NEW YORK (AP)--A young resident doctor at Bellevue Hospital stood at the bedside of a frail little man in his early sixties who was obvi- ously fighting for every breath, "Look," said the doctor. "Here's the pinnacle of dis- tress--and this poor guy is typica' of severe cases of this condition. "They act like they just finished the four - mile run every minute of their lives." He referred to respiratory failure--a virtual shut-off of breathing power--which can be brought on by an insidious ja reactionary agent," he said.| | "At that time, too, the army| became more evident in Lu-| chow." Mackinnon said the Red) labor relations--and Mas setts Institute of Technology. He has been a professor of economics at St, Francis and in 1951 made his first bid for a He was elected to Parliament in 1953 where he struck up a Pearson, then external affairs minister, When Mr. who had become Liberal leader. JOINED CABINET IN 1962 He was re-elected in 1962 and became labor minister when He was appointed to his present portfolio early this year. Mr. Sharp is a relative new- comer to active politics. He was defeated in his first try for Par- liament in 1962, although he mahaged to slash Conservative Donald Fleming's majority in Eglinton riding to 760 from 19,- 000 votes, In 1963 Mr. Fleming had re- tired and Mr. Sharp won eas- ily. He became trade minister the Pearson government, moving to finance following Walter Gordon's resignation in after. the 1965 November elec- tion. of Audrey Klewer,| Liberal nomination and failed.) Foreigners Were In Dange During Red Guard Purg HONG KONG |Ottawa as an adviser andjat the height of the militant Red |speech writer for Mr. Pearson,|Guards campaign, a British en- \gineer said Thursday. | James Mackinnon, a 53-year- old Scot who spent 16 months \in China helping to build a fer- the Liberals came' td power, | tizer plant, said that 10 days) ago in' Peking, he saw truck-| loads of Red Guards--young-| sters with red armbands--con- | fiscating art treasures and furni- He had first heard of the Red |Guards in Luchow, in Szechwan |Province, where the factory is | being built. Five other British | lengineers are still working on| |the project. | Before he left, Chinese engi- neers informed him things were "a little different outside" and he and his wife siicule 2s ti the Red Guards. told them. | "When we got to Chengtu, in) central China, we were told not Guards regard Communist party | Chairman Mao Tse-tung's doc-| jtrine as a religion. "They can stop an individual) jsoldier and tell him to get a} and get away with it." Mackinnon said the guards ap- pear to have calmed down now. | |But in the south China city of| {Canton, they still appeared ac- (Reuters) --|to leave the hotel," Mackinnon |tive. MacEachen was|Chinese officials warned for-| said, \defeated in 1958 he remained injeigners to stay in their hotels 'Perhaps they have not got) the message yet. I saw groups | About two months ago, he|of youngsters parading people | said, British engineers working | down the streets. 0 nm the fertilizer project were| "One was an old woman of advised not to walk the streets | about 70, who was taken round| at night. "The reason they gave us in ropes and a tall dunce's cap. | "People in the streets looked | was that there had been an at-jon, their faces showing neither | tack on foreigners in Peking by'approval nor resentment." RENT-A-CAR DAY -- WEEK -- MONTH $8.00 PER DAY 725-6553 RUTHERFORD'S CAR AND TRUCK RENTALS 725-6553 PLUS LOW MILEAGE CHARGE 14 ALBERT ST, hawa thaircut. They can do anything» but potentially devastating and lethal lung disease called emphysema. Emphysema (pron ounced prrteperiiaaustci thine tits the U.S. public health service as "the fastest growing crip- pler disease in the United States today"--constituting a public health menace of po- tentially epidemic proportions unless somehow checked. The malady, whose basic cause or causes remain un- known, is characterized by a so far irreversible destruction of lung tissue. This results in abnormal distention of the sponge-like lung, a loss of its wondrous elasticity, and an entrapment of life-sustaining air within it. OBSTRUCT AIRWAYS There's. also obstruction of certain airway tubes--with the over-all result that many vic- tims can have frequent and extreme difficulty in exhaling, and even mild cases can oc- casionally have such difficulty upon exertion. While the cause remains to be pinpointed, the public health service, and many pri- vate physicians, contend to- bacco smoking -- especially cigarette smoking -- and air pollution, are at the least, among the aggravating fac- tors. Th halth service says the malady has bedevilled man | since ancient Greek and Ro- man days, yet it is a new dis- ease in that only in recent Crippling Lung Disease Could Become Epidemic years has it been properly defined. At least 2,000,000 Amer- fcans. and possibly un to 14+ chronic obstructive tory diseases--including em- physema, chronic bronchitis, which usually is a fellow-trav- eller of it, asthma, bron- chiectasis, and certain forms of chronic pneumonia. Possibly 17,000 become new victims of emphysema yearly. DEATHS INCREASE More than 15,000 will die of emphysema - bronchitis this year. Reported deaths have risen almost eight-fold in the last decade. And, if present rates continue, mortality sta- tistics will list almost 64,000 in 1972. The disease disables one of 14 American workers over 45, striking men 10 times more frequently than women, The little man in the Belle- vue Hospital classic, advanced-stage case. He has been in the hospital about a year. But he's been fighting to breathe for fully 10 years -- his emphysema, bad enough in itself, compli-, cated by chronic bronchitis, a vicious blocker of airway tubes. A tube for intravenous feed- ing is inserted in the little man's right arm. "He can't take the time between breaths to drink or at when it's hot," said the The Oshawa Little Theatre Invites You to Attend CASTING MEETINGS "THE MOON By F. HUGH I$ BLUE" HERBERT To be directed by JANET STEVENSON SUNDAY, September TUESDAY, September 11, at 2:00 p.m. 13, at 8:00 p.m. at ROTARY HALL, Centre St., Oshawa Anyone interested 4 this production is im = $3 mount THE OSHAWA TIMES, Friday, September 9, 1966 15 @ resident-physician, Dr. ichael D. Iseman. *"*That's how short of breath he is." TREAT OUTPATIENTS Among emphysema suffer- ers there are also the walking wounded, victims who come periodically to Bellevue's 10- year-old outpatient clinic for emphysema patients. They look, to a casual observer, like a group of normal, mid- a eee ee eee eee eee WER, DAY, I & UCL BUH fice. "They don't look too bad, but it's only because they're sitting down and expending no effort," says Dr. Anne Davis, clinie director. "You have to see them in exertion. Most of them cannot climb a flight of stairs without becoming breathless; many have trou- ble walking a single block. Only a very small number are able to work--and then oniy at sedentary jobs." "These patients are anxious all the time," said another Bellevue doctor. "Thy're con- stantly frightened of being caught short of breath." To help prevent such epi- sodes--or control them--pa- tients are given hand-oper- ated nebulizers, a kind of OSHAWA TIMES PICTURE RE-PRINTS Available At NU-WAY PHOTO SERVICE 251 King St. €., Oshawe 8 x 10 -- 1.50 each 5x 7 -- 1.25 each 20% Discount on Orders ef 5 or More Pictures bed was a | with Ventilated 0-20° COOLERS: PAN Se t HOoLVENT ae Alumunum © AWNINGS 7 © PORCH ROOFS / © PATIO ROOFS © DOORWAY COVERINGS All-ALUMINUM Keolvent Awnings keep out the sun ond tA, : lod .? end tod, a light. rain ceoe Pi for all-season service, they won't rot, rust, sag, teer, or FREE estimates, MAIL Designed burn. 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