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Oshawa Times (1958-), 21 Jun 1967, p. 24

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DONALD DUCK BUZ SAWYER LCAN'T BE MISTAKEN! CHRISTY SAWYER? 'YOU USED TO BE MY SECRETARY! VOICE... YOUR YOU CAN'T POSSIBLY BE ANYONE BUT CHRISTY. QUICK'? THE COOR-- LI'L ABNER ¥ THEM CONTENTED LI'L BURPS DRIVES ME. \ EVEN CRAZIER THAN ~ > THAR FORMER HONGRY HOWLIN'// 4 NATCHERLY/ YO" Cor T FRELIN'S!# - hae or SALE FLAWLESS, TIM PROUD oF you! YOU'VE ETOPPED BRAGGIN' ABOUT YOURSELF AN' YOU'VE QUIT INSULTIN' PEOPLE / ANI THE TIME APOLOGIZE TO YOU! UM COME FOR ME TO 1 WELL,WHAT TOOK YOU So ZONG, FATHEAD 2/ tebe erred TO See Fectoe Srodietn tons 1967. World DON'T PLAY TH grag 'gs tage I'VE SEEN THE AcgUISHTVE TXPRE an ON YOUR FACE EVE! TIME. You GLANCE vat THAT LEAVES THE FIELD OPEN FOR YOU, TENNY. AND WITH EARL OUT OF THE WAY, WHAT'S TO STOP YOU FROM CATCHING THAT CUTE LITTLE BLONDE ON THE REBOUND? © King Foateras Syndient eee JANE ARDEN SEE THE TRADER. at the PONTIAC Action Centre YOU SURE % ARE oH JANE MN BEST FRIEND, BUZ SIR, I REPEAT, FACE NOUR AMERICAN ACCENT! 1S. MARY BROWN, AND 1. CPWENTY MILES AWAY... MY NAME ~ NEVER SAW YOU BEFORE IN AY LIFES THE CLIFF MILLS MOTORS LTD. ee camer te ae one aor gremee ng Tes ager TELEVISION Channe! 2--Buttalo Channel 3--Barrie Channei 4--Buttale Channel 6--" = et iel 8 cet 9--Toronto Channel 11--Hamiltow Channel 12--Peterborougb | wei94 76432 -- News, babii 2 Sports Ni--Pierre Berton 3-6-9--News, Weather, Sports 4--News 2-8--Huntley-Brinkley rite P.M. 1i--Fugitive 9--Batman &--Lowell Thomas 6--TBA 4--Lowell Thomas 3--Daktari 2--News, Weather, Sports 7.2% P.M, 7--News Weather 7:3 P. 12--Comment 9--Andy Williams $-2--Virginian 7--Batman 6--Peggy Neville 4--Lost in Space 7:45 P.M. 12-6--Nation's Business 8:00 P.M. 11--Movie 7--Bill Graham Crusade 3-61 "um Pe Acres 9--Socce 4-- Beverly Hillbillies 3-6-12--Bob Hope 9:00 P.M. 7--Novie 4--Green Acres 4--Gomer Py'e 3-6-12--Intertel N--fd 2-8--NBC News Special 9:30 PLM, Tver" Sra 4--Steve Allen 24-1 Spy spsoris, Hot Seat. sondlee Ho on Stage 1:00 *.M, | é--News, Weather, Sports 3 PM. 6--Frost Report 12:00 A.M, 1l--Mystery Theatre 1:28 P. Se ae | | t viewport 'ekopeeman i-Plerre 'Berton Pegi sted g Patrol | peared 12 mich Wessipecker | pesdenany Bier 4--Movie metiaier aay | 7oMovie | 1. bsacrrpenee Ald a-Thriler ns 1 seul Gaeae sed 9--Movie $--How's Business MW. J--Twillgee rneatre 12--Movie 6--Green Hornet 412--News, Sports, eather 3--Nation's Business o:38 P.M. 12--Laredo Bled cack oa Kangeroe *| albert J. as pg lL lh the Alr 8:55 $--Dialing For Dollars -- Virginia Graham Ni--Littie People 9--Romper Room | 6@--Biography | 4--Forest Rangers | Laaicbeaaiet 9:3 A.) ge Sir Lancelot Sane Bobby selor pay oh "ot Life | 2--Jack La Lanne \l--Morning Time | 9--Cartoon Playhouse 7--Dateline: | 4--Beverly Hillbillies | 2-8--Concentration 11--Mike. Douglas 9--Fractured Phrases 7--Supermarket Sweep 4~Andy Griffith | 3--Ed Allen Time 4:30 A.M. 9--Magistrates Court | 7--Family Game 4--Dick Van Dyke Pat LOG uni beget | aeree 4-12--News, Weather and @--Dialing Fo Dollars, 4-6--As the World a ayaa in Mates 24--Days on Lives 9--Words and Musie 4--To Tell The Truth Allen Time | 8-2--Snap Judgment 4--Candid Camera 10:38 A.M. sua HEY AIN'T MANY A MAN COULD COME ONTO A DEAL Like. THIS! VY LooKSsuKE OQ THERE'S NOTHING FOR DRIIMM TO THIT HIM! King St. at Park Rd. HUBERT Tataran Syndicate, Inc., 1967. World rights reserved: DAVEYS FRIENP iS IN THE HOSPITAL-- CAN YOU TAKE US TO VISIT HIM? TLL WAIT OUT HERE- I'M NOT VISITING ANY BULLFROG! =>! HOSPITAL FY PRE TF YOUR HEALTH 3-4-6-12---Edge a Night 't Say WALKING DOLLIS MISSING! Distribated by King Features Syndicate, MICKEY MOUSE HEY! I DIDN'T MEAN THAT LITERALLY, JUNIOR... AND TO THINK THAT SOME PEOPLE DON'T BELIEVE IN THE POWER OF SUGGESTION. OD Pe Pa fit iP oe a ae a ee ee 22. River islet 25. Kind of CROSSWORD AOROSS DOWN 1, Pants 1, Talks 6, Bound witha strip 2. Genus of of linen 5 11, Apportion 3. Strike 12. Insert 4. Kettle 13. Buttonhole 5. Cooking flower 15. Division 6. Glittering or portion; adornments abbr. 7. Herb of 16, Feudal carrot tenants family 17, Mississippi 8. Petition embank- 9, Nobleman ment 10. Colors 18. Identical 14. Part of 21. Overhead achurch train 17. Confed- general bay window 18. The sun |?) (0) Hane Dear Dr. Molner: I have been having a gall bladder problem. Is_ it possible to pass. gall stones? I am told a person can eat anything after having the gall bladder removed. If so, what is the purpose of having a gall bladder? Is there any alternative to| surgery?--Mrs. D. S. Yes, it is possible to pass gall stones--if they are not too big. To answer your second ques- tion, let's consider what the gall bladder is for. It stores and con- 3 30. Like 32. Wild goat 33, Performer 35. Native of Teheran 38. Rowing implement 41, Group of cirrocu- mulus clouds: 2 wds. 43, Knitting stitches 36 IN 44, Miss O'Grady fj centrates bile, a digestive juice. Bile is formed in the liver. It flows to the small intestine, but some follows a detour into the gall bladder where it is concen- trated and stored. When you eat, this reserve supply is re- leased. Since the bile is concentrated in the gall bladder, and since most saturated solutions tend to the formation of crystals, it is not surprising that crystals can form in the gall bladder under certain conditions. These crys- tals are what we call "gall stones." They can be of any size, from what we call "sand". or "gravel," up to very sizable stones. The small ones may pass through the duct easily into the intestine. The big ones can't get into the duct, but re- main in the gall bladder. MAY LODGE And then .there are the in- between sizes, not small enough to pass through easily, but not large enough to prevent them from getting into the duct. They may work their way through slowly, hurting all the way until they finally pass into the in- testine, putting an end to the eee pain. Or they become lodged in Gall Stone Answer Depends On Size By JOSEPH G. MOLNER, MD the duct, in which case surgical removal is the only solution. Bile is particularly necessary |for digesting fats, But since the gall bladder is merely a reser- voir, even when it is removed bile still will flow from the liver to the digestive tract. It is pos- |sible to "eat anything," so long as the amount eaten is not too great for the supply of bile to handle at any one time. You still produce the same amount; all you have lost is the ability to store it up for mealtimes. Many a person who eats mod- erately gets along very well without a gall bladder. Some learn that eating rather lightly at regular meals and then add- ing snacks between meals helps them. But the person who eats a heavy meal, particularly one rich in fats, may not have enough bile at that particular meal, since he no longer has the reserve to draw on. He may then have digestive difficulties. When, because of stones (or other conditions), a gall bladder needs removal, there isn't any choice. Surgery is the proper course. And (this is a question often asked) there is no way of "dissolving" gall stones. Not without harming the body. Nor can we offer much in the way of preventing stones, ex- cept that they tend to form in infected or diseased gall blad- ders, so subduing infection helps {when that is the cause, Dear Dr. Molner: Can tran- quilizers (meprobamate, etc.) become habit - forming or a "crutch," so to speak?--V. V. Certainly. But that is true of innumerable medications. Some people can get an "'aspirir habit," and think they éan't ge along without it. Trangilizier: aré very useful, but like any THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, June 21, 1967 BRIDGE By B. JAY BECKER (Top Record-Holder in Masters' Individual Championship Play) South dealer. Both sides vulnerable. NORTH as76 83 OAT42 $Q1093 WEST EAST oK53 4109842 @KI974 995 $1083 595 62 ATS SOUTH 4AQ 9A1062 oKQ6 @KI85 The bidding: South West North East lm Pass 2m Pass 3NT Opening lead. -- seven of hearts. It stands to reason that the more mistakes your opponents make, the better off you will be, and it also follows that the more opportunities you give the opponents to make a mistake, the more often they will be kind enough to oblige. However, there are also hands in which you may unwittingly trap yourself into making a mistake, and since there can be no advantage to falling into a trap of your own creation, you should naturally make every effort possible to avoid becoming your own victim. Here is a typical case. Let's Say you're in three notrump and West leads a heart. You duck twice and win the third round with the ace as East discards a low spade. When you now lead the king of clubs, it turns out that East has the ace. But when he then returns a spade, you are faced with the critical choice of try- ing for your ninth trick by either taking a spade finesse or by going up with the ace and playing for the diamonds to be divided 3-3. If you are familiar with prob- abilities, you will take the fi- nesse and wind up going down two.. You reason that there is roughly a 50 per cent chance of winning the finesse, but only about a 36 per cent chance of finding a 3-3 diamond division. As the cards lie, you could have made the contract by play- ing for the diamonds to be even- ly divided, but you cannot really be faulted for having made the correct percentage play. However, your method of play earlier is much easier to fault, What you should have done was lead the K-Q and another dia- mond before playing the king of clubs. Had you done this, you would have made the contract easily. You would learn that the diamonds are divided 3-3, and would run like a bunny with nine tricks when East took the ace of clubs and returned a spade. Hydro Workers Sustain Strike MONTREAL (CP) -- Union leaders said today a majority of the 8,000 Hydro-Quebec work- '| ers involved in a series of rotat- ing strikes against the provin- cially-owned utility have voted against a management settle- ment offer and that a sustained strike has officially started in some areas. Already on strike, said the un- jon spokesmen, are employees in Montreal, Quebec City, the Laurentians and the north shore of the St. Lawrence River. Voting on management's offer took place Monday night at 28 worker meetings across the province. In the general Montreal area, an estimated 76 per cent of the sgh voted against the of- er. They are members of the Ca- nadian Union of Public Em- ployees. Seniority has been a major question at issue in the dispute, Involved are office workers, technical personnel and em- ployees described as basie workers. HOME RUN ELKINS, W. Va. (AP)--John Denver Canterbury, held in the West Virginia medium security prison at Huttonsville, recently celebrated his 19th birthday and escaped from jail. State po- lice said Canterbury, serving a term for breaking and entering, escaped while the prison base- ball team was in Elkins for a game. SALLY'S SALLIES "Please don't scare him with those grave looks." medication they have to be em- ployed with good judgment. Note to "Montana": No, can- cer of the pancreas cannot be 'transmitted through marital re- 'ations, or, in fact, transmitted, at. all. ) ) 7 7 ' sais

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