Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 9 Jul 1964, p. 21

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THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, July 9, 1964 - o Stock Market Listings i a , Ne Sales High Low a.m. A "1% 380 389-380. 10 Am Ledue 9990 17 Ball 5% pr Surgeons Argued During Operation TORONTO (CP) -- The chief resident in surgery at Toronto} East General Hospital testified Wednesday that an operation on atricia Morgan was stopped about 10 minutes while he and Dr, Kenneth Brown argued over procedure. : Testifying at Dr. Brown's trial 'on a charge of failing to report Miss Morgan's death, Dr. A. T. Varga said he requested Dr. Brown to identify parts of the OBITUARIES MRS. PERCY A. FARMER | The pallbearers were R. and The death occurred suddenly|W. Taylor, A. Bourne, J. Tobin, , July 7, at her home,|P. McGarry and W. Lee. B Zenith drive, Scarboro, 91 ANTONI SIDOROWICZ AL f -- The funeral service for Antoni Percy Albert Farmer. : ey Sidorowicz, of 538 Dieppe street, Mrs. Farmer is survived by\ oi." died in Oshawa July 7, pe poe lg ae in his 5ist year, will be held at rviving are two si ters, Mrs mn age Funeral Home, '| July 10, at 11 a.m. a peg of gorgg Servs Rev. Arthur Magee of Centre pee ERY. O al0./street United Church will cor- .,-and a brother, Allen) quct the service and interment Garlick, of Weston. will be in Union Cemetery, JThe funeral service was held|oshawa. at 3 p.m. today followed by in- y Lepr term '| WILFRED A. (FRED) KNAPP|anatomy during the operation } ag 4 Nee Arnel aan The death of Wilfred Adolph the 32-year-old woman last Oct. : (Fred) Knapp occurred at the 18 is FUNERAL OF Oshawa Gensrsl Hospital today "MRS, W. J. NOONAN in his 30th year following a Rev. M. J. Darby sang alyear-long illness. He resided at Requiem Mass in Holy|105 Agnes street. be Roman Catholic Church} He was born in Hamilton, ednesday for Mrs. William J.|Ont., the son of Mr, and Mrs. foonan, who died at the family|Adolph Knapp. In 1958, he mar- residence, 211 Park street, July|ried the former Svivia Ashby in 5;. Interment was in Resurrec-/Oshawa. The deceased was a tion Cemetery, resident of Oshawa for 28 years. * wt Colas maint ak Gok McRuer Heads "Reform Study eral Motors of Canada Ltd. He was a member of St. George's Anglican Church. Mr. Knapp is survived by his "TORONTO (CP) -- Attorney- General Arthur Wishart an- nounced today that former On- tario chief justice James Chal- wife, his parents and two sons, Timothy Jay and Scott Edmond. mer McRuer will head Onta- rio's law reform commission. Today's Toront By the Cenasian Press 1) Ne Toronte Stock Sxchange--July % Sales High Low a.m. Ch'ge (Quotations in cents uniess marked $. B B10 460' 460 z--Odd lot, xd--Sy-dividend, xr--Ex- Acc = - 250 $21% 2114 rights, xw--Ex-warrants. Net change Is 8 pr py 120 HH Pe shag oaats ee 1500 $24 2370 23% + Ve 25$123 123 123 : 100 $11% 11% 11% 264 $22%4 22% 22% -- 4 1165 $222 224 at % 575 $3% 23% 23%-- Ve : 1 Sales High Low a.m, Ch'ge 100 $11% 1% Wae+ vw 200 $16¥e 16% 160 225 $11% 11% 11% 243 450 450 450 5 300-420 420 '420 Stock Cosmos Crain RL Crush Int i F i i ; 3 # s < Dr. Brown, who wears a hear- ing aid, argued about the loca- tion of certain organs in the ab- dominal cavity, Dr. Barga said that when Dr. Brown, the Morgan family phy- sician, began cutting toward the spleen, he warned him to stop "I stopped Dr, Brown... I tapped him .on the arm or touched his hand and told him he couldn't cut there . . . there would be a lot of bleeding,' Dr Varga said. "But Dr. Brown just kept cut- ting and cut off a capsule from the spleen," Dr, Varga said adding that the spleen must be removed if it is damaged. He also said Dr. Brown did not) clamp before he used his scal- epl at another juncture in the operation. CHANGED MIND In the course of the opera- tion, when Miss Morgan's blood oR +5 120 Fi 3s - 3 + # v1 Net Stock Sales High Low a.m. Ch'ge INDUSTRIALS 450 $15%e 15 1S' + Ve 200 390 =390 A Alta Gas 240 $35%4 35%4 35% Alat Gas w 874 1600 995 99. Alta Nat 260 $21¥2 218 Qi" Alg Cen 50 $36 560 $71% 1380 $31% 25 $44% t 650 $8% 8% 8% 565 $12¥e 12% 12% + Ve 232 23. 23 I $2 2% 25 +1 MB PR 535 $302 30% 30% + % M Leaf Mill 300 $16% 16% 16% ass-F 41% 3 M $31% 31 Mass-F Sie 30$155 155 155. Mid-West 600 320 320 320 | Molson A 75 $34Va 34¥a 34a 3.13 --" 201 $13 9% 9b mm Va -* Abitibi cki 3288 vse = + = = 3 eSee3sbeeietedc? a Sage asceaushst es 5 308 823d g3~Se-Bisesd 28 3 % 1% 1% 44% WW "4 W% 65 1% 2 20% 2 57 Algoma Alumint Alum 4% pr Argus 100 $172 Arg C P pr 225 $14% Atl jar 200 $17% Bank Mont 101 $6514 Bank NS 113: $72% 400 $2) 8 2 PS 383233 $460 GH 926'2 26% Bat % i 0 6 105 100 100 --5 $182 18% 18% 2 8% 84+ % $20 22 20 --%%| QN Gas $17% 17% i7%--- Val Revelstoke 9s 934+ Ve) Rolland A 51% 514+ %| Rothman Royal Bank Salada Seven Arts Shell Can 4510 $10 250 $14% 14¥2 lla 600 $14 13% 14 200 $74 7% 7% 250 $12% 12% 12% 44% 44% 385883 = s Dr. Brown is one of six men who have been charged with failing to report Miss Morgan's death last Nov. 4 to a coroner 'after an autopsy revealed a sur- gical clamp, tangled in her in- testines, as the cause of death. Five doctors and the admin- istrator of the hospital faced the charges. One doctor was con- victed earlier this week and ps aga Another was 8! ocsure failed to register, Dr. : Brown saiq he would revise his Bee Pg ag Se ae original surgical 'intention and ' ove more of the stomach ibed interruptions during the|"°™ Seaser operation due to a differ- and small bowel, the chief resi- iy dent said. .. ence of medical opinion. "T told him the patient was SKED TWICE too weak for this . . . the oper- When John Hoolihan, special ation had been going on for Crown prosecutor, asked Dr.jabout two hours by now. I told Varga why he requested Dr, a-nurse to call Dr. Plewes," he Brown to identify the anatomy said. of the patient, the witness re- ga8aystistees abs + 20% 2 +% 7 -% 390 $20% $12 i $57 390 38 Wsburne W Decaita 250 $ 12% 1875. $174.17 1%+ 349 $18% 18% 18% 300 605 605 605 --5 200 640 640 640 --10 550 $29 29 + 100 $11% 1% 11% 1479 $252 25% 25%2 + Ve 300 $19 19 19 oe 75 $592 592 592 Tor-Dom Bk' 155 364V2 646 64a + Ve Transair 3490 325 320 325 +10 Tr Can PL 2137 $42¥e 41% 42144-+ Ve Trans-Mt 486 ad i s salgg i) 10 $! A p70 $20% 20% 20% 100 $22 22%e 22\e--% Un Gas rts 8436 62 61 62 Versatile 150 $i0% 10% 10% -- 0 400 400 400 +20 Vulcan 301 Walk GW 785 $26¥2 36% 36% WCoast Tr 175 $1890 18% 18% + % Weston 150 $192 192 19"a-- West A wits 251 $10% 10% 10% Woodwd A 105 $27 27) 7 tL it sh tL hand pr Int Nickel Int Util 3999258533838 Agnico 2900 Amal Rare 1000 A Am Moly 800 15° 250 320 $2! 254 25%4-- Ve 425 $88 87% 88 1400 320. 329 320 $222 22% 22% $8v2 84 8% 435 430 430 oe atu ee) 6 66 6 =v $8% 82 8 $19% 19% Wie 9 9 9 +4 295 25 295 $52 5% Sie $72 Va Ve 230 $ 20 20 645 $16¥2 16% 162+ 4 225 $20% 20% 20% $25%e 25% 25\%4 25 125 $19% 19% 19%-- ve Can Malt n 1000 Can Perm cy CSL 55 CAE 100 Cc Brew 2865 C Brew A p 1210 C Brew B p 150 zs Area Ati C Cop Aunor Bankeno Bankfield B M 72% 2082 30% + Ve % 10% 51% 54% + Ve 15 730 3 230 --5 1% -- Ve 4 65% Slee; Can ~ 8 Lafarge wis 560 LOnt Cem Lakeland Lambtn_ Ln aura Sec au Fin Lav F 6% Lav F 140 Corby vt $10% 313% 52 $46¥e 750 $9% 450 $36% 295 $42% 1280 $11% 10$108 1 10% 13%+% 4 --% 9% 36% -- Ve 42 Ye 1% + % 08 +2 t Le Li sé 033 eb .28sSegrgecFso2k w82.<2 so88ss9e5 -cecBisess Serge 28 .s8=Segeon<Fs.ebv83.s= s-8Sagdsd.cectise 38,88 950 5500 26 3000 21%2 21% 21% ) 0 380 2 Con Bldg Con M S$ Con Paper Con Gas n Con Gas A + "% Th 11% $12%e 12% os 10' % 12M Ve 10 10M ae | He said when Dr. Burns The deceased also leaves two brothers, Robert and Herbert, 'Dean Allan Leal of the Os- goode Hall law school and an- all of Oshawa. The remains are at the Armstong Funeral Home for a other legal expert, as yet un- named, will serve with Mr. Mc- Ruer, Mr. Wishart said. "Among other things I ex- pect it (the commission) to study laws on divorce, deser- tion, 'bail and abortion. It's a tremendously important com- mission," he said in a state- ment. . * He said the commission would not be confined to laws unde; provincial jurisdiction. 'I think it is our duty to recommend re- form we think necessary in fed- eral law as well," he said. "The attorney - general added that laws regarding hate litera- ture could fall under this cate- gory. Mr. McRuer, who retired as thief justice July 1, will chair the law reform commission while conducting the govgrn- ment's royal commission on ci- vil 'liberties. Mr, Wishart saiq the two commissions overlap in some areas Robarts Denies Revealing Date TORONTO (CP) --Premier 'obarts denied Wednesday that , he told four advertising agen- dies the date of the last provin- cial election a month before the date was made public. The date of the Sept. 25 elec- tion was announcd in August. E. A. Westendorp, then vice- came. A James A. Lovick ' agency, said last May 22 that the premier had told representatives of his and three other agencies the date a month before the announce- ment. Mr. Robarts told a press con- ference Wednesday that he did not disclose the election date a month in advance "because I didn't know it myself." "There may have been intel- ligent guesses--there was a lot o! speculation," he added. 'But the specific date was not re- vealed," British Consider A Cnadian Bill LONDON (CP) -- A Canadian parliamentary bill that would authorize a new pension plan was introduced in the British House of Commons Wednesday. Because the plan involves both federal and provincial gov- ernments in Canada, an amend- ment to the British North Amer- ica Act is required. Such an amendment can. only be passed by the British Parliament. The bill was introduced by Duncan Sandys, Commonwealth and colonial secretary. It is ex- pected the bill will pass without delay. A similar bill to amend the 1867 act was last required in 1960 when Canada decided a re- tiring age for judges. memorial service July 11. Rev. F. G. Ongley, rector of St. George's Anglican Church, will conduct the service. Interment will be in Mount Lawn Cemetery. In lieu of flowers d>nations to the Cancer Fund would be plied: "To be truthful I wanted to know if he knew the ana- tomy. I had to ask him twice. Finally he showed the abdominal anatomy in the patient." stood back and Dr. Varga said that he and appreciated. GEORGE A. VINISH, DFC George A. Vinish, of Bow- manville, died in the Toronto General Hospital, Wednesday, July 8, following a short illness. He was in his 35th year. Born in Prince Albert, Sask., in 1919, he was the son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Vinish, He mar- ried the former Joan Wallace in London, England in' 1933. They moved to Bowmanville, in 1939. He served as a bomber pilot in the Royal Canadian Air Force during the Second World War. While on service he won the Distinguished Flying Cross. For the past 15 years he has worked for the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company of Bow- manville. He was plant engineer before his death. He is survived by his wife, Joan; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Vinish, Wakew, Sask.; two sisters, Mrs. Lars Larson (Ilona) of Snowdon, Sask. and Mrs. F. R. Smith (Mary) of Vancouver B.C.; two brothers, Paul and Henry, of Courtenay B.C.; one daughter Judith and a son, Patrick, living at home. Mr. Vinish is at the Morris Funeral Chapel, Bowmanville. The funeral service will be in the chapel, Friday, July 10, at 3.30 p.m. and will be conducted by Rev. Walter Rackham of Oshawa. Cremation will be in the Toronto Crematorium. The casket will be closed by request. MRS, JENNIE A. BEATTIE | The death occurred Wednes- |day July 8, at the Toronto Gen- jeral Hospital of Mrs. Jennie A. |Beattie, 132 Verdun road, Osh- awa, The former Jennie Adeline b Pp d di b a c h ti a ti to the probate court of the County of Cleveland Eaton removed as executor of his sister's estate. tice in the Royal Gazette May 27 it would. take action, said to- ties -- the revenue department to have the Nova Scotia Trust Company or some other party, appointed by the court, named executor. not complied with time stipula- ders "requiring you to pay into late Florence Eaton-Kaye. . . . April 24 by the probate court to deposit $111,322 and interest ina Nova The money represented succes- sion duties and death taxes on the estate of his sister, a resi- dent of Victoria, B.C., who died in Rome in 1958. tate of $356,600, the bulk of which went to Mr. Eaton. Delay Granted Plewes, the hospital's chief sur- geon, arrived he told him the patient-was in shock and about to go under. Dr. Plewes ordered the dam- aged spleen removed and then halted surgery. The women's blood level returned and Dr. Plewes left, Dr, Varga said. Kelly clamps, the type found in Miss Morgan's ° abdomen, were used by both him and Dr. Brown, Dr. Varga said. He In Eaton Case HALIFAX (CP)--A delay has een granted in an application Halifax to have industrialist Cyrus Gordon S. Coan, solicitor and roctor for the national revenue lepartment, which served no- ay. "a delay has been granted y agreement" between the par- nd Mr. Eaton. The May 27 notice said appli- ation would be made July 8 to ave Mr. Eaton removed and The notice said Mr. Eaton had ions of two previous court or- chartered bank in Nova Sco- la, moneys of the estate of the Mr, Eaton had been ordered Scotia. chartered _ bank. Mrs. Eaton-Kaye left an es- Hackett, a daughter of the late! John and L. cy Hackett, the de- ceased was born at Lisboy, County Monoghan, Ireland. Af- ter receiving her education in Ireland, she came to Toronto in 1923 and was married there in 1937, She was employed as a} saleslady by the T. Eaton Co. Ltd., until her marriage. Mrs. Beattie moved to Osh- awa in 1932, She was a very ac- tive member of Simcoe Street United Church and was keenly interested in her home and her garden, Prd d by her h Charles Alexander Beattie, in August, 1963, Mrs, Beattie is survived by two sisters, Mrs. Herbert Hillier (Eva) of Osh- awa and Mrs, Robert Finley (Minnie) of Ireland and a bro- ther, George Hackett of Ire-| land, The funeral service will be held at the McIntosh-Anderson Funeral Home at 8 p.m. Fri- day, July 10, Rev. John K., Mof- fat, minister of Simcoe Street United Church, will conduct the service. Interment will be in Mount Pleasant Cemetery, To- 'ronto, at 10.30 a.m. Saturday. a 0! eee | 0! P Seaway Trying Speed Traffic rence Seaway Authority is try-| ing Lake Ontario and Lake Erie. Wednesday it engaged a Tor. onto firm of traffic and opera-| tions research specialists to find out how to speed up transits of OTTAWA (CP)--The St. Law-) to get ships to move just bit faster through the locks f the Welland Canal between The seaway authority said n the 27-mile waterway by- testified Dr. Brown started to close the incision and after he was about two-thirds down he handed the needle driver to him to finish closing. When Mr. Hoolihan asked him whether any search for Kelly clamps or any other instru- ments was made before Miss Morgan's abdomen was closed, the witness said he could not remember, He said the sur- geon in charge of the operation, meaning Dr. Brown. must make certain no instruments or other foreign objects are left inside a patient. Costumes Have Impact WINNIPEG (CP) -- A United States home economist Wednes- day suggested experiments in- volving models may be used as a guide to research into the im- pact of clothes on other people. Dr, Mary S. Ryan of Cornell University told the Canadian Home Economics Association covention- that a_research pro. ject in her own class, involving models wearing different . cos- tums, found class ratings de- pend more upon the costume than the girl wearing it, Dr. Ryan, a professor of tex- tiles and clothing, said five girls unknown to the class modelled costumes rangi g from a slightly out-of-date suit to a tight skirt and sheer blouse. The stud- ents rated the models, describ- ing personality traits. Three weeks later, the test |was repeated with four of the five girls wearing diffrent cos- tums. The results, Dr. Ryan said, showed that "the one who wore the same costume was rateq almost exactly the same (and) we could assume that dif- ferences we found with the oth- ers were due to the costumes." Dr, Ryan felt the project, al- though it did not indicate any general theories, indicated that "clothes, at least sometimes, assing Niagara Falls. The report, submitted by the) said ship masters and canal| workers share equally in the) time it takes to put a ship| through a lock. If they could cut five minutes of each lockage, the consultants aid, most of the waiting lines ships would be eliminated. As a result, the seaway au- thority has asked ships to pro- ceed in the canal as promptly s 'safety will permit." are very important in determin- ing the first impressions which firm of J. Kates and Associates,|people make." Few contemporary authors are better qualified than Louis Fischer to write about Lenin, the father of the Soviet sys- tem whose image is coming into sharper focus these days. Not only is Fischer a lead- ing authority on Russia, where he spent 14 years as a corre- spondent, he speaks and reads tHe language fluently. His new book, "THE LIFE OF LENIN" (Musson Book Co. Ltd.) is one of the most authori- tative, penetrating analysis of the man who changed the course of history for us all. It was on his first visit to Russia in 1922 that Fischer met Lenin and watched that country "in the throes of revolution" -- he has 'been in indefatigable student of Soviet affairs since, and this book has the trademark of an historical scholar who knows his subject well, No man on the stage of his- tory played so important a role in the Russian revolution than did the former "Nobleman Viad- imir Ulyanov,"' as the future Lenin signed his name in 1892. Lenin was the revolution. He lived and breathed and died for it, He was born in 1870 in the sleepy Volga town of Simbirsk. He died in 1924 at 53, childless, but having changed the course of history throughout the world. Fischer's new book makes for exciting historical reading, and he makes Lenin come alive as no previous author aver has -- what makes his book most important is that it is well docu- mented and he gives the source for most of his important state- ments. DIED FOR IT Fischer tells how Lenin was able to create and' sustain a revolution that hovered constant- ly on the brink of chaos, Fis- cher shows how it was Lenin's incredible strength of will and personality, his fantastic or- ganizational ability and com- pleted dedication to the goal of revolution which enabled him to surmount domestic dissension and disorder, foreign interven- tion, political rivalries and econ- omic ruin, The author shows conclusively that Lenin was es- sentially a pragmatist rather than a theoretician. His unique success, says Fischer, was due largely to his aiiiity to adapt "Life Of Lenin' A Superb Book to change, to pursue any means to achieve his ends which final- ly ibled the revolution to suc- serves a place of prominence on every library shelf. Here is included the inside story of the rise of Bolshevist power, the ex- traordinary story of the Brest- Litovsk treaty negotiations; the confusion and threat of Western intervention. Fischer draws freely from Lenin's voluminous writings. This is a book to be acclaimed. ceed. Doctrine to Lenin was a means only; if it didn't work then it. must be changed. Lenin began to doubt the fu- ture of the revolution he had created finally -- this was in the last months of his life, his brain enfeebled by sclerosis, but still active. There is ample evi- dence that he was aware of the threat of Stalin's obsession for absolute power. He also sensed the coming schism between Trotsky and Stalin that was to rend the communist world for decades to come, Fischer's masterly biography brilliantly recreates the "Ten Days That Shook the World" -- he also tells of events that pre- ceded and followed them. He uses a wide historical canvas and a glittering array of famous personalities pass in full view of the reader--Tsar Nicholas II, Kerensky, Trotsky, Stalin, Chi- cerin, Bukharin, Kemenev, Zin- oviev, Ludendorff, President Woodrow Wilson, Bertrand Rus- sell and H. G. Wells. Fischer's "THE LIFE OF LENIN" is a monumental achievement, a true landmark in historical biography, It de- CNR Suggestions Result In Savings MONTREAL (CP) -- CNR employees made suggestions re- sulting in a saving of $95,176 during 1963, and received $10,- 849 for their ideas, the railway reported Wednesday. It was the largest saving since the suggestion plan was intro- duced 15 years ago. Out of 2,253 ideas submitted, 333 were put into practice, The highest reward went to a Winnipeg electrician who re- ceived $758 for a new way to clean magneto armatures. The railway saved $9,000 in the sub- sequent 15 months. The suggestion plan was re- organized in 1958 when the max- imum reward was raised to $10,000 from $200. Although no one has yet earned top money, the CNR has profited to the ex- tent of $321,644 in the last five years. OLD NAILS A leading Swedish nail manu- facturing plant is 200 years old. ve and average down? We can give you the what action to follow. 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