Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 26 Dec 1964, p. 14

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

THE OSHAWA TIMES, 13 Seturday, December 26, 1964 Crowds Riot For Goldfinger JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) Police were called and firemen used hoses on an excited crowd of vege a coe Africans trying . ge a midnight showing of the movie Gold- finger at a theatre near here Friday night. The police arrived after eggs had been thrown at the cinema EVEN THE MIGHTY SIOUX BOW IN DEFEAT TO MACLEOD AND HIS SMALL FORCE OF ||tover and a box office window BRAVE .TAMES MACLEOD DIES IN 199%, BUT Tile LEGEND HE MADE OF THE | Inroven. 'They sought to quiet NORTH-WEST MOUNTED POLICE LIVES ON 7O a ||) setae the crowd but were greeted HIN way li -- ] i" [|ffcostcsoven wes wc.eco || ate | | I jcccs. "By. tuldnight 'the street | i | | |was blocked to traffic and fire wt mu | jengines arrived. HERB, HERE, YOUNG LADY~ YOU MUSTN'T BE IMPATIENT= NOBODY CAN REACH PERFECTION OVERNIGHT= AN! NOW MR. OWL WILL ENTERTAIN US BY RECITIN' SOME POETRY! Qawonntcy-- ae CANT BELIEVE HS EYES!----FROM THE BOTTOM OF THE PLANE TUMBLES A FLOCK OF GtESE! Tm DICKERIN WCTH OUTNDMBERED BY MAXROYY.....- DAD? HIM FOR THE COLD WE'RE NOT HERE. 0 FIGHT THEM. SPRING TANK, li 'THE LONE RANGER SECRET AGENT X9 YOUR HEALTH By Joseph G. Molner, MD Dear Dr. Molner: My five- year-old grandson has stuttered for two years. His parents have been told not to discipline or correct him. They tried this but it does no good, Could it be caused by sleep- ing in the same room with his sister, who is a year younger? She keeps: him awake and pest- ers him. Will this stuttering stop by it- self or is there anything we can do? He gets angry when he does not have his own way, and always wants to be the boss. He does not have many chil- dren to play with, however. He will not eat any vegeta- bles or potatoes, just cereal, frankfurters and hamburgers, candy, soda and ice cream. His stuttering is so bad that people will not take time to listen to him and he gets very frustrated.--_MRS. H. H. Occasionally a defect in the speech centre of the brain can cause stuttering but in most cases--and apparently in this one--it is psychological. The stutter usually appears about the time the child is learning to form sentences. It can increase in severity during early school years, and tends to decline in adolescence. I printed most of your letter, Mrs, H. H., because it mentions a number of psychological fact- ors which can enter the pic- Patience Needed With Stuttering be patient--and I hope others will be patient enough to wait and listen when the boy tries to talk. Elders should not, of course, ever make fun of him, or help him finish a word or a sentence. He must do this him- self. Tolerance should not extend to giving in to every whim. This boy should have 'an adequate, balanced meal set before him, and should not get dessert or ice. cream or candy until he eats it. If he decides not to eat regularly, he shouldn't get any- thing else instead. There should be no threats or lecturing about this. It should be a matter-of- fact statement. (He'll soon start eating properly.) Now he is at kindergarten age, teachers may be able to help him. More contact with children may also help, Giving him a room of his own, if pos- sible, and eliminating the pest- ering by his younger sister, might reduce his frustration and tension. You say that a. tolerant atti- tude by the parents has been tried but 'does no good." I wonder! It can do some good, (in fact it is. usually necessary) without putting a quick end to the stutter. The parents may be overly impatient themselves, and dealing with stuttering is a problem that is never helped by impatience. It is not something that can be quickly cured. Dear Dr. Molner: Would the CROSSWORD AOROSS 52. Fish 1, Uncon- trolled DOWN anger 1. Keep 6. Tropical 2. A wing tre: ry 9. Jewish month 10. Ostrich- like bird 11, Booth bear: Astron. Yesterday's Answer Firemen, after unsuccessfully | |trying to persuade the crowd to form lines, directed jets of wa- ter into it, holding it at bay until 12:30 a.m. today. The movie eventhally began about 1:30 a.m. but hundreds of per- sons were turned away. The movie is based on @- novel by the late British writer ~jIan Fleming. SLAM IN SPADES FOR CHRISTMAS LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP)--It wag a late Christmas gift for Mrs. Jessie Cunnington of Louisville, but Santa did it in spades--13 of them. Her bridge hand wasn't the only bonanza in the game, Each of the other three play- ers had 13 cards of the same suit. In the game at the home of Mrs. Cunnington's daughter, Mrs. Charles Shontz, Friday the cards were dealt: --Thirteen clubs to Mrs. Eugenia Shontz. --Thirteen diamonds to Mrs. Bruce Long. --Thirteen hearts to Mrs, Richard Black. --And 13 spades to Mrs, Cunnington, the dealer. According to the World Al- manac, the' chance of one player in a bridge game get- ting 13 cards of the same suit is one in 158,753,389,900. The odds against all four players doing so, of course, are a great deal higher, but the fig- ure was not available, Mrs..Cunnington, who was one down after the first hand, opened the bidding with two spades, Mrs. Long bid to five. diamonds and Mrs. Black | raised to six hearts. Mrs. Shontz passed and Mrs. Cun- ningtoh won the bidding with seven spades. The opponents then con- ceeded the grand slam. DEATHS By THE CANADIAN PRESS Montreal--Camille |'Heureux, 66, who retired two years ago after 35 years with Ottawa Le wg 16 of them as editor-in- chief. San Francisco--Nathan Asch, 62, son of the late author Sholem Asch and writer himself of four novels and a work of non- fiction; after a brief illness, New York--Mrs. Lala Kauf- man, 77, daughter of Sholom Aleichem, noted Yiddish writer and humorist, and herself the author of more than 2,000 short Stories; after a brief illness. Winnipeg -- Wasyl Swystun, 71, prominent Ukrainian lawyer who specialized in international law and Soviet law. Montreal--Howard Clements Spence, 56, who served in a senior capacity with United Air- craft of Canada Limited; of a heart attack. London -- Frederick Cherrill, 72, former detective chief su- perintendent of Scotland Yard and one of the world's leading fingerprint experts. Montreal -- Dr. Stewart G. Baxter, senior surgeon at Royal Victoria Hospital here. Montreal -- Marie Alphonse Joseph Gauthier, 77, president of Pierre Gauthier et Fils Lim- itee insurance brokerage firm and a well-known figure in in- surance circles. ture: The boy has temper tan-|hormone shots used to control 81. Fastened, 87. Closes, as trums, wants his own way.|hot flashes and dizziness during] 24 Rough g as ahawk's won't eat properly, is annoyed|menopause cause a reaction of teonth eyes NEWS- IN BRIEF by his little sister (sibling com-|more pain in the joints from cir aa iticah ails 40. Vex petition, the psychiatrists might|arthritis, or keep the arthritis pet outs g ry Comfort AuTaon Dies term it), and he has limited|medication from doing any| 3° 4 ahen'e ---- Vane ae ~ contact with other children his;good?--MRS. H. B. ots "fame! pele. a ce Fig Me hoe - deobhier . own age. : : No. On the contrary the hor-| 99 tinderwater 16. Stitt, pre lay Ps arly prone My ona Yin His short temper, impatience|mones would tend to ease the craft: abbr, leather Mi 48, Topaz Bist WHtAE Aha maria' and MICKEY MOUSE and frustration all add to the psychological pressure which causes the stutter. The parents were well ad- vised to be tolerant. They can- not force or discipline a child into not stuttering. They should arthritis associated with meno- pause. Look for some other cause for any increased pain. NOTE TO MRS. R. N. M.: I don't know of any pill or med- icine that will "improve the memory." AND MY NERVES JUST AREN'T UP TO HEARING ANY KiDoe «WHO REFUSES 'TO A\ TORONTO (CP) -- Canada's economy will rise to new heights in 1965, with the Gross National Product expected to increase $2,800,000,000 to $49,- 000,000,000, A. A. Cumming, president of the Canadian Ma- nufacturers' Association, says in a year-end statement. He adds, however, that an even larger trade deficit with the: United States is in prospect New Heights In Economy months as industry and {ts em- ployees have ever known." Signs indicated a continuation of high business activity and strength in the year ahead. "The upward pressure on prices is likely to be main- tained because of the vigor of the economy, but both prices and costs should be contained within the limits of. productiv- ity improvement and over-all economic growth." 22. Type leggings: measure Mil. 23. A catch in hose 2 25. Small drums 28. Shook 80. Not true 32,.A grave 35. Sun god herself the author of more than 2,000 short stories, died Thurs- day after a brief illness, FIRE KILLS CHILDREN GLASGOW, Mont. (AP) -- Four young children, left in charge of a baby-sitter, died in a Christmas Eve fire that started about 15 minutes before the parents returned home, Sheriff - Coroner Hugh Borton said the two boys and two girls ranging in age from seven months to five years, were overcome by smoke. They were the children of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Clowes. SALLY'S SALLIES 47, Antelope: 45 So. Afr. 49, Otherwise "60; Wash 61, Antlered Jy \ \ A reduction. in this merchandise trade deficit . . . should be a national objective engaging the attention of us all." Mr. Cumming says 1964 'thas certainly done well by Canada in every important economic respect and, although the world of manufacturing becomes al- most daily more competitive, it was in aggregate as good as 12 manufactured and fully pro- cessed goods will. continue to increase, although the import surcharges recently imposed by Britain seem certain to trim sales there. "After four straight years of sustained expansion it is hardly surprising that some Canadians should be wondering whether the economy wasn't due to slow and "achievement of a marked| He predicts exports of semi-|down at least to catch its SUE BOXER breath. "However the demands of the post-war babies now going to school and approaching marri- ageable age in record numbers are an extremely buoyant fac- tor and these are almost enough in themselves to avert any se- rious business downturn in the jogs ahead," LOS ANGELES (AP)Boxer Eddie Machen and his man- agers, Walter and Leo Minskoff are being sued for $750,000 by Professional Boxers Inc., which alleges breach of contract. The corporation charges that since Dec. 1, 1952, Machen has fought a number of times without turning over to the corporation the one - third of his earnings "Gran won't let money. He says he's immune to gums and Tm aot"

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy