Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 1 Oct 1965, p. 11

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Abandoned, Retarded BoyiSome Noble Advice: Don't! ~ Lost To Parents Forever But If You Should, Lose!! MIAMI, Fla. (AP) -- Ricky! Mrs. Thorne beamed when Thorne, a mute, mentally re-\the judge announced Ricky tarded boy who was abandoned) would be put in a Miami school. 1,350 miles from home, may) "This sure is a load off my never live with his. parents| mind," she said after the hear- . ling. "J know I'll miss him,' said) The red-haired housewife said mother, Mrs. Victor Thorne,| she had cared for Ricky alone 44, of Troy; Mich., who ad-\since an illness damaged his mitted leaving the 13-year-old/prain when he was 18 months boy at = eae Rory oil last! old. week with the is snipped) «He was becoming a man and from his clothes and only three) potting new problems," she cents and a sandwich in his| said. "He was a little more re- pockets. |sentful, a little harder to man- Juvenile Judge. Ben Sheppard/age. He was getting bigger, committed Ricky to a special/too. 1 didn't want to get in any school for treatment Wednes-| arguments with him." day and ordered that his par-/ Judge Sheppard dismissed ne- ents stay away for a year un-/giect charges against Mrs. less psychiatrists advise other-|Thorne, but ordered her to un- wise, dergo psychiatric treatment. Sheppard allowed the parents| She said she left Ricky in Mi- to see Ricky for one last time|ami because she had given up before they go back to Michi-jhope of getting help in Michi- gan. gan. "Both parents had tears in) The Thornes face charges of their eyes when they saw neglect filed Tuesday in Michi- Ricky," said a juvenile court) officer. "Ricky was real glad fo see them, too." Judge Sheppard "There's not much hope Ricky) will be returned to his parents. |drawn, He'll probably remain in this) A condition of Ricky's enrol- school for two or three years}ment in the Miami school was before other arrangements are|that his parents bear the ex- made for him." ipense of the school. MALES -- LECHEROUS SWINE, MUST FACE A GROUP NOW SHEFFIELD, England _ haired, blue-eyed adonis who (Reuters) -- June Heaton, a 8425 into your eyes is not imiver. oimking in your beauty. . . %-year-old Sheffield Univer- 0. not in the way you thitk sity student, has started a he is." society called Maidens Anon- The society invites mem- ymous for girls who are bers who find themselves in against pre-marital sex. danger of being seduced to The society, which so far telephone one of several has 20 members, in an article numbers -- secret except to in a student newspaper, says: members--to contact a fellow "All men are lecherous, ego- member 'who will attempt to tistical swine and the blond- give moral support." cated they were filed against the possibility that Ricky's case said:| would be referred back to that state and might now be with- LONDON (Reuters) -- The | 18th Duke of Bedford, who traces his ancestry back to | the 11th century, today ' told | his aristocratic colleagues how o win noble friends and influence top people. His ad- vice: Don't open your stately homes to the public at half a crown (35 cents) a head: and if you do, don't make a suc- cess of it. The duke, known as the Showman Peer because of the big business he has made out of operating his family home, Woburn Abbey, as a public showplace, gives the advice in Book Of Snobbs, published to- y. In the book, which he wrote LONDON (CP)--The coffee tables of Britain's upper-class jhomes will never be the same again, After 64 years of record- ing the passing show of society, The Tatler, glossiest of glossy} magazines, went on sale for the last time Wednesday. | The weekly journal, part of} |publishing empire for the last four years, will be replaced by, London Life, a sophisticated} guide to doings in the capital] aimed at a somewhat youngez,; more "with it" readership than} The Tatler's county set. John Oliver, editor of The Tatler since 1961, said the mag-| azine had been doing well fi- nancially, but it was felt a new type of publication might be more in tune with the times. "The hardest thing was pre- serving the balance of keeping it up to date but at the same| itime preserving the prestige.| That is the tightrope we have} been walking." The Tatler, described in & jfarewell article in Punch as) \"the last of society journals,"| made its bow in 1901--fittingly| enough at the dawn of the Ed-| wardian era, in which English} jsociety was to flower as never before or since. The new magazine, billed as "the lightest, brightest and most interesting society and' The Tatler Talks No More Replaced After 6 Decades dramatic paper ever pub- lished," has no connection with the famous 18th-century publi- cation of the same name asso- ciated with the essayists Addi- son and Steele. In the words of Alison Adbur- gham in Punch, The Tatler was "written for snobs by snobs." gan, but authorities there indi-..,,qian-born Lord Thomson's} The first number, dated July |3, 1901, set the tone with a lav- ish spread on a fete at the Duke of Sutherland's stately home, followed by a feature on the family tree of the Duke of Norfolk and an article entitled "Who's Who in Pall Mall," first of a series on smart residen- tial districts. MAN, YOU'RE ON A WRONG SCENT LINDSBORG, Kan. (AP) Mike Chambers' pet deodor- ized skunk ran away. Mike's 14-year-old cousin, Larry Webster, was on his way to a school dance when he was sure he saw Mike's pet. He pursued the fleeing skunk and threw his coat over it. Larry didn't go to the dance. It wasn't Mike's skunk. in collaboration with Hungar- ian-born humorist George Mikes, he says he enjoys be- ing a showman and enjoys be- ing a duke, and gives hints for social aspirants. FORGIVENESS LOST He writes: "If you want to retain the esteem of your fel- low peers and of the mem- bers of low society, remem- ber not to open your home to the general public at half-a- crown a head... . "You will never be forgiven for it, as I have never been forgiven... . "If you do become a duke, | and necessity forces you to open your doors to the public, there is one chief rule you must adhere to lest you forfeit the esteem of snobocracy; do not make a success of it.... "Success is a vulgar thing, quite unsuited to any English gentleman. As long as you | open your stately home to the public but make a mess of it, your painful aberration may be overlooked.' The duke and Mikes gave hints on how to wheedle one's way into the upper level of society, how to get free din- ners from unwilling acquain- tances, how to. impress with one's dress, food, drink and holiday resorts, and how to curry favor with butlers. DIE IN STYLE They tell how to put one's daughter on the marriage | market, give details of ap- | proved upper - class illnesses | and advise on how to die | fashionably. Last word from the duke: "Just as in the world of real mountaineering, when you reach the top you will often | find that the climb was not | really worthwhile .. . "Being an upstart is, per- haps, natural to many human beings. Being a downstart is much rarer: But also much | wiser." WASHINGTON (AP)--James Roosevelt, who resigned from Congress Thursday to take a new joh at the United Nations, is a rarity--a president's son who still makes news 20 years after his family left the White House. In fact, this is true of most of the five children of the late Franklin D. Rooevelt. Jimmy--as everybody calls him--has been a California con- gressman for more than a dec- ade. Elliott Roosevelt, who won an lupset victory last June to be |come mayor of Miami Beach, \Fla., after only two years as ja resident, is rumored a pos- sible candidate for governor or senator. Franklin D. Roosevelt Jr.,| who looks and sounds a good bit like the late president, re- jsigned last May as undersec- retary of commerce to become jchairman of the new Equal |Employment Opportunity Com- \mission. | |LEAVES DOOR OPEN } In July, Frank, as he likes to be called, ended speculation he might run for mayor of New Fluoride Goes In N.Y. Water NEW YORK (AP)--New York} City began injecting fluoride; jinto its water system Thursday) lat the Kensico reservoir at Val-| |halla, N.Y. | The initial use will result in} 84 per cent of the city's public |water supply -- 840,000,000 gal- }lons -- being fluoridated. Other water sources will be fluori- dated within the next month. The city's decision for fluort- jdation was contested in the |courts,, and Sept. 21 the appel- jlate division of the state Su- |preme Court upheld the city's |right to treat the water with |the anti-tooth decay chemical. Three Of FDR's Progeny Have Kept In Public Eye York, but left the door open for a big next year for the gover- two Roosevelts, John, the youngest, and Anna, the only daughter, have been out of the public spotlight in re- nor's mansion. The other cent years. When Franklin D. Roosevelt was nominated for the first of his four terms as president in July, 1932, Anna was 26, James 2%, Elliott 21, Franklin Jr. 17 and John {6. Anna, James attention as the candidate. | In the 33 years since, there jhave been few months when one or more of the Roosevelts haven't been in the news for one reason or another. Even their matrimonial act- ivity has been of headline cali- bre. The five children have married a total of 14 times. El- liott tops the list with five mar- |riages. COMBINE IN EXACTA LONDON, Ont. (CP)--Vesta Direct, finishing first 'at $11.80, and American Girl a second at $11.90, combined for a 10th-race ! and Elliott played major rolesin the cam- paign. The energetic Roosevelt family drew nearly as much THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, October 1, 1965 ada's economic problems is tak- ing attention away from year-to- year stabilization, says Dr. A. D. Scott, new head of the Uni- versity of British Columbia's economics department able to take long- ems in stride Dr. Scott criticized the federal government for ignoring of the advice offered by much mists. - "Canada is unusual among na- tions in the extent to which ex- 'pertise among econo: mists is not of themselves, he the early-30"s reinforced by the slump of the late §0's still holds sway. "Farsighted people during the most recent slump could see the explosion coming up in the la- bor force" Dr. Scott said in an interview. "This led to studies of produc- tivity and manpower, which were fine then. into work the Economic groups. "Everybody is worried about long-term and how the growing labor force is going to ifit into the economy, ".. . If we had the same jexacta of $81.60 at the Western|galaxy of talent looking at the |Fair Raceway Thursday night.|more immediate problems, they sought or needed," he said. saieeaiii believes. He says a mentality fostered EXPERIENCED TRANSPORT WANTED... "But this has seeped: over Must be familior with Toronto done today by|§ond District. Union shop. Ap- cil and other|§ ply in person, 8 a.m. to § p.m. B. & R. Transport LTD. 401 Dunlop St. East WHITBY, ONTARIO Your Health is your most important asset... how many pay days could you afford to miss? Income Replacement PERSONAL HEALTH INSURANCE should be in your family's budget for 1965. ANNIVERSARY | YEAR Es "he EXCELSIOR LIFE Susuuance Company 66 Falcon... 1966 FORD ... HERE! NOW! 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