ya he NE NRG ee PERALTA THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, September 19, 1966 3 ms mo | BUT SISTER DIES OF HEART FAILURE One Twin Saved By Rare Surgery Dr. Allin found that after sep- satian tha aratendine hearts leased a statement warnng the| The bills, though deceptive, public about the counterfeit|contained "minute printing de money. fects," el See MONTREAL (CP) --_ RCMP and Montreal city detectives have seized about $200,000 in counterfeit $10 bills as a result of one of a number of weekend TORONTO (CP)--Crystal Ann ° a raids. McGee is alive tocay. otter one would be critical, With this in| grter Ming wiANM ali Wicrauevs of the most rare and complex 'of overations--the separation of Siamese twins. Her sister, Sherri Lee, died of heart failure Saturday, about eight hours after a team of doc- tors successfully separated the twins in a 64-hour operation at the Hospital for Sick Children. prepa care.' Gee of Guelph. Since Sirth, Sherri had been stronger detailed and elaborate as those made for surgery itself, were red for post - operative The twins "were born June 2 to Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Mc- Lee than her were too fragile to bear pres- sure and could not be placed within the babies" chest cavities. The Edmonton doctor's exper- ience caused Dr. James Simp- son of Toronto to alter slightly his operation plans. Once he fourrd that extensive work would be required on the 'hearts, his sister, whom doctors de- rly today, Crystal Ann was Matty, anes scribed as 'constitutionally in- in the hospital's neo-natal unit, team decided to separate the livers first, giving as much The investigation into "the appearance in the Montreal area of' phoney $10 bills which police said seem to be numerous, cleverly contrived and possibly nationwide in cir- culation, | Eight men were taken into) custody for questioning in the weekend operations, but all were later released. pec ear conunucs aad Widusedau Cnaaiale_ SESS BEER OBERER 65 geen pee sores LEAN AND TENDER CLUB SKINLESS room as possible for heart sur- gery. It took Dr. Simpson and Dr. William T. Mustard, a. Toronto cardio-vascular surgeon, nearly 4% hours to separate the livers and begin the difficult heart separation, USED MESH The abdonominal incisions in the babies were too large to be closed by drawing end skin sek & save 7 i across and were clos with surgical mesh and, in Sherri FURNACE? Lee's case, the plastic dome. No Down Payment--First Payment The operation finally ended December--Coll | about 3:15 p.m, and a hospital PERRY The $200,000 in bogus bills' were reported to have been scattered in a northeast Mont- real lane by two men who fled in a car Saturday night as po- lice closed in on them. About 100 plainclothesmen from the two police forces staged a dozen raids starting Friday -night. On Saturday both forces re-) adequate." Despite her greater vitality, hosvever, her heart was more misshapen than her sis- ter's, The dociors hoped that, after a time, Sherri Lee's heart might assume a more normal shape and becor:s possible at a later date. | However, at 11:45 p.m. EDT, the tiny heart gave up'and the baby died. LATE DEVELOPMENT It was only within the last} 10 days that the surgeons rea- lized the babies' heart abnor- |mality posed the greatest threat {to their lives. The doctors consulted with} Dr. Eardley §. Allin of Edmon- ton, who operated on a set of twins with overlapping, horizon- tal hearts in 1950. Both infants in that case died during the op- eration. Ex - RAF Chaplain Wonders If Heroes Died In Vain | SALISBURY, England (Reut-)leaving to find freedom els e- ers)--A former: RAF chaplain| where. Sunday chose the 26th anniver-| 'The ideals of the welfare) sary of the Battle of Britain to } | ery: ' wonder aloud whether the he-|state have peeved a Mianen. "Following the separation of| oi. efforts of a handful of RAF|Bureaucracy has gone mad. the McGee twins it wh found) iiots against the Nazis really|Petty restrictions have multi- that Sherri Lee's heart pro-|ocuited in. a free England |plied. "Unemployment is disguised! truded two inches Mn : - worth living in | chest cavity and could no' i ey a De | it ' normal positiun| "We do well to ask," Rev.|as redeployment, The sanctity placed 'in get William Rodda told a memorial} without impairing the function Garvie. in Salisbury Cathedral jof the law counts for nothing, fatal reset? on an immediate)' oien we look around today,|Provided you can get away with) este sate was their journey into the un-jit." | |DOME USED known really necessary?" | In services elsewhere in Eng-| "A ag dome ? songs "We were told we were fight-\land,- more than 3,000 persons prior to the operation waS|ing for frcedom, for a countrY|crowded into Westminste: i placed over the heart as tem-/fit for heroes to live in. This isiney" to prog their prove Tha porary measure. This prece-inow just « joke. |men Winston Churchill dubbed dure, it was hoped, would -- "Instead of wanting to. live|"'the few." the heart to function normally. here, as many as possible are " kni that even ; , oye orf getting out. Our doctors, scient- th: urvived sur- ative navinditete tradeemen, and others are! her breathing assisted by a specially-designed respirator. A hospital spokesman said her condition was critcal, but her progress satisfactory. A special team of 10 doctors and six nurses was faced with two major problems when sur- gery on the three-months-old girls began Saturday morning. The girls' livers were sepa- rate, but fused within a large band of flesh that joined them from chest to navel, Their hearts, enclosed in one mem- braneous sac, lay hdrizontally instead of vertically. HEARTS PROTRUDE The elongated lower cham- bers of the tiny babies' hearts protruded each into the other's chest cavity. But doctors said Sherri Lee's heart protruded more than her sister's. The operation took longer than anticipated, but surgeons said they met nothing that pre- operative x-rays and tests had not prepared them for. Surgically, it was a triumph of skill and planning that the tiny babies, together weighing only 15 pounds, survived the separation. A hospital bulletin after the operation explained the prob- llems encountered during sur-| The survey does not include |® natural or industrial deaths, known suicides or slayings. The Ontario dead: Wieners Wieners 49 BEEF 39 FRESH CUT SHANK -- 5 9 | | Bonetess BEEF bulletin said both babies "were | Day or Night... 723-3443 alive and alert. Sherri Lee had err ly been called Sherry Ann since her birth, but Mr. andé-Mrs. Mc- Gee brought the error to the attention of hospital officials be- fore the operation began. McGee, Dr. Simpson, friend of the family, and Myrna McGee's' mother, Mrs, Harry Armstrong. One of the twins died eight hours after the operation. after an operation to sep- arate them at Toronto's Hospital for Sick Children Saturday. Shown (left to right):Leonard and Myrna DR. JAMES &. SIMPSON (wearing white coat) re- ports to the parents of Siamese twins Sherry Ann and Crystal Ann McGee At Least 68 Killed - Week-End Accidents By THE CANADIAN PRESS At least 68 persons died in ac- cidents across Canada : during the weekend. A Canadian Press survey from 6 p.m. Friday to midnight Sunday night, local times, showed 57 persons killed in traf- fice mishaps, four drownings, one death by fire, one hunting CHICAGO? one fire death and a baby who suffocated in his' crib. British Columbia and Alberta each had three traffic fatalities and Manitoba had one. There SUNDAY was also one drowning in Al-| James Preston, 21, and Mur- berta and an unclassified death|ray Lund, 22, both of Peterbor- in Manitoba. _, _ |ough, and Dale Russell, 21, Lind- Saskatchewan had no acciden-|say in a two-car crash near tal deaths. | Peterborough. fatality and five deaths in mis-| Nova Scotia registered seven cellaneous accidents. \traffic deaths, one drowning _ SATURDAY Quebec reported 24 fatalities,|and three miscellaneous fatali- Pauline Hutchinson, 19, including 21 in traffic, twojties, Five died on roads in Brampton, when the sports car drownings and the hunting/New Brunswick, two in New-|') which she was riding collided death. foundland and one in Prince|With a tractor trailer on the out- Ontario had 14 road deaths, Edward Island. skirts of Toronto; Karl Knight, 45, Windsor, when the car he was driving hit another car head-on: Mrs, Dorothy Sears, 4 fire that destroved her h Huntsville; Glen A. Legacy, 33, Brant- ford, when he was apparently struck by a hit-and-run motorist when he stepped .out of the truck he had been driving on the highway near Lancaster; Mrs. Rose Brunet, 61, Rock- land East, in a two-car collision near Rockland, Ont.; Robert Scott Wood, three months, London, suffocated when his head caught between his crib and mattress; Marjorie Fitzpatrick, 26, AIR CANADA FLIES THERE 8 TIMES A DAY eum vmm832 Enjoy the convenience, unbeatable speed and no cost "extras" of AIR CANADA travel: Tasty, free meals... tilt-back seats... courteous, friendly service. (No tipping, please!) T E i ~~ Lee ia ons ! Two Federal By- Votes In Newfoundland, Quebec | By THE CANADIAN PRESS | was named to the Senate in July} ie year. Mr. Jamieson, a close friend| of Newfoundland Premier Smallwood, is a well known St. John's broadcasting executive and political commentator. He is a former president of the Canadian Association of Broadcasters and is mentioned i in speculation from time to|Cornwall, in a car-truck crash time as a possible successor to} the Macdonald-Cartier Free- \Transport Minister Pickersgill|WaY near Lancaster; as the province's representative) FRIDAY in the cabinet. | Edward Sanders, 48, London, when a truck and a tractor THREE IN CONTEST | hauling a tobacco steamer col- In Grand Falls-White Bay-|jided east of Port Stanley; | ps0 ed hoes! yy ee Joseph Hector Bernier, 35, drew Chatwood, Cansereatioa |r mit oe Sane. tas oe Thomas Pitcher ' New Dem. (on when their car rolled over ocratic party candidate Lorne| het te cet hed Snell are contesting the riding.) andrew Svarckopf 65. Vi- Charles Granger, now minister| enna, Ont., when the car he was of Labrador affairs in Mr.|driving collided with » truck Smallwood's cabinet, won the|near Port Burwell: riding by 12,207 votes last No-| sarah Jean Jackson, 63 vember. Brampton, in a two-car collision In Nicolet-Yamaska, 28-year-| 4+ Rolton, Ont. old high school principal Nor-| yrs. Sarah Freisen, 65, Jor- mand Beaudoin is trying to hold/gan and her daughter Elma the riding in the Conservative|;4 when the car in which they jeamn. Clement Vincent, now in|wara ridine left the raad and Premier Johnson's cabinet, held| prs Sy \s the seat last November by 7 bag =) 2 being votes. = sia ab Liberal Florian Cote, a 37-| year-old farmer, independents. Jean - Mare Denoncourt and| Georges Grenier and New Dem-! ocrat Georges-Henri Forcier are | | N.B. If your wife and/or family are going along, save 25% or more on Family Fare Discounts on AIR CANADA's flights any day, anywhere in North America. There's a new, increased baggage allowance, too! See your Travel Agent for details -- EACH PRESCRIPTION IS A PRECIOUS DOCUMENT A Doctor practically devotes his entire adult life to gain the needed knowledge thot enables the writing of @ prescription. After many yeors ot college and hip, it is still obligatory to reed hours of new reports each week, jy 'lei al Federal political parties today face voters, for the first time since last year's general elec- tion, in two byelections in New- foundland and one in Quebec. Polls are open from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. local standard time in the large Newfoundland ridings of Burin - Burgeo and Grand- Falls-White Bay-Labrador and in Nicolet-Yamaska, a farming area between Montreal and Quebec City. Both Newfoundland ridings have been held by the Liberal party since the province joined Confederation in 1949. The Que- bec riding has been in the Con- servative camp since 1957. A Liberal sweep would raise the party's standing to 131 of the 265 seats in the House of Commons, two short of a bare majority. The significance of byelection results in terms of national political attitudes is always de- batable but they provide fodder for speculation about trends for or against a party. PLENTY OF ISSUES Since the November election last year hardly a week has passed without some new con- troversy arising on Parliament Hill. The major issue was the Gerda Munsinger affair. Medi- cal care insurance, old age pen- sions, inflation, labor troubles, possible tax increases and fed-|his opponents. There are about ere! - provincial relations were! 94 900 eligible voters other important issues for de-| No date has been set yet for| bate. ja byelection to fill a fourth va-| In Burin-Burgeo, with about|cancy in the Commons, caused) 23,500. eligible voters, broad-|by the Aug. 31 death of Alexis caster Don Jamieson, 44, is run-|Caron, MP for Hull. ning for the Liberals against; Standings in the 265 seat Com- Conservative Eric Hiscock, 45,| mons now are: Liberal 128, Con- who ran as a Social Credit can-|servative 96, NDP 21, Creditiste| didate in last November's elec-/8, Social Credit 5, Independent tion. No other candidates are}3, vacant 4. contesting the riding. | A telephone strike in New- For the past 17 years the con- |foundiand could cause delays in stituency has been represented |the reports of poll counts by re- by Liberal Chesley Carter, who!turning officers. --] or write to us in Toronto at 130 Bloor Street West For Reservations and Information Call DONALD TRAVEL SERVICE | OSHAWA--WHITBY--BROOKLIN \104 BROCK ST. S WHITBY PHONE 668-8867 -- ss PLANNING A.>. © BANQUET © CONVENTION © MEETING First Class Facilities For 20 to 400 Guests Quality Service Experienced Staff RESERVE YOUR PUNCTION NOW! 723-4641 HOTEL ' Tl YEAR AROUND A Pharmacist also spends almost as many years at college and internship to learn how to sofely dispense prescriptions. We too heave to study every new drug's -- and dosage. Prescriptions are passports to better ealth. YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US when you need a@ medicine. 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