Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 16 Nov 1966, p. 38

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

D x : ete oa lt lt ool tel el el 38. OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, November 16, 1966 Security Seen As Vital In World Of Business 108 ANGELES iy = Wher- there's a made ba i, the businessman don't make it, observers are every: where: the fashionable depart- ment store, the local bank, in- dustries large and small, the gambling on be of Nevada, business is "security." ng fer ref friend, or mem| y, assigned to roam the premises in casual clothes, But more often, they're professionals, security guards py keeping an eye on the These public eyes, uniformed and clothes guardians of indi economies, number in the millions, says Raymond C, Farber, publisher of Secur- ity World, ama zine mailed to And, says Farber, {t's a good thing there are so many of failures are directly attributa- ble to crime in business," he said, 'There's a degeneration of morals eging on, an erosion, There's evidence that crime is growing more rapidly than the population. "We apprehend ministers, doctors, lawyers --- it cuts through the social strata," Far- ber said of shoplifters, "Some. times whole families work to gether, "We found one family who were using thelr children, They stole small appliances and gour- met groceries and sold them in their apartment, Finally two security officers knocked on thelr door. They bought some- thing and the man rang it up on a cash register. 'I'am not going to fool around with the state of California,' the man told them 'We've got to pay 'Theft from business, whether it is shoplifting or embezzle- ment, is a billion-dollar busi- Ps Mg da Dp ( rs e88 ars headed . Kiyoshi Ohata of Tokyo University have uncovered the remains of an ancient city which flourished in the middle bronze age, some 2,000 years BC, The city existed in the Israel- ite , but afterwards de- clined until it was wiped off the map during the Byzantine pe- , in' the third century AD. The city was found in the mound called Tel Zeror, near Pardess Hana in the Sharon Valley, PIRATES STILL THRIVE SINGAPORE (AP) --Indone- sia has asked this island-state to help put down pirates in the Straits of Malacca, where Eu- ropean fleets used to hunt them through the jungle creeks a cen- tury ago, The new pirates are thought to be deserters from the Indonesian navy and cus- toms service, LABOR LOOKS BACK. "The International Labor Or- ganization celebrates its 50th anniversary in 1069, "Seven per cent of business |ness in itself, Farber estimates. LOW PRICES -- You will find that Our Prescriptions are Comparably Low in cost, for we do not soley de- pend on Prescription Sales to stay in business and can afford to pass on savings that result from our large volume of purchases. SERVICE -- While You Shop = Our Pharmacist will gladly attend to filling your PRESCRIPTION while you continue to shop throughout the rest of the store. AGAROL For Relief of Constipation nn 99 CEPACOL Mouthwash and Gargle 4 14 oz. gy CORICIDIN For Relief of Coids eal m OF BENYLIN COUGH SYRUP « LLO9 PARAMETTES MULTIPLE VITAMINS Bonus Pak 12's = PARDEC eg 1D Vitamin Supplement we 219 'CONTAC-C Relief from Cold Symptoms w 229 AMPHOJEL ALUMINA GEL 2 ot. L13 ~ PRESCRIPTION DEPARTMENT Operated by G. Tamblyn Limited Located on Highway 2 Between Oshawa and Whitby Phone 728-5651 BUT NOT A DROP FOR THIRSTY FIELDS A Ccslogical Strvey of Canada field party drilling on a mapping project brought in this gusher in the arid Coldstream Valley near Vernon, B.C., but so far no use has been made of the 500,000 gallons of water that pour out every day because the flow can't be controlled. By spring a drilling company hopes to have the problem licked, (CP Photo) Kidney Transplant Saves Man Who Was Expiring By BURL OSBORNE SPOKANE, Wash. (AP)--For the first time in my adult life, I can savor the full difference between living and just staying alive. Medically, I should have died two years ago when both my kidneys failed and left my body without their vital blood-cleans- ing ability, I have lived since then only through twice-weekly visits to an artificial kidney ma- chine. But. now a new and radical operation has given me a trans- planted kidney that is working at the 24-hour-a-day job of keep- ing my body fluids stable, let- ting me eat and drink with free- dom again, and releasing me j\from the tyranny of living by benefit of machine, I'll never forget when doctors jtold me after the operation, "It is functioning perfectly," Nothing will surpass the joy I felt. It was a pardon from a life sentence. It was a new experience--just feeling well. After the effects of the surgery passed, I could tell I wag becoming stronger every lday, stronger than I had been in years, I want to get out of bed in the morning, and once I do, I feel like going, doing, liv- ing like other people. The off- limits signs are gone from the swimming pool, the golf course, the bowling alley. |MILKSHAKE A JOY Most people won't understand my joy when the nurse brought me a big chocolate milkshake after the operation. I was spell- bound by the first big pitcher of water she put at my bedside, with instructions to drink all I wanted. I had been limited to three small glasses of liquid a day, and I had to figure into that total how much water was jin my food, The road to the transplant it- jSelf was long and punctuated with the doubis that haunt any- one who thinks he is doomed to jan early death. The decisions | that led to it were pure agony. | | I had hoped for a transplant} |--someday--from the first time |I was treated-on tie artificial kidney machine, But I didn't give the operation serious {thought until about 18 months jlater, when I began to have |what seemed insolvable prob- lems with the kidney machine. I tended to go into convulsions during treatments. No reason }could be found. In March my jheart stopped briefly during a treatment. | I was frightened. | For the next two months I |thought of virtually nothing but a transplant--debating with my- self whether the odds were good enough or whether it: would de | jmorally right to accept a kid-/ jney from a member of my fam- sometime later. On the other hand, the chances for success| with a kidney from some other| source would be greatly re-| duced, MADE A DECISION Finally, in June, I worked up the courage to act. Both my brothers and both my parents voluntéered a kid- ney. The doctors assured me there would be little danger to the donor. That helped, more or less. Since I had little, if anything to lose, my wife and I decided to go ahead, Tests gave my mother a slight edge as a donor, The decisive call eame about midnight July 20, asking me to be at the University of Colorado medical centre's Colorado Gen- eral Hospital at Denver by Fri- day, July 22. The day before the transplant, I had what I hoped was my Gangland Guns Kill Boston Duo BOSTON (AP) -- Two more men were killed by gangland bullets in» Boston today, their bodies léft in a parked sedan on a south Boston street, Police said they believe the victims were Arthur C, Bratsos, 32, of Medford, Mass., and Thomas De Prisco Jr., 24, of Boston. The bodies were found in the blood - spattered back seat of Bratsos' 1964 sedan, Both had been shot in the head, They were the 34th and 35th men cut. down in land Taj Mahal Minatures Sell Well AGRA, rtisans ample of France in cashing in For years, Parisians have done a roaring trade in mass-pro-|work, duced souvenir models of the Eiffel Tower, Now, every well - travelled tourist can have on his mantle- piece a model of the Taj Mahal made by pe in the heen ae «.|where the white marble bléc! ry PP spo h hae of the famous monument were|foreign buyers. from the men who built the Taj fashioned more than 300 years Mahal are earning big money|#8°- carving it in miniature for The marble-cutting trade is booming, bringing local ¢rafts- some 1,000,000 rupees of prosperity since the comple- on its most famous monument. |tion of the Taj Mahal in it threw many ofthem out of Some 700 families today sell (about $137,000) worth of marbleware each year on the home market alone, They ate also making their white marble miniatures of the Taj Mahal for export to LOOK AFTER HEALTH more than 3800 hospitals ai urists. India is thus following the ex-imen one of their biggest spells'clinics in India, : OVER $8,500.00 IN PRIZES! Prizes to be won over 10 week period The New CAMARO Ontario Motor Sales 2, 7 day vacations to HONOLULU via ' CANADIAN PACIFIC AIRLINES 4, winter vacations for 2 to the BAY MOTOR INN and SKI VILLAGE Foreign missionaries run ELECTROHOME portable TV PARKWAY TELEVISION $1,540 in MERCHANDISE VOUCHERS ies A Entry eveilebl iP from b identified with 'Win @ Prize" banners. raisons or WINNING STUBS MUST CLAIM AWARDS BY NOV, 19th, 1966 HERE ARE LAST WEEK'S WINNING AT THE CENTRAL ONTARIO TRUST AND SAVINGS CORPORATION, OR NATIONAL TRUST COMPANY. ENTRY COUPON NUMBERS 1ST PRIZE $50.00 -- 95907 7TH PRIZE $5.00 45091 2ND PRIZE $25.00 -- 35471 || 8TH PRIZE $5.00 23046 3RD PRIZE $10.00 -- 50795 || 9TH PRIZE $5.00 497011 4TH PRIZE $10.00 -- 87935 || 10TH PRIZE $5.00 -- 103144 STH PRIZE $10.00 -- 187844 11TH PRIZE $5.00 -- 735049 slayings in Greater Boston dur- ing the last 24% years. Bratsos was one of four men arrested at gunpoint in down- town Boston Oct. 4 and later indicted on charges of Illegal possession of firearms. Arrested with Bratsos at that time were Joseph Baron, 34, of Swampscott, also known as Jo- seph Barboza; Nicholas V. Fe- mia, 27, of Boston; and Patrick F, Fabiano, 24, also of Boston. 6TH PRIZE $5.00 -- 115333 | | 12TH PRIZE $5.00 -- 355027 SPECIAL BONUS PRIZE 370357 VAGATION FOR 2 TO BAY MOTOR INN AND SKI VILLAGE, OWEN SOUND final run on an artificial kidney. The last thing I remembered Wednesday was my mother smiling a cheerful hello as we were whegled into the operating room, The next thing I knew, it was over, TOOK FIVE HOURS Dr, Thomas Starzl, chief sur- geon at the hospital, removed my spleen, appendix and both useless kidneys, while Dr. Thomas Marchioro removed my mother's left kidney. The good organ was transplanted into the lower right front of my body, in a five-hour operation. My first question when I awoke was, "Is it working?" It was, The next thing I remember was excruciating pain that con- tinued without letup for a full 24 hours. Pain killers might put added stress on the kidney, 'It was small enough price to pay. I was on my feet the next day, with nurses supporting me, but managed to hobble only a few steps. After that, I could feel improvement each day. Within a few Gays aimost every- | thing was normal, | My body tried mildly to fight| off the new kidney a few days after the surgery. Drugs to con- trol this were administered. Four weeks after surgery I was released from the hospital, and a week after that I began working part time. My mother, 45, is home again and feeling fine. I have lived with the spectre of kidney disease since I was 12, when they found I had nephritis. I found out early that it was incurable and eventually fatal. In those days, there were no transplants, no artificial kid- ney. Against the advice of doctors, | IT went to college, worked to pay my way through, and mar- ried in my sophomore year. I \ily, It would subject the donor jto the risk of kidney failure graduated in 1960. $8.00 PER DAY 725-6553 | RENT-A-CAR DAY -- WEEK -- MONTH PLUS LOW soc ranean MILEAGE CHARGE | RUTHERFORD'S 725-6553 | CAR AND TRUCK RENTALS | 14 ALBERT ST, Oshawa Edward, how igit the nursery is SO much cosier than before? Got a chilly nursery? Adding a new room? Yon can make any room warm and livable with electric heat- ing. It's simple and inexpensive to install and oper- ate. You can add electric heating without disturbing your present heating system. And it. will cost you less to install than it would to extend your present system. Flameless electric heating is the quietest, safest, cleanest heating system ever devised. See NP cae! della Rata os Soa ese RRR ok RINE OSHAWA PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION - PHONE 723-4624 -- In Co-operation with -- WHITBY PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION ............. 668-5878 AJAX HYDRO ELECTRIC COMMISSION ...... PICKERING PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION ........... ELECTRIC HEATING, YOU DOLL! Electric Heating Information Centre, The special- ist at your Hydro's Electric Heatiiig Information Centre can give you complete information on the type of unit best suited to your room, installed cost, operating costs and help in arranging installation, Call now. ELECTRIC HEATING INFORMATION CENTRE your hydro 942-0500 $42-2930

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy