Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 8 Mar 1956, p. 22

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22 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Thursday, March 8, Air Ambulance In West Saves Many Since 1946 | REGINA (CP)--White airplanes craft engineer to give service to {with the red crosses have logged ™ rthern areas. The service charges $2 a patient ja decade of humanitarian service and $10 a passenger, regardless of [to the people of Saskatchewan distance within the boundaries of The Saskatchewan government (he province. If the trips extend ait ambulance service has just|beyond provincial borders, cost is {cempleted 10 yeprs of operation, [35 cents a mile for patients, seven with only a few minor accidents in [cents a mile for passengers. tre log books of its four pilots,| The service however has no fa- our flight nurses and six engin- cilities in the far north, and regu- eers. lar aircrait companies operating in Its »lanes have flown id Fo nortl. such as Sasktchewan miles since February of 1946, sav-|Government Airways handle north- ing many lives by flights made tein flights at any time of day or night, with MID- AIR SURGERY !2ndings made anywhere. Some Aerial ambulances twice have flights have seen emergency op- lost the race with the stork, but | erations performed in the air, and flight nurses delivered the babies bebies have been born among the successfully. | cloud. Mid-air surgery became neces- MININUM CosT Ee ira The service started with $75,000 .ave the life of an Il-year-old boy in'ested in one Norseman aircraft py making an incision in his ard a pilot-nurse team. Today it throat. The desperate measure was has four Cessna 195s, a twin-engine an attempt to allow a young polio Beechcraft, and four pilots and patient to breathe ns veglstered Sia: nurses, along ~ Air ambulance pilots must have We yees. a minimum of 1,500 air hours be- Main base is at Regina, with an fore joining the service. Nurses wixiliary base at Saskatoon where must have had at least three years' me machine stationed with a pilot, a flight nurse and an air- TEMPERATURE OUTLOOK VARIED southern | United States weather bureau. j a belt around Hudson, yay ad ee pone Wear Rorsial I va a Britisn Colum: ool) bia. The rest of Canada can ex- ern Maritimes, Quebec's Eastern | pect below-normal temperatures. Townships most f Ontario and Health League Again Told Fluorine Effects Uncertain TORONTO Dractivs] experience after gradu- tion sik Scattered parts of Canada can expect near-normal ° temperatures in the next 30 days, gccording to this map based on 'Woman Inherits Fortune coin Io ths, may bad 1 Because Divorce Defective ¢,cus Takers RIVERHE AD, N. Y (AP)--A 53- vear-old Brooklyn housewife has To Start Count : Next June 1 _onada's anti-fluroridation move- inherited $260,000 .from a husband he thought she had divorced Nejson, meantime, was making nearly 20 years ago a fortune as a partner in a Brook. OTTAWA (CP) Almost 17,000 ; ment told the Health League of workers will count Canada's popu- .'snada Wednesday the non-injur- lation in the first five-year census i,.« affect of fluorine in water The lucky heir is Mrs. Myra jyn metal products factory. Richman Duck. Agreement on her died in Miami Beach last year He starting June 1, the trade depart supplies has not been established. ment said today. Goerge MacMillan, Canadian di- share of the estate of Helge Nel- ga leaving no will. His estate is There will be a commissioner for _icion chairman of the Interna- 4 son, of Huntington and Miami estimated at $650,000 Heise, from Beach, Fla. was reached in surro- Nelson's common-law wife at the each of 263 census districts, 526 (; 1 Safe Water Association, field supervisors and about 16.000 .hajianged too, the statement that (signing gate's court here Monday i 3 As a girl of 15. Mrs. Duck mar tine o bjs death, Dorothy Com ried Nelson. After two weeks he di or in arrozate s fou left her and: she never heard from ne€r¢ for a widow s share oO e estate. A search for possible sur- enumerators who will gather the gy, ..ine" has been proved benef information. The department ov in reducing tooth decay. named most of the commissioners go = challenged th ereport today that tooth decay among school- him again Twenty vears later she wanted ViVOrs was stated, and it turned up to marry Frank Duck. Prudently, MIs. Duck. ia she hired a lawver to get a desert- The lawyer had misinformed her, ion divorce from her long-departed It turned out, and never got her a divorce decree at al. She still ted t Because of the Jilie Hest vied O children at Brantford, where a 10- sompile versls Jesu 8 I anacs 10 year fluroridation experiment was the past, as fac one on y mv ie 'wcently completed, has been re- years i ur aev 1 ec niques cut Cuced by 60 per cent. veloped in the 13.1 cens Rinsing the mouth of food part- husband, in case he was still alive vas the legal wife of Nelson The lawyer reporte ok i was *H Nelson. he Ry P d back in due Under the agreement, Mrs. Duck dos Ld 3 Hime and made a five- ices immediately alter eating yes Asus practicable vould cut down tooth decay by as SALLY'S SALLIES is to inherit 40 per cent of the " The department said this year's | much as 60 per cent, he said. astate: The other 60 per cent goes to Nelson's sister, a half-sister and a half-brother. Doroth C: pisi got i gl ae By en de de- Improved oral hygiene education 000, ~ould have been the reazon. compared with $8,000,000 in 1951. Challenged about his. informa: nothing. It has been slimmed down to - Skiers Killed just five general questions Plus | 3 more detailed questionnaire By Ava a e \skiers died, police reported Wed- LONDON (Reuters)--Thundering nesday. Another avalanche killed time that he had obtained a divorce decree. He collected his fee and she went ahead and married Duck. (CP)--The leader of tion on mouth-rinsing, Mr. Mae- Millan waved a pamphlet issued bv the department of national aealth and welfare. "Are you disputing the material put out by the department' he asked. . MacMillan's attack followed a paper bv Dr. J.Z. Gillies, chair- man of the league's fluoridation committee, saying fluoridation nas been endorsed by the leading iealth authorities throughout North America Dr. G.K. Martin, of the Ontario health department, said syphilis is almost extinct in Canada. In 1945 there vere more than 2,000 known cases. Last year there were only in. Col. E.A. Baker, blind manag- ing director of the Canadian Na- tional Institute for the Blind, said Canada needs a preventive pro- gram for blindness. GREET OLYMPIC SKATERS Phillips are Fr. bara Wagner, and world figure ances Dafoe, Bar- ' pion of 1956, Carol Anne Johnston 3rooklyn, New York skating cham mayoral guest book) corded a civic reception in To ronto on their refurn from Italy. | Seen here with Toronto Mayor Canadian skaters and a pretty US. world champion were ac- Warn Ambassador Convicted Man ' » Asks Court Bo Bo Not Prague For Job Back rian Zorin, Russia's new TORONTO (CP) four-month sador to West Germany, has been cfiicer in the oviet secret police. labor di pute Haid its third the target of withering blasts in Other papers lambasted him for round Tuesday before the Ontario the press. Foreign office officials allegedly criticizing the Bonn gov- Appeal Court treat him with icy politene ernment at public functions. The © dispute West Germany's largest political In an unprecedented move, the .tdam Rivando, party has warned him that 'Bonn Adenafier government in its offi- 1s not Prague" --a reference to cial bulletin commented on Zorin's ,... life has come under attack. Zorin's masterminding of the Com- cordial remarks when he pre: 1he newspaper Frankfurter Rund- munist coup in Czechoslovakia sented his credentials to President ;chay commented, "for many with the International Nickel Com pany -at Port Colborne, Ont. Riv- ardo, a member of the Interna ticnal Union of Mine, Mill and smelter Workers tInd.), was fired lat September on grounds that he vas absent without leave Rivando, jailed last Aug. 16 on a 30-day term for impaired driving, said he wrote the company Aug. 26 aslng a leave of absence. He said tis letter was unanswered and he was refused work when he returned to the plant A three-man arbitration beaded bv Judge Ian Macdonell of Toronto, ruled la-t December that Rivando should be reinstated Last January the company took the case to the Ontario Supreme Court. which refused to alter the board's ruling The cae is continuing reported that is a high ranking Vale- of Zorin. One ambas- his chauffeur paper board. around employee revolves former | Lofoten islands off the northwest coast. | In Switzerland, a party of 16 {German skiers near Scuol were {hit by an avalanche. Four of the is Zorin, a deputy foreign minister Heus »eople, Zorin's activity the Urged or Cats agriculture. Each person will be before his assignment to Bonn, 'The ambassador must surely iypical behavior of the subversion LONDON, Ont. (CP) -- Cats as listed by age. sex, marital Stas, came here eight weeks ago cocky he aware that there are hardly two expert he allegedly revealed "him \ well as dogs should be inoculated -elationship to th~ head of the and houncy. Now, one diplomat niher countries in the world be- self to be in Prague in 1948." BRUINS BUY KILBURN x against rables, according to city household and whether livide on a Says Lorin 3 Piel unhappy tween which trust and confidence.' 7orin has imported two delega- VICTORIA (CP)--Colin Kilburn, a that cats, and in fact form. Se mpares WH en Sve and very isapp i he ind spen-able basis of any {jong of experts from Russia to 28, captain of Victoria Cougars in all animals are subject to the virus. - : RE The Russians, in a Moscow ulderstanding, have been more ist German plants and discuss the Western Hockey League. has and steps should be taken to im- |iwhite death claimed at least 49three German skiers near Bregenz, Lroadcast, particularly objected to thoroughly shaken and abused. It ocsible orders for equipment. His been sold to Boston Bruins of the munize P ets WILL IMPORT FORDS |killed and missing in western Eur-| Austria Tuesday. stories alleging that Zorin's em- Will Teqijire more than a declara- oy embassy already is publish-| National Hockey League. The tM: of rabies appears to, TORONTO (CP)--The Ford Mo-jope during the last 36 hours in a bassy is tapping government tion of . intentions if this regret- ing a news bulletin and is reliably| Fred Hutchinson, Cougars' man- be drawing closer to Middlesex tor Company of Canada Ltd., an-grim aftermath of the continent's ANCIENT PORT vires. ible atmosphere is to take on a ..5orted to he planning an infor-| aging director, said Kilburn will prea we first met, he whistled county and the London area with nounced American-built six- -cyling- most severe winter of the century: UNPRECEDENTED MOVE new complexion mation program designed to|report to the Bruins next fall. Kil-| once. Now look what's hap- |discovery and capture Tuesday of er Ford cars and trucks are to be) Avalanches roared down from Hamburg in West Germany, one This was just one of a flood of Zorin's feverish activity to make match similar American and Brit-| burn leads Cougars in scoring with |a fox at Harriston which displayed |introduced in Canada for the first | [the mountains in Norway snuffing/of Europe's greatest ports, was newspaper stories highly | friends in various phases of Ger- ish efforts in Germany 141 goals. symptoms of the disease. 'lime, out the lives of 21 persons in the founded in the ninth century. 21 BOND ST. W. THE NAME WHICH STANDS FOR VALUE PLUS QUALITY BOYS' OR GIRLS' ALL WOOL BLAZERS Sizes 2 to 6 Reg. 2.98 1.99 Kiddies' Short Sleeve GIRLS' 'T' SHIRTS | JUMPERS Sizes 2-6. Reg. 49c. Sizes 3-5 only. Reg. 1.98. 4:11.00, 79: MEN'S DRESSY NYLON GABARDINE PANTS Belted, zippers, pleats. Sizes 30.44. Reg. 5.95. 2 3.99 TRAINING PANTS Combed cotton, nylon re-infor- ced. 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