Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 18 Oct 1956, p. 8

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lk C.A.R.S. PHYSIOTHERAPIST GIVES TREATMENT TO PATIENT COMMUNITY CHEST iy # | Arthritis And Rheumatism Sufferers Given Relief The urgency with which persons plical af.licted with arthritis and rheu-|cuperatiy matism should seek treatment is! fected his prog well evidenced .in the following examples Their peculiar and they have from the treatment of the Canadian Arthritis and Rheu- finea to bed and wheelchair and group, Each day Mrs. required daily nursing care, re- the joint I with gular visits by a physiotherapist! physiotherapist and patient. unit have resulted in a noticeable im- spy ¢ PHYSIOTHERAPIST matism Society. H. Biebrach, physiotherapist, her fully equipped mobile treats persons who could not branch is a member of the Osh- awa Community Chest and is di- rected by a representative board otheriwse receive treatment. This chaired by Harry Millen. It is important to note that any- one will be treated, regardless of race, creed or income. It is hoped that citizens will help continue through their support of the Osh- awa Community Chest campaign these services in the Oshawa area which opens next week. cases are mnot| with atoid r n benefitted sought help in November of 1954. arthritis or r S ffered by Although she had been long con-| can strike any family, in any age learned Wednesday. Leslie Black- ted treatment during the re- ress, 52-year-old woman first Case B--A rheumatoid arthritis provement in musicle strength. Still handicapped by severely af-| fected hips and knees, she is now able to dress herself, even as to shoes and stockings. While she still does use a wheelchair she did, during a seven-week period when her sister was ill, manage |to cook, prepare vegetables and|ciety) can be seen in any do light housework. The physio- therapist treating this case hopes that in a short while it will be possible to improve her condition to the point where she will be These are not isolated cases but their that which Rheumatism Society. By very nature, they indicate rheumatism can be overcome through efforts of the doctor, The Oshawa Branch of the Ca- sible for the company to finance | Py, D. A. MacDonald nadian Arthritis and Rheumatism, Society is staffed by an able, ex- | perienced full-time physiotherap- list, Mrs. H. Bierbrach. Her gray car with the familiar (the national symbol of the so- part of {the city as Mrs. Bierbrach visits |hér many patients in their homes. { Mrs. Bierbrach averages 25 to {30 calls each week bringing re- lief from pain to those suffering |able to walk with crutches. It is|from various muscular diseases. Just as an instance of some of : : . ; i more than eight years since she While Mrs. Bierbrach treats all the work which is being done, yg heen able to, or tried to stand. here are a few case histories: TYPICAL CASES Case A--A 51-year-old man with rheumatoid arthritis The patient is now very keen to try. |such handicapped cases, prefer- lence is definitely given to the y | Arthritis patients. Authority from railroads and a score of labor|out. Case C--A 48-year-old married|a doctor must always be procur-|unions representing more than|-- ------------ which in- man with two dependent children ed before such a visit can be ar- 1,000,000 rail workers Wednesday volves his knees, hands, feet and who had rheumatoid arthritis in|ranged. The physiotherapist pro- shoulders. A year ago he was un- the legs which caused him to|vides short-wave treatments, sun- able to work at his job. With the walk poorly was discharged after lamp treatments, and plaster-of- | | continuous treatment provided by|less than a year's treatment at|paris casts as local rests for ar-| the mobile physiotherapy unit, he home by a C.A.R.S. physio thera-|thritis joints. Contributions from has experienced gradual improve- ment in all joints. Unfortunately, the patient fell one day, fractur- from patient at all . . . doing all al service ing his leg at the knee. This com- pist. The report from the family doctor reads 'Little complaint work without trouble." the Red Feather Drive make it possible to supply this profession-| to all regardless of | their ability to pay. | | Laval Chief Says Priest Free To Speak, Write QUEBEC (CP) -- Abbe Louis O'Neill, co-author of a controver-| sial 4,000-word article on Quebec's straint no longer weighs against Abbe O'Neill." Saturday, the informant in Laval electoral methods, is free to write said Abbe O'Neill had been re- for publication and to speak in lieved of his post as teacher of public, it was announced today, moral philosophy at Le Petit by Msgr. Alphonse-Marie Parent, Seminai a classical coll di- rector of Laval University. The administrative head of the| old Quebec French-language uni-| versity described as "untrue" a| weekend report that the young priest is under a one-year re-| straining order, preventing him from writing for publication or| speaking in public. | Reports of restrictions placed on| Abbe O'Neill's activities were con- firmed Saturday by a reliable au- thority within Laval University. | NOW CLEARED UP { The same source said Monday | night "the situation has mn | cleared up and it is true the re-'at the fac a, hd rectly affiliated with Laval--and assigned to teach logic in the same institution. Laval University, in a state- ment Mouaay which made no llusion to the weekend report, said Abbe O'Neill was professor of philosophy at Le Petit Semin-| aire and now is professor of logic and natural philosophy. The state- ment implied, but did not state directly, that the change occurred last June, prior to the publication of the article in August, The statement says he now teaches theology at the faculty of A an fessional morality d pr ulty of commerce. (A | | | Laval's annual report for the 1955-56 school year, published a week ago, mentions several ap-| pointments made last June by the| university but Abbe O'Neill does |not figure in any of them. The university statement says bbe O'Neill was relieved in May at "his own request" of his post as chaplain of the students of the faculties of science, forestry en- gineering and land-surveying, and! commerce, but continues to serve| as chaplain of the university's Catholic Action movement. Abbe O'Neill wrote the article about Quebec's electoral practices in collaboration with Abbe Gerard Dion, director of the industrial re-| lations department of Laval. In it, the two priests accused Quebec's political parties of buy- ing voters, corrupting electoral of- ficers, and waving the scarecrow of eommunism. East Germans Unhappy: | Staging Strikes RERLIN (AP) -- Labor unrest has erupted into slowdown strikes | [said so far they had not received |confirmation of Der Tag's report. to work," the West Berlin paper says, 'lies in the fact that man- But the official Communist trade) union paper Tribuene said two) days ago that workers in four big' Magdeburg plants had shown "'dis- | satisfaction' with excessive work and poor pay. | SAYS JUSTIFIED The Red organ said the com- in three Communist East German |plaints were justified and warned c.lles, reports a West Berlin newspaper |local union officials to take care {that in the future "the interests of The independent paper Der Tag!the workers are not violated." says 2,000 Red police had rushed from East been | Der Tag says the slowdowns Berlin to the have spread to sections of factor- agement has raised work quotas without granting suitable wage in- creases." Almost the same circumstances touched off the bloody East Ger man workers' rebellion of June 17, 1953. This uprising--which be- gan in East Berlin and 'spread to other East German cities--finally was put down with the aid of Soviet tanks and soldiers FAMOUS NAME One entrance to Petawawa mil-| city of Magdeburg, reported cen-|ies in two other cities--Erfurt and itary camp in Ontario is called tre of the strikes. Official sources ip West Berllpi Karl-Marx-Stadt. "The main reason for the refusal British field marshal: Montgomery's Crossing, after the i CARS NEWS BRIEFS NOT VINTAGE YEAR PARIS (Reuters)--There was sad news here for gourmets of the grape. A spokesman for the French Wine Producers Associa- tion announced the grape harvest this year will produce some 130.- 000,000 gallons less wine than it did in 1955. BEGINS ACTION FLORENCE, Italy (Reuters) Florentine painter Enroco Sac- chetti Wednesday began a legal action against Florence Mayor Giorgio la Pira to prevent 16 Renaissance masterpieces being exhibiied in the United States. The painter claimed to be acting "in the name of the citizens of Flor ence" to protect the masterpieces from possible damage during the transatlantic voyage. NO AGREEMENT SIMCOE (CP)--The market ap- raisal committee of the Ontario "lue-Cured Tobacco Marketing As- sociation ed Wednesday to reach agreement on a minimum average price for the current crop. It will meet later at the call of Chairman Frances R. Gregory. p F MANSLAUGHTER FOUND PRINCE ALBERT, Sask, (CP Edward Sennie, 48, of the Long Plain Indian reserve, was con- victed Wednesday of manslaughter in the death of George Carpenter, 78, on April 12. Sennie was charged originally with murder. REMOVES MACHINES KITCHENER (CP -- Following a recent ruling by the Supreme Court of Canada that coin-oper- ated machines are illegal, oper- ator Ted Jarosz said Wednesday that he has begun to remove his pinball machines from public places here. MAY ABANDON PLAN TORONTO (CP--A tight money tive period but has not af-lones taken at random from the arp t may force abandonment {files of the Canadian Arthritis and of plans for a $100,000,000 com-|nine votes to win. As many mercial and residential develop- ment on the site of the former Thorncliffe race track, it was well. former Ontario general and now president of Thorncliffe Park Ltd., told the Metropolitan Toronto works comi- mittee: "It may be quite impos- attorney- it (the project). RETURN TRUE BILL PORT ARTHUR (CP--A grand Bluebird jury Wednesday returned a true|f. qeral resources department bill in the murder indictment against William Andrew Ibey, 21. The accused is charged with the uly 1 slaying of Mrs. Vivian Mytruk, 26-year-old nurse's aide whose body was found under the back porch of a store. Mr. Justice R. 1. Ferguson adjourned the case until Oct. 22. NEAR RAIL PACT WASHINGTON (AP U.S. were reported nearing an agree- ment for a three-year contract providing substantial pay in- creases. Negotiations are being carried on in Chicago. THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETYE, Thursday, October 18, 1958 7 "a WORKERS AND CHILDREN AT CEREBRAL PALSY SCHOOL CouNpNITY capt : Railways Say Freight Rate Hoist Cerebral Palsy Council Is 015 Per Cent Insufficient ' . | OTTAWA (CP)--Canada's two|ways' request for the 15 per cent Carrying On Great Work biggest railways said Wednesday rate boost, which includes a re- that a 15-per-cent increase in gen-|view of a seven-per-cent interim eral rail freight rates being sought increase granted the companies The Oshawa and District Cere- its services and benefits avail- from the board of transport com- effective last July 3 » bral Palsy Parents' Council, now able to any child who can be| In|Sioners would not meet their The increase is opposed by the in its second year as a Commun- helped in any way. Wherever it| = neome requirements for this four western provinces and the ity Chest participant, is carrying is possible, the Council sees that year. CNR and CPR made their ng spokesmen are on a work of assistance to an they receive the proper care and Res | begin summing up their afflicted group of children who treatment in their iy {statements. as the board neared' case today, with the hearing likely need all the help and encourage The Council wishes it to be, the end of its hearing of the rail- to end Friday ment that can be given to them made known that any handi-| = RTE in fzcing the future. The Council capped children, whether the case was, a year ago, recognized as be one of cerebral palsy, sac New York Central worthy of inclusion in the Com- after-effects or any other condi-| 1 .1 munity Chest because of the tion, who might be benefitted by Must Continue Serv ice splendid work which it is doing the equipment and treatment it ALBANY, N.Y. (AP)--The pub- in the training and treatment of provides, will be made welcome lic service commission ruled to- ° children who are afflicted with to attend the school and clinic|day that the New York Central various types of cerebral palsy. at Simcoe Hall | Railroad must continue the bulk Since its inception, this volun-| This is one of the important|of its passenger service to North- teer organization has conducted Red Feather services which are ern New York. a school and clinic for these han assisted by the funds raised in| The commission held, however, dicapped children of Oshawa and the Community Chest campaign. that the railroad may discontinue the surrounding district. This has been made possible through the provision of facilities and accom. modation at Simcoe Hall. There, Your contribution to the Chest|Six little-used trains. will be of vital importance in as-| The Central had proposed, 'as Madame Bussieres President Of Catholic Women's League sisting these handicapped chil-|an economy move," dropping 11 LONDON, Ont. (CP) Mrs. /clared Mrs. A. V. Svoboda of dren. | north-country passenger trains. -- |The plan would have ended all | service intn Ogdensburg and di- rect service between Utica and Watertown. The commission did not act on F. A. Bussieres of Silery, Que., Saskatoon the winner with five | Wednesday was elected president votes. of the Catholic Women's League vice . presidents include |of Canada. H. T. Donihee, Cornwall. | In by acclamation, she was the| Bishop Smith suggested that at |only one whose election was not the next convention the CWL have| a Central plan to increase service | |contested. {"the intestinal fortitude" to pre- between Massena and Syracuse, | saying the matter was outside the | A nominee needed six out of sent a slate. as; "You've seen this schmozzle to- scope of the investigation. The commission added that the rail- to day," he said. 'We don't want a a repetition of it." road 'may and should properly MEN'S put in operation any additional] trains'. . . for which Jt believes AND CLINIC at regular periods each week, the school and clinic are conducted, and the results, while sometimes in making themselves apparent, have been most gratifying from the standpoint of the children's future welfare. As the number of children to be cared for increases, the periods of training and treat- ment are to be extended. The Cerebral Palsy Parents' Council has been fortunate, also, in securing the services of train ed personnel to conduct the school, and administer the re- quired physiotherapy treatments A large quantity of essential equipment to help the trained personnel in the work has either been purchased by the Council from its own funds, ar donated by interested groups and citizens It is the aim of the Cerbral Palsy Parents' Council to make Flames Destroying Port Credit School TORONTO (CP) -- Fire was re- ported burning out of control early today at the old Port Credit] high school and police said the building probably will be a total] loss. | Fire engines from three com- munities west of Toronto -- Port| Credit, Cooksville and Clarkson-- | Shewered alarms about 4:30 am. IST. | MURDERED Lorraine Lalonde, 19-year-old girl of McKim ' township, near Sudbury, Ont., was shot to death in he m a man at her home and T | who called asked her 12-year-old brother where she was. The boy said the man went upstairs, shot his sister, then calmly walked out of the house. Mrs there is a public asad. FREE UNIVERSITY Of 9,500 students at the Free The skeleton of an Indian found University of Berlin, 3,000 are in a cave in Alabama is estimated! from the Soviet-occupied zone of to be 4,000 years old. East Germany. five ballots had to be taken elect the six vice-presidents, secretary and a treasurer When the deadlock occurred during the election of the treas- urer, Bishop W. J. Smith of Pem- broke, national CWL director, de- 'Retiring Today OTTAWA (CP)--Dr. D. A, Mac- donald, forestry director of the since 1948, retired today after 42 years work in Canadian forestry. | A native of Saint John, N.B., he |has worked for the government | since he left university in 1914, | He played a large part in the preparation and administration of {the Canadian Forestry Act of 1949 {under which federal - provincial {programs of forest inventory and | reforestation have been carried WELSH NAME Pembroke in Renfrew county, Ontario, was named after the 'Earl of Pembroke, Wales, when the settlement started in 1843. Men's DAILY CROSSWORD ACROSS 1. Unspoken 6. Irritate 11. Sultan's decree 13. Kitchen utensil 46, Like sound waves 47. Cooks In anoven DO 1. Name 3. Missile weapon $. Reasons ¢ 4. Roman date 18. Destructier « §. Thrice 16, Snare (mus.) 17. Music note 6. Basket DRESS SHOES res.vo1500 3.98 up MEN'S TOE RUBBERS 1.98 MEN'S RUBBERS . . . . 1.49 Men's RUBBER BOOTS sizssana7ony 2.98 Children's eR IE 19. Large [eit NIRWIEIAVIER) snake [UII TT IL [ETNA 20. Exist _ [E] 22. Ancient 23. Cher- ished animal #4. Capital of Cuba (pods.) #8. River (Venes.) JAINIOINTY I} (A Nlo} IE B[o]A] IRIEIRICIE]S [SIE[ALR] Vesterdey's Anawer 18. Female for fish $7. Tray for carrying 36. Girl's name 37. Founda. organs 10. Wandering 16. American 38. Indefinite article 39. Marsh 40 (Jap. art) Vice-presi. dent under Coolidge Drupelets of fruit 45. silly 4. 44. RUBBER BOOTS sizes 1 and sony 2,98 Children's GALOSHES s==5: 2.49 Misses' GALOSHES s+ 2.98 tions 9. Coins (Romania) 40. River (Afr.) 42. Metal 48. Dip #8. American Save With Safety At . . . EWAR SHOE STORE 12 Simcoe St. N. Oshawa

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