Oshawa Times (1958-), 16 Feb 1963, p. 5

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"TWINS HAVE TWIN BIRTHS SAME DAY " Mrs. Anne Cramer, left, and Mrs. Pamela Ellitson, identi- ¢al twin sisters, hold their baby boys, both of whom were born Wednesday at the same hour, 4:30 a.m., about 120 miles apart in England. Mrs. Cramer had her baby at Hull, Yorkshire, and Mrs. Ellitson gave birth at Lytham St. Annes, Lancashire. (AP Wirephoto via cable from London) Heavy Ice Stops Island Ferry Run WALPOLE ISLAND, Ont. (CP)--Heavy ice has stopped ferry service from this St, Clair River island to Adanac, Mich., but the islanders still get to work. From the island, 18 miles northwest of Chatham, it is a 80 men and women over his trail every day. At 50 cents a head, the side. line pays well. The route is al- ways changing because the shifting warm currents of wa- ter discharged from the Detroit Edison Company generat- Sunday School Program Faces Change In '64 By |. THOMPSON DUNBARTON -- Dr. W. A. McKay conducted the regular morning service at the Dunbar. ton United Church, assisted by R. Pitcairn, organist and choir leader. The choir sang the an- them, "Make A Joyful Noise". Vancouver Makes Pollution VANCOUVER (CP)--The gas- oline additive that takes the knock out ot your auto engine could also be causing the rasp in your respiration. The dry cleaning fluid that takes the nal off your. coat could be putting it on your lungs instead. Each is a possible health haz- ard as weil as an aid to clvili- zation, Each could be helping to give cities a serious pollution problem, While measurable fallout from industrial sources is known to be diminishing in cities, little is known about the tons of auto exhaust and gas fumes that foul the atmosphere every day. A three-stage pilot study un- dertaken by the British Colum- bia Research Council may pro- vide some of the answers. Dr. Frank Murray, chief. of the council's chemistry divi- sion, and research chemist Ian Williams aim to develop sensi- tive analytie methods .to iden- tify substances im the air, find out what the unknown contami- nants are and co-operate with the University of British Colum-' bia medical school to see what harm the various substances can do to humans. CANCER SUSPECT Medical authorities have long Study causing mindr respiratoty ail- ments, is also a contributory cause of cancer, One of the products of the in- ternal combustion engine, a sub- stance known as 3:4 benzpy- rene, is known to be cancer- producing, The researchers hope to find out how much of it is in the 25 to 30 pounds of air a person inhales daily. They will look for the quantity of unburnt gases, hydrocarbons, lead compounds, carbon monoxide and other mat: ter poured into the air by auto exhausts, dry cleaning plants and gas station spillage. This will be done by an $8,000 machine called a gas chrom- atograph which can determine to less than one-millionth of a gram the amount of any. sub- stance in a given mixture of gases, In a matter of minutes it breaks the mixture down into various components and re- cords them on a chart, Dr. Robert Wright, head of the program, says it is impos-| sible to tell what is fouling the atmosphere by just testing auto exhausts. "For one thing you can't find out what the average car pro- duces because the idea of an average car is as ridiculous as the idea of an average human 0! suspected air pollution, besides! being." Explosion Causes 8 Deaths, EDMONTON (CP) -- A fiery explosion rippetl through an iso- lated Alberta construction site on a 30-below-vero day in Jan- uary, 1962. Eight persons died almost im- mediately, Four others were 4 Hurt in his car. Local calls cost 30 cents for three minutes plus 10 cents for each additional min- ute. Long distance calls are at normal rates. To place a call from his car a person presses a "talk" but- ton on the receiver, asks for 3 Glen ' Aictive Service Class Elects 1963 Officers By MRS, LORNE JONES BALSAM AND MT. ZION -- Officers. of the Active Servicers Active Service Class are Mrs. vice-presi-' ft as follows: Manderson; dent, Mrs. Earl Disney; Adult teacher, Mrs. {Ralph Jones, Assistant teacher, mer Wilson; Cecil Disney; tary, Mrs. Albright, President, Mrs, Mrs, Mrs. Percy Jones; El- secretary, Mrs. assistant secre- Imer Wilson; pia- nist, Mrs, Allen Carson. : Treasurer,, Mrs. Frank Me- Avoy, Miss Kathleen McAvoy; 4-H Leaders, Mrs, Don Sander- son, Mrs, John Sherian. Group leaders -- Mrs. Mac Orr Graham, Mrs. Allen Carson, Mrs. Les- ie, Harbron, pringham, Mrs. Burnett Jamie- son. Business Committee -- Mrs. Thomas Jordan, Mrs, Percy Jones, : Sick committee -- Mrs. Lorne Jones, Mrs, Orr Graham, Nominating Committee Mrs. Cecil Jones, Mrs. Lome Jones, Mt. Zion Sunday School Of- ficers -- Supt. Mr. George Em- pringham; Assistant Supt., Mrs. Elmer Wilson; secretary, Mrs. Ronald Jones; assistant secre- tary, Mr. Jim Wilson. Pianists, Mrs. Allen Carson, Miss Anna Wilson; Mr. and Mrs, Crade Roll Supt., Mrs. Frank Coultis. Missionary and Temperance to be looked after by Active Service Class. Primary teachers -- Misses Janet Jones and Lynda Hos- kins; Junior Class -- Mrs, Al- Jack Em- auditors, HALIFAX (CP) -- A former, \United States paratrooper whi says he likes excitement has be gun a parachute jumping club 'or like-minded Nova Scotians, Walt (Crash) Roberts, who first jumped from a plane when he was 16, now has 23 mem- bers in the Nova Scotia Skies Unlimited Club. Members, who pay an annual subscription fee of $25 and $5 a jump, practise their daring sport at Stanley Airfield in nearby Hants County. Already 16 of them have hit the silk, 11 for the first time, "This exhilarating sport is enjoyed by people from all walks of life," Mr. Roberts' says. 'Doctors, lawyers and teachers take up sky diving. , "Tt is tremendous fun and per- tectly safe, There is no other sport like it, The participant is 'ree of all physical A dons." Mr. Roberts, born in' New York, grew up in England, He got his nickname from his rac- ing career. In 67 speed -races he was in 36 crashes and taken to hospital 19 times, once for seven months, - "I suppose you could say I was learning the art of road racing the hard way." CRIBBED HIS AGE His first descent with a 'chute was at a country fair, "I cribbed about my a 'old them I was nen took a 3,000-foot drag- orf, In a "drag-off"' the 'chute is d and allowed to "drag" Reluctant Peer Will Take Seat LONDON (Reuters) -- Lord Sandwich, nicknamed the "re- luctant peer" for his decision not to take his seat in Britain's died last year and he inherited the title, has decided to make his appearance in the - upper house after all. He said Friday he has de- all - party parliamentary .com- mission. It suggested that in future Lords should be able to choose for themselves whether to stay in the Lords or run for election to the House of Com- House of Lords when his father) cided to take his seat in the?) House of Lords while waiting])) for government action on a re-|). cent recommendation from an/i len Carson, Miss Ma Jamieson, Mrs, Lorne Cecil Disney, Mrs. Lorne Jones. Wilson; Jean mens. Junior Intermediate -- Mrs. Senior Intermediate -- Mrs. ack Empringham, Mrs. Elmer Young Peoples, Mrs. the jumper from the aircraft. At 17 Mr. Roberts, who works in the sales department of a scuba diving equipment firm, joined the U.S. 18th Airborne Corps. While serving in Germ: Ex-US. Paratrooper | Starts Jump School any he studied in his spare time at Heidleberg University, In 1957 he joined the 4 diving one He no race om many European road ra tis Unll oa es. Unlimited members jump 2,500 feet on their feet jumps using 'chutes opened automatically by a static line, The next are 10 free-fall 10+ second jumps from $8,400 feet. Pig' " oy i oe feet. s the jumper deve ficiency higher fee oth other techniques are under> taken. Sky flying, in which the jouer glides like a bird, fol- lows. ri OTHACHE oe eds Don't suffi let tran ler neediessly, throbb! with fast acting ay KY ot money back, All drug stores, Camp Oconto Established 1925 For Girls -- 5 to 17 years Riding, land sports, safe waterfront. Resident graduate physicion and two nurses. 40 MILES NORTH OF KINGSTON Directors ---- Mr 3 Pine Forest Rd., Toronto 12 Fully ilustrated Brochure Sent on Request. ond Mrs. €, C, Labbett, STARTS MONDAY DOORS OPEN 6:30 P.M, NAI vr ! {WORTH BILTMORE f ing plant at nearby Marine City, Mich., make the ice thin or cause patches of open water. HAS ANOTHER JOB The river guide also holds a regular job at a marina in Al. gonac but is available during his spare time to lead parties. "With my wife expecting our third baby, the extra money comes in handy," he said. The personnel manager of the badly injured. The camp, where a testing crew had been working on a new, piece of \pipeline, was 35 miles through rugged bush from the nearest town, Edson, 120 miles west of Edmonton. There were no telephone lines into the camp and much of the connecting road was primitive. Yet emergency sup- plies were flown to the site within an hour and the "out. side' knew of the accident within minutes. The communi. cation had been made by tele- phone. The crew was one of d in isolated construction and oil exploration camps in Alberta equipped with mobile radio tele. phones. There are almost 1,000 tele. phones in cars and trucks throughout. Alberta that can tle directly into the normal land line system. And there are more than 1,200 private mobile systems. by which field crews can communicate directly with their offices (but not with other telephones) while on the road. Aids exploration--Alberta gov- ernment telephones says there are more mobile radio-telephone units in Alberta than in any other province. As a communications device in Alberta, radio telephones came of age soon after the dis- covery of oil at Leduc in 1947 when exploration crews began to scour the province. Mobile phones are still used extensively by oil companies for 60-mile drive up the Canadian side of the river to Sarnia, across the international bridge to Port Huron, and back down the American side to Adanac where some 70 Walpole Island residents are employed. But those who know Edward josed can get to work in t 20 minutes by following fim across the windswept, ice- cake-cluttered 'river. ' maa ike" aoaer the 1.300 boat works, Wesley Densmore, | residents of the island, started|!s enthusiastic about the serv- ice. hg nd guiding business four "Our men from the island get to work no matter what the BACH PAYS 80 CENTS weather is like," he said. As soon as the river freezes|"'Sometimes some are late Over and cuts out the ferry|when the ferry is held up by he picks out what he|fog, but we can depend on them ders to be the shortest and/ getting here over the ice." across the river. Mr. Kahosed said his biggest usually some open) problem is the cold. the middle of the} "I'll never forget one night|/£@Ts Was conducted during the fiver, and Mr. Kahosed takes|when it got down to 20 degrees|*¢rvice by Cheryl Lynde. customers across this haz-|below zero," he said with a| On Feb. 24th the study period in his rowboat. shiver, "I had on so much cloth.|Will begin at 7:30 with "The = Armed with a muskrat spearjing I could hardly mové. I'd|Word and The Way", being the nd wearing plenty of warm have gone down like a rock if| Study book: @lothing, he leads as many as the ice had broken." PERSONALS GIRL, 7, PLAYS IN SNOW -Physicans Mend 'Hole In Heart Burnett Jamieson, Mrs. Elmer Wilson; Nominating Committee, Mrs. Donald Jamieson, Mrs. Murray Jones. The following stewards were elected, Walter Pascoe, Percy Jones, Leslie Harbron, Lorne Jones, Cecil Disney, Donald Jamieson, Jack Empringham, Ralph Jones and Elmer Wilson. Mrs. Allen Carson was ap- pointed organist with Misses Anna Wilscn, Sharyn Jones and] Mary Jean Jamieson assistants.) Sunday School will be at 1/ p.m. and church at 2 p.m. dur- ing the winter months. | Mrs. Dorothy Cullum conducted the Junior Congregation assist- ed by Christine Cullum, + There was an_ installation service and rededication of the Sunday School Teachers and of. ficers. Dr. McKay spoke on the plans for the Sunday School for the coming years. Our United' Church curricu- lum is being changed in 1964 with the new yearly text books being issued The Sunday Schoo! course will be a training course beginning at nursery school age and continuing with the proper continuity through to adult age. The beautiful floral arrange. ment on the communion table was in memory of Rev. J. W. Wilkinson who died a year ago. His wife and family were pres. ent for the service. The meeting of the messen- the mobile service operator and gives the number, She dials it. Anyone can reach a mobile phone by calling the long dis- tance operator, giving the num- ber he wants and the area in which the vehicle is located. The phones have been used frequently to summon police and medical aid to highway ac- cidents or to summon assistance for stranded motorists, Country veterinarians often use them to phone their offices before re- turning from calls in case there is another call to be made in the same area, ¢ Chinese Cook Dies After Fighting Fire PORT COLBORNE, Ont.| (CP)--Chinese cook Kum Hing} Ma, 71, died in hospital Friday, | five hours after he was ad- mitted with severe burns to his} face and hands suffered while! trying to beat out a fire. 1 Coroner J, C, S. Wilson said death was caused by smoke In- halation. Until he was overcome by smoke, Kum Hing Ma fought|® the fire in the kitchen of the|® Globe Cafe over which he lived.| Ay The fire broke out again four|i hours later in the second storey |i of the cafe. Firemen believe grease boiled over on the stove. . Wa Moth Au CLEANERS and LAUNDERERS OSHAWA + PORT HOPE WHITBY - COBOURG BOWMANVILLE ~ SCARBORO Curteins, Drapes, Blenkets, Ruge OSHAWA'S ONLY UNIONIZED SHOP 723-4631 50 MILL NOVAK costanems REX THOMPSON * JAMES WHITMORE om SHEPPERD STRUDWICK ao moons VICTORIA SHAW Comemenes aes Se LAST TIMES TODAY and SUNDAY "MR, HOBBS TAKES A VACATION" WITH JAMES STEWART--FABIAN--MAUREEN O'HARA "BACHELOR FLAT" with Tuesday Weld BOTH FEATURES IN COLOR 4 LET ME BE YOUR VALENTINE FEBRUARY SPECIAL! One Week's Groceries telat | soma rene | CALL FREE "THE LINCOLNAIRES .. ." * YOUR VALENTINE 728-9403 HOME ECONOMICS Food--Freezer 11 ONTARIO ST., OSHAWA amt KINSMEN SPECIAL 12 PRICE PASS To the Friday, Feb. 22nd KINSMEN SUPER CAR Mr, and Mrs. Ken Balsdon returned home last week from their vacation in Florida. Mr. Murray Brown was on a business trip in Michigan last week. Ottawa. LAKE, Ont. (CP); oxygen. In Carol's heart, blood Mrs. Betty Harpell and Sher. A seven-year-old girl is having ty returned home this week from a month's vacation in Jamaica her first taste of winter fun this year thanks to a rare heart @peration performed a year ago Carol Draeger had a compli- cated set of congenital heart de. fects corrected in the operation, @ type believed to have been performed only once previously. "Until this year Carol was strictly a house mouse," says her mother, Mrs. Thelma Draeger. "You couldn't get her outside the door." Now she's enjoying the thrill the snow and climbing to the top of the hill for another ride. Carol was blue instead of the usually healthy pink when she was born. She grew but not as ckly as normal youngsters. e quickly became exhausted, frustrated and irritable. ®!heart to be pumped through the was shunted through the hole and pumped out into the body without reaching the lungs. Queen's University surgeons left the hole untouched because Carol's main problem was the sthallness of the right cham- bers and the blocked artery to the lung. Instead they linked the large vein carrying blood from the upper body to the heart with the artery to the right lung. Part of Carol's blood now by- passes her heart and goes di- rectly to the lungs to pick up oxygen. It then returns to the body. Some still travels the normal route and a little still gets shunted abnormally be- tween the chambers. Carol's mother says she is still smal) for her age but has put on four pounds since the operation. Fred Weinbrener of Hunting- ton, Indiana, visited ~ with the Harold Mitchell and FE. J, An. nis families last Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. H. Piatti of Oshawa visited Sunday after- noon with the D. M. Thompson family. SLAVS ADVANCE LINZ, Austria (Reuters) -- Zagreb Dynamo of Yugoslavia clinched a place in the quarter- finals of the Inter-Cities Fairs Cup Wednesday night, defeating Union St. Gilliose of Belgium 3-2 in a second-round playoff. The teams had finished even on aggregate 2-2, after their home- and-away ties. for other heart conditions but doctors could find only one other example in medical liter. filing reports and ordering sup- plies. Hundreds are used by the lands and forests department for such things as keeping tab on forest fires and summoning help, Anyone can rent one for $30 GAINED FREETOM Jordan was part of the Ot- taman Empire from the 16th century until the First World War when it became part of the Palestine Mandate. It gained in- a month and have it installed TONIGHT Old Time -- Modern | ADMISSION--$1.00 She withdrew into herself, ferring to be left alone: h-strung and nervous, she lacked the ability to concentrate To have thot corpet or chest- erfield cleaned professionally in Oshawo's Original Carpet Cleaning Centre . . . where 'Bf fully guoronteed sctisfaction is assured, Phone 728-4681 NU-WAY The technique has been used! condition. ature of use in this particular dependence in 1946. j | | | DANCE PARTY PAT RICCIO & HIS ORCHESTRA ° = ° PoeviuoN ey 0. +) \ KINSMEN i= Me: AT THE Peterborough Memorial Centre ™ $8,600 a GO - IN PRIZES INCLUDING N3aWwsSNIN 29272 1963 PONTIAC STRATO CHIEF or $2,000 Cash. $1,000 Hi-Lo Game. $1,900 Big Snowball (58 nos.) $1,100 Jr, Snowbell (57 nos.) Plus $600 games. regulor' games. $450 special LARGEST AMOUNT EVER $3,000 in $1,900 in 58 Nos. Snowball $1,100 in 57 Nos. THIS SATURDAY AT THE 0.6.V.1. Auditorium -- 8:30-11:30 p.m. MEMBERS 40c --- NON-MEMBERS 60c ~ Age Limit 15-21 GET! PRESCR IPTIONS OUR SPECIALTY Pro! CITY PICK-UP & WIDE | DELIVERY OPEN NIGHTLY TILL 9 P.M. For Fast Service DRUGS OSHAWA Call Us To-Day HELL'S LIMITED Bookmobile Schedule Tuesday, Feb. 19th--POWER 2:30 - 5: 00 P. STORE--King St. E. M. Thursday, Feb, 21st -- A&P -- North Oshawa | 2:30 - 5:00 P.M end 6:00 ~ 8:30 P.M. Friday, Feb. 2 22nd -- SIMCOE PLAZA 730 ~ 5; 30 P.M. Saturday, Feb. 23rd -- ROSSLYNN PLAZA 10:00 A.M, - 12 Noon end 1:30 - 4:00 P.M. wi ot h oth eek LOOK FOR THE BLUE AND WHITE TRAILER BURT LANCASTER and JUDY GARLAND TAKE AN UNTOUCHED THEME AND MAKE IT TOUCHING AND UNFORGETTABLE ! FEATURE TIMES: 1:35 - 3:30 - 5:25 ond 7:25, LAST COMPLETE SHOW .9:15 P.M. GENA ROWLANDS STEVEN Ascoclate Predecer PHILIP LANGNER Musie by ERNEST GOLD Released thre UNITEDRIJARTISTS HILL Assy woe Sonn CXssavetes STARTS SUNDAY The glamor girl who wakes up ashamed... ELIZABETH TAYLOR LAURENCE HARVEY JOHN O'HARA'S BUTTERFIELD DINA MERRILL com MILDRED DUNNOCK + BETTY FIELD « JEFFREY LYM + KAY MEDFORD » IN COLOR * GinemScorE THEMONDAY 9 SIMCOE 21. M, TELEPHONE IN 723-3431 "SUNDAY Day "JUMBO" TECHNICOLOR RUG CO. LTD. 174 MARY ST. SOR eS Last Day Toy DARI ote "PLAYGIRL A "CRY DO ~ | LAST DAY! ) S WALTZ OF TOREADORS aderttance 4 R: ewno see & -

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