DONALD DUCK TIME SLEEPING? Wastine Yo LI'L ABNER "i Nh UN LS SL aes Where Your Mills Men Are Men of Action! Now { DID WE TAKE THOSE IGNORANT FOREIGNERS! b a -- -------- emcees .---- eee eee oe JUST ASK HIM TO WAIT. SAY 1 WAS KEPT LATE AT THE STORE, THEN EXCUSE YOURSELF, DON'T TALK TO HIM OR YO! , PUT YOUR FOOT IN YOUR MOUTH. URE SURE TO YES,Z'M POSITIVE! A WOMAN LIKES TO BE REASSURED. es | a r Fon." " <) JULIET JONES © King Festnrne Spadicate, Jan, 1967, World rights remeved. OS MICKEY MOUSE MUGGS AND SKEETER «HE TOLD US THAT THE TIGHT-MONEY POLICY WAS STARTING TO LOOGEN UP! GET MAN....THATS TOO os wie LETS OUT OF HER' EVERY TIME LTHINK OF HOW DRUMM AND ADRIENNE WIDDOE CONNED ME INTO PAYING SO OE Ee aE The Trading Post Offers Soon... Another Brand New Car!! SWINGING VIVA to 1967 HERE NOW! THE CLIFF MILLS MOTORS LTD. TELEVISION LOG Channe! 2--Buttale Channed 'Channet Channel 9%--Toronto Channel 11--Hamilten Channel 12--Peterdorough WEDNESDAY EVENING a:09 P. 109 FM. 12--Woody Woodpecker 11--Movie Superman 7--Highway Patrol 6--Passport 3--Woody Woodpecker 5:30 P.M. 12--I1's About Time McHales Navy 7--News é--Music Hop 3--It's About Time 2--Of Lands and Seas 6:00 Pm. $--How"s Business )--Twiligee rmeatre 6--Green Hornet 412--News, Sports, Weather 3--Nation's Business 6:30 P.M. 12--Laredo Ni+Pierre Berton 3-6-9--News, Weather, Sports 4--News 2-8--Huntley-Brinkley 7:00 PLA. N--Fugitive 9--Batman 8--Lowell Thomas A 4--Lowell Thomas 3--Daktar! 2--News, Weather, 12--Peopie and Their Problems 9--Andy Williams 8-2--Virginian 7--Batman 6--Peggy Neville 4--Lost in Space 7:45 PLM. @--Nation's Business 8:00 P.M. N--Movie 7--Monroes 3-6-12--Green Acres 4:30 P.M. 9--Movie 4--Beverly Hillbillies 3-6-12--Hellow Delhi 'een Acres 2-8--Bob Hope 9:00 :00 P.M, 7--Novie 2-8--Best on Record 9:30 P.M, 4--Gomer Pyle 3-6-12--A Choice of Ftures 10:00 P.M, N--Merv Griffin 4--Danny Kaye 24--1 Spy 10:30 P.M. 3-6-12--Voyageur Pageant 10:45 P.M. 7--Summer Olympics 9--Sports Hot Seat 200 P.M, 11:00 FM. 12-11-9-8-7-6-4-3-2 -- News, Weather, Sports 11:20 P.M, 6--Viewpoint 1.25 P.M, \\--Plerre Berton 2-8--Pat Boone 3+4--Mr. Dressup 123 A. -6--Bonnie Prudden 11:38 A.M. 9--Magistrates Court 7--One In A Million 4--Dick Van Dyke 2-8--Hollywood Squares 12:00 NOON 12--Cartoons 9--Toronto Today 4--News, Weather, Sports ie i iw P.M, --Johnny Carson 4-Las Vegas 7--Movie 1. 3--Thrilier 11:40 P.M, 9--Wild, Wild West 11.45 PLM, 12--Maverick 6--Nightcap H M, Mystery Theatre THURSDAY 8:00 A.M, 9--University of the Alr 4--Captain Kangaroo 3.30 A.M. 1i--Albert J. Steed $--Romper Room 1 s: M. 8--Dialing For Dollars -- Virginia Graham 9:00 A.M. 1l--Little People 9--Uncle Bobby 8--Pastor's Study 4--Forest Rangers 2--Topper 2 A.M. % i 1i--White Hunter 8--Gloria 4--Love of Lite 6-12--Ontario Schoos! 3--Ed Allen Time 2--Jack La Lanne 10:00 A.M. 9--Cartoon Playhouse 1i--Ed Allen Time 8-2--Snap Judgment 4--Candid Camer Morning Time 9--Fractured Phrases 7--Dateline: Hollywood 4--Beverly Hillbillies 3-6-12--Friendly Giant 2-8--Concentration 10:45 A.M, 3-6-12--Chez Helene 11:08 A.M. 12--Romper Room 11--Mike Douglas 9-- Mr. And Mra. 7--Supermarket Sweep 4--Andy Griffith a 3-6-12--Canadian Schools 10:38 A.M. 7--Money Movie --Luncheon Date 4--News, Weather, Sports 3--Popeye and Pals 2-8--. ardy 10 12--Movie li--It's A Match 8--Eye Guess 4-6--Search for Te morrow 3--News; Weather; s 2--Merv Griffin 12:45 P.M, 4-4--Guiding Light 1:00 PLM, 9--Movie 1--Theatre #--Dialing For Dollars, Virginia Graham 7--Fugitive é--Luncheon Date 4--Meet the Millers 3--Movie 1:30 PLM. 8--Let's Make a Deal 4-6--As the World Turne 2--Matches and Mates 2:00 P.M 7--Newlywed Game 4-6-12--Password 2-4--Days of Our Lives 2:30 P.M, 2--Calendar 9--People in Conflict 8-2--The Doctors 7--Dream Girl é--Coronation Street 4--House Party 3:00 P.M. 9--Words and Musi¢ 7--General Hospital 4--To Tell The Truth 3-6-12--Take 30 $-2--Another World 3.25 P.M. 4--News 3.38 P.M. 1--Marriage Confl- dential 9--It's Your Move 7--Superman Show 3-4-6-12--Edge of Night 2-4--You Don't Say 200 P.M, 9--I Love Lucy Super Comics 8--Match Game 4--Secret Storm CROSSWORD ACROSS 41. Malay RIES] 1. Recom- island (ATL I) pense 42, Languished ei * 5. Butts 43. Stitches asi 9. Spanish 44,.Among . IS} dance DOWN 10. Pick 1. Rich, te 12, Speech strong form white wine IMIE IN] 13. Fraud 2. Riddles Ul 14. Wooden 3. Selves i pins 4. Spanish tress Yesterday's Answer 15, Calendar title signal 31, Island in abbrevia- 5. Provide 25. Kettle- N.Y. tion once more drums harbor 16, Bitter 6. Wing 26. Shunned 32. Sticky vetch 7. Audio 27. Settled, mud 17. Dickens' needs, for asan 37. Tapering character short audience piece 18. Beetle 8. Cubic 29. Possessive 39. Solemn 19. Observe meter pronoun promise 20. Elaborate 9.First-rate 30. Thrash 40. Resort. 23. Former Z repre eT Bp ki: - title ry yy" " . Smal! 24, Small i. As 28. Servi 'A to Abe 14 As Y 6 er wo as 'od of x La WZ 33. Anglo- 20 at 22 YAY Saxon letter 23 Y, 24 25 |26 [27 34. Extinct -- " bird "Uae 35, Addition ALL a 30 |3i 32. Ex) Y 34 hila v. 36. These 3S Vi, 36 a should Banmmty LL be 38 39 Y 4 crossed 4 87. Point al YY 7 ores Wy VaAaa %Z 38. Active Y Y WY 40. Tone a 262 KING ST. WEST THERE'S GOT TO BE AWEAK LINK SOMEWHERE . ef) ~ IN THIS SETUR, 15-24 feast Ela Me a EES LE Wn" ae ' WHERED You TWO GET THE RECIPE FOR THIS GOULASH, TRUDY - THE ARMY TIMES? YOUR MOTHER IS MELLOWING -- © King Features Syndicate, fon, 1967. World rights reserved. NEARLY AS WITHERING HER GLANCE ISN'T AS IT USED TO BE YOUR HEALTH Peril Can Be Of Rheumatic '|HAVE EXAMINATION Yesterday, I recounted in some detail -- and not in the least exaggerated--some of the frightening aspects of rheumatic fever. It may have alarmed some readers, but unless people are} thoroughly aware of the de-| struction of health caused by this disease, it apparently isn't possible to get them to take) precautions. We know this from) experience. Rheumatic fever continues to take its toll in pain and heart disease. And yet a great deal can be done to prevent its dangers. The _ following information should be of value to some readers who have written with) such questions as, "I had rheu- matic fever when I was a child. Is it advisable for me to marry?" Or, 'I had rheumatic fever, and wonder whether I should have children." Not every attack of rheumatic fever damages the heart; this occurs in slightly less than half the cases, Irvington House, a rheumatic fever clinic and re- search centre at New York Uni- versity medical centre, points out that somewhere from 10 to 20 per cent will have residual heart damage severe enough to affect their future lives signifi- cantly. , This adds up to a large num- ber--but it is also important that merely having had rheu- matic fever should not make do is to have a careful exam- By JOSEPH G. MOLNER, MD patients think automatically|the term petit mal that they will become "'heart/reference to an eight-year-old cripples." Rather, the thing to} boy?--J. V. ination and find out whether the|is one form of Eased Fever Most subsequent attacks -- 98 per cent, Irvington House says --can be prevented by prophy- lactic use of sulfa or penicillin or some other antibiotic. A monly used by injection, once a month. Either it or sulfa can be taken by mouth. This can and should be con- tinued for five years, possibly even more. One interesting finding was that the patient whose heart is not inflamed by the first attack does not seem to have heart d from ib it at- tacks, But when heart damage does occur, then recurrence is likely to add to the damage. It has also been shown that as a person grows older there is less susceptibility to rheumatic fever, and further studies are now in progress to try to deter- mine how late in life the peni- cillin or other protective medi- cation should be used. Thus I hope to help make it clear to all how important it is to be alert for signs of rheu- matic fever, but to make it equally clear that, with proper care, the disease need not be the crippler and killer it used to be. And to emphasize also that not all rheumatic fever pa- tients should feel that they can- not live normal lives afterward. A majority can. They should guard against future attacks, = should not have to live in ear. Dear Dr. Molner: What does mean in Regardless of age, petit mal ilepsy. It does 28 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, May 24, 1967 BRIDGE By B. JAY BECKER (Top Record-Holder in Masters' Individual Championship Play) South dealer. Neither side vulnerable, NORTH @A5 91074 o9842 4AQI5 EAST $3108 aQ4 @AIB 929638 $1073 J5 4K1083 h9762 2h Pass 3@ Pass 46 Opening lead --jack of spades. In duplilate bridge, gaining an extra trick that would be relatively insignificant in rubber bridge often makes the differ- ence between an excellent score and a poor one. In today's hand, taken from a tournament, de- clarer succeeded in making 'ive spades, while the other de- clarers in a spade game made only four with the same cards. South won the spade lead in dummy with the ace and return- ed a trump to the king. At this point there was some slight danger of going down if the diamonds were badly divided and the ace of hearts was off- side, but when declarer cashed the A-K of diamonds and both opponents followed suit, ten tricks became certain. South's next problem, now that the contract was assured, was to try to find a safe way of making five. Leading a club to the queen was obviously un- sound because East might win with the king, return a heart, and defeat the contract if West had the ace. The alternative method of leading a club to the ace and returning the queen, intending to discard a heart if East fol- lowed low, would not guarantee five, though it would of course preserve four. South solved the problem very neatly when he succeeded in making eleven tricks by means of an unusual play. He led a club to the ace, a diamond back to the queen, and then put West on lead with a trump. Now it no longer mattered to him where the ace of hearts or king of clubs were located. With the nine of diamonds now established as an entry to dummy, West found himself in a hopeless position. He had to return a heart or a club, and in either case the defense could score at most one more trick. West did as well as he could when he cashed the ace of hearts, but South achieved a top score by being the only declares to make five. Second Infant Abandoned TORONTO (CP)-- A healthy baby girl, the second infant abandoned on the ground in Metropolitan Toronto in the past four days, was found in a yard Monday by two children. Scott Elliott, 13, and Daniella Van Esterik, 9, found the baby, btween six and 12 hours old, beside a hedge. Police took the baby, partly covered with a small white hand towel, to hospital. Doctors said she was a perfectly-formed child showing no ill-effects from exposure, although she was blue with cold when found. Police speculated the child had been left only an hour or two before she was found. They said she had been washed but her umbilical cord had not been tied. - A baby boy, reported in ex- cellent condition by hospital au- thorities now, was found last Friday in Toronto's High Park by an off-duty policeman and his wife. YANKS WELCOMED CHADDESDEN, England (CP)--A Derbyshire pub is to change its name to The Presi- dent Kennedy. A favorite of Americans living nearby, it al- ready has a Pentagon bar. SALLY'S SALLIES "Let's go in, dear. Maybe you'll have better luck at the fish market." terruption of activity, often so short that the person merely seems to pause in the midst of saying a word, and then goes on and finishes the word. Note to Mrs. K. B.: There is no reason why the operation for varicose Veins cannot be re- forget it. heart has been damaged to any|not involve the violent convul- important degree. If not, then sions (grand mal) in which the patient falls to the floor, In- diy your peg- nancy played a part. These are, of course, different veins, not the ones that were tied off Or rather, almost forget it.[stead, petit mal is a brief in- seven years ago. Prov Con TORONTO ( eneral Arthi gested Tuesda course of Con be charted b acting as "so our own right "The pro created the ment," he tol "It.is the prov come together the kind of. | must have.'" Mr. Wishart ces originally states which d their powers thority. He spoke a: debated a go tion on Premi posal that On Confederation « ference next f: "We have pe approach," M "that we 10 pre should come t and say: 'Wi states in our Opposition 1 legislature apy his remark shouted: 'Mr, come to the | reads about th Mr. Sopha : proposals woul country." "Your party "T"m not s party," Mr. W "Remember, torney-general ing," the Libe insisted. t Natio To Ca By DENNI OTTAWA (¢ should follow series of spec projects to cap! tion of its peor of the Science ada said Tuesd Dr. O. M. Sc has made an | bution to nation and Canada's i He told the ¢ Club Expo pro what it takes sources, energ tion. A series of ings" would n volvement and His suggestec Large-scale for many type: tion including ada's large siz population crea terest in makin nications leade! --A transfor gtain delivery. to bottom. Dr. this a problem by systems an: --A major de Arctic and sut with an experi to serve as "'a development of living happily t --Greatly in aid as a major world peace, u: now devoted to Dr, Solandt s are science-bas the future invo ence in social problems. The governme on science and 1 first chairman o search board. pointment to h council he - hel positions with tional Railways land Aircraft o! He gave his predictions Tue: 10 years comm satellites will ¢ spread use; las microwave syste and automatic s applied to all fo Robarts With Al TORONTO (C John Robarts s: federal governn sult with the p implementing ar tions of the Ca mission on taxa Mr. Robarts ture his govern its views on th at a meeting of | incial tax struc here June 13. "We of cours position that nc tion--if that is t be taken with Carter commiss said. "We think the: fullest conside: changes with th fore those chang "T would think possible really tc way because tl constitutional qu and there are that affect the particularly." The premier, question by NDF MacDonald, saic suggest to the Carter recon considered in c those of Ontari