1 Restored oung Boy (AP) -- Surgeons af etts General Hospital be several days be- can tell whether an 'o restore the hand of -old boy was success- h's hand was severed ' when he became CLAUSE-BY-CLAUSE STUDY Approval In Principle - Won For Divorce Bill By ALEXANDER FARRELL OTTAWA (CP)"-- A govern- ment bill widening the grounds for divorce won approval in PARLIAMENT AT-A-GLANCE J _IN VANCOUVER VANCOUVER (CP) --A THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, December 19, 1967 3 Roadside Suspension Tried For First Time the law has cut the number ofjdrivers that our force has en- friendly drink and a drive is a/persons arrested, but drinkers|countered in the 17 days of the formula this Christmas that will|still are getting behind the|month as compared with 141 leave many British Columbians| whee! and seemingly in increas- charges for the same period in an escalator. eration is successful, e the third time doc- principle in the Commons Mon- h By THE CANADIAN PRESS day night without a recorded ready for a balanced reduc- tion of forces. hospital succeeded in _ severed hand. im was Jeffrey Roth, Sanford I. Roth, a pa- t the hospital. aid the boy slipped _his hand in the esca- » on a shopping trip ather and mother at 1 Marsh department $144 HOURS sr rushed to turn off to the escalator, and vas recovered by po- ore employee, Paul pplied a tourniquet. 1 hour's exploratory the hospital, doctors d on the operation, 1d 814 hours. was reported "'in rea- od shape"' atferward. geons worked to re- lood vessels in the after 30 operations, artial use of his arm ear qualified for his ence. ANE ee RT He LE y and Protect With Anite IDING © . by Keiser! sulation @ Ne main- All work guaranteed mates, BRAITH ) East -- 728-0181 HRISTMAS AR GUAR- NG MAM- . viewing, Ultra ctric eye meter. i¢ reset counter, srvice in Toronto her case. RING ONE FOR ISE HIM THIS AAD YOU DID. ieseiediiniiuiasiniiometentianeiall NNER OF H THIS MATIC CTOR 59.88 matic operation; 3.5 lens; 500- ; Self-contained ; Edit* tray. TT Ht for the your family, entre -HRISTMAS » had been "a very dramatic de- " place," Dr. Botha said. vote. However, the House was un- able to complete clause-by- clause study of the legislation despite extending its sitting an hour. During debate at this stage, which continues today, the Com- mons turned back two Conser- vative attempts to give country and district courts jurisdiction over divorce. Gordon Aiken (PC -- Parry Sound-Muskoka) said hearings in the high provincial courts are much more expensive than in the lower courts. His amend- ment was beaten 67 to 46. Robert McCleape (PC--Hali- fax) said the high courts will be getting too many divorce cases to handle. He estimated that the present rate of 9,000 cases a year will be doubled. His amendment was beaten 66 to 4g, {clause covers desertion, impris-| CHANGES REJECTED Richard A. Bell (PC -- Carle- MONDAY, Dec. 18 Justice Minister Trudeau told the Commons a new sys- tem of courts would be needed to implement the 'marriage breakdown" concept of di- vorce advocated by opposition members. Grace MacInnis (NDP-- Vancouver Kingsway) earlier joined in demands that mar- riage breakdown be substitut- ed for specific grounds in the government's divorce bill. External Affairs Minister Martin, reporting on NATO ministerial talks, said there is no sign the Soviet Union is The defence department said Wing Cmdr. R. A. White had set a Canadian altitude -- of 100,100 feet in a CF- 104, The Commons completed committee study of the di- vorce bill after voting down opposition attempts to amend it. TUESDAY, Dec. 19 The Commons meets at 2:30 p.m. to continue debate on proposed broadcasting leg- islation. The Senate meets at 8 p.m. jrape, homosexuality, bigamy jand permanent marriage break- |down as well as adultery. The marriage-breakdown onment of a spouse, addiction to |drugs or alcohol and failure to consumate the marriage. But if they had been launched /10 or 15 years ago, there might ;now exist a system of marriage jcourts in which the marriage-| breakdown theory could be ap-| |plied. | Grace MacInnis (NDP Vancouver Kingsway), one of ton) then tried an amendment} Justice Minister Trudeau said the most ardent advocates of that would allow the federal) cabinet to give country courts! jurisdiction in divorce cases at the request of provincial gov- ernments or territorial councils. It was rejected 63 to 50. The bill would permit di- vorces for physical of mental} cruelty, sodemy, bestiality, | Washkansky Deteriorates But Doctors Still Hopeful the government wanted to take action now to improve the di- vorce law. He defended the bill as the most that could be done with the sphere of federal juris-| diction. He said he was not trying to} minimize the importance of fed-| eral-provincial consultations. | |change the marriage-breakdown theory, jsaid this approach would elimi- jnate the necessity of one spouse} having to prove that the other is! in the wrong. COURT DECISION What was needed was the one ground that would allow a court| "to decide whether a human re-| lationship has failed beyond the hope of repair." Mr. Trudeau said this concept "presupposes a complete in our conception of courts and justice." | Instead of the adversary sys- tem, in which the judge was the arbiter between the two quar-| CAPE TOW N(CP) -- Heart treatment was quite remarkable|relling parties, the procedure| transplant patient Louis. Wash-! kansky is 'in a very serious} condition," his doctors said today, but they added they have not given up hope for him. Dr. M. C. Botha, the patholo- gist for the operation, said there crease" in 'Washkansky's white corpuscles count in the last 24 hours ana a transfusion was planned. The doctors Monday night re- ported a deterioration in the condition of the 55-year-old wholesale grocer, who devel- oped lung complications Satur- day. "While still considering the various possible explanations for the decrease in the patient's white cell count, it seems likely a process of rejection is taking "This rejection may be affect- ing his own tissues, such as the lungs and circulating white blood cells,"' he added. Dr. Botha said although there were various possible explana- tions for the decrease in Wash- kansky's white blood count, "'it seems likely a process of rejec- tion is taking place." SYSTEM AFFECTED But he added that the rejec-|being allowed in her husband's|ed by three municipal affairs tion process might be affecting! "his 'own tissues such as the| lungs and_ circulating white | blood cells' rather than the) heart which was transplanted into his body. It was decided to tranfuse Washkansky "vigorously" with white blood cells from normal people, Dr. Botha said. The transfusion probably would be carried out in a matter of hours, he added. The effect of this form of Refugees . Dying Fast | PONTIANAK (AP) -- Medical officers report Chinese refugees crammed into rotting ware- houses in this river city of In-| donesian Borneo now are dying at a rate of three or four a day. | More than 26,000 Chinese now are jammed into about 40 emer- gency quarters. They are victims of a blood war launched by Dyak tribes- men in the jungled interior. Wtih army support, the Dyaks| Communist then to attack forces, vowed guerrilla ers who control the interior's economy. It is estimated 60,000 refugees | are scattered from Pontianak to the smaller coastal city of Sing- kawang to the north. Rice and medical supplies promised by the government have failed to materialize. -- CALL -- 725-1127 RADIO DISPATCHED MOTOR CITY CAB turned | their fury on the Chinese trad- | 9 PRINCE STREET | on occasions, he said. Before his operation, and until) recently, Washkansky had more white blood cells in his circula- tion than normal persons. Ever since the operation, Washkansky's doctors had be- him lay in the body's normal} other foreign bodies implanted but they in turn tended to lower, his body's normal resistance to infection. Washkansky also is a dia- betic, more susceptible to infec-| |tion than normal people. heart of a 25-year-old woman car crash victim in the first op- eration of its kind Dec. 3. Washkansky received an | | CONDITION WANES After near miraculous pro- gress in the first two weeks, Washkansky developed pneumo- nia in both lungs and apparently did not respond to massive} weekend doses of penicillin. | Other drugs were then used. | Anxious relatives flocked to the hospital late Monday night. Among them was Washkan- sky's 15-year-old son, Michael. His wife, Ann, phoned from her would have to be a kind of in-| quest into the state of the mar-! riage. Instead of relying on the} parties to produce all the evi- dence, the court might have to seek our evidence of its own. Marcel Lambert lead to the means to carry out concili- simply be the testimony of the Appointments Announced TORONTO (CP) -- Municipal Affairs Minister Darcy Mc-| Keough Monday announced the appointment of 11 members to the Ontario Municipal Employ- ees Retirement board, to come into being next Jan. 1. The board, responsible for management and administra- tion of municipal pension plans, will comprise representatives of municipal emlloyees and the| province, municipalities and local boards. home since no visitors were ultra-sterile ward. "No visitors will be allowed} till he is on maintenance anti-| rejection drugs," Dr. Venter said. "He says he feels better, but we do not think on clinical ex-} amination that he is better. We are disappointed that there is rejection but this is not unex-| pected." APPETITE POOR Washkansky's appetite has} been poor since the lung condi-} tion has developed. "We are disturbed about the patient's condition," said Dr. Christian N. Barnard Monday night. Dr. Barnard, who headed the} surgical team in the landmark | operation, told reporters that iung changes which doctors first treated as- an infection have been increasing. "He has not responded well to this treatment," said Dr. Bar- nard. "It may be some evidence of the rejection penomenon in that he is reacting to new tis- sues," If Washkansky's natural body defences against foreign objects /reject the heart, there is little doctors can do to save him. The province will be represent- department officials, Paul Hick- ey, C. W. Yates and J. W. Bell, and D. P. Holmes of the treas- ury department. Representing the municipali- ties and local boards participat- ernment Bert Herridge, (NDP -- Kootenay West) said. he didn't feel discriminated GO Transit Success Leads To Expansion | TORONTO (CP) -- The Ontar-;demonstrated that the simplejing costs are slightly io government's $15,000,000 ex-j|announcement of plans for a (PC -- Ed-|periment lieved the greatest danger to;monton West) said the bill will| service along the I in commuter JUST DROPPED IN FOR TEA | against Monday night at Ottawa when he joined a party of NDP members' Some observers have suggest- the shape of a U, serving the northwest and Agincourt to of $2,000,000 f Transit experts wto planned|the northeast. parties themselves. -- _.|the 60-mile GO transit--for Gov-| of Ontario--route be-|! One of the benefits of such a ine would be its ability to serv without a driver's licence for 24|ing numbers. hours. Provincial officials say it still] can 1966,"' he says The 1966 figures do not show | A policeman suspend jis too early to gauge the law's| Suspension because the law was lyour licence in B.C. if, when| effect because it was not|"O0t yet in effect. No charges are he stops you in a routine or| claimed involved in the suspension law lother check, he smells liquor lon your breath. | Dubbed B.C.'s |pension law, this |Christmas hol'day it has been in effect.. Scattered figures indi- cate police are using it widely. The legislation, passed in 1966 | but not proclaimed until earlier jthis year, is designed to take lthe drinking driver out of his jcar for the time his ability would be impaired. Safety officials and police in Vancouver, however, are ques- | tioning its effect. DRINKERS MOBILE Police Chief Ralph Booth says roadside sus- Arms Purcha JOHANNESBURG (AP) -- South Africa plans to permanent- ly shift its arms purchases else- where, Defence Minister Pieter Botha said today. Botha said he anticipated Monday's decision by the Brit- ish government to continue its arms embargo against South Af- 'rica. "For this reason we have al ready ordered submarines from janother country and will now take other steps to fulfil our | duty," he said | Before the embargo, Britain had been the traditional sup- plier of arms to South Africa. Now France is building {Daphne submarines for South higher| Africa. The South African Air secretaries. He just donned a wig, gloves and mini-skirt and "was one of the girls.' (CP Wirephoto) jthan expected, mainly because|Force is equipped with French- train}new commuter line will push up/of higher labor costs. ake Ontario|land values in the affected area.| However , "consecutive poly-|shoreline has proven such a suc-| | . tendency to reject organs and gamy." The courts did not have|cess the government has made|ed one of the new routes will be othe b imp ja first move toward expanding|in in it. To curb this rejection, he|ation measures and the evi-|the pilot program to serve other,Brampton and Georgetown to|the system to the expected level had been given various drugs|dence of marriage failure would! parts of the Toronto area. | built Mirage jets. the increased Pat vaGuE ON FUTURE ronage is expected to keep the} Botha said South Africa would government's annual subsidy of not close the Simonstown naval base near Cape Town to the Royal Navy, but did not com- is the first} South Africa Transfers across the province} until Oct. 1. | It became effective in Victo- . ' . jria on a trial basis April 5, the| Attorney-General Robert Bon- jrest of Vancouver Island July ead Pg Pay an adminis- jand in Greater Vancouver Aug-| "4 driver's only recourse jt: against a policemen's suspicions | Vancouver has already js to request an on-the-spot reached a record 55 traffic fa-\breath test or to take a trip to talities so far this year and the) his doctor for a blood test. province more than 520 reported ON-THE-SPOT TESTER last year. | John Fisk, deputy Vancouver) The breath-reading device the |chief, says 101 drinking drivers|policeman carries in his cruiser have been charged so far this! Zives him a yes or no answer on | month in the city and 246 motor-' your condition. Should. it show jists have had their licences sus-| your condition to be worse than | pended under the roadside law jthe legal .08 per cent blood-al- ' "This represents 347 drinking|chol ratio, he cannot use the in- iA igs AaE -- \formation in any subsequent charge. How does the average driver like the law? "When they come in the next day to pick up their confiscated licence, they go out of their way to thank the police for suspend- ing them,"' says Traffic Supervi- sor Alan Rossiter. and no individual driver records are kept. se To France ment on continued British par ticipation in the Simonstown de-| Jim Plaskett, Vancouver traf- fence agreement. fic and safety council manager, Reports circulated before the |52¥S the legislation is only a ae vs stop-gap measure. British decision was announced Cautionties people doesn't that if the three-year-old ban on' seem to have worked," he says. arms sales continued South Afri-| Mr. Plaskett agrees with ca might consider ousting the|Steve Kershaw, B.C. Safety Royal Navy from Simonstown. | Council executive director, that One rumor said France was ajit is time to forget slogans and possible successor to the Royal/to start an all-out. war against | Navy at Simonstown slaughter in the streets 'Covby's EXTRA DRY 'GIN ONE DRY | tween Hamilton and Pickering/ice the satellite city of Brama- via Toronto's Union Station pro-lea near Brampton and undevel- jected .a long-term passengerjoped parts of the: borough of load of 15,000 a day once the|Scarborough where the govern-| jareas served became fully ur-|ment's Ontario Housing Corp. is| banized. \deeply involved in housing pro- Your money DRYER for Highwavs. Minister George Gomme sometime and may provide the basis for) early expansion of the service to one or more lines. seven months old, patronage has already reached the 16,000 mark and one day last week) passed 16,500. The increase in passengers | has prompted the provincial cabinet to order GO transit. offi-| cials to bring up to date a sur-| vey of other potential commuter' lines in the Toronto area. | The GO transit manager, W. T. Howard, said in an interview Monday the report will be ready in January The decision will be difficult,| But with the service less than|stams. | from the CNR as operator of Mr. Howard. said initial | the GO system indicate operat-) DIXON'S HEAT WITH OIL OIL 313 ALBERT ST. 24-HOUR SERVICE 723-4663 SERVING OSHAWA OVER 50 YEARS since the first experiment has ing in OMERS are Controller Anne Jones of Hamilton and Al- derman E. W. Swain of King- ston. The five employee members | include R. §S. Chambers of; Toronto, L. D. Groombridge of | Chatham, F. Janzen of St. Cath- | arines, J. M. McLeish of London | PUBLIC WORKS MUNICIPAL DES Salary Ronge -- $12,1 Responsible to the Director of Design ond draftsmen are employed in the including sewers, roads, sidewalks, and J. E. Stockdale and Port | Arthur. | CAREER SCHOOL | OF HAIRDRESSING levels of municipal and provincial Applicont must be a graduate Civil Engineer and @ member of the Association of Professional Engineers of Ontario with a minimum of five years applicable experience, Starting salary will be based on comprehensive range of employee benefits available, Apply IN WRITING ONLY, giving f cation and experience by January 5: The Personnel Officer - Oshawa, Ontario City Hall, - CITY OF OSHAWA and direction of the Design Division, in which o staff of technicians liason required with utility companies, private concerns and various DEPARTMENT IGN ENGINEER 65. to $14,869. p. a. and Control for the administration design of muncipal public works culverts, bridges, ete, Relevant government. \ \W THE NON-SLIP BOTTLE | ©. CORMY DISTILLERY, LIMITED, CORBYVILLE, CANADA. | LAST @ DAYS DON'T MISS OUT To Enroll and Save ON VIC TANNY'S on term deposits, Guaranty Trust Federally Incorporated and Supervised Capital and Reserve $27,000,000--Deposits over $400,000,000 Rein Harmatare, Manager 32 King St. E., Oshawa Tel. 728-1653 \ qualifications and experience, A ull details of personal dato, edu- th, 1968, to: | opening of a New Branch in OSHAWA. now. taking appointments, Models are welcome. City of Sotary Range -- $5,682.00 -~ traffic engineering studies, includin, reports, parking regulations, etc. Full high school, with previous traf Required to have chauffeur's licen A comprehensive range of welfare Public Works Department TRAFFIC CLERK Reauired in the Traffic Engineering Division to carry out and process Assist in the maintenance of various traffic records, such as accident Apply IN WRITING ONLY, giving full details of personal dota, educa- tion and experience by December 22nd, 1967, to: |] Are pleased to. announce the |} Day and Evening Classes are || 145 KINGST. WEST || 576-3558 4 ----mmmmme_o_n;n,|: Phillips School Choir and Instrument- ------' | Soloists. Oshawa & TUES., DEC. 19 at 8 P.M. $6,458.00 p.c. (40 hour week) | a the preparation of written reports | Mc LAUGH LI N COLLEGIATE ee [fond VOCATIONAL INSTITUTE vain goed storia, ce H ADULTS 75c¢ ° STUDENTS 35c¢ The Personnel! Officer, 1 City Hall, Oshawa, Onterio. AZZ WV | i | | Located at the \ OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE J For Christmas Give Her A DIAMOND from... BIRKS| EWECLERS II CHRISTMAS CONCERT A program of Christmas Music feat- ; % uring the MCVI Band, the Dr. S. J. Rectangular Tube Uhf - Vhf Hand Wired Chassis 1 Year Guarantee On parts and sabor Solid State at 17 Vital Points, BOND & DIVISION MOTOROLA COLOR CONVENIENT TERMS ARRANGED > T.R.1.0. TELEVISION LIMITED PHONE 728-5143 Inf EXPIRES DEC. 24 or sooner if quota is reached are evoked as you move in the radiant fragrance of . f | PU | Don't Be Disappointed. Enquire Now The perfume that is. Call the Manager Today! womistakably Spanish. snmistakably YOu. $2.00 - $2.75 - $5.50 - $9.00 | Complement with PERFUME, COLOGNE, i SPRAY MIST, BATH OIL. DUSTING POWDER || JURY & LOVELL eta aap VIC TANNY'S Gym and Health Spa's CAROUSEL MOTOR INN (BLOOR ST. & STEVENSON RD. S.) 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