Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - August 9, 1963, Winnipeg, Manitoba
Coffee break they say Beauty is Only skin deep but not according to a group of people i met this week. Marshall Wilder president of the toiletries and perfume Guild of Manitoba took me on a tour to see what s new at the Guild exhibit in the Viscount Gort Motel. For one thing i Learned it s desirable for a Man to have a certain air about him. Men Are becoming conscious of fragrance and sales Are booming in male colognes and after shave said or. Wilder. In fact european men buy As much Cologne As the i sniffed a few open bottles trying to find a scent to match my personal Ity but there was nothing that hinted even vaguely of Ink and typewriters. He then introduced me to Beauty specialist Phyllis Meikle who gave me the surprising news that women buy heavier fragrances of perfume for fall than they do for summer. In fact Winnipeg women Are paying up to .557 an ounce for perfume without batting an Eye Al though there Are blends that Are much less costly. More Aboul Beauty Here s a hint i picked up to pass on to female readers. Perfume is meant to be used it s perishable and unlike old wine does not get better with age. But to pre serve it it s advisable to keep the bottle tightly closed out of Light preferably in a Box and out of extreme heat. Some people even keep perfume on the lower shelf the refrigerator. Or. Wilder said women should have a wardrobe of with a Basic scent and of course some thing whatever that Means. I was fascinated by a Little innovation explained to me by j. C. Edick another of the exhibitors. He showed me a bottle of Nail polish which contained two Little steel balls. The balls keep the polish mixed and you la notice the Brush is Flat so it stands on end and the polish does t drip Down the end of the if that s a desirable situation then or. Edick should have a Busy season. Doug Denver who handles the publicity for the Guild explained that teen agers form such an important part of their business that they Are catering to their every whim. For example there s a new teen age Young Man s Cologne called Canoe and we had to get a match ing scent for girls. We called it ambush and the idea of a boy girl Matching scent has caught on like one final word or. Wilder and Phyllis Meikle left me with this there is no excuse today for a woman not being attractive with All the Beauty aids on the Market in fact there s no such thing As an unattractive of soap and supermarkets last minute notes a local woman wants to know Why the empty lots of the supermarkets shopping centres and other plazas can t be used after business hours. Her suggestion is that the City or someone place loudspeakers and music for dancing. It would give youngsters and even adults a place to go in the evening and would be a lot of fun latest Coffee break Silver Dollar winners Are Mary d. Borthistle Grosse Isle Man. Mrs. Anne Powell 75 Kennedy Street and Anne Johnson Teulon Man. Here goes another old adage flying out the win Dow. A medical study in the . Claims that washing products including both soap and synthetic deter gents May not be a primary cause of dishpan a total of 89 volunteers immersed one hand in tap water the other in a washing product solution _ for one hour a Day for two weeks. The pattern of change for better or worse was the same in both hands. Correction department the right phone number of the burned out family needing a Chest of drawers is 474-2042. Cml Chat 33. Illus slur Clivy 85. Tempi rat Lirra sunny and want a saturday. Light winds. For 34-hour period ending . Free. Vancouver Calgary Edmonton Regina Brandon the Pas Winnipeg 01 fort William 35 Kenora new Calendar what s doing in Winnipeg saturday . Winnipeg stadium baseball greater Winnipeg Pony league playoffs. . Shrines Parade from the fort Garry hotel to legislative building. . Assiniboia Downs racing featuring the Gold cup. . Alexander Park National soccer league scottish is. Germania provincial Semi final. By Gerry Cairns major Turley the Assiniboia lip major Turley the top Money Winner so far at this year s races at Assiniboia Downs is known to some followers of the sport of Kings As the Cassius Clay of the major was photographed Friday As he rehearsed for a poetry Reading he plans to give shortly at the Downs. Here for layers of the lilting line Are a few Well turned samples. Why do i win i hear you say. I drink a tank of Beer a Day. In the Derby fast and keen thanks to a shot of Wintergreen if it should rain am i a mucker place a bet and try me sucker. -7 racing for. The cup of Gold Wager if. You re 1 bet your Wallet bet your Roll As for me i plan to major Turley will be in there with the Best of trying in his own Fash Ion of carry off the Gold cup. That race May provide material for an epic poem. Major Turley by the Way was willing Toj. Give us the lip on almost every subject but he declined to comment on the possible outcome of the race. Winnipeg free press so ce8tbe by Carrier 3sc per week Winnipeg Friday August 9, 1963 single copy Price Loc Sargent Weall final word athletic Council puts the Boot to football High schooners won t play in 63, secret meet decides there will be no High school football in Winni Peg this year. That appeared Friday to be the final decision on a Long standing dispute Over the Fate of the High school football league. The Winnipeg High school ath Etic Council the Winnipeg school Hoard Winnipeg City Council and he Winnipeg enterprises corporation All have been involved in proposals and counter proposals concerning suitable playing facile ies. The decision to cancel the eague s activity for at least a was made behind closed looks at a meeting of the ath Etic Council thursday night. Newsmen were barred from the meeting. The announcement came in a grief press release. After considering All aspects f the problem the Council de idea with regret to reaffirm its arlier decision not to operate league for the 1963 in announcement said. The athletic Council said it and considered an offer from Ity Council regarding the pro Ision of seating accommodation t four Community club grounds it Felt that under these Condi on it would not be possible to aise the necessary for the operation of the league. The athletic Council said it also considered a letter from Winnieg enterprises offering the use f the stadium for the red Fea ther game. The letter also offered the use of the baseball Park. The facility was termed unsatisfactory by the Council last fall after the league had player there for two years. The athletic Council through the Winnipeg school Board had requested the use of the Winni Peg stadium for one night per week. In further business the ath Letic Council appointed a com Mittee to begin planning the operation of the league for the 1964 season. This committee is to meet with a similar committee of the school Board. Trustee Andrew Robertson chairman of the Winnipeg school Board who attended most of the athletic Council s meeting said Friday i think the decision May bring the whole thing to a trustee Robertson had Indica Ted thursday that the one Hope of survival of the league for this year would be for Winnipeg enterprises to reduce the rent at the Winnipeg taking a smaller Cut of the Gate receipts. Winnipeg enterprises president Karl g. Slocomb however said Friday he had no. Comment to make. Human failures cause concern study reveals drug errors by Noel Swann automated drug dispensing systems in hospitals could Cut errors in drug distribution in half or. Kenneth n. Bar Ker of the University of a Kansas said in Winnipeg thursday. Or. Barker was speaking at the conference of the Canadian society of Hospital pharmacists which is meet ing together with the Cana Dian pharmaceutical society s annual convention. Or. Barker is the project director of drug distribution system studies a research team organized at. The varsity of Arkansas in 1961. The research group found that in two different hospitals one error occurs for every six doses of medication administered. This observation was car ried out on medical surgical paediatric and obstetrical Nur sing divisions and involved a total of 572 doses. The Survey showed that the average nurse was involved in one error for every six doses administered. Or. Barker stressed that the nurses were observed administering the doses. This did not imply that the re searchers were Able to establish the nurses caused All of the errors he said. In one Case the nurse asked the researcher Grams equals cubic meters does t the re searcher pretended he did not understand the question and she continued without checking further. Another involved a Case where a nurse did not notice a change order of a dosage. In another Case a dose was Given after the or Der for it had expired. Three unordered drugs were Given one of them in still another Case. On the paediatric Survey two overdoses were Given. In another Case capsules were left with a five year old child without warning the child not to Chew them before swallowing. On the surgical floor a nurse omitted nine doses of medication which to All Indi cations should have been administered. The same nurse was observed starting to pre pare one dose land being interrupted so Many times that by the she got Back to it it was time for the next dose. In. Another instance the researcher saw a nurse take a tray into a on the tray were two prepared injections for each of the patients in the Ward. Although the Medicine cards were correctly prepared and the patients identified by name at three different Points in the Ward the nurse gave each injection to the wrong patient. Or. Barker said when peo ple heard these statistics they always asked were these errors really his team was working on a Pilot study to ascertain the problems and potential of the centralized unit dose dispensing concept. The experimental system they developed has among other data shown that the error rate can be Cut in half. The results. Of their Pilot study Are to be published in the american journal of hos Pital. Pharmacy. Hot gracious living with rain and relish gets a boost from metro chairman Dick Bonnyce Stylc left and councillors Peter Taraska Centre and b. The chef in Kildonan Park. They were trying out 18 barbecues Worth installed in Kildonan Churchill Crescent drive St. Vital and frasers1 Grove to replace open campfires which might get out of control. If the barbecues prove popular More will be installed said or. Bonnycastle. Taraska denies wage charge by Charles Thompson metro councillor Peter Taraska defended the private construction Industry thursday night and denied that unfair wages Are being paid to workers by companies under contract to metro. He was speaking at a metro Council meeting coun. chairman of a subcommittee of metro s finance committee which is to look into claims by two other councillors that fair wages Are not being paid. The sub committee s first meet ing would be within the next few he told Council. It is regrettable that coun. Sidney Green has raised such alarm. Contractors have accepted of rates that apply to of yelled coun. Green. Even the one Simpki Nicori Striction co. Ltd you Are concerned with the employees have not registered any com plaints about wages As far As metro is concerned so that s an indication they proper wages Are being said coun. Tar Aska. I see no reason for alarm so displayed by coun. Green hat employers Are being paid Ess than . Besides the bulk our contracts have been let for 1963, so this would Only Bear weight on future other members of the subcommittee Are councillors Thomas b. Findlay and Jack Willis. They were appointed by Ypuh l. E. Ostrander finance committee chairman after a closed finance committee meeting aug. 1. The subcommittee will hear re plies to charges by coun. Green and coun. J. A. Coulter that some contractors Are not living up to a fair wage schedule. Coun. Green told Council thurs Day night that a very bad Selec Tion of councillors had been made for the subcommittee. Coun. Green said either coun. Coulter or himself should have been appointed to the subcommittee because they ones most interested in the matter being investigated. He also charged the other councillors with stalling by not doing something two months ago earlier in the construction season when the matter was first raised by coun. Coulter. Coun. Coulter had charged that Simkin s construction had claimed it was not required to pay fair wage schedule rates on some jobs it does for metro. Simkin s does metro s private contract work waited for Light St. James wait walk eight year old s death accidental says jury a recommendation that wait and walk signals be installed at All controlled intersections along Portage Avenue in St. James was made thursday night by a Coroner s jury inquiring into the death of an eight year old girl. Lorraine Ann Doyle 8, Daugh Ter of or. And mrs. W. A. Doyle of 125 Birchwood Terrace 2440 Portage Avenue St. James was fatally injured at Aboul 3 . July 30. She had been crossing Portage at Why Tewold Road and had been i collision with a westbound truck driven by Edward Hirschkorn 44, of 259 gun Nell Street the jury ruled the death was accidental. On errand eight year old Valerie Cardy of 321 Birchwood Terrace said that Lorraine had been accompanying Ber to a store across the Street on an errand for her Mother. I crossed the Street. She Raine was a Little Way behind me Valerie Lorraine had come from the South and reached the Centre strip when the Light changed to yellow. She waited while the Light was red and when it turned to Green she started to Cross. She was7 just starting to Cross when she got Valerie said. Mrs. R. L. Johnson of 391 Shelley. Street Kirkfield ".Park, testified she was driving West on Portage in the Middle Lane arid lad come to a full Stop when the ight turned Amber. She said a truck passed her on the left in the Lane next to the Centre strip. Still Amber i did t see the Little girl until she was mrs. Johnson said. I think the Light was still Amber when the truck entered he John Dubik of 749 Boyd Avenue told the. Jury through an inter Preter he was a passenger in he Hirschkorn vehicle going West on Portage at about 25 or 30 Miles an hour. He said that As they neared Why Tewold the Light changed to Ellow. Or. Hirschkorn was look no straight ahead at the time tar. Dubik said. Or. Dubik said the first he a of the child was when she stepped off the Boulevard. Then i yelled to the Driver to Stop put on the brakes or. Dubik said neither he nor or. Hirschkorn had had any liquor that Day or. Herchkorn in a state ment read to the jury said he was driving West on Portage at about 35 Miles an hour. I saw the yellow Light. I thought to myself can t Stop in time now As i went into the intersection my partner or. Dubik screamed look out. I saw the Little girl hit against the right front fender of my truck. That was the first i saw the David Ginter St. James police Mechanic testified he examined or. Hirschkorn s truck and found it to be in Good condition. He said the truck was roadworthy and had been Well looked after. Or. J. M. Trainer pathologist at Grace Hospital told the jury death was caused by brain lacerations and Haemorrhage due to Skull fracture. The child also suffered lung and liver injuries. The inquest with the Coroner or. I. 0. Fryer presiding was held in the St. James police Sta Tion. Wanted aids to safety metro councillor b. R. Wolfe vice chairman of metro s streets committee morning the loss of any child is More than tragic and that any recommend a. Tons which might be implemented for their safety will receive Serit fus consideration by metro. Candy not to blame for sacking the adjutant of the Canadian corps of commission Aires in Winnipeg issued a statement thurs Day in connection with a Story in thursday s free press regard ing dismissal of former Stanley Wright. Or. Wright 72, of 319 Queen Street St. James was known for passing out Toffee to All he met. The statement reads or. Wright was not dismissed for giving away Candy. Men in the Seldom retained Over 70 years. This Man was retained to age ,72. And discharged because his service was not lip to corps
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