Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

The Gazette from Montreal, Quebec, Canada • 46

Publication:
The Gazettei
Location:
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Issue Date:
Page:
46
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

46 THE GAZETTE, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1967 COMICS I I 1111 i LAJA I i WAKE UP I SEEM5ASHAVH Ji I TO WAKE HIM UP trs TIME? health! FOR TODAY i By PtUr J. Sttincrohn. M.D.. FJLC.P. TOaOTO frl, VVOJ WAVE TO eiT up nwT Ui MA Kr-fiJtt i hi io-zs 1 lt vl 1 1 1 THINK OJE 0CMT(ME I pi- 5 fF HE SELECTS THIS POMPWM BOTH CRAZVlyliMTWUTHIMK, the place of a patient physician who takes the time to listen.

Some people get over the original acute panic reaction within days or weeks. Others, like yourself, may suffer for many months. Practically all get better, but so does a broken leg. You need a crutch to lean on while the process of recovery gets in its good work. In your case a necessary crutch is a sympathetic, unhurried physician.

People with your kind of panic are like those who have been shipwrecked, and are outcasts on some barren island. You wave for help but ships keep on their course and do not stop to help. Your ship will come in when you find a doctor who is willing to give you emotional as well as PATG1 THE MOST SINCERE, ijHflvtgi quins) vouews II pompkin' y- UXU. CAil IU Shh. him: IT physical support until you feel better.

For Mrs. Your grandson, now 16 and having nosebleeds since the age of seven, certainly deserves more study than he has had. Have his family doctor refer him to a nose specialist. He should also have special "blood work" done to rule out specific blood "dyscrasias" (disorders). Sometimes a tendency to rheumatic fever infection causes recurrent nose bleeds.

Dr. Steincrohn 's booklet, "What to do for Chronic Anxiety," will be mailed to you on receipt of a stamped, self-addressed envelope and 25 cents in coin for handling. Address your request to Dr. Steincrohn. in care of The Gazette.

Dr. Steincrohn is sorry he cannot answer readers' letters. Nevertheless, all questions of general interest are answered in later columns. (A Bell-McClure Syndicate Feature). A It's one thing to suffer udden panic and live through few moments of apparently unbearable fear; but quite notber to wake every morning to i recurring anxiety which hangs on as tenaciously as a bull terrier; to live daily with a pounding leart and a mind bombarded with thoughts of death and dissolution.

Chronic Anxiety State is the medical term for It Here is an example: Dear Jr. Steincrohn: Help, please! For the past eight months I have been feeling abnormally tired. So nervous I could cry at the drop of a tat and can't sleep without sleeping pills. My head has been feeling very foggy and actually confused. I don't want to go out shopping as a feeling of panic comes over me.

My hands get soaking wet and my nerves are so raw I feel as though I am about to jump out of my skin. I am 34 and thought I might be going through my change, but the gynecologist said I wasn't. Imagine imy surprise when my 28-year-old brother came home sick from work with the same symptoms. The weak feeling, thinking he was going to pass out, the nerves, panic, everything. We both went to the doctor.

A very, very busy man who hasn't time to discuss symptoms, anxieties or really talk over )wr problems with you. We are at our wit's end. I could tolerate fatigue (have been feeling so dragged out) but this terrible feeling of depression, excessive nervousness, and fogginess and confusion has me near the point of no return. We have both been on pills and vitamins but our symptoms are the same. I have a 13-year-old daughter.

If she sees me crying one more day I'm afraid she'll be on tranquilizers, too. Please, answer this, as I don't know where to turn next. Thank you for any help. (Signed) Thoroughly frightened sister and brother. Comment: You two need more than vitamins to help you.

What is the cause of your chronic anxiety state, I don't know. There may be a number of reasons conscious and unconscious. These are for your doctor to discover. I believe you should ask your present doctor to refer you to one who has the time to listen patiently and explain what you need to do to recover. Pills will not take 0 Elected Bishop Of Yukon 1 rar.ro 1 I K-n t- rrrz- VANCOUVER -JOT Canon John Timothy Frame of Burns Lake, B.C., has been elected bishop of the Yukon by the executive committee of the Anglican Provincial Synod of B.C.

Canon Frame, 37, is incumbent of the Mission to Lakes district, Diocese of Caledonia. Born in Toronto and educated at the University of Toronto and Trinity College, he was consecrated an Anglican priest in 1957 and since has served at Burns Lake. He succeeds recently-retired Bishop H. H. Marsh.

New Post TORONTO -OT- Rev. William E. Lowe, 40, of Burnaby, B.C., has been appointed planning director for the Anglican Church of Canada. One of his first tasks will be to integrate the four -year-old Anglican World Mission Fund into the church's general budget. A graduate of the Anglican Theological College at Vancouver, Mr.

Lowe, a bachelor, has been rector of the Church of Christ the King at Burnaby since 1958. Goren ON BRIDGE I ITS FO0R 10 0NE UiUii I CSD I (H5lf JL. 1 fT VOTE IN FAMILY AFFAIRS I If JUST LIKE EVERVCNE ELSE. rh 7 -V jjj I I THNK AW. TRAIL XM JCRRV WOULD fY) jT PF AjKk 7 HASCOWEFOfJ 3 I VOUWALK JlM id UICi 3 The GameJLof Kings BY D.

M. LE DAIN QUIZ No. 857 Black 11 Pieces 1 A 'At BY CHARLES H. GOREN fe If 47 by Tin CMue Tribune I WEEKLY BRIDGE QUIZ Q. 1 As South, vulnerable, you hold: I The bidding has proceeded: South West North East Pass I ass 1 A Pass 1 A 2 Pass Pass What do you bid now? Q.

2 Neither vulnerable, as South you hold: AAK63 OAQ82 KQ4 The bidding has proceeded: South West North East 10 Pass 1 Pass What do you bid now? Q. 3 Both vulnerable, as South you hold: AQWZ OA983 K42 The bidding has proceeded: North East South West Pass Pass 1 0 Pass 1 A Pass 1 NT Pass 2 Pass What do you bid now? Q. 4 As South, vulnerable, you hold: 4AQ53 8763 The bidding has proceeded: North East South West 1 0 Pass 1 Pass 2 Pass What do you bid now? A. I Q. 5 Both vulnerable, as South you hold: VAKQJ 0AKQ6S AQ4 The bidding has proceeded: South West North East 2 0 Pass 2 A Pass 3 Pass 3 A Pass What do you bid now? Q.

6 Neither vulnerable, as South you hold: M083 KQ1087 010653 A The bidding has proceeded: North East South West 1 Pass 1 Pass 1 NT Pass What do you bid now? Q. 7 Both vulnerable, as South you hold: A VAKJT 0KJ5 1076 54 The bidding has proceeded: North East South. West Pass 1 Pass 1 NT Pass 2 What do you bid now? Q. 8 East-West vulnerable, as South you hold: AG 3 OQ10965 A The bidding has proceeded: West North East South 1 10 Pass What do you bid? fLoofc or answers Monday. Pyotor Romenovsky noted af the time that Spassky was confidently advancing towards mastery in chess.

A year later the young Leningrad player became a candidate-master. He made a good showing In the quarter-final of the USSR Championship, defeating a number of masters. His performance in the 1952 Leningrad Championship attracted great Interest among fans. He captured second place in quite a strong field. At the 1953 Bucharest tourney he tied for fourth place with grandmasters Boleslavsky and Szabo.

This earned him the title of Inter-national Master. In the 22nd USSR Championship he tied for third with Botvinnik, Petroslan and lllvitsky. He scored 5 points against the eight grandmasters. At Antwerp, 1955, he won the World Junior Championship, and In recognition of this and his other prior successes he was made an International Grandmaster, the youngest in the world to hold this title." Defence By Counter-Attack In this game from the international at Belgrade, Yugoslavia, 1964, Larsen appears to be getting the upper hand until Spaasky reverses the trend with ingenious positional combination. MPPWlfKl'l mim i I HER.

HUSBAND NOW, I DON'T VOL) NO.THJWr; KimJLtrT'iVii HER. AGENT, YOU KNOW! 1 CARE F0RDE5SE.RT, VOU An AT DINNER TONIGHT, Ktmve J81iiTZ. ME1RRITTJ QUITE A FEW MARRIAGES 1 I VE' HAVE A A EVE T5 ALCXDF AS kZ 2g THArVj-5 HERi UKE THAT THE6E DIRECTORS, b-U, IK 0 DO THE LEAD IN S3 K.EEP5 CAREEE5AND ffisAW' I pO 11 1 T'W TRVINQ OU FOR P) (ttOUQ IT A MINUTE) OKAY-N KATOM TWIRLER AGAIN OOPS!) LULU I CARRY OM.) White 11 Pieces White to play and win. (See solution below) B. Spassky, USSR.

vs F. Olafsson, Iceland (Moscow, 1959) ENGLISH White: B. Larsen Black P-M N-QB3 WORD PUZZLE By Gladys Solution to Yesterday's Puzzle White 1 P-QB 2 P-KN3 3 3.N2 4 N-OB3 5 P-K3 A KN-K2 ,7 0-0 OPENING Black: B. Spassky While Black 21 KR-K1 N-KJ 22R-B4 Q-R5NH) 23 BxNP BxP 24 QR.N1 NxP 25 0-KN3 Q-B3 26XP-N5 B-Q5ch 27K-R1 RxRch 28RxR Q.B4(i) 29R-KB1 BxB 30 RxN 0-K4 31 R-Bl R-Kl P-KN3 B-N? KN-K2 0-0 P.Q3 PxP B-NS(a) B-B4 9 P-04 9 PxP 10P-B3 ,11 P.KN4 32Q-KB3() B-Bl(b) T2 B-B4 P-Q4 13P-B5(c) P-N3l(d) 14N.NS(e) ki-Li a T. A lis I A ILL Jj I SH 0 rTinr rpr i i ip rfrfnT IE DS 0 AFnr A SOT A I 1 AlHl.

llDjim. ill I E'nTc IPO PT1 SjC rPfjirT REpl 0 fcjEJ TmJe a kDnIbIe! rtfi y.wc tpdItc oTT rFrEmirrrFirT LlRTtLilil ill 333-ONJ 34 BxP 35 N-N4 37 B-B3 38Q-B2 13-QR3! BxN 15 NxBP 16QxB UQ-Q3 18 PxP NxP R-Bl PxP 40 0-N8ch Resigns N(2)-B3 19 B-K3 K2 (WiL BEOJZ, UKE MAH "1 if -IF THAT TREE IS CUT I VDOWM 1 fVAMPAPWSPEWHS fsHISPAPPVTOLE. fCt.P-SUMPTHIN'LL HAPPEM 20 N.R4(f) Stone DOWN 18 Ancient Asiatic people 23 Skills 24 Raw minerals 23 Tires 26 Oodles 27 Implied 28 Flower 29 Decorate a -wall 30 Aida 31 Baseball teams 32 Understanding 34 Challenged 37 Surname 38 Nobleman 40 Insect 41 Brittle 43 Diminishes 44 Boats 46 47 Attendant 49 Bell sound 50 Venus R-Kl(g) (Comments abbreviated rrom I rbooTcr-Tin'Tuic I IJsTTv l( Cirsv ku cmftOT WU Wr those by Kmoch in "Chess CROSS-ACROSS lWalk 5 Crawl 10 Seed covering 14 Land measure 15 Cowboy's rone 16 Alley 17 Heat regulator 19 Vases 20 Look 21 Sheep 22 Least wild" 24 Poems 23 Swiss city 26 Gazed Parts 13 Crates Mends $3 Pastry $6 Deeds 17 Ann and May 18 Ivy League-school i 19 Gaming cube 10 Skirt parts 11 Goddess of harvests 12 Newcomer ACROSS 44 Fold 1 43 Group uf musicians 46 47 "Edible tuber 4 50 Desccndenls 5t Monk 54 Muie passage 6 53 City 7 tree, aw his pafpt vFhrS Tzpjl LLdC rr AFORE MIM-SO IT MJ7J nDf fj WRONG, GLOVER A T. JU5T CAME FROM GAR1 1 PI 1 IT I I ill IX. V--, WM---WHO ARE LJ(-fM A REPORTER VA DU BAR STUDIO DO 1 1 '1 1 hv Vf IV VOU, MISTEfl? V-FROM 'PROOP" )M HAVE TO TELL "JOU WHAT fSbf 1 I IS-p I Vr WEVER wind i Xtt.

magazine I found there ii Ri I flnwr-L (a) Threatening 10. NxP. (b) All the way home as he Intends P-Q4. (c) Threatening 14. N-N5 and it seems 61.

must re. sort to P-QR3, or B-K3. rf)'A fine reply that meets the threat with a combination and also the positional counter threat of 14. PxP, (e( Wh. enters into It and runs into trouble.

But if 14. PxP, RPxP Bl. obtains a strong initiative with IS. B-QR3 followed by N.N5 or (t) Wh. emerges with the two Bs and more compact Ps, but his pieces, some 1 exposed, do not work in concert, (g) If 20.

N-K4- 21. OxN, NxPch; 22. BxN BxQ; 23. BxB with three pieces for the Q. (h) Bl.

threatens QxNP. or NxP, or BxP. Wh, cannot hold everything, (i) Bl. has retained all his advantages, with a up. (j) If Os are exchanqed the ending is hspe-less for W'h.

with his weak Ps. (kl If. 39. R-KN1, QxRch! DOWN Taps I'am f'alra'V That; woman's Cock-a- doodled Ascends Consumes Greek letter Models Graduate Lncommon Taverns For fear that Th Russians Ar Hert Boris Spassky and Paul Keres, two of Russia's leading grandmasters, will encounter Montrealers in lour exhibitions of simultaneous play this week-end in the following schedule; Saturday, Oct. Mr.

Keres at McGill University Student Center, 3480 McTavish startina at 2.00 p.m. Open to all. Saturday. Oct. 28th; Mr.

Spassky at the LaKeshore C.C., Stewart Hall, 176 Lakeshore Drive, Pointe Claire, starting at 2:00 p.tn. Open to alU Sunday, Oct. 2ths Mr. Spassky at the Notre Dame de Grace Community Center, 5311 Cote St. Antoine Rd.

(at Decarie), starting at 2.00 p.m. Open to ali. The program will start with a short lecture by the grandmaster, Illustrated by one of his games on a demonstration board. Autographed book prize for the best-played game. Playing fee: Seniors.

U- Juniors (under 21), $3. There are enough boards but players must bring their pwn crtess set. i Monday, Oct, 30th; A special event at the Metropolitan C.C., 201 Rachel SI. at 8.00 p.m. Mr.

Spassky vs ten leading players, in which timing clocks' will be used. Spectators are welcome to all events, Speed Champion iules Therien and Leslie Witt tied for first In the city speed championship with 4VJ-VS pts. each, with the title going to Therien on the tie-break. C. Coudari, j.

tabelie and K. Pohl tied next with 5-2 pts. eoch. 28 played seven rounds of Swiss pairing. Boris Spassky (continued) The achievements of Boris Spassky in recent years welt known, and which have catapulted him into the No.

3 position of international grandmasters. Less Is known ot his early tormative years in which tl ground-work was (aid. We continue trie story from "The Sovet School of "In the Soviet Union, gifted Children art assisted and encouraged in every way to develop their talents, and Boris Spassky had every opportunity fo make progress in the game he loved so much. Leading Leningrad masters gave him instruction The teachers in the Paiace o' Young Pioneers attentively fol'owed tVs progress in school, on guard, against cheii becoming hii sole interest. 'To be a good chess piayer you have to be an educated pe-son and be tit', tney 'old him.

Boris successfully comb ned his scfxwr work in chess ram.no, and atretics. In )e he finished trfth in the Leningrad junior champonbhip arid ws p'omoicd to (irsf-cattoory ruling. T'w prominent Leningrad payers Taimaoov aid Cheknover competed 'hers concourj' in fhat tournament. Tie Spassky vs. Ta'manov game was a stiboom battie.

At the decisive moment U-year-oid Boris let himsetf be carried away by his plans; he underestimated opponent's threat and lost ft same. Tn was a vaiuao lesson. Boris rea'iwd the consequences not paying sufficient attention to the kic and of opponent. Hi game with Chekhow ended in a draw. trie iunio of hi Ri.s jr.

Federation In 14 he p'aved second, end in the charrp'onshp of the Laoor Se-sevves Sports Sj. e'y nsk wc.n aii tt.s games, fo.j.-ei. Bo- became scnoc. boy er a i-pon of tn.rgfad in end p. ived successfviiv mi the LSSR ornamerrt of Summing ud thct fourne.ntn's.

ice 58 Left 59 Scratch out 60 Play 61 Units uf work 62 Noatrih 63 Social gatherings 51 Floating mass 52 Frost 53 Vipers 56 Period 57 Eve. PROBLEM No. 1062 J. Hartong Black 8 Pieces TT3 -5 5 7 ttsaft fejl tmJS r-v -se JwLrf 0 i I I7 I li In Us IT" Tr-if a it" Ws 3 7 I "I it iJ- -t4 1t I 1-tt- -p? i 1 -J Jl .8 it ki T-p4 -Til a .1 i vmn wit Wffr 'Sf i i A r-' a Zl I E3 STARTLE) f' (5lr me-ipipnt LrK White 10 Pieces White mates in two mover. Solution next week' Solution fo weeks ProO.

tern No. MM (Savournn): Ke. I. Nl7)xKP. No'e the 'try' 1.

N(7)-B5 is refuted by I. NBP. Solution to today's Ou I Na, 15 Sossk a'sso-i); R-NSch, K-BJ; 2. R(J)-N7ch, QiB. 3.

RGkh. KxK: 4. HnKBi (c-eair 5. O-NicS, K-B2; 4. QxN.

K4i 7. BxPchi. Resigns i.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the The Gazette
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The Gazette Archive

Pages Available:
2,183,085
Years Available:
1857-2024