pi og NS EGIL IET ILE EBM Mi EEE EEE v WOMEN'S WORLD One of the most successful career women in Canada is Miss Mary Macdonald, the - executive secretary to ' Prime Minister Pearson. She has been on Mr. Pear- . son's. staff for 17 years. She accompanies the Pearson ' party on state visits such as the trip to London to attend the Churchill funeral. Canada has a pain in its tummy, says Dr. Margaret Mi of Guelph Univer- * sity's icdonald Institute, * and the only cure is more . men in the kitchen. The : home economics education- ; ist told the Ontario Turkey . Association in Hamilton the : food trade is at the bottom . Of the social ladder and that * more men must be lured ' into food handling, manage- » Ment and cooking. She said female cooks are preferred because they will work more cheaply. Kingston woman journalist Mrs. William Elizabeth Rymaske, has invaded a 102 - year - old male strong- hold, The women's editor of the Kingston Whig-Standard, she has been elected as a laity delegate to the Diocese of Ontario Synod. The synod embraces 132 congregations near Kingston and had never had a woman delegate since the diocese was in- corporated. After an absence of sev- eral seasons, Anne Sothern is returning to television this month as a guest on the Lucille Ball show. Rumor persists that, with Vivian Vance determined to retire from Lucy's comedy series, there is a chance Miss Soth- ern will replace her next season. It is ludicrous to think that consumers do not want facts, but will be persuaded by a slogan or a few dull adjectives, Mrs. A. F. W. Plumptre of Ottawa, presi- dent of the Consumers Asso- ciation of Canada told the Advertising and Sales Club of Toronto. She said adver- tisers and manufacturers should give all the accurate information about a product that it is possible to include in advertisements or on the label. A dark-haired widow and mother of three, Mrs. Felicia Baiz of Montreal has been named Miss Hospital- ity of 1965. The competition to select the top waitress in Quebec province has been an annual event since 1956, Mrs. Baiz has been a wait- ress in Montreal for nine years. In Monaco, Shelley Winters has been awarded the Monte Carlo Internation- al Television Festival's best- actress prize.. She received the award for her perform- ance in a National Broad- casting Company play "Two Is the Number". The first any of the U.S. was represented by daugh- ter Lynda Johnson at the Washington National Cathe- MISS MARY MacDONALD MRS, FELICIA BAIZ dral memorial services for Sir Winston Churchill. The president and Mrs. Johnson, recovering from colds, could not attend. About 120,000 mothers marched across Canada this weekend to help raise $1,750,000 for the March of Dimes. In Ontario, Hon. Ellen Fairclough was the chief marching mother for the province. Mrs. Fair- clough was chief in her home town of Hamilton in 1954, and has been on the provincial board ever since. ANN LANDERS Striking A Mate Relic Of Stone Age Dear Ann Landers: I am fed . right up to here with your stand that there is no justification for striking a mate, regardless of provocation. You, of all people, Ann Landers, should realize that hu- man beings are not made of stone. Mortal man has his weaknesses. When a person is pushed to the brink he can lose control and behave in a way «that is not quite saintly. My husband, for example, has made a science of needling me. When I reach the limit of my endurance I simply crack him one in the teeth. After that he . lays off for two or three weeks and everything is lovely. Any physician will tell you that bottled tension can lead to physical illness. I have learned to deal with my problem in a manner that is effective for me. So why don't you stay out of it?--ONE BLOW BETTY Dear One: I didn't write to you, Doll. You wrote to me. If you feel you are handling the problem belting your hus- band in the teeth--and if he stands for it--it's all right with me. All agree that anger should be worked out of the system, The manner in which people rid themselves of anger is what distinguishes them from the lower animals. I would suggest that you buy some cheap dishes to throw against the basement walls. Or, when you feel the tension build- FREE PARTS FOR CLEAN 725- CUT Your FUEL COST FREE! YOUR FURNACE -- FREE FURNACE OUT -- FREE 24-HOUR SERVICE WESTERN OIL. Co. ing, scrub a floor or wash a wall or beat a rug. Civilized people vent their hostilities on things, not on other people. Dear Ann Landers: I am an 18-year-old: freshman at 'a fine college in Ohio. I've always been able to cope with whatever came along but this problem has me boxed. The pressure on co-eds to drink with the fellows is getting me down. For several years the students here waged a battle to drink if they wanted to. Now we are involved in another battle--to refrain from drinking if we don't want to, | Last week I spoke in behalf jof the '"'Drys." The next morn- ing five fellows came up to me and said, "Listen, Frosh, button your lip if you. want to be con- sidered part of the tradition around here." Everything else on campus is great. What shall I do?--PAM Dear Pam: Any girl who be- lieves she has to take the cork out of the bottle to be popular needs an extra cork--for that hole in her head. A fellow who wants to load a girl with liquor is bad news to begin with. Stick to your principles. You don't need to be the star of the debating team to win your point. The minute you say "no," you've won it. Dear Ann Landers: I come from a family of civic-minded women. My mother and my grandmother were pillars of society in this community. I feel 1212 s|the Soviet Union, Poland, East meet Dr. Andre Rousseau, 24, 'l(stable) established by a Boston ,/year for me, Everything seems By JOSEPH MacSWEEN derson, a Vancouver vagabond with an idealistic streak, tells with sparkling vivacity of a hitch - hiking odyssey perhaps unmatched by any other Cana dian girl. The blue-eyed former school- teacher recently came to Lon- don on an odd mission--to help Moroccan donkeys. "Put it down to my ideal- ism," said the 26-year-old bru- nette. 'Besides, I happen to like donkeys." Muryl spun yarns -- some- times light - hearted, some- times wistful--of her journeys which began in June, 1959, when she climbed aboard a_ boy's- Style racing bicycle and ped- alled from Vancouver to Mont- real in three months. Two years, several countries and many adventures later the bike was stolen in Paris--"and believe me, that was a trag- 'My original idea was to travel around Europe for two years or so--not around the world. When I saw a bit, I wanted to see more. My appe- tite was whetted. I hope to go to India this year." Ticking the places on her long, strong fingers, Muryl said she has toured the British Isles, Ireland, Scandinavia, Lapland, Germany, West Germany, Aus- tria, Switzerland, France, Yug- oslavia, Italy, Greece, Turkey, Spain, Portugal, Israel and Morocco, BOUGHT CAMELS "I've been a chambermaid in London, a scrubwoman and later a secretary in Copen- hagen, a domestic servant in Paris, an attendant in an Ath- ens mental hospital for children, a fortune-teller in Gibraltar, a worker on a kibbutz in the Is- raeli desert and a camel-buyer in Morocco." It was also in Morocco that she became interested in the plight of donkeys. In Fez, she rang the bell of the French consul and asked about a suit- able campsite. "But we know a wonderful Canadian family here," she was told. That was how Muryl came to of Rimouski, Que., and Mont- real, director-veterinarian of a Fez animal hospital, and his wife Carmen. Miss Anderson found the hos- pital, the American Fondouk woman in 1927, to be a "'clean little palm-shaded paradise" in the sun - baked city whose donkey population is 250,000. Rousseau, "another young idealist" who has become a sort of missionary in the art of an- imal healing and care, offered Muryl a job. That job began in January, 1964, but now, with the hospital running low on funds, Miss An- derson has embarked on a money-raising mission to Brit- ain, France and Monaco. She hopes to interest Monaco's Prince Rainier in becoming patron. CRUEL TREATMENT Fez has many animals be- sides donkeys, but Miss Ander- son seemed particularly fond of the lowly beasts of burden, often the victims of frightful cruelty by their Arab owners Blue-Eyed Former Teacher Tells. Of Hitch-Hiking Odyssey) LONDON (CP) -- Muryl An-|tipped prods. who drive them with spike- "It seems that almost every donkey in Fez has been our pa- tient. They call 'hee-haw' when they pass outside, saying helio, and everybody inside answers back. Sometimes a donkey com- ing to us is so maltreated that we simply put him to sleep, and me the owner he died by Allah's will." All this is slightly different from Muryl's old life in Van- couver, where .he lived with her mother, Mis. Pauline An- derson, and her brother, Andy. How did it begin? "I tried schoolteaching and then worked for a tourist agency." I wanted to see into the lives of people. You know, in Canada people do not under- stand each other, I wanted to go and see the countries our people came from, to learn what makes us tick, "IT also wanted to go by bi- cycle and live closely with the people in the countries I visited. That way you don't carry your own environment, or at- mosphere,- around with you. ...- One must get off the main roads."' After tours of Britain and Scandinavia, Miss Anderson said she entered Russia aboard a Finnish bus and rode her bi- cycle in Moscow, Minsk and Smolensk, remaining in the country 144 months in the sum- mer of 1961 WARM-HEARTED PEOPLE "I found the people very warm-hearted. It helped that I had 'Canada' and a maple leaf on my jacket. They seemed tc get a kick out of my blue jeans and my pigtails, which reached my waist. I stayed with many families who were overjoyed to hear I was a_ student, my brother a worker--that I was not a big capitalist." Miss Anderson said she ar- rived in Warsaw almost flat broke from Russia and over- stayed her Polish visa which was only good for a few days. A group of students, again re- sponding to her Canadian iden- coat tailored SLENDER SILHOUETTE From the Originala spring collection comes a youthful on slender ets. wing collar and T-flap pock- --By Tracy Adrian 29 Countries So Far For Expo ' 'THE OSHAWA, TIMES, Mondey, Februcry 1, 1965 1] Mrs. Barbara Hanley yon: |Webboosd in Northors in Canada's first woman mayor, |Webbwood in Northern. The _-- countries that have } |Exhibition continues to grow. There now are 29: Austria, lum, Bi lon, Republic of China wan), Czechoslovakia, Den- mark, Finland, France, Federal Republic of Germany, Ghana, Iceland, Iran, Israel, Italy, Ja- maica, Japan, Malaysia, Mona- co, Morocco, Netherlands, Nor- 'way, Sweden, Switzerland, Tri- nidad and Tobago, Tunisia, Uni- ted States, Venezuela. Belgi rilain, Canada, Cey- (Tai- BARRED FROM GAMES At one time in Ancient Greece, women were not even allowed to view male participation in the Olympic Games, and not al- lowed to take part in sports themselves. CLOSE PETS Mrs. Lyle Bryan of Wiota, Towa, has a pet monkey trained to ride around on the back of her collie dog. A Traffic Cop: "What's the big idee doin' sixty miles en hour?" Demure Miss: 'Well, it's this wey, officer," she stommered, "my brakes don't work so | wos hurry- ing home before | hed on ecel- dent." One thing we don't have to make ony excuses for is the dry clean- ing work we do. We fully realize wheat o large investment your wardrobe represents. That's why, mot only will we restore them to 'like new' condition but we'll help make them last longer, too. For finest dry cleaning care give us @ call soon. aL CLEMUIT SERVICE 725-3555 v BOB EAKINS Super BAKED FRESH DAILY IN OUR KITCHEN! LWORTH'S Bakery Specials LARGE Special lines. The fabric is fleece in an exciting palomino color and the visored cloche is designed in a matching shade. The topper features a double-breasted closing, neat set-in sleeves, a rolled TV and STEREO WAYNE'S 78 Simcoe N. Telephone 723-1411 This Week LEMON FILLED LAYER CAKE Topped with Boiled Icing & Cocoanut DELICIOUS SPICY HOME STYLE PUMPKIN PIE Made with Flaky Pastry. a3 Special This Week Two or three tier wedding cakes -- Order One Week Ahead BAKERY ORDERS. PHONE 725-3421 tification, put her on a train, with her bicycle, for Berlin over the protests of the conductor, who later relented and gave her free passage. "IT spent a hungry winter in Paris in 1962," said Muryl. "Trying to get a job with my in- adequate high - school French, my bike stolen. I have picked up snatches of language every- where, but it is difficult. "Being a very impatient per- son, I didn't stay long enough to let it depress me, I started hitch-hiking again. "In Gibraltar for a joke I told the fortunes of some tourists on a deck of cards. They loved it. They put up a sign: 'Fortune teller at the white caravan.' Later I was hired by a_ tea- room, and interviewed on radio and television. At the same time I took in washing. My price was constant, two shil- lings sixpence to tell their for- tunes or wash their shirt." Miss Anderson, who radiates friendliness, found it was pos- sible for a girl to travel safely alone. "In Turkey, for instance, it would work out something like this: I might meet a family on a bus, and be invited to their home. They would go out of their way to make me feel safe. They would send the father, or brother, to take me on the next part of the journey. ... You an obligation to do as they did. Furthermore. I enjoy it. My| mother has been my mentor) and my guide. This is a particularly hectic to have hit at once. I am on five boards and I hold four im- portant offices. Last week I had to be away from home six eve-| nings. Friday when I returned from a meeting (at 10:45 P.M.) I found a sitter with the children. My husband had left a note say- ing a college buddy had come to town and he wanted to show him a good time. It was 2:30 A.M. before he came home-- smelling like a distillery. Any comment?--Concerned Dear Concerned: Since your mother is your 'mentor and guide" she should have told you were a friend of theirs, a girl, and no harm must come to you. But Muryl, laughing, passed on this bit of advice to other girls who may want to go hitch- hiking on the grand scale: "Always on your toes! Know how to jump out of a moving car, landing on your feet." HONEY IN BAKING For best results, use cake and cookie recipes that cail for honey, rather than simply sub- stituting honey for sugar. . If you wish to try some honey in a recipe that calls for sugar, however, replace only half of the sugar with honey and re- duce the liquid to make up for the water honey contains. For example when you substitute 4 cup honey for % cup sugar, that like fires, husbands often go out when left unattended. reduce the liquid by % cup (two tablespoons). Furniture & 3 Exclusive Wringer Washers, 3--2 Year Free Service MOFFAT GIVE STARR >; ARE YOUR ASSURANCE OF SATISFACTION 1--2 Year Service Guarantee on all 2--plus 10 Year Additional Guarantee on Main Mechanism All Simplicity Clothes Dryers. also avaliable models by BEFORE YOU BUY... 723-3343 491 RITSON RD. S. Appliances WASHERS DRYERS Guarantees ys ys a + as Guerantee On @ RCA, STARR A TRY -- OSHAWA The aaa beautiful styling Meteor The most spirited performance Elegance in every way - at a popular price. Model Meteor has the year's most beautiful styling! 3-speed and 4-speed manual transmissions are fully synchromesh in all forward gears. Meteor's luxurious refinements in riding comfort start with a long, road-smoothing 123-inch wheel- base. Add to this a new "torque-box" frame construction that reduces road shock and vi- bration to an amazingly low level. Meteor's cushioned but positive-handling ride results from improved all-coil suspension without that "floating" sensation. Meteor surrounds you with luxurious comfort! Deep-pile carpeting, richly beautiful uphol- Meteo Elegance in every way -- at a popular price. Every detail announces styling leadership . . . the gleaming full-width grille, the distinctive symmetry of the extended fender line, the im- pressive sweep of the trunk deck. No car in its class surpasses the magnificence of the new Meteor, Meteor has inspired new spirit in its perform- ance! This year, Meteor has the powerful new 240 cubic inch "Avenger" Six, a smoother- running, quieter engine that squeezes extra miles out of every gallon. Meteor offers a smooth 3-speed dual range automatic trans- mission that you can pair with the "Avenger" Six or the sparkling 352 and 390 V-8's. The illustrated: Meteor Montcalm, 2-door hardtop. One of the Ford Family of Fine Products, buift in Canada. Certain features are optional at extra cost. The most luxurious comfort steries, padded dash, wide padded arm rests front and back, elegant instrumentation and curved side-window glass for more shoulder room. There's a new suspended accelerator pedal, a new double-edged key and a push- button door-locking system. Meteor's trunk has a lower sill for more Inggage space but less lifting distance, You have more choices in choosing a Meteor! There are three Meteor series -- Montcalm, Rideau 500 and Rideau in eleven exciting models, Test-drive Meteor atyour Mercury deal- er's. You'll find that for styling, performance, luxury and comfort, no other car in the popular- r priced field measures up to the 1965 Meteor! 1271 WHETHER BUYING OR LEASING SEE YOUR MERCURY DEALER Bramley Motor Sales Ltd. Simcoe St. N. 723-4675 aera ee