Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 26 Feb 1966, p. 13

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DIA DIST AFF RY THE OSHAWA TIMES, Saturday, February 26, 1966 13 st oe - 2 Summary of reports of meetings and activities of Oshawa women's organiaztions as compiled from reporis submitted by their secretaries. turnes G4 tuUrnse Gi is. in enou Heney, were attending {t cneugh other fr. | Shop Conference held by the| ticles on hand at this time, -- pital Ausiliaries Association! Mrs MeCansh announced hat at the Ontario Hospital Associa- the annual meeting of the hos- | tion, Don Mills, Toronto. | pital will be held on Tuesday, Mrs. A. E. Johnson, convener) March 22, and members of the of oY Bt Euariek# Fr gees ope auxiliary were invited toaatend. ing held on March 16, reported, : : the various conveners as fol-| Lue was served 'With Mrs. A. lows: General convener, Mrs.|W- Atmstrong presiding at the A. E. Johnson; assistant con-|tea table. vener, Mrs. Harry Perry; ticket} eonvener.. Mrs. Fred Malloy: as-| 4 1 é os NSE Bae | Scarboro Ulinics: sistant, Ms . Harry Taylor; For Birth Control bridge iabie convenei, Mis, KR.) W. Bassett; conveners of food | -- evening, Mrs. G. §. Hunk- ing and Mrs. H. A. Finer; af-) TORONTO (CP) -- A birth and Mrs. John Huband; prizes, Control program which will in- Mrs. W: F. Marshall and pub. | clude clinic service and advice licity, Mrs: E. F. Cuthbertson,|(0" contraceptive pills and de- ANN LANDERS Smart Husbands Don't | File Letters In Wallet Tne 2205) ST. GERTRUDE'S C.W.L. {United Chrch Women was St St. Gertrude's C.W.L, Feb-|held at the home of Mrs. L. G. \ruary meeting members heard | Glover. |the speeches given by the par-| 'Songs of the Night' was the lish winners of the public speak-|theme of the worship service, ing contest, Barbara Wisniew-|Which was under the leadership iski and Peter Zevenhoven. /of Mis. Wilbur Rusnell; assist \These two students were elig-\ed by Mrs. J. D. Tane. lible to compete in the regional| The new unit leader, Mrs, A. lcontest at St. Gregory's Audi-|G. Clark, presided for the meet- \torium. ing. Plans were made for a | The president, Mrs, John Mel-/rummage sale to be held at nychuk, announced that the|Simcoe Hall in April, and for coming fashion show had been|the Marathon Bridge banquet postponed until March 23. ito be held in Christ Church Mrs. William Clancy reported | Hall in May. TE seeee_ sy. : rao wy Breet, Dear Ann Landers: 1 nope} Dear Bushands: wf. your readers will learn some- thing from my bitter exper ience, Last week my husband was driving home on slippery pave- ment. His car went out of con- trol and he hit a telephone pole. They called me from the hospi- tal and said he was in critical condition. When I arrived my husband pvas in surgery, where paul wc at fais Fees. ay and not be concerned ' about what she may find? If you can't, you'd better do something about it. Like now. ternoon, Mrs. Kenneth Crone Dear Ann Landers: Maybe I'm a nut to let this bother me) but it does and I want your he. remained for almost tw0) opinion. hours. I prayed the whole time I was in the corridor when! they brought him down. The} doctor said he had a good chance to recover, Then a nurse handed me his watch and bill- fold. Well, Ann, he has recov- ered, but I don't know if I ever) will. In his billfold were two letters} My name is Florence and I) like the name. When anyone) calls me Flo I bristle inside be-| cause I detest that nickname. And 'I absolutely despise the nickname Flossie. Our daughter's name is Kath- erine. I loathe the names Kathy,| Kate, Katie, and Kay. My from a woman with whom he| daughter loathes them also, She obviously was begging him to come back. I did not recognize her name and don't know if she lives in this city or elsewhere there was no envelope. I am crushed to think that my had had an affair, She] is only since eight years old but she knows what she likes Yesterday Katherine came from school and told me that a new girl named Katherine joined the class and the teacher {has decided to call our Kath- husband would have deceived! erine Kathy in order to avoid me this way. Our 22-year mar- riage was considered ideal by everyone who knew us. Yesterday he asked for his confusion. This infuriated me. I want to write a note to the teacher tell- ing her to call our daughter by billfold. When I handed it to her correct name. My husband him he wanted to know if I had seen the contents. I said, "Yes."' He told me how horribly ashamed he was and swore that he 'had not seen the woman since December and that he would never see her again I am trying to believe in him and trust him once more. I guess the real lesson to be learned here is this: Never earry anything with you that you would not be willing to let the whole world see. Lord alone knows when your next of kin might be handed the damning evidence.--Victim of Fate CHILD GUIDANCE Parents Can Help Children Take Part In School Activities By GARRY MYERS, PhD Many letters come to me about the child in the kinder- garten or Grade 1, even Grade 2, who does not participate in what the other children are do- ing. This child is reported by his teacher as inattentive, a daydreamer. Often the teacher says, '"'He doesn't do anything unless I stand right over him, and keep telling him what to| do next." Typically this child| is an only child or several years younger than a brother or sis-| ter. The parent of this child usu- ally talks to him at home urging him to pay attention at school, Sometimes the parent scolds or} says I'm making too much of }it and to leave things as they are. What do you say?--Livid Dear Livid: Yes, you are a nut to let this bother you but at least you admit that your hos tility is grossly out of proportion to the "injustice."' Now that you have effectively transferred your nuttiness about) jnicknames to your daughter,| please let the poor, innocent |teacher in on-it. She can then call the other Katherine Kathy 'and everyone will be happy. si President of the Canadian Cancer Society, Ontario County Branch, Mr. W. H. J. Thompson of Ajax, grate- fully accepts a cheque Fear, Oshawa from Mrs. Donald representing the Chapter of the Sweet. Ade- lines who donated the funds raised from their 4 \then served by Mrs. SWEET ADELINES HELP CANCER SOCIETY recent, highly successful Harvest of Harmony, "The Roaring Twenties." --Oshawa Times Photo THE STARS SAY Police Matron Reminisces By ESTRELLITA |FOR TOMORROW For the second time 'this week, planetary influences sug gest extreme care in personal relationships. Some adverse as- pects put a cloud over romance jis that 'a Sunday school is avail- |and cause tension in family and able to many children, es-|Social circles. Do the best you pecially those whose parents|can to maintain harmony. can't afford the cost of a. pri- FOR THE BIRTHDAY jvate nursery school. If tomorrow is your birthday, EXTEND PRESTIGE the coming year should: prove Church leaders who strive to highly stimulating where. job recruit young children for their|and monetary affairs are con- |church school usually are think-\cerned. -The weeks between ing of building up this school|next Monday and April 15 will and of extending the prestige; | and services of their particular/connection but, after that, do church or synagogue. If these |not let down in effort then or| leaders and other leaders of the You could offset gains, In fact,| community who are not mem-|You May experience some "dull-| bers of a church or synagogue ness" in occupation interests considered the widest service|and some need for retrenching they might render to the young |in the. financial department} children, many of the church|during May, June and most of schools would soon be swamped|July, but keep plugging--with be especially generous in this} Of 30 Years On OTTAWA (CP)--A young girl dying of abortion and a 72- year-old prostitute were some of |the most memorable cases en- countered by Alice Goyette in 30 years on the Ottawa police force. "Cireumstances have a lot to {do with the. making. of a crim- jinal,"' says the grey - haired lmatron, recently retired from her senior position. "During the depression years, poverty, over- crowding and need drove moth- ers and young girls to do des- perate things." She joined the force in 1936 when she was a young widow) with two small sons to support. Her early duties included stak- ing out bawdy houses and call- ing in arresting officers "when I thought the time was right." "Putting the girls in jail was punishes the child for his igat-|with little children from two to Careful planning and foresight.|doing them a favor in those A tention at school, In this way she. gets nowhere. The mother of this child should quit talking about- the matter and try to help him at home. He may be attentive as she reads to him alone, as she talks companionably with him there, or shows him how to do and make things with his hands. But he may not have much fun with other children, two or more at a time The mother needs to attract some of these children into her house where her child may learn to enjoy doing what the other children are doing at the same time. If she is showing the group then how to make or do some- thing, the child may get prac- tice at participating with the group when the child may learn to listen while they are listening (this is a different experience} from listening while she reads to him alone). GOOP_ START. = In these ways, the child will get the useful experience of lis- tening to what others are lis- tening to and of making and doing what other children are doing; it is practice in a small group for like experiences at school in a larger group. Some little children are so accustomed to doing thincs at home only with their mother that they grow excited and confused in the large group of strange chil dren at school. Usually this type of child im- proves at group participation from having been in a nursery school or kindergarten. Also the opportunities afforded this child to grow more socialized in the pre-school department of the Sunday school should not be overlooked. Think of all the little children attending Sunday school and the million more of them who could attend. How wonderful it Pom ALL YOUR Bridal Shoes TINTED FREE DANCEY'S bit of a "windfall'" in late September five or six. Of course, some mothers, find October early wile should give your spirits a lift that the little child is not happy land then you can look happily in a nursery school or kinder-|forward to, next January, when garten group anywhere. They, you will enter a really excellent |have the problem of helping. this three-month cycle for the ad- : vancement of all interests. little child to grow more self-| Social activities and travel reliant and independent of them will be governed by benign in- and to have practice at being|fluences from June ist through often with small groups of other |Sept. 15; also in October, late chtidven (4 December: and next January. in a a as roa a 3 : (Romance will be especially fa- neighbor'a home, Apparently | vored in early April, late Au- these problems are greater in/gust, late October and late suburbs and suburbia than in Sr : slum areas. child born on this day will be a loyal friend and com- ANSWERING QUESTIONS panion; extremely versatile Q. How many words are in/|along creative lines, jthe speaking vocabulany of the! ,., 3 ; laverage child entering the first FOR MONDAY | prade? Sunday's adverse planetary ey 2 influences governing personal a en oe 15,000 to 30,000 | relationships continue, so tact Ores is first reader may |wil] be an absolute necessity in have only a few hundred words. |4)) dealings on Monday. Be es- ~|pecially careful not to read on the toes of superiors and co- Shae Re wi 2 workers, ~in--general, ek---te WINNIPEG (CP)--Heartburn |;oytine and avoid as much per- in pregnant women is not | sonal involvement as possible. caused by pressure on the ab- dominal diaphragm but by hor- |FOR THE BIRTHDAY mone changes, Dr. James Lind If Monday is your birthday, and Dr, Ashley Coopland found your horoscope indicates that in experiments here. ambitious plans, coupled with or their home or IT'S NOT THE BABY gt We Reserve The Right To Limit Quantities ies STOCK REDUCTION CONTINUES WITH days. It was one way they could get a meal." Mrs. Goyette says she has seen immorality and. prostitu- tion grow from a_ small-time racket into big business. - She never wore a uniform and never went on an assignment |---- without her hat and gloves. In the early days of investigation lenergy and determination in }carnying them out, could prove jhighly remunerative before your next birthday rolls around. The jnext 12 months will be notable for the strides you can make in upping your financial status. Al- though you may _ experience some dull periods, or even some minor problems in this connec- tion -- notably in May. and June--do not become discour- aged. As of today you enter a good period for both job and mone-/} tary interests--one which will last until April 15, so get on the beam now and be prepared| for_the mid - year slowdown. | Next good cycles for material) interests: Mid-July, late Sep- tember and early October. Then, beginning with January 1, 1967, you will enter a truly ex- cellent: three-month cycle for advancing all goals. |she's seldom wrong," Ottawa Force work, she' says she felt a uni- form would antagonize the pris- oners. A motherly, gentle per- son, she admits she is prob- ably regarded as '"'one of the old school." FACES WERE FAMILIAR Magistrate Glenn E. Strike, who heard her nervously pre- sent her first case, was on the bench the day she made her last appearance in court. "She has a fantastic memory for names and faces, a remark- able insight into people's char- acter and an ability to win their confidence," he said. In one morning Mrs. Goyette could usually produce a pre-sen- tence report that normally takes two weeks. to prepare. "And said the magistrate. One of her "last investigations ended on a comic note. The prisoner was an elderly woman suspected of her first shoplifting offence. Examina- tion of the buxom accused re- 'yealed she had two pounds of |man. her |good and bad in him." melting butter hidden in done recently, | vices will begin in suburban on welfare work Mrs. Glover showed pictures | including the supplying of jof a trip clothing, money and Christmas /States, and refreshments were \paskets to needy families. served by Mrs, F. V. Sprackett | It was decided to arrange a/and her group. theatre trip to Toronto on March! The March meeting will be |10 for members and their/held at the home of Mrs. Wil- ifriends. Refreshments ree €!bur Rusnell. John |Burne. OGH WOMEN'S AUXILIARY FRIENDLY GROUP |Women's Auxiliary of the Osh- The Friendly Group of Cen-| awa General Hospital was held)a telephone notifying commit- tre Street United Church is the) in McLaughlin Hall last Monday, | new name of the former Cou-| with the president, Mrs, Jame iples Club. It is hoped that) McCansh, presiding. leveryone will feel welcome to} Mrs. McCansh gether. jshall, gift shop convener, Mrs There have been several zget| Kennedy Mason, staffer of the togethers. On Saturday the Gift Shop, group attended the hockey game to western United} The February meeting of the| Christmas gifts to the patients.| ---- | informed the come and join in fellowship to-| meeting that Mrs. W. F. Mar- Mrs. Neil Felt, corresponding secretary, read a letter from Bearborough March: 4, Mrs. M, Gulliver, acting direc-/ DF. J- Alan Bull, medical offi- tor of nursing, expressing the cer of health, said clinics will appreciation of the studentibe opened in nine churches in nurses for the newspapers and/the township, and a township magazines supplied for the resi-| 4 All visi dences for the year, also for the, ctor 'wi - sit each once @ recreation and. entertainment|Week to advise women on birth |planned for the nurses, and for control practices. | | Members who agreed to form) TOOTHACHE tee for March and April; MTS. | pon't suffer agony. In seconds get relief . W. Payne, Mrs, G. S. Hunk- that lasts with ORAJEL. Speed-release ing, Mrs. H. B. James, Mrs, | formula puts it to work In- . i ee stantly to stop throbbing bg ge og: Mrs. Harry Don-| cothachepeln, soantedec= y ald, Mrs. A. E. Haley, Mrs. W. tors recommend it for | PARENTS: J. Bone. teething. ra-jel' / Mrs. W. J. Bone, sewing con- oO and Mrs. Steven'vener, reported four spreads at Civic Auditorium and later were guests of Mr. and Mrs. | Owen Smith, Elizabeth street Mrs. Aubrey Weeks presided for a short business session. Mrs. Dean Peel read the min- utes and the treasurer's report was given by Mrs. Cyril Clark. The group is assisting the Sunday School in the aid of a \Korean child, | "Hobo Night" is planned for next meeting, March 26, at the| home of Mr. and Mrs. Cyril Clark, Windsor avenue. All were urged to attend. Refreshments were served and a special silver wedding an- niversary cake cut by Mr. and Mrs. Cyril Clark. CENTRE STREET UCW (East Unit) The February meeting 0 the} | Kast Unit of Centre Street Unit-| ed Church Women was held re-| cently at the home of Mrs.} Arthur Magee. Mrs. Rueben Broadbent was in charge of | | | Heidi's Modern Hair Styling SPRING PERMANENT SPECIAL ALL NEXT WEEK Cream Wave Reg. 10.50 Now ... Steam Wave Reg. 12.50 Now .... Lenolin Both Reg. 12.50. Now .... Olive Oil Perm Reg. 15.00. Now.. All Weather Body Weve Reg. 17.50. Now .... (Wella Germany) Special Perm for Grey Hair Reg. 16.00 New 12.00 HEIDI'S MODERN HAIR STYLING Experienced Europeen Heir Stylists 367 WILSON RD. SOUTH WINDSOR PLAZA -- 723-5631 FREE PARKING 8.00 9.50 10.50 12.50 14.50 the meeting and opened with a) poem, "My Prayer For You." | Mrs. Magee led the devotional period. | Plans were discussed .for the dinner to be catered on March /19. It was announced that there would be no meeting in March. A silent auction was held. Refreshments were served by | Mrs. Magee. | KING STREET UCW | (Friendship Unit) The February meeting of the Friendship Unit of King Street brassiere, and in the same gen- eral area half a pound of ham, a package of cheese, a home permanent kit and four cartons of cigarettes. Mrs. Goyette says of all the hundreds of prisoners she met, few were bad. "Most are just foolish, simple woman. You have |to remember everyone is hu- And everyone has some 10 to 1 You can earn money valuable experience as awa Times Botty INTERIOR DECORATOR FURNITURE DRAPERIES BROADLOOM 15 King Street East CUSTOM MADE DRAPES Phone 725-2686 4 BOY it's_an Interesting job for every young per- son who wants to make his or her own spending money. ©0.D.H. ox: SPECIALS OPEN DAILY 'TIL 10 -- SAT. 'TIL 6 P.M. HUNDREDS OF IN-STORE SPECIALS Adults Only Allowed Specials Pe bicteseil relies <> h Name Address > ® ia Sheldon GRANNY GOWNS, C | FOR PRICE SAKE Fancy Knit STOLES. Compare FOR PRICE SAKE Ladies' WINTER HATS. Compare to 4.98. Y OUR DISCOU FOR PRICE SAKE Tablet or Vapour -- DRISTAN. Regu FOR PRICE SAKE LYSOL 12-0z, bottle. CONCENTRAT at 1.69. FOR PRICE SAKE . lor 1. Gift Boxed Fancy HANKIES. Compare at 98c on a FOR PRICE NT PRICE 30 * 15 FOR PRICE Compare at »Woodbury's Lilac FROST COLOGNE Regular 1.25 FOR PRICE SAKE ... Glade AIR FRESHENER Comp SAKE . Revlon Hi & Dri ROLL-ON DEODORANT Regular 1.25. FOR PRICE SAKE . Ladies' Hair Brush ROLLERS Regular 1.00 package. FOR PRICE SAKE . Moir's 25c Filled Centre CANDIES SAKE Men's Woodbury's COLOGNE & SHAVE KIT 3.00. FOR PRICE SAKE are at 79¢ | I 1" | I I | School Your Applicetion as soon os a route pkgs. MAKE For Price Sake It's No Where Else OSHAWA DISCOUNT HOUSE 1038 King St. W At Garrard Rd. APPLICATION NOW ! CALLING ALL AGES 4 and gain an Osh- CARRIER will be considered is open in yorr area. YOUR Mail or Bring Your Application to the Times in Oshawa or Whitby Oshawa Gimes DOWNTOWN OSHAWA <> DPANANANPal ait FEW WWE DMM IIIS

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