A > THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, November 13, 1967 ]] THE STARS SAY By ESTRELLITA FOR TOMORROW | While A.M. aspects will be on! ithe mild side, those hours will,| nevertheless, be a good period in which to make plans for af-} ternoon activities. More vigor-| ous influences will prevail after} noon, will encourage accom-| plishment in important inter- ests, | { FOR THE BIRTHDAY If tomorrow is your birthday, your outlook for the next year is excellent, indeed. As of the first jof last month, you entered a! |fine period where finances are! concerned--one which' will last through the first three weeks of next. March. Next good cycles |for monetary gain; the latter |half of April (but. only where! llong-range ventures are con-| cerned. Don't expect immediate returns); again, during the first three weeks of September, and throughout next October and November. Where job and-or business in- terests are concerned, best pe- riods will almost -parallel good fiscal cycles -- especially be- tween now and the end of ' z - *™ \March. Next: the last week in é September, the first three A GROUP of Canada's steps of the Parliament 4, 1926. The nurses: were at- nurses who lost their lives |Weeks of October and through- war nurses pose on the Buildings in Ottawa, Sept. tending the unveiling of the in the First World War jout next November. Just one memorial to Canada's --CP Photo 'admonition: Do nothing to an- nfit IES | Near this new con- ter neck, shoulder tip ventional way. Fibre- iping. In embroidered iste elastic sides and 2-36. 5.00 : Smooth your way g pantie girdle. Light, immy flat-tering lace 3.00 00 tagonize superiors or business " il es Se ewikee é : Cc ada's Nursin Sisters partners in June, early July or ; MRS. @ NEIL Mac- Noakes (left) and Mrs. Pat- shipment of UNICEF cards : an lier Gan Gad heeh believed cent rata of the C War Rega tet : gan, chairman, with her rick Ryan (right) are seen to be distributed in is <= C g edi gga Segoe i - : 3) he 93 : Himes ar ber or the star promised re-| eo.chairmen. Mrs. David pi e or safe--early ambu to the 93.6 per cent rate of wards will not be forthcoming. Heroines Ot World War I sive care techniques up There are now about 590 wit be ore Le B Si : M4 Rest in the Des ' " [ ' ; great emphasis on ro- in the Desert, The Cathe through rehabilitation were nurses on 40 Canadian mili- mance during the laltar part of eta igma Phi Sets Target dral, Playmates, and Carol ' J CP Women's Editor being on the Mayflower by "We find that the survival service called, since 1959, the \her and next November. Don't For those seeking an unusual _In the acrid, choking fumes the girls who followed. "rate of those casualties Jeav- Canadian Forces Medical jake the infatuations of May or For Sale Of UNICEF Cards and decorative gift for friends V i IV ni filling the bombed Paris cafe Miss Moore says she be- ing the battlefield alive rose Service. September too seriously, how- or neighbors the 1968 UNICEF : : - di they are taken about, tending the dying and _ in particular received impetus for travel and social activities:|of the five member chapter|cated in a pre-campaign survey,/™USt. There are three designs =m injured. from the experiences of the | CHILD GUIDANCE | eth : patients up and around ear- from the region of the 80 per the first three weeks of Septem- unpacking some of the first area. : lation--was another. Progres- the Second World War." Along personal lines, there By JEAN SHARP disrespectfully referred to as improved, Miss Pepper says. tary bases in the reunited (next month, in June, late Octo- Singers a blue-clad figure moved lieves two medical advances ever. Most stimulating periods; The UNICEF Card Commitiee| The three best sellers as indi- Engagement Calendar™ is al. + - the first three weeks of May,|Beta Sigma Phi officially em-jreveal a return to the tradi-/282in available this year in The reward of It was military Nursing Sis- First World War. next August and September barked upon its-1967 card cam-|tional greeting card expressing notes for gift giving fe | being a great man ter H. M. Stevens of Dunn- One was an increased inter- | . . A' child born on this day iPaign recently with the target'the beauty and truth of Christ- Last year, more than one and ;% is that long after ville, Ont., her uniform tat- est in mental health work, xperience art eaningtul would make an excellent archi- set at $3,000, which represents mas a-half million people bought] "pow | You're dead, no tered, her white-starched partly as a result of seeing tect or scientist; May write poe-|an increase of almost 50 per 'Three Saints' by Margo|\UNICEF greeting cards. Each| fj yj eee sure, ewe -- ere orn Oa gers 4 little-understood so-called . try as an avocation cent_over last year's target./yoj},. depicts a multicolored|°!_ these purchases contributed |) ¥ you are dead. others in the bombing, which -- shel} shock. And she says A d <i , h Ch ld 1 R d "Our aim is to sell just one boxlstcined lace w Bl aydE katie ah nT SiGe oe killed four Canadians during interest in public health grew | Nn €dac es 1 0 ea iof UNICEF cards to every fam deals saecitad nse 0 ae, a child in school, a mother! Abbe tdel patel Ad the Second World War. when too many Canadian | . Aen Ao ily in this area who use any! cient strengths healthy, a family together, a kina, oil seems Lieut. Stevens, who later boys were found physically By GARRY C. MYERS, PhD grade want to read so they can {form of greeting cards at the eaes . ae i. ee community growing with pro- , to ~sause o lot of Your child is fortunate on Show their parents and others |holiday season," said a spokes n arth y OSSi\ ductive opportunities for its. BOB EAKINS friction married Ross Munro, Cana- ynfit for the services dian Press war correspondent Miss Moore has recently |entering the first grade if-hejat home that they can read.} . and now publisher of The retired as director of public |has visited a farm, bus station, How much more wonderful if Canadian magazine, after- health nursing for Ontario. airport, park and other places|your child tries to show you ward was hailed as a heroine. -- After the war, a permanent ('ifferent from his neighbor-| how he can read than for you to But she said, simply: corps of nursing sisters was |Nood. Some children of course|@sk him to read to you Still | "I did what any Canadian maintained, with a reserve |Will take such trips from school | more wonderful if he shows his nurse would be proud to do." registry. while in the kindergarten or/Younger brother or sister how In war and peace, often at ' first grade, well he can read. the risk of their own lives, OVERSEAS IN 1940 Often the primer and first, Here let me say that about Canada's military. nurses The first Second World War |reader at school will have some|the best way for your child in have backed the nation's contingent went overseas in |things the child is familiar with|the primary *grade to learn to man for the committee. "If we C2Zmner is a Christmas Card/youth. This, and more, is are successful we could very portraying a softly colored town| the kind of work that UNICEF moet mien lwell double 'our. target," she(teating the message of the helps carry out in hundreds of ¢9F8 are sold with a five-year guar- ladded Herald Angel thousands of cases in 119 coun- ontee. Which is longer than you "The Star" by M. 4, Rahmanitries. Cards will be sold from can get on the average pedestrian. Chughtia, which rated number|the McLaughlin Public Library one in the Oshawa survey is aion Saturday mornings from 9 In the journey tt gh life, the lare using their entire member a h desi gp copvesing the|a.m to noon, from November é lship, some. one hundred women nique orienta beauty and 4, through to December 16. At aa taudiclaual conntanues to% the mysticism of the Christ Child's}other times, the cards may be | coming jobtained from Mrs. R. Neill the trip © \cards. Posters will be displayed ©" : , lall over the city and brochures, There is in addition a mag-\MacLean, 487: Bernhard Cres- The sorority took on the proj ect as their major service en \deavor for a second year and pessimist is often proved right, but the optimist has o better time on fighting men. June, 1940. towead about at school; and the;™ead and read better is to Whether it was surviving a At the start, all nurses |feacher writes (in manuscript)|@™muse a much younger child by lwill be made available to allinificent contribution to the col- cent; Mrs. S. D. Noakes, 773, Here's « sensible vacation plen: ook aA oe ob ene gl "Cink" fe jon Pia' ig get ng ge sb yh pus wd gobbo ir ey to see what the cards ng a yee gg Dali, en- an ar eee roca spon If your pocket book's flat -- stay editerranea é 3 Ss. made by the children for them/|* ' r ook like. he Angel , ae . omeet, " through the strafing of field RCAF branch was begun in |to read, These ex perience|aty grade level may gain more| ik AMAIHON: somdibhee at the} Potulardop (hose whosprefer|one Beta Sigma Phi in the Osh-\Where you're at. hospitals in the First World September, 1940, with five sis- |charts may centre around then reading skill by reading to a sorority will service a booth ati@ card in a lighter mood is the|o™* 97C2- 2 | e War, the nursing sisters have ters seconded from the army. |trips sorhe of the children have| younger vias than is he were} the McLaughlin Public Library|"Fairy Tale" by Orest Verisky.| 7 | ing taught by the ablest read- lduring the Saturday morning| For the buyer who wants| PLAY LADIES earned the thanks of Cana- The navy nursing service was | taken. dians in uniform. ish : po bleep 1941. | In the many classrooms) 0e cxpert Ou, e navy girls were | whe 6 " Early in the first grade your DIED IN FIRST WAR - assigned to shore hospitals, lage dingy seed gh oo pod child is eager to write his first More than 50 died in the they all spent a day at sea to |horhood, the children have had|name. If the school doesn't 1914-18 war, including 14 lost get some idea of the condi- familiar experiences these|teach him to do this in the when the hospital ship Llan- tions under which their |charts could revolve about./¢atly weeks or months, why dovery Castle was torpedoed patients worked. They all eat, sleep, mingle and|40n't you do so? Teach him in in 1918, Gladys Sharpe, now nursing play with other members of the| Your own way, making the iet-| In the Second World War 99 consultant to the Ontario Hos- |family. They fight and quarrel,|ters @8 simple and easy to! Mrs. F. E. McLean, Colmar {Young, Xi Alpha Sigma Chap-|\; ' army nursing sisters were pital Services Commission, |haye emotions and tensions,|Make as you can. Avenue, Bay Ridges, has |ter; Miss Marlene Sutherland, N@vity" by Jean Paul Le- calm and orderly after their was senior matron and liaison | sorrows and joys, face danger,| It may be helpful to you to| been awarded the $500 |Phi Omega; Mrs. David Cos- ship was hit by torpedo officer with 300 nurses who |have accidents, and witness learn ways of manuscript writ-| Scholarship in physio- jburn, Delta Sigma; Mrs. A. F bombers near Italy. : served in South Africa. accidents other persons have. |; : 5 : therapy presented by the |Carter, Gamma Epsilon: Miss °f limited quantities, are avail- Douglas Amaron, Canadian She was also matron on fn some culturally deprived|/"* * modification of printing.) Women's Auxiliary of the (Beverly Baker, Phi Phi; and 25/e through mail order only, Press correspondent with the hospital ships bringing men |areas many children may not|eerally used at school in the) Oshawa General Hospital. |Misses Mary Buck and Sheila Canadian forces in Italy, from the north. |have rich experiences, may not|first few grades. Even if you| Miss Mclean, an honor |Pollock supervising the library FOUND HELPFUL reported the nurses swam, "We loaded the ship at Port |hear much talking or be read to|must make a trip to school to| graduate of Pickering High | booth MOSCOW (AP) -- Hypnosis paddled and rowed to safety Said at night because it was, |at home; and some alas, may|do so, it could prove profitable.| School, is attending McGill This year there are nineteen before and after surgery has after the ship on which he you know, pretty dangerous |not know their names or know|AS your child writes or prints) University. She is enrolled (cards to choose from, Some are|been found helpful in lung oper- was aboard was struck. None at the time." how old they are. They may/his name, encourage him to do| in the second year of a |sophisticated, some quite ations performed at the Rusa- was lost. : She says the ships were run |never have held a flower in/it slowly, and carefully and| course leading to a bachelor (simple; some classic and some|kov hospital for children in Mos- It hae a, gfe He 2B like any ae rie yg their hands. plainly of science degree in physio- contemporary. All are a warmicow, the Soviet news agency proud recor or Canadas the patients' beds were bunks | Betas > eee anc S and wonderful way of express-|Tass reported. It cited the work military nursing services, in three tiers and ventilation CONSIDERABLE EX PER I- ANSWERING QUESTIONS a --- ing season's greetings aig there of Prof. Stanislav Dolet- which began 67 years ago aS and heat were a problem. ENCE |S puppose 900 NAB 8. teen UNABLE TO RUN IT __ ily, friends and associates. _'sky and other surgeons four nurses left for South Yet most children in the firstjage son or daughter of driving) CaypeRLRY, England (AP)|* cee : 'Africa _to-tend Boer War-cas- 'MITT ME, KID' grade have had~considerable|age, with a driver's licence, Taines Watk ci ne Paes ualties. In a lighter vein, Miss jexperiences to talk about at|and you had objective evidence |' pron \t Svate exeunolag The following January, four Sharpe says her fa vorite |school. When they tell of such|that this child deliberately vio vpige = more were prides out of 199 memory of wartime red tape |the experience chart can be lated basic traffic regulations? |and ae ee A . volunteers, and the pattern was the wire that almost got |good material to read. Most of A. If I still had control of this ished in ot Now it's fin- i a pleased nurse in difficulties. |us parents have wished the pri-|child, I would require him or ished, but it's also up for sale-- | they can't afford to run it | ? C C : \hours from November 4 through/something different, "Holiday) NELSON, B.C. (CP) -- A vol cy |to December 16 on Skis" is a bewitching illus-|unteer women's group is hard) 1 ar Heading up the Beta Sigma) ttation of delightful little people) at work playing in Kootenay| Phi UNICEF card committee Skin - Lake General Hospital. The) CLEANIT SERVICE LTD. PRIZE STUDENT Jare: mrs. R. Neill MacLean,|There are in addition two/group recently lppacked o Flay! : chairman; Mrs. D. S Noakes| canadian cards this year./Ladies Service at the hospital/ORY CLEANING, SHIRT LAUNDERING 7 cs eee co.| Snowy Winter" by Henri Mas-|designed to provide entertain- 725-3555 I Miss Margaret Ellen Mc- |and Mrs. Patrick Ryan, Tenn CARtAr Ok Mc and 'ith I poe son depicting a typical Cana-)ment and diversion for young- sia 8 chairmen, with Mrs. Kenneth dian winter scene and "The|sters undergoing treatment. =. o 4 as 3 . s wean First World War sent She wired home, Mitt me, |mer and first reader the childjher to give me the. driver's : 9,000 nursing sisters overseas. kid, I've brass up," and Miss juses at school would tell of the (licence for a definite period--a In the Second World War, the Sharpe had to translate for a |common experiences any child|few weeks or months. In case NEED FUEL OIL? army alone had. more than Suspicious censor whose Eng- | may have the child refused to do so, I 3.000 nurses, the navy 330 and lish didn't run to colloquial | Your child is fortunate in the| would appeal to the local police CALL i ian-- s if y Y t. Failing there, 1 s force nearly 400. Canadian--congratulate me, I |first gfade, if you have been |departmen g gt ete 1900, more volun- have been promoted. reading to him since he was| would refuse to sign an applica- PERRY ee 4 vis ' There was 'generally more |two years of age. or younger, |tion for renewal of the licence 723-3443 ee teered than could be accept- ed. In 1943 there was a wait- ing list of 8,000. The permanent attention given to training in |and if you keep on reading to|In case the youth had a car the second war than in the jhim for several years while he accident and was called to trial | Canadian first, and a greater degree of jis in school. There is no better) and found "guilty", I would ask Army Medical Corps nursing specialization in the nursing |way to get him ready to read at |the court to take away the driv- service was established in 'Service. g | school and to encourage him in| er's licence. As the time for the invasion |reading during the first several |" DAY OR NIGHT by MODERN 2 A new concept in dry cleaning HERE'S WHY MORE PEOPLE ARE USING ~ PAY OFF BIL 1906. CHANGE UNIFORMS - The following year, at the suggestion of Matron Georgi- na Pope, a Boer War veteran, the khaki uniform was changed to a light blue blouse and skirt with a dark blue, red-lined cape. Because of it, at the start of the First World War the nurses wert nick-named blue- birds, a flight of fancy that must have come to seem inadequate. During the First World War, Edna Moore of Toronto recalls cutting six inches off her skirts to keep them out of the mud in Salonika, Greece. The tent hospital in which she worked there was bombed and machine-gunned in Zeppelin raids. Field hospi- tals in France were attacked by airplanes. The first 100 nurses enlisted Sept. 23, 1914, and left Quebec Oct. 1. Miss Moore smiled at the memory that they were ELECTROLYSIS painlessly. Try Our Kree-Imperial Machine. MARIE MURDUFF will be in Oshawa et the GENOSHA HOTEL Noy. 13th, 14th & 15th PHONE 723-4641 of Europe approached, some nurses were given arduous years of school. Most children in 'we i BACKACHE® field training to toughen them physically, and they wore battledress, because it was practical. They moved into | Europe right behind the army. A Canadian Press story said, "Florence Nightingale, 1944 version, wears khaki bat- tledress and carries her kit on her back. She's sunburned from weeks of pre-invasion training outdoors. ... They carry full kit, wear tin hel- mets for 10 or 12 miles." Evelyn Pepper, nursing consultant with the emergency health service of the depart- ment of national health and welfare, served overseas with | the RCAMC for five years. | In a reminiscence for The | Canadian Nurse magazine, she named important tech- niques developed during the | Second World War. The team concept of medi- cal care was one, getting The Oshawa Little Theatre PRESENTS Nov, 15, 16, 17 & 18 FALL ARRIVALS 463 RITSON RD. &. Sale! Sale! Sale! Full Length Formals AND BRIDESMAIDS' GOWNS SARGEANT'S BRAND NEW $19.95 725-3338 BLADDER IRRITATION Common Kidney or Bladder Irrita- tions make many men and women feel tense and nervous from frequent, burning.or.-itehing urination_night and-day. Secondarily, you_may. lose sleep and have He: ache, Backache and feel older, tired, depressed. In} EX usually brings such cases, CYS relaxing comfort by curbing irritat- ing germs in acid urine and quickly easing pain,Get CYSTEX at druggists. We won't pull the ADULT EVENING GLASSES At the OSHAWA BUSINESS COLLEGE Every Tuesday & Thursday Evening 7:00 p.m, to 9:00 p.m. Choice of subjects: Hy-Speed longhandX.10 lesson and manual typing, Dictaphone, course. in. shorthand, Electric Refresher courses --- Book- keeping, Business Machines; Free Literature Start Any Week Diol 725-3375 wool over your eyes Or any of the other thousands of eclourful fabrics for dresses, suits, end other fashions you ere' planning fer your family thet we hove waiting for you to see, You con be sure, however, that we'll offer our : experience with materiols and pattern service so that you won't be left in the dork about meking a happy choice. Add some colour te your life, drop in to the House of Fabrics 11 KING EAST Gikvus: Ont. 725-4551 i Modern. $ valuable garments "Drive-In" « AN Try "CARE CLEAN" by MODERN | DRY CLEANERS & DRAPERIES 321 OLIVE AVE. OSHAWA PHONE:728-4614 FREE PICK-UP AND DELIVERY IN OSHAWA, , Modern's 'CARE CLEAN' Services DRAPERY CLEANING: our cess guorontees the length of your drapes; it's exclusive in @shawa and aréa SIZING: We size every garment free of Restore that 'brand new' feeling to your SHIRTS: Dustproof cellophane packaging returns your shirts just the way you like them FAST, FAST SERVICE: At no extra cost. Bring them in the morning --. pick them up et night. (Monday to Friday) FREE PARKING: Ladies! WHITBY AND BROOKLIN, S 3S ONE GLEAN SWEEP Ready cash from GAC International makes piled-up bills disappear fast. Sweep many monthly payments into one. Stop in or call. Get acquainted with our one-step bill cleaning service. ASK em LOANS UP TO $5000 a OSHAWA 5214 Simcoe Street, North... ++ Phone 728-7325 ----RICHMOND HILL 20 Yonge Street, South........ . Phone 884-4458 TORONTO 25 Bloor Street, West « «Phone 924-7731 Bloor at Yonge) st 2290 Dundas Street 64 Vaughan Road a SSS ' (A Clair Ave, W) 2645 Eglinton Avenue, Eas Eglinton at Brimley 944A St. Clair Avenue, West.. ' »+»»Phone 481-6836 (2 Blocks below Eglinton Ave.) 2907A Dundas Street, West... .. Phone 767-3161 (1 Block West of Keele St.) 2087 Yonge Street.......