Oshawa Times (1958-), 9 Mar 1962, p. 8

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THE OSHAWA TIMES, Friday, March 9, 1962 ' leasier on Cindy? Please give us} 4 |little brother, | your story was a clumsy mask- 3 | NS IMPISH GLEE _ Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. ; Donald Richardson, Carleton, Robert org to ig emmc Nova Scotia, and great-grand- street east, is Donna Louise. | Mrs Aly Bixcatheld Dems is the | Seen et oe ne granddaughter of Mr.. Wil- | Richardson, Carleton liam Gibbs, Oshawa, and Mr. | --Aldsworth Photography Landscape Planner To Address Club A resident of Canada since 1958, Mrs. Janina Stensson, will adress the Lyceum Club on Monday afternoon, Mrs. Stens- son was born in Warsaw, Poland, and is a graduate of two Polish universities. For several years after the war, until she came to Canada, she was senior landscape ar- chitect for the ministry of ar chitecture for Poland where her chief work was to assert the | Jand architect's point of view in the planning and reconstruc- tion of Warsaw. ; She was associated with the landscape plans for many; government buildings, hospitals, : schools, housing schemes and the restoration of churches and historical buildings. ; : ee ipa ei Mrs. accu" te been ap-| MRS. JANINA STENSSON pointed the Canadian delegate) of the Canadian Society of| Landscape Architects to the in-| ternational congress in Haifa,| Israel, this summer, where she FOR PETTER HEALTH For more nutritious menus consider each day's three meals as a unit, suggests the Food --------~| ANN LANDERS : \It would shake her confidenc /\check on his Misleading Story | f | | My/|flower in his lapel signify pu-} If this were true there! Dear Ann Landers: wife and I are faced with ajrity? serious problem. We have a four - year - old/flowers sold. recone My' wite and I were the track has the right to insist} thrilled at the news that another|that his bride .be of the lily- baby was on the way. We told| White variety. Yet some do. At Cindy that God was sending her|the same time, just to round out a new baby sister or brother in| this cockeyed picture, visualize January. She was very pleased |if you will, a girl demanding} and talked of little else for|that her groom be pure. She'd) weeks. be laughed. right out of town as Our little son was born with) a damaged heart and lived only} ten days. Cindy cannot under-| ee ge baby | tasy may be fun but you can't leas Wa dop't know "how to| Hive in a world of make-believe lhandle the problem. Shall we sare are | stop talking about the little r q i | brother pall genre yee rd jnever existed? Would this be) jsome advice, We need it des-| LODGES AND |perately.--T AND C | SOCIETIES | Dar T and C: It would be} wise to stop talking about the ; as fa but to pretend LOYAL TRUE BLUE Ithat he didn't exist would be The regular meeting of the The Loyal True Blue Lodge, No. 55, ,/was held in the Orange Temple on Tuesday, March 6. Lodge was --LUNATIC FRINGE Confidential to Gooseflesh: junrealistic and harmful. youngster would soon sense that jing of the truth and then you'd) + as opened by have far more serious trouble.|Shipful Mistress Sister Ruth e|Gatchell, assisted by deputy {;master Brother Leo Keeler. Flags were saluted at the opening of Jodge and scriptures and prayers were read by the in your integrity and she migh |become fearful and insecure. | Children know that animals land flowers die. Use animals i c 5 i and flowers as examples when| Chaplain, Sister Alice Short. jexplaining the mysteries of) The correspondence an? ™'n- jdeath, And be sure to give|utes were read by Sister Phyllis |Cindy the comforting thought!Arbourne. The. sick list report that all things happen for the;Was given by Brother Leo best and that God always makes Keeler. the right decision Many items of lodge interest Dear Ann Landers: The letter) were discussed, after which Sis- from the wife who counted her|ter Mary Lemere was escorted husband's handkerchiefs to|to the altar by Supreme Gra: fidelity brought) Mistress Sister Susan Spencer to back some memories. The/be installed as second commit counting system didn't work for|tee lady. The installing officer me because my smart guy used|was district deputy and mas- paper tissue to remove the lip-|ter Brother Willard Spencer stick. It was his shirts that) Birthday greetings were sung finally did him in. I discovered|for Sisters Mossie Keeler and one day that he was not return-| Rleanor Mitchell ing at night in the same shirt he had worn in the morning When the facts were uncov- ered and his dirty laundry was hung out to dry, I found that half of his wardrobe was in a one-room apartment downtown --hanging with black lace lin gerie Heayen's Gift To Woman now has a fourth wife who is count- ing his handkerchiefs and I am supporting his three kids. Had I known that the child-support laws in this country were so| archaic and utterly useless 1 would have washed and ironed} without counting. It would have} been much easier to keep my| jtrap shut, and live in the hope |that one day some babe's hus- band would put a hole in his head.--_COUNT DOWN Dear Ann Landers: Let this be Preparations for the annual birthday banquet to be held on ake up, Little Dreamer. Fan-} ' UNITS, GROUPS AND AUXILIARIES PMA CLUB The president, Mrs. Elwood |Bradley, presided at the week-|of the sick as well as the teach-/reported on ly meeting of the Pleasant Mon- day Afternoon Club. Hymns Discussions were held regard- ng the meeting place for the annual meeting Mrs. William Collins, PMA's jwould be darned few white|oidest member, celebrated her birthday recently and birthday is bright and) No man who has been around | greetings were sung for her also for Mrs. McKay. Mrs. Eva Simmons was re- ported to be a patient in: the hospital at Hillsdale Manor. Mrs. William Collins, Mrs. Mar- garet Arkle and Mrs. William Reed were reported ill at home. Refreshmenis were served some kind of a nut or something. by Mrs. Norman Hodgson and|/Mrs. James J. John Jakes HOLY CROSS WA At the recent meeting of the Woman's Auxiliary of Holy Cross Roman Catholic Church Miss Isabelle Sorley gave a talk on the Victorian Order of Nurses and Dr. W. C. Sands showed some slides on the Mrs, Triday, March 16, are being completed A penny sale was held, follow- ed by refreshments served by Sister Mary Abbott. The next regular meeting will start at 730 p:m. as there will be degree practice. All mem- Wor-| bers in the degree staff are ask-|ports were heard ed to be present. VAC CLEANER BAGS e HOOVER @ EUREKA = WESTINGHOUSE FRANK MEAGHER APPLIANCES 92 SIMCOE ST. NORTH 4-day treatment $135 mittee; Mrs. Cecil Cornelius, social convener; Mrs. Bayliss \¢ progress being jing of health. The nurses at-|made on the cook book. tend the sick in private homes.! May 19 was agreed on for {same subject. The main ob: \jective of the VON is the care es * . jf Won't Fool Child & é f |were sung and the scripture | Families are shown how t0\the spring tea. Mrs. Cornelius \lesson read. jassist the infirm in their homes. | wij) convene this event. |Miss Sorley and Dr. Sands were lthanked by Mrs. Leo Kryhul. |.,22@ 8toup agreed to having > jits name added to Arrangements were made for) croups assisting fag Big sg the annual night of cards which |G.) M tae has been re-dated from May 1) le Manor tuck shop. to Tuesday, May 8. The film "Treasure at Beth- Nineteen visits to the sick/any" was shown and refresh- = were served by Mrs. \John Henderson and Mrs. John | Porter. CALVIN EVE. GROUP The monthly meeting of the 'Calvin Evening Group of St. Paul's Presbyterian Church |was held at the home of Mrs. John Longman. | | Mrs. Lloyd Perry opened the |meeting with prayer and the reading of Psalm 70, Ten mem- |bers answered the roll call. Mrs. Derek Allen led in the |\Bible study taken from St. Mark's Gospel and concerning Palm Sunday. The minutes were read by' Mrs. Beverley Smith and the: treasurer's report by Mrs, Eric Pym who also reported the success on the rummage sale held last month. The members discussed the possibility of holding a tea or bazaar in conjunction with | the planned sod turning for the new building. Refreshments were served by Mrs. Alex Cosens assisted by Mrs. John Longman. « The next meeting will be held at the home of Mrs. Lloyd Perry on April 5. jwere reported to have been |made by Mrs. Leo Karneth and| \Mrs. Stephen Bondfordi. j Mrs. Leo Hansen and Mrs.) Steve Coe were thanked by| Mrs. J. T. Mullen for making] the card parties a success. Ap-| |preciation was also extended to} Hughes, Mrs.| |Stephen. Bondfordi and Mrs.' Frank Sheppard for visiting Hillsdale Manor recently. | Mrs. Herbert Anthony and Mrs, James Sloan volunteered to have a card party on March oi Bo St ai ses Bs Nk | | The monthly meeting of The Southminster United Church Women was held recently with 19 in attendance. / The worship service was con- ducted by Mrs. Gary Bayliss and Mrs. Royce Whittaker with Mrs. A. G. Nelson at the piano, Mrs. Delmont Olmstead, pres- jident of the group, presided. Re- from Mrs. 'Lars Christensen, manse com- PHONE 725-4711 |KRESGE'S| 1 i ht a Soe ie ak ak Se I "comm cy | ALL NIGHT WARMTH with LA SALLE BLENDED BLANKETS (SECONDS) Individually wrapped in a poly bag. Wide variety of colours to choose from. Three inch satin binding on both ends. CHEERFULLY REFUNDED i 13 One ORNAAL* capsule brings you 12 hours of continuous relief from stuffy nose, will give a talk on Canadian landscape architecture. Department of Macdonald Insti- the last word on the row in your tute, Guelph. This way you are/Column over the chaste brides less likely to overlook any of|it seems to me there are an ithe food groups mentioned in awful lot of stupid or unrealistic |Canada's Food Guide. Be espe- people around 2 STORES TO SERVE YOU BETTER DOWNTOWN OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE Frontier Nurse lcially careful to include a whole| Why is it that nobody says grain cereal and an adequate jamount of milk. Is Angel of Mercy weepy eyes, and sin anything about the history of 'the groom? Does that white * REG. us pressure. OSHAWA Can. T.M. Of. To Hill-Billies WENDOVER, Ky. (AP)--The minimum fee is $2 a year, but it buys some of the finest home nursing care in the world for more than 10,000 men, women and children of the mountains of Kentucky. They are scattered over 700 square miles of forests and streams, an area covered by the women in the blue - grey uniforms of the Frontier Nurs- ing. Service. If a nurse cannot reach a pa- tient by jeep, she rides a horse. If the horse cant't make it, she walks, Her heavy saddlebags contain all the equipment needed to handle anything from gunshot wounds to pregnancies. Since 1925 these professional nurse-midwives, many of them from England, have delivered some 14,000 babies under medi- eal direction. They lost only 11 mothers Before the FNS came into the mountains, neighbor assisted neighbor at births in this sparsely settled land of tiny farms, scattered little coal mines, lumber mills and cabins of lonely trappers. Now, mothers who register with the service get extensive prenatal care. After the birth, nurses visit new babies daily for the first 10 days, then once a month for a year. PAY WITH EGGS The cost for a delivery, either at home or in the hospital, is $50, payable in cash, eggs, or what have you. No mother, how- ever, is turned away for lack of funds. As for the $2 yearly fee, it covers home visits, shots and related services. Medicines are sold at cost. The success of the FNS is no surprise to its founder, Mrs. Mary Breckinridge, daughter of a prominent southern family. \fter the death of her two small children, she wanted to help the mothers and children of isolated rural areas. A reg- istered nurse, she went to Eng- land to take graduate training as a midwife, passed the ex- amination and became the first American nurse-midwife. Returning to Kentucky, she} opened the Frontier Nursing| Service in a log cabin. | Today, at 81, and bedridden} most of the time from a broken back suffered years ago, Mrs. Breckinridge still watches over a staff that includes 30 nurses and a medical director in a modern hospital at nearby Hy- den, and the administrative headquarters at Wendover, whare she lives Now when you say OK... you see OK! The writing's on the wall. So many people have caught the idea of saying OK for O'Keefe Ale, we've put the OK right on the label! It's the same great O'Keefe Ale. No change there. But now when you say OK, you see this big, reassuring OK on the gleaming new label. That OK tells you you're going to enjoy the pure ale with the Now when you say OK for O'Keefe Ale, you natural flavour. see OK.

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