emen Jo Aldwinckle, Women's Editor, Dial 723-3474 "THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, Februery 18,1963 7 The February meeting of King : |Street Home and School. Associ- ation featured an interview by Mrs. D. K. Stiles with two mem. bers of the Board of Education, Mrs. Margaret Shaw and Mr. George Fletcher. The stricture of the educational system was ~ |examined, The place of the local board in relation to taxpayers and provincial government was outlined. The committees of the board were listed with the duty of each outlined. The duties of the superintendent, Dr. C. M. Elliott, of the business adminis- ltrator, the attendance officer, csi the superintendent of mainten- ance were listed. To answer the THE BEST GIFT OF ALL iquestion 'What can individual aq. |taxpayer do if he disapproves parents are Mr. and Mrs. Ed- ah some action of the board", ward Fice and Mr. and Mrs. |some interesting information John Morrison; great grand- | was brought forward. Questions parents, Mrs. William Morri- |from the cone -- a d Mr. William Lindsay, |interest sparked by the lively| ail of Geka: discussion. The thanks of the! --Ireland Studio |members was expressed by Mrs. One year ago today, Mrs. Bruce Morrison, Simcoe street north, gave her hus- band a real, live birthday present, and here he is, Mi- chael Bruce, so father and son are celebrating the dou- ble event. Michael's grand- UNITS, GROUPS AND AUXILIARIES FEDERATION RITSON H AND S ASSOC. |the Oshawa Library Film Coun-| CANADIENNES - FRANCAISES, The February. meeting of Rit-|cil so that the organiations of The Federation of French.|son Home and School was held| the church may have the privil- Canadian Women held its regu- recently with Mrs. Eric Cooper|ege of securing material for fu-| lar meeting on Tuesday at the|presiding. Mrs. Cooper intro-jture meeting. | home of Mrs. Real Goulet. Mrs.|duced the guest speaker, Mrs. ALBERT STREET UCW 1 Lucien Chamberland presided. J. T. Gaskell who is a district) The regular meeting of Unit Mrs. Yvan Gilbert read the|organizer for Home and School 1 of Albert Street United Church| minutes and Mrs. Alcide Le-|Council was "held 'in the Friendship| clerc gave the treasurer's re-| Mrs. Gaskell spoke briefly 0n|pRoom. February 13, with Mrs. port. the basic aims of the Home and/wiyjiam Crumb in charge. The president thanked "Mrs./School and how it must be well) yee Herman Laxton was in Armand Paquet and Mrs. Lau-jorganized with good program | hange of the devotional period| rent Lanteigne for taking/topic to attract parents. She|ang her theme was 'Common charge of the altar committee/pointed out the need for COM-| Place Things. Psalm No. 7,| in place of Mrs. Gerard Ran-|munication between the CX€CU-| vances 31-43 was read by Mrs.| court who had resigned due to|tive and members and the need winiam Gibson. = jto make use of the pamphlets) Tetters were read by the sec-| Mrs. Yvon Leger, chairman|and booklets available through| retary from Mrs. W. Nelson of of the welfare committee, re-|council. lalla' Ganie end the Revarenal ported supplying a layette and) She "introduced a "Case|James. Freeman from Sandy| children's clothes to a needy)study'" on a meeting, to be dis-'Lake, both in connection with| family of the parish." She ac-/oussed by the members. Under|the sending of bales, cepted the penny-a-day savings/the leadership of Mrs. R. R.| Moved by Mrs. Mark Hill and| contributed by the members to| Thomas and Mrs.R.°M. Ed-\seconded by Mrs. Art Alimao help foreign missions and thank-|munds, vice-presidents of coun-\that the unit have a bakeless ed the members for their dona-|qil, the members formed twol sale. tions of clothing and money/discussion groups. The results) Moved by Mrs. Ross Clark used for welfare relief. lof this discussion were reported] and ded by Mrs. William The president thanked Mrs./by Mr. Robert Richards and|Stallibrass that a letter be writ- pa aes x for representing/Mrs. F. Tomalak. ten to Miss Millicent Luke, ask-| Women's League. Givtng in og Mrs. Gaskell and her assist-) meeting. King Street H&S Discusses Aspects Of Board Of Education John Maroosis. Mrs, John Payn- ter introduced Mrs. Stiles. Mrs. John Chmara, president, led an interesting discussion on "School Clothes". Although no final decisions. could be made, parents realized that their prob- lems were not individual but were problems facing many other parents. Wise, but un- obtrusive, direction and pati- ence were considered to be timely aids for the parents. To honour Founder's month, Mrs, Chmara called on Mrs. G. E. Moss, a_ former presi- dent of King Street Home and Schos: Association who is now a vice-president of council. Mrs. Moss traced the development of Home and School Associations from its founding in 1916 by Mrs. A. C. Curtis to its present strength of 325,000 members. Reports were given by Mrs, Harold 'Sproule, secretary; Mrs. Joseph LaRocque, treasurer; and Mrs. C. J. Anderson, publi- cations convenor. Mrs. John Galbraith principal, stressed 'iat marks were not the most important factor on the report cards to be issued| soon. Parents were urged to pay| particular attention to the teacher's remarks, the child's standing in relation to the class average, the child's attendance and assessment of the child's effort. Members will be contactéd to contribute to an apron-candy- bake sale for the April meeting. Hospitality convenor Mrs. Walter Sharpe was assisted by Mrs. George Hamilton and Mrs. Joseph La Rocque. Mrs. A. E, Maycock's room had the largest number of par- ents present, Mrs. A. J. Lymer, social con- venor, was assisted by Grade mothers from Mr. Paul Wright's room. Mrs. John Maroosis and Mrs. J. H. Cooper. THE STARS SAY By ESTRELLITA them. Later in the day be care- COMING TO SPEAK The director of women's ac- tivities in the New Democrat- ic Party, Miss Eva Latham will be in Oshawa tomorrow to address a meeting of the UAW Auxiliary No. 27 and friends. Miss Latham has a wide experience of women's organizations. She served as program and executive direc- tor of the YWCA in many Ca- nadian centres and in Ply- mouth, England. She was a director of the Ottawa Sorop- timist Club, charter presi- | dent of Moose Jaw League of | Women Voters and am honor- | ary member of the Business and Professional Women's Club. She holds a life mem- bership in the Women's Mis- sionary Society of the Presby- terian Church. FOR TOMORROW Unusuat opportunities and good contacts are promised just before noon, so get routine mat- ters out of the way early and be ready to take advantage of ful in handling 'situations when other persons may express themselves, maybe a little too forcibly. FOR THE BIRTHDAY If tomorrow is your birthday your horoscope indicates that you are currently governed by influences generous to job and financial mattérs, and will be governed until late February, in 1964. This is truly the Aquar- ian's year for accomplishment --if, of course, he puts the pro. verbial best foot forward and takes advantage of all the good influences offered under excep- tionally benign aspects. Look for some interesting ro- mantic experiences in June and July; an opportunity to travel during the same period. Be on guard against nervous tension in August, however, and avoid extravagance in December. Sep. tember will be a fine month for expanding business operations. A child born on this day will be highly imaginative and ver- satile, bu may incline o ex- treme verbosity. possible, a breaks. Available in stores of an inch -- which is being hailed as the most radical ad-' billion zippers-per-year market garment industry alone ra years work and the exepnditure '| LESS VISIBLE chines so finely geared they instantaneously spot and rej an imperféction. The boi stop, top stop, pin, cam, a High Precision Nylon Coil Advance on Metal Zipper --__[iuvina, too ry ings The homemaker and herjmanently dyed. More than 100)" menfolk now can be sparedjshades presently are being the frustration and annoyance| made. : they suffer when, inevitably it's) Most notable of its features, at the most inconvenient time/however, is its snag-resistance. zipper snags oriit closes by meshing two con- tinuous coils of nylon which have no sharp edges to catch threads or frayed cloth. If a woman does catch her zipper, she need only pinch the coil, open it, and remove the snag. It is "self-healing" in that all that is required to restore an open- ed zipper is to move the slider back to the starting point. The idea of a monofilament zipper has existed for about 25 years but its development from idea to commercially acceptable: product was not an easy task. The new closure took about five Nevertheless, the manufac- turers decided to go ahead with development of a nylon non- filament closure to replace the metal zippers they were making. Their reason: they could only minor refinements ahead across Canada is a closure of for the metal zipper. nylon monofilament with the fantastic. tolerance of .0008 inches -- eight ten-thousandths Denny the Dry Cleaner Seys: CALL US FOR PROMPT PICK-UP and DELIVERY vance in zipper technology since the advent of the '"hookless fastener' 60 years ago. The fastener is expected eventually to replace metal zip- pers. in a large segment of the more than one and a_ halt in North America. The Canadian about 125,000,000 fasteners various types, mostly zippers. of several million dollars. For one thing, a new closure had to have enough advantages: to replace today's metal zip- per which, despite the loss of temper it may. cause on occa- sion, has been labelled one of the most ingenious and_ intri- cate inventions of the last century. Its tolerances of .002 inches -- two-thousands of an inch -- are finer than those of PHONE 728-5133 4 Centres to Serve You: @ 434 Simcoe South @ 249 King East @ 16:Bond West @ 688 Hortop PICKWICK Cleaners and Dyers The new closure, which substitutes a high-precision ny- lon coil for the now-familiar rows of gleaming metal, is only about half as wide as the convention zipper. It is so flex- ible that it can be tied and un- tied yet it withstands a mini- mum pulling pressure of 70 pounds an inch. Since it is!a watch. In addition to the teeth smaller than the metal zipper it| mounted individually on tape, is less visible. It won't corrode|there is the slider, composed of! and in addition it can be per-|three tiny parts wedded by ma-! FIRST TO GRADUATE Two young Zulu women showed male students how when the became the first graduates of the Ngoye University College in Zululand, South Africa. Tiny New Zenith Cameo One more reason why FAR MORE TH ZENITH HEARING AIDS HAVE HELPED PEOPLE HEAR BETTER Your nearby Zenith dealer will be AN A MILLION AMAZING ATTENTION! CHURCH GROUPS SERVICE CLUBS SOCIAL GROUPS YOUNG PEOPLE'S CLUBS, ETC. Be Sure To 'Adivertis happy to show you how the new Cameo brings a new standard of performance to miniature in-the-ear hearing aids. He's listed in the "Yel- low Pages." If not satisfied, your. money will be refunded within 10 days of purchase. Mail coupon for your free copy of "The Inside Story on What's New in Hearing Help." ZENITH CAMEO (actual size) @ Tiniest aid In Zenith history! © Actually worn In the ear! @ No dangling cords or tubing! © Brilliant performance! | FREE! Send my copy of "The 'Inside' || Whitby. Mrs. Lacroix contribut- ed to the program by singing! French songs accompanied at the piano by Mrs. Charles Tan. guay. The Whitby group made the guests welcome and pleas- ed them by trying to converse in French. ants. Mr. A. S. Winter spoke brief- won the parents attendance ban-| March. | ner. Refreshments were served! It was moved by Mrs. William| by the mothers of Grade 3. Leonard Head thanked ing her to speak at the April | Mrs. William Crumb informed the Unit that they would be in ly on the forthcoming report|charge of the devotional period cards. Miss Biggs' Grade 1 classjat the general UCW meeting in HEAK AGAIN see HEARING Story on What's New in Hearing Help!" Zenith Radio Corp. of Canada, Ltd., Dept. c4gp! 1470 The Queensway, Toronto 18, Ontario CARPET PANY 282 King W. 728-9581 FOR RUG & CHESTERFIELD CLEANING Our experts will ¢lean AIDS avoness Your Activities In The Oshawa Times COMING EVENTS |Cooper and seconded by Mrs. The president reported that| |Art Allman that a birthday box with other representatives of Oshawa parishes, she had at- WESTMOUNT U.C.W. | The executive of the West-|0e started. 5 : mount U.C.W. met at the home| Mrs. Mervin Morrison then tended a banquet at the Royallof Mrs. Beatrice MacDonald on|8@Ve an informative talk on York Hotel, Toronto, for the|Monday, February 11. The | Korea, as part of the missionary Province FLY TCA Better Health Through Knowledge Lild TORONTO to WINNIPEG for business for pleasure @ 2 HOURS 25 MINUTES @ UP TO 8 FLIGHTS DAILY @ $104 ECONOMY RETURN Ask about ever lower Group Fares for groups of 10 or more, flying in Canada, See your Travel Agent or contact TCA at: 130 Bloor Street West, Toronto, Ontario. TRANS-CANADA AIR LINES (@) AIR CANADA Send questions to Science Editors purpose of raising a building|president Mrs, Kenneth Markle| study of the book on Aisa's | hum. Archbishop Philip F. Pocock Brown, read the minutes. The/Ro-abeck and Mrs. George Le- lie Richard as convener. board of stewards, will speak ard and Mrs. Yvan Gilbert. dent, will assist Mrs, Frank song en Aitken presided and offered) ? ' "au from India. We are to be road| A. Mumps vaccine prepared from killed virus has is open to the Gospel of Christ.) long-term protection, may be available within the Jesus', Mrs. Jack Dugan closed! sarety_standords. Victoria Order of Nurses was) Q. After an cnpeination: our family doctor sent were.read by the secretary, Why do doctors try te scare people to death? The amnual meeting of the) potients. No one, not even a doctor, hes the Those interested are welcome ient. In the case of thyroid surgery, for example, duties on the wiekends. occept this risk. The doctor can't assume respon- risks against the hazards and ogree to or refuse ary were 357. The total num- P.O. Box 97, Terminal "A" Toronto Three students from the Osh-| a for a mission home. Thelopened the meeting. | anquet was arranged at the) ; | Refreshments followed, with request of the Most Reverend ve seeretary. Mes, Gordon Mrs. John Pibgel, Mrs, Earl It was decided to hold a ba.|Program for Tuesday, Febru-|mere in charge yom for bd hae of the parXhlapy 19, was planned. Mr. John| ----------- rasiecorence early in October with Mrs. Wil-|Ballentine, representing thei? > 24-HOUR SERVICE The meeting closed with a so.|and a film "I Have a Friend"| NO SERVICE CHARGE cial hour and the serving of re-|on visitation, will be shown. freshments by Mrs. Willie Rich-|Mrs. Carl Morgan, vice-presi- TRAVEL Ward, on the program commit-} CALVARY BAPTIST W.M.S. UCW will subse PHONE 728-6201 The Calvary Baptist WMS boantses oa W_will subscribe 5 meeting opened with a service and a poem 'Precious Saviour at Thy Feet', read by) Mrs. Henry MeGhee. Mrs. Niv- prayer. Mrs. Kenneth Getty was the oan ae oe MUMPS VACCINE Q. Is there o cine thet will p builders for Jesus Christ, tak-| from mumps? ie on bates from esish 4. been available for the past few years. Unfort- We are all one in Him. India, unately, it gives protection for only about a yeor. A live-virus vaccine, which is expected to give Mrs. Carman Westlake and ; ; Mrs. George DeLany sang a next several years. The Russians claifn to have duet "Looking into the face of| perfected such a vaccine but if doesn't meet U.S. the meeting in prayer. | : VON | WHY OPERATIONS ARE The February meeting of the EXPLAINED hes p Me eM a4 « the| ity Hall wi rr. 3, ow: ' me to @ 9 who thet my sell presiding. The minutes thyroid be removed, | was willing onl he began telli it thi thet rong. Helen Raddy, and the treemt| ing me all the things that could go w '; er's report was given by Mr all this. necessary? F. A. Mcliveen. A. It is necessary and it isn't done to frighten Oshawa Branch of the VON wil!) legal! right to harm a person. But in oll operations be held March 11 at 5 p.m. in| there is a certain amount of risk and this risk the board room of the City Hall must be explained to, and accepted by, the pat- to attend, the patient may lose his voice through no ee f the surgeon. This is an accasional aftermat The Whitby and Oshawa . t Gianch nufies are now sharing! of thyroid surgery and the patient must agree to c sibility for things over which he hos no control. Miss Isobel Sorley the nurse It is for such reasons that doctors explain: what in charge reported that the) could happen. The patient can then weigh the total number of visits in Janu- the treatment. ber of patients were 69 of which, 19 were admitted during the) month. Our prescription prices provide safe, sure awa General Hospital observed! economy in combination with quality. the morning service for two} days each. | DONALD TRAVEL SERVICE OSHAWA -- WHITBY -- BROOKLIN 366 DUNDAS ST. EAST WHITBY 668-3304 364 Wilson Rd. A RUDY'S $.-- 728-7021 COLUMN If your organization is holding a bazaar, bingo, turkey shoot, dance, rummage sale, business meeting, fair, tea, bridge, euchre, fashion show, or in fact any event which you wish to let the general public as well as your members know the date, place and time, etc... , YOUR QUICKEST, MOST ECONOMICAL AND EFFICIENT WAY IS TO HAVE THE OSHAWA TIMES PUBLISH YOUR MESSAGE IN THE COMING EVENTS COLUMN YOUR COMING EVENTS NOTICE REACHES OVER 19,000 HOMES DAILY Oshawe's Only EXCLUSIVE HAIRSTYLING FOR MEN Berber Shop featuring: @ Heirstyling @ Hole Colouring Wcilr Pieces @ Trichology @ Perms OPEN EVERY FRIDAY 'TIL 9 P.M. @ FREE DELIVERY @ BOOK THROUGH-- MEADOWS TRAVEL SERVICE 22 SIMCOE ST. SOUTH OSHAWA 723-9441 Just Phone 723-3492 And Ask For An Adwriter