Bryar, N. i, ng and work. ve secretary ingredients," I asked her accomplish- jouble life preparation » Can be ap. to the other ield for that have always anywhere in | to prepare e organized; rough; think ake pride in be willing to d gain some. xperience,"* inliaiastlinins ' fre The gay colorful air of this cosy and tray cloth belies the ease with which they are made. The method set forth in the new, easy- to-follow instructions guar- antees that anyone can make the various shapes PATCHWORK COSY AND TRAY a fit together precisely and neatly. If you wish instruc- tions please send a self- addressed, stamped en- velope and ten cents to cover cost of handling, to the Needlework Department of this newspaper, asking for Leaflet No. E7570. Ont. Cabinet Minister Collects Rare Canadian TORONTO (CP) -- Whenever Ontario's minister of citizen- ship goes out of town fora speaking engagement, he invar- jable sets aside 10 minutes for a quick look in local antique shops. John Yaremko doesn't need much more time. His expert eye can spot a piece of antique glass in a second. And chances are he'll know more about its origin than the shopkeeper. '"'He's an astonishing collector with a very astute mind," says Gerald Stevens, a research as- sociate with the Canadiana de- partment of the Royal Ontario Museum, "He will examine a piece of glass. and surmise from his knowledge of Canadiana that it might relate to this or-that. "In my opinion he has the largest collection of Canadian pressed glass in Canada. It's a very select collection and rep- resents the majority of patterns known at the present time." Mr. Yaremko, who is also provincial secretary in the Pro- gressive Conservative govern- ment, started his hobby 10 years ago and now has several hundred pieces. "At the time we were rede- corating our home with Canadi- ana furniture and paintings. I did a fair amount of research on antiques and when I was reading about early American glass the thought struck me that there must be some pieces about of Canadian vintage." MAPLE LEAF PATTERNS A short time later Mrs. Yar- emko came home from an Antique Glass \ ¥ THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesdoy, Januory 4, 1967 17 CHILD GUIDANCE Most Parents Can Help Average Child With Spelling By GARRY C. MYERS, PhD | gle mistake than to spend time Unless the child 8, 10 or 12 over eight or ten with one or years old is rete colar | teore mistakes, mentally or has visual or hear-| oe % m ing defects, practically any par-| To repeat--He will not want to |keep at one word till he has) ent can help him at home to) mastered its spelling but hurry eer spell correctly a list of| gn to the next. Even while fife or six new words an eve: ctugving the word he may not sssiing jo _ |look carefully at it and its let- Suppose your child, 10, brings) ters while saying them. He will home a list of words he is sup-|jook away to try himself out too posed to learn tonight to spell.| soon. He will ask you to pro- First of all you will want to be/nounce the list long before he sure all these words on the list! has really studied them. are spelled correctly and writ-| 5 ten or printed neatly. You may, PRONOUNCING WORDS deem. it desirable{to type or| When any child asks you to write these words \down your-jhelp him with his spelling he self, preferably on gmall cards,|means he wants you to keep) one word to a card pronouncing the words and cor- Have him pronounce the first | Tecting him each time he makes word and then say the letters|@ mistake and to do this over in it in correct -order, while|@"d over till the mistakes disap- looking right at the word, He|Pear. Indeed, this is the way will want to go quickly to the| Most parents help a child with @ FOX'S STORE-WIDE CLEARANCE SALE @ @ FOX'S STORE-WIDE CLEARANCE SALE © next word. Have him stay with! this first word, pronounce and! spell it five or six times while) looking right at it. Then have} him write the word while look-| ing at it. | Have him do all this before trying to spell it from memory} while looking away from it. As he goes to the next word and CLOTH the next he should learn it in| like manner. Have him do all) this aloud till you are sure he has the correct pattern. WRITTEN TEST Refuse to pronounce the list for him to spell until he has studied all of them as directed. If he makes a single mistake or halts as he spells one of these words have him study it while looking right at it at least five times more. Be sure he lpoks carefully at the word while' do- ing 80. In case he spells orally the whole list correctly you might auction with a pitcher decorated | have him next write these words with maple leaves and the/as you pronounce them--the Yaremko pressed glass collec-|way he may be tested at school. tion got its start. The Yaremkos now have a If the list he brought home to learn seems to you to be un- his spelling... Instead of trying to help him in this way, the parent should merely heip him to help him-| self, to see that he correctly} studies each word often enough} to master its spelling. A parent} should see that he keeps work- ing on each word in. this way} before attacking the next and not look away until he has pro-| nounced this word, spelled it while looking at it, five or six times. The parent helps well when he or she pronounces the list just once after the child has correctly learned them. Any parent helps his child best at learning to spell a list of words when he guides him so that he never makes a single mistake. PARENTS' QUESTIONS | Q. Our daughter, 8, locks her| door as she leaves home. She} says she wants to keep her little) brothtr, 3, out of her room.| What should we do? | A. No doubt he does some harm to her possessions there.) Why not accept her right te pro-| tect them? However, it should} @ FOX'S STORE-WIDE CLEARANCE SALE @ great variety of pieces with the! juany long for him, prevail on| be possible for you to train him maple leaf motif, dnd research him to attack only part of the/not to go into her room while | by Mr. Stevens has traced this A ; i | : : ords, ignoring the rest tonight.|she is not there and thus pro-| pattere 10 Lee Untane seta It is better for him to learn to| vide the door with an invisible! ies--Sydenham Glass Co., Wal- spell four or five without a sin-|lock. } laceburg, and Jefferson Co., Toronto. : ' Many of Mr. Yaremko's fa-|keeping track of where the vorites are in the Pillar pat-|pieces are stored. Asked if she tern produced by the Lamont|had ever broken a piece, she Glass Co., Trenton, N.S., from|said, "Never." 1890 to 1902. "The only time I broke a "Anything with a maple leaf|piece was in an antique shop," or beaver design is almost cer-/Mr. Yaremko says., "I wasn't tain to be Canadiana," Mr.|interested in it anyway, but it Yaremko told a reporter. "This|cost me $7." PARSON MOVES WEST | SAINT JOHN, N.B. (CP)--| Rev. Harry A. Renfree has) sent in his resignation for June 30 as general secretary of the Atlantic provinces Baptist con- vention. He then will become executive minister of the Bap- tist Union in Western Canada. goblet has both designs on it plus an inscription around the base reading, St. Jean Baptiste, Quebec, 24 Juin, 1880. It's the hope of every collector to have one of these."' The piece he considers his rarest and most valuable is a small paperweight bearing the name, Sydenham Glass Co., across the front. "It's valuable because it's _ self-authenticat- ing. Someone' must have been very proud of it." He found the paperweight in an antique shop in Chatham, Ont. The majority of his pieces were turned up in Quebec, On- tario and the Maritimes. Mrs, Yaremko's favorite is a Rayed Heart butter dish, also considered rare. She found it herself at a church antique show in Kingston, Ont. Mrs. Yaremko is in charge of cataloguing the glass and Set your table Tonight with Beauty that lives forever and ot FOR ONLY Clearance Safe Of MEN'S and BOYS' BRAND NAME SWEATERS ! | The finest of fine knitwear, made facturer forbids us to use his name, These come in White, Ivy, Walnut, Grey, Black and Blue. S, M, L, XL. GET AN EXTRA SWEATER Orlon and Lambswool. Manu- 1.00 MORE ! { USE YOUR CREDIT @. Vivant @ Young Love Open to 9 p.m. Friday bead 2 LOCATIONS ' 4 36 KING ST. EAST © DOWNTOWN OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE and OSHAWA Open to 9 p.m. Thurs. and Fri, STERLING SILVER FLATWARE _ Jan. 3 Through Jan. 21 3 Famous Makers Available @ FOX'S STORE-WIDE CLEARANCE SALE © FIRST SECOND You INTERNATIONAL WALLACE | SWEATER SWEATER . 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