Oshawa Times (1958-), 19 Apr 1967, p. 13

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APLESS RAS BRA, JANTZEN famous names te, in short end 7o OFF » PRICE DLAI, 'IBRE lia ideas SELECTION ia HATS suit everyone, s to 19.95 PRICE maid, Ledy Anne, 88 IRT | Madras losure 288 -.., 8.88 ANTS 88 DUPONT LON KETS ent, stain resis- idian Product. . 7.95 34 -- 44 / ( Mr. And Mrs. 'Tony' Esposito Honored On 25th Anniversary Some 250 guests attended a dinner and dance in the Kins- men Community Centre on Sat- urday night celebrating the sil- ver wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. Anthony N. (Tony) Esposito. Jack Menzie performed duties of master of ceremonies and the toast to the couple was proposed by the best man, Wil- liam Ballan. A toast was also proposed by Mrs. Rose Capilano, sister of the bridegroom and the _ Honorable Michael Starr ex- tended good wishes. 'Mr.' and = Mrs. Esposito's daughters, Mrs, "Ted". Bar- noski (Nancy) and Miss Toni- Marie Esposito presented their the} parents with a chest of. silver flatware. Roses decorated the head table which was centred by a four-tier anniversary cake made by Mrs. Esposito's sister- in-law, Mrs. Harry Clemens. | Mrs. Esposito is the former {Mary Clemens 6f Oshawa which has been the couple's home since their. marriage here twenty - five years ago. They have two daughters and one grandchild. Mr. Esposito is a member of \Oshawa Rotary Club, Oshawa |Golf Club and'a director of the |Oshawa Branch of the Victorian |Order of Nurses: Guests were present from Windsor, Toronto and Peter- borough. Wemen THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, April 19, 1967 73) . | Active Community Life Paved Way To Success For New Senator PORT COLBORNE, Ont. (CP) Canada's newest woman sen- ator is a jill-of-all-trades who lives ih a home she designed herself and whose busy life has included stretches as a cement plant shipper and hockey player. : Mary Kinnear, whose appoint-| ment to the Senate April 6 re- stored the female membership in the upper house to five, is, a lifelong Liberal who got her first taste of politics in the daily conversation around the dining room table at home. She has been an active be- hind - the - scenes worker since she joined the Port Colborne Women's Liberal Association in 1921, never thinking in those days that she would one day become president of the Na- tional Federation of Liberal Women. Her success in the admin: istrative side of the political scene was hardly surprising, however, to those who recog- nized her ability in the years after the First World War. From 1919 to 1929 she held the position of shipper at the Can- ada Cement Co. plant here, a responsibility rarely entrusted to a woman. HEADED VON She also headed the Port Col- borne Girls' Club which spon- sored university extension lec- tures, plays, concerts, dances and scholarships. During the Second World War she directed the Red Cross blood donor pro- gram, headed the Port Colborne Hospital Women's Auxiliary, the Busi and Professional Wom- en's club and the Victorian Or- der of Nurses. She was also active in sports, serving as secretary of the women's section of the Port Col- borne golf club and playing left wing for the town's women's hockey team. She also enjoyed swimming, ice skating and ten- nis. In all these activities she per- formed with a cool and precise sense of direction, a courteous but no-nonsense administrator. Behind her array of activities lay the overriding conviction that women must play an in- creasingly larger role in public life. She has labored indefati- gably to encourage them to) accept the challenge. { | "I value the effort of the |Business and Professional Wom- jen's Association in assisting women to reach desired goals, jand I believe every citizen! should be a student of politics." |ALMOST QUIT There was a time, however, when she thought seriously of giving up her club and political activity. That was 17 years ago when her late husband, Robert Kinnear, manager at the Maple |Leaf Milling Co., became ill. Robert Kinnear knew how, |dedicated his wife was to public) 'affairs and urged her to continue with her outside interests. He died in 1954. They had no chil-} dren. | With an interest in Liberal) party affairs inherited from her staunchly Liberal parents, Mrs. Kinnear advanced through vari- ous local, riding and regional organizations to become presi- dent of the Ontario Libera? Women's Association in 1952. From 1959 to 1963 she was president of the national federa- tion and now is an honorary life member of that body. She also served on the executive of the National Liberal Federation. Senator Kinnear lives in a gracious two-storey brick home overlooking Lake Erie and the entrance to Port Colborne har- bor. Visitors to the well-ap- pointed residence are surprised when they learn that Mrs. Kin- near designed the home. DESIGNED COTTAGE But it's not her only experi- ment with building. She de- signed and supervised construc- tion of a beautiful summer cot- tage she and her husband had erected at Reeb's Bay in the Lake Erie summer colony. Mrs. Kinnear describes her appointment to the Senate in modest terms. "This distinction recognizes the contribution of all women to public affairs, and particularly the Women's Liberal Federation of Canada,"' she says. There were five women in the Senate until Marianna Jodoin of Quebec retired a year ago. Mrs. Kinnear joins Muriel Fergusson of New Brunswick, Olive Irvine of Manitoba, Josie Quart of Que- bec and Elsie Inman of Prince Edward Island in the Red Chamber. | CHILD GUIDANCE Children's Desire To Leam Developed By Proper Guidance By GARRY C. MYERS, PhD | The parent of practically any| child under the age of 2, 4 or 5 must have observed his eager-, ness to learn. He reveals this eagerness by exploring alll around him, by manipulating) anything he can get into his hands, by listening to new; sounds and trying to see new| things beyond his view. How often he will say, 'I want to see.' He is happy when we lift him to where he can see or bring things out of his sight into, his view. | As soon as the child can ges-| ture or grunt, he begins to ask) questions and never ceases to} show his curiosity. How wonder-| » ful when his parents and others) kindly and patiently help him gain the new knowledge and ex- . perience he is forever seeking. A mother writes from Phila- delphia: "IT am extremely interested in aiding my daughter, 2, in her thirst for knowledge. She has often asked that I teach her to read. I hesitate, as I do not feel qualified without some expert advice. | "She has the ability to mem- orize stories read to her only once, She enjoys this type of entertainment more than any other. Therefore, I would like to satisfy her wish to learn to whatever point is desirable at her young age. "Can you offer any advice i stimulation and learning at home?" | CONTINUE READING My reply in part: You are a wise mother tol understand the great thirst of that little child of yours, to learn. It is good that you have) been reading to her. Just go on| reading and reading to her daily, several times a day. Be glad when she voluntarily tells back what you read but don't make this your chief purpose in reading to her. Though she may want to read the same selec- tions over and over again, intro- duce to her very gradually new WILLIAM BALLAN, LE Anna Kosub, 6, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gregory Kosub, Dunkirk avenue, this year's "Tammy," sells the first ticket to the an- nual "Timmy. Charity Ball," to the Honorable Michael Starr. Looking on is Mrs. Claude Vipond, questions kindly. If she' wants to know what a certain word on the page says, tell her. But don't ask her to name a word |you point to. You say she wants you to teach her to read? Is this a true wish of her own or a wish some one has induced in her? If you feel sure this wish is really hers you might call to her attention street signs, signs at a store, and labels on food packages. | Don't be in a hurry to give her formal instructions in reading. KEEP HER INTERESTED You need have no fears that you will teach your daughter in wrong ways so long as she is ahead of you in her wish to learn, and you don't pull her interest by making any of her learning experiences unpleasant selections which are a bit older | or boring. Let her success and in content and vocabulary. Be- fore she enters the first grade} you then may be reading to her materials hard enough for the fourth or fith grade: child to read. Answer all your daughter's continued interest guide you. After another year or so, if she still shows so much eager- ness to learn to read, try this with her: Reread to your daughter one of the stories she likes most and Ae ae ticket convener for the ball which is to be held at the Carousel Inn, May 5, spon- sored by the Women's Wel- fare League. Proceeds will be turned over to the Crip- pled Children's School and Treatment Centre. can read word for word from memory but without connecting | what she says with the words, | |phrases and sentences on the) \pages. As you read slowly, run' your finger under the words of la few phrases and sentences. Help her connect these words with what they say. Quit as | soon as her interest lags. Pro- vide her with alphabet blocks hoping at play she may learn |the letters. Later she may have fun learning and writing letters jon your typewriter. It is doubt- jful whether you should have her 'now spell out words. | Encourage your interest in sounds about her, especially when she _ imitates them. Induce her to count ob- jjects up to 10, or so. When she learns to read be sure not to show off her exploits to children' or adults. In the | meanwhile encourage her to jto have lots of fun with other children of her age and to make |things with her hands--to draw, |paint, mold from clay and cut and paste. daughter's AINS every time you move? ASPIRIN CAN YOU BETTER FAST! HELP geas FAST R LIEF HEADACHES COLDS 'TAMMY' SELLS FIRST TICKET TO BALL | 3 rea8 : ds : ; Aw" FT, WAS BEST ov AT THEE + s € CG fee Race | SPOSITO-CLEMENS WEDDING 25 YRS. AGO 2 Class Of '69 Guests Of OGH Alumnae The Alumnae Association of the Oshawa General Hospital | |School of Nursing entertained| the student nurses, class --of 1969, at McLaughlin Hall last Wednesday, A sing-song was! jled by Mrs. Joyce Stewart with! Mrs, Kay Black at the piano.! |Games of Charades and Court| Whist followed: Prizes in a} centennial theme, wrapped in the school colors of red and gold, were awarded the win- ners, Miss Fern Baker, Mrs.| Jean Warren, Miss P. Harder,| Miss Elizabeth Miller, Miss Lil-| lian Mayr. A sumptuous buffet was served on a table decorated) with red and gold flowers, | candles, streamers and cen- jtennial flags. . | Mrs. Mary Peterson, presi-| dent of the alumnae, and Mrs.) Jo Kietz, social convener,| thanked all members who help-| jed make this an enjoyable eve- |ning. : NE If You Want Opportunities You Must Work For Them By ROBERTA ROESCH another is what keeps. a woman going and gives her good oppor- | tunities," says Pat Patnier, of New York. With this as the premise that keeps her moving, Pat uses part of her energy to conduct a business finding apartments for celebrities and people with special tastes. She has served such clients as Elizabeth Taylor, Marlene Dietrich, Sophia Loren, Rock '\Hudson, Tab Hunter, Frank Sinatra, Hermione Gingold, Farley Granger and Paul New- |man and Joan Woodward. Pat also studies singing seri- ously, sandwiching lessons into her lunch hour and after work. And in-the time left over at the end of the day, she studies | oil painting and keeps up with her' reading. "T originally wanted to be a lyric soprano,"' Pat told me, "so I came to New York to study that. When I arrived, I took a job in a real estate office, so I could pay for my lessons. But my employer died and his fam- ily closed the office. "After that happened," she went on, "I décided to give up my music, but my mother be-! came very ill so I was forced to return to a job." YOUTHFUL DECISION As young Pat analyzed her potential she realized the only thing she knew was a little bit about real estate. So, with the | confidence of youth, she de- cided to begin her own business. To get started, she went out and searched for apartment listings for the clients she was sure she sould get. She promptly saw some spacious | empty rooms in an attractive old brownstone, knocked on the door of the building and sug- ested {o the owner that she rent them for an office The owner turned out to be Countess Cassini, mother of designer Oleg Cassini. After saying 'You're only a child," the countess took a liking to Pat, agreed to rent her the rooms, and even gave her a helping hand by listing with her an empty apartment that had once heen occupied by Gene Tierney. Food store heir Huntington Hartford came to see the apart- ment and Pat got her start with | celebrities. One person told an-| other about the attractive list- | in gs. | "In order to get started, I, also advertised, stayed in the| Office till midnight whenever it | was necessary and obtained a do-it-yourself education in real estate by reading and studying \ 120% Profit 10% Interest --Oshawa Times Photo No Investment USE YOUR BABY BONUS AT 0.D.H. FOR 10% BONUS STARTING THIS MONTH SEE PAGE 27 Per Annum! Each Month Jin "'Iust doing one thing after added, the public library," While she was busy doingijhem," Pat said. Pat these things Pat kept up her music. And that has paid off, too. Last year she made her debut in Carol Longone's "Op- leralogues" in New York's hotel | Pierre. "T don't think there are many opportunities in this world that you can't have if you work for : This coupon canbe 1 , the start of a wonderful * s European vacation This summer BOAC offers 'you a complete program of British and European car and coach tours. You'll find all the facts in three colourful new booklets. They're free and they give you @ all the details you need to plan your perfect summer vaca- tion, Be sure to get your copy. Fill in the coupon and mai if Piven to: BOAC, P.O. Box 426. 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