iG ON GLASS f the Trinidad and irenada pavilion at THE OSHAWA TIMES, Saturday, May 13, 1967 J] kimono. And Japanese Hapl coats are translated into shortie nightgowns by Gern-eich. Claire Haddad of Toronto has designed a bias-cut tent cover- up in smash stripes in silk-and- crylic fibre with the long hand- erchief hemline caught at an- length to givewrn..T oot , woh sz aoige ene JOS JOURNAL Ingenious Nightgowns Double oe o BY JO ALDW!NCKLE . ; | : 5 FOR PROFIT a 3 For Evening At-Home Events uthorities hope to Women's Editor 00 from the sale of The Times to reproduce the ymbol, ING PAIN By MARGARET NESS thing like a tennis dress and is NEW YORK (CP)--The night-|topped by a smoking - jacket gown now is so sophisticated|robe. y that if you are daring enough| For sheer elegance you can-|' you can wear It to evening and|not overlook Pauline Trigere's 8 60 MANY THINGS going at-home events without causing|U8der-pinnings to complement on this week, I'm whirling raising project for the stu- dents' performing trip to rs rely on Baby. ORA-JEL ain's gone. Easy to use, NES pro- just about eased out of my second concert tonight at Mc- ; q ? ed lat neck from watching the Gold- Laughlin Collegiate. with the F faigmnce and sipiloceaniea| agin OH Sele cw Jere erat fer en Centennaires Air Show, so. support of the Canterbury egance and sophistication | studded. " r the whirling has been rather Singers. appear in lingerie, sleepwear} Fernando Sanchez, a designer e-jele erratic. and playtime shirt-and-shorts. |for Warner's, likes ruffles. Some of the floral flip petti- These appear in his matador Band he Bond's Expe like a dervish. The kink has Monday night brought the National Ballet and I was so happy to see a completely fill- ed house give the dancers an enthusiastic reception. This was the premiere performance of their eastern tour and Miss Celia Franca, the artistic di- rector, was flitting about back- stage, pencil and notebook in hand, but she had returned to Toronto before I could catch up with her. Did you know that the company brought their own floor covering with them? They find most stages are too slippery, so they take their own covering of heavy, battleship linoleum. Who was thinking of lino- leum while that delightful chamber orchestra was play- ing? Just think, we had Strauss, Bach, Schubert, Mo- zart and Rossini exquisitely played and interpreted by the lithe and graceful movements of the dancers. TUESDAY brought the air show and if the ballet pleased the eye and ear, the air show stirred the blood. When the first Voodoo zoomed in at low level, rending the air with the roar of ten express trains and trailing blood-red vapor, I automatically ducked to the crouch position that became second nature in the days of land mines and buzz bombs. The jets shattered the heavens, but the flight forma- tions were pictures of pre- cision flying. How strange by comparison was the old open cockpit bi-plane that labor- iously climbed high, like a soaring bedstead, to loop the loop and do a "falling leaf". That, to me, was really fly- Expo. The band is giving a ON SUNDAY the Royal Ca- nadian Sea Cadet Corps "Drake", the Navy League Cadets 'Hawkins', the Sea Rangers "SRS Crusader" and the Oshawa and district Naval Veterans' Club are combining in an inspection drill and change of command ceremony in the Civic Audi- torium, so get your sea-legs going and have a look at the lads in navy blue. May be your last chance.. It won't be long before they all look like Robin Hood's merry men in suits of Lincoln green. Two bells is the hour (1:00 p.m. to land-lubbers) to get a good seat. Next Wednesday and Thurs- day nights, starting at 7:30, the Oshawa Public Schools will be presenting their Cen- tennial Celebration in the Civic Auditorium. The chil- dren are bursting with excite- ment and from what I hear the teachers have built a "really big shew'. MEANWHILE, the best or- ganized homemakers are get- ting ahead with their spring cleaning because they know that someday soon it will really be spring. They will be the careful ants and the rest of us, giddy grasshoppers, Well, anyway, the Simcoe Hall Boys' Club at Eastview is most anxious to start a li- brary. The club is asking for all kinds of books, adults, children's, paper backs and periodicals to hold a Book Fair. The Book Fair will be held May 27 from 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. and the proceeds will buy new books to start the library they hope to as- HAPPY MOTHER'S DAY TO ALL MOTHERS Mothers all over the world will be honored tomorrow, mother's death in 1905, fought for nine years to es- of the United States of Am- erica proclaimed the second coats could even pass as day- Warner's short- sleeved T-shirt and tiny mini- in antron and nylon, = |were previewed as suitable for partying or sleeping. Warner's also '|floor-length nightgown, bias-cut in dacron crepe chiffon, the full- falling from a gathered '| circlet-neckband that leaves the + |shoulders exposed. No one 4|would question its appearance -jat a dance. Vassarette's short sleep gown in floral antron 'tri- *"jcot has party manners with its wide bateau neckline and its stem-tie in front creating an time dresses, shorts, ness _jempire look. || Rudi >| wi th oriental influence blue bra. In Italy, Count Emilio Pucci has transferred some of the ab- stract prints used in his jersey dresses over to lingerie. One such short nightgown is some- introduced a Gernreich's nightgown is no more bizarre for a semi-formal occasion than many of his cou- '|ture clothes. This temple-bell- sleeved, dacron - and - cotton shortie is in a chrysanthemum print with a high-riding obi band in moon dots. JEWELLED BRA Gernreich has designed: a whole oriental - inspired collec- tion in these prints for Exquis- ite, including halter bras and petti-slips with hip-hugger cuffs. Another outfit that Gernreich - thimself tags as i |brunch, bed or the beach is a three-piecer of blue-polka-dotted mini-shirt, brief pink pants and suitable for is observed throughout the world so that the scene PAY MORE FOR FOOD her famous crepes. The match- sleepshirt, floor-length, with the a bullfighter's shirt. t He also introduced a ruffled "breakfast dress" for at-home mornings. But it certainly could have a dual life as sleepwear, too. His ruffled hemline flounces| | high in front and dips in the|} back, in the tradition of the fa- mous flamenco dancer's cos-| tume. EAST EXERTS INFLUENCE The Eastern look that is in- vading every aspect of fashions turns up in sleepwear and lingerie too. Warner's has its karate jumpsuit in orange with} a wide band of turquoise, its lotus nrint half-slip, shift and) Great Ontario flamenco gown described as a't! Opening lead--eight of clubs. and still come out whole. AUTOMATIC -- ONE -- (eee dummy, Adventure Vacations You run into a bad trump dis- tribution once in a while, but in a surprising number of cases you can overcome the bad luck For example, take this hand where West led a club to the ka! ap above will be repeated in thousands of homes, --Photo by Malak, Ottawa Sunday in May to be set aside as Mother's Day. The idea spread rapidly and now Canadians pay 20 per cent of disposable income for food compared with 18 per cent in the United States. tablish a day to honor moth- ers. Success was. achieved when in 1910 the President thanks to the late Miss Anna M. Jarvis of Philadelphia, who, following her own semble. Please clear out all those old books that no one reads anymore and turn them over to the Boys' Club. A ing and the courage of those first airmen still inspires me. All aviation takes a special kind of courage, but those "We had friends that are talking to those parents will do first ex perimentors really dared. telephone call to Simcoe Hall will bring someone to pick CHILD GUIDANCE dear to us visit us with their no good. They naturally sup- LAND IS RICH Swaziland, one- of Africa's two boys 4 and 5%. Our son them up. . pose that your son, 6, should|smallest countries, has one of ing for WEDNESDAY brought the @ayest tea party in many a year when the Women's Aux- iliary of the Oshawa General Hospital held its Diamond Jubilee Tea at the Hotel Gen- The centennial costume ball at the Toronto Art Gallery "Silver Environment 2067 AD" was most spectacular. On arrival, guests walked through a silver cave into a Children Should Be Taught Self - Defence At Early Age was playing on the floor with- out conversation with them and back and then again mouth. The teeth were loose and bleeding. The mother ne ably could add here the rest of be able jone of them hit our son in the|against in his| children. to protect those much younger himself|the world's mines and huge iron and coal reserves, largest asbestos From the foregoing you prob- THE 1967 STYLES IN ef osha. The fresh flowers, dec- shimmering, luminous world 'YY C. MYERS, PhD jhimself, lest as he fails and\nothing except at his age mate orations and delicacies were created entirely from silver "tion a wardert question a grows more fearful and dis-\could not be told to do anything.|"* -- SPORTSWEAR ry worthwhile f perfect and the ladies com- vinyl and foil. Gigantic mo- |, rent may ask is, "How can I|couraged. Aim to have him be) asked that no more fighting]ANSWERING QUESTIONS ee ' fr een bccaite pen a oe hd ee teach my child to defend him-|self-defensive when he thinks| vould carry fy! Lk son just) @. Our son, 8, who does well/f @ 'Sabre' Slims Enjoy dee = eir prettiest ensembles. One an reads rotated above the |-4i¢9" 'This child be 3, 5,/he can succeed. ung his head in tears. at school, has no: regard for. a ' injoy at Stratford Festival Bg ao He ae that p.m. the other|time or doing things when told. © 'Sabre' Shorts future. er. hat, a confection of flowers, was flown in from New York, arriving just in time. sculpture court. Silver birch 10 or older. He is pathetic. trees, sprouting thousands of hand-cut silver leaves, sur- Usually when another child of his size or age or much smaller CHILD WILL LEARN Get your child to be often "Again |child hit |the neck because our son did him in the eye and/What can we do? A. Set just a few easy chores @ 'Cole' Swim Suits Now on Display An Adventure Vacation in Land between the Lakes villages and historic places LEARN On Thursday, the McLaugh- rounded a fountain. Galleries his things|With other children of about his/not give up the toy he was|, td lari te 'ita lin Collegiate Band presented and corridors sparkled with /?7¢ Youngel grabs tis DOR own age and size, hoping he/playing with at the very second egg Nek gals Bg Magnet WARD'S the Land between the Lakes --_ like Hamilton's Dundurn HAND the first of its Music Nights silver wall panels, streamers [4, hurting him physically in| Wil learn to hit back with his/the child demanded it. Our son|have to tell him. Set an effec- Simcoe St. et Athol will lavish you with Castle. Modern in- and received a standing ova- and 'geometric = sculpture loner ways, he merely cries or|bare hands, while you still curbiagain just cried and ran from|tive penalty. like sitting un- ity Si 9 riches--with the golden fruit- dustrial wonders like Sarnia' ool term closes. tion from a packed audience. forms. Colored lights glinted ainecte matna, He-won't dole him in using weapons. Every|the room because he was hurt. Buen for Halk: ah hoorcit Quality Since 191 g ; ders s rnia's Directed by Michael Crosbie, throughout, making costumes : ie ing|time he takes a stand and wins,|His eye swelled but no serious ; ; 725-1151 fulness of the land, with skyscraper-sized chemistry elce of subjects A » 3 : thing to defend himself. Seeing iaud: i | won't be jawing--for each dere- onl lewels aid th rite les Six, Seven, the combined Senior and Jun- glitter, glimmer and glow. how scared he is, other children|#PPlau m, jharm was done. ietioh. tural jewels an a weal 'sets and Douglas Point's - FREE copy of ing ee 2 aro, and. ome snaren ge all the |may constantly tease and tor-| A mother from Wisconsin) "We are in ey contact es of entertainments--from nuclearpower. Birdsanctuaries gave a solid performance and French conversation going on |1.78 him. writes of her son, 6 Rar Dele ~~ agers re the sun-gilded profusion of and pony rides. Harvest or Sense" or 5S, 1967 gister Now al 725-3375 was supported by the Barber- shop Chorus. During the eve- ning Mayor Ernest Marks was presented with a record- ing the band has made. A limited number of these long- play records are on sale at Alto Music Supply as a fund- has been voiced by the die- hards. It's all very simple. The Quebecker says 'Where is my 'at?"' and the Ontarian, 'Where am I at?" so.it's all a question of putting the em- phasis on the right syllable. Not to worry. Ontario Government Publishes : Booklet 'Law And The Woman' TORONTO (CP)--In Ontario it is a punishable offence to leave a child under 10 un- attended for an unreasonable length of time. A daughter who is married is not relieved of responsibility for a parent who is destitute or unable to maintain himself. If her husband can afford it, she can be obliged by law to provide support. A housewife who employs do- mestic help must deduct income taxes and Canada Pension Plan contributions if she pays the employee $600 or more a year. These are samples of the spelling out, in layman's terms, of laws as they affect women in Ontario in a pamphlet called Law and the Woman in Ontario. It was recently published by the women's bureau of the Ontario department of labor. PROVIDES A START The bureau's research officer, Jo-Ann Poglitsh, who prepared the booklet, says it was done in response to public demand. Both individuals and organiza- fions have asked if there was such a thing. "We started with the statute] © WORLD OF Beauty AWAITS YOU HERE! Remove superfluous hair per- manently from face, arms, legs with ELECTROLYSIS Kree Imperial Deluxe, gentle, fast by Electrolysis. MARIE MURDUFF Will be in Oshawa at the Gen- oshe Hotel May 15, 16, 17. PHONE 723-4641 abe books and went to the child wel- fare and attorney general's de- partments and others. It wasn't enough just to put the laws into layman's language, you would end up writing a big fat legal text if you went into it all. "This is just to give some idea of what legal rights and re- sponsibilities are, If a woman doesn't know anything about them, this will tell her how to start, perhaps give her a lead for specific questions. "We are not a legal aid de- partment. We hope the book will tell them little things they might have to do--or the re- verse--and they can go on from there for legal aid." The booklet is available for 25 cents at the bureau, 74 Vic- toria St., Toronto. As a rule, from the time this youngster could toddle his par- ents tried to teach him never to fight, even in self - defence. When as time goes on they see how this child suffers from fear of other children, even of chil- dren much weaker and younger than himself, they begin to wish they had taught him to look after himself. Many a parent writes me about such a prob- lem and I'm often hard-put-to in trying to advise them. Their problem is terrific and may take enormous skill and months and years for them to solve or approach solution. Suppose you face this prob- lem. It will do no good to cry over spilled milk or to condemn yourself. You did what seemed best to you at the time. You two parents are going to try now to work out together as well as you are able a program for. building gradually in this child a growing desire and suf- ficient skills for defending him- self and his own rights. You can't do this all at once. It may take weeks, months or years before you see much progress. Don't let yourself be dis- gusted with the child, and scold or shame him for his apparent cowardice. Don't try to force him to take a stand against a child larger and stronger than "Please help us in training our son, 6, to defend himself. We have always told him not to fight and now we have come to the point we feel he must, once he is struck by another child. We do not know just how to handle the situation at his age though. asked the people to correct their children but they sort of grinned and said, 'That's chil- dren for you.' We know it does ino good to talk any further to them." | My reply in part: ! 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