Oshawa Times (1958-), 13 Oct 1967, p. 10

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12 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Friday, October 13, 1967 Mother Should Home Nursing Course Relieves Pressure On Trained Personnel By MARILYN ARGUE OTTAWA _ (CP)--More patients are spending more time at home because of the shortage of hospital beds and trained nurses. And although they may be comforted by familiar surroundings, they still need good nursing care, says Margaret Hunter. That's where the amateur nurse comes in. Miss Hunter, chief nursing consultant with St. John Ambulance, says her organization's eight-week home nursing course has been planned to meet this need. Many people are unfamiliar with basic nursing procedures and are afraid of having to cope with an ailing relative, she says. The course can give them the confidence they lack. "And it is a proven fact that old people and children recover much more quickly if they can be cared for at home, by someone they know." Miss Hunter is a tall, attractive woman with dark grey hair and brown eyes. A native of Winnipeg, she was formerly director of nursing at the Canadian Armed Forces hospital in Kingston, Ont. MEN TAKE COURSE Since her appointment to St. John Ambulance two years ago, she has travelled across Canada and into the Yukon meeting the organiza- tion's provincial nursing con- sultants. She says more than 9,000 MARGARET HUNTER "So many young families available from these people do in time of emergency or large-scale disaster. Another with making the home safe and treating minor-accident injuries. COST NOMINAL Miss Hunter says the course is not only valuable comed into volunteer work in hospitals, nursery schools and old people's homes. Courses are arranged by persons took the home nurs- provincial St. _ John Ambu- ing and child care course lance organizations wherever offered by St. John last year. there is a demand. Miss Many were teen-agers. Girl Hunter says they may be Guides are encouraged to join the classes, and babysitters also find them useful. Men are also among the students. Often they are fathers with a chronically ill child or wife. Besides practical nursing, the course teaches "'intelli- gent use of agencies" such as the Victorian Order of Nurses, local hospitals, fire department and the family doctor. oe Renwicks Seek To Be First House, or in a town hall or school auditorium. Instruction is always given by a nurse, and the associa- tion is anxious to find more nurses to teach the course. A booklet covering everything taught is given each student. Cost of the sessions, usually held once a week for eight weeks, varies from province to province, but is always nominal, Miss Hunter says. don't know what services are | Students are taught what to | section of the course deals | for mothers and babysitters. | Graduates are gratefully wel- | nurses, in the local St. John | Inspect Schools By ELEANOR ROSS It's a wise mother who doesn't shy away from an inspection of the school that her children attend. She takes care to send the youngsters off to school looking neat and clear, and the school surroundings and facilities snould be geared to maintain that same clean appearance, HESITANT CRITICS appear critical of conditions in the cafeteria, classrooms, ha'ls, and washrooms, 'Then there are jmothers who feel that they are far too busy. and occupied to take the time to inspect the school. Either attitude is unwise, if not unfortunate, because home and school must work together to set high standards of cleanli- ness and to make sure that children live up to these stand- ard Teachers are just as eager as mothers to see clean, sensibly dressed pupils in the classroom. It makes for better disci and order. They bless parents who instill the virtues of per- Some mothers hesitate tojsonal cleanliness in their chil- dren, and are grateful when the children have been taught orderliness home. to-date equipment and wash. rooms on the premises, but All school facilities want up- raise their voices in order to make the teachers' goals mate- rialize. school begins, mothers should s. visit school. Then, at the first PTA meeting, if something has|i to be done, the matter can be put on the agenda. must So, as soon as possible after ings is, of course, the responsi- bility of the school administra-|scrubbed as tion and the school board. Nev- ertheless, mothers have a right to know what the afford in the way of sanitary facilities. The simple business of hand washing is far too The upkeep of school build-|goes for hot water supply and per-cent of working wives earg 'URES CLOSED bw " ees than $3,000 a year, Recent figures show that 79- towels, Are the clean as buildings water? mportant to skip over lightly. ms they |should be? Are all the cafeteria facilities kept as ciean as possi- ble, and dishes and tableware sterilized in plenty of hot These are small things per- haps, but added up, they are mighty important for good Is there enough soap? Same'health. and neatness at | RE-ELECT B WALKER | CONSERVATIVE Gwe , Sounds of the NOW Generation THE BIG FUN DANCE Friday, Oct. (3th ONE EYED Y HOTEL LANCASTER : hh coe PPEARING OSHAWA oa, wae FIREFIGHTERS' Silver Pine Sweethearts 3 GIRL ENTERTAINERS ANNUAL BALL Sat., Oct. 14th SOLD OUT! Hayley Mills isn't playing kids games, anymore. "Speaks clearly and truly to a whole new generation of long-haired, soft-eyed kids who are beginning to discover that a man is not a man because he is tough, or queer because he is tender." Newsweek Magaz ommended as LT ENTERTAINMENT -The BOULTING BROTHERS Production the family way Shown Today at 7:10 and 9:20 -- Doors Open 6:30 2») ODEON THEATRE A 39 KING ST. E. -- PHONE 725-5833 AD Laff Along With THE SHAMROCKS "You've Never HAD So Much Fun" @ 5 Shows Nightly @ Fully Licensed KING ST OSHAWA First there was man... woman,..and b | MILLA! NEARS BS. AT THE ESTABLISHED HOME Of Country & Western MUSIC IN OSHAWA CHILDREN 30° Up to 2 P.M. ODEON MOVIE CLUB Doors Open 12:30 P.M. Show Starts et 1:00 P.M. "GUN FOR A COWARD" AND COLOR CARTOON ALSO FREE PRIZES end POPCORN Odeon 52 | | | Man - Wife To Win Election By CAROL ANDERSON you ask to see the woman of! TORONTO (CP)--James Ren.|the house. | wick and his wife, Margaret,,) Women are an untapped! hope to make Ontario politicaljsource of talent for the NDP,| history in next Tuesday's prov-|says Mrs. Renwick. If they can| incial election. be reached, the response usual- ew Democratic Party|!y is rewarding. "nan want to be the first "Besides, there comes a time husband and wife to win seats|in a woman's life when she in the same election. finds she needs something more to do than run a house. When ee et her children are grown up and tics, but few husbands and|her husband becomes more suc- wives have turned the trick,|CeSsful and does not need her as much, she looks for some- Ee ete Sores Senne was thing to do. Politics can be a| rewarding answer." | While Mr. Renwick cam-| paigned for both the Liberals} and Conservatives before join-| ing the NDP, Mrs. Renwick is a} one-party woman. | When Mr. Renwick decided to} contest the Riverdale byelec-'| tion, his wife decided to join in on a part-time basis. But she was so taken with the cam- paign that she became a full-/ time helper. In the 1965 federal election,| she was asked to substitute for/| NDP candidate Ed Phillips at] what was described as a tea' the election of newspaper man Barry Mather to a Commons seat in 1964 while his wife, Camille, was a sitting member in the British Columbia legisla- ture. The Mathers also were NDP candidates. While the Renwicks must co- ordinate some phases of their campaigns--they share the family car--they stress they are running as individuals. "We aren't a team," says Mrs. Renwick. "Even when I canvassed for Jim in 1964, we} wouldn't work the same street. "Jim, being a lawyer, goes at things in a factual way, but an I'm more emotional. Quite\PAy os oy ; | often we arrive at the same|,,9"@ enjoyed every minute of conclusion but we have differ-|tne action and decided to take ent ways of getting there." jon politics full time. He sought) " i jthe. Scarborough Centre nomi-| 3-WAY FIGHT nation which thrust her into the James Renwick, NDP nation-|current campaign BRITONS David Whitfield Captial Record Star Singing his million seller song "Cora Mia" Oshawa Old Country Club Members Auditorium Box Office Bolahood's Sportshaven Bishop's Sporting Goods The Disc Shop Marty's Record Bor Bus Service Oshawa 7:00 - 7:30 - 8:00 P.M. Return After Show i Ajax The Centre Smoke Shop ON TOUR end many Irish Ballads Britain's Outstanding Stage Personalities Also Billy Liston and Jimmy Kerr, Scotch Comedions Sponsored by 'Old Country Club of Oshawa and District" THURS., OCT. 19th - 8 P.M. TICKET PRICES Adults $2.50 @ Children $1.00 Tickets on Sale Bowmanville Jury & Lovell Travel Agency Whitby Whitby Arena aie Ruby Murray Who Made Famous "Softly, Softly" ' THIS WEEK Selecting: -- "MISS Candidates:-- JANICE FAINT BONNIE McLEOD ANN FERGUSON KAREN EDMUNDS RHONDA DEWLAND Vote for the candidate of your choice Voting Closes at 10:00 P.M. FEATURING ... LITT and RED FEATHER" JANICE ABBOT BETTY JENKINS LYNN O'BRIEN ANITA ROTER LE CAESAR THE CONSULS SATURDAY, OCT. 14th... af8:30 P.M, ADMISSION: -- 75¢ Members -- $1.00 Non-Members Membership Cards on Sale at $1.00 each 0.C.V.I. AUDITORIUM DRESS:--- SHIRT AND TIE -- NO BLUE JEANS al president, seeks re-election in a three-way fight for the Toronto Riverdale riding he won in a 1964 byelection. Mrs. | Renwick, an attractive red-} head, also faces two opponents in the suburban Scarborough! Centre constituency. One of Mrs. Renwick's oppo- nents is Conservative George | Peck, who beat Kenneth Ran-! ney of the NDP by 404 votes in the 1963 provincial election. Two candidates in one family | has not meant bankruptcy, says| Mrs. Renwick. All NDP candi- dates are on budgets and the) money comes from donations, | To hit the hustings, Mrs: Ren-| wick has arranged lunch-time | and after-school care for the| couple's only child, Margaret, A Toronto native, Mrs. Ren- wick, 44, found previous work) with an airline as an in-store | sales promoter, she prepared to meet the public. | She likes between 6,000 and 7,000 persons since winning her nominations | last December. | "When you go to the door, SPLASH ODSTS $15 | LEIGHTON BUZZARD, Eng- land (CP)--Bedfordshire sales- man Bruce Smith was wearing| his best suit to impress a cus- | tomer when Vivian Cairns drove through a puddle and soaked him to the skin. Bruce phoned the police and Vivian was fined $15 for careless driv- IZZA Phone 723-0241 or 728-0192 EPI'S STARTS TODAY! + KILLS TO LIVE! =e = JEAN SIMMONS : tN A MARTIN RACKIN propuction Only one can survive the... ROUGH NiGHT IN JERICHO 7-38 N GEORGE PEPPARD: DEAN MARTIN «LIVES TO KILLI Vai Si i NS bs Po 4 x >, f A bs re Ye FEATURE TIMES! -- 1:40--3:30--5:25 7:30--9:40 apse aa | te "x. AND NOW ... The Chicken Burger PHONE AHEAD 728-2291 Your Order Will For Immediate Take-Out McMURRAY'S DRIVE-IN RESTAURANT SIMCOE ST. N. at TAUNTON RD., OSHAWA McMURRAY"S WE LOVE McMURRAY'S and we're glad they're open again?' Home of the... @ Big "M" Burger ENGLISH STYLE @ Fish 'N Chips COUNTRY STYLE @ CHICKEN deliciously new Be Ready ee COLOR by DeLuxe e 'bo 1070 Production in Resocistion with i < STARR oS EORGE C. SCOTT-SUE LYON cine rosy HARRY MORGAN ALICE GHOSTLEY - ALBERT SALMI-IAGK ALBERTSON PICKENS tama Tow pnooocron FEATURE DAILY AT; SM 2:25 - 4:40 - 6:55 - 9:15 Regents CONTINUOUS FROM 2 P.M. BOS SECECCECCC CC CeCe d ¢ BEFORE Car Foll A fine of $151 30 days was. levi ald Rockbrune, W., when he w: careless driving fic court on We The crown's cated that whe police constable brune with a su 16, Rockbrune from his truck « while driving off The officer te followed Rockbri Street westboun 55 to 60 miles saw him change Signalling, cut ¢ Bown Reser BOWMANVILL a lengthy heari day Magistrate reserved judgme on the charge Brinkman that | a Bowmanville | ing cattle and pi; tial area. The court wa: cused purchased land, including a gog Street in 191 have plenty of children and shel stock. A. H. Stri copy of the byla 2, 1955, but de argued this was ; conforming use.' Mr. Brinkman owned four cow. 46 pigs, six ge turkeys. Apparen in five houses { gog Street, did cows, but the pig matter. Many co lodged but nothir Jacob Vander; 1955, he and his 35 acres on the Scugog Street at of the town. App! on the southerly remainder was | ture. His father | a year and then was erected on for the storage of In .1958, Mr. brought in son used the barn | them and the la: In 1961, 10 acres barn,. were sold man. The follov began to build uy 'aan inaehdeaenaiababimimianienenientl A If your prese ful deep-dow stands steadi indicator to : venient featt a trade-in thi Attach

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