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Oshawa Times (1958-), 10 Oct 1967, p. 16

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ee ee el me awa m eA ee eet et oe ee ee ee ee 16 TH OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, October 10, 1967 'Be Feminine And Enjoy Life' Mary Walpole Advises Women Two hundred smartly-dressec women in St. George's parist hall took Mary Walpole to thei: hearts when she spoke to them on The Many Faces of Womer following St. George's Guild luncheon last week. Fashion-wise Mary Walpole, a widely read columnist of The Globe and Mail is herself the epitome of the woman she de- scribed, wife, homemaker, housekeeper, mother and career woman. "A woman's role is much more exciting now than it was in grandmother's day," she said. "Being a woman is a great challenge today and women are meeting it head on with all banners flying." While nothing was as impor- tant as being a good wife and mother, the speaker added that the same wife and mother was expected to take an active part in the community, in school and church; to sit on committees; to raise money for charities; to be part tutor and chauffeur and to have a working know!l- edge of plumbing: interior dec orating and gardening. Meanwhile, she added, little woman's husband was looking for a hostess, a psychol- ogist and the girl he married On being feminine, Mrs. Wal- pole said that in the United States women dressed to please themselves while in Europe they dressed to please men. "The outside packaging is im portant," she said, "and if you are taken for granted, it's your own fault. "Listen to your voice. Correct it if it is strident or booming. Your. voice is part of your charm. Use it and your eyes and ears to show a sincere in- terest in others." \ject said that they disliked women who wasted time shop- ping and who fussed in restau- rants. "On the wonderful side," she said, '"'women can be a fragile as chiffon and as dur- lable as iron, They have execu- tive ability; courage in a crisis jand tenderness of heart. Let us skip our petty jealousies and be proud of being women." Mrs. Walpole was introduced iby Mrs. W. R. Hambly, lunch- eon convener and thanked by Mrs. Lionel Hind. | National CWL | Moves To Oppose Permitted Abortion' By KARIN MOSER MONTREAL (CP) --_ The the Catholic Women's League Tues- ---- day urged its 165,000 members to tell their federal representa- tives they oppose adoption of innocent permissive abortion legislation The 400 delegates attending a during closing sessions was one ¢ convention of the which urged the government to Roman Catholic reintroduce, or otherwise rec based sider, three. - day national women's organization, their resolution on a statement passed by last year's conven--make LSD a restricted drug! tion which termed a bortion.and its possession illegal. * Men questioned on the sub- ' a i "the taking of the life of an Amo earlier A BACKDROP of copies of her newspaper formed an apprapriate Mary Walpole, columnist of ' SES RS The Globe and Mail, when she addressed a women's bouquet of appreciation from Mrs, Lionel Hind, luncheon recently. She is right and compliments seen, centre, receiving a setting for from Mrs. W. R. Hambly, the convener, left. --Oshawa Times Photo time, effort and danger. Developments along these lines might combat | Find Risks, Thrills |{n Playgrounds Of The Future VANCOUVER (CP) -- Play- spirits craving risk and excite- school time, with ment, he said. p Dr. Banister said his thoughts| minutes of play, , apply to school programs as learning and so on. that otherwise involve much well as to large community recreational areas. He suggested that with the juvenile|new system of re¢reation delinquency by satisfying those/should come a division of students nay. ing 10 minutes of learning, 19 10 minutes of grounds of the future should be adventure parks that provide children with the thrills of drag racing and mountain climbing, says a physical educationist. Dr. Eric Banister of Simon Fraser University in Burnaby says the parks should be designed to satisfy craving for risk and excitement. This would be accomplished by artificial facilities for such purswits as scuba diving, skiing, cave exploring, moun- tain climbing and drag racing. "Just as space science devel- ops training methods and mate- rials to equip men for the haz- ards of space, so the special skills essential to the newer recreational pursuits should be|/® taught," said Dr. Banister. | He said such parks would be} controlled environments for teaching the skills of sports 7 BRAND NEW FALL ARRIVALS 463 RITSON RD. S. *19.95 Like Them To Be . CALL 725-3555 EDGAR'S DECOR CENTRE 34 KING ST. W. @ COLOR UNLIMITED CLEANIT SERVICE LTD. Dry Cleaning @ Shirt Laundering More foreign aid to underde-|cerning the sale and use of BB veloped countries, increased/and pellet guns to ensure that subsidies for research into only persons over 16 years riminal behavior, and a pro- could purchase or use such gram to provide rental supple-|guns. on--ments to poor families were! 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Choose your own personal shade, and color your world youl GP PAINTS Cost no more than ordinary paints WHITBY, ONT. DODD & SOUTER 107 BYRON ST. SOUTH PHONE 668-5862 Light one up and see how it suits you. (joldcrest GREEN DOOR GIFT & PAINT SHOP BROOKLIN, ONT. PHONE 655-4531 OSHAWA, ONT. PATTE"S PAINTS 85 SIMCOE ST. NORTH PHONE 725-3529 FARM No He By FOR Oshawa BRIAN De bert and Te Blackwater, 1 testants in classes, in t Junior Plowi the farm of Fred Timers the judge. Brian had the class fo years and ur viously plowé He was follo ham, Moun Jones, RR Frank Mangz ton In the clas 16 to 22 year previously p tition Ted Sr by Ron McGu Albert; Bob bridge and Je Beaverton Barry Timt Albert, will r Ontario Plow in the junior and Ron Me sent the asst termediate i Both classes International Oct. 14, at B Lynda Mc Orillia, was Queen of the tion, She will sociation, Oc' national mate "DUE TO good crop 0: the adequate foresee any winter feed it C, B. Holden, tural represe County Plantings 0 looking good, up spotty du but recent r an improvem The harves is under way corn will be week's time ae

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