It‘ll be a gala affair for the Women‘s Auxiliary of the Queensâ€" way General Hospital when the members celebrate their tenth anâ€" miversary with a Pink Ball at the Skyline Hotel on Friday, April 22. The reception for the dinnerâ€" dance will be held in the Habitant Room at 6.30 p.m. and dinner will be served at 8 n‘clock. Convener of the event is Mrs. G. A. Hatton and her committee includes: Mrs. H. A. Agar, Mrs. M. R. H. Legg, Mrs. J. N. McKeil and Mrs. J. J. Mann. For reservations call Mrs. John Cairns at 233â€"5174 or Mrs. Earle Kelley, 233â€"8439. and Mrs. W. P. Gillie, senior, Cornwall, Ont. Members of Humber Branch of the Consumers‘ Association . of Canada are in attendance at the Home Show in the Coliseum, Exâ€" hibition Park this week. They man one of the booths, and information regarding the work of the associaâ€" tion and its accomplishments can be obtained from those in attendâ€" Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Gillie and family will be spending the Easter holidays with their parents, Mr. More _ information _ on . th is nurseryâ€"kindergarten and its fasciâ€" nating methods of teaching, may be had by contacting Mrs. Kathy Adamson, 82 Advance Road, Islingâ€" ton or telephone 239â€"5330. > new method math. She hopes to have a male teacher for the math and science courses. With all the interest and enquiries about the school, Mrs. Adamson expects to have some 40 pupils in her second year classes next term and another first year class of fiveâ€"yearâ€"olds. She anticiâ€" pates adding French instruction. given | by a â€" French â€" speaking teacher, to the curriculum and may start a preparation class of fourâ€" yearâ€"olds who will be introduced to the new math and phonetic reading as well as the course in French. 10th Anniversary Pink Ball A film ‘Mathematics At Your Fingertips® had to be shown twice to _ accommodate all of t he interested â€" visitors. _ It _ showed children of six doing complicated math problems using number rods of different colors and lengths to represent numbers. _ Next year Mrs. Adamson‘s pupils will use work books from England for this Q‘u_e'enswa y WA ?"5 m,‘- who â€" has _ one almostâ€"fiveâ€"yearâ€"old reading grade three level & problems with rods or cubes the Cuisenaire method. The family syllable method of phonetic reading, advocated by Mrs. Marjory Armstrong, is taught by Mrs. School director and . teacher, Mrs. Kathy Adamson says it was an exciting experience for her and for many of the parents who came to observe the school in action. Pupils read from grade one to grade three level readers for the interested visitors and worked out math problems with rods or cubes Over 300 adults and children attended the Adamson Preâ€"School Open House last Saturday to listen and waich as the first year pupils demonstrated their skill in reading and mathematics. ‘ 300 At Adamson Preâ€"School Open House Pupils Impress With Knowledge Complete Courses in MODELLING AND SELP IMPROVEMENT FOR CHILDREN, TEENS & ADULTS 3313A RLOOR 8ST. W. (Kingsway) PHONE 233â€"6660 or 231â€"2777 ® Thorncliffe Park â€" o Yonge & Steeles â€" o Dixie Pln; Tess * Leaside Willowdale Port Credit Don‘t Miss it! Here are just a few of the bargains awaiting youâ€" oN OUR GIANT EASTER HOLIDAY SALE! 1 DAY ONLY CHANEL MODELLING STUDIO OPEN DAILY 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Men‘s Allâ€"Weather SAVE 20% to 50% @ Along The Queensway FRIDAY, APRIL 8 â€"â€"â€" Thursday, April 1, 1966 There will be a flower show. and orders will be taken for geraniums which will be shown by Mrs. F. M. Gregory and Mrs. J. L. Oppenâ€" heimer. 4 Mr. P. H. Oisen, of the Weall and Cullen Nurseries, Ltd., will be guest speaker, whose topic will be Trends In Modern Landscaping. A cordial invitation is to visitors. Refreshment served. Members of the Royal York Branch: of the Women‘s Auxiliary of â€" Queensway General Hospital are completing plans for the Mayâ€" time Tea to be held in Queensway United Church on May 19, from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. The affair is being convened hy Mrs. F. W. Bailey and Mrs. J. R. Kearns. LISTEN TO TEACHER â€" Most of her pupils listen and watch intently as Mrs. Kathy Adamson sounds out words in sentence. One little girl is more interested in how her friend savs it. R Phain he Stew Wintcic The Kingswayâ€"Sunnylea Hortiâ€"; There will be a sale of home cultural Society will meet in Sunâ€" baking. and a white elephant table, nylea Public School, Glenroy and the latter in charge of Mrs. W. J. Humbervale Aves., on Monday, Barbour, who is appealing for April 18, at 8 p.m. articles for this booth. Call her at NOW IT‘S MY TURN â€" Even games at the Adamson Preâ€"sc} looks like lots of fun for the y 6.98 to 9.98 Values Ladies‘ > Stretch Slims Mrs. T. Turner, CL 1â€"7224 extended *will be Miss Glenda Scott has been honâ€" oured recently at preâ€"bridal showâ€" ers. prior to her wedding on May 21 in Runnymede Baptist church. Miss Helen Scott, her aunt, and Mrs. Ivan Simmonds, her cousin, hosted a party in Mrs. Simmonds home, 59 Ashmount Cres., Weston, when some forty guests showered the brideâ€"toâ€"be with beautiful gifts. The office staff of the Melia Construction Co. honoured Glenda at a shower which was hosted by Mrs. Regina Frappier and Mrs. Sheena Filipeic. Glenda is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James B. Scott, Stephen Dr.. and the groom is Mr./ John Mullin, Feversham, Ont. 251â€"0470 and she will arrange to have any donation picked up. though it‘s*not all fun and ol, this arithmetic session )unzsters. 9.95 to 12.95 5.99 Values Save Up To 6.96 On Table Lamps Phntn by Stan Windrim Members of Price Memorial; Mrs. Chester Gibson, Edgmore Lodge, L.O.B.A., extend their best } Dr., is home from a very enjoyable wishes for a speedy recovery to|six weeks holiday spent in Lakeâ€" Mrs. William Blain. Winslow A\'e.,‘ land, Florida. who suffered a heart attack last * * * week. | _ Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Bailey, Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Richardson accompanied hy Mr. and Mrs. J Arnold Murray, Kirkbraden Rd. E. have returned home from a twoâ€" week motor tour of Florida. Mr. and Mrs.‘ Charles Raymer, Chartwell Rd.. have Mrs. Raymer‘s mother, Mrs. Lillian Northcott, Brockville. as their guest‘ for the Easter holidays. : I‘m also mildly sorry for Gerda Munsinger who, after all, never did anything to attract attention to herself and her playmates, though it looks as if she is going to clean up financially (which is a wry comment on our society‘s values.) But why this woman should bevgy more reviled than the men who played around with her, beats me. Surely it‘s not believed that she wickedly seduced these men and dragged them to her bedroom, while they begged for mercy ? It‘s the old double standard fluttering from the bushes againâ€"this is why prostitutes‘ names and addresses are published in the newspapers, but never any details of their customers. One of the reasons, we‘re constantly told, why women are unfit for high public office, is that they‘re emotionally unstable. The only dubious advantage it seems to me that male cabinet members have over women politiâ€" cians is that they can have affairs without becoming pregnant. The person I‘m sorry for in all this muddy Munsilggter affair is Mrs. Pierre Sevigny. Lots of women are doubleâ€" crossed by their husbands, but when they are confronted with this unhappy knowledge, it‘s not usually in a blaze of publicity with all the world looking on and licking its lips. It‘s all very well for Sevigny to beat his breast and call on his illustrious ancestors and his own war record to prove that there was no security leakâ€"to any woman, that is the less important aspect of the matter. He does not deny knowing Gerda Munsinger sociallyâ€"and he has placed his wife in a humiliating position as a result of his liaison with a woman who does not pretend to have been an intellectual companion. _ c Speaking as a woman, one wonders what unusual techâ€" niques the Gerdas and the Christines possess that they can captivate men in public life who must be well aware of the dangers they run in being found out. These women do not appear to have great charm or intelligence or an overâ€" whelming personality. They are just attractive and availâ€" able and they set out to please men. But the quality of the women that attract the Profumos and the Sevignys does throw doubt on their good taste, even if not on their official capabilities. e e _ Another example, closer to home. I have a dear friend who has what the psychiatrists ambiguously call a "perâ€" sonality defect;" a normal, very intelligent, decent person in most ways, he tends to crack under pressure of any kind and then his actions become illogical and disastrous for his family. This problem recurs at irregular intervals. For example, last week he started to go to the office one morning and when he arrived there, found that for some peculiar reason he couldn‘t get out of the car and go into the office. He wanted toâ€"he likes his jobâ€"but he couldn‘t, so he spent the day aimlessly driving around or sitting in cafes, knowing that his office must be phoning home and that his wife was probably worrying her head off. When he got home at 2 a.m., exhausted and frightened, he told his wife he must have help and he was going back to the psychiatrist who has been treating him off and on for some time. This psychiatrist is in charge of a hospital psyâ€" chiatric ward and he is the only specialist for miles. He is of course overworked and inundated with patients, and when my friend arrived next morning, he found he couldn‘t even see him for several days. This poor devil sat outside the doctor‘s office for hours, determined to wait all day in case there was a cancellation, and terrified of leaving what seemed to him to be his only source of help. Finally, there was a cancellation and he managed to get in for half an hour ; he at once asked to be admitted, but the psychiatrist was tired and not particularly sympathetic. No he couldn‘t be admittedâ€"no roomâ€"and yes, he was beginning to get some idea of why the patient kept breaking down like this but he didn‘t know whether he could do anything about it. Anyway, he couldn‘t see the patient again for two weeksâ€" his first free period. ‘"Next, please." No medication, no hope offered, no help. Of course, this patient is not a public menaceâ€"he is only ruining his own life and his family‘s, but suppose he‘d told the psychiatrist that he was getting a terrible compulsion to kill his wife or to attack little girls, would the psychiatrist have told him to come back in two weeks‘ time? I understand that this happens, too, and it will keep happening as long as there are too few specialists available and not enough facilities to serve those who beg for help. â€" Despite all the welfare agencies and apparent help available for people in various kinds of distress, it‘s frightâ€" ening to find out how many people call for help in vain. A friend of mine works in an old and noble organization for lulpmï¬ women and she told me about Billie. Billie is a whiteâ€"haired, 60â€"yearâ€"old alcoholic; she is constantly in trouble because of her drinking and has long lost all contact with her family. Her life is unbelievably squalid. After working on her for months, the welfare worker finally convinced Billie that she should go to the narcotics and aleohol foundation in Mimico, which is doing excellent work and research into these addictions. All at once Billie seemed to understand that this was her only ho?e. The welfare worker was jubilant; she phoned up the foundationâ€"and the first appointment she could get for Billie was in July. This was not because the foundation didn‘t care, but it already had more patients than it could cope with, most of them as desperate as Billie. Can You Use...... $150 FOR SPRING CLOTHING? $500 FOR A BOAT OR MOTOR? $1,000 FOR THAT NEW RECREATION ROOM? $2,500 (or more) FOR A NEW CAR? 2479 BLOOR ST. w. Jant a s00# car 100® Enguire about our Special Low Rate fof Auto Loans * ON NEW AND LATE MODEL USED CAR LOANS PHMONE OR VISIT US AT ... 766â€"8131 766â€"6859 COMMERCIAL CREDIT PLAN LTD. An Arts and Crafts Show, and sale, will be held in Royal York Rd. United Church, sponsored by the U.C.W., on Friday, April 29, from 7 to 10 p.m., and Saturday, April 30, 10.30 a.m. to 4 p.m. More details at a later date. Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Bailey, Badger Dr., will be entertaining Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Allen and their son â€" Lawrence. Montreal, during the Easter weekend. By JOAN SEAGER 396 PACIFIC AVE COMWER DUNDA$ & PACIFIC ¢#%¢% Special competitions for work of the blind, hospitalized citizens, and for Homes for the Aged and perâ€" sons of over 65 years continue to be held. Mrs. E. A. Marsden, 47 Glenroy Ave.. will be hostess t6 members of Humber Bay Branch of the Women‘s Auxiliary of Queensway General Hospital at the April 12 luncheon meeting, at 1 p.m. ... and how very often they win prizes. In each class of entries, there is a special Grand Award for the Best of Class. Pottery, ceramic sculpture, wood carving, oil painting, leather work and hand woven articles, as well as knitting, sewing and crochet work, rug making, are still very popular entry classes. It is of inâ€" terest to note how many entries are received each year from men The Prize List is now available to anyone wishing to enter the more than 250 classes in home crafts, handicrafts, baking and canning and the total prize money is more than $6,000. Two very popular competitions introduced with tremendous sucâ€" cess last year were Candle Making and a Tea Cosy Contest. These will be repeated during 1966. As Canada approaches its Cenâ€" tennial~year, change in our society is expressed in many subtle ways. This year the Women‘s Division of the C.N.E., in response to many requests, has added two categories in the home crafts competitions of its Prize List that directly reflect the growing acceptance and popuâ€" larity of skills brought to us from Europe. These prizes are for Euroâ€" pean tapestry and Rya and Ghiorâ€" des Rugs. Debbie sounds like a top conâ€" tender for the ‘allâ€"round Canadian girl‘ and just the kind that any teacher or mother would love to have around! Disraeli said: "The public health is the foundation upon which reâ€" poses the happiness of the people and the strength of the nation. The care of the public health is the first duty of a statesman." Exciting and glamorous though the world ofxthe theatre may be, Debbie takes it all in her stride and says, very matterâ€"ofâ€"factly, that she hopes to make it her career. her afterâ€"school hours, Debbie also enjoys skiing in the winter and swimming in the summer. But she admits she doesn‘t expect to have any spare time to go away on a holiday this coming summer. Immense sums are spent in medical and rehabilitation treatâ€" ment of people injured in accidents. by comparison, only a trivial amount is spent on safety educaâ€" tion that would help to keep people out of accidents. Accidents are one of the most serious public health problems, says the Ontario Safety League â€" and one of the most neglected. 0_ As though dancing and acting weren‘t enough to keep her Busy in °*A grade four pupil at Rosethorn Public School, Debbie is the daughâ€" ter of Mr. and Mrs. J. M. B. Tumâ€" bull, Thornerest Road, Islington. She is as happy at school, where she says her favorite subject is spellâ€" ing, as she is at her other activities of dancing and acting. For the past five years she has studied ballet, jazz, tap and Highland dancing with the Gladys Forrester School of Dancing, which she is continuing to study as well as drama;, as a pupil of Mrs. Dorothy Wild. Skills Brought From Europe Add To CNE Prize List Debbie Turnbull is a young lady, who at the age of ten has appeared in four musical productions, beginâ€" ning with ‘Finian‘s Rainbow‘ at the Royal _ Alexandra _ Theatre last summer. She also performed in ‘Annie Get Your Gun‘ in summer stock, in ‘Brigadoon‘ in December and the recent production of ‘Oklaâ€" homa‘. This bright eyed little ‘pro‘ has appeared with such veterans as Carmel Quinn in ‘Finian‘s Rainbow‘ and Elaine Stritch in ‘Annie Get Your Gun‘. Future Career In The Theatre For Young Etobicoke Actress â€" EASTER _ SUNDAY _ SERVING OUR TRADITIONAL ® casTER MENU WITH ORGAN MUSIC FOR YOUR PLEASURE IN ALL DINING ROOMS CHILDREN‘$ MENU HALF PRICE SATURDAY FEATURES Aâ€"GOâ€" GO DANCING WITH OUR GOâ€" GO GIRLS IN THE NEW DISCOâ€" THEQUE ROOM. ORGAN STYLINGS TO ENTERâ€" TAIN YOU IN THE BURGUNDY ROOM. OPEN GOOD FRIDAY FOR YOUR _ DINING _ PLEASURE. 2282 LAKE SHORE BLVD. W. 259â€"9635 _ 2599442 RESTAURANTâ€"DINING LOUNGE EASTER WEEKEND SPECIAL ‘AYPA Council Needs Volunteers To Plan Montreal Expo ‘67 Trip Baking Day always brings in exâ€" citing and luscious entries from the kitchens of talented Canadian women and junior entrants. Many use recipes they have developed themselves; others work from inâ€" structions that have been used in their families for many generaâ€" tions. In this day of mass marketâ€" ing of prepared foods, it is like a journey into the past to visit the The 1966 Prize List can be obâ€" tained free by writing to: Mrs. Elsa Jenkins, Women‘s Division, Canadian National Exhibition, Exâ€" hibition Park, Toronto 2B, Ontario. Day. Ayers, the following is a mes sage from Local Council Presi dent Ron Varney: A large percentage of skiing inâ€" juries are the result of foot twistâ€" ing. The â€"Ontario Safety League states that properly adjusted safety ski bindings are the answer to this hazard. Merienced skiers should get advice from the experts regardâ€" ing the right type of bindings and proper adjustment. And then check the adjustment frequently during the day to be sure your foot will release with sufficient ease to preâ€" vent injury in an emergency. "As Closed All Day â€" Good Friday Saturday at 6 P.M. um FOR CARS ... ASK ANYONE! JUST NORTH OF SEAWAY HOTEL IT‘S ENMGN FOR CARS OPEN «EVENINGS UNTIL 10 P.M. our year draws near an 1964 Morris 850 Station Wagen Uicence No. 36030X 1964 Chevrolet Be! Air Sedan, Autematic Uicence No. 219077 1961 Austin Westminster, 6 Cylinder Sedan Licence No 464018 1983 Muvr. Orford. Autematic Licence No. 177282 1965 Morris Oxford Seden. Lic. 464449. Company car, Bolance of new car warranty « 1966 Austin 1100. Lic. 144081. Company car. Balance of new car warrenty 1963 M.G. Magnette Sedan. lic. 465010 OTHER USED CAR SPECIALS 1983 Morris 1100. Lit. 464452 1961 Riley 1.5 Spoft Sedan. Lic. 465003 Blue, an exceptional car,.awaiting a buyer and ready for the open road. Sleek, fast and a $1895 dream of a sports car. 1961 Morris Oxford Sedan, Lic. 494019 1963 Rambler Clossic, Autemetic. Lic. $75137 1964 MG.B Home Baking Judging QUEENSWAY at WINDERMERE MOTORS iro. SPORTS SPECIAL! EN S 1IG N Debbie Turnbull RO. 2â€"8231 AND MANY MORE Plans for this trip will be disâ€" cussed briefly at the‘next Deanery meeting on Tuesday, April 12 at St. George‘s on the Hill at 8 p.m. â€" a few days before the T.D.C. Conference, the weekend of April 15 to 17. Let‘s have as many out as possible." To all Ayers â€" Enjoy your Easter Holidays but don‘t forget the significance of Easter. Diane Bicheno. end, there is â€"still one big task that we must complete. It is our Anglican World Mission Project of raising $1,500 for Polynesia, Wa have sent in half of this amount, but are certainly lagging in raisâ€" ing the remaining portion. You all pledged your support of this proâ€" ject, and now it is up to you to fulfil your part of the bargain. Let‘s all get together and get this job done. The executive is trying to plan a trip to Montreal to see Expo ‘67. Volunteers of branches interested in this venture, are needed to serve on a planning committee for the trip. At the Annual Meeting the gavel will be presented to the A.Y.P.A. which is judged to be the best of the year. The judging will he based on: 1) Enrolling of new members; 2) Support of Local Council; 3) Variety of programs at branch meetings; and 4) Memâ€" bership participation in meetings. The Branch activity reports must be mailed or given to Ron Varney before April 30. $1,595 $1,695 $1,295 $ 695 $1,095 $1,095 $ 695 $995 $1,395 $995 $1,195