DAISY DORIS GORDON ENGAGEMENT STUART BEACH ANNOUNCED The engagement is announced Mr. Wilfred Beach and the late ,f Miss Daisy Doris, daughter of Mrs. Beach of Ottawa. Marriage Mrs, John Charles Gordon ‘and to take place on Saturday, June the late Mr. Gordon, of Cardigan 6, at 3.30 p.m., in R-ideau Park P_E,1_, to Stuart Beach, son of United Church, O-ttana, Ontario, T PAINTS ‘N BRUSH es t CSEA Was A Broadening Experience The report of the 1957 conven- tion of the Canadian Society foi Education through Art has just come to hand. Their meetings were held in Toronto last Novem» be;-, with a very large attendance of members, patrons, and peo- ple interested in art education from all over Canada (except P.E.l.). The members of CSEA are art supervisors, heads of art schools. artists and art teachers.‘ The pa trons are firms anxious to give financial aid. CSEA began about five years ago under the chan- manship of Dr. C. D. Gaitskell, director of Art in the Ontario Department of Education, author of many books on child art, who also chaired the Bristol seminar on art education assembled by UN in 1952. It is affiliated with the International Society for Ed ucation through Art, and the Can- ada Arts Council. The aims of the organization are of course to improve and pro mote art education all over Can- Yonn POINT w. I. The May meeting of York Point Women’s Institute was held at the home of Mrs. Urban Gau- thier with an attendance of 11 members present. ‘ The meeting opened with the “ode” followed by the creed in unison. The minutes of the last meeting were read approved and signed. School Committee report- ed. Sick Cinmittee reported re- membering it shut - in. Treasur- er gave her report. It was announced that a Gar-. den Club meeting be heldin the school May 9th. to re - organize the Garden Club. Notice was re- 0 ada, and to see that it gets its rightful place on the school cui- riculum. Already B.C. and Sask-- atchewan give recognition to an majors, and Ontario is working on a course for Grade XIII. The qualifications of art teachers is being carefully studied. The program of the convention was a most interesting one. Four different commissions sat to look into such things as: the role or art education in t-he Canadian community. There were address- es by such prominent people as Alan Jarvis, head of the Nation- al Gallery in Ottawa. There were expeditions to art galleries and museums, to art schools and pri- vate homes whose owners col- lect paintings. There were visits to the studios of prominent ‘ar- tists, and discussions with them. All in all, a most broadening experience for th 0 s e lucky e- nough to be able to attend. Other years similar conventions were held in Quebec City, and in Win- nipeg. This year Vancouver is the city that has been chosen. Collection for the evening amount- ed to 86 cents. Mrs. Reggie MacEwen kindly swered by a new vegetable plant ee, Mrs. Reggie Butler, Mrs. Jack Mac-Eachcrn and Mrs. Stanley Murchison. Program, Mrs. which a delicious lunch was ser ved by the committee in charge. invited members to her home for June meeting. Roll call to be an- in one’s garden. Lunch committ- Aubrey Mac- Phail. Meeting adjourned after Zdmm Lena Caroline Mcbure. Women’: Editor. Phone 850: Thur., May 22, 1958 The Guardian Page ll Horizons are widening for Can- adian women in almost every sphere of endeavor except poli- tics according to the “Authorita- tive List of Women in Public. Life in Canada” compiled by the Sur- vey and Research Committee of The Canadian Federation of Bus- mess and Professional ,Women’s ,Clu-bs, under the chairmanship of Miss Nazla L. Dane, Toronto. The list was released today-by the national office of The Canad- ian Federation of Business and Professional Women’s Clubs. There are 11 women in Canada ‘who are entitled to be addressed as “Your Worship”, 99 who may write “Aid-erman" in front of their names, and 250 on school boards. But in all of Canada. there are only six women in Legisla- tive Assemblies, two in the House of Commons and five in the Sen- ate. The B and P list does attest to the fact, however, that wom- en are making a uniqueplace for themselves in the economic life of Canada. In Alberta, Mrs. Amelia Johan- sen, Lethbridge, heads up an oil company, and Miss Annie B. Cook, Meanook, is in charge of the federal magnetic observatory. Coaldale, Rimby and Trochu have women secretary - treasur- ers for their municipalities. An important advance has been re- corded also by Evelyn Berg in Red Deer, the first woman west of Winnipeg to be appointed an assistant accountant in the Can- adian Bank of Commerce. Two other members of her sex in Ve- toria, Mrs. Viola T. Harris and Miss Charlotte Montgomery have received similar appointments. 18 Eskimo and Indian girls shared in the dstaff achieve- ments when they graduated from a course in food service training at the Provincial Institute of Technology, Calgary. Diplomas were presented to them by Sen- a.-tor Glad-stone, the first Indian in Canad-a’s History to receive a Senatorial appointment. Another unique recognition of theworth of women was stacked up by Margaret McKenzie, New Westminster, who was elected secretary of the May Day Com- mittee in her city, a position held by a man since its inception over 80 years ago. Mrs. Evelyn Henson, Victoria, B.C., has pioneered in another field not usually regarded as com- FEREKHLSDOCTOR oeived that the district conven- tion will be held on June 23rd. in Bonshaw Hall. Plans were made to hold the 45 Anniversary on the evening’ of -May 6th. Secretary was asked to send for receipt cards to canvass the district. for Salvation Army. The names of 14 former mem- bers who passed on will be in- scribedin the Memorial Book. Mrs. Reggie MacEwen gave an Tuesday as flames and thick smoke swept the cottage where he lived alone. Police identified him formerly of Concord. MANCHESTER, N.H. (AP)-A retircd Manchester physician died as Dr. Louis 0. S. Wallace, 71, ing under the category of “wom- en’s activities” _ when on the death of her husband la-st Novem- bet she became president and general manager of Vancouver Island Helicopters Limited. Whitehorse, is the only court re; porter in the Northwest Territor- ies. NORWAY EARTH TREMORS interesting paper on Agriculture, Tuesday. BERGEN, Norway (Reuters)- Severe earth tremors were re- ported in west Norway early In Manitoba, Mrs. Flora ‘Cowan, Brandon, a B and P. member, is the International Peace Gardens. Miss Margaret Kane of Selkirk, the only operating room nurse Miss Winnifred E. Clark of International Vice- President of Women Win Recognition In The Affairs Of Ccmcido Clinic in Phoenix, Arizona, ha.s invented sterililzing bag for sur- gical instruments which permits them to be ready for use on ar- rival. Miss Anna Kaemena, Winnipeg, Manager of the Arosa Steam- ship Line, is believed to be -the only woman in Canada to hold such a. position. - Only woman to be appointed to -the_ Atlantic Provinces Econo- mic Council is Mrs. James F. Fos- -ter of St. John, New Brunswick. Another St. John woman, Mrs. Aubrey Seymour, is the first of her sex in Canada to be licensed as an auctioneer. Mrs. Olivia M. Spence of Norton, N.B., has just retired recently after 1-0 years as a rural mail driver. There are 15 women rural mail drivers in New Bunswick, all -under contract in their own right to the Post Office Department. The only woman holding an e- lective position in Newfoundland was Mrs. Harry Drover, Claren- ville, the first woman ever elect- ed Mayor in that province. Al- though she headed the polls, her election was disallowed by the provincial government. No new election had taken place to set- tle the controversy at the time giie authonitative list was compil- On the credlt side of the ledger in Canada's newest province is the appointment of Miss Mollie DIIIETG, St. John’s, as principal of the Vera Perlin School for Re- -tarded Children, and Miss Mar- jorie Mews as head librarian of the Gosling Memorial Library in the same city. ~ “Down in Nova Scotia, Miss Eve- lyn Teresa Bennett, Glace Bay, was the winner of the Initial graduate study at a Canadian me- dical faculty. Mrs. Etta Fine, is now the N.B. representative on 1957-58. viellopving their special talents. have a sawfly named after her 25 years in the Arctic region. HP SAUCE P "Improves I -{all meals!” \ to the Airborne Orthpedic Surgery Schering Fellowship ($4,000) for Sydney, was elected secretary - treasurer, Maritime Division, Do- minion Chartered Customs House Brokers Association in 1954, and the Dominion Chartered Customs House Brokers Association for With its larger industrial cen- tres, Ontario offers wide oppor- tunity for women interested in de- The only woman in the world to Mrs. Eva Beckett, is a resident of Fort William. A famous nat- uralist, she and her husband spent Miss Alma Duncan and Miss PORTER - VENO NUPTIALS S ~ Mr. and Mrs. Colin Forbes Por- ter are seen following their wed- ding at St. Paul’s Church, Sum- merside, on Tuesday, May 6th. The bride, the former Mary Myra Veno is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ervin Veno, Sum- merside, wh-ile the groom is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Percy Por- ter of Aylesford, N.S. Audrey McLaren, Ottawa, are Ca- nad-a’s only independent produc- ers of animated films and Mrs. Elizabeth Barraclough, Ottawa, is the first of her sex to be appoint- ed a United Kingdom Press Offi- cer to Canada. A member of the B. and P. from St. Catharines, Miss Irene Helmer, has received an appointement as a Trust Offi- pany, the first to achieve this dis- tinction in the company. Mrs. Dorothy Kidder, Sarnia, is the first woman in Canada or the U.S.A. to be admitted to mem- hership in the Canadian Purchas- ing Agents’ Association. One of two women radiographers in Can- ada, Mrs. Gwen Barnes, Toronto, is the only feminine member" of the Ontario Society for Non-des- tructive Testing. Mrs. Vera Glen- nie, another B. and P. member, is the first woman to be named to the Ontario Civil Service Com- 5 up In 5 :1 Dr. Lucy Morgan, Toronto eco- nomist with the Bank of Nova Scotia head office, wrote a. report on the Canadian steel industry for the Royal Commission on Ca- nada’s Economic Prospects. Mrs. Cathan Shoniker is assistant golf professional at St. Andrew’s golf Club while Miss Kay Helleur, _WoodIbr.idge, is the only women golf course designer in Canada, perhaps in North America. Ano- ther first ha.s been chalked up by Miss Ann V/ilkinson, Milliken, who exercises trained racehorses and breaks in yearlings. Mrs. Dorothy Corrigan, Cha'- lottetown, is the only woman in Prince Edward Island ever to run in a municipal election. She lost out in this historic contest, but intends to stand for election again. Miss Rosa Bell, a Char- lottetown B. and P. member, was elected treasureer of the P.E.I. Pharmaceutical Assoc:iation, the first woman to hold office in this organization. Another prerogative of the male sex has been invad- ed by a woman in the Island pro- vince with the appointment of Mrs. Dorothy Rogers as 1 true- tee of St. James Presbyteitan Church. Mrs. Eileen E. Cosiglio, Pied- mont, and Mrs. Elsie Gibbons of Portage du Fort, ha-ve won ma- yoralty posts in the province of Quebec. Another Quebec woman, Mrs. J. G. Coulombe, ha.s been elected national vice - president of the Allied Florists a-nd Growers of Canada. Adding to Quebec’s stature also is Miss Lucille Wheel- er, St. Jovite, who became the W-orldfs Champion skier at the re- cent meet in Switzerland. In Sask- atchewan, Mrs. Gertie Gilroy Re- gina, and Miss Gladys Berney, Saskatoon, chair the credentials and resolutions committees of the Saskatchewan Federation of Lab- or, the first time women have been chosen to head up these important committees. Mrs. Ella Lewis, Saslnatoon, is secretary of the Army, Navy and Air Force Veterans’ Associa-tion for Saskat- chewan and Mrs. Alice Turner of the same city is president of the Saskatchewan Library Associa- tion; Topping the list of women’s a-' chievements was the appointment of Mrs. Ellen Flairclough to Prime Mini s t e r Diefenbaker’s cabinet, the first Canadian wom- an to receive such ‘recognition. Her contemporary, Margaret Aitken, who represents York- Humber in the House, was the first woman to be elected chair- man of a parliamentary standing committee. Mrs. Harry S. Quart, Quebec, was appointed a member of the Canadian delegation to the Unit- ed Nations last fall and is Can- a-da’s representative on the com- ’ mission for the Status of Women. Mrs. Ruth Houck, Barmpton, Miss Caroline Robins, Saskatoon both B. and P. Members, and Mrs. Rex Eaton, Vancouver, are only women appointed to the Ca- nadian UNESCO Commission, while Miss Dorothy Cadwell, Ot- tawia. and Saskatoon, has been made acting secretary of the COVEHEAD ROAD W. I. The Cov-ehead Rd. W. I. held their May meeting at the home of Mrs. S. J. Birt with 9 mem- bers -and 1 visitor present. Meet- ing opened with “O Canada." Roll call was answered with a “Home-baked Article of Food.” Minutes were read and approv- ed. Correspondence was read and discussed. $4.80 was the amount designated for this Institute to donate towards the scholarship which the district convention area have established. It was decided to invite Oyst- er Bed players to present their play in the Community Hall, May 26., and plans were made accor- dingly. Mrs. Rilla Reardon and Mrs. Harry Birt were voted to attend the executive meeting re «t-he district convention. The program consisted of a ybgnoon by Mrs. Harvey Mao- Donald, won by Mrs. Phillip Mac- Inn;s; also a “can" contest con- ducted by Mrs. Ernest Machin- lan which was won by Mrs. Rilla Reardon. _ . Next meeting is to be held at the home of Mrs. Harry Birt. Meeting closed with the “Nation- al Anthem. After the meeting there w.as a sale of home baked foods with Mrs. Reardon acting v-ery capably as auctioneer. Lunchwas served by the hos- tess. DRY SPELL ENDS VANCOUVER (CP)—A 26-day dry spell ended Tuesday. bring- ing relief to farmers and lumber industries. The rainfall reduced the fire hazard in the forests and gave new life to grain, fruit and vegetable crops in the Fraser Valley. It's Modern money service backed by 80 years of experience Every year over ‘/2 million people agree: good business to do business with HPC Canada’s leading consumer finance company offers both money management advice and fast, friendly service on loans up to $1,000. 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