Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 2 Dec 1959, p. 7

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[] Mr. Stanley Stephen Lukow, and his bride, the former Miss Bette se Wight, are pic- tured following their marriage recently at Northminster Unit- ed Church, The bride is the MARRIED AT NORTHMINSTER daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Allan Wight of Consecon and the bridegroom is the som of Mr. and Mrs. Steve Lukow of Osh- awa, --Photo by Cheredaryk GROUPS, CLUBS, AUXILIARIES ASTRA GROUP oie The ar meeting A reap of the WA of Sim- coe Street United Church was held in the ladies' parlor. Mrs. Walter Roe presided, Mrs. Bryce Smith read the minutes and Mrs. Robert Currie gave the treasurer's report. Mrs. Ray Branton's group was in charge of the devotional per- wi was decided to hold a Christ- mas party at the home of Mrs. Walter Roe, December 17 for the members of the groun. | A new slate of officers were elected to the follwing positions: President. Mrs, Robert Currie; vice-president, Mrs. Robert Mc- Yeod; treasurer, Mrs. Robert Pass: recording secretary, Mrs. Nicholas Gulenchyn: correspond- ing secretary, Mrs. David Bowman. Vrs. Ray Branton's group s..vV- ed refreshments. , GIRL GUIDE ASSN. (Parkwood District) The new Parkwood District of the Girl Guide Association met recently at Guide House with Dis- trict Commission~r, Mrs. George Pearce, pre: g. Mrs. Walter Johnson, district badge secretary and Mrs. John Galbraith, district guider, were present and spoke briefly. Mrs. Johnson gave a revort of badee work for the year and announced that Mrs. Hayden Macdonzld and Mrs. J. A. McNab were her new committee members for Guida tests and Mrs. D. A. Brown for Brownie Golden Hand test's. She esked for someone to work on Brownie proficiency badges and testing. Reports were given on 6A, 6B, 8th and 21st Brownies and 6A, 6B and 8th Guides. Several good turns are being planned for Christmas. Mrs. Pearce d that Jo- reports were read. ments were served Whalley, and her two assistants Miss Joan Starr and Miss Elean- ogr MacKenzie, were present and Miss Whalley outlined her plans for the pack in the coming ear. 5 was decided not to have a December meeting and have a pot luck supper for the January meeting. Refreshments were served bv Mrs. James Warnica and Mrs. Benjamin Tunnicliffe. RCAF ASSN. AUXILIARY The November meeting of the Ladies' Auxiliary to the RCAF (420 Wing) was held recently in the ¢lvb rooms with the presi- dent, Mrs. Jack Lee, presiding. Plan for a social evening to be held on December 18 were discussed and following the bus- iness meeting there was a de- monstration of cosmetics. Refreshments were served by Mrs. T. H. Murphy assisted by Mrs. D. M. Robertson. The next meeting will be held on January 27, 1960. PMA CLUB Mrs. G. V. Lee presided at this week's meeting of the Pleasant Monday Afternoon Club. Mrs. R. G. Collison called the Roll show- ing a large attendance including one child. The scripture lesson was read by Mrs. George Whitbread. Miss Cathy Burkett was reported to be on the sick list. The secretary and (reasurer Refresh- by Mrs. Lloyd Patterson and Mrs. Lloyd Burkett, The officers for 1960 are: Pres- ident, Mrs. George V. Lee; first vice-nresident, Mrs. Elwood Bradley; second vice-president, Mrs. R. G. Collison; secretary, Mrs. Lloyd Burkett; treasurer, Mrs. William Reed; executive s, Mrs. Lloyd Patterson, anne Glover of 6A Company had been chosen to apply for the Ju- bilee Inter-Provincial Girl Guide Camp. She is the candidate frem Parkwood District. Of all the Mrs. Duncan Nisbet, Mrs. George Bell, Mrs. Ge-rge Whitbread; auditors, Mrs. William Callison, Mrs. Lloyd Patterson. Guides applying, only 22 will go from Ontario. | The names of all five districts] were given by the Commissioner -- Rosslynn, Parkwood, Kings way, Adelaide and South Dale. Colonel R, S. McLaughlin has given his kind permission that the name Parkwood may be used by the former North District. "The Hanging of the Green" will take place at Guide House on Thursday, December 3, at 9 p.m. Mrs. A. R. Garrett agreed to be press reporter for the year. Mrs. M. A. Adam served refr t Woman Proves Better Guinea Pig In Space Tests By STAN McCABE Canadian Press Staff Writer WINNIPEG (CP) -- It may be that women would make better space travellers than men, says Dr. John Zubek, head of the University of Manitoba psychol- ogy department and director of assisted by Mrs. John Galbraith. WIDE-AWAKE GROUP The November meeting of the Wide-Awake group of King Street United Church was held recently in the church parlor. Mrs. Gordon Pierson, presi dent, opened the meeting with prayer, assisted by Mrs. Robert Johnson, who gave a reading. The minutes were read by Mrs. Eric Booth, followed by a treas- urer's report by Mrs. Jack Pier- son. There was a discussion about experi ts in which persons spend six days in a darkened sound-proo'ed isolation chamber. Wilma Sansom, 29 . year « old psychologv student who emerged Wednesday from a isolation test, said at a press conference that she experienced only boredom-- none of the hallucinations re- ported by three men who pre- viously spent time in isolation. Dr. Zubek said that without at- tempting detailed interpretation, a look at charts of her brain waves showed fewer distur- bances than the charts of the men, the Christmas dinner to be held December 10. Mrs. Perry, presi- dent, of the WA, was guest at "If there is a sex difference, the implications are far - reach- ing," he said. -Jokingly he sug- the meeting. A report on future gested that the United States, in- WA plans was presented. | Elections were held with the following officers for the year 1960: President, Mrs. Donald Cooper; vice - pres., Mrs. Robert Elston; secretary, Mrs. Robert Joh (to |TO TEST MORE WOMEN The ab of Lalli stead of training astronauts for |space, possibly, should be train- |ing "astronettes." +. Visitor from Punjabi Eager to Paint Canada's Winter WINNIPEG (CP)--Mrs. Pardu- man Singh Chawla from Punjab, India, is one Winnipeg resident who js looking forward to the prairie winter. Calvary WMS Elects Officers The WMS of Calvary Bud and Bloom Has Meaning In Oriental Flower Arranging The bud pointing towards heaven is the heavenline, the bud at the base is the earthline and the one between is the manlin. "With such an arrangement earth is looking up to man and The diminutive Mrs. Chawla man is looking up to heaven, and recently arrived here with her what good would man be if he husband, who has been appointed didn't." badmintop professional at the Winnipeg Winter Club. ORIENTAL ART She said in an interview that Mr. Hall said 75 per cent of all|friends had warned her before floral arrangements are Oriental. she left India about Canada's Although the use of flowers is snowfall. Instead of discouraging growing in Canada and the her, the warnings instilled in her United States, these countries|a desire to see and paint winter have not reached the point that| scenes. Europeans have, he said. "In|LIKES LANDSCAPES some places in Europe the people| 'My particular hobby is paint- wouldn't sit down if there weren't|ing landscapes," she said. "1 flowers on the table." hope to return to India with If the head of a rose begins|many Canadian canvases -- par- drcoping it can be easily revived. ticularly snow scenes. It droops, he says, because air A bubbles are caught in the stem Te i which she was introduced and the water is not passing|through short-wave radio broad- through to the head of the flower. casts. Mrs. Chawla, a graduate in Lay the flower horivantally 2 education from the University of warm bath of water until the pyniah also studied Indian mu- head straihtens. "Be sure the water is neither The Mr. TORONTO (CP) -- Cut flowers '|don't have to be put in a vase. A teapot, candelabra, almost any odd dish, makes a good start for a floral arrangement. "With imagination the sky is the limit," says Harvey Hall, Mrs, |eastern manager of a large floral [telegraph service. my h well," For and a saris yearly in Canada "f States giving demonstrations of flower arrangements. sings the wear 8. sions vised During his travels he -|praises of Oriental stylin| .|CAREFUL GROUPS "They always use odd numbers, ,{When they come to three, they do the flowers in groups of threes," he explained. If there are nine flowers in the arrangement, they will be in three groups of three flowers. "The flowers are carefully se- lected -- one tight bud, one me- dium and the other large," he explained. "The bud represents hee mater Mrs. Mary Mrs. Bruce Nicholson, Mrs. A. R. Alloway; representative for committee, Mrs. John Dugan; home visitation and work committee, Mrs. Daniel Nichol- son, Mrs. Wililam Spencer, Mrs. Eva : song leader, Mrs. Harry McGhee. Mrs. Aitken closed the meeting come wish She to he about Indian stringed instrument. first wedding anniversary shortly after arriving here. They met on a badminton court in Bombay. dian international teams and fore coming here was ranked as 1 one of the country's top players. "Although I play oiten with sari of turquois colored silk ac- cented by red embossed thread, her feet were brightly - painted "juttis"'--flat leather shoes. Mest Indian women collect ones," pensive to have the garments-- each including some six yards of Mrs. writer. something new," she said. haps will publish it on her return . She plays the sitar, an couple celebrated their LUNCHEON CHILI 3% cup chopped onion spoon over placed in heated 3% clove garlic, chopped to 6 servings. THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, December 2, 1959 J steamed rice . Makes 4 Chawla played on three In|2 tablespoons shortening be-| ¥% cup chopped green pepper 12-ounce can luncheon meat, cubed 1 No. 2 can red GOLD PLATES Sultans of Guinea on Africa's west coast centuries ago dined on ushand, I don't play very Mrs. Chawla smiled. the interview, she wore a kidney beans 1% cups d t t 1 teaspoon chili powder choker of white beads. On and simmer 30 minutes. Serve large bowls with crisp toast. as a hobby, she said. have 60 silk and cotton she said. But she plans to them only on special occa: because she has been ad- that it would be too ex- DID YOU KNOW That you can get TRILAN CARPET from Nu-Way Rug and Carpet Sales for $5.50 square yard. 'NU-WAY RUG AND CARPET SALES 174 Mary St. RA 5-0433 ial--dry cleaned, Chawla's father is a He encouraged her to to Canada and "his great is for me_to return with is keeping a diary and per- r native land--probably in two years' time, she said. tomorrow, the medium flower to- day and the large bud yester- day." DRIED PRUNES The small bud is placed point- France's pack of dried prunes|ing towards heaven, the largest in 1959 is estimated at more than'bud is at the base close to the 16,000 tons, compared with 2,300 earth and the medium bud is set tons in 1958. between. sic at the Bhatkhande School of hot nor cold, but just warm." "If people would just take a few minutes to phone a florist to find out how to care for the flowers they receive the flowers would last much longer," said Mr. Hall, with prayer. THIS CHRISTMAS Put shoes Ambassador $4.98 You give a man year-round comfort when you give him these Kaufman Foamtreads. Made of handsome velveteen with shantung trimmed vamp. Foam rubber soles can't come loose because they're welded on. Non-marking leather les. Sanitized, washabl Junior Sandman $2.98 ® Si These gay slippers for children have to keep ® First Quality ® 400 Needle ® New Shades Reg. 1.50 88¢ pr. Buy Them by the 1-10) ¢ NYLON HOSIERY HALF SLIPS and PANTIE SETS Nylon tricot HALF SLIPS i with beautiful. aylon lace trim. PANTIES to match with trim. The Christmas white, brown. 1 88 identical lace ideal set for "gifting", Colors of candy pink, blue and Sizes §-M-L. Regular to 2.98 zes 82 - 11 'healthy. Toss these whea they get soiled! 6 pair for 5.00 Fantasy $3.98 Women will love the velvet sleeckness of these Kaufman Foam- tread slip Choice of beauti- ful colors with golden edging and bow. Non-marking leather outsoles. Midsoles are composed of millions of tiny < air bubbles -- inviting the feet to relax. Sanitized for foot health and washable too. The secret of an "F comfort and long wear CRERERERE EFC RE ERR AER » E74 Nylon NO CEMENT « NO NAILS NO STITCHING AT BETTER STORES EVERYWHERE Made by Kaufman Rubber Co. Limited, Kitchener, Ontario " 119 BROCK ST. SOUTH WHITBY MO 8-3476 OPEN FRIDAY EVENING TILL 9 P.M. © HOUSTON SHOES WHITBY PLAZA WHITBY PHONE MO 8-4901 Stule - Lite Foot WEAR 107 DUNDAS W. WHITBY MO 8-4881 eo OPEN FRIDAY EVENING TILL 9 P.M. o AGNEW SURPASS SI!CE STORES DOWNTOWN OSHAWA DOWNTOWN OSHAWA WHITBY 25 SIMCOE ST. S. SHOPPING CENTRE 112 BROCK ST. §. PHONE RA 5:6611 PHONE RA 3.7411 PHONE MO 8-2412 HALF SLIPS i Nylon Lace trims in all ;{ all I : beautiful new Christmas Reg. to 2.98 . ERRORS NTSB Ladies! You Save On OPAQUE in Miss Sansom's case has led a decision to i de a greater treasurer, Mrs. Peter Morgan; press secretary, Mrs. Doug. Mec- ay. 4TH SCOUT MOTHERS' AUX. The November meeting of the 4th Oshawa Scout Mothers' Auxil- was held at St. Andrew's nited Church with 12 members the annual ol I} annual reports by the officers and committees, the new officers for the coming year were installed by Mrs, Edward Simmons, past president of ex- ecutive council, The November tea and sale of work was stated to be a big suc- number of women in the tests, he said. "There is plenty of documented evidence to show that the fe- male is biologically better able to stand stress and strain." Miss S a grad the NYLON SLIPS Model Shoe Store 32 SIMCOE STREET SOUTH--CORNER OF ATHOL STREET Beautifully made slips by famous for. . shadow panels -- Colors of white, University of New Br k in pink, cotillion blue, dahlia, etc. 1953, is doing post-graduate work in psychology at the University of Manitoba. / During six davs in isolation she ate only a liquid commercial re- ducing diet. "It had the texture and color of green paint and tasted like a combination of liquid chalk and a milk shake," she said. She said she lost an inch or two "in cess. The rew Akela, Miss Helen places." KING AT SIMCOE 3240. Regular to 3.98 259 Dainty - Pretty - Lavish with Lace ! manufacturers, well cut and easy to care . priced right for big savings! Beautifully trimmed with lace -- All 2 for 5.00 FULL FASHIONED NYLONS ® Branded 'Ban-Lon' SWEATERS cklines 88 newest bd rust, Normandene ©® 51 Gauge 15 Denier ® First Quality ® Fall Shades ® Sizes 8% to 11 Regular 1.00 44¢,. 6 pair for 2.50 red, blue, beige. Sizes S-M-L. LEOTARD TIGHTS Colorful, fashionable and warm, All the girls are asking Santa to 'Please bring us plenty of tights for a merry Christmas'. Erwinne' have a large selection in colors of black, '. 1.88..2.49 #1 Quilted nylons, satins and crepes, prints and plains ? and novelty fabrics. Some washable. White back- > grounds and floral patterns. Sizes S-M-L. 6 E 2 Special Purchase LADY BERKLEIGH Various styles of Pyjamas and gowrs in beautiful print. ed patterns, All guaranteed washable fast colors, REGULAR TO $3.98 MOHAIR WOOL SHAGGY PULLOVERS Warm and yet oh so smart . , . Mohair wool shaggy pullovers with turtle nack or roll neck styles. A much appreciated Chritmas gift item. Colors of charcoal, beige, brown, green and blue, Sizes S-M-L. $8 brand candy Sizes Regular 10.95 Value DANCEY'S 18 SIMCOE ST. S. se oe RA 5-4611 NYLON SIMPLEX : T! for yourself and for gift in X how to protect Don't Poison Your Child ! Have you thought how many poison items are in your home? Do you know your child from them? The helpful article in this week's Star Weekly tells you, Shae, G wild DAVIDSON'S 31 SIMCOE ST. N. RA 5-3312 'oun FRIDGE CID) swhrown = WSs iads "Goods Satisfactory or Money Refunded" OPEN FRIDAY EVENING TILL 9 P.M. RA 5-1833 giving. White apd colors. sho 6% to 7%. Accorted styles. Value 198 T= 1.00 ERERIPE TR YM 'Ishawa GIFT GLOVES i You'll want several pairs £m WRAL ARs ley, rie. 4 LL Rm pla SS aise 2] 7S REERSRERSY PURE SILK Bn Satin Squares Thirty two inch squares satin and crepe. All wer repellent. Pais. florals and geomet- Wide selection of colores Reg. to 1.98 59¢ 11 SIMCOE S.

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