Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 20 Oct 1964, p. 7

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"highlights MRS. R. G. MARTIN, left, models a turquoise and black diagonally - striped suit with Fashions Stress In St. Andrew's All the jewel tones of autumn were shown in a parade of af- fernoon wear, cocktail dresses and sportswear in a fashion show arranged by Unit 9 of St. Andrew's United Women.. The garments shown were provided by Montgomery's Ladies' Wear, King Street ~ East. Casual dresses in dashing checks, double-knit wools and thistledown mohair were all warmly received by the capa- city audience. Particularly ap- plauded were the suits, two being a red and black diagonal stripe with a black muskrat collar and a sculptured double knit in camel. For added delight there were cocktail dresses and a beautiful Jo Aldwinckle, Women's Editor Dial 723-3474 (emer THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesdoy. October 20, 1964 7 PERSONALS terday for Montreal to spend a few days with her parents prior 'to sailing to Holland to visit her husband's family at Zandvyoort|ris, Massachusetts; Mr. Mrs. Hans Haagmans and; Guests from out-of-town at- baby daughter, Daphne, left yes-|tending the Colleran-Southern wedding recently in Northmin- ster United Church, Oshawa, were: Mr. and Mrs, Frank Hat- and Church wel black leather belt. Mrs. K. F. Arbuckle wears white leather coat with borg collar. --Oshawa Times Photo Casual Look Fall Show full-length velvet at-home host- ess gown in shades of blue,! green and gold. \toggery were enjoyed, and for a touch of romance, frothy lin- gerie, starring a peignoir set in pink georgette trimmed in gen- uine maribou. Mrs. R. G. Aldsworth, con- vener, was assisted by Mrs. T. H. Greer. Mrs Alfred Austin was the commentator and Mrs. Ross Mackie played the piano. Arrangements for the refresh- ments. were directed by Mrs. |W. M. Wright. Those modelling jwere Mrs, Russell Hunt, Mrs, |R. H. Davis, Mrs. K. F. Ar-| | buckle, Mrs. R G. Martin, Mrs Gordon Dowling and Mrs. Jo- | seph Larocque. _|nue on. Friday evening for a! Watkins, all of Whitby. *}\going away party for Mrs. Rus- et '|sell Evans, formerly Eva Lock jcourt, |parents, Mr, and-Mrs. J. Stan-| variety of uses thoughout the| \ly Locke, Sr., Willowbank Cres-| house and for Gay sportswear and pert ski/- | ~~ Mrs. Percy Delaney and Janice, Toronto; Miss Judy Joyce, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Mclsaac, Mr. and Mrs, Ronald Proctor, and Mr. Thomas Davis, all of To- ronto; Mrs. Zella Thomas, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Bushen, all of Buffalo; Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Colleran, Uxbridge; Miss Jen Carnegie, Mr. Robert Parry and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Parry, all of Port verry; Mr, and Mrs. Jerry Colieran, Brooklin; Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Burrill, Nova Sco- tia; Mr, and Mrs. Grant South- ern, Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Rovlin and Mr. and Mrs. Frederick for three months. Mr. Haag- mans who is starting out on a trip around the world will join his family for Christmas. Sir Philip Hendy, director of England's National Gallery, in Trafalgar Square, London, flew to Toronto to open the Canaletto exhibition in the Art Gallery on Friday evening. This yaluabie exhibition will be open to the public until mid-November, Friends and relatives gather- ed at the home of Mr. and Mrs, Benjamin Locke, Windsor ave- | HOUSEHOLD HINT of Oshawa, and her two-year-| Available in two convenient old daughter, Lorraine. After an} sizes -- storage size and the enjoyable evening a bon voyage| smaller sandwich size -- plastic sl was apron Py dems| PASS of heavier weight are new Svaris' aunt, Mrs. Jack Ade=s| on the market. and buffet refreshments were} served. Out-of-town guests were) age bags are designed for stor- Mr. and cade Rees, Agin-| ing lange cuts of meat, chickens, Mrs, Evans Packaged 25 to a roll, the stor-| and her| vegetables and greens in refrig-| Britain since 1919. daughter have been visiting herjerator and freezer and for a|-- in gaciaanimaces KING STREET UCW, 1 Mrs. Douglas Redpath. pre- ided for the Thanksgivi . anksgiving ject 'Grateful Oh Lord Am I' and 'Count Your Blessings', ac- companied b Scott, Miss Gladys Burley, Mrs. S. W. Wannamaker, Mrs. Orland Orr, Mrs. Bourne, Mrs. Bryce Brown and Mrs, Oswald Cornish read the different parts of a story 'Finding Thankfuiness', meet of the Alice Jackson Unit of King Street UCW, held in the ladies' parlor of the church, Twenty - seven members answered roll call. Mrs. Leslie Booth recorded forty-six hospi- tal and fourteen home cails. Mrs, P, A. Tresise reported the by Miss Marjory Blewett, Mrs. Robert Brown and Miss Barker. rs. A. C, Britton sang two Mrs. Clarence unit had helped in the 'Tuck Shop' at Hillsdale Manor in S$ tember and that it would ag: the first week in November; sMembers were reminded of the ATOS turkey supper on Oc- tober 24; the Delmar Unit eve- ning with Miss Betty Kennedy as the speaker on October 29; the UCW bazaar on November 18 and the UCW Sunday on No- vember 22. It was announced that there will be a bale of good used clothing and old nylons If Youre TIRED ALL THE TIME n gets 2 "tired-out"' feeling, an opal packed in November, The theme for the devotional 'Gratitude Thanksgiving'. A playlet, Farmer's Confession' was read period ..was and 'A ALL THE GIRLS LOVE A SAILOR This \ittle sailor is Jeffery Lee Virgin, the thirteen- month-old son of Mr, and Mrs, Ted Virgin, Montrave avenue, He is the grandson of Mr, and Mrs, Arthur Vingin and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Green, all of Oshawa. His great- grandmother is Mrs. James Green, Liverpool, England. --Photo by Hornsby WOMEN'S SUFFRAGE Women have had suffrage in $200 In Cash! } Sutta's 725-4521 travel. The small- cent for the past four months.| er bags, packaged 50 to the roll, | They left Toronto International) are perfect not only for lunch| Airport by jet, Saturday after-| boxes, refrigerator and freezer |' noon, October 17, for their re-|storage of sandwiches but for} turn home to Treharris, Glamor-| holding small items on the kitch- : gan, South Wales. en shelf. LILLIAN MAE MARSH SCHOOL OF DANCING in your Home, Church or Studio 21 ATHOL ST. W. D.E.A., M.D.A. 4 723-3680 ¢ Ballet, Tap, Toe, Acrobatic, Pre-School, Kinderance, Character AT MASONIC TEMPLE 91 CENTRE ST. INFORMATION 723-7253 ANN LANDERS Dear Ann Landers: I'm.a 16- year-old girl whose parents ,- were divorced last year. My dad has remarried and I dislike his wife. Her former husband brought out so much dirt during the divorce hearings that everyone knows she's an immoral woman, Now I am torn between my mother's ad- vice and my desire to be a self- respecting person. Dad telephones me every Sat- urday and asks me what I need. I tell him I don't need any- thing, He offers me _ extra money which I refuse because I have no respect for him and I don't want his favors. He in- vites me to dinner with him and his wife almost every Sun- day. I hate to go but my mother pushes me. She says I'm stupid --that I should accept every- thing my dad wants to give me, plus whatever I can sweet-talk maybe that would have been| "in his province!"' I called the police and was) told fo talk to the 4op on the | beat. By then thé wagon had| been driven off. What should I have done?--N.B.B, Dear N.B.B.: You should have | insisted that the driver take the) wagon to a garage for a safety | check. If the car did not pass/ muster then you should have phoned the headquarters of the organization which sponsored the tour and said, "The vehicle is unsafe. What do you intend to do about it?" Dear Ann Landers: I have a problem. It is called a little brother. I am a' boy 14 years old. | I will be minding my own} | business, and my dear little! | Seven - year - old brother will come and make a pest of him- self. When I ask him to please leave me alone he says "OK."' Then he comes back to pester | him out of. |me some more. ; | I tell my mother he is both- Am I entitled to whatever I| can get as payment for the hurt|©Ting me and she says, "You my dad has caused me? I need|27@ mean. That is no way to your advice--Albatross jtreat your little brother."' | |_ The next time he pesters me Dear Albatross: I hope you|T hit him. (Just a light tap.) will not allow your mother's) The little rat - fink actonnia| bitterness to turn you into 4) bloody murder and my mother grasping, insincere person. ; comes running into the room, I Be civil to your father and/get heck and he gets loved up, | his wife but don't pretend any-| The law says I can't leave thing ypu don't feel, And don't}home till I'm 18, How can I accept anything you don't need./stand four more years of. this Dear Ann Landers: For the) torture? Help me.--In Misery past five years my husband and} Dear In: The best solution to I have taken foreign exchange | the little brother problem is to students into our home as/|Pray for another boy in the guests' during school vacations |f@mily. when they toured the country. Your little brother will be so This weekend two girls from|PUSY defending himself against Sweden arrived in a station| bis little brother he will leave wagon which carried ten adults YOu alone. plus luggage. My husband was. ,, (P.S. When your mother reads appalled when that overloaded) 'his she will probably tell me wagon drove up. I invited every- ys drop dead.) one in for a cool drink and he ga examined the car. Ann, the car showed 86,000 miles on the s pe edo meter. | FREE There was one bald tire in the back and the rear window) wouldn't open. The driver said the car kept pulling to the right and made a lot of noise, I felt it was my duty to do some- thing about it, so I phoned our minister. He said this was not "in his province." If those stu- dnts had been killed and he had to deliver the funeral talk, WILL GIVE WORLD TEACHER i Baker's Meant It! The words "'Exquisitely cleaned' most cer- tainly are no fable when it comes to BAKER CLEANED DRAPERIES. BAKER'S have every element for perfect cleaning of draperies Long experience. Exacting skills. Scientifi¢ © BROADLOOM equipment. Then you. add a generous portion of that priceless ingredient, painstaking care ! This all adds up to new life and colour re- stored to vour draperies . . . the gentle way. Try BAKER'S and see. Ross E. Mils (local agent) will handle all dettails. "FREE PICK-UP AND DELIVERY" ee ONE CALL DOES THEM ALL" --, BAKER Cleaning Co. "Over 80 Years' Experience" Your local Agent... ROSS E. MILLS Co. LTD. ,80 SIMCOE NORTH PHONE 728-6218 HALLOWE'EN MASKS e@e FUN FOR EVERYONE e FROM. NOW -- UNTIL OCTOBER 31st -- OR WHMRE THEY LAST FANNINGS' LAUNDERESS AND DRY CLEANERS A HALLOWEEN MASK FREE MONTREAL (CP) -- Jean Moore's next stop on a trip in WITH EVERY DRY CLEANING ORDER which she is teaching he\ way around the world is at\an Eskimo school in the Northwast Territories. The 22-year-old teacher from the Isle of Man} has already worked in England | and Montreal and she hopes to teach in the Orient and Aus-| tralia after spending "'at least @ year" in Canada's northland. | 25 Established DIAL ANNINGS' LAUNDERERS and DRY CLEANERS 723-1149 ONTARIO STREET, OSHAWA in Peterborough 1898 -- Odorless Dry Cieaning RELIABLE. FURNITURE - INTERIORS @ CUSTOM DRAPERIES @ FINE FURNITURE UP' TO atiintitite Foyt ey OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE - Monthly FAMILY ALLOWANCE @ SIMPLY CASH YOUR FAMILY ALLOWANCE CHEQUE AT THE CENTRE AND ASK FOR FREE ENTRY FORMS @ DEPOSIT ENTRY FORM INTO BALLOT BOX AT FLAG POLE IN THE MALL @ ENTRY SELECTION THIS MONTH WILL BE MADE ON THURSDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1964, CANADA SAVINGS BOND BUY YOURS FOR CASH OR BY INSTALMENTS | DOWN PAYMENT OF 5% = | $2.60 FOR A $60 BOND, | $6 FOR A #100 BOND, ETC. BALANCE IN EASY INSTALMENTS OVER A YEAR BANK OF MonTREAL Canadas Pout Sank 25 beautifal Compare up 320" of beautifel Christwas Gift Wrap cach roll 20° wide and 80" long covvvecone OUI lowest price ever . Less Than 4¢ A Card Christmas Cards in hox te $2.90 a box. Imaging

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