Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 19 Jul 1965, p. 10

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EASY LAMB IN ASPIC Y%, cup water 1 envelope plain unflavored gelatine 1 can (about 10 oz.) con- somme 2 tablespoons grated onion. % teaspoon dried mint flakes \% teaspoon salt % cup water 2 cups finely-chopped cooked leah lamb 1% cup chopped pimiento Combine % cup water and gelatine. In a saucepan cpm- bine consomme, onion and t flakes; bring to a boil; remove from heat and add gelatine mixture; stir to dissolve gela- tine, Add salt and % cup water; chill until just starting to thick- len. Stir in lamb and pimiento. /Pour into. 6 individual jelly moulds or 9" x 5" loaf pan. Chill until set; unmould and serve with crisp salad greens. Makes 4 to 6 servings. 10 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mondey, July 19, 1965 SOCIAL & PERSONAL ® ~ Jo Aldwinckle, Women's Editor Telephone 722 - 3474 for Women's Department Mr. Edward Harman, re-|pot-luck supper, topped off with cently retired custedian of|generous portions of water- Conant Public School, left last/melon. 'Thursday on a three month vacation in Great Britain, where he will visit relatives at Mar- gate, Kent and in London. chak of Swan River. Her fiance, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Horban, RR 3 Bow- manville, is a graduate of the Living Word Bible In- stitute at Swan River. The ceremony is to be held in the Living Word Tabernacle. The Salvation Army Home League held its annual picnic in the lower hall of the Citadel owing to the bus strike. Games were played, prizes won, and supper enjoyed. At the regular meeting Tuesday afternoon Cadet Mabel. Jean Rawlins led the devotional period and told of her call to be an officer and related some of her experience in Training College. Cadet Raw- lins will be spending the sum- mer months in Oshawa. St. Matthew's Church, Ottawa, will be the setting for the marriage of Miss Susan Winif. Berry, to William Edward Miklas, Kingston, according to an announcement made today by Miss Berry's parents, Mr. and Mrs. George R. Berry, Ottawa. The bride- elect is a graduate of Queen's University and her prospective bridegroom, the HOUSEHOLD HINT Plastic bags are just the thing for toting wet bathing suits. son of Mr, and Mrs. Martin Miklas, Oshawa, holds a Master of Business Admin- istration degree from Queen's and will lecture there this fall. The wedding will take place on Satur- day, August 21, 1965. The marriage is to take place in Swan River, Mani- toba, August 21, of Miss Darlene Nemetchek and Mr. Donald W. Horban. The bride-to-be is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Nemet- CHILD GUIDANCE With Proper Examples Child Develops Speech Mr. and Mrs, John C. Kemp, Garrard road, have returned from a trip to England. where they visited relatives in Man- chester and London and did some sight-seeing in the mid- lands and west country. PATIO SALAD Combine chopped cooked lamb with chopped celery and green pepper -- moisten with salad dressing -- to taste -- chill and serve on thick slices of tomatoes with toasted English muffins. An easy patio or garden meal, Free Pick-up and Delivery 725-8915 Mrs. Fred: Cornish, Arlington avenue, had as her suest last Friday, her niece, Miss Lela " ¥ " "= \«night, Toronto, who arrived to "RANK STEVENS help Mrs. Cornish celebrate her RRANE S dein Hornsby \esth birthday. Many gifts, cards, y , and telephone messages of con- MR. AND MRS. "Hundred Guests Attend Surprise Party For Couple Mr. and Mrs. Frank Stevens, *Thorncliffe street, were honored "at a surprise party on Saturday, July 10, on the occasion of their 95th wedding anniversary. " One hundred guests attended 'the party arranged by their son, "Fred, who acted as master of ceremonies, and their daughter, arol, and friends and held in) "the Legion Hall Centre street. Following the reception and Buffet supper, Mr. and Mrs. Btevens were presented with a money bell, silver cufflinks and a silver bracelet on behalf of those present. They also re- eeived many other gifts. The toast to the couple was both born in Oshawa. Mrs. Stevens is the former Margaret Hamilton, They were married in Whitby and have one son and one daughter aforementioned. Their wedding attendants, Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Ashby of Whitby were present for the celebra- tion. Miss Carol Stevens kept the |guest book signed by friends from Buffalo, Albion and Eggerlsville, New York; Tor- onto, Newmarket, Markham and Scarborough. Mr. Stevens has been em- ployed at Duplate for over 35 years. Mrs. Stevens is a on ge by Mr. W. Barnes. ir. and Mrs. Stevens were Lodge. KEEP IN TRIM Working Wife With 20 Pound By IDA JEAN KAIN The working wife must eat to up her strength to carry on two jobs. The hitch is, the excess food she eats to get ex- tra energy simply piles on pounds, A young woman writes: "T am 22 years of age. I work in an office where I am under tension, Since I leave before seven in the morning, I rush to up. our apartment, ready for my driver. In evening when I arrive , I rush to prepare dinner myself and my husband. he is unavoidably r so late in getting and a doughnut to eat at office. Mid-morning I'm hungry again, but eat only a cracker or two. Then I'm starved at lunch time. In the afternoon a chocolate bar seems % satisfy the gnawing hunger. At night I'm too hungry to wait until my husband arrives, so I eat something and then eat din- ner with him. I try to have only skim milk and cereal be- -fore bedtime. "Sadly, I've regained the 20 pounds I lost:three months ago with diet pills from my doctor. I realize I must find a food pat- fern to regulate my weight. What is the cause of this con- stant gnawing hungry feeling? Seeks Help Problem There are 14,500,000 working wives today and, of these, 9,500,000 are also mothers. The key word for working wives is organization, Otherwise the sit- uation becomes intolerable. The working environment cannot be altered, but you do have some control over your home envir- onment, Attitude, too, is all- important, BUILDS TENSION Hurry in the morning builds tension before the office day even begins, Much as you might want to have everything straightened up before you leave, is it worth it--this build- up of tension? To help with this problem, will you more experi- enced working wives share your methods for easing into the day with a minimum of pressure? What is the key to your success in handling both home and job so as to enjoy living? To the young working wife in today's letter, try this plan for a 'single week. Put the order in your day, instead of giving your all to the home. Treat yourself to a balanced breakfast. Carry along a hard-cooked egg to eat at mid-morning, At lunch have a double portion of lean meat or chicken, on one slice of bread, and a glass of whole milk. Let the four o'clock pick- up be an ounce wedge of cheese. That candy bar is creating the rebound to hunger--skip it! On arriving home, sit down and re- I am quite discouraged... . lax with a cup of tea and a . Ontario's TROUSSEAU Four little velvet bows form Summer brides would wel- come this handsome lingerie set as part of their trous- geau wardrobe. The break- fast-length peignoir is of Schiffli embroidered nylon tricot in a floral design. its front closing. Under- neath is worn a short gown made of double layers of ny- lon with matching embrol- dery on the bodice, By TRACY ADRIAN jchek of Swan River, Manitoba, leoming |daughter, Darlene Helen, to Mr. past grand| chief of the' Pythian Sisters| Mr. and Mrs. William Horban, ernacle, Swan River. |Berry, \Institute, this recipe for a tasty treat. gratulations were received from friends and relatives. The Oshawa Women's Auxil- iary of the St. John Ambulance held a family picnic at Lake- view Park, recently, The chil- dren enjoyed many races for which there were prizes and a fish pond which was exciting. The games and prizes were ar- ranged by Mrs. Grant Hardy and Mrs. Malcolm DeMille. At supper time all sat down to a SOCIAL NOTICES FORTHCOMING MARRIAGE Mr, and Mrs. Paul Nemet- the forth- of their to announce marriage wish Donald William Horban, son of 3, Bowmanville. The cere- mony is to take place on Satur- day, August 21, 1965, at 4 o'clock in the Living Word Tab- ENGAGEMENT and Mrs, George R. Ottawa, announce the engagement of their daughter, Susan Winifred, to Mr. William Edward Miklas, Kingston, son of Mr. and Mrs, Martin Miklas, Oshawa. The wedding will take place on Saturday, August 31, Mr. thew's, Ottawa. FORTHCOMING MARRIAGE Mr, and Mrs. Harold Babing- ton, Oshawa, wish to announce the forthcoming marriage of their daughter, Patricia Gail, to Mr. John Patrick Caines, son of Mr. Jack Caines and Mrs. Alice Caines, all of Oshawa. The wed- ding is to take place on Friday, August 6, 1965 at King Street United Church, Oshawa. ENGAGEMENT Mr. and Mrs. G. H. McMahon, Kingston, announce the engage- ment of their daughter, Judith Andrea, to Mr, Wilson Douglas Stainton, son of Mr. and Mrs. William D. Stainton, Oakville. The marriage will take place on Saturday, July 31, 1965 at 2.00 p.m. in the Morgen Memorial Chapel, Queen's University, Kingston, cracker. When your husband is} late, drink a glass of butter-| milk, sipping it slowly. The greatest favor you could do for yourself and your hus- band is to plan twe evenings a week of play in the form of physical activity. Bowl, swim, square dance -- whatever you enjoy most. Physical exercise is nature's plan for. coping with tension. Molded Salad An Easy Treat July is Salad Month with |days when a jellied salad is always a welcome treat. More- over, a molded vegetable salad, sparkling in flavor and texture, can be made very easily with fresh _ vegetables. Home economists at Macdonald Guelph, recommend 1965 at 2,00 p.m, in St. Mat-| THE FORMER Sharon Marie Johansen signs the register following her mar- riage to Derek John Watch- orn in Simcoe Street United Church. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Christian Johansen, Oshawa, and the bridegroom is the son of Mrs. W. S. Watchorn of Ajax and the late Mr, Watchorn. --Ireland Studio WEDDING ALBUM A record for your Wedding Album is provided by The Oshawa Times Woman's Page. Oshawa Times office. Forms are available at The Early publication of this wedding record js facilitated by submitting the completed form and a picture of the bride to the Women's Editor as soon as possible after the ceremony. You are asked to submit the names of out-of-town guests attending the wedding to the social editor either before or the day after the wedding. Watchorn - In a double-ring ceremony in Simcoe Street United Church, Sharon Marie Johansen became the bride of Derek John Watch- orn. The bride is the daughter of Mr.:and Mrs. Peter Christian Johansen and the bridegroom is the son of Mrs. W. S, Watchorn of Ajax and the late Mr. Watchorn. The Reverend John F, G. Mor- ris officiated. Miss Donna Gra- ham of Woodbridge sang, ac- companied by Mr. E. Kelvin James. Given in marriage by her father, the bride wore a full- length, traditional gown of pure Chantilly lace. The fitted bodice featured a scalloped neckline and lily-point sleeves. The front tiers of the skirt were enfolded by a flowing overskirt, cas- cading into a regal train, A scalloped crown of seed pearls held her shoulder-length veil of silk illusion with -- scalloped edges. She carried a_ colonial bouquet of white butterfly and Gold Sceptre roses with stream- ers of picot ribbon and rose- buds. ¢ Miss June Fleming was the maid of honor and Miss Diane 1 package (3 ounces) lemon- flavored gelatin : 1 2-3 cups boiling water ¥% teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon grated onion 1% cups tender, crisp, shred- ded cabbage % cup grated raw 'carrot lettuce mayonnaise % cup diced celery | Dissolve gelatin in boiling) water. Add salt, cool and chill until syrupy. Prepare vege- tables. ] When gelatin is partially set, fold in onion, cabbage, carrot, and celery. Pour into a four- cup mold or individual molds} that have been rinsed with cold| water or lightly brushed with salad oil to make it easy to un- mold the salad. Chill until firm. Unmold and serve on lettuce- lined: individual salad. plates. Serve with dressing of mayon- _ Makes five to six serv- ngs. | HOUSEHOLD HINT For light, flaky pie crust, use barely enough ice water to hold| pastry together; chill well be-) fore using. | Johansen Floody, the flower girl. Both were dressed in yellow lace and chiffon over peau de soie, The other attendants in summer green, were Miss Arlene Emery, Willowdale; Miss Sally James, Mrs, Larry Thomas and Mrs. Robert James. All carried white and yellow iceberg chrysanthe- mums. Master Terry Black, Black- stock, was the ring bearer and Mr. Garnet Watchorn of Toronto was the best man. The ushers were Mr. James Gee of Cha- tham, Mr, Peter Johansen, Osh- awa; Mr. Garry Gibson, Ajax; and Mr, Edmund Duncan, To- ronto. A reception was held in the Kinsmen Community Centre. As the couple left for a honey- moon in the Pocono Mountains, the bride was wearing a navy blue and red print A-line dress with navy blue accessories. In September, Mr. and Mrs. Watchorn will reside at North York where the bride has ac- cepted a teaching position and the bridegroom will return to complete his final year at the University of Toronto Law School. By GARRY C. MYERS, PhD It can be fun to observe care- fully how a little child de- velops in his speech. To write down his first utterances, add- ing the new ones you hear every day, not only affords pleasure but also considerable insight into the amazing way in which his speech grows. More than fifty years ago some notes on this subject be- gan to be published. Many have appeared since. I mysel kept voluminous notes on the early speech development of our eldest child, about forty years ago, but have never pub- lished them. In these notes I find that in his early speech he had a way of using @ single word to express a wide variety of ideas, For example: When he said: "chicka" (chicken) he meant, a live chicken, chicken meat, chicken feathers, feed the chickens, chicken coop, chicken wire, eggs, gather the eggs, and so forth. As we heard him use this word for various thoughts, we had no trouble knowing what he meant, While the . earlier published studies measured mastery of language in terms of vocabu- lary size and sentence length, more recent studies have focused on the evaluation of syntax, tracing development of combining words from the earl- jest expression with more than one word, until the period when the child's speech approximates that of an adult, LANGUAGE STUDY In 1964, Bellingi, Brown and Roger were editors of a study of The Acquisition of Language monograph of the Society for Research in Child Development. According to this study, the child, at about the age of one makes his first meaningful ut- terances. Generally they are single words (daddy, light), and occasionally short phrases used as single words (gimme). They or a complex situation. Many more single unit witer- ances occur in the following months and, about 18 months, these units begin to be combined.. By the time the youngster ts 3%, his speech is very similar to adult speech. They are wide individual dif- ferences, of course. As soon as the child begins combining a second word with a first word, he soon combines several words. His description of a cat lapping milk might rogress as follows: "Milk, "kitty drink," "kitty drink milk," "kitty is drinking his milk." TELEGRAPHIC LANGUAGE As the young child hears an adult speak, he tends to listen to just one or more of the words most meaningful to him. He hears and later may use, a kind of telegraphic language. When your child is beginning to use a few words, you may just say "orange," as you show him an orange, instead of say- ing: "This is an orange." Later you say the whole expression, from which he may imitate with one or more of these words or all of them. When you do things for and with your child's begin- ning speech, you wisely talk about what you are doing. As the child hears adults talk) normally in the family, he grad- ually centres his attention on those words and groups of words most meaningful to him, and tends to use them himself. When you begin reading nur- sery rhymes and brief stories to him, he may attend mostly only to certain words, groups of words, or sounds that appeal to him most, As you read the same rhyme or story over and over, he attends to more and Jones wos afflicted with « bad case of stuttering but explained it' casually. "It's my_p-;-;-jecul- jority . , . everyone hos. some p-p-p- peculiarity." His friend explained thot he wos an exception since he had no pe- culiarities, when Jones soid: 'How do you s-s-s- stir your ¢-¢-¢- coffee?" "With my right hand, of course," wos the onswer, ' "That's your p -p -p -peculiarity,"" said Jones. "Most p-p -p -people use o 8-8-8 - io INQUIRE ABOUT OUR BOX STORAGE aL CLEAWIT SERVICE 725-3555 more of it. PROGRESS CONTINUES Your child's growth in inner response may be as gradual as the turning of darkness to light at dawn. Though the child be- ginning to vary verb forms may make a few mistakes as "I goed" for 'I went," he gradu- ally takes on amazingly accur- ate grammar if he hears only correct speech. Perhaps nothing else can help him so much to acquire easy to correct expression as his being read to continually. @ AIRLINES @ STEAMSHIP @ TOURS @ HOTEL .. RESERVATIONS Call - |designate an object, a person,| SALE CONTINUES Jayn- --at-- EVERTHING 1/2 PRICE OR LESS 4 FREE PARKING @ 725-4561 77 King St. E. 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Come and hear music in the park, out in the open, under the summer sky. You'll hear the best_of Broadway and popular hit songs in these hour and a half concerts, Pantomime & Comedy DOUG ROMAINE THE KIMBERLEY'S Honky Tonk COME AND ENJOY MUSIC IN THE PARK These concerts are presented by General Motors of Canada and the Toronto Musicians' Association.

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