Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 5 Aug 1965, p. 10

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* * ¢ Orono Couple Holds Open House To Celebrate Golden Wedding Te celebrate their golden wed- ding anniversary, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar J. Luxton, Orono, held open house and received felici- tations. from a wide circle of friends. Mr. and Mrs. Luxton, the for- mef Alice Victoria (Mercy) Wal- ton, Newcastle, were married July 26, 1915, in Bowmanville where they resided on their farm until they retired to Orono eight years ago. The couple have one son, Wesley John of Providence; and two daughters, Alice, Mrs. Lawrence Hooey, Orono and Helen, Mrs. James Cain, Downsview; and seven grandchildren. The bride of fifty years re- ceived her guests in a dress of sa blue lace over taffeta. Scott Van Driel and Mas- ter 'Leslie Van Driel presented their great-aunt and great-uncle with a corsage of pink roses and a boutonniere. Mrs. Hooey and Mrs, Cain assisted their parents to receive. Also in attendance were the honored :couple's bro- thers and sisters. The table was decorated with gold candles and centered with MR. AND MRS. OSCAR J. LUXTON, MARRIED 50 YEARS --Photo Courtesy Canadian Statesman Those serving were Mrs. Wat- son, Mrs. Donald: Mercer, Mrs. Linden Van Driel, Mrs. Kenneth Gamsby, Mrs. William Cox, Mrs. Albert Quinney, Miss Marie Hooey, Miss Annette Van Den Brink and Mrs. George Wal- ton. The guest book was attend- ed by Miss Peggy Luxton and Mr. Robert Luxton. sented the couple with an elec- tric dryer and gifts of money. quets were also received; and at the annual Luxton. family pic- nic, their nephews and 'nieces presented. them. with a sum of money. |good wishes from the Governor- General and Madame Vanier; Mr. Russell Honey MP, and Mrs. Honey, Port Hope, who are vacationing at. Trail, B.C.; Mr. and Mrs. Donald Ferguson, Laura, Paul and Gregory, An- caster; and among the guests attending was Mr. Alex Carruth- ers, MLA. Other 'guests attended from Aurora, Toronto, Oshawa, New- a three-tiered wedding cake made by Mrs. Gordon Watson. castle, Orono, Bowmanville, Co- 10 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursdey, August 5, 1965 CHILD GUIDANCE nity for many a pupil and student who lagged at books last term, to make up his ar- rears. Some of these attend summer . courses provided by the public schools, some others have special tutors and a few are helped by parents. Unfortunately, many children of the elementary grades taking the summer courses feel they are being punished instead of having an opportunity to gain more success at books now and next year. Obviously any child will gain most through summer help who welcomes the help and Summertime Is Chance To Help Lagging Pupil By GARRY C. MYERS, PhD jenjoys increased achievement Summertime offers opportu-/from it. PROGRAM HELPS : Parents who can hold them- selves to a systematic program, and can be patient with the child might be able to give him leffective help. But, as a rule, the parent of the child who lagged at school last year is the kind of parent who didn't do very well at helping him while school was in session. She might not do much better this sum- mer. Her chief difficulty is to keep calm and patient, never growing vexed at the child over his learning, and to find ma- terials for him to learn easy enough for him to: succeed at. In the family with all the The immediate families pre-|§ Numerous card gifts and bou-|! They received telegrams of| # the Prime Minister, the Right] ¢ Honorable Lester B. Pearson;| ? bqurg, Scotland and Winnipeg. B.C. To Halifax Via Horseback SAULT STE. MARIE, Ont. (CP)--Two British Columbia women who left Clingon, B.C., - April 23 bound for Halifax on horseback have reached the iy point of their journey. Helen Aldwood, 29, a grader in a Port Alberni, B.C., ply- wood plant, and Joyce Mylon, 32,. employed by a Prince , B.C., electronics firm, SOCIAL NOTICES ENGAGEMENT Mr. and Mrs. Maxwell Gordon Coleman wish to announce the engagement of their daughter, Diane Gail, to Mr. Robert Neil Springstein, son of Mr. and Mrs. §. Russell Springstein, all of Oshawa. The wedding is to take Place in St. Mary of the People Roman Catholic Church on Sat- urday, August 28, 1965, at 12 had. never ridden horses before beginning their journey. They said they expect to reach Hali- fax the third week of Septem- * o'clock noon. MARRIAGE Mr. and Mrs. Edward Watson Downey wish to announce the marriage of their daughter, Mona Dianne, to Bruce Gary : HOUSEHOLD HINT Mark, 'son of Mr. and Mrs. G. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Balan, Oshawa and her bridegroom is the son of Mr. Gerald Lilley, Winnipeg and Mrs. Dennis Jefferson, Osh- awa. NOW LIVING in Whitby are Mr. and Mrs. Gary George Lilley, following their marriage recently in Holy Cross Roman Catholic Church. The bride is the former Janis Ann Balan, WEDDING ALBUM A record for your Wedding Album is provided by The Oshawa Times Woman's Page. Forms are available at The 'Oshawa Times office. Early publication of this wedding record is 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. --lIreland Studio usual interruptions the parent can't easily hold rigidly to a regular program. Typically a stranger whom the child meets regularly away from his home can be a more effective tutor. Some reading clinics are avail- able in many areas. DISCOVER HIS LEVEL "In any plan for helping a school laggard during summer, the first essential is to find at what level of difficulty he can succeed and to bring him for- ward gradually from _ there. Suppose he were in the fourth grade last winter. He might be able to read well only at second grade or even primer level. How absurd it would be to have him try to read from fourth grade 5 |books., Just imagine the thousands of children who will be set to try to read, spell or do number work this summer at the level of dif- ficulty on which they worked without success last winter, CHOOSE TUTOR WISELY Make it your first concern in choosing a tutor for your child at any time, that this tutor will find rock bottom with this child, find at what level he must work in order to enjoy success. Unfortunately, the average by, president of the Bay of Quinte Conference, Church Women will conduct the business sessions at the fourth annual school, Albert College, Belleville, Aug- ust 9-12, Mrs, Claude Ives, Bow- manville, dean of the school, MRS. L. F. RICHARDSON District Women Have Key Roles In UCW School Mrs. L. F. Richardson, Whit- United being held at will extend the welcome to those attending. Bible study will be under the |direction of Miss Marion Thomp- son, field worker for the Board of Women and Bible study group leaders from the Oshawa Pres- byterial UCW will be Mrs. Gor- don Tomlinson and Mrs. Car- |son Heard of St. Stephen's Unit- ed Church, The theme of the school this year is "Eternal Values in a Changing World'. Guest speak- ers will include Mrs. J. L. Hal- penny from the Department of Christian Education of the Unit- ed Church. Mrs, A. E. DeNure, formerly of Bowmanville, will be the pianist for all occa- sions. Mrs. Stephen Saywell will at- jtend in her capacity as treas- jurer of the conference bursary jfund, and Mrs. Carl Down as conference corresponding secre- tary. Mrs. Kenneth Farrow will re- port proceedings in the seven major newspapers in the confer- tee that such "usually do WASHINGTON (AP) -- The . international Feder ston ollwhom'the 'bayeoners fasagiae usiness an " women Tuesday defeated althey are helping, : 'Hi it to abe > aed poor trade nga eas . 22. meee for a papome: KAYE'S : other action, as edera- PRESERVER Hen ended - acpnvention sere LARGE SIZES SHOPPE '| Lady lewood, an 14% - 32% Use a oan ae ne lawyer, took over as president. ~_-- yn ote 52. - will go through fabrics easily,|Marearet Mclrvine of Ottawal] LOVELY LARGE SIZE ate i lwas elected secretary. ' Del F FOR Pio cE alta tes from South Africa loomers were nam ing the organization represent- Mrs. Amelia Bloomer,a cham-ling career women in 22 coun- - of women's rights, whojtries to "influence people in igned in 1851 a their own country against the attire" of a knee-length skixtluse of trade boycotts for politi- over Turkish trousers, . eal purposes' as some countries MAPLE CLEANERS 'A Message To Our Customers ! BATHING SUITS end SUMMER PLAY SUITS, @ WE WILL BE CLOSED FOR STAFF HOLIDAYS AUGUST 21st to AUGUST 28th. MAY WE REMIND YOU TO BRING YOUR CLEANING IN NOW - AND PICK UP EARLY HOPE YOU HAVE A SAFE AND HAPPY HOLIDAY TOO! 8 Hr. Service - Free Pick-up and Delivery CLEANERS Maple 504 Simcoe S. 726-0643 ence which includes territory from Pickering to G and from Lake Ontario to Pem- broke. Wednesday, August 11, 'has been set aside for those wishing to attend for one day only. tutor just has him labor in vain over the kind of learning ma- terial which had been far too hard for him at school. If he was in the third grade last term and could barely read well from first grade readers, he probably has him read from third grade books. A whole summer of such help may be worthless; it may even do harm and leave the child VISITED FROM FAR OAKVILLE, Ont. (CP)--Ana Mainola, a kindergarten teacher in Salta, Argentina, spent two) weeks here with Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Rydman to learn about Canada. She came under the Experiment in _ Interna- tional Living, a 33-year-old pro- gram in which 59 countries ex- change visitors more discouraged. BOOKS MUST APPEAL But if this tutor had this third-grade child practice from a reader labelled second or first grade, he might feel the book too babyish for him. His pride might be wounded. She should find easy-to-read books from the library: or at a good bookstore, books which appeal to the child, books which make him feel worthy. The tutor might find some such materials from one of the children's Magazines, Anybody trying to help a re- tarded reader should read aloud to him and with him. come alive! You're in the anon sugar on cookies/C. Mark, all of Whitby. The a shaker. It's easier, and ceremony took place on Satur- the sugar spreads more evenly,|day, July 31, 1965, in Whitby. Lilley - Holy Cross Roman Catholic ENSEMBLE FROM FRANCE Church was the setting for the marriage of Janis Ann, daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. John Balan, Oshawa, to Gary George Lilley, Winnipeg, son of Mr. Gerald Lilley, Winnipeg and Mrs. Den- quets of pink-sprayed white min- iature carnations. Nott and the ushers were Mr. Daniel Reid and Mr, Pakosta. Balan KEPT WOMEN OUT Oxford University, the most venerable university in the Commonwealth, first admitted women students in 1920. The best-man was Mr. Philip Pepsi generation! eercha wa' Smith Beverages Ltd., 750 Farewell Street William The reception was held at the Burns Jewellers Mrs. panied. Given in marriage by her father, the bride wore a formal sheath of white organza over taffeta trimmed with a vallance nis Jefferson, Oshawa. The Reverend M. J. Darby officiated and the soloist was Gary Booth, self-accom- home of the bride's parents on Wakefield crescent, where the bride's mother received, wear- ing a pale pink sheath with a lace over blouse, matching hat and a corsage of white roses. The bridegroom's mother assist- ed, wearing a medium blue suit trimmed with blue satin and a corsage of white roses tipped SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE of lace and featuring a full- length chapel train. The bodice had a scoop neckline and lily- with blue. honeymoon to points south. the As the couple left on their/ point floral headdress held her shoul- der-length veil of French tulle and she carried sleeves. Her pearlized|pride was wearing a navy. blue and white suit, white accessor- ies and a nosegay-shaped cor- a bouquet of soft! sage of deep pink and pale pink pink roses. rosebuds. Mr. and Mrs. Lilley CONTINUES The maid of honor was Miss Barbara Butler and the brides- maids were the bride's cousi have taken up residence at 80) Elizabeth crescent, Whitby. Miss Dora Balan and Miss Jo- Anne Balan. They were dressed alike in formal sheath gowns in blush pink with detachable full- length trains and carried bou- was organized in 1657 in Ville! Marie (Montreal) by Margaret Bourgeoys. WOMAN WAS TEACHER | The first school in Canada| Feder - Tricosa of Paris designed this chic dress and jacket ensemble and gave it a ribbon treatment. Soft pink ribbon threads through the edging of the wine- 7 colored woolknit costume. It appears at the neckline of the brief-sleeved sheath and matches the color of _ its narrow leather belt. The ribbon also es the front, pockets and sleeves of the jacket. 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