f jered below the tightly - fitted , |REDINGOTE FAVORED CREAT-GREAT-GRANDFATHER HEADS DOUBLE FIVE GENERATIONS Great - great - grandfather William John Ashby, Park road north, has reason to be proud of being the patriarch of two unbroken lines of five Cooking By ROBERTA ROESCH Madame Grace Zia Chu, an authority on Chinese cooking who daily presents Chinese cooking demonstrations at the New York World's Fair Festi- val of Gas pavilion, says that her entire career can be sum- med in one direct, three-word statement. "I love people," she says sim- ply. "That's how my cooking career began and that's why it continues," C «& 4 however, was a real career-switch for Chinese-born and Wellesley - educated Mad- ame Chu. The first part of her working life was spent in teach- ing physical education in China, while she and her husband, Lt. For Pleasure Leads To Demonstrating at World's Fair |Madame Chu said. lout of the country, they urged/widespread, A group of Chinese) jme, toward the end of the war, court, Nipigon street, and behind Mr. Ashby is Mrs, Vaillancourt's daughter and Tricia's mother, Mrs. Allan Glaspell, Windsor avenue. In the picture on the right, CHILD GUIDANCE 19 months old, and seated beside him is his daughter, Mrs, Joseph Palmer of Peterborough. Behind Mrs. Palmer is one of her daugh- ters, Mrs. Nelson Vaillan- generations, which happens very seldom, In the picture on the left, Mr, Ashby holds his great - great - grand- daughter, Tricia Glaspell, | But when she moved to Flor-| lida, she soon became ac-| iquainted with a new group of women, and after sampling her Chinese cooking, they induced her to give them lessons. | "And since most of their husbands werein teaching cooking hecame| people in New York prevailed) 4 WT y upon her to go there, so Mad- m -- bie agp = ge ame Chu ultimately moved ng so they wou e able to plan Manhattan and began her pres- ) : bs ' and serve more exotic dishes\ent job teaching Chinese cook-|!f there ie mye 8 gale when their husbands cameing at the China Institute injyounger ae "pe ~ Ere ) home. |America, Mandarin House|"ve & sr ; ae Beye iSchool of Cooking and Riverside} A mother writes from Sou FINALLY GAVE IN Church. We have two girls, "At that point, 'pakota: We taught cooking in isn I'd never! As a result of this teaching|seven and one-and-a-half, my life," some of her students suggested|had no trouble till we moved Madame Chu continued, "so at} first I told them I couldn't do/phe Pleasures of Chinewselyear ago. The seven-year-old is it, But because of my interest!cooking. my problem, She's a nervous in people and because the wives) Tater the American Gas As-|child, but it's got worse. insisted so much, I finallY/sociation and the Gas Appli-| The other day she wanted to started giving them lessons." lance Manufacturers Association|go to the drugstore and [ said, Just as the classes were be-|made a film based on her book.|"No.'* She stamped her foot' and ginning to form, the Second|Then still later, because of her|cried. Some mornings when she World War came to an end and|book and the film, she got herigets up and we say, 'Good Gen. Shih-ming hu of the Na- tionalist Army, still lived in that country. | "But in 1941, my husband,| our two sons, and I came to Washington, D.C,, and became naturalized citizens of the U.S."| Madame Chu explained, "and it} was in the U.S. that my career in cooking began. "At the outset, my first American students were the wives of generals whom I en- tertained during the war years," REHABILITATE MUSIC MOSCOW (AP)--Two pieces of music by Sergei Prokofiev which. were donounced._by--the cultural watchdogs of the Stalin era now are being rehearsed for performance in April, 1966, on the 75th anniversary of the Rus- sian composer's birth.*They are a cantata composed in 1937 for the 20th anniversary of the Oc- tober Revolution and Ballad of an Unknown Boy, about a Sec- ond World War drphan. Proko- fiev and Stalin died on the same day in 1953. WIFE PRESERVER Install a soap. dish near the outside spigot and keep it filled. Save trips indoors to wash dirty hands. sree USED CARS Highest Cash } 1 | the servicemen--including the|present assignment at the New,morning," she just ignores us. generals--came home. Every-|York World's Fair, Outside there are no children one was so busy with transfers} And how does she like her jobjher age; all are a year or two to new posts or returning tojat the fair -- the first world's|younger or older, So she feels civilian life that there was little|/fair she's ever attended? jleft out. interest in learning how to cook} She loves the people and is} "The two six-year-old girls in new ways. So Madame Chu's|doing her job with joy--a good|stick together; the same with little venture to teach cookingjapproach, incidentally, for any-|the eight-year-olds. stopped before it got warmed body with a job in no matter} The six-year-old across the up. |what field. Gradually, word of her skit] NO Playmates Her Own Age street told my girl yesterday Mrs. Palmer is holding her great - granddaughter, Shel- ley Bradica, while Shelley's grandmother, Mrs. Carl Starr, Colborne. street east, another daughter of Mrs. | This Child Has A Problem ith What I'm wondering about is Is my child to blame for all this jtrouble and unhappiness she has jand what can we do to help? SUFFERS FROM JEALOUSY My reply in part: |W ishe write her now-popular book,|into this neighborhood about a; My guess is that your older child feels she doesn't stand in the family as well_as her little baby sister, that she suffers greatly from jealousy. Try, you and Dad, to find ways, with the help of your rel- atives and friends, to build: up this girl and make her feel more worthwhile, It's not the fault of your child that the older neighbor children snub her, Blame it on the fact she is younger than they are and that she has no other playmates of her age. She needs to be with children of her age. Her baby sister can't tbe a good playmate, nor can the Palmer, stands behind Mr, Ashby and Shelley's mother, Mrs. Starr's daughter, Mrs. John Bradica, Kaiser ores- cent, is behind Mrs, Palmer. --Oshawa Times Photots older children. Try to attract some children to your home near her age and go to a few homes where such children are. Perhaps she could bring home some of her classmates with permission of their parents, | Try to spend a lot of time jwith that older child---read to By GARRY .C. MYERS, PhD |that she disliked her and didn't/her, make things with her, play The child under eight or ten|want to play and ran home./games with her, you and Dad, who has no playmates: in the|Naturally .my child came in| Protect her from programs of iwhhorhood near his age, even|crying. She had no one to playjviolence on TV, Limit her view: ing of television. |PARENTS' QUESTIONS | Q. Buildings under construc-| tion near our home are very fas- cinati g to our children, Don't they face great hazards there? A, Yes, When your children go into or about these buildings under construction, they prac- tice trespassing and bad citizen- ship. Let them go there only when you are with them, and after you have gained permis- sion of the owner to be there. STUDIES ON HONEYMOON MONTREAL (CP)--A supple mental exam at Macdonald Col- lege did not prevent J. R. (Benny) Beattie from honey- mooning in Europe with his {new wife. The college gave him special permission to write the examination aboard the passen- ger liner taking them overseas ivenchy F Givenchy Favors ' EAetl, Fitted Midrilf By PEGGY MASSIN PARIS (Reuters)----The fitted midriff came back to fashion at Hubert de Givenchy's public showing of autumn and winter styles Monday. The young designer develops a sophisticated classical ap- proach based on snug fitting, while Balenciaga, who shows to- day is said to have launched the youngest, most jazzy collec- tion of his career, Givenchy's shift was a defi- nite shape compared to the loose - waisted chemise silhou- ettes seen in other top Paris fashion. houses, He uses wider padded shoul- ders, with a new deep-cut sleeve with fullness across the shoul- der blades, His basic wool jer- sey dresses have deep-cut cap sleeves and. simple boat or scooped necklines. They are belted with three- inch-wide suede sashes featured in a contrasting color, Some models have siender straight skirts, while others are gath- walst yoke, The tubular narrow redingote emerges as the number one coat silhouette. It has a high collarless neckline or small! rolled collar to contrast the dramatic dolman or _ bat-wing | | Casters Roll Up THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesdoy, September 1,9965 17 Success In Free-Wheeling Style By ELEANOR ROSS The big, shiny zipper has ad- vanced to an integral part of the design of many sports and cas- ual clothes, And, in the same vein, some urniture designers are going ir for casters in a big way with the big jobs as part of the de- sign, Other furniture creators are concealing the wheels under furniture frames, Apparently, it is because of space reasons that the caster has become so important, It is used for tables, bars, chairs, room dividers, hassocks, chests and jt enables these pieces to be moved around with ease, Another trend that has de- veloped is the soft, squashy sofa, the one that used to be luxuriously filled with eider down, of course. But foam rub- ber is just as bouncy and is much more resilient and pliant. DUCKY FOR DUCKS So the down could stay on the eider duck, which,for the duck is just ducky, One trend in furniture tha jseems headed for questionabl jacceptance is the distressed wood finish, After all, the tiny ish, although at first It may ap- pear to be, ls the growing im- portance of velvet upholstery, This aristocratic fabric can be used in households where there. is small fry, all because of the protective finishes that are so -readily available. GAINING. POPULARITY - har s ~ oy or bar- rel chair is gaining in popular- ity, especially when made with bases that swivel or tilt, There are single chairs and there are nice roomy double jobs for com- fortable, curling up. In woods, walnut {s the most popular and there is much use if rosewood, acacia and other exotic species. Very little teak is being shown just now. Soon we will have full reports on the very latest fall furniture fashions which promise to be more luxurious than ever, For All Your "Bridal Shoes" (Tinted Free) CHOOSE black spots. that resemble genu- ine worm holes might be not) sleeves cut out from the waist- line. Givenchy buttons his red- ingotes from neckline to hem, and adds a narrow leather thong belt Cocktail and formal coats in damask patterned heavy silks or cut velvets are trimmed with small jewelled buttons, Match- ing court shoes are made of the same relief patterned velvets or silks, Evening clothes feature the ~ |elassic "robe de style" with all ithe emphasis on cut and color. {A typical black velvet gown has ila puritanically high neckline long tight sleeves, and the in- jcongruous zest of a.slit up to ithe knees at the centre front, ' The fitted midriff is empha-| sized with curved seaming or} brassiere cuts intended to play) up the bosom, There are gold and silver lame hostess ensem- bles, with wide-legged pyjamas, long tightly fitted overblouses, and floor-length coats, Thursday, Sept. 9 4PM, -- 7 PLM, Soturday, Sept. 11 10 A.M, ~~ 2 PLM, FOR FALL TERM HARVEY DANCE ACADEMY Oshawa Shopping Centre 725-6122 hs casiciasatianaliiiatiaisetaal ice i Eh NN EA NARA TES NE A SE SCE MR EER LAL IIE SERIES SS RE | i Prices F eens 61 - 62-63 Cars Liens Paid Out SEAWAY MOTORS | 200 Dundes St. W. Whitby - Ph. 668-5893 whether you plan to build or buy, make sure your new home isa Medallion All-Electric Home A Medallion all-electric home gives you the benefits of-- 1. Flameless Electric Heating 2. Full house-power 8: Planned lighting--inside and out 4. A superfast Cascade 40 electric water heater MEDALLION HOMES COME IN ALL SHAPES, SIZES and PRICE RANGES. FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL your hydro LIVE BETTER ELECTRICALLY ---- In Co-operation With -- WHITBY PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION ........ . TELEPHONE 668-5878 AJAX HYDRO ELECTRIC COMMISSION ......... . TELEPHONE 942-0500 | PICKERING PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION. ..... . . TELEPHONE 942-2930 \ OSHAWA PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION, PHONE 723-4624 too much out of line in a re-} production of an old piece, But) |to see a wood distress finish on modern furniture -- well, some! people call it downright foolish. | DANCEY'S \ DOWNTOWN OSHAWA 5% DISCOUNT IF YOU BRING THIS AD But what definitely isn't fool-| STRAINED FOODS *IN CONVENIENT GLASS JARS. holesome ood from ness the baby © specialists Hf your baby has begun to eat solid foods, you'll eventually add to his or her diet a variety of good wholesome foods: cereals, fruits, meats, vegetables, dinners and meat dinners, desserts, Each plays a part in baby's diet, nutritionally speak- ing. From a practical view, when you introduce your baby to a variety of tastes, you start him off on a lifetime of good eating habits, Makes life easier for you, more healthful for your baby, Who knows what's best for baby? Devoted specialists in infant nutrition ,.. like the Gerber people who bring your baby over 50 nutritious strained foods, Nice to know: that isach of these foods is "custom-cooked™ to help preserve its ood values ...and, too, its colour and flavour appeal to lheighten baby's interest in eating. When you see the Gerber baby on the label, you may be sure that the quality of the food and all phases of processing are carefully controlled by specialists who work solely in the interest of better infant nutrition. "You '® appreciate these handy gisss jars, 90 exsy te rectose for stoning enesed portions im your refrigerstor. . Babies are our business ..Our only business! Gerber Baby Foods niaAGara FALLS, CANADA