Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 17 Oct 1966, p. 12

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12 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Mondey, October 17, 1966 i y * * * ' 'ANN LANDERS A Wife Gives Advice To The Other Woman you 'in a working man's salary, But 'please don't feel sorry for me. av *I do have a few new dresses-- jwell nearly new. My sister +cleaned out her closet six smonths ago, and she is almost smy size. * And now for the important «part of my letter. I hope my 'husband has been honest with lyou about his past. He had "three other "love" affairs be- 'fore you came along and from +the way he whistles in the {morning when he shaves, I sus- spect he has already found your 'replacement. If he wasn't with fyou Friday and Saturday night *you are already on your way out because he wasn't at home veither. Sincerely yours --The b Wife " Dear Wife: Here's your letter and a' superb one it is, And now *may I add a word? Any idiot knows that it is not possible to catch asthma or hives. These illnesses are not contagivus. inuw i: one gue tic measles or the flu from her husband, that would be another .-|matter. I hope you will correct yourself in the paper because a lot of people accept your word as law and you owe it to the public to give sensible an- swers.--! joned Dear Dis: A person does not catch asthma or hives from an- other person in the same way that he might catch the mumps, but any physician will tell you that hives and asthma can be psychogenerated -- which in plain English means "'caused by an emotional problem." Fear, resentment, conflict and guilt can make a person so ill he is unable to get out of bed in the morning. Ulcers, head- aches and backaches are only a few of the ailments that are often traced to an emotional problem. No one would be so foolish as to say an ulcer is contagious, but almost every- body who has an ulcer got it from somebody--usually a rela- tive or a business associate. 'Unusual Washington Market : Specializes In Way - Out Foods By KELLY SMITH supermarket there are: --Braised' kangaroo tails, rein- deer meatballs, and gourd shavings. --200 cheeses, 100 sausages and salami. Bread flown in from Paris, fresh caviar from Iran. Vine leaves go like pork and beans. On a typical morning, & woman fills her gold-colored basket with Canadian moose «steaks and a businessman "leaves. with four cans of quail rarer es esses ee 4x2 St eaee ler rings up orders of * 900 or $1,000. Outside, a tourist pictures. This is the International Food , the city's tastiest multi- tourist haunt. Started ago as a novelty, the become a way of life in down! Washington. There 6,000 items im- Em i ERY ; signs shoppers in English and French. mbassies .buy here. Ambas- sadors' wives mingle with housewives. and tourists. The reports 1,000,000 people visited last. year. LOOKS NORMAL From the outside, the store seems a typical modern super- , market, Inside, without reading «labels, one might assume it was {just another grocery store. But » you don't find breakfast cereal, bread and eggs. Instead, there's a panélled, wine alcove, fancy' grocery carts for a touch of lux- and a gourmand eager to Plan menus and unravel town are ported from 50 countries. Aisle guide H eee eee eeeeerr eee ret WASHINGTON (AP)--In this} blonde from Nice, Arlette Schmitt, a brown-eyed France, speaks four languages and can tell a housewife how to use each item in the store. Arlette and store manager Bal Raj Dogra, of New Delh, India, agree on one point: The shop- pers are mostly American--not foreign. Two years ago, Dogra says, items were new to most cus- tomers. But now he says they've become picky, even over brand names. There are $25 roast suckling pigs for instance. 'At holiday time, we sell 25 to 30 a day, .|We can't keep enough of them. Lots of people want pig instead of turkey." SELL WILD GAME The wild game department in- cludes a $19 nine-pound water buffalo rib roast, a $5 five-pound wild snow hare from Canada, $3 Canadian elk rib steaks, $3.50 quail, as well as mallard ducks, venison, frog legs, pheasants (with all the feathers), wild cor- nish hens and alligator steaks. There's diamond rattlesnake meat ("Some people like rattle snake meat"), greek stuffed vine leaves and plain vine leaves ("Some people like to stuff their own"). "Every hostess wants to see the snails," he says. 'We call them escargots. A gourmet wouldn't think of giving a party without them." "Baked for you in Paris" reads the wrapping on long, slender cabaguetts, 69 - cent bread loaves flown in from France. Sweets are favorite gift items --candy, cookies, chocolates from Europe and the Near East. foreign recipes. Hats in black and white leather, resembling hel- LEATHER HELMET HAT STYLES mets, and garnished with gold studs, featured today's fall and winter collection shown in London by a famous design house. (AP. Wirephoto by cable » from. London) In 1832 English Husband In Canada For $8 TORONTO (CP)--Young men in Canada "are absolutely pant- ing for wives and can't get them. . . . Nor should women think these men are mere beasts." The quotes, from a fashion magazine of the early 19th cen- fascination such publications hold for present-day readers. They also reflect the pro blems of pioneer women, says Mrs. James Collard of Bur- lington, Ont. cal She is searching attics, base- ments and libraries for early Canadian prints and magazines to prove her contention that these, along with the fashions of the day, show the times, stresses and developments of the 18th and 19th centuries. She has about 900 prints and 300 journals. "These books. were used by the women," she said in an in- terview. "They were as impor- tant to them in 1820 as the women's magazine today is as a guide to fashion, home decor and the housewifely arts." PANT BUT PROVIDE Single English women, "a mere drug in England," were tury, help explain some of the} told in 1832 that many of the panting men in Canada could Miss Bought provide a comfortable life in the distant land. | The Lady's Magazine and| Museum of Belles Lettres, Fine Arts, Music, Drama, Fash- ions, etc., made the comment in its December, 1832, issue in thumping strongly for English women to consider Canadian husbands, The article, entitled On the Present Alarming Stagnation of Matrimony, said the invention of the steam engine and of gas- light had removed the romantic instincts of English swains, All an English girl had to do was put up $8 for a husband-- the British government would subsidize her travelling ex- penses to Canada, In a letter to one of the 19th century British magazines, a lady about to come to Canada was warned to bring her own china, cutlery and glass with her. When Pennsylvania Dutch families moved to Canada dur- ing the American Revolution, they brought the German _in- fluence with them. Among the oldest prints in Mrs, Collard's collection are some dated 1774. There are also copies of the Journal des Luxus and der Modes printed in Germany from| 1786 to 1826. | LONDON, Ont. (CP)--More than 50 Roman Catholic nuns, in a break with tradition, have been sharing 14 apartments here. : The sisters, from across Can- ada, the United States and as far away as the Philippines, are in London for a year to take courses in religious education at the Divine Word Centre, for- merly B'nai Moses Ben Judah Synagogue. Since London's religious com- munity facilities can't handle the influx of new students, the apartment move was neces- sary. "When one of our neighbors first heard we were moving into the building she said: 'Oh no, that@ean't possibly be true-- nuns don't live in apartments,' " said Sister Alma Marie, a Mary- knoll nun from New York. "T think we're a novelty for the children," said Sister Imelda, an Ursuline from Bruno, Sask. 'Neighborhood boys are always following us Catholic Nuns Leave Convents | Share Apartments In London | home after grocery shopping, to ask if they can help us carry anything." "The boys are always after us to teach them songs," said Sister Fe and Sister Marie Teresa of the Philippines. pes MISSES COMMUNITY | "Apartment life is fine but I) miss the community life," said! Sister Laura William, a Sister of Charity from Halifax. In an interview the five nuns| said they're forced to cope with the routine problems faced by all roommates. Cooking and cleaning chores have to be shared and they're learning to budget their living expenses., | The sisters said they feel| more and more nuns in the fu-} ture will be leaving larger con-| vents: to live in apartments. "In some localities it's harder to get a residence," said Sister Alma Marie. "It depends on the; work you're doing. We're loos-| ening up a lot. We have sisters | in New York City who. are liv- ing in apartments." | HONOR AITKEN MONCTON (CP) -- Sir Max Aitken, son of the late Lord Beaverbrook, was made an hon- orary citizen of this city by 'Mayor Leonard €. Jones, Jr., during a visit here Friday. Sir +Max, Canadian-born newspaper | Magnate, aisy receiveu aii u0u-) orary life membership in the| Moncton Men's Press Club. SUPREME 88's MAEN'S DRESS SHOES 6.88 NURSES' OXFORDS 4.88 CHILDREN'S CASUALS 3.88 Ledies' STACKED HEELS 5.88 Bata SHOE STORE Centre wick Ovhews and 15 Simcoe St. North WORTH WAITING FOR i] | | | Ansus-[5RAYDON: CARPET COMPANY LTD. Anniversary SALE WATCH WEDNESDAY'S TIMES FOR COMPLETE DETAILS! You Can Save Many Dollars ! ewe: Clean Swimming Pool Now By ELEANOR ROSS It will soon be time to winter- ize your home swimming pool. Do a good job and you'll save time, effort, and perhaps cash on next summer's tune-up and clean-up, There are different schools of thought on the advisability of draining a pool, or leaving it completely filled during the winter, It is believed that a complete draining of the pool is the more satisfactory method. However, one exception is a pool with an interior finish of plaster or tile, which is not bonded to the pool structure and may be damaged by freezing conditions, Also, a pool built in an area where the ground water level might rise above the bottom of the pool should not be drained, especially if the pool is not equipped with a hydrostatic relief valve. FILTERS CHECKED To winterize sand filters, re- move the manhole cover. Break up any crust that may have formed on top of the sand. Then {To Prepare For Winter dig down into the sand and de- termine its state of cleanliness.) | If the sand contains any mud balls of calcified hunks, it should be treated with a filter cleaning compound, which should be used according "to the manufacturer's recommen- dations. Turn on the pump and back- wash the filter, h the manhole, for it 30 minutes. Leave the manhole cover off during winter storage. Remove plug from bottom of tank and allow all water to drain out of the tank: Open all valves on filter system. If there is a diatomaceous After 21 twice as many women as men are made miserable by common urinary irritation caused by a germ, Escherichia Coli. To quickly combat the secondary aches, muscular pains sleep oes by Bicner ene Bladder y 'STEX tablets & glass 0} ae is @ clea antl. septic, an analgesic pain 9 Rhi » Sciatica Pains, Backache, and muscular pains. Get OYSTEX from druggist, Feel better fast, SPORTSWEAR Lid. OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE PURE WOOL SET-THE FASHION TREND PULLOVER--Whether you're off for a day of fun or an evening of friendship and chatter, you'll feel relaxed in this "London Rib" mock- turtle pullover with long sleeves and neck zipper. Just imagine--machine- washable, 100% English * Botany wool in lots of new shades for Fall, SIZES 34 - 42 EACH $14.00 SLIMS--To compliment your sweater, these perfectly tailored pure wool worsted slims woven from 100% dyed-to-perfi Kitten Botany wool sweater. SIZES 8-20 EACH $18.00 WE CARRY BY FAR THE LARGEST STOCK OF KITTEN-DYLANIZE SWEATERS, SKIRTS and SLIMS IN OSHAWA, A Deposit Will Hold Any Purchase OPEN THURSDAYS & FRIDAYS UNTIL 9 P.M, light on poo! deck, under wooden HUMOR BEATS AGK cover box. » 1 OSHAWA, Ont. (CP) -- "If | All skimmers should bejyou're born with a sense of hu- drained, and covered to prevent/mor, you'll never grow old," entry of snow or rain in water,| Angela Armitt of the University If skimmer drainage is impos-i°% Western Ontario told a sible, a semi-inflated bicycle| Packed, parish guild me @ tin g tube should be stuffed down into| Jr"), eA gl ag the skimmer to absorb pres- Irish-bo: gies feta the sures created by freezing and] ining canine the name yod gt then you are too old." Well, we've done quite a job today, so let's finish preparing the pool for winter in a later AWAITS YOU HERE! Removes superfluous Hair per- column, ; manently and painlessly by ELECTROLYSIS The Kree Imperial now installed for your convenience, Over 15 Years Experience MARIE MURDUFF | Will be in Oshawa at the Genoshe Hotel Oct. 17, 18, 19th PHONE 723-4641 HOUSEHOLD HINT \ Bake sausage patties for a. crowd instead of frying them. | To each pound of sausage. add 1 slice bread in crumbles, 1 egg, 1 teaspoon salt, % cup grated apple. Mix, shape, bake for 30 ED : Drain water from all chiorin- ator parts and hook up lines to make certain the ejector is drained, If chlorinator is out- , Femove and store in- Store chlorinator gas inside. The lights in drained pools|minutes at 350 degrees, should be examined for signs of leakage. Where leakage has occurred, remove light from niche, disassemble, dry out, re- place defective gaskets and re- assemble, Replace light in niche, In nanle loft filled with water remove lights from niches and place on pool deck and examine for signs. of leakage. Where leakage has occurred follow] ReD CROSS Bénart | "CAMERA DEPT. ----ee K mart GER DEP FREE ROLL OF FILM! | BLACK -&- WHITE OR COLOUR FOR EACH ROLL LEFT FOR DEVELOPING & PRINTING 620, 120, 127, 126, 35mm YOU NEED NEVER BUY ANOTHER FILM! SIMPLY LEAVE YOUR NEXT FILM BLACK -&- WHITE OR COLOUR AT K mart's CAMERA DEPART- MENT FOR DEVELOPING & PRINTING. YOU WILL GET A FREE ROLL OF THE SAME SIZE. ¢ @eeeee#e#ee?e® SATISFACTION GUARANTEED! @eeeeee#e?e® FREE! SAME SIZE OF FILM WITH EACH ORDER! THIS WEEK ONLY POLAROID SWINGER CAMERA @ _10 SECOND PICTURES @ BETWEEN OSHAWA AND WHITBY ct ON HIGHWAY No. 2

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