Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 9 May 1967, p. 12

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

1Z THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, Mey ¥, 1967 The Motor City Sunday Night Bowling Social League closed its season on Saturday night with a turkey supper and dance at the Polish Hall, Olive BOWLING LEAGUE CLOSES WITH CE Avenue. Following dinner and. the presentation of over sixty trophies, prizes were awarded for the most attractive . centennial cos- tumes. Winners of the first NTENNIAL DRE 4 5 # cs Ss -UP prize for couples, Mr. and Mrs. Donald. Wilson are seen centre; Mr. and Mrs. Edward Smith and Mr. and Mrs. John Noden are left and right, respectively. --Oshawa Times Photo "The binding was always Rare Talents of Montreal Woman wens mess tna'my tinser Are Book - Binding, Calligraphy MONTREAL (CP) -- "My work is a labor of love," says Liselotte Stern, one of the world's few women master bookbinders. It's a good thing, too. For although the profession is far from crowded, the absence of competition doesn't mean big money. "For some reason people complain if they have to pay $10 or $15 for restoration of a book for which they originally paid only $6.50," she says. "They don't realize that sometimes 15 or 20 hours of labor go into the repair of an older volume." Mrs. Stern, who earned the right to call herself a master bookbinder in her native Ger- many 35 years ago, has given new life to books dating back as far as the 15th century. "Each book is a completely different problem. Books that are brought to me may have been damaged hy water, mil- dew, acid or just may have fallen apart from old age. "I begin by cutting a book apart and tackling each page individually. The seams of the Pages are mended with strips of Japan paper. If a book is badly stained it gets a vinegar bath." EXPERT AT COPYING Mrs. Stern is also an expert calligrapher and can copy anything from medieval man- uscripts to Arabic script. She learned this art from Anna Simons, who studied under Edward Johnson, the English master of calligraphy. This enables her to repro- duce a page that may be be- yond saving. To "age" such a page Mrs, Stern may soak it in weak tea or coffee until it acquires the same color as | the original. | When a page is badly torn or crumbling with age, she glues French silk chiffon-- gossamer evening dress ma- terial--over the entire surface to hold it together. The silk becomes almost invisible and the page must be held up to the light to detect any evi- dence of repair. Mrs. Stern, whose husband Karl is a psychiatrist and au- thor, does most of her work for McGill University's Osler and Redpath libraries and for the renowned Shakespeare collection of Montreal indus- trialist §. T. Fisher. Her basement workshop houses such equipment as brass finishing tools, gold-trim bindings, marble slabs, a four-foot paper cutter, ply- wood pressing boards, antique flatirons and a quill for medi- eval lettering. She has a supply of sheep and goat skins, some of which come from India. "There the leather is particularly desir- able as goats are exposed to such extremes of temperature it makes their skins very easy to work with." FRIEND ASSISTS HER Mrs. Stern has a collabora- tor in Paula Heinemann--"a real book doctor' who "con- siders each book a sick pa- tient that must be restored to health." The way Mrs. Stern became interested in bookbinding is a story in itself. It began when she was 11 and wrote and il- lustrated children's stories. a community of quiet elegance located in oshawa's northern residential area. Simcoe and Taunton If you are looking for a lot to buy .. . visit cedar ridge -- use a builder of your choice for informetion. On all Types of Furniture French Polishing - Restoration of Antiques Oshawa Upholstering Co. 725-0311 EXPERT RE-FINISHING | i phone 723-1194 OSHAWA @ Wide Selection of Fabrics @ Workmanship - Gueranteed (5 full yeors) 90 SIMCOE ST. N., OSHAWA @ Over 20 Years of Experience @ Easy budget Terms -- Free Estimates THE FURNITURE CENTRE 725-9332 prints and glue were all over the pages. So mother sug- gested I go to the local book- binder who was not far from our home in Heidelberg. "There I became fascinated with what he taught me. At 15 I quit school and became a full-fledged apprentice. Those weren't easy hours and for four years I worked from 7 a.m, to 6 p.m. "Later I had to take four s \difficulties faced by these chil- *, |Group of First Baptist Church. Jo Aldwinckle, Telephone 723-3474 for Lieutenant Colonel W. C. Paynter and his father, Mr. F. T. Paynter of Kingston, Ontario recently attended a testimonial dinner in honor of Dr. K. J. Paynter, tendered at the Gran- ite Club in Toronto by the Den- tal Faculty of the University of Toronto. Dr. Paynter has been appointed dean of the new den- tal faculty of the University of Saskatchewan at Saskatoon and he and his family leave in July to take up this: appointment. Attending the congress of the Federation of French-Canadian Women, held in the Chateau Laurier, Ottawa, May 1, 2 and 3, were Mrs. Jean Cardinal, president of the Oshawa sec- tion; Mrs. Yvan Gilbert, vice- president; Mrs. Richard La- croix and Mrs. Wellie Richard. The Reverend Roland Sans- chagrin of the French parish of l'Assomption de Notre Dame, Oshawa, attended the opening breakfast. Mrs. A. F. W. Plumptre, past president of the Consumers' As- sociation of Canada will ad- dress the meeting of the Uni- versity Women's Club of Osh- awa and district, tomorrow night. Miss Marjorie Lake, teacher of handicapped children, spoke on her work and showed slides illustrating the problems and dren and the special efforts now being made to help them at the meeting of the Dorcas Among the guests attending the Ajax Ladies' Pipe Band Ball to be held this Saturday at the Kinsmen Centre, will be: Lieutenant Colonel Leo Tig- gelers and Mrs. Tiggelers; A, V. Walker, MLA, and Mrs. Walker; Mr. and Mrs. James Potticary, the President of the Ajax Recreation Commission, Donald Crumm and Mrs. Crumm and members of the Ontario Regiment Pipes and Drums who will, with the Ajax Ladies' Pipe Band, stage a massed band presentation. more years of formal training in Munich and Weimar before I qualified as a master book- binder at the age of 25." Since then her assignments have included the restoration of 17th century Korans and tooling the royal crest on a souvenir photo album for Queen Juliana of The Nether- lands, She has also reared three SOCIAL & PERSONAL Women's Editor Women's Department Mrs. Herbert Anthony was elected president of the Holy Cross Council of the Catholic Women's League at its annual meeting. Others elected to office were' Mrs. Marcel Gir- oux, secretary; and Miss Mary Fitzgerald, treasurer, The Rev- erend M. J. Darby presented a past-president's pin to the retir- ing president, Mrs. J. T. Mullen and congratulated her on her past work and leadership. Oshawa members of the Beta Sigma Phi who will be attend- ing the 'Centennial Mosaic" convention being organized for this weekend in Ottawa, by the Ottawa Chapters of Beta Sigma Phi, are: Miss Janis Eagleson, Miss Candis Eagleson, Miss Carol Henry, Miss Sharon R. Whitely, Miss Mary Buck and Mrs. Kenneth Young. Mrs. Lloyd Jewell, dressed in period costume, greeted the guests at the Centennial tea held by St. Stephen's United Church Women. Many of the members were in. costumes worn 100 years ago. Mrs. Lloyd Down, Mrs. Wesley Down, and Mrs. Murray Osborne, all of Ebenezer, © accompanied Miss Louise Osborne, Bowman-| ville, sang old favorites. Mrs. M. M. Sutherland demonstrated the art of cake decorating and many antiques were on display. Mrs. Mark Swanger, service convener of the Prince Philip Chapter, IODE, reported at a recent meeting that a large bale of knitted goods and chil- dren's clothes had been sent to headquarters and that comfort bags for hospitals were to be made and filled by members. An addition to the library of the adopted school at Burnt Point, Newfoundland, had been shipped. Plans for the tag-day, May 26 were completed, A new member, Mrs. G. R. Kelly was welcomed and _ installed. Mrs. W. G. E. Robinson and Mrs. Leo Glover who convened a most successful marathon bridge, to raise chapter funds, have arranged a dinner tonight at the Oshawa Golf club for all those who participated. Prizes will be presented. CHECK SAVES LIVES HALIFAX (CP) -- Probably 200 lives were saved by the Nova Scotia uterine diagnosis campaign, begun in 1961, says Dr. Stuart C. Robin- son of Dalhousie University. The disease is curable in nearly 100 children and now is the grand- mother of 10. per cent of cases and 400 cases) were found in 144,000 st through the province. 140 BOND ST. WEST 'Where the Trad es Are 'le CHEVROLET © CORVAIR © CHEVY II '@ CHEVELLE © OLDSMOBILE © CAMARO ONTARIO MOTOR SALES TELEPHONE 725-6501 | | i by} | | cancer | FREDERICTON (CP)--Doris Ogilvie plans to treat her new work as a member of the royal commission on the status of women in the same way she treats her duties as a deputy judge of Fredericton magis- trate's court--she will try to wipe any preconceived ideas on the subject from her mind, Mrs. Ogilvie is a wife and a mother who recently graduated in law from the University of New Brunswick after returning to college. She is also a member of Canada's large female labor force as deputy judge of the magistrate's court where she handles family court and juve- nile cases, She says that because of all her varied roles in society, she will have to be particularly careful to keep an open mind on the subject of the status of women. "It's like being in court. One trains oneself to forget every- thing pertaining to the case ex- cept the evidence that comes up before one." of the commission study make it a project of challenge and excitement to Mrs. Ogilvie. STATUS HAS CHANGED "From the time the commis- sion was first announced, before I knew I was to be a member The far-reaching implications|! Status Commission Member Trained To Keep Open Mind the number of children who get into trouble. She says that moralizing on whether or not woman's place is in the home--as. was done at great length in the past--is ir- relevant in view of the situation today. HOME LOSES APPEAL "The fact remains that women aren't staying in the home, It's a clear trend. There now are more married women than single wemen working in Canada. The importance of the commission will be to study and report on the effect of all this-- and to make recommendations, if necessary, on what the gov- ernment can do to ensure that they get a fair break." Mrs. Ogilvie, whose h Career | | KEEP IN TRIM By IDA JEAN KAIN Food technologists are doing their creative best to help weight - conscious persons to keep the calories on the safe and svelt side. There is a wide variety of these special dietary foods available -- ice cream, candy and gum, cake mixes, frostings, puddings, soft drinks, cocktail mixes, jams, jellies and salad dressings, and artificial sweeteners in tablet, cube gran- ulated and liquid form. According to research, the three most popular foods in the low calorie food category are salad dressings, artificially Dr. Robert Ogilvie, is a Fred- ericton dentist and city alder- man, was born in Halifax and educated there. She received a bachelor of secretarial science at Mount St. Vincent University before she married and had her four daughters, Mary, now 17, Anne, 15, Jane, 14, and Susan, 3 In 1960 she decided to return to university and get her law degree. "I was fortunate in having the university so close to our home, and especially fortunate in that my husband--and my children too, but particularly my husband, were entirely in of it, I was terribly pl d that the government had taken ac- tion, in this field. "It required recognition of the fact that there has been a great change, gradually, in the status of women, and a realization of just how much substance there will be for the group to look into. "I was particularly interested in certain areas, of course, be- cause for the past few years I've been involved with family court and with juveniles. Both are all tied up with the home, of course, and thus with the status of women." Mrs. Ogilvie says she be- lieves that one of the most im- portant questions the commis- sion may be able to answer is whether or not there is any relationship between the greater number of women working, and favor of my returning to school. They co-operated in every way they could and gave me all the encouragement I ded. I think sw fruits and baked goods, in that order. Of the salad dressings French, Italian and Blue Cheese are the favorites. These special dress- ings furnish three to nine cal- ories a teaspoon. A whipped salad dressing, a mayonnaise- type product furnishes six cal- ories a teaspoon. Special jams, jellies and mar- malades prepared with artificial sweeteners furnish only 1% to five calories a teaspoon. In the dessert line there are cookies, cake mixes, frostings and pud- New Low Calorie Foods Boon To Weight Watchers "boom" area, Food technologists have suc- ceeded in extracting 60 per cent of the oil from peanuts, To ex- tract the oil, such peanuts are subjected to hydraulic pressure. The pressed nuts are then re- stored to their original size and shape and roasted. These lower- in-fat peanuts are labelled "par- tially defatted." On 'the calorie Score, 45 peenuts of the defatted variety furnish 100 calories. With regular peanuts, 21 add up to 100 calories. By the way, de- fatted peanuts are not to be con- fused with dry roasted, which merely means no fat is added in the roasting. These special dietary foods make it possible to give low cale orie fare a taste - satisfying touch. But let's face it, these special foods won't help to fight fat if they are simply added to fattening fare. I have observed women scramble like mad in their pocketbooks to find the packet of non-nutritive sweeten- ers. If they have just eaten a bount repast, c lete with a rich dessert, this gesture is futile. If this same line of rea- soning is used with artificially dings. Whipped toppi which resemble whipped cream fur- nish only seven calories a table- spoon. Recent legislation has lifted the ban on non-nutritive jsubstances in candy, so this d candy and defatted peanuts, creeping overweight will continue to be a national problem. Whether by the new math or the old math, it's the grand total of calories that |may be the next big low calorie counts on the weight score. that was the decisive factor in my case." | BARBARA'S BEAUTY SALON {0th Anniversary 25% OFF All Cold Weves During month of April--Until Mey 15th 73 CELINA ST., OSHAWA 725-9572 ! ONE COAT OF IMPERV-ALL One Paint for Acorn's IMPERV-ALL is a miracle coating, providing maximum beauty, coverage and protection on Masonry walls, metal or painted or unpainted. No paints -- IMPERV-ALL.. Guaranteed for 5 years! Oshawa's Exclusive Dealer Starr Sports and MARINA King St. E. at Townline DOES IT BETTER ALL Surfaces wood. Inside or outside, need for 4 or 5 different . is one for all. 723-0211 Wor AVON ~ = + AR » a If your rug is valuable to you... and it costs no more. Modern equipment, skill and only fully experienced men guarantee you the best of results when we i clean your soiled rugs, whether it be wall-to-wall or loose rugs. Other services offered by Angus-Graydon are binding, repairing, fringing, dyeing, alterations and custom installations. H The Cost Is Only 10¢ Per Sq. Ft. Example 9' x 12' Only 10.80 ANGUS-GRAYDON ) CARPET COMPANY LIMITED 282 KING ST. WEST LEANING it deserves the very best. . . 728-6254 | Magnificent gifts of Vase 895 Lead Crystal. Large selection... find them in our Gift Shop now, Candy dish 195 | Fashions since 1867 OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE Genuine Hand-cut Fruit bowl 6% longed for. And thanks bandeau. Priced from © * Dupont's registered trademark, PLAYTEX CROSS Don't delay! Try this better way to accent your figure in this beautiful new Long Line style of famous Playtex Cross Your Heart* bras. Make this simple test now -- cross your heart. See? You're suddenly shapelier! That's what this Playtex Fashion Magic* Long Line embroidered cotton bra will do for you -- constantly. It lifts and separates ... with the comfort you've always elastic inserts, back and exclusive 2-inch elastic back band it gives you the smoothest bust-to-hip line ever! Adjustable semi-stretch straps. White. 34-40; B and C cups. Visit Walker's tomorrow for a fitting. Try on both styles; regular 6 9 5 Long Line and $ length Long Line, Each Ue While you're there, ask the fitter to show you the Playtex Cross Your Heart to its sheer Lycra** 3.00 up. © Meytex registered trademarks, THE HOME OF THE BRANDS OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE -- 728-4626 5 KING ST. EAST, BOWMANVILLE -- 623-5451 DONALD DUCK LI'L ABNER JULIET JONES MICKEY MOUSE GRANDMA MUGGS AND SKEETER LET'S GE OURS TAK ' Where Y Are Men

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy