a ay eres WOES OF her marriage last Saturday were: Mrs, Jack Harrop, Tor- onto, gave a tea at Adelaide House, Oshawa; Mrs, James Maire, a linen shower; Mrs. Murray Brooks, Willowdale, a misclellaneous shower; Mrs. Douglas Manning, and Mrs, Joseph Mahon, a miscellaneous shower; Mrs. Kelvin Edgar, a shower, baie. Donald Hill a kitchen shower with Miss Jean Johnston as. co- hostess; Mrs. Ross Lee gave a ~ dinner party at her home; and following the wedding rehearsal, the bridal. party was entertained at the home of Mr. and Mrs. guests from out-offown a the Swan-James wed- ding this evening are: Mrs. 'Alice Delve, Toronto; Mr. and Mrs. Steven Artym, Hampton; Mr. ana Mrs. Harvey Cole, Mrs. Joseph O'Brien and Lynn, Mr. and Mrs. Carton Greenough, pas and John; Mr. and Mrs. D Browning and Robert, Miss Patricia Cole, and Miss Agnes MacDonald, all of Barrie; Mr. and Mrs. Elton Blakesley and Deborah, Mr. and Mrs, Reginald Shaw, Mr. and Mrs. James Innis, Mary and Steven, and Mr. and Mrs. Lioyd Cole, all of Etobicoke; Mr. Ray Cole, Toronto; Mr. JOS JOURNAL; Women's Editor of The Times 14 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Seturday, October 9, 1965 SOCIAL & PERSONAL Jo Aldwinckle, Women's Editor hen under his arm, here were people there were goats which» was perhaps why the train kept up its tea-kettle whistle. We wound out of the desert into farm land; gentle slopes dotted with sheep and into fruit- growing areas. The houses in the villages were poor, but trains never do go through the best part of town do they? The women we saw were all in black. They wore a baggy sort of wrap-garment and head shawl covering their fore- heads and pinned high under the chin. Younger ones on the railway stations were not dressed like this. They were in cotton print dresses or blouses and skirts and no head covering. 'The stations, always crowded with travellers, mostly with huge, cumbersome bundles, were neat and clean with usually a few,-flawer baskets swaying in the breeze and invariably tables And chairs set out on the platform where you could sit and drink Turkish coffee and watch the trains go through. Obviously this was a local pastime. Olives For Breakfast Somewhere along the line at a place called Muratli, a young fellow in a white coat came in with a breakfast tray. On it were a boiled egg, some slices of rather heavy white bread, a sweet roll, a dish of yogurt, a dish of ripe olives, a large pear, an apple, some strawberry jam, a tiny glass of hot tea and two cubes of sugar; no milk, no butter. I began with the pear which was luscious and worked my way through the lot, except the apple -- saved that for lunch. Since there was, no butter, the yogurt went well with the bread and needed the olives for seasoning. Arrived in Istanbul one is immediately aware of the throngs of people. Actually there are two million of them and they all seem to be out on the street. Not all -- the women stay at home, Wherever you look you see men, old a tl Wheat stalks and chrysan- themums go together like turkey and cranberry sauce. Arranged in a plain, vase inside a pumpkin and sur- rounded by corn, carrots and all sizes of squash, set in red-gold leaves, they pro- PUMPKINS AND POMPONS . . CORNCOBS & CARROTS vide an unusual bit of magic for a window sill or a buf- fet, befitting the season of Thanksgiving, Miss Sally James, whose mar- riage is taking place this eve- ning in St. George's Memorial Church, has been much enter- tained in honor of the occasion. Showers, Teas, Presentations Fete Today's Bride Sally James | | | man James, Mrs. John James,| and Mrs, Frank McClure, aunts | of the bride-elect, with Mrs.| Wayne Norris, Miss Sophia Taratuta, Miss June Fleming,|# The Wing 420 Club at the Osh- awa Airport was the setting for a surprise party honoring Mr. and Mrs. James Dunlop Gibb on the occasion of their 25th wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Gibb were married on Sep- tember 30, 1940 at Gairbraid United Church, Maryhill, Glas- gow, Scotland, coming to Can- y son, Norman Gibb, with the help of many friends. Mr. and Mrs. were presented with a boutonn- ierre and corsage and a gift of sterling silverware on behalf of the more than 50 guests, A pro- gram of entertainment and danc- ing was held followed by a buff- et supper and the serving of an anniversary cake. mid, Bloor street west, have Telephone 723 - 3474 for Women's Department ada in June 1949. The party was|McMillan, all of Port Perry. arranged by the couple's: only| Mr. and Mrs. Harold McDiar-| chorn, Mr. and Mrs, Keith Graham, all of Willowdale; Mr. and Mrs, Allan Niddery, Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Niddery, all of Scarborough; Mr, and Mrs. Robert Bradt, Bobcaygeon; Miss Alison Foy, Newcastle; Mr. and Mrs. Walter Floyd, Grimsby; Mr. and Mrs. Harry Peel, Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm Toronto guests attending the Swan-James wedding this even- ing are: Mr. and Mrs. Rudy Scererbegovic, Mr. Michael White, Miss June Fleming, Mr. Albert Niddery, Mr. and Mrs. Kirk Wipper, Miss Lilian Me- Roberts, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Sheppard, and Mr. and Mrs, Oyston, Guests from a distance attend- ing the Swan-James wedding tonight are: Miss Frances Red- returned from a motortrip to California, Disneyland, Los San Francisco, and by Angeles returning Mr. and Mrs. George Parker arrived on Monday, from Dale, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Denzil C. Dale, Sutherland av- where they visited! way of Chicago, stopping en) route to see the Grand Canyon.} Lon-|nia; M don, England, to attend the wed qi Ml ding of their niece, Miss Sharon| peterborough; Mr. and Mrs.| enue, to Mr. Lawrence Perkins| yr and Mrs. Walter Swan, all man, Detroit; Mr. and Mrs. Donald Floyd, Mr. Allan Jack- son, all of Calgary, Alberta; Mr, Gordon Harcourt, the Netherlands; Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sullivan, Sepulveda, Cali- fornia; Mr. and Mrs, Arthur Rawlings, Lakewood, Califor- David Nathan, Lon- Mr. Edward Zielinski, Kenneth Stewart, Brockville; Mr. and Mrs. Garydon Cole, Walter Swan, Detroit; Mr. and groom Mrs. Hoare Coles, Barrie. en Se Guests from Toronto at the Perkins-Dale wedding this af- ternoon include Miss Carolyn Cooper, Miss Marlene Mason, Mrs. Wesley Matthews, Mrs. Ethel Perkins, Miss A. M. Kelly, the Reverend and Mrs. W. J. Newell and family; Miss| Jane Dale; Mrs. Edna Bowden) and Miss Joanne Bang. Attending the Perkins-Dale wedding this afternoon will be Miss Japhia Terlecki, Montreal, and Mr. and Mrs. Dale Thomp- son, Shawville, Quebec. From Ontario centres are Miss Bar- bara Broadbent, Miss Marilyn Mrs. Rae Hopkins, of Orillia; Mrs. George Osborne, Paris; Mrs. Murray well, all of. Toronto, Vernon Osborne, parents of the Out-of-town guests attending the Osborne-Hopkins wedding last Saturday in King Street United Church were: Mr. and Calgary; Mr. and Mrs, Leonard Booth, and Mrs. Charles Jeremy, all Stanley Poe- kohla, Detroit; Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Bruce Kneeshaw, Stayner; Miss Jessie Osborne, Brantford; Mr. and Mrs. Jack Harrop, Mr. and Brooks, Mr. Joseph Finney, Mrs, Kay Vare ley, Mr. and Mrs. John Dean, and Mr, and Mrs. William Gald- Markle and Miss Jeqn Ter- willegar, Kingston; Mr. and! Mrs. Roland Hornby, Ashton; | Mr. and Mrs. Orvill Peever,; Arnprior; Miss Myrtle Peever,| Paris; Miss Barbara Perkins, Mr. and Mrs. Beverley Coulter, ROCK 18 IN ORBIT Our solar system's diameter. largest asteroid, Ceres, is 480 miles in London; the Reverend and Mrs, A. G. E. Mitchell, Bracebridge; Mr. Murray Mitchell, Sudbury; Mr. and Mrs. Donald McDonald, | Miss Margaret Rice, Mr. and) Mrs. Clinton Newman, Hamil- ton; Mr, and Mrs, Richard Wingrove, Brantford, the Rev- erend Alfred Weiner, Miss Linda Michael Mr, and Mrs. Gerald Tebbutt, Guelph; Mr.| and Mrs. Jack Tosland,. Rich- mond Hill; Mr, and Mrs. R. J. Moon and family, Cooksville; Master Marketing itd. IMMEDIATE CASH INCOME SPARE TIME, NO SELLING Reliable individuals required to service established ,ocounts. 4-6 hours weekly. Only family men of good employment with | Miss Sheila Lawler, Mrs, Bruce| g\in First Baptist Church, tomor-| iilie: 'viwes unk Mrs Doreklt jof Orillia; and Corporal David row afternoon. |E. Jubb, Camp LeJeune, North Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Badour, A party was given by the Port Perny; Miss Beatrice Kos- bridegroom's relatives at the sound and stable background men, young men, rich men and poor, all in some sort need apply. of western dress, some well-tailored, some in jeans, but not a sign of a fez. The fez and the veil were outlawed by the liberator and first president of the republic, Kemal Ataturk, The city is built on seven hills and is partly in Europe and partly in Asia; separated by the swiftly flowing Bos- phorus which connects the Black sea_ with the Sea of Marmara. The European side is divided again roughly into north-east and south-west by the Golden Horn, a long, narrow neck of water, and from my hotel balcony I could see mosques and minarets silhouetted in the crimson sun- sets and the point where the Bosphorus, the Golden Horn and the Sea of Marmara met. The city is so old and so full of culture and tradition that it would take months rather than weeks to take it all in. For 16 centuries Istanbul has been a metropolis, longer than any other city in the world and sometimes it is difficult to distinguish the suburbs of the imagination from the centre of reality. Older Than Christianity The first settlement dates back to the 9th century BC. In turn this became Byzantium and then Constantinople after the Roman Emperor. In the Middle Ages it was captured by the Ottoman Turks and the Sultans held sway until 1923 when Mustapha Kemel led the revolution that brought about the present republic. Evidence of the fabulous wealth of the sultans are the enormous mosques, marvels of oriental architecture, that built. There are five hundred mosques and at are larger than any European cathedrals . Inside, supported by gigantic. columns, nalf-domes rise above half-domes curving inward to the centre, Painting and mosaics decorate ere are some stained designs but no figure, either human or animal, is allowed. To the Moslem the mosque is a place of the spirit. There are no seats and the stone floors are completely carpeted. Outside in the courtyard are fountains and footstools where the worshippers wash their hands, feet and faces, paying scrupulous attention to their eyes, ears, noses and mouths, before entering the mosque, They walk from the fountain to the entrance on wooden clogs which they kick aside and enter barefoot. A non-Moslem is required to remove his shoes which 1 did many times, hoping, in an unreligious moment, that they would still be there when I emerged. They were. A Moslem is required to pray five times a day, at least once in @ mosque, The first call comes in the grey dawn and the last in' the twilight. As he prays he kneels and bows his forehead to the ground. Because the carpets are touched by the foreheads of the worshippers, they must be kept free from dirt. Hence the reason for the removal of: shoes. Women have practically no place in the Moslem faith. A small gallery is reserved for them in the back of the mosque while rows and rows of men crouch like turtles before the Imam who intones his prayers in a mournful minor key. Outside in the sunlight a handful of boys were kicking a football around in the dust. Not for them the call to prayer. This was one of the signs of the new Turkey. When they conquered, the Turks did not ravage. That is why it is possible today to see Roman and Christian relics. The famous basilica of Saint Sophia constructed by the Emperor Justinian in 532 stands in all its glory, but is not used either as a church'or a mosque and I discovered the 1500 year old church of St. Sauveur in Khora, rich with gold and colored mdsaics of Bible stories, angels and saints, which were covered with plaster when the church became a mosque and-are now being restored by archaeologists. I went down into the vast pillared cisterns that the Romans built as storage places for the precious water they piped in from the hills, over long aqueducts. The Roman fortifications are still standing and the poor have built lean-to shacks against them. Wallowing In Wealth It was the old, dirty, crowded part of the city that fascinated me. Here is the old seraglio, now the Topkapi Museum, that was the historic palace of the sultans. Here they ruled in glittering splendor with five thousand ser- vants at their bidding. Never have I seen such a collec- tion of jewels, diamonds, emeralds, rubies and pearls in , mecklets, headdresses, watches, knives, swords, scabbards, almost any object you could think of was there, encrusted with precious stones. Not just one room, but galleries of them and others containing Chinese porcelain and oriental treasures. Abdul Aziz, one of the most splendid, and avaricious, of the Sultans, weighed over three hundred pounds, so he had among other things, a special throne built of solid gold and inlaid with pearls. He also had three hundred concubines and four wives. He once paid a state visit to Queen Victoria and tried to obtain a loan but instead she gave him a grandfather's elock and there it stands, plain and practical, amid the exotic treasures. ' A friendly Turk asked me if the sultans had more jewels than the Queen of England. "Oh yes," I replied, "many more" but I didn't add that we still had the Queen. Because while the sultans were gobbling up the wealth of the land and exchanging diamonds for dancing girls, their subjects were living in squalor. Their end had te come and so, I see has mine for this week, A home of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Browning, Barrie, showering the couple with pantry shelf gifts, and presenting them with several electrical appliances. The bridal attendants enter- tained at the home of Mrs.| Robert James, Courtice road north, for a miscellaneous show- er, The hostess was assisted by Mrs. Philip Dudley, Miss Cathe- rine McClure and Miss Penny James. The matron of honor, Mrs. Donald Floyd, Calgary, Alberta, was unable to attend. A shower was arranged at the home of Mrs. Wayne Nor- | Clure and Mrs. Philip Dudley Watchorn poured tea. Miss Lin-|f da James, Miss Molly McClure|/ and Miss Sheryl Baker received. The flower girl, Miss Penny James, assisted the guests to the- rooms where Mrs. Donald Floyd and Mrs, Robert James were in charge of the trousseau rooms and Miss Catherine Me- kept the gift rooms. Guests were present from Toronto, Barrie, Grimsby, Bob- caygeon and Detroit, Michigan. Mr. and Mrs. John Swan en- tertained the bridal party fol- lowing the wedding rehearsal, last night. ris, Emerson street, isted by Mrs. John James, where the bride-to-be received miscellane- ous gifts. Friends, relatives and neigh- bors of the bride-elect were ests of Mrs. Alice Delve, 'oronto, at the home of Mrs. John James, Simcoe street north, assisted by Mrs, Wayne Norris and Mrs. Jesse James, where Miss James was present- ed with miscellaneous items. Miss James was entertained by the members of the Canada Permanent Mortgage Corpora- tion staff at the Spruce Villa day, October 30, 1965 at 3:00 SOCIAL NOTICE FORTHCOMING MARRIAGE Mr. and Mrs. Roy K. Dean, Oshawa, announce the forth- coming marriage of _ their daughter, Frances Deanne, to Mr. David Andrew Matthews, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Matthews, Taunton. The wed- ding will take place on Satur- p.m. in the Simcoe Street Pen- 2 Swan-James giare: Mr. TO SPEAK HERE A member of the expert advisory panel of nutrition for the World Health Or- ganization, Dr. Beaton will address the University Women's Club on Wednes- day evening. A professor of public health nutrition in the Department of Nutrition, University of Toronto, Dr. Beaton has studied nutrition conditions. in Guatemala and Mexico. He is a mem- ber of the American In- stitute of Nutrition and vice- president of the Nutrition Society of Canada. His parents are Mr. and Mrs, J. 4| Robert District guests attending the wedding and = Mrs. James, Penny, Quinn, Tracy, Hampton; Mr. and Mrs. James, Mrs. Sarah James, all of Bowmanville; Miss Sheila Lawler, Mr. and Mrs, James Waterfall, Miss Ingrid George Hill, Bay Ridges; Mr. and Mrs, Raymond Petit, Clark- son; Mr. and Mrs. Jack Faich- ney, Mr. and Mrs, Derek Wat- tonight} Bruce|Carol Ann Large of Southmead, and| was | | shower was Korswagen, all of Whitby; Mr.|esses at miscellaneous showers Carolina. Mrs. Joseph Kyc, the former entertained at several showers prior to her marriage ter and Mr. and Mrs, Mervyn Crosson, Whitby. || to Mr.° Boxter, Those entertaining for Mrs. | BOX D-928 Robert Osborne, the former Miss Sandra Hopkins, prior to Write including phone number THE OSHAWA TIMES last Saturday. A miscell held at the home of Miss Jacqueline Elliott, Wil- lowdale avenue, and other host- were Mrs. Leo Dupruls, Scott's road; Mrs. §. 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