Daily Times-Gazette, 16 Oct 1946, p. 6

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THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1944 Marion 'Brown visited re- cently at her Jenta. 1a Orono, Mrs, Dave atonal, Bi Mes, William Odgen recently visited her mother, Mrs, cett, Orono. Mr, Leo Huffman spent the hol» day with his mother, Mrs. D, V. 'Huffman of. Belles, 4 Mr, and Mrs. Dun Shutks ano % »Miss Ne! ul were guests re- . "oently of Mr. M, Shutis, Starkville, . > bb .i' Mrs. B. M, Warnica t a re- 'omnt week-end with Vesta '., 8pargo of Bowmanville, El) tM. R. O. Jackson visited recent Jy her son, Mr. Wilfred Jackson of { 'Nestleton. bs hy Mrs, i Little recently visited Mr. and Mrs, Orme Falls +" of Starkville, Mr. and Mis, Hog. "Kersey visited recently at the home of Mr. 8. Ker- sey, Hampton, I Mrs. Ed. rie, rt Mrs, Prank Cates and Laurel visited recently At the home of Mr, and Mrs, Lewis Mi. HE ¥. Brownlee has been ApPo| honorary local represen~ 'tative Of the Ottawa Music Festival Association. Mr. and Mie. T Weay and Miss Pileen Wray of Hampton visited (recently at the home of Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Wray. & & Mr, and Mrs, Robert Kent and their three children visited recently {at the heme of Mr, and Mrs, Harry , Grace, Burketon, > * ©" Mr. and Mrs, Ohaties Stainton and children were recent visitors .at the home of Mr. Milton Stainton, Enniskillen. Dase, Ajax, have returned home af- spending the week-end with Mr. FOR WASHER REPAIRS OIL CHANGE OR OVERHAUL AUTHORIZED DEALER BELOW WE CONE QUICK WASHER SERVICE FREE ESTIMATES 3800w ! Jock BIDDULPH Avrnonizes TEE osaren 68 SIMCOE ST, N. "Look for the Store with the Yellow Front," Bride-Elect ; gegi ES3s fx" 1 tH! ee Miss Mabel Ouran will arrive at Malton Airport tonight from Ohi cago where she has spent the past week on business, [ Mrs, John %. Sorne, Mrs. N. 8, Hoag, and Mrs. CO. N. Bannon are the conveners for a bridge and eu- chre party, to be sponsored by tir Mary Street Home and School As- sociation on Wednesday, Oct. 23 at 8 pm, Mrs, Murray Els of Toronto and her little son, Teddy, mre re- turning home today after a week's visit with Mrs. Collis' parents, Mr, Mrs, Bert Edwards, Athol . | Burnie, 67 Kenneth Avenue, Plans for the Autumn Frolic to be held on Oct. 30 at Adelaide House are now under way. LO a Mrs, 8, J. Scammell is the con- vener of the committee arranging for the tea which will be held at .| the home of Mrs. E, J. Umphrey, Simcoe Street North (five doors north of Rossland Road) next Fri- day afternoon from 3 to 6 under the auspices of Mrs. Arthur Felt's group of the Women's Association of Simcoe Street United Church, * dS Mr. and Mrs, J. M, Graham, ac- companied by Mrs, Thomas Hunfer of Peterborough and Mrs, Charles Pogue, returned recently from an | lif extended tour of Ontario and part of Quebec, By motoring north through Muskoka, they reached North Bay and Kirkland Lake and finally Timmins. Crossing into Que- bec, they went to Noranda and Val d'Or, then back to Ottawa. In Greenfield Park, a district of Mon- treal, they visited Mrs, Wilfred Ir- vine, formerly of Oshawa, and af- ter touring St. John's, Quebec, they came home via No. 2 highway stop- ping at points of interest en route, ------------ . UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT | MISS ROSE MARIE FLYNN e wish to announce that Mi Rose Marie Flynn has poithoine the position of manageress of our Beauty Salon. We offer to the ladies of Oshawa the latest in hair stylings and beauty treatments. OPEN FOR APPOINTMENTS - MODERN BEAUTY SALON 8:SIMCOE ST. SOUTH "oa PHONE 1200 5 Couple Celebrate nt iil 411 g 7 ri] al E £8" 1 25 f g 8 S81] 4 g bouquets of lovely flowers from thelr friends as well as many cards of congratulations on their having reached their golden wed- W.A. Group Hears Talk on Business Mrs, Norman Mechin, William Street East, was hostess to 'ed Church last Friday evening. Rev, T. H. P. Anderson gave the Group a business talk. Mrs, Thomas planned for Tuesday, Oct. 23. Refreshments were served by the committee in charge and a social half-hour was spent, Mrs. Bert Terwillegar moved & vote of thanks to the hostess for her hospitality. Mrs, C. 1. DeGuerre invited the . | Group to hold its next meeting at her home on Friday, Nov. 8. Seeks to Combat Marital Discord Montreal, Oct, 16--(CP)--An ade- quate marriage counselling service is Sigently Ineded, to ges) acieny- Beally personal problems result in many tragic marr fall- of the Mental Hygiene Institute, sald in an address to the suburban St. Lambert's Women's Association, Dr. Silverman, professor Ys | ures, Dr. Baruch Silverman, assistant .|of Jovchiatry at MoGill Universit; sal emotional Insecurity rather than financial and economic ine security produces the majority of mAFigeY pion counselling ice e serv would advise young people contem- plating marriage and would deal with marital problems, The service would enable couples to adapt themselves more satisfactorily to one another to maintain the integ- rity of the family group. In many cases husbands and wives were unable to adapt themselves satisfactorily to one another be- cause of the emotional stress to which they had been subjected since the war ended. Many of these people had always been mentally unstable individuals but prior to the war they had been able to make a relatively successful adaption to marriage and home e. ' At the present time ) unable to face their ey Rbitties and readily tended to in- YS on man ere spec! treatment to tide them on their emergency period. "In order to help people to devel- op. more satisfactorily social rela- tionships," sald Dr, Silverman, "we must strive to create in them a cap- acity to adapt themselves realisti- cally to the problems with which ey re confronted. requires three essential ad- Justments: Social adaptability, vo- cational Adjustment and fitness for family life, "By helping people to make such necessary adjusiments, we can build w in them wholesome mental at- udes, adequate social relation- ships, an ability to make a real success of Four Generations Meet on Sunday The home of Mr, and Mrs, P. H. Hare, 42 Warren Avenue, was the Visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Hare were Mr. John Hinman, Miss Clara Hinman and Mr, and Mrs, F. V, M. Hinman of Cobourg, and Mr. and Mrs, Bert Reynolds and their daughter, Joyce Louise, of Toronto. Mr Tare wn he esc A an Mr, John eam ga of FRENCH ORPHANS WERE NAUGHTY, SENT HOME ne Twenty-three naughty children from 190 French war orphans holi- daying at Hatfield, Hertfordshire, were flown back to Paris, while the remainder were taken to live in Wuglish homes. overseer of the party said the children had had no proper super- vislon for years and one "naughty" | prising that they were troublesome. boy had seen his father shot by the | | SaStabo. It Was not, therefore, sur- | 7 % 7 Principals at Recent Wedding MR. and MRS, RUSSELL HOWARD HARVEY who were married at the home of Rev. J. 8. I. Wilson. The bride is Margaret Jean, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Russell F. Pearson and the bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Albert J. Harvey and the late Mr, Harvey, ~--Photo py, Hornsby Studio Exaggerated Contrasts in India Pictured to Nurses by Dr. Bayne "India is a land of exaggerated contrasts, breath-taking beauty on one hand and desolation and waste the | on the other; fabulous wealth and degradation and poverty." This was the summing up by Dr" James Bayne of his enlightening talk on India to the Nurses' Alumnae last night at the Oshawa General Hos Gormley read the Scripture lesson | pital "Salvation lles in education", he said, "but the people who could bring it are being turned out. Con- gress, which is the Hindu Party led by Mahatma Gandhi and his discip- le Nehru, set the torch to the 'Quit India' campaign and now fears that it may be swept away by the con. flagration it has started." "India has gained prominence be- cause England was behind her," he continued, "with all the advantages that an old civilization can bring, and England has been extremely tolerant of political upstarts, know- ing all too well, how unsound is the whole political structure, How," he asked "might a Hitler or a Stalin have taken advantage of this?" Cause of Famine Dr, Bayne described how such disasters as the recent Bengal fam- ine are brought about by the peo- ple's own obduracy; ignorance, su- perstition, and religious beliefs all playing their share. The popula- tion is now approximately 400 mil- lion and increasing rapidly, The cattle, because they are sacred, are never killed off. There can never be enough food for everyone as things are going now. And still a Hindu, whose dlet is mostly rice and fruit, would rather die in the streét of-starvation than touch food that was taboo, the speaker said. Should even the sha- dow of an untouchable fall across the food that a Brahmin was to eat, he would spurn (it, believing van by eating it he would be defil- / Except for a few, the Indians are an unhappy people, with no fun or laughter in them, Dr. Bayne de- clared, They are lazy and unambi- tious, and, although given to whine ing about their state, do little to improve it, The sordid profession of begging is still permitted, and children are crippled and even blinded by their parents to make their case more pitiable and touch the hearts of the unwlily. Disease Gets Easy Hold It is easy to see, said the speaker, how disease can take hold among these ill-fed unclean people, Maler- ia is endemic and after the mon- soon season is epidemic. Heat- stroke hits white people who do not guard against it carefully and take plenty of rest, Dysentery is a grave problem as it reaches the stage of mass infection, The doctors of the Armed Forces found that all these things could be controlled by strict dicipline and where disease broke out it was invariably traced to care- lessness or disobedience, v "The whites in India have a life of ease," the doctor said, "but eat- ing conditions are most unsafe, and every single drop of water must be bolled and filtered, while we can so easily eat a snack at the corner drug store and fill a glass with sparkling water from a tap. It isn't till these .things are denied you that you realize just what they mean." The acting president, Mrs, Wil- llam Edwards, was in charge of the meeting and Mrs, Frank Mason in- troduced the speaker who specidl- izes in paediatrics, He joined the Alr Force in 1042 and was sent to the far Bast in 1944 where, besides seeing various parts of India, he also visited Slam and Malaya. The meeting was very well at~ tended, and after the address a vote of thanks was proposed by Mrs, B, A. Brown, British Conferees Bewail Dad's Fate By JACK SULLIVAN Canadian Press Staff Writer London, Oct, 16--(CP)--It was all Joy Sontusing when experts of 57 social, scientific, medical and edu- ca associations in Britain sat down around the conference table and talked about Mom and Dad. The they said! Visitors might have been forgiven for thinking they were in the wrong room at the British Medical Asso- ciation Mouse. Perhaps this was the annual meeting of the Mutual Admiration Soclety--not a down- to-earth 'analysis of Mr. and Mrs. Britain and their offspring. Cyril Bibby of the Eugenics Socl- ety said: "Today the father is prac- tically disappearing . . . 80 much stress is being laid on the mother that the father seems scarcely nec- He had hardly taken his seat when Willlam Griffiths of the Na- Sonat Union of Teachers popped up with: "A husband comes home in the to enjoy Okay. But does he? How about it, Mr. Griffiths? Poor Pa! e husband listens to the radio and reads the paper while his wife is slogging away, cooking and wash- es. "I do not think it makes for family life, A father (get this, Dad) loses his influence with his children like this, and they take notice of only what mother i 0 ngs seemed to going along swimmingly for Mom, but a woman got in the last word. Mrs, Margaret Langford, of the National Froebel Foundation and mother of three children, said: "Life for children is becoming very unhappy because father is left out in the cold." She sald servicemen fathers "lost touch" with what Mom has learned at maternity and child welfare clinics and when he comes back he has the old ideas baout upbringing and they clash with the mother's, Her shot: "In many cases the d would be happier if the father, as in the old days, had su- control, and therefore was the house." atill wondered just who in opinion of the experts wears the ts in the family, Mom and Dad can "battle" that one out. Teddington, Middlesex, gland ~(CP)~Thomas Morne, ller, has six sons--all jewellers in dif- ferent towns. Many Women Vets Are Taking Training Ottawa, Oct. 16--(CP)--Com- mending Canada's 45,000 women veterans for thelr 'remarkably fine" rehabilitation progress, Veter- ans Minister Mackenzie today said more than 8,000 women are trained or undergoing training for more than 100 different occupations. More than 45,000 of the 48,000 women who enlisted in the Armed Forces were discharged by last August 31. Of these, 18 per cent are training under various vetdér- ans' training programs and it is ex- pected the figure may exceed 20 per cent within the next years, the Minister stated. Approximately 6,000 ex-service women have taken vocational train- ing with assistance from the De- partment and more than 2,000 have taken or are taking university training or other professional or semi-professional training in var- lous non-university schools or col- Of the women veterans taking university and other educational training, 713 are in arts and sclence courses, 204 in undergraduate train- ing as nurses, 75 in public health nursing, 54 in household science and home economics, 33 in ocoupa- tional therapy, and 30 in Normal Schosls. The Minister noted an even high- er ratio of ex-service women in training or enrolled for training than for men. About one in every 18 women veterans has chosen training, and the ratio of women to men in the Canadian forces was about one in 20. A little more than 30 per cent. of service women were married at the time of discharge. Most D..A. hospitals have in them some women patients who became casualties due to service in Europe, and some ex-service women dis- abled due to service in Canada, the United Kingdom or elsewhere. "The total number of women vet- erans of World War 11 receiving 'pensions at the end of August was 285 and one-third of these are vet- erans with overseas service," the Minister said. Brentwood, Eng. -- (UP) --Food ministry officials denied extra soap rations to Brentwood, which has hard water, but offered to send ex- tra supplies of soda for softening purposes. Kathleen Crouter Becomes a Bride - Orouter, bride, who were gewiisa alike in t ise o gowns. Z shoulder-length vells and carried varicolored chrysanthemums, Little Miss Diane Hubbell, cousin of the bridegroom, was flower girl, wearing & long blue gown with pink trimming, a blue shoulder-length veil and lace mittens, and carrying the were pendants, gifts of the bride. Mr, Donald McIndless was best brother of the , Gordon Pollock, brother of the bridegroom, At the reception in the Masonic Temple, Mrs. Crouter, mother of the bride, received with the bridal party and was assisted by the bridegroom's mother, Mrs, Pollock, Mrs, Crouter was in a wool dress of medium blue with matching acces- sories, Mrs, Pollock wore a lime green .crepe frock with brown and gold accessories, Bach of them wore TOSe COTSAges. The bride's table was centred by the four-tiered wedding cake and flanked by white tapers and bou- quets of baby chrysanthemums. Four cousins of the bridegroom, the Misses Beth, Joyce, Ruth and Donna Bint, assisted in serving, After the reception, the bride presented her bouquet to the bride- groom's grandmother, Mrs. R. A. Bint, Mr, and Mrs, Bert Hardie enter- tained the hundred guests with their dance recording system during the evening, For the wedding trip to Toronto, St. Catharines and Buffalo, the bride chose a light brown tailored sult, dark brown accessories and a corsage of bronze and yellow chry- santhemums, The couple will live in Oshawa. I ------------ Flour-Bags Foster Good-Will in Europe While international politiclans thump angry fists on Peace Confer- ence tables, the women of the world are fostering permanent good will by. means of--flour-bags! Every time many women in Bri- tain, Holland, Norway, and Fin land dry their dishes they are be- ing bound in friendship to the wo- men of the United States--and the boys and girls--who have collected their flour, grain, sugar, and chic- ken-feed bags to make drying-up cloths for the women unable to buy textiles easily. Nothing will ever be able to era- dicate the power of friendship forg- ed by this imaginative gesture in the hour of our domestic need, Social Notices Marriage Announcements 1,00 Results of Draws 100 a tie Engagement Announcements $1.00 AT HOME Mr. and Mrs, R. PF. Lick, King- ston Road West, will be at home to their friends on Saturday, Oct. 19, from 7 to 10 p.m. on the occasion of their sliver wedding anniversary encAcEminTs Mr. and Mrs, John H. Cottingham announce the engagement of their only daughter, Lois Irene, to Mr, Stuart Henry Jacobs, elder son of Mr. and Mrs, Edward T. Jacobs. The wedding will take place at Christ Church on November 22. oe "* Mr. and Mrs, ¥ L Phillips of North Oshawa wish to announce the engagement of their youngest daughter, Frances Alecia, to Keith Wesley, son of Mr, and Mrs, Frank Branton of Don Head Farms, Rich- | mond Hill, Ont, The marriage will take place at King Street United Chasen on November 23 at 4 o'- Hollywood Fashion Suited for Fall -- Mart Vickers, soon to be seen in Warner's "The Big Sleep," prevues : the fall fashions with this smart new outfit, 22.Year-Old Girl Is British Vice-Consul 'Twenty-two-year-old Ciclly Has- tings, of Oxford, England, sits be hind an imposing desk in the Bri tish Consulate at 25 Broadway, in down-town New York, looking like a very bright schoolgirl in a ging- ham apron dress and white blouse, But young Cicily is no schoolgirl, She is the only woman acting vice- consul in America, and has held her job for 18 months now. In a few months she will be re- linquishing her diplomaticspost and returning to London, Brought up in Oxford, Miss Has- tings worked in the Foreign Office before coming to New York, Her work has been two-fold, making travel arrangements for British Government officials en route from New York to any part of the world and looking after Bri- tish subjects in distress. EMERGENCY POLICEMEN Johannesburg--(CP)~A chain of 808 call boxes is to be established in the Johannesburg central area to enable the public to act as em- ergency policemen in the drive against crime. These call boxes will operate on a system of direct communic¢ation by microphone, with police headquarters. Newcastle, England -- (OP)--A special police squad patrols News castle's East End every Sunday to Hollywood Happenings . 3 hee y fi ig 5 i #88 g : g i £53 4 FFEESR ik Hg i | i iH ] th ifr ; g 1 i §® 5 § £3 7 H; ik 2 J i i § : Ee a5 2 2 ¥ 8 : ts,' id dance routine , , , Kal Grayson is developing & re] of eight operas so that she can fry out for the Metropolitan Opera au= ditions next Spring . , . Wally Beery flew up to Jackson's Hole, Wyo., to see if early shovs dautaghd his ranch , . , Osa assen's gift to her sister in Copenhagen will be a round-trip honeymoon 10 Hollywood, ee -- London--(OP)--A businessman gave the office two parcels to in his car. They were put in wrong car and its owner is by two sults, underwear and pounds of sugar. TAP and BALLET! TAUGHT BY} IRENIE HARVEY N ® curb street gambling, Nail Enamel 50c; Lipstick Like nothing ever known! And so; #0' wearable! Splurge of splendour -- with mystio-mauve powder. that transfigures your face! Very ullra, that Revion "stay-on™.:} - Double feature Malch Bos Set, $1.00 -- aloo available individualtn Double Feature-- At Your LDA. Drug Store KARN'S ¢ POWELLS ¢ THOMPSON'S NAIL ENAMEL! LIPSTICK? FACE POWDER, 100! J 65c, 85¢c; Face Powder 68¢c Your Hair Problems Solved by... MRS. MARJORIE STROHM (Consultant Permanent Wave Specialist) Will Be In Our Salon October 21 -- 22 «.« And you are invited to bring your perma. nent wave problem to her. There is no obli- gation on your part and no charge is made. Telephone 2020 for Appointment Hy -

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