Daily Times-Gazette, 18 Oct 1946, p. 5

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THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE PAGE FIVE Personals of social events and Toes Sa a TELEPHONED Tx EE) HH i E 5 ] x 3 BE E¥ WES 5 n's Club in Adelaide House next y evening at eight o'clock. All old and new members as well as pective members are invited to r this popular speaker, Ea Last Wednesday evening the Walther League of Grace Lutheran Church 'surprised Mr. and * Mrs. Robert Behm by having a house- warming party for them, Forfeits, rhythm and many other games were played under the leadership of the president, Mr, Raymond tymen, and Rev. N. CO, Kritsch, Lunch was served, » 9 British war Brides who were members of the Women's League Health and Beauty before coming to Canada are invited to renew their membership next Wednesday night at the 0.C.V.L in the girls' gymnasium, from seven o'clock, or to contact Mrs. Len. Wakeford, Aberdeen Street, or Mrs, G. P. Morison, Division Street, * bb Ms. Edward Brisebois, Arlington Avenue, entertained on Tuesday at & miscellaneous shower in honour of Mrs, N. E. Scott, Barrie Avenue, who arrived recently from England. The house was decorated with pink and white streamers and flowers, Mrs, Scott received the gifts and feplied very graciously. Lunch was served by the hostess, assisted by Mrs, Duke West and Miss Doris MeLintock, * Po Mr. and Mrs, W. H. Sawyer and their gmghter, Nora, Oshawa Blvd. Accompanied by Mr, X mer Arsenault of Ajax and Mr, Al- bert Perron of Brantford, drove to . At the meeting of the Salvation Army Home League last Tuesday it Ieported that preparations for jas 5 i 7 g ] | TH 1 8 § 2 g pter es' College held a meeting at the home of Mrs, Robert Gray, Col borne Street East, on Wednesday to elect officers for the coming year. The following were elected: Mrs, Just Arrived! Shipment of Bras an cotton-satin and nylon. EM SIMCOE 8. . SHOPPE! PHONE oon and "Hoop Song"; Were Married Saturday Last MR. and MRS. CHARLES W. FORD . . who were married in Simcoe Street United Church parsonage, The bride is Miss Marjorie Luella Long, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. John H. Long, and the bridegroom the son of Mr. and Mrs, C. W. Ford, all of Oshawa. ~Photo by Campbell's Studio Pupils Present Musical Program. A musical program by pupils of Cedardale School and presentations to Mr, Herbert Brenton who has been caretaker for 17 years and to Miss Stella Ross of the teaching staff who has been transferred to Albert Street School were the high- lights of the meeting of the Home and School Association last Tuesday evening. The program was as follows: Songs by Grade II pupils, "Autumn Lullaby," "Daytime Lullaby," "Cuckoo" and "Goldenrod"; songs by Grade III girls, "Morning Glory" solo by Gall Authors, "Little Curly Hair"; songs by Grade VI girls, "The Horn," "Early One Morning" and "The Owl"; recitation by Margaret French, "Autumn"; songs by Grade VIII girls, "Home on the Range", "My Good Friend Pierrot", and "Don't Fence Me In"; piano solo, "Santa Lucia", by Lorraine Badour, Mrs, Charles Templar, president, made on behalf of the Association the presentation of a leather bill- fold containing money to Mr. Bren- ton. To Miss Ross she presented a Sup and saucer from the Associa- n, The room prize was won by Grade VI. Miss Ruth Robinson gave the secretary's report, and Mrs, G. W. Jackson the treasurer's, re was a large attendance an lunch was served. a Group Entertained At Mrs. Choate's Mrs, Jesse Choate, Elena Street, y | entertained her group of the Wo. man's Missionary Society of Kin, Street Unitea Church A Wedne day afternoon, One of the leaders Miss Effa Wright, opened the meeting with & poem, entitled "A Prayer", Mrs, Willlam Grose read the Scripture lesson in keeping with Thanksglv- ing and also a quotation, "Thank God I'm live." Miss Wright read excerpts from "The Book That Nobody Knows" by Bruce Barton and the following program was presented: two read- ings, "The Stylish Church" and "The Model Church," by Mrs, Har- old Tiers; reading by Mrs. Philip Ripley, "The Way That Kid Grows At the close of the meeting a soc- ial time was enjoyed. Mrs. Ayres, Speaker At Albert St. W.A. Mrs. Arthur Ayres was the guest speaker at the meeting of the Sen- for Woman's Association of Albert Street United Church yesterday af- The speaker who was in- troduced by the president, Mrs, Clayton Lee, chose as her subject "Two Missionaries in Africa." and described the life work of Mary Slessor of Calabar and Dr. sang, accompanied by Ma Joseph After routine business, plans were completed for a turkey dinner to. be held on Wednesday, Oct. 23. Santos, Brazil, is the leading cof- fee port of the world. SAVE COUPONS! meat short- Help the Come! , , , Send! let dell CLOVER LEAF 568 SIMCOE ST. SOUTH Belleville Nurses To Take No Action Belleville, Oct 17 -- (CP) -- No further action will be taken by graduate nurses at Belleville Hos- pital in connection with demands pertaining to conditions of employ- ment which they submitted to hos pital authorities Sept, 12, adminis- trator Gordon A. Priesen sald today, Adjustments of pay to all em- ployees of the hospital have been made, he said. In som2 instances the rates of pay for the nursing staff were increased beyond the figure sought last month, The Experts Say By KAY REX (By The Associated Press) Ottawa, Oct, 17--(CP)--In the good old days grapes and grape Juice were prescribed by medical authorities as a cure for various diseases. And until not too long ago the 'grape cure" was recom- mended for digestive disorders. But whether you look on them as medicine or not, grapes are just about as plentiful as apples this year and the two may be combined to make several delightful winter de ert's, The recipe: four medium apples, one cup grape juice. " es Peel, core and slice half-inch slices and cook grape juice until tender (about eight min- utes). Chill, The amount serves six persons. If those grapes were bought this year with an eye to making jelly-- here are . few general tions which might be handy not only now but later on, if you wish to paste them in your favorite cook-book. 1. Pick grapes over carefully se- lecting firm ones, removing and g stems and stalks, then wash grapes under gentle stream of water, and drain. 2. Don't add water unless grapes have gone through a dry season. (This year's crop is molst enough). 3. Cook slowly untl] fruit is soft and mushy and juice is drawn out. 4. Drain through a moist jelly . If bag is not squeezed the jelly will be clearer, but squeezing the pulp increases the quantity of Jelly and gives a pronounced flavor. 5. Measure juice. For each cup of juice, three-quarters of a cup of sugar will be ne . > 6. Boll juice gently for three utes. 7. Add heated sugar. Bol] three to 10 minutes, or until jelly sheets from the spoon. 8. Remove scum. Pour into hot sterilized glasses. Let stand until set. Seal and cover, * : * The jive addicts brough! Pan Dowdy back to Just the season to have a try at it: One quart peeled and sliced ap- ples; one cup of brown sugar; one- quarter of a cup of flour; one-quar- ter teaspoon salt; one tablespoon vinegar; three-quarters of a cup of teaspoon vanilla extract; Marriage Announcements fiw ts of Draws 10c a Line Bogagement Announcements $1.00 ENGAGEMENTS Mr. and Mrs. Paul Antil of Cour- tice wish to announce the engage- ment of their daughter, Pauline Constance, to Reginald Harold Graham, bi Sh Mr, Py Mrs, Christopher am of Oshawa. The woding will take plage at Ebenezer ted Church, Courtice, November 16, at three o'clock. gagement of their eldest daughter, Edna Margret, to Mr. Wallace H. Brown of Toronto, The wedding will take place Varied Activities Carried On At YWCA, Report to Board Shows 'The report of the program secre- tary, Miss Grace Richer, presented at the monthly meeting of the Board of Directors of the Young Women's Christian Association by the chairman of the program com- centre of much activity and min- isters to a wide variety.of inter- ests, The Board meeting, which was held at Adelaide House was over by Mrs. T, K. Creigh- ton, president of the Board, Concerning Teen Centre, Miss Richer's report told of the Teen Centre Executive broadening its program to include bowling, an or- chestra and & dramatic club, The Friday evening dances are already well established. teams, with six in Eight a team bowl at Mayfair Lanes ev- ery Monday from 6 to 7 p.m. Enthusiastic About Acting Mrs, J. J. Fleming, who is in charge of the Dramatic Club, re- ports an enthusiastic group of some 20 boys and girls of teen-age who meet in the recreation room at Adelaide House Monday even- ings from 7.30 until 10 to practise for a three-act play which they will produce later in the season. The to-keep-fit classes are under way. In the Tuesday evening class are 28 business girls who have decided to start a table tennis and shuffle-board contest. They have the privilege of playing these games before and after their class period and are enjoying the sociability af- forded. Eight junior girls are learning tap dancing on Saturday mornings. Archery Popular The archery classes are proving s0 popular that Mr, and Mrs, Charles Kofmel, who are conduct- ing a class for mixed adults on Wedriesday evenings have asked for another night for advanced players, An archery range has been set up in the garage which is known now as East House. Handicraft classes are being held every Thursday afternoon and evening. The following crafts will be taught until Christmas: glove-making, leather-tooling, lamb- skin mitt and slipper-making, and shellcraft, The following persons are giving leadership in these classes: Mrs, Ewart McLaughlin, Miss Kay Ironside, Miss Eleanor Dillon, Mrs. W. H. Perry and Mr, Lauri Oittinen, Twenty-three girls between 11 and 13 are enrolled in the Junior Girls' ¥ Club under the leadership of Miss Jean Hunter and Miss Mar- garet Gibbons, So far this month their program has been carried on out of doors . Their activities this year will include crafts, skills, games and folk dancing, Young Boys' Club Eighteen boys between 11 and 13, in the Junior Boys' Club, led by Don Howe, meet on Friday after school for outdoor sports, indoor gaines, crafts, tumbling and other 8 A The St, John Ambulance First Ald Class witn an enrolment of 36 is instructed by Dr, W. 8. Millman. An examination will be given after some six weeks. The Record Club which meets on the second and fourth Thurs- day of each month met for the first time on Oct. 10, with Mr, John E. Harris in charge and those pre- sent were delighted with the selec- tions, The executive of the Over 20 Club has announced that all the members must have Y.W.C,A. mem- bership. All attending the Sat- urday night dances are required to show their membership cards. The Club's program has been enlarged to include bowling. Four teams bowl on Thursday evenings. Business Girls Organized The Young Business Women's Council was addressed recently by Miss 'W. Chaplin on budgeting and at the next meeting on October 22, Miss Audrey Brown of the Junior Fashion Council will speak on Fashion Trends for Young Business Women, The Board of Directors instructed the secretary to send a a letter of thanks to the Over 20 Club and Teen Centre acknowledging the gift of a public address system, pre- sented by the two clubs to the Y. W.C.A. and formally accepted by the president of the Board, Mrs, Creighton, at a recent Over-20 Club dance, Eleven hundred and four mem- bers have joined the Y.W.C.A. since last January, it was reported to the Board. Of this number 97 joined last month, 20 as junior members, 51 as senior and 26 as re- gistrants, Hollywood Happenings By BOB THOMAS Hollywood, Oct. 18.--(AP)--Now we know why Eleanor Powell is re- turning to professional life. Her husband, Glenn Ford, is a square. The boy can't dance, Glenn explained the whole situ- ation to me between scenes of "They Walk Alone." "We don't go to the night clubs any more, because every time we got up to dance, people would clear the floor to watch us. Me, all ¥ can do is a slow Abe Lincoln shuf- fle!" He didn't elaborate on what kind of dance the rallsplitter favored, but added, "I can do a pretty good square dance." Besides his faulty foxtrot, Glenn ted out, "We'd run up a bill of for the evening at a night club. Think + of all the phonograph rec- ords we could buy with that!" The Fords have 7,000 records in their collection, As a result, the Fords' social life consists of: Dinner at home, listen- ing to records or watching movies from the home projector. To com- plete a rousing evening, Glenn might turn on the outdoor flood- lights and putter around the gar- den, As some wives will allow, constant home life can get rather dull, and especially when the spouse would like to be in pictures and isn't. Eleanor, perhaps, with the h of resuming her film career, dip her toe in show business after a two-year idleness, She opens next month in a Chicago night club. Glenn may be taking steps to im- prove his "Abe Lincoln" shuffle, He and Eleanor have just bought a house next door to Fred Astair's. La IK You may have read about Bob Burns applying to the United States Department of Interior for a home- stead on the Moon. Well, the sage of Van Buren received a lengthy answer, sf ht from Fred W. Johnson, 'Acting Director of the Bureau of Land Management, It sald in part: \ "If land on the Moon should at any time be officially proclaimed to constitute public land of the United States as a result of sover- . | elgnty obtained through exploration or any other means, arrangements will doubtless be made at that time . «+ Until such arra ents have been officially established, how- Or Sure ss. no Authority ve applications for the Moon. , ." ew hours and sat alone six or seven pictures. with Linda Sony ho or , Wi . rent interest. i 8 or Canadian Second In Beauty Contest Paris, Oct. 17--(Reuters)--The Paris Peace Conference had a gay | unofficial sequel last night when 21-year-old Jacqueline Jamet of the Conference 'Tourist Bureau 'staff, was elected "Miss Peace Con- ference 19046" at the smart Lido night club in the Champs Elysees. She was chosen from more than a dozen entrants, all of whom work- ed at the Luxembourg Palace. Second to Mlle. Jamet was Mrs. Madeleine Warren, blond Canadian newspaper woman from Quebec. USED COSTLY COMBS Combs of ivory or boxwood have frequently been found in early - this | ing Czechoslovak Doctor Opens $100,000 Drive Ottawa, Oct. 17--(CP)--The tiny woman with the fierce light of the crusader burning in her eyes turn- ed from the window in her small office high in a downtown building. "If only I could bring back that $100,000," she said. Today Dr. Lotta Hitschmanova, executive director of the Unitarian Service Committee of Canada, was on her way to Vancouver where Sunday she will open a three month speaking tour to take her Hiroughout the four Western prov- ces. Under the auspices of the Wom- en's Canadian Club she will appeal to Canadians to contribute to the US.C.C.'s drive for funds to contin. ue its relief work throughout war- ridden Czechoslovakia and France. More Than Ever Significant enough that BEuro- peans need our assistance now more than ever before is the fact the Committee's present quota of $100,000 is double that for its last drive several months ago, Dr. Hitschmanova sald. UNRR.A. will go out of exist- ence the end of this year and other welfare organizations already have disbanded, which means the Uni- tarian Service Committee will be one of the few left tocarry on the work of saving the lives of starv- Europea ns, Hard-Working Not too long ago the hard-work- ing little director, was herself a Czechoslovakian refugee moving from hiding place to hiding place in an effort to escape the Nazis, During a tour this summer throughout France, Belgium and her home country, Dr. Hitschman- ova found that tuberculosis and malnutrition = still are continuing to reap their harvest of lives, It may be true people do not die of starvation any longer in libera- ted lands, they die of diseases of malnutrition,' she said. The need for shoes and clothing is unbelievable, "We are bringing the name of Canada into the re- motest corners of Czechoslovakia and France," she continued, adding this is the first time there has been such an agency which works in the name of Canada. OBLONG ORANGES Port Elizabeth, South Africa-- (CP)--For , some strange reason oranges in the ramous Kat River citrus area are oblong this year in- stead of round. This is causirig great difficulty in sorting according to size and it is almost impossible to adhere to the market regulations. for BETTER SLEEP... Dr. Chase's Nerve Food Portrait of Future Queen This charming picture of Princess Elizabeth was made during a visit to Dundee to perform the opening ceremony of Camperdown Park. The future British ruler is wearing a tailored coat and off-the-face hat of soft rose pink. Mothers in Russia Get Bigger Bonuses Moscow, Oct, 17.--AP)~--Increases in already liberal allowances for Russian mothers--especially those with large families--are expected by some observers to boost the to- tal population of the Soviet Union to more than 200,000,000 within the next few years. (The 1980 census gave Russia's population as about 170,500,000), Under a budget proposed by the Finance Ministry, the government would spend 4,000,000,000 rubles in allowances to mothers next year, as compared with 2,100,000,000 rubles last year. (The ruble's official value is 5.4 to the dollar), ; The government instituted the program of grants to mothers on July 8, 1944 and at the same time officially recognized the rearing of large families as a patriotic achievement by striking off special medals for mothers, In the first 12 months after the program was launched the number of mothers receiving state aid in- creased 7% times, Over 200,000 mo- thers who have borne and reared five to 10 children each received the Medal of Maternal Glory dur- ing that period, The current scale of payments to mothers ranges from 400 rubles' on the birth of the third child to 5,- 000 rubles for each child over 10 years of age, Monthly allowances for mothers with large families range from 80 rubles beginning with the birth of the fourth child to 300 rubles for every child after the 10th, FILM LIBRARIES GROW In Canada today there are four times as many film libraries as in 1939. With the aid of the Natiopal Film Board they have expanded from 15 to 75, 107-Year-Old Woman Mrs, Isabella Sharow, » uy pi cent 0. ri raw Seley med her 107th birthday at North ays home for the aged with a party the press. The little woman--she stands less than five feet--lives in the present and the d the present is interesting to her. Up at 6 am. She's up each day at 6 am, -- "Though mind you, dear, I don% really have to be up as early as the rest; I'm a fast dresser and some of them are slow." She naps briefly in the morning and afternoon and at mealtimes she's always there, al- though "my appetite isn't what it was." Mrs. Sharow, whose maiden name was McDonald, was born in Rene frew in 1839. Oldest of 14 children, she went with her family into the county's wilds, where her father was a lumberman. No Doctors Nor Dentists When she married her late hus- band--also a lumberman--she went north to Trout Mills, where she lived for 45 years or so; she can't quite remember, : Nibbling a bit of biscuit and mun- mching it with enjoyment, she re- plied to a query: "My teeth? Oh, dear, no. I lost them long ago. There were no doctors or dentists around either; it was way up in the back country and they had to use wire cutters to pull them." "Who pulled them for you?" "Oh, any of the men around camp, It hurt, too, and my face was swollen up for days afterwards." Lack of teeth didn't hamper Isa- bella when the other residents sang "Happy Birthday to You" and her tiny, wrinkled hand grasped a knife and began to cut her blazing birth day cake, 9-28 NS Gsogemen [B A cut raw potato rubbed over the of knives which have turned dark from acid will help to remove the stain, - Complete HRISTIAN' Will] FIRST WITH WHAT? ... Why, with the new, sensational and fascinating mode of travel .. . THE MOTO-SCOOT « «« Actually a scooter with a big smooth 1.8 H.P. high compres. sion motor. UP TO 100 MILES PER GALLON. Speeds up to 45 miles per hour. Tubular steel frame, large comfortable spring filled seat cushion -- airoplane type shock absorbers -- 3.50 x 6 Goodyear Tires -- kick starter. behind the seat. Head and tail lights and ignition lock. ANY- ONE CAN DRIVE IT! Large parcel compartment SEE IT -- TODAY Come in and OSHAWA PHONE 1000 CHRISTIAN' Electric and Hardware BELLEVILLE PHONE 820 Has Birthday Party North Bay, Oct. 18--(CP)---Mest A Ll ...aor

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