Daily Times-Gazette, 16 Aug 1950, p. 7

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WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 16, 1950 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE PAGE SEVEN In Jhe Home Women's Groups to be Entertained In Many Ways at CNE Luncheons The carnival spirit of the CNE will, this year, invade even the private luncheons. The dally line- up of guest speakers, for years routine at Women's Division lun- cheons, will give way to old-time fashion shows, choral singing, danc- ing and a 10-course luncheon, /At these glaily noon-time affairs, the CNE honors representatives of every national women's group and wives of leading citizens. Opening day, August 25, with Ma- dame St. Laurent as guest of honor, a parade of old-time fashions, fea- turing every important fashion de- cade since the Ex opened, will be the big feature. Square dancing by studefts of Bolton Continuation School and a campus fashion show will give the light touch to the War- riors' Day luncheon. Children's Day, a group of the Church of All Nations, trained by Mrs. F. Adrian Brook, will do choral singing. Ross Mortimer will be there to entertain the youngsters with his magic tricks, Motoring costumes over the years, including those old-fashioned rus- ters, will be modelled at the Auto- motive and Electrical Day luncheon. Food Products and Merchant's Day, women who own and operate busi- nesses in these fields will be intro- duced. Mrs. Ellen Fairclough of Hamil- ton, Canada's only woman MUP, in Ottawa, will share honors with her musician son Howard on Women's Music and Art Day. Mrs, Fairclough will challenge women to become more active politically. Her son will perform briefly at the piano. Press and Radio Day, guests will be asked to put out a newspaper of personality chit-chat and on Manu- facturers', Floral and Athletic Day, a floor show of young Canadians will be the spotlight attraction. Women labor leaders will take the floor La- bor Day and on International and Health Day, with all provincial health units represented, bridal cos- tumes around the world will be modeled. The margarine-butter fight will be given an airing by farm women and their city sisters on Agriculture and Livestock Day. The new Toron- to woman weather forecaster, Mrs. Gloria Ellenton, and women com- mercial travellers will be given-the honors on Transportation, Commun- ications and Commercial Travellers' Day. Guests on Interprovincial and Service Clubs' Day get the 10-course luncheon, each of the provinces providing one of the course, and on Citizens' and Cadet Day, the coun- try's older citizens will see clothes worn to the Ex 50 years ago. Government Sets Bread Standards For U.S. Bakers Washington -- (AP)--A proposed national standard for bread-setting forth what the family loaf should contain and in what quantities -- has been announced in the United States federal register. This official government publica- tion presented the proposed stan- dard as drawn up by the food and drug administration after hearings held over the last nine years. It is due to be adopted after 30 days, unless exceptions are filed in the meantime. If adopted, it would apply only to bread shipped or sold in inter- state commerce. It would, however, also provide a future working basis for uniform state standards, food and drug officials said. The proposed new standards would permit bread containing soy flour up to 3 per cent of the weight of the flour used to be sold as white bread. They would require that the weight of raisins in raisin bread be not less than half the weight of the flour used. They would allow whole wheat bread alo to be sold as graham . bread or "entire wheat." Breads made from white flour mixed with whole wheat flour or with cracked wheat or crushed wheat would have to be properly identified in their names as to the wheat ingredients used, and could not be sold simply as "wheat bread." Milk bread would have to contain milk, or non-fat dry milk solids and milk fat in prescribed amounts, as the wetting ingredient instead of water. Maximum and minimum limits on thiamine, riboflavin, niacin and iron for enriched white bread also were set forth in the proposed Baking Soda Useful In Simple First-Aid For Picnic Casualties Summer picnics often trail an aftermath of painful sunburn, in- sect bites and the rash which springs from the poison ivy and poison oak. Even though you are on guard against these picnic pitfalls, you may find yourself a victim. A mild case of sunburn is annoy- ing and painful; a severe case may mean hospitalization. At the first indication of a slight sunburn, make a paste of ordinary baking soda and water and daub it over the affected area, Cover the paste with wet cloths and change them frequently to keep them moist. A mild case of sunburn is very easily relieved with this home treatment. A severe case should be treated, of course, only by medical care. The insects which buzz around at picnics can cause a great deal of discomfort. To lessen the pain, first remove the stinger if it is left in the skin, Next, make a paste of baking soda and cold cream and apply it to the affected area. Baking soda is an alkali which helps to neutralize the acidity of insect bites and stings. Poison ivy is particularly danger- ous in the summer because the sap of the plant is most abundant then. Some 90 per cent of the Com- munist guerillas in Malaya are Chinese. " standards. Many states require that white bread be so enriched. The proposed standards would not allow the use of so-called bread softeners or emulsifiers. Food and drug experts said the principal such ingredient, polyoxyelatylene monostearate, has for some years been used in "a substantial amount" of the bread produced in the United States. TUES., SEPT. 5 INTENSIVE TRAINING INDI'/IDUAL ADVANCEMENT Stenographic Secretarial Accounting Comptometer Business Administration LIMITED REGISTRATION ENROLL NOW 18 SIMCOE ST. N., Office Hours During Summer 8 - 5 TUES. & THURS. OSHAWA BUSINESS COLLEGE OSHAWA, ONT. For Free Bulletin of Complete Courses Please M.ail Coupon Below NAME... >... ives sissies ADDRESS .............PHONE ..... EVENINGS 7 - 9 p PHONE 1314 Personals of social and of visitors to and from the city are appreciated by the Social Department. TELEPHONE 35 Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Creighton are holidaying in Grand Bend, Ontario. * + +» Mr. Reg. Cowley is leaving today for a vacation in Nassau, BW.I. * bP ! Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd D, Clarke, turned from a vacation spent at the Taft Hotel, New York City. * + * Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Adair have returned from a week's holiday at Tamworth, Ontario. * + » Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Herring, Verdun Road, are back from Co- bourg where they have been holi- daying for the past two weeks. * + Mr. Robert Herring of New York City is spending this week with his parents, Mr. and Mrs, A. W. Her- ring, Verdun Road, *> + » Mr. and Mrs. Harry Cowley, Glid- don Avenue, have returned from a trip on which they visited Detroit, Port Dover and Long Point. > + » Messrs. Charles Creighton and John Foreman have returned from a motor trip through New York State and the Thousand Islands. L IR SEE I Miss Mary Flintoff returned to Oshawa yesterday, from a month's holiday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Flintoff, Belleville, © Mrs. Arthur Abernathy and daughter Melody, and son Stephen, of Sterling, are visiting relatives in Oshawa, * * Mr. and Mrs. Robert Simpson, King Street" East, have returned from a two weeks' vacation spent in Sudbury and Chapleau. > + * Miss Barbara Lidster, Oshawa Boulevard, and Misg Patricia Nob- bin are holidaying" at Wigwassan Lodge, Lake Rosseau, Muskoka. * + > Mr. and Mrs, Hanson Richards, Athol Street East, have returned from a very enjoyable trip around the Gaspe Peninsula, the Maritimes and Prince Edward Island. * + & % Mr. and Mrs. William Pomeroy, and Mary, Celina, Street, and Mr. and Mrs. F. D. Kinsman, Town Line, spent last week at Sandy Shores, Harwood, Ontario. > +» Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Wright and Betty and Bob, Jarvis Street, have returned from a two weeks' vacation to New York where they visited relatives. * + +» Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Ives, Ritson Road South, have returned from a two weeks' holiday spent in Halifax, Nova Scotia, and Lake Placid, New York. > + & Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Blore, Brock Street West, and Mr. and Mrs. S. J. McCully, Simcoe Street South, have returned from a vacation spent in the Niagara District. : * » Mrs. Flora McLaughlin, of Sas- katchewan, and Mrs. J. Chapman, Hamilton, have been visiting their brothers, Mr. Roy VanZant and Mr. Clarence VanZant, Park Road South, for the past few days. + + » Mr. and Mrs, Eldon Kerr, West- moreland Avenue, accompanied by Mr. and Mrs, Merrill Cummings and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Palmer, re- cently spent a vacation at a cottage at Gananoque. * + + Mr. and Mrs. Fred Lean, Oshawa Boulevard, Mr. and Mrs, Jack Long, Mr. and Mrs. Wilfred Baker, Mr. Glen Baker, and Miss Joyce Ham- lyn, spent a two weeks' vacation at Lake Papineau. | * » * Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Peters, Burk Street, and grandson, Terry, have returned from a two weeks' vaca- tion to Regia, Saskatchewan, where they visited Mrs. Peters' mother, Mrs. Jake Lafoy. LA SN Mr. Bob Rife, Oshawa Boulevard, has returned from a vacation in Hamilton where he visited his par- ents. He also spent some time in Detroit, Chicago and the Middle West. * * » Mr, and Mrs. E. J. Clark, Tom, Marvyn and Gene, have returned from spending their summer vaca- tion in the St. Lawrence River dis- trict, Watertown, N.Y. Ottawa and Kingston. * * * Mr. and Mrs. James W. Heath, Colborne Street East, have returned home after a holiday spent at "The Cedars", Collingwood, Ontario. The Misses Betty and Annie Heath spent the Civic Holiday week-end with their parents at Collingwood. * + * Mr. and Mrs. O. T. Mitchell and Robert and Miss Marie Armstrong and Miss Eva Swallow left today for a two weeks' vacation through Pennsylvania and New York States, visiting at various Bible Club Con- ferences. . * + » Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Lang and Sharron, Sommerville Avenue, re- turned last week from a vacation trip through the State of Michigan, spending a few days with Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Lang, of Pontiac, while enroute. > % » Mr. and Mrs. George Hamilton and family, Kingsdale Avenue, have returned from a two weeks' holiday at Fernandy Camp, Torrence, On- tario. They were visited by Mr. and Mrs, Joseph Wilson, Nassau Street, who remained for a week-end. * + @ Mr. and Mrs. C. Shaw and Gwen- dolyn Shaw, of Columbus, accom- panied by Mr. and Mrs. 'Arnold Bowler, Cromwell Avenue, enjoyed N a trip recently through the Thou- ~ OF INTEREST TO * Pictured Following Ceremony Grandison, MR. AND MRS. JAMES BLAIR GRANDISON whose marriage was solemnized recently in Knox Presbyterian Church. Formerly Miss Marlene (Joan) Gyure, the bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Gyure, of Oshawa, and the bridegroom is the son of Mrs. George Grandison, of Musselburg, Scotland, and the late Mr. ~~Photo by Campbell's Studio. iv MR. AND princi bride, Wed in Centre St. United Church MRS. KENNETH HOSKING pals in receni ceremony held at Centre Street United Church. The the former Miss Jean Madeline Virgin, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Virgin, of Oshawa, and the bridegroom is the son of Mr. Edwin Hosking, of Belleville, and the late Mrs. Hosking. --Photo by Hornsby Studio. sand Islands and also through Ot- tawa and the Laurentians. * La Mr. and Mrs. Alex Grant, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Rutherford, Mr. and Mrs. John McNeil and Don, and Mrs. James Bliss, all of Hartford Connecticut, visited Mr. and Mrs. M. Mcintyre Hood, Simcoe Street South, yesterday. * + 3 Mrs. Frank Hastings and Mr. Bud Hastings, William Street West, Miss Flora Purdie, Simcoe Street South, and Mrs. Henry Hurst and Miss Mary Hurst, Agnes Street, have re- turned after a two weeks' tour through the United States, spending one week at Miami Beach and re- turning by way of Washington. L I * Mr. and Mrs. E. N. Weldon and family, Golf Street, have just re- turned from a two weeks' vacation at Lake Simcoe. During Civic Holi- day week-end Mr. and Mrs. Weldon were in Flint, Michigan, where Mr. Weldon received the degree of Bachelor of Industrial Engineering from General Motors Institute, Flint, Michigan. Scottish workmen have smashed another world record by completing a 200 feet water cooling tower in 13 weeks. This record-breaking build- ing is part of the $36,000,000 oil re- finery which is being built at Grangemouth, Stirlingshire, Scot- land. 'Wife Preservers 'To remove meat juices from the broil- ing tray of your gas stove, soak it first in hot soapsuds, then scour with steel wool and 8 gentle scouring powder. -- Girl May be Heiress To Pen Pal's Fortune Johannesburg--(CP) -- Miss Jean Bertha, of Outshoorn, South Africa, is heiress to £10,000 ($31,000) from a man she has never seen -- unless somebody is hoaxing her. She corresponded with a Mr. R. McCormick, of Eiffel Flats, South- ern Rhodesia, through a pen friend club, and they were to have met at OQutshoorn on June 30. Somebody telegraphed that Mr. McCormack had died of snakebite on May 10, and later wrote that the body was being sent to London for burial and that the writer understood that McCormack had left Miss Botha £10,000. Miss Botha, who works in a cafe and as a shop assistant, dislikes publicity and says that she has made no plans concerning the sup- posed inheritance. She understands that correspond- ence is passing between Outshoorn and London with regard to the matter. Kitchener Nurse Writes from Korea Kitchener, Aug. 16-- (CP) --A glimpse of the role of the medical services in the Korean war is con- tained in a letter from a U.S. Army nurse in the battle area. "I've never been so thirsty, dirty, flea-bitten, so tired or felt so use- ful in my "whole life,"' Nursing Lieut. Goldie: Mae Bowman wrote her mother, Mrs. Weston Bowman of R.R. 3, Centreville, In aiding the wounded, the Medi- cal Corps is beset not only by fleas and filth but by an enemy which fires upon ambulances. The nurse, who arrived in Korea about a month ago, described a night operation case with "moths and bugs by the thousands crawl- ing all over us." Attendants picked them off with their rubber gloves Groups, (lubs ellis CHRIST'S AMBASSADORS The regular meeting of the Pentecostal Christ's Ambassadors was opened Monday night by Mr. Ed Wright, the president. Prayer was offered by Mr. Don Kellogg. The scripture was read from John 13:1-7 by Miss Shirley Gordon. Mr. George Bateman contributed a vocal number entitled "I have found a hiding place." The speaker for the evening, Mr, William Bowler read from Revelation 1:12-18. He stressed the fact that John in Revelation was alarmed at His Divine Pres- ence. This indicated that God is supreme above all and is to be feared if one is to obtain the mercy He has manifested by the Cross at Calvary, Other gcriptures connec- ted with the subject included Co- iossians 3:23-24, and Isaiah 6:1-8. The service was closed in prayer after singing a song entitled "Just as I Am." Ajax Man Marries Girl from Glasgow July 29 will be a memorable day for Miss Catherine Richards for on that day a year ago she left Scot- land to come to Canada, and exactly one year later she became the bride of John Middleton in Whitby Pres- byterian Church. She is the daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Richards of Glasgow, and her bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Mid- dleton of Ajax. The ceremony was performed by the Rev. David Marshall. The bride was gowned in white lace over pale blue taffeta with matching accessories and carried a bouquet of pink and yellow roses, The matron-of-honor, Mrs, Mar- vin Miller, formerly of Glasgow, now of Niagara Falls, New York, was in pale green organdy with white accessories. She wore a cor- sage of yellow roses. Mrs, Miller has been the bride's closest companion since childhood, and came to the United States in 1948. Mr. Edward Kemp, Ajax, per- formed the duties of best man. A reception was held at the home of the bridegroom's parents, George Street, Ajax. To receive her guests the bridegroom's mother chose a two-piece dress of grey tissue faille. Later Mr. and Mrs. Middleton left for a wedding trip tour through New York, New Jersey and the New England States. For travelling the bride wore a beige suit with brown accessories and a corsage of yellow roses. HONORED AT SHOWER Mrs. Norman Lambert, Alma Street, and Mrs. Jack Bird were co-hostesses at a miscellaneous shower held last evening in honor of Miss Adrienne Louise Lambert, a bride-elect of next month. A specially decorated chair await- ed the honored guest who was pre- sented with a basket overflowing with many useful gifts. Refreshments were served by the hostesses assisted by Mrs. Stewart Brown, Ajax, and Miss Lorrian Lamb. Want to buy or sell or trade - a Classified Ad and the deal is made. WOMEN -~ =. Discover How Good Iced Tea Can Be!g = Make tea double strength and whiie still 3 ) fl bot pour into glasses filled with cracked ice . . . Add sugar and lemon to taste. ICED T EA TIPS FOR TEENS :- "Consideration", Magic Key ELINOR WILLIAMS ' Fg An Ve There's no magic charm that will make you popular and make you seem grown-up enough for the privileges that you want so much. True, a pretty or handsome face helps, but'it's mostly a matter of using your head--a combination of good manners, good taste and good sense, It's not such a big order either. Actually a little common sense counts terrifically simply by helping you do and say what's kindest $0 others. Consideration for others is the basis of correct manners, too. Little things like this, for example: 1--Don't urge a friend or date to stay out later than she is supposed to. It puts her in an embarrassing spot and leads to trouble or com- plete loss of dates. Instead, accept the fact that all good things must end and, if you've had fun, make plans for another evening instead of prolonging that one. 2--Let your date know if you're delayed in reaching your destination at the expected time. Same goes for parents, dentists and everybody else who expects you at a certain place at a certain time. If there's going to be a delay that would make them wonder or worry about you, phone at once to let them know what's what. 3--Say goodnight and leave your friend's or date's home at a reason- able hour. Don't wear out your wel- come by staying too late because you're having fun or simply by fore getting all about time. 4--Let your parents know where you are going, and if you change your plans let them in on the change by making a quick phone call. It's not sissy; it's consideration. Parents like to be kept informed of your whereabouts. It's part of good parenthood, not a peculiarity. (For tips on easy streamlining exercises to improve your appear- ance, send a stamped, self-addressed envelope to Elinor Williams at this paper for a reply.) Want to buy or sell or trade - & Classified Aa and the deal is made. ® DRESSMAKING! eo DESIGNING! ® ALTERATIONS! First Class Dressmaking and Designing. Work Guaranteed. One Week's Service. Delivery on Completion. PHONE 6165-) 127 CADILLAC SOUTH SEER as the surgery progressed. SIZES 14-46 OSHAWA ~ PATTENICK'S INAL SUMMER ESS CLEARANCE 150 DRESSES REG. VALUES TO $7.98 2.00 ALL OTHER SUMMER MERCHANDISE REDUCED FOR QUICK CLEARANCE PATTENICK'S

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