Daily Times-Gazette, 21 Aug 1950, p. 7

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J ered MONDAY, AUGUST 21, 1950 PAGE SEVEN Accounts of social events and of visitors to and from the city . are appreciated by the . Social Department. TELEPHONE 3 { Mr. and Mrs. Michael Hickey and family, Verdun Road, have return- 'ed from three weeks' holiday at Roslin, Ontario. \ > + * Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cowell and daughter Frances have returned from a week's holiday spent in Kitchener, Preston and Hespeler. * * Mr, and Mrs. James Latimer, Rag- | lan, have recently returned from | a motor trip to Watertown, Ro- | chestér and Buffalo, N.Y. LE 1 Fr Wedding Tri + Miss Elsie Mandrak and Miss Mary -Vajda are vacationing at | Lovett's Point, east of Brighton, | Ontario. ie, de We | Mrs. J. R. Junkin and family of Bobcaygeon were recent visitors at | the home of Mr. and Mrs. H. 8S. Gill, Wilson Road North. | > bP | Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm MacKenzie returned home to Montreal last "night after two weeks' holiday as | guests of Mr. Allen Gregg of the | * Downsville Golf Course. * + + | Mrs. Ray Cole and Gloria, Carol | and Elaine, Christie Street, are | home again after spending two | weeks at The Cedars, Georgian | | LJ ES, 4 | The Misses Betty Crouch, Mary- | lyn McClennen, Angeline Sachlas . and Betty Keith are holidaying at | Wig-a-Mog Inn, Lake Kashogawi- | gamog, Haliburton. do + BP ! Mr. Douglas McKay, Mr. Bob | Martin and Mr. Clarence Keith have motored to Miami Beach, «Florida, for their vacation and plan | to go on to New Orleans before | returning home. * bg Mr. and Mrs. Harold Tripp and Miss Bernice Tripp, Celina Street, returned home Sunday after spend- ing two weeks at Lake Mohawk, Sparta, New Jersey, and in New York City. : a, SE Mr. Fred Small of Sedftle has | been visiting his brother, Mr, Er- nest Small, Celina Street, whom he has not seen for 25 years. Mr, Fred, with - other relatives has now left for Winnipeg to visit more mem- bers of the Small family. * +B Mr. and Mrs. E. O. Phillips and Mrs. L. Savage, Simcoe Street South, and Mr. and Mrs. Gordon -Houlden, and Miss Marilyn Houl- den, Mary Street, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Stickells, Bal- sam Lake, for the weekend. * | Constable and Mrs. Robert Hig | ll ham have been in London, Ontario, | » Mrs. Edwin Manning, all of To- - v where as representative of the On- | tario Durham and Northumberland | Counties Police Association, Mr. |g. 0 "tor a half day of sightseeing | where the Higham has been attending the annual conference of the Ontario Police Association. L 0 J { Mrs. W. H. Hamlyn, Simcoe] Street South, had as guests at the | week-end her brother Mr. John] Johnston and her nephew and | niece, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lee! and their daughters, Miss Eileen | and Miss Geraldine Lee, all of| Lindsay. : | * + Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Butler, Miss Sandra Joyce Butler, Gladstone | "Avenue, and Mr, Clarence Ellis visited Mrs. L. Ellis and Mr. and Mrs, W. J. Seguin at Walford, On- | tario, on their route to Sault Ste. | Marie and through the United | States. oP INTEREST TO WOMEN -~ p to Ottawa MR. AND MRS. WILLIAM A. J. JORDAN whose marriage took place in St. George's Anglican Church recently. The bride, who is the former Viola Ann Maddock is the daughter of Mrs. | Frederick Maddock of Oshawa and the late Mr. Maddock, and the bride- | | groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. William Jordan of Ajax. | | --Photo by Hutchison Studio. Montreal, Aug. 21--Forty-three, delegates and visitors representing | the Women's Institutes through- | out Canada sailed on the Empress | of France Friday .enroute to the sixth Triennial Conference of the Associated Country Women of the World, to be héld in Copenhagen, Denmark, from September 10 to 16.| Mrs. R. Thomson, of Abbotsford, | and Madame Charles Gagne, of Saint Anne de la Pocatiere, will re- | present the Quebéc Women's In-| stitute at the conference. Mrs. E.| E. Morton of Vegreville, Alta.,| national president of the organiz-| ation in Canada, will head the delegation. | The group will arrive in Liver-| pool on August 25, when they will break up to vigit various Women's Institute hostesses in Cheshire. | Following the week-end, Lanca-| in th {for Glasgow. From Glasgow, they stitutes. will travel by train, metor coach and steamer through the Trossachs | for Edinburgh, where they will be] the guests of the Scottish Women's Rural Institutes. | Norway-bound 1 On September 2, the group will leave Edinburgh for Newcastle, to! sail to Bergen, Norway, where] they will be met by members f| the Norwegion country woman's organization. | On Monday, September 4, the] delegates will travel to Oslo, where they will meet with the "Norgen Husmorforbund". In Stockholm, | next on the itinerary, they will] meet members of the "Sveriges Husmodersforeningers Riksfor i 'W. I. Delegates Sail For Denmark |For World Country Women's Rally entrain for Copenhagen, the base for not only the conference, but an excursion to North Sealand, the castles of Kronberg at - Elsinore visit to the Royal Threatre in Cop- enhagen. A two day trip in Den- mark will follow. An equally exciting program has been planned for those delegates intending to return to Canada on the Empress of Scotland, October 3, via The Hague, Brussels, Paris and London, Belfast, Ireland. Two have been arranged, the first to | { | | and Frederiksborg, and an evening H.R.H. PRINCESS LJ LJ | Receiving Birthday Wishes Today MARGARET ROSE ® Greetings Pour Into Balmoral Castle For Princess Margaret, 20 Today Balmoral, Scotland, Aug. 21 (CP) --The sweetheart of the common- | wealth -- Princess Margaret -- including a visit to|turned 20 today amid a crop of itineraries | romantic rumors. i With the King and Queen, she include a meeting at The Hague | will celebrate at a small family Plattelandsyrouwen", | with the "Nederlandsche Bon van | birthday party tonight at Balmoral and a pos-| Castle, where the family is spend- sible visit to Denman College and |ing their annual Scottish summer Lady Tweelsmuir in London, the | holiday. second, a "plane trip from Paris to London, and thence to Belfast, |elder sister Princess Elizabeth, who | delegates will meet with |gave birth to a daughter last Tues- Lake District, ledving later |the Northern Ireland Women's In- day in London. That made Princess Margaret an aunt for the second | Director In Group Miss Anna P. Lewis, director of the Women's Institute Branch, and Home Economics Service, of the Department of Agriculture, has re- vealed that Lady Susan Tweeds-| muir has already issued "a warm invitation" for some of the party to visit .at her home. Manor. Oxford County. Miss Eliza- beth Christmas, warden of Den- man College, will welcome Elsfield | Missing from the party will be time. Glamis Castle, Scotland, and folk- lore in the district says that all girls born there must choose a hus- | band before their 20th birthday. Many are wondering whether Margaret has made her choice. Some society circles believe the {man in Margaret's life is the 'Earl delegates to the Women's Institute College. Miss Lewis also revealed that, since the delegates would not be visiting Finland, some of the Fin- nish women would be holmi to meet their Canadian sis- * ; Out-of-towns guests at the De- { bund", On September 9, they will' ters. Mille-Flewwelling wedding were Mr. | ' and Mrs. James Bedwell, Highland | Creek; Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Hale, Miss Margaret E. Hale, Mr. E. J. Emslie, Mr. and Mrs. G. E. =a 4c! Mr, and Mrs. J. E. Flewwelling, all | of Toronto; Mr. ana Mrs. Kenneth | Johnson, Raglan. | EEE | Mrs. Norman Wirsching, Roxber- | venue, was hostess at | afternoon tea as a surprise party | Mrs. Robert Orr who is leaving | the neighborhood. Si:teen neigh- bors were present and on their be- half Mrs. Irwin G. Southwell pre-|T sented Mrs. Orr with a black lea-! ther purse as a token of their re-! gard. NE J Out-of-town guests at the Rowe- Brown wedding were Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Brown, Kearney, Ontario; Mrs. I. Brown, Mr. Jack Brown, both of Katrine, Ontario; Miss Joan Patterson, Miss Yvonne Taylor, Miss Chiyeko Shinohara, Mr. and ronto; Mr. and Mrs, Victor Lanois, Dunbarton; Mr. and Mrs. Victor Levesque, Whitby; Mrs. E. Stratton, Mr. H. R, Webster, Mr. and Mrs, P. A. DeHetre, all of Detroit; Mr. and Mrs, W. E. Woodcock, Trenton. Won't Pay $3 Fine | destruction." 'Vatican Claims U.S. Preaching Birth Control to Serve Own Ends * Vatican City, (Reuters)--Vatican, authorities are disturbed by the increasing propaganda in favor of | birth control which, despite strong | church opposition, is gaining ground in many countries of Eu- Birth control as a method of solving population problems has long been viewed in Roman Catho- lic circles as a "philosophy of de- spair based on the arithmetic of Much of the blame for the spread of birth control is laid by Vatican circles squarely on the shoulders of the anglo-saxons, particularly the Americans, The Jesuits have, in fact, ac- cused the Americans of "exporting" birth control doctrines to over-pop- ulated countries for the further- ance of their own interests. Powerful Jesuit review, Civilta Cattolica, said in a recent article that the U.S. is exporting the "pseudo-scientific solution" of birth control to keep the "prolific na- tions of Europe and Asia from exert- So Goods Auctioned East Grinstead, Sussex, Eng.-- | (CP)--Mrs. Ethel Johnsen, 54-year- old lady of Gravetye Manor, near here, told the local magistrate she had no intention of paying a $3 fine | imposed on her for a traffic viola- | tion. "I will go to prison rather than pay a fine for something I have not done," she said. ; Police went. to the manor and impounded several household ar- ticles under a justices distress war- rant. They will be offered at public auction to pay the fine as well as the bailiff's fees. - INLAND WATERWAY From the Strait of Belle Isle at the northern entrance to the Gulf of St. Lawrence, the sailing dis tance to the head of Lake Superior is 2,338 miles. | cannot feed more than 3,000,000,000 ing pressure" on under-populated | American "dominions." The increase in population dur- ing the last 50 years is admittedly startling, Since 1900, world popu- | lation has gone up by nearly 50 | per cent--from 1,608,000,000 to 2,- 403,000,000. Alarmists world maintain the people -- a figure which at the present rate would be reached with- |in the century. Other statisticians | maintain that the earth can sup- | port '9,792,000,000 people -- which 'would at least give humanity a | little more breathing space. In any case, Roman Catholic circles believe the artificial sup- pression of population growth is no answer to the demographic row. They say population tend- problems either of today or tomor- | encies 'are eminently unstable and | trends cannot be followed through (to their logical arithmetical cone clusion. Social Notices $1.00 Marriage Announcements $1.00 ENGAGEMENTS The engagement is announced of Clara Muriel, daughter of Mrs. Al- berta Andrews Dainty' to David Boyd Valleau, son of Mrs. D. A, Valleau and the late Mr. Valleau. The wedding is to take place on Saturday, September 23, at 1:45 pm. in St. George's Anglican Church. Children Spoon-Fed Summer Class Told Halifax--(CP)--A Pine Hill Di- vinity College . professor = recently told a teachers' summer school class here; "We tend to spoon-feed our children too much instead of edu- cating them." Prof. J. B. Hardie said the teach- ers' job is to produce minds that can move on their own. They are catering too much to the sutdents' whims, fads and fancies, and dis cipline is suffering. "I suggest we are producing par- rot-like children," said the profes- sor, "We are not letting them do enough on their own and are de- liberately crushing initiative." In religion, too, he said, the im- portance of young people is stressed too much. He caused a laugh when he added that "child psychol- ogists are beginning to declare that one may actually spank a child." Dr. Hardie sald there must be more study of languages and Can- ada' should emphasize the study of French because the nation is bi- lingual. Soak ba.on in cold water for a | | few minutes before frying. shrink and curl less. in Stock- | of Dalkeith, who will one day in- the | herit one of Britain's largest' for- tunes. His parents, the Duke and Duchess of Buccleuch, own six stately homes and more than 500,- 000 acres of land. * The Earl, 27 in September, has {been one of Princess Margaret's frequent dates and his mame has been repeatedly ' linked with hers. Once an official denial had to be| issued, so widespread was the be- lief that the Princess was in love. Today's newspapers devoted col- umns to Princess Margaret. | up-to-date with the latest fashion | dictates. Her favorite fashion is dancing. | Jazz is one of her hobbies and lingham Palace to hear selections from her record library. Today the Princess accompanied her parents to church at Balmoral. Princess Margaret is expected to | remain in Scotland until the King and Queen return south in October. Then she will see Princess Eliza- beth's baby daughter for the first i time. Trenton Man Takes Bride From Ajax The marriage of Kathleen Emily | Brown, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. It will | | Charles Brown, of Ajax, and Eric Gerald Rowe, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Rowe, of Trenton, was solemnized on Saturday afternoon at Ajax United Church. Gladioli formed: the setting for the ceremony performed by the Rev. Archibald McLachlan. The wedding music was supplied by Miss Mary McRae. The bride who was given in mar- riage by her father was gowned in | ivory satin designed with a flaring skirt, A net yoke and long pointed sleeves styled the bodice. She car- ried a bouquet of red roses and wore an heirloom chain with pearl pend- ant belonging to her grandmother. Miss Mildred Brown was maid-of- honor for her sister. The brides- maids were Miss Ida Brown and Miss Rose Marie Brown, also sisters of the bride. All were gowned in pale blue taffeta with net bonnets to match and carried Colonial bouquets of pink roses. They wore pearls, the gift of the bride. Mr. William Woodcock, brother- in-law of thé bridegroom perform- ed the duties of the best man and the ushers were Mr, Edwin Man- ning, of Toronto, and Mr. Victor Lanois, brother-in-law of the bride. For the reception held at.the home of the bride's pargnts, the bride's mother was in navy blue mesh with white accessories and a corsage of pink roses. The bride groom's mother was unable to be present. Later Mr. and Mrs. Rowe left on a wedding trip to Ottawa and nor- thern Ontario and upon their re- turn will reside in Oshawa. For blue sheer dress with white acces- sories and a corsage of red roses. Only five-foot-two, she is always | travelling the bride chose a pale Gay Mexican Place Mai dank of Mexico is this attracti Inspired by the bright colors and si 1 teh dq the embroid mat of heavy cotton gabardine. The fring d napkin motif on the mat, and is decorated with a flower design. Use any color combi- nation you like . . . dark green and lime, sanka brown and cream or dutch blue and white. You may have instructions for this MEXICAN PLACE MAT if you will write to the Needlework Dept. of this paper requesting Leaflet No. E-1000. Please enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope. : MR. AND MRS. DONALD WILLIAM DUNCAN whose wedding recently was attended by many Oshawa guests. Beula Mary Hamilton, the bride is the danghter of Mr, and Mrs. Frederick H. Hamilton of Brougham, and the bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. William M. Duncan of Green River. Formerly --pPhoto by Graphic Artists, - Toronte Let Children Play When They Wash Keeping Hands Clean Can Be Fun can promote cleanliness at home, and help to insure the health of their familfes at the same time. Such precautionary measures thwart the spread of disease, and the annual summertime fear of polio. An August campaign has been launched jointly by health services and other interested organizations -- for the purpose of combating polio with this basic premise: that many diseases, maybe including polio, are spread by unclean hands, and that hands washed frequently are not apt to spread germs. And special reminders of this fact are being directed toward youngsters -- who need this particular protection during thé holiday months. If you dramatize the business of cleanliness, your small fry will find it pleasant and fun to "wash up." | Keep charts-- award stars -- any {visual way . to keep track of the {day's soap and water activity is Princess Margaret was born at! friends frequently visit her in Buck- [good for the record. Supply children {with their own equipment -- a towel Mothers with a flair for staging rack located low enough for little iels in two), hem the edges, and try short arms to reach, a personal soap dish -- complete with soap. Let them use the gentle pumice soap that working men use to get dirty hands clean. They can feel the pumice, feel the 50,000 tiny scrubbers in every inch of lather. Brighten the job with small, gay, colorful towels, Katherine Potter suggests you make use of old Turkish towels whose edges have become frayed, centers worn, or borders shrunk. Cut off worn parts (divide the larger tow- out some of your needlework skill on decoration. Then, taking your cue from the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, teach your youngsters the important times they must remem- ber .to wash their hands: before meals, after toilet, whenever hands have been soiled by oral or nasal discharges. Have them recite this schedule back to you so you know it's perfectly clear to them. Make the child his own guardian against germs. Average American Women is Short, 'Needs Clothes Scaled to Proportions | New York--(CP)---She used to be | the forgotten woman in the cloth- | snags encountered in giving the |ing trade--the "half pint" of five-| "halfpints" a break, according to lines nowadays | Sices, is due to women's vanity. Costume jewelry is more important feet-five or less--but the average American woman. ture, setting the average height a little over five-feet-three. A mere per cent are the willowy five- nine type for which Paris creations arc designed, and the in-between group numbers 33 per cent. Further, the statistics show that a goodly proportion of these "half- pints" are well-rounded, the type that must choose clothes carefully to avoid a dumpy appearance. A small but growing segment of the slothing industry holds that these average women should have dresses and suits styled and. scaled to their measurements, instead of altered hand-me-downs designed for taeir taller sisters. One of the leaders in the move- ment, Murray Sices of New York, says he got the idea when he was detailed to outfit the Women's Army Corps; he found that alter- ations entailed tremendous work and expen ¢ because uniforms had been designed for the taller-than average girl. 1 Slimmer Look Now his firm handles nothing but suits for the not-so-tall group --four-feet-nine to five-feet-five-- wearers look taller and slimmer. and designs them to make the] she's getting more of a break. The | They just don't want to be seen reason: Discovery that she is really | buying Almost two-thirds of American |Plumpish women. They would ra- women belong in this group, says ther buy regular sizes and have the U.S. Department of Agricul- | them altered. feet- | Sizes quite happily so long as the the Strangely emough, one of their clothes labelled in depart- partments for small or who argues that the So Sices, the "half-pint" girls will wear classification is not forced to their attention, is campaigning for a new approach by department stores. He wants all sizes sold in the same de partment, and the clerks trained to know at a glance what type the customer needs and supply it with- out comment. Another New York firm, specia- lizing in coa's for the shorter group, stresses that: they are de signed "for the womanly woman-- not for fairybook ladies, but for actual averages scored in inches and fractions from widespread surveys of women as they are." In the trade papers, the com- pany's advertising slogan is: "The | Dame Who Took Samson was no | Toothpick!" | LILLIAN MAE MAI SH. SCHOOL OF DANCING d p gl ion Sat. 9; Sept. 10 a.m. to .1 p.m. Mesonic entre St. an , dancers. C well as for Temple, | | 9th, | Community. RubysFlewwelling Henry R. DeMille Wed At Centre Street United Church on Saturday afternoon the Rev. F. P, Whiteley united in marriage Ruby Jane Flewwellingand Henry Russell DeMille. 'The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Claude E. Flewwelling and the bridegroom is the son of Mr. James DeMille and the late Mrs. DeMille, all of Osh- awa. Baskets of gladioli formed the floral background. Mr. Norman Williams presided at the organ and Mr. Edmund Bedwell, of Scar- borough, uncle of the bride, was the soloist. ) Given in marriage by her father, the bride was gowned in white slipper satin styled with a white lace jacket. A Dutch cap held her floor-length veil and she carried a cascade bouquet of pink carnations. Her jewellery was a pearl pendant and earrings to match. : Mrs. John A. Scott, of Whitby, sister of the bride was matron-of- honor wearing peach satin. The other attendants were Mrs. Fred C. Taylor, of Oshawa, in blue moire taffeta, and Miss Marion Flewwel- ling, of Toronto, also a sister of the bride, in blue lace. All carried cascade bouquets of gladiolus petals in contrasting hues, ; Mr. Thomas DeMille, brother of the bridegroom, was best man and the ushers were Mr. Daniel Shutka, of Oshawa, and Mr. Harold De- Mille. For the reception held in the auditorium of Centre Street United Church, the bride's mother was in smoke grey crepe with navy blue accessories and a corsage of pink carnations, For the wedding trip to Mont- real and points East, the bride chose a white gabardine suit with a navy blue topcoat and accessories. Mr. nd Mrs. DeMille will reside in Oshawa. Destined to be Seen In Smartest Places Eye catching hemlines this sea- son, skirt lengths vary from 15 to 18 inches, both in classic and high fashion ensembles. + Pb The modified sheath dress in black velvet with deep yoke of chantilly lace. An exciting texture contrast of a whole bodice of vel- vet atop a slim, sideflared skirt of taffeta, ' +> + Skirt variations are important... there are two extremes...the straight and narrow and the full- flared. There is a skirt with the important side drape; the circu- lar skirt; the skirt with clustered fullness at the. side, showing the influence of Spanish styles; the skirt with sunburst pleats the very narrow skirt with tiered folds. * + oP Charcoal flannel with tiny black velvet collar and cuffs; dark navy gabardine with horse-shoe neck- line collar of matching velvet; black broadcloth with narrow pipings of black velvet; black velvet with braid edging, buttons of rhine- stones. * + & Black, navy and brown velvet shell pumps, skillfully created and designed, go LJ +* Christian Dior of Paris shows both "Long and Short Formals" in his fall collection. L JER SR Rhinestones are back in head- . the bigger the better, than ever. L JE J Long-haired fleeces are fashion news in coat fabric. Rich bro- cades, gold lace, sheer tulle and chiffon embroidered in rhinestones for evening elegance. ea Important: hat fabric . . . velours, pile fabrics and panne velvet. For dress-up the little feather hat, and veils are jewel-sprinkled on black and gold net. OE Another new shade for hosiery, 'Clover Club,' created to match the season's most popular color . , . Charcoal Grey. And remember it doesn't cost a "penny more" to be a "traffic stopper" in fashion. © DRESSMAKING! | e DESIGNING! e ALTERATIONS! First Class Dressmaking and Designing. Work Guaranteed. One Week's Service. Delivery on Completion. PHONE 6165-J 127 *ADILLAC SOUTH Need buttons, or kennels, Or bricks for a wall ? Consult YELLOW PAGES They list them all} i ? | CERES LZ 0 FORE 4 Ser Ul 8 od = RAR SRE LE he str 3a

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