STYLED FOR SMALL FRY Little girl fashions are becoming cuter and. more practical every year. Today it is really hard to get an outfit that is not ring and becoming to even the chubbiest figure. The aré a very good example of the trend. They consist of a little skirt and a light blue cotton knit top. The blouse has a white collar band and cuffs, and is guaranteed washable. -- By Tracy Adrian. CHILD GUIDANCE Courtesy and Consideration Add Enjoyment to Family Outing By G. CLEVELAND MYERS Yesterday we considered the wholesome education and pleasure to be derived by children from the world of nature, especially when parents share with these children such enjoyment. Consider the companionship from this family enjoyment together; also the precious experiences a father and son,. may have on a hike together. © While many parents and their children in large cities arg denied such wholesome pleasures, fewer would be if the parents put more value on them. Even many par- ents and children living on the putskirts of a town or city don't njoy the wide-open spaces all about them. RICH EXPERIENCES Yet many parents do drive or ride on common carriers with their children (from about five to | 12) out to areas where they can enjoy the woods and fields and streams. Sontetimes they take their lunch with them. Such excur- sions can provide rich and useful | experiences for the entire family, highly educative to the children. « But if you owned the property over which these parents and their children roamed, you might not welcome these trespassers; and most of them are. They may break down your fences, leave | open your gates, trample down | your crops and build fires that are dangerous. Most may not think of asking your permission to ramble over your property.' And if you should show displeasure at their destructiveness or tell them 'to get off," they may respond in ugly Ways. Even the parents with their hildren may speak abusively to ou or about you. Strange as it | may seem, these parents may be | looked up to in their home com- munity as model citizens. MORAL DAMAGE Just imagine what then may happen to the ideals, moral stand- jards and moral fiber of these | children thus led by their parenis {in being nuisances to other per- | sons. Just imagine what then may happen to the ideals, moral stand- children thus led by their parents in being nuisances to other per- sons, defiantly trespassing on pri- vate property and mutilating or destroying it. On just one such excursion more moral damage may be done to the children than | can be repaired by years of moral | instruction at home, school or | Sunday school. On the other hand, parents on such an outing could effect rich moral education if they would hold | | themselves and their children to | strict principles and practices of | good citizenship. Accordingly, they should first be sure the owner of the property over whicy they roamed with their children appro- ved; that no person in the party i harmed or destroyed anything or {left any litter or committed any | nuisance whatsoever. Besides, the | children should see and hear their | parents on leaving the property they enjoyed thank the owner for | his kindness to them. calely COSTS ONLY 7 Nothing puts the finishing touch to oven-fresh cookies. forget our fresh bread and buns for 104 KING E. DIAL 5-6224 By popular demand, we are repeating last week's special. We promise you our ORANGE LAYER CAKE will be just as appetizing as last week ond will be enjoyed by the whole family. How About Those Picnic Lunches? Easy to pack and easy to eat, too. PERFECTION BAKERY "The Home of Good Things to Eat' OSHAWA -- WHITBY 82 SIMCOE DIAL 3-2464 So take one home today! our enjoyable picnic lunch like our And don't sandwiches! N. WHITBY DIAL 706 HOLLYWOOD | HIGHLIGHTS | By JAMES BACON HOLLYWOOD (AP)--Can a nice girl make the grade in the mov- ies? Ann Blythe, a girl any fellow could proudly take home to meet mother, is proof that virtue is its own reward--even in Hollywood. This young and beautiful actress is one of the most talented and successful in the businses. Yet her name is seldom mentioned in gos- sip columns, Ann, it seems, spends most of her leisure time at church ba- zaars, a most unlikely hangout for gossip columnists. She has plenty of dates, like any other girl of 23, but so far nothing serious. One of her steadiest beaux, Charles Fitzsimons, says a date with Ann usually entails dinner, a movie, with a chocolate soda afterwards. NO PRUDE Ann is not a prude about night- clubs. "It's all right," she explains, "to go there to see some great artist perform. But to sit there in those dingy, smoke-filled rooms night after night is not my idea of fun." Fitzsimons discloses something else about a date with Ann. "Besides being one of the nicest girls I've ever met," says Fitz- simons. "she is surprisingly atten- tive when we talk." Ann has three major pictures either just released or about to be. In "The World in His Arms," she plays a Russian countess who makes love to Gregory Peck: in "Sally and Saint Anne,"' she plays an 11-year-old girl, and in 'One Minute to Zero," she plays a young war widow. In some parts of the American Southwest and in Mexico, choco- late is used to flavor both meat and vegetables. MARY HAWORTH'S MAIL Engaged Girl and Struggle Against Mutual Attraction DEAR MARY HAWORTH: Tim {and I fell in love before I knew he was married and before he knew I was engaged. We have tried to stay away from each |other, but no matter what we do {the love and longing come back, |and eventually we seek each |other's company again. We find in each other a kindred spirit, that heretofore. had felt unloved and all alone--an inborn feeling, since we have. both had proof that we are loved by others. I have always been generously loved by my family and friends, and in the past five years I have had 14 proposals of marriage. But in, Tim I have found a heart that makes answer to my own--filled | with the same dreams, hopes and | tender intensity. Our love developed after many 'hours of quiet companionship. | There is nothing cheap about our | Ti | relationship. As Tim says, '"Every- | thing must always be right for us." | And it isn't a case of my wanting | something I can't have. As soon las I tell Tim of my love, he will |get a divorce and marry me. He has offered that. I have longed to tell him of my love, and confirm the sweet promise he has given; but I feel I should wait until the end of this month when I will " | EAS R4819 1m oT GOOD MIXERS By ANNE ADAMS Even a beginner will sew these | matchmates quickly! Such smart fashion dashing standup collar; happy skirt makes a pretty spin at beach parties, square dances, --sleeveless blouse has a | pocket- [EST TO MAKE By ALICE BROOKS t He's so cuddly, children love to go to sleep with Cheerio the Clown Doll beside them! Thrifty gift, he's easy to sew in the short- est amount of time! Use scraps and a Size-12 man's sock for Clown Doll. Pattern 7170: doll directions; cothes patterns. Send TWENTY-FIVE CENTS in coins for this pattern (stamps can- not be accepted )to Daily Times Gazette, Household Arts Dept., Oshawa, Ontario. Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS, PATTERN NUMBER. Exciting! Our 1952 edition of | Alice Brooks Needlecraft . Book! | Brimful of new ideas, it's only Twenty-five cents. NINETY-ONE ! illustrations of patterns of your favorite needlecraft designs, plus SIX easy-to-do patterns printed | right in the book. everywhere! Picture it in crisp | white pique -- cool, so very cool! Pattern R4819: Misses' Sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20; 40. Size 16 blouse; | 1% yards 35-inch; skirt 27% yards. | This pattern easy to use, simple | to sew, is tested for fit. Has com- plete illustrated instructions. i Send THIRTY - FIVE CENTS | | (35¢) in coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern. Print plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE NUMBER. | Send order to ANNE ADAMS, | care of Daily Times Gazette, Pat- | tern Dept., Oshawa, Ontario. ADAMS DRIVING SCHOOL Duol-Controlled Cars. We will call at your home or place of business. DIAL 3-7071 HAVE YOUR FURNITURE RECOVERED NOW! You save money now on our clearing line of mill ends. It's cheaper to buy direct from the factory. AAAI FREE! fas! HOSTESS. CHAIR TO EACH 3-PIECE SUITE be ot an Fashion Right for '52 Our Specialty: To toke old upholstered pleces and turn them into smart, comfort- able furniture thot hioned, uncomfortaoble you'll proud of, And we do it LOW COST. Call now tor obligation-free estimate. PARKLANE AVE. CALL AT OUR OSHAWA OFFICE TORONTO FURNITURE MFG. CO. PHOKRE 3-8549 FREE PICKUP FREE DELIVERY Married Man have a chance to see my fiance and break our engagement. SOLVES OWN PROBLEM My family has always let me make my own decisions and solve my own problems. understand my love of Tim, but have given their blessing to us, as they did to Joe, who has been is seen in your string of proposals, | of The Daily Times-Gazette. my fiance for three years. I want to be Tim's sweetheart, wife, com- | your fiance at present--keeping | ipanion and helpmate; and I am | him in the dark about your change not making excuses when I say there is no wrong in our love itself. The only sin I can see is in the idle gossip and condemnat- fon (without proof) that it kindles in people who know us. If there is anything more I can do to end the affair, or tp prove that it is a deserving love, I wish to know what it is. I have done| Assuming you were to marry in| Were feted recently in a unique all that I know to do, and still the wake of this history of inter-|celebration of their golden jubilee theanswer is the same --1I love | mingled double dealing, could you |in religious orders. m. G.'C. INVETERATE FLIRTS Dear G.C.: It seems to me 'that you are covering a shabby propo- sition with fine talk. It is already too late for Tim to say, "Every- any particular? I doubt it. There | trude (Corrinne Dubuc) of Rhode thing must always be right for would be a worm of distrust at|Island, N.Y., also took her vows in us." You got off to a wrong start, [the core of your delight; or should | 1902. jon a premise of 'mutual dishonesty I say a lurking serpent of mutual | |--and I think the lightning, when |jealousy in the Garden of Eden, | Ottawa sex attraction, not an instance of soul mates meeting in their latest not love, but a blend of infatuation | incarnation. You say your love developed recognize that your big thrill of | 1 after many hours of quiet compan- |ionship; yet you didn't know ad | Tim was married, nor did he know that you were engaged, | getting acquainted, in a casually friendly way, how come each assumed that the other was fancy | free, eligible and unattached? Why 'hadn't your fiance, or his wife, (been mentioned as 'a fact of life? 5 suggest the answer may be that |each of you is an inveterate flirt, | who uses a conscienceless amount They .don't of finesse in baiting the interest | of a prospective. conquest. | Further evidence aiong this line and in your velvety hypocrisy with of heart, until you can smooth things over face to face. Tim's behavior is equally treacherous in relation to his wife. He is courting your love, to which he has no right, behind her back; and waiting lupon your affirmative response, before broaching divorce to her. | WORM OF DISTRUST in each "other's character? I think not. Having cheated right and left to get | together, could either feel that the | other was truly straightforward in rest on faith it struck, was simply a case of from the outset. You and Tim are manifesting |and childish 'selfishness. Try to SHOP: SAVE =. A LACK TEA Angelus A&P Evaporated MILK 3 lls 43c Ann Page SALAD Ilona, Halves lona Dessert PEARS JSAM Savoia Queen Solid Light Meat Sultana PEANUT ANN PAGE FRESH MILK BREAD 15 DELUXE CBRE Regular Price 45c each 39: White or Brown SLICED 24-0z loaf speciol glend ot Delicious Canned Me! Navy until | | (alack) too late, Given time for | THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Thursday, July 17, 1952 9% the moment doesn't abrogate the! laws of decency and the principles | |of rectitude, governing right rela- | tions, that rational people gener- ally observe. A chief distinction | between the infant and the adult] | mind, is the ability to know that | {individuals can't have everything {they want. My advice is, break {with Tim and look for a real Squate shooter to be your husband. J&A. , Mary Haworth counsels through ! {her column, not by mail or per- | sonal interview. Write her in care | 'Unique Celebration For Cloistered Nuns OTTAWA (CP)--Two cloistered nuns, one of whom has spent 50 | years inside the grey-walled Con- vent of the Precious Blood here, | Sister Agnes of Mary (Agnes | Transeau) of Brooklyn, N.Y., took |her vows 50 years ago this July 'and never has been outside the | convent since. Sister Mary Ger- Archbishop Alexandre Vachon of relaxed the strict rule | against outsiders entering the con- | vent to allow friends and relatives | of the two nuns to visit them for | | special services. Such visits have | been made only once previously-- | during the Marian Congress here in 1947. Archbishop Vachon celebrated mass during which the two nuns repeated the vows they took 50 years ago, ' The sisters of the Precious Blood live in almost complete seclusion, A selected fw ar allowed outside the convent to carry on necessary business. They wear black robes in. stead of the white and red worn by the others. Two other sisters answer the telephone and attend to other calls. The sisters' day begins at 5 a.m. and ends at 8:30 p.m. Their time is spent in prayer, sewing religious garments, making prayer beads or painting. religious pictures. They speak only during short recreation periods two or three times a day. Parcels are delivered to the con- vent through a rotating wicket. The person delivering the parcel does not, see the sister who receives it. Novices are allowed one visit every three months from a rela- tive. Those who have taken their vows may be seen for an hour once a month.- 2 HONEY CINNAMON TOAST For a change in the routine breakfast menu, serve honey cin- namon toast, Toast one side of bread. While still hot, butter the untoasted side. Spread buttered side with honey. Sprinkle cinna- mon on top. Then place slices under broiler until the bread is well browned. oii ------------------------ UNSLICED 24-0z loaf 14. ¢ Prices Effective Until Saturday, July 19th Customers' . Corner We've said it before and we say it again . .. If you are to get full value from your food dollar, you need these things, too, in addition to low prices: High quality food. Full measure and full weight, Correct price and correct change. All these things are what go to make up the great values you enjoy at your A&P. Customer Relations Department A&P FOOD STORES 135 Laughton Ave, Toronto, Ontarie am BTE 32% Loo VF 2. 21¢ 2-13 tb 39¢ A&P COFFEE CUSTOM GROUND BOKAR -93c 3.48 BAG $274 RED CIRCLE 9c EIGHT O'CLOCK 88: ® AsP MEAT SPECIALS b31c B baby tins 27 ¢ 16-0z jar 39. & 20-0z tins 35. 2 15-0z tins 33 Prior's Strawberry (Pectin Added) 24-o0z jar 37 16-0z jar 29 7-oz tin 21 16-0z jar 31 A&P Choice Golden Grapefruit Yukon Club (Contents Only) Sockeye Fancy Aylmer Fancy . APPLESAUCE FROZEN FOODS CLOVER BRAND. Asst Flavors Pint 29. ICE CREAM 2.39. 2 15-0z tins 2c & 20-0z tins 21 & 30-0z btls 25¢ a's tin 39c 2 15-02 tins 25¢ NIFTY WAFFLES ORANGE JUICE YORK BRAND GREEN PEAS [LP Niper Warder Ea 5: AGAIN THIS WEEK BY POPULAR DEMAND RED OR BLUE BRAND LEAN MINCED BEEF SHOULDER ROAST (ROUND BONE POT ROAST) CHUCK ROAST 30. LLADE ROAST SHORT RIB ROAST your choice +4} Q- Native Grown Sweet No. 1 Native Grown Pascal No. 1 A &r P i A &r Vegetables GRAPES 2 6-oz tins 31: California Large Red Eating No. 1, Luscious oi California Seedless '2D PEACHES Georgia Fresh Yellow Freestone, Elberta, No. 1 19. ORANGES Calif. Valencia now at their best, No. 1 288s doz 9c CUCUMBERS CELERY STALKS 2 for 19c for 5c