Daily Times-Gazette, 21 May 1953, p. 7

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DOUBLE DUTY SLEEPERS Highland Jling ful choice for leisure wear this year. Here it is in a three-piece sleeper set which boasts endless advantages. The outfit features a bright cotton coat, deftly co- ordinated with pajamas, The §racetully flared, three-quarter ength jacket, will serve double duty around the clock. It can be plaid is a color- | worn over shorts, slacks, bathing suits or as a smock for chores around the house. Designed for sleeping comfort, the pajamas have an adjustable waistband and a V-shaped mysticollar which dis- appears at the shoulder line for added coolness. --- By TRACY | ADRIAN, HOLLYWOOD HIGHLIGHTS Recognition by TV Gives Comediennes a Break By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD (AP) -- One of the remarkable things about tele- vision has been the rise of comedi- ennes. Funny women have long been | a stock in trade of show business. But until TV, they were always overshadowed by the popularity of the male laugh-getters. TV has changed all that. The title role in the home screen's top show--"I Love Lucy" --belongs to a woman. Among the others who have nice ratings are Imogene Coca, Eve Arden, Joan Davis, Ann Sothern, Marie Wilson, Gracie Allen, Martha Raye and Tallulah Bankhead. Most of them were in radio, too, but have never |p had the immense success they en- Joy now. |best. we possibly can. I always have a smart outfit on, unless I've |just fallen in a mud puddle or something. | "I held out for three years against doing live TV. One of the main reasons I wanted to film was that you can look better. We spend {much more time lighting me than {they ever did when I was making Imovies. In those days, they'd look lat my nose and light me with a {match." | Lighting, you see, is what makes ithe glamor girls glamorous. It {shouldn't be too big a job on Joan. | Despite her comic characteriza- tions, she is a smart looking wo- man, with smooth skin and blonde air. Joan admitted that TV was the biggest thing that ever happened er How come, I asked Joan Davis, |," ft is because women's voices are not as recognizable on radio? "No," she replied. "It isn't hard to recognize my voice, or Eve Arden's, or Gracie Allen's." Is it because male comics excel in audible humor while the gals rely on sight for laughs? "Nope, I don't think so." Then why is it? "I think it's because of that nasty old g called sex," Miss Davis replied. "And sex is more visible than audible." "All of us girls try to look the SPECIAL VALUE 4535 es 2-8 ; By ANNE ADAMS SEW-EASY Sun Set! PLUS 18 IRON-ON strawberries in color! All included in one pattern! Just check that diagram -- two main parts to dress, one main part to bonnet. Whip up this outfit in a jiffy! IRON ON the luscious red and green motifs in two minutes flat! They're washable! Easiest, prettiest outfit. Don't misg this two-in-one value. Quick, send now! attern : Children's sizes 2, 4, 6, 8, Size 6 dress 2 yards 35- inch fabric; bonnet 3 yard. Send THIRTY - FIVE CENTS (35c) in coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern. Print plainly SIZE NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE NUMBER 1 "I became better known in six weeks on TV than I did in all those years on radio and in pic- tures," she remarked. A QUEEN IS CROWNED By CHARLOTTE WHITTON, CBE Mayor of Ottawa LONDON, England --Before me, as I write, I have a yellowed let- ter. dated from Liverpool, July 5th, 1838, and addressed to a great- aunt of a friend, at "Monaghan, County of -Northumberland, Dis- trict of Newcastle, Upper Canada, North America" by her son -- the writer. \ He speaks of "the disturbances that have occurred in some parts | of Canada" but of the hope that "under the government of Lord Durham matters will be so ar- ranged as to prevent any further attempts at insurrection and re- olt"'. He adds that he is "forwarding, by the same ship, a paper' with "an account of the Coronation of our young Queen, an event which has been celebrated in every part of the Kingdom with the greatest joy, and an expression of the warmest attachment and loyalty to youthful sovereign'. Victoria Regina The crowning was -of Queen Victoria and the year that of the rebellions in Upper and Lower Canada. That wag, almost a cen- tury and a quarter ago; yet one of my own earliest memories is of slowly tolling church and fire bells | in the town, and of men and wom- | en, quiet and sobbing, in a way. a | tiny girl coyld not understand, as, | having reigned for more than threescore years, the aged Queen, | who had been that youthful sover- eign, passed into history. | There were services in the Mar- | ket Place, gone now in the bustling | town, and in all the churches, and | large gatherings of the children, even of us little tots not yet at school, and bewilderment in my baffled mind when the household gloom was broken by my solemn statement that one of the clergy- men had said the good Queen's soul had gone to Halifax and everyone was sad from Paradise to | Vancouver. Paradise was now to me but Vancouver I did know, | because a family in town had just said goodbye forever to their friends and gone to that far coun- ry. | | CHILDHOOD MEMORIES Then 'Kindergarten' and all of | us working bright wool crowns on 'cardboard for the "Core-in-nation" lor something that sounded like |that, and marching round and {round with flags carried over our shoulders the while we shouted "The Mapul Leaf Forever" and "Soldiers of the King" that had been "Soldiers of the Queen' be- fore, All this for something that was going to be in the Fair Grounds on the day of 'core-in- nation". Then black gloom, again, just as in those days when the Queen was dead and everybody praying because the King had to have a "Corporation" (again I solemnly reported 'the teacher Miss Bow- ditch' had told us this). School closed; the King was still sick; and the marches were never made, though there was much '"to- do" in the streets and bands every- | where late on in the summer when, {well again, the King at last was | crowned. [YES COMES BACK |" And someone who was "over" | | for it reported that the birch bark | | canoe, sent to HRH Prince George, the person and government of our | As the World Grows Smaller The Royal Family Comes Closer Hall, where the Principal spoke of the death of the King. The pic- ture of Edward VII was draped in purple and that of 'Prince George" brought forward, the flag unfurled before it, and we all sang "God Save the King". Again the church memorial serv- ices, the official one in St. Paul's, seriously disrupted by Hilda Rob- ertson, now a respected Ottawan and all the Presbyterian row with her, crashing in a sudden skid in | untrustworthy reliance on the un- | accustomed Anglican kneeling benches. A year of excited preparation for the glad crowning of King George and Queen Mary, for here were a King and Queen who had really been in the town within the decade. Moreover, the King had been to sea in HMS Canada, and the wom- en were happy because Queen Mary was to be named Regent since Prince Edward of Wales was S0 very young. Besides, a '"'crossing'" was not such an unheard of trip now. Times were good, money easy, and even, from your own small town, a party of the women were going and "on their own'! Wasn't Miss Barr arranging it and not a man among them to manage for them? The Scouts had heen started and one of the town boys was chosen to go in the Coronation troop, and, since it was just at the end of school anyway, a school dance would be allowed Coronation Night -- your own first one with boys as well as girls present! THE TIDE OF WAR A bare three years and that happy, buoyant, comfortable world had gone forever; so many of the boys who had marched "i cadets" that Coronation Day dead, ere their twenties, for the King, in |far places. Then '""'Armistice", a a peace that was only a pause wars. The years of idleness, hun- ger and need, of breakdown in all the continents and hoplessness in the hearts of men. But, somt way, "King George and Queen Mary" seemed, in on- rushing years, steadfast, Secure, personifying in themselves the few enduring values in the strain and stress of a crumbling civilization. The King's Jubilee Message came as a rock of reassurance in the shifting sands: "With commonsense and good- will as our shield and buckler, we have kept, in spite of all difficul- ties, our heritage of liberty, alike for the individual and for our many constituent races'. . Fifth of a Series (Part 7) ... WIFE PRESERVER Nylon will not burn, but melts in contact with an open flame. For this reason nylon should not be pressed with too hot an iron, nor dried over a radiator. |Duke of Cornwall and York, from the Ottawa Valley lumbermen, by our own "Mr." Barnet, was really in use at $andringham, (Three years ago, I am told, it was still in service on the Norfolk stream near the King's most loved of homes.) | DEATH OF EDWARD VII Then, a pleasant May Day, and the School called to the Assembly Sunshine Rebekah Lodge TELEVISION DRAW WINNER Ticket No. 1067 Mr. S. R. Monn, | 139 Central Park Bivd,, Oshawa, Ontario Send order to ANNE ADAMS, | care of Daily Times-Gazette, Pat- tern Pept., Oshawa, Ontario. ° 1--20.00 Down, 5.00 Week BURNS. 32 KING STREET WEST PERFECT DIAMOND Guaranteed perfect and insured free aga 2--Pair, 13 Week 3--25.00 Down, 6.25 Week 4--20.00 Down, 5.00 Week 5-12.50 Down, 3.00 Week HN "$125. inst loss .25 Down, 3.50 CREDIT EWELLERS (mo. DIAL 3-7022 Norma J. Corrigan Donald G. Hoy Wed The marriage of Norma Jean Corrigan, daughter of Mrs. Viola Corrigan of Oshawa, and Donald Gilroy Hoy, son of Mr. and Mrs. Alex Hoy of Courtice, was solemn- ized last Saturday afternoon at the parsonage of Courtice, United Church with the Rev. L. M. Somer- ville officiating. The bride who was attended by Miss Gloria Marchuk wore a cock- tail - length dress of white organdy styled with a white lace jacket. She wore a beaded headdress and carried a bouquet of red roses. Miss Marchuk was in yellow silk with a white bat and carried pink carnations. Mr". Grant Hoy was the best man. Later Mr. and Mrs. Hoy left for a short wedding trip and on their return will live in Courtice. Want to buy, sell or trade -- A Classified ad and the deal is made. * TABLE TREAT By ALICE BROOKS Transform any simple cloth into a bright beauty with this easy | cross-stitch and embroidery. There | are 14 motifs -- enough for other | linens, too. Send now. | Embroider tablecloths, towels, | scarves! Pattern 7063 has 14 mo- tifs 4x10% to 2'%2x2% inches. | Send TWENTY-FIVE CENTS in coins for this pattern (stamps can- not be accepted) to Daily Times- Gazette, Household Arts Dept., Osh- awa, Ontario. Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS, PATTERN NUMBER. TEN COMPLETE PATTERNS | to sew, embroider, crochet -- print- ed in the new 1953 Alice Brooks Needlecraft Book! Plus many more patterns to send for --including GROUPS, CLUBS, AUXILIARIES BATHE PARK AUX. Bathe Park Ladies' Auxiliary held its meeting recently at the home of Mrs. Fred Coleman. Plans were made for the carnival to be held May 29 - 30. The social eve- ning, arranged by the hostesses, Mrs. Fred Coleman and Mrs. Eric Cooper, took the form of a birth- day party with the traditional birthday cake to celebrate the five years of progress. It was announced that the next meeting would take the form of a family picnic to be held on June 27 at the summer home of Mrs. Wilfred Ogden. CANADIAN LEGION AUX. The Ladies' Auxiliary to the Ca- nadian Legion held its meeting on Tuesday with Mrs. Clifford Pilkey presiding. The president thanked all mem- bers who so willingly helped and worked to make the bazaar a suc- cess. Cards and letters of thanks from sick members was read by Mrs. Eric Jacklin, A report on sick vet- erans was made by Mrs. Robert Williams. Mrs. Edward Bouckley reported that three soldiers' boxes had been sent to veterans in Korea. THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Thursday, Ms) 21, 1958 Y The Auxiliary decided to make a trip to Sunnybrook Hospital on June 17 to visit the veterans from Oshawa. It was decided to discontinue the meetings for the month of July and August. 10TH GROUP COMMITTEE The regular meeting of the 10th Group Committee was held in Guide House recently with Mrs. Lloyd Halliday presiding. Plans were made for a rum- | mage sale to be held in the Scout Hall on Friday, May 29, ¢* 2.30 p.m. Plans were also made for a picnic for the Guides and Browne ies, the date to be announced later, Mrs. Ross Cook gave a report on the convention at Hamilton. Mrs. Lloyd Halliday presented Mrs. Thomas Coull with a gift as she leaves for England soon, Mrs, Lloyd MaclInally won the door prize, ea was served by Mrs. Coull and Mrs. Thomas Salisbury. 5 SALAIA ORANGE PEROE Canada ideas for gifts, home accessories, | toys, fashions! end 25 cents now! ' Pauline's Beauty Salon Nov: for hair styling done by an expert, for tinting done by an experl- enced hand, for work done in New, Modern surroundings by new modern equipment--and for ample parking space for customers, call or drop in for an appointment at Pauline's Beauty Salon. - 543 RITSON RD. S. 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