Daily Times-Gazette, 15 Jun 1955, p. 13

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Young Turkish W oman Adopts Herself To Chemical Research 7 By SHIRLEY MORRIS | Cenadien Press Blalf Writer QUEBEC (CP)--A young I woman who admits s { troubles with home eooking Is | studying the, chemical factors in | volved in the cooking of woodpulp | to produce pape Mrs, Nilufr Woods is an associ late scientist with the Pulp nnd | Paper Research Institute of Can- lads In Montreal, an organization | which deterinings methods of in. | ereasing efficiency and quality in | paper production Donning what she called her | "not-so-white cont," Mrs, Woods works efficiently with complicated laboratory - equipment, But the story Is reversed when she puts on an apron to cook in her own kitehen "My husband and 1 have to eat at mother's three times a week or { we'd starve," she said | BOOKS DIDN'T HELP | The 27-year-old chemical engi neer tackled her home cooking problem scientifically "I brought cookbooks languages Hung arisn, {How To Avoid 8 Tractor Mishap EDMONTON (CP) At least seven persons were killed in trace | tor accidents on the Prairies in May, There were five fatalities in and one each in Manitoba in four 1 Turkish, ONE OF OLDEST VOTERS A advanced nage, | have been one of the oldest vot- who will be 100 | ers in the Ontario general elec. Q | t tthe Dear tion, In the foreground is Mrs 3 : in Beptember, votes at the = | Ron Newton, poll clerk, and Mrs, | baskatchewan ness Home for Senior Citizens McLeish, deputy returning offic. | Farm sa ifety experts soy most at London, Ont. He is believed to (oc or, ? Photo) | accidents are the result of careless Rocky Thinks Atomic Weanons Despite his Henry Morton, ness, One of the commonest and most dangerous Is tipping To aveld tipping they | against driving tractors on sleep | hills or banks when the ground is urkish | advise | | & mlish and French | where,' She met her husband, John, |® whom she ago, ot the research institute, | delicate pastel blues and planks to! autumn tinted browns and leat | | greens, from slim, but I got no- | where he also is a chemical engl | neer "Since I'm in fundamental re-| search and John is connected with | production research, arguments at home About work," Mrs. Woods said, Her own particular project is the our | there are po| study of penetration of liquids into | wood during the cooking process whieh turns it into paper, ONLY WOMAN Mrs, Woods was the only woman delegate at a recent meeting here of the technical section of the Canadian Pulp and Paper Associa tion. At the winter session, she be- came the first woman jo deliver a technical paper to the gathering, The young woman, who was horn and raised in Turkey, sald as {long ws she can remember she wanted to be a mechanical engi neer, the profession of her Hungar- ian father "He convincéd me that as a | woman | wasn't suited to it so | turned to chemical engineering," she sald Mrs, Woods studied for both her chemical engineer and master's degree at Istanbul, She did post graduate work on radioactivity for {two years at the University of | Paris with the intention of return- ing to Istanbul to lecture at the universly GROWING COUNTRY Instead, she became Interested in Canada because "it is a grow. ing country which has much to of- fer a person in my profession,' After reading literature about | Canada supplied by the Canadian embassy and Canadian students In Parls, she found on arrival that the country held no disappoint lest go Into voluminous to) | sleeves, suits and dresses v. ary fitted lines to sprea ing Aldine skirts Leather coats and jackets feature |a new water-repellent, satindike suede called suedalope and all are Coals, married four months | cut on French and Halian lines, One full length. double-breasted leather coat comes in & warm tan lined with lightweight beaver lamb dyed to a matehing color, The hug the-neck collar is also of fur, Mohair lined with beaver lamb, ocelot fabric and even Ethiopian Zi 18] while pure wool jersey is the fa. vorite for day dresses and suits, Cream-beige Is adopted for a! beltless, buttoned - through style with a draped bodice, and a closely. | ribbed grey Jersey ~~ resembling | grosgrain--shows up in 8 Jumper | sult, Fine worsteds trimmed with ny lon, satin, and velvet are favored | for evening wear, Mostly baller. | ina-length, cockinfl dresses hold 8 distinet Parisian flavor, A two | plece outfit in colored lame in. | cludes a theatre coat in matching | fabric, with three-quarter length | One striking sleeveless cocktall dress boasts a three-tiered ruffled skirt and a short bolero in cerise velvet Brightly colored proofed-poplin raincoats lined with tartan and ocelot fabric are the Dutch idea for keeping cheerfully-dry on a bleak day. There are jaunty hats, cravats and bags to match, SANCTION BOUT SAINT JOHN, NB, (CP) ~~ Al Canadidn welterweight bo x in g| championship bout at Montreal June 28 has been sanctioned by the | Canadian Boxing and Wrestling Pederation, president G, K, Gar | nett of the federation announced | Tuesday night, Champion Allan | McFater of Toronto will defend his | TO BUY .. ® Cash o Budget ® 30-Day Charge ® Lay-Away* Coleman CAMP STOVES THE DAILY TIMES.GAZETTE, Wedneslay, June 15, 1956 13 REPEAT OFFER | Repeated by Popular Demand POWER SHOP ® 37 PIECES $10.88 ® FULLY GUARANTEED ® REG. VALUE 37.50 JUST THE THING FOR FATHER'S DAY title against Tony Percy of Drum: | | wet or soft, apply ing brakes whe 1 | me nis mondville, Que, Will Decrease War Casualties By DAVE McINTOSH Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP)--Ma)j.-Gen, John Rockingham foresees the possibil ity that stomic weapons would keep down casualties "The sooner we got them, (atomic weapons) the better," the! tall, - barrel-chested commander of the 1st Canadian Infantry Divi sion sald in an interview here In the Becond World War, most major attacks were made by mass ing men and material at one point for a break-through, Such an operation today, in' thé face of | atomic weapons, would be con- side red suicidal ' "Look at what the Germans could have done to us at Nijmegen | if they had had an atomic bomb," Gen. Rockingham sald. "We had eight divisions crammed into an area of three miles wide, I can think of dozens of other similar situations during the last war." BOMBS TO CUT WAY He sald he believes the break. through now could be accomp- lished by atomic bombs, whether fired from cannon or dropped from aircraft, thus preventing the heavy casualties of a mass man. power assault, The 'red-patch" division--Gen, Rockingham refers to his asi 'my al undergo its: first atomic-tacties training this summer at Camp Gagetown, N.B, It will be the first divisional e: cide in Can d the first for the ond front, # TROOPS IN jor APE, "We're Teady rignt Jaw 10 to take on our weight in wildeats,"" the general sald, adding that his troops are in food spirits, well trained and equipped, "But we have to be ready to Started Tour On Bike In '50 VANCOUVER (CP) Loulse Sutherland, pretty nurse from New the tractor is in road gear, hitch ing a load too high, and using the [fight a war with atomic as well | drive wheels to pull out - posts in| | as conventional weapons," he sald, | the ground "After this si ¢ we * should know the e¢ y score," children to drive They Gen, Rockingham id he win | say children are not developed suf be thinking atomically when he! fie ently either physically or men works out the 3rd and 4th brigades | tally for what is e entially « more than 10,000 troops at | adult's Job Gagetown, First will come two| Other bad habits inc lude high | defensive exercises known as | Ppeeds around corners or on rough | "Block"! and two offensive work. | ground, jack rabbit stars with outs to be called "Tackle These NeaVY loads, moving the tractor will be follgwed by the full division | from the ground when hite hing im exercise, "Rising Star," | plements, riding on the drawbars | The 2nd Brigade will conduct | °F fenders, and allowing others to v | ride on the tractor similar training at Camp Wain. |" right, Alta, The 1st Brigade Is | in Germany, will be assumed that an atomle| The emphasis will be on mobil. [bomb has punched a hole through ity and communications, "If com. |the enemy line, The attackers will munications break down, every [try to exploit' the breakthrough thing is lost," Gen. Rockingham | | quickly, moving fast through the sald, |gap and then probably dispersing | ses from any tractors an All or most of the aircraft will |to prevent heavy loss be on the "enemy" side, This will |atomie counter-blow enable the division staff to deter Gen, Rockingham and his staff | mine how well concealed and dis- | already have put in more thgn a ersed troops would have to be|year's work on atomic tactics? He | n the event of atomic attack, | recently witnessed three atomic "por the offensive exercises, it | blasts in Nevada ROOM AND BOARD X ETHER OF JU wry RSUYA PR Zealand, has covered 7,000 miles of a round-the-world bleycle tour she started in 1950 The 98-pound girl most of Europe and plans a six-month tour of Canada, going first to Calgary to see the Stampede . "I've been In dozens of countries and my, passport was all I needed, but the red tape of getting into Canada almost made me decide to go back to England, the last coun. try 1 visited," she said At one point bedouin chiefs hon. ored her with a dinner of whole roast camel, '"Thé camel Is served whole and is stuffed with a whole has covered | india and |, LEAVE HIM # WITH 79 2. all rues! | ALL-WEATHER COAT sheep which is stuffed with smal ler animals." Miss Sutherland will go back to England from Canada and then visit the Scandinavian countries, RED CROSS BLOOD DONOR CLINIC June 29 For Information Call RA 3.7073 SALE 15 STYLES -- ORIGINALLY TO 35.00 "Famous most with Mstant 99y new colo = = 4 WAYS TO BUY = ® CASH ® CHARGE ® BUDGET ® LAYAWAY ° OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT ° 2nd. FLOOR OVER They warn also against allowing | { "The way of life, the standard of | living , they were exactly what I expec ted, " she said, Her first Job here 3% years ago was in the laboratories of 4 pulp | and paper company. at Sault Ste | Marfe, Ont, She joined the re- search institute two years ago, Dutch Fashions Delight Britons In Early June By SYLVIA HACK Canadian Press Staff Writer | LONDON CP) = BSun.starved | Britons were getting their first taste of summer warmth when a band of Duteh fashion designers in. | vaded the capital with a lavish dis. play of chic fall and winter styles that place special emphasis on | colored furs and skins, | Sixteen members of the Dutch fashion group modelled their cre- ations for the second time this year to British buyers and loudest ap- plause greeted their use of leather skins dyed In shades ranging f MILD=COOL=EVEN BURNING IT'S LATER THAN YOU THINK. . « Plan NOW to do your FATHER'S DAY SHOPPING at JOHNSTON'S The store with nearly forty years experience in serve ing the Fathers of Oshawa and district, You simply can't go wrong if you buy his gift at , , , JOHNSTON'S ® SHIRTS by Arrow and Tooke HATS by Stetson and Crean SLACKS by Keithmoor and Dacks HOSIERY by Penman's and Byford SWEATERS by Peter Scott and Grand Mere The well known end reliable portable stove that makes cooking so easy af picnics, camping trips or 11 96 1 ot the summer cottage, Coleman PORTABLE COOLER So handy to take along with you en that picnic or holiday, Insulated to keep foods ice cold for many hours, Sturdy construction Keep liquids hot or cold for hours In one of these well-made Insulated thermos jugs,. 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