Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 17 Jul 1956, p. 7

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MF op gh a SIGNING THE REGISTER The former Alice Rose Erick- son signs the register following | her marriage to Harold Allan Baker in Simcoe Street United Church. The bride's parents are ' MARY HAWORTH'S MAIL En a J0 ALDWINCKLE WOMEN'S EDITOR THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Tuesday, July 17, 1956 7 ool Choir Sings At Wedding Of Irene Walker, Donald Washburn | On her parents' wedding anni- otis ud ies piacechie roses cen- |versary, July 14, Irma Cordelia|tered rosettes. | Walker, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. win. Biuce Maiyon of Dxbritye Joan Chapin, bridesmaid. They |W. H, Walker of Oshawa, became {the bride of Mr. Donald William|wore matching floor-length govns of blue embrol nylon over Washburn, son of Mrs. A. E. Wash- burn of Toronto and the late Mr.|cornflower blue tatfeta with Washburn, The wedding day was|matching bandeaux and pink cas- also the anniversary of the bride's Sade bouquets of carnal and r. 3 faust, Mrs, Walter Johnson an The flower sil, lite Miss Pens: a x ope ard-' was a | 1cia 'saturday 'evening. in. North-| doorlength frock of pink embroid | el ver pink " inster United Church. The Rev- DY Mh orooet of pink. yose- buds and carried a matching nose- |m lerend H. A. Mellow was assisted Iby the Reverend R. T. Chapin ol or Greenbank in performing the i A Robert. Washiburn, Toronto, doublering rites, was best man and the ushers were Mrs. J. K. Ferguson of Seagrave,|\Mr, Bruce Malyon, Uxbridge, and violinist, was accompanied by Mr.\nr Paul Peel, Port Perry. J. R. Robertson at the organ pre. To receive the guests at the re- ir| ception, held in the lower hall of the church, the bride's mother wore sandalwood crepe and lace, ceding the ceremony. The. ¢ from North Simcoe Public School, (conducted by Mr. Wallace Young, i |sang "Holy, Holy, Holy" as a pro-land white accessories. The bride- cessional hymn and "0 Worship groom's mother chose navy blue the King" during the signing of the|gjlik gshantung with white, Each had a corsage of pink chiffon roses. Later the couple left on a wed- ding trip through the berder Unit- register. Miss Isabel Gould ol Mr. and Mrs. Albert Erickson of | Woodbridge sang "The Wedding ed States. Over a flowered white nylon' dress the bride wore a dus- i i the brid is |Prayer" and the bridal party was Timmins sii ae ar Te |piped from the church by David ter of French blue taffeta, white accessories and a corsage of pink Baker of Oshawa, | Carstairs. rosettes. and Mrs. Washburn will b --Photo by Peter T. Ellins | The bride was given in marriage Mr. by her father. She wore a floor- {length gown of Swiss embroidered make their home in Dixie, Ontario. Guests were present from De- Ask How To Prevent Daughter |nylon net over white satin with a | voluminous skirt and fitted basque bodice with sheath sleeves. [ troit, Michigan; Vineland Station, Galt, Rockwood, Toronto, Wood-| bridge, Weston, Blackwater, The low rounded neckline was [fhe with seed pearls matching Greenbank, Uxbridge, Port Perry, | the coronet of net petals securing her shoulder-length veil of illusion. FROZEN CHOCOLATE, MARSHMALLOW FAVORITE No More Sticky Scissors - Concert Pianist For Jazz Hounds haired musician who made debut 36 years ago at Massey says jazz has a mission--to intro- duce classical music to more peo- Hambourg: a Ey a a assical mus . Di Y (luted with inst a it woud be acceptable to more Beethoven don't r Holds Jam Sessions By OLI DAUM Canadian Staff Writer TORONTO (CP) A ite. Hall says not people can rumental variations them strumental dressing-up," he said. 'Hass has very much a future. Youngest of a family of class- ical musicians, Mr. Hambourg of others who he says will become Miniature Marshmallows Here Good things come in miniature|be made as the spirit moves you, As a top example, we give youland held in the ezer to serve the tiny marshmallows which run/when you wish. about a hundred to the cup. Frozen Chocolate and Marsh- These miniature marshmallows mallow Favorite will be welcom- are a ready - to - use size de-|ed as a "cooler" on hot summer signed for cooking, salads and days. But it is also a dessert that desserts. They are, perfectly shap-| ed, tender and fluffy marshmal-| lows, wonderfully delicious in fla-| vor. Besides saving you time, you| will like their pert and perky air| in any dish. { Toss handfuls of miniature marshmallows into your favorite chocolate fruit salads, They won't stick to- 2 cups miniature marshmallows gether Use them to garnish con-| 2 teaspoon vanilla |fections, cakes, pies and sweetl cup heavy cream, whipped potato casseroles. Place milk, sugar, and choco-| How easy miniature marshmal- late in top of double boiler. Heat, lows make the preparation of to- stirring occasionally, until the day's frozen chocolate dessert chocolate is melted and the mix- Put away your scissors. Just fold ture is smooth, about 10 minutes. these marshmallows, along with Cool to room temperature. Fold the cooled chocolate mixture and the chocolate mixture, marsiimal- flavoring, into whipped cream. lows, and the vanilla into the Here is a simple dessert that can whipped cream. Pour into a refrig- erator tray and freeze until firm. you can serve for special occa- sions the year around. Frozen Chocolate and Marshmallow Favorite 1% cup milk 1, cup sugar 1-1-0z. square unsweetened joint," it is run by Mr. Hambo AFTER-HOURS MUSIC Toronto's only after-hours "jazz urg and his wife, Ruth. He is the of- ficial greeter and his wife cooks for the customers. Mr. Hambourg greets visitors with "come on in, things are cool" and leads them downstairs into a brick-arched restaurant illumin- Gib MR. A In Simcoe Street United Church, recently, Marion Jean Cowie became the bride of Gor- don William Varty. The bride is | i ho" di "7 %; ND MRS. GORDON W. VARTY the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Irvine A. Cowie and the bride- groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Varty, all of Oshawa. --Photo by J. T. Simnett ated by a few orange bulbs and candles. Customers' eyes are glued to a dinky stage in the corner where jazz musicians, after playing at PUBLIC SPEAKING CAKES AND POISE SOUTH KENTON, Eng. (CP)| BIGGLESWADE, Eng. (CP)-- ~--An elocution expert advised| Governors at the secondary various night spots here: meet to) play the music they love best. Their audience is attentive, talk- ing, if at all, only in whispers. "The type who come here are not boisterous," said Mr. Ham- bourg. "They come to listen. These jazz musicians are serious and it takes a good deal of talent to play good jazz. Many of them have some basic classical train- ng s place is open only on week- ends. It is crowded with older persons as well as youngsters, and iquor is mot allowed. AZZ GAINS REPUTE From Making Unsuitable Match Dear Mary Haworth: We are alor education, considers wage earn-| professional family and haveling unglamorous and menial, and raised our daughter, an only child,|longs to be discovered by Holly-| with Gedicated love. Sue i besut-jwood, iful, talented. travel an U-| He accepts money from our cated, but won't work hard to daughter as a matter of course, make use of her potentials. {and continually has minor brushes However, she is sweet and good with the law, for brawling, traffic and we've tried to teach her to|violations, etc., and disregards be a keen judge of character, and/court summons. When things to have so! moral values and|catch up with him, he runs home| more. But I would say she has/to his mother. for cash and sus- been sheltered and pampered tenance which she can't afford . . . Now, at 21, she has her heart set| HIS CONQUESTS on a young man of 27, an itiner-) He brags of women he has ant salesman who hasn't made/lived with; yet tells our daughter any money in the past eight'he is misunderstood and mis- months, and has no constructive|treated, and that she is the one| plans for the future. He enjoys| worthwhile wonderful thing in his| night club prowling, loafing in the life, and that he needs her to re- sun, and making an entrance. He/form him. He is trying to rush drives a flashy car, so that people her into marriage . . . will notice him and how good-| How can we make her see what looking he is: he says. He spends, 'had marriage risk and what a hours in the bathroom, primping. dangerous man he is? She has al- He feels no obligation about ways looked forward to a home paying debts; still owes everyand a family of her own, patter- cent for an expensive engagement ned like ours. How can we make ring, owes on his car, and has her see what an insecure life their many other bills. He has no talent children would have? D.R. SEW-EASY!. a pa | | ARE "UNREALIST! Dear D.R.: The painful truth of 'am (let's call her) is on the same wave length as this worth- iless man, psychologically. They are of a kind, in their gompletely parasitical address to e Inasmuch as they aren't mak- |ing any disciplined productive |use of their faculties, they feel a need of lavish uncritical admira-| |tion to keep their self-confidence {inflated and, as of now, they are| {teamed up in a mutual admiration| | duet. | They are about as remote from| {reality--from a practical grasp of the rules of survival--as persons| ican be, who still come and go in| society. They don't know what| {they are banking on, in planning (a future together; but unconse- |{iously they expect, of course: to |fall on their feet in fairyland, as a king and queen, with power and ease at their command. NO TRUE LOVE | How can you make Pam see . what a dangerous risk this fellow] ' lis? Well, the probability is that you can't. Love is blind, the sages tell us; and infatuation, its count- |erfeit, specializes in self-deceit. It {chooses to believe what it wants {to believe, without regard for con- |clusive evidence to the contrary | Pam and this fellow aren't in| |love; they are infatuated--each in| love with himself, that is, or with | fantasy image of himself. They are responsive to one another, as to their secret self-images seen in a mirror. He craves her. and she craves him, simply because each assures the other that he (or she) is all that he (or she) wants to | believe of himself, about being in- \comparably wonderful, etc | They can't have a real inter-| change, because each is vapidly self-absorbed. Thus an attempt at marriage would come to grief. The| undertaking would fall apart no matter how desperately either might cling. M.H Mary Haworth counsels through her column and not by mail or| personal interview. Write to her in care of this newspaper. 4722 sizes 12-20 By ANNE ADAMS Graceful sundress in long-torso effect -- ci.y-going fashion when you button on the clever collar- ette! You'll be well - dressed for any occasion with a smart com- bination like this! As easy to sew, as it is flattering to wear! Pattern 4722: Misses' Sizes 12, She carried a cascade of stephan- Ashburn, Hampton, Whitby. | PORTRAIT NECKLINE IS PRETTY The light covered look -- a | lovely expression (in pattern | form) of the way America's best-dressed women will appear | on this summer's social scene. Shoulders disappear, beautifully -- beneath the wide-winging col- lar, tiny sleeves of this Schrader Original; portrai! neckline a per- fect foil for simple "good" jewel- ry. The lines below portray the graceful symmetry- that makes all Schrader designs such a joy to own; no froufrou is ever need- ed for flattery Pattern M348 could be a pretty silk, a tissue ODEST CHAPTER ° TORONTO (CP) ~-- Scottish- born Mrs. W. H. Cross, 102 on June 17, is a member of Ontario's oldest chapter of the Imperial Or- der Daughters of the Empire, St. George's. She has lived in Brock- ville for 70 years. SANDWICH FILLER Canada produced 14,073,502 pounds of canned ham during 1955, up about 500,000 pounds from the previous year. | GAGEMENT | Mr. and Mrs. Harold E. Sleeman announce the engagement of their| youngest daughter, Shirley-Anne, | to Robert Charles Weeks, son of | Mr. and Mrs. Oswald C. Weeks, all | of Oshawa, The marriage will take place in Northminster United Church on Saturday, August 18,/ 1956, at 2.30 p.m. ENGAGEMENT | Mr. and Mrs. Roy Barraball, Orono, formerly of Whitby, wish e t of | to their daughter, Marion Joan, to| Robert James Horner, son of Mr. | and Mrs. Lloyd Horner of Oshawa. | The marriage is to take place on Saturday, August 18, at 3 p.m. in Whitby United Church. Credits Women taffeta, or one of the fine new cottons. Sewing is simple -- very simple, for the elegant results you'll achieve. Pattern M348 is available in Misses' Sizes 10, 12, 14, 16 and 18. Size 16 requires 8 yards 39- inch fabric. Send FIFTY CENTS (in coins) for Pattern M348 to Daily Times- Gazette, Pattern Dept., 20 Front Street West, Toronto, Ontario. Please rint lainly YOUR NAME, ADDRESS with ZONE, With Introducing 'Built-In' Trend A New York industrialist today ave credit to American women the idea of built-in appliances.' Alex Lewyt, Dresidant of three corporations mal 200 products from electronic equip- ment for the military to vacuum cleaners and air conditioners for the home, said that women started the trend for built-in appliances more than twenty years ago when| they recognied the idea's space-| saving features. He recalled that in 1035 scores | SOCIAL NOTICES | J. n "In the old days jazz had a bad ASY CHAIR-SET reputation. Mr. Hambourg said. - "Solid, sensible people di ten to it. That is no.longer true." Mr. Hambourg's interest in jazz developed after the Second World War, He and his wife, a pianist born in the southern United States and familiar with early jazz, had a recording studio. "Some musicians asked us if they could come up 'for a blow' and the sessions grew until we de- cided to open this place," Mrs. Hambourg said. Jazz celebrities visiting Toronto like to perform there, including Oscar Peterson. Hazel Scott and Sarah Vaughan. When visitors and musicians started bringing their lunch, Mrs. Hambourg decided to cook for ue them. First it was just sandwiches and coffee but now she serves full meals. "I never studied this business of cooking and don't have much Javiety but what I make I want & ood," she said. Her menu|. includes spare-ribs, and pizza. barbecued roast beef frogs Joga. CURTAINS VENETIAN SHADES s of a 's club here|school here have a new item on to learn voice control for public|the agenda at quarterly meetings: speaki by humming and sing-|"Tea and cakes." Girls at the ing scales at home. "Keep the|school bake the cakes, then act vacuum cleaner running so as not|as waitresses. The headmaster to alarm the neighbors," the ex. |says the practice teaches them pert added. "confidence and poise." Chase £ Sanborn g gs of fi guests enjoying the hospitality of the Sheraton-Mt. Royal, a favorite: topic is the delectable cuisine, To meet the they serve famous A 1 Loi Enjoy the distinction of a rich, tie coffee at your table...buy Chase & Sanborn today! More fine hotels and restaurants throughout Canada serve Chase & Sanborn Coffees than any other brand. ' By ALICE BROOKS Bluebirds of happiness -- fun to of women were having built-in book cases and vanity tables made crochet in pineapple design, com- |bined with a lacy edging. Make a is hess Romes. hen tele. | Chair- or buffet-set for your home. | About ten years ago, when tele-| "paptern 7207: Crochet directions] vision started to become a definite gr hair.set in No. 30 mercerized | part of the household, many .otton, Easy to do -- so pretty in| women installed TV sets as built. | 5; in units," Mr. Lewyt said white of SoH Ba Sor ENTS tol A A 5 ¢ | The industrialist declared that coins for this pattern (stamps can- those early deoorativg ideas have; not be acsepled) hd Dally Times- been expanded, and today | Gazette, Household Arts Dept. modern home incorporates a wide Oshawa, Ontario, Print plainly variety of built-in appliances. NAME, ADDRESS, PA RN Mr. Lewyt sald that he started NUMBER, to make built-in wall air condition-| Two FREE patterns--printed in ers two years ago, after surveys|the new Alice Brooks Needlecraft indicated a strong liking for such|book for 1956 Stunning designs installations. The fact that appll- for yourself, for Your Yome-Jus} manufatcurers are now in-for you, our re Ss ze! vesting millions of dollars in built- other designs to order -- all aasy, in units is further evidence that fascinating hand-work Send 25 women created a successful idea, cents for your copy of this won- he said. |derful book right away FOR ADDED BEAUTY--UTILITY AND VALUE TO YOUR HOME IT'S HERE! How To Hold FALSE TEETH ) More Firmly in Place | false teeth annoy and em- | Do | barrass by ali e Dllng whe Sou gat: Jogh pb Kh Pp. 3 ne (non-acid powder holds false teeth Ar ) §ooey, pas taste ys 1 eid or feeling. not sour, Lr late odor" breath). Get ¥ toda any drug counter. | | 14, 16, 18, 20. Size 16 dress takes 4 yards 35-inch fabric; collarette requires 's yard This pattern easy to use, sim- ple to sew, is tested for fit. Has complete illustrated instructions. '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, Ont. Op KEEPS FRESH LONGER Marie Marlowe, Propr 10 POPULAR SHADES Hours: 3-5 p.m. Ho en of The Beauty Bar 37 PRINCE ST., OSHAWA, ONTARIO SATURDAY, JULY 21, 1956 7-9 pm. ietress THE MARIE MARLOWE BEAUTY BAR cordially invites you to attend the use REGULAR SUPER OR VERY $000 i GENTLE With Our Home Improvement Items ! We will give you a free estimate on the following: Winter Seal Aluminum Storm/Scrgen Windows 2-track and triple-track Aluminum Prime Windows . . . Residential and Commercial Enamelled Aluminum Windows Kool-Side Awnings . . . "they open and close from inside" Kool-Lite Aluminum Ventilated Awnings Railings . . . interior and exterior Mitchell Air Conditioners . . . residential and COSMETIC DEPT, NOW LOCATED: OLD POST OFFICE BUILDING RA 3-4621 RA 5-4632 Saled Lob FOR FURTHER INFORMATION LIMITED DIAL i5 PRINCE ST., OSHAWA

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