Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 25 Oct 1956, p. 11

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NO, NO, Maggy Rouff designed and | created this egret feather plum- i ed hat. It will be recalled that | the same egret feathers caused | _ | | paths of ice and snow. EGRET some furore in Canada recent- ly when they turned up here. They may not be imported into Canada, so kiss this hat good- | bye girls. Mission Circle Holds Thankotfering Mrs. L. W. Parrott, street, was hostess to the Kate McLaurin Mission circle of First Baptist Church on Sunday after- noon, October 21. Mrs. Paul Tucker of Moppa, Ni- geria, was the special speaker, the occacion being the annual Thank offering meeting. Invited guests were from the teen-age group of the congrega- tion and a pleasant social time was spent at the conclusion of the program. The speaker, now on her first lan on behalf of those present. tributing a vocal number. furlough, presented vivid first im. Mrs. Murray Eaton led the wor-| pressions of life as a missionary, |ship service with Miss outlining day to day demands of Greenfield at the piano, Mary|language study and the varied |the lemming population fluctuates --she "catches up on concerts" activities on a mission compound. Gimpses were given of children's work at an orphanage, girls' work at a boarding school and domestic arrangements into which snakes, scorpions and white ants intrude themselves as a matter of course. Mrs. Sidney Winsley presided and introduced Mrs. Tucker, who is one of her sisters. Thanks were expressed by Mrs, Frank McLel- Edna Eileen OMEN! THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Thursday, October 25, 1956 11 Summer In The Arctic Holds Fascination For City Woman By CAROLYN WILLETT moon trip would take her to the Canadian Press Staff Writer [chilly community of Baffin Island. of "It is cold; sometimes in early OTTAWA (CP)--Although she's) op jy) "405 90" helow zero, she said, {a native New Yorker, Rosamund) "But I like the north with its Cooch happily trades Fifth avenue fine, cheerful. friendly Eskimos." {pavement for the eastern Arctic's| She's learning the Eskimo lang- {uage. To combat the cold she | i For the last two years she and |p an 2. Jr rimmied parka made her husband, 28-year-old an vi Lo sealskin boots worn over a Cooch of Ottawa, a Canadian wild-| pe! socks life service ornithologist, have| Far"pom eivilization--she finds lived on Baffin Island from April the south noisy when she first 0 September. |comes home in the fall -- she "We would like to stay in the braids her long dark hair, lives north all winter," the attractive|in canvas tents and cooks on a 23-year-old woman said in an in-|single-burner primus stove. | terview here. | "I love to cook," she says. And| Their summer home is at Cape meals planned from Hudson's Doreset, a small community about|Bay Company staples and tinned | {150 miles south of the Arctic|and dehydrated rations haven't] | Circle. on the southeast coast of dampened her interest. | | Baffin Island. _ With occasional tastes of Esk-| | Mr. Cooch, with his wife as an IM, food she declares: | assistant, regularly travels to a Sa! ver is | : Ives' li od {spot about 30 miles from Cape ca " ioe 7] i Dorset, where he studies the The north has ther "luxuries. | y A pr : One is the 'Welcomed steaming {north's eider duck. Use of eider| f iepuifa. + |down is being investigated as an Sup of tea 3nd pilot biscuits, "'pro-| |additional source of income for Guced anytime day or night by| : | Eskimo guides whose dogsled and| the Eskimo economy. 2 | M Cooch. blue d 4/team. carries the young couple on IS. , e eyed and working trips around the ice-| ravea-haired. has her own project. locked island. | She studies the lemming, northern! "There's also the peace and| relatives of the field mouse and|quiet of a beautiful country . . .| {the hamster. |where even the wind over a tree-| _ "The tiny lemming plays a part less land has a different sound." {in Eskimo economy, too," says! A wireless set which picked up| Mrs. Cooch, a graduate of New stations in many parts of the| York Teachers College and Corn- world helped bridge the isolation| ell University with a bachelor's|in a community of about a dozen degree in conservation. | white inhabitants. | Arctic white fox, whose fur is| Interested in music and ballet! | LODGES AND SOCIETIES QUEEN MARY LODGE Queen Mary Lodge, No. 97, held its regular meeting recently with the worthy mistress Sister Gertrude Logan presiding assist- ed by the deputy mistress, Sister Louis Owens. The chaplain, Sis- ter Isabel Reid, read the scrip- ture lesson and offered prayer. Visitors welcomed were Sister]: Elliott, right worshipful grand past mistress of Scotland, right worshipfu! Sister Gillespie, right worshipful Sister Richards, right|: worshipful Sister Anderson, hon- orary members of Ontario west, Sister Mustgrove, worthy mis- tress of Lady Russell Lodge, To- ronto, Sister Virgis, worthy mis- tress of Victory Lodge, Oshawa, and all Sisters of Lady Russell Victory and Oakleigh Lodges, Oshawa. Sister Anne Tome was reported to be still on the sick list. Sister Margaret Phillips thanked Lodge for her 25-year pin and for all the kindness shown to her mother!' in her lengthy illness. There was a short business it meeting. Past mistress, Sister Cora Gardner and her committee? had a successful penny sale. Refreshments were served by Sister Owens and her committee. The next regular meeting is on November 7 when all officers were reminded to attend in white) as there will be a degree exempli- fied Baked Ha To Any Occasion Rid yourself of that 'what to serve' anxiety by keeping ready in the refrigerator the most ver- satile of meats -- a ham. Hot or cold, sliced, minced or diced, bar-| { becued, broiled, baked or steak- ed, it is always welcome at a breakfast, lunch, dinner, cock- tail party, or midnight snack. For ham baked with a tasty difference try preparing it next time with apple juice. Hame Baked with Apple Juice 12 to 15 1b. ham whole cloves cup brown sugar tablespoon mustard (sufficient vinegar to a source of income for the Esk-|--her grandfather was a musician! imo, feed on the lemmings. But/and her grandmother a ballerina | within three-year cycles, she says, during her winter stay in Ottawa| and so the fox population and its|and New York. |, moisten) food supply are closely related.| But most of her days in the; 1 cup apple juice Mrs. Cooch met her Winnipeg-|South are spent in libraries and| Wash and soak ham one hour born husband when he was doing Museums, working on research|in hot water. Place 2 or 3 plys of {post-graduate work at Cornell, Material to complement her sum-|brown paper in baking pan, place following studies In biology at Mer field work. ham skin side down and bake in {Queen's University, Kingston, Ont.| Mr. and Mrs. Cooch intend to fairly hot oven (allowing 25 to 30 | Married in February, 1955, Mrs, "cturn to Cronell for the 1958-59 minutes per pound). Before last Cooch found part of her honey- term. She will study for a mast-(hour of cooking, remove ham biter 7 |er's degree, using lemmings and|from oven, remove skin and ex- parasites as a thesis topic. Her|cess fat. Score and stick whole Taylor and Gwen Parrott con- husband will work on his Ph.D.|cloves in ham. Rub with brown thesis on blue and snow geese. (sugar, mustard and vinegar mix- "And then we'll probably build | ture. Pour cup of apple juice over at the home of Mrs. a house here and have a family," |ham, return to oven and bake 1 hour. The November 22 meeting will | be' held x rk Bk ok Choro KRE Frank McLellan, Tooley's Mills. |she said. SG (Frail Tots Benefit FELT ENSEMBLE A fashion show with a differ- ence, produced by The Wool Bureau of Canada, was seen at | the 34th Annual Conference of the Canadian Woollen and Knit Goods Manufacturers Associa- tion in Quebec City. "Festival in Felt" featured an entire wardrobe from casual to classic -- in soft, Canadian- made felt. Outfits were design- ed and made by students of the School of Fashion, Ryerson In- stitute of Technology, Toronto. White slim jims, appliqued with multicolored felt strips lend glamour to this casually smart Night Of Cards Successful Event The stage at the Masonic of Cards of Mary Street Home and School Association was held recently, was the focal point of much attention. Mrs. William Ranstead was in charge of decor- ations and had used the school colors of white and blue to pro- vide the color scheme for the dec- [Newton Nichards. Alkers, assisted by Wood and Mrs. Will drew the remainin who were as follows: 0 Reardon, Temple, where the annual Night Frank Ball, Mrs. M. F. Winter, Leese, Mrs. J. E A. Wi mrs. Cecilia Casey, ilson, Mrs. C. R. Eaward| Rundle, mae mason, Mrs. Lloyd! Johnston, Mrs. Wilse iam Ranstead, prize winners were won by Mrs. Bright, Mrs. Mrs, A. Hodgson, Mrs. Isobel Essex and Mrs. | Mrs. Elsie Mrs. Haze! Armstrong, | Mrs. Ian McNab, Mrs. A. S. Mc-|Mrs. D. J. Crothers and Mrs, Car- G. men Steenburgh were the lunch iday, | conveners which was served by Mrs. Dorothy McDonald, Mrs. Dorothy Montgomery, Mrs. A. . Elliott, Mrs. MITE. Mere McKay, The progressive euchre awards Essex. 4 Mrs. Gordon Barker, Mrs. Mrs. F. Doreen, Mrs. A. James| Roland Crawford and Mrs. L. W. Alles, Miss Mabel Mason, Cathy Hurren were Erwin, in charge -of the | candy table, Mrs. J. V. Maffey, Grade mothers assisted by execu- . W.itive members. orations. White and blue - tinted chrysanthemums and standards of ferns framed the table displaying the prizes. Prizes were wrapped in the school colors and made a very eyeval hing display on the white draped table. Mrs, Llnyd Wood was the gen- eral bridge convener and intro- |duced Mrs. Edward Alker, presi- dent of Mary Street Home and School Association, who welcomed the guests and declared the bridge open. Mrs. John Naylor drew for the door prize which was won by Mrs. By Summer School TORONTO (CP -- Satisfactory! growth and weight charts of stu-| dents at an open-air school here are more important to parents than good class reports. | High Park Forest School, children of low vitality, has just "closed its doors" at the end of the school year, May to October. | Each of the pupils is recom-| mended by a health nurse or teacher and the idea is to help them increase their ability to learn by improving health and education. for | For True-Life Story: re ----- all new Toni as a wave can be! NOW WITH... All New Fresh Air Waving Lotion = All New Lanolin-Treated End Papers -- All New 10-Minute Waving Action = All New No-Dab Neutralizing! AND INTRODUCING... | "The Two-Bdged Dagger" 1% An Ottawa civil servant who once | |bunted Communist guerrillas in Ma- | | |laya tells about his eerie true exper- |iences in November Reader's Digest. | He is alive today only because of the | strange power of a simple good-luck | | charm --a charm given to him by a | native he was once ready to kill in | cold blood. | He tells the full true story of "The | Two-Edged Dagger"'--how he Scorned | | 2 3, a | a native's superstition and how thi | superstition saved his own life. His story won the Reader's Digest $2,500 | "First Person" Award and appears in | the current issue. 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