Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 23 Jan 1957, p. 10

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Clubwoman"s Spec. Hot Shepherd's Pie 1 1b. ground shoulder beef or hamburg 3 teaspoon salt % teaspoon pepper 2 tablespoons fat 4 tablespoons chopped onion 1 tablespoon flour 3 tablespoons dry instant 1 3 1 Of Breakdown; Dear Mary Haworth: Tell me what to do. My husband is one of the finest men in the world and I want to help him. He is quite a bit older than I, but we make a wonderful marriage. We have three lovely children and my life has been complete in every way. 1 do not give cause to be jeal- ous, but he believes he has lost his manhood, and it has become such a worry to him that I am afraid he is headed for a break- down powdered milk cup hot potato water cups cooked mashed potatoes (about 6 medium) tablespoon butter or margarine % teaspoon salt ¥, teaspoon pepper % cup dry instant powdered skim milk | : a + | I have told him so many times ai mo oy BI ath soup! that his impotence makes no dif- iference to me. I love him for 1 cup buttered cornfalkes or 1 mall package potato chips |¥hat he is, and what he has made NE P {of our marrisge-yiich is good OD: {and fine--but he doesn't under- 1. Fry onions gently in 1 table-/stand. Physical love certainly is chek. siting with a fork. until CONTENT WITH AFFECTION. cook, stirring with a fork, un N' » brown and crumbly. Sprinkle with salt and pepper and mix. Turn than I, it gives him a feeling of into casserole. being, well, finished, I guess. 2. Make fat in pan up to 2|After loving each other all through tablespoons and stir in the flour the years, taking the good and and 3 tablespoons of dry instant bad times together, our marriage, powdered skim milk and stir until is now such a good friendship golden, then stir in the 1 cup which is how it should be, potato water until thick. Add this think. gravy to the meat and stir in. Many Older nen matty younger women, oes! | o Shesd musatoom Soup way. Please tell me what I can 4. Cook potatoes until tender, 0 for, Jim; I 'love Him very reserving the potato water. Mash,| pear D R.: A philosopher of an- rice or whip potatoes until light sient times--was it Epictetus?-- and fluffy, adding butter, salt has said there are two things we and pepper, dry instant powdered should never worry about: One jskin) mile ni Bhi Wits the thing we can help. jhe other iwaler. . is the thing we can't help. spoonful on the layer of mush-| This shrewd observation ought 3 |Faom Np Spread om roughly, to guide your husband to a sound {| buttered Bones or Slightly ang sensiple management of his E difficulty. He ought to find out ! hed potato chips. Bake at at once, with diagnostic help, the EL coll ESKIMO ART EXHIBITED IN ROME deg. Fahr. for about 20 to 25 gignificance of his frustration. He is among more than 200 pieces | people of Canada's Arctic Tun- minutes. ; | -------- NOTE: This may be made in advance and refrigerated. If it is death throes is the subject of | of sculpture being exhibited at dra, the sculpture was describ- this Eskimo carving which is | the Venezia Palace. Carved by | ed by Rome critics as *" on display in Rome. The bear | artisans of the semi-nomadic | unique and meaningful art." A harpooned polar bear in its | [tor and put in oven, it requires at least 30 minutes at 400 deg.| Fahr, { taken directly from the refrigera- c I D ht Jipiey re clean all the way through. Just wash them after each using enera S aug eT in hot soap or detergent suds. This way they're aiways ready for Wed in Ottawa | {the next tour of duty MARY HAWORTH MAIL ' Impotency Brings Man To Verge As Johr (I'll call him) is older| > (CP)--Ruth Sander- | Look around in the houseware OTTAWA (C | | department of your favorite store {and see what's new in brushes. |Chances are you may find still {another brush that you just} When you want to cut marsh- shouldn't be witnout and that mallows use a pair of thoroughly son Simonds, daughter of former | chief of the general staff Lt.-Gen. Guy Simonds and Mrs Simonds] of Ottawa, was married here Sat- urday to William Shiells Turner jo THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Wednesday, January 23, 1957 of Toronto. Following the wedding in Angli- ean Christ Church Cathedral the pair left for Montebello. They will | When Jeanette Leriger returned fore going back to Washington. to her home near here after serv- i |ing a year with the Canadian ante strictions, Miss Leriger described |bassy staff in Indochina she was as "the top experience of all' her "just itching" to see a movie and year's stay as secretary of the do some shopping. |said, kept members of the Cana- on the mission at Hanoi, carrying dian Red Restrictions Reduce Hanoi mae weir home in Toni. To Lifeless City Says Traveller ---- you'll soon find to be vital, ciean scissors dipped in hot TO REMOVE LINT water. This prevents the marsh- | While looking around our favor- mallows from sticking together, {ite houseware section, we came a RE {upon a good substitute for a cloth CURRIEL SARDINES |ing brush, especially excellent for Take a can of condensed {removing lint from such materials |, chroom soup, add two tea- |as suede, felt or corduroy. It is a spoons of curry powder, and |hand-size pad made of foam rub- jo i oN h p heat till bubbly. Add a chopped er, apple, rind and all, a diced ban- As pretty as they are practical, ana and two cans of drained these pads are backed with gaily sardines. Serve over boiled rice printed or polka dotted vinyl plas-|for a quick and easy supper. tic. Each is equipped with a wide Pass a condiment tray of chut- plastic strip for easy holding. ney, chopped egg, bits of bacon These foam rnbber brushes, and chopped nuts if there's com- which are easiiy carried in purse pany. or the car's glove compartment, -- ms = pick up and hoid pesky lint and| GREAT SINGER ~ 0S dust. You can wash them clean in| Jenny Lind, the "Swedish Night- GRANDE PRAIRIE, Alta. (CP) Dublin, Geneva and Prague be- In spite of Bamboo Curtain re- Canadian group which worked s h e with India and Poland delegations Communist restrictions, international out cease-fire agreements for L. team on the ; : ambodia and Viet Nam Wite Seeks Help should determine whether it is |due to ill health; or due to a na- tural waning of his biologic ener- gies; or 'perhaps .a symptom of bored dissatisfaction (and irrita- |tion) with a sexually indifferent spouse. To know the truth about the na- ture and background (or cause) of the distressing condition, is to take a long step towards either curing it, or learning to live with it without damage to domestic ac- cord. CO-OPERATION NECESSARY | Now, referring back to the third | possibility suggested above--nam- ely, that hidden conflict may be making John impotent--I hope it |is true that you are as ready to co-operate, in finding right solu- tions, as you profess to be. Be- {cause there is a chance that your a definite Tull. The minute it's all over, however men dash for the phone to tell {fiends they knew Mickey Mantle would Long "Phone Calls Run To Eight Hours| robbed. throug! or how the Dodgers oy Between Women VANCOUVER (CP) -- Vivian Ralph, chief te'ephone operator at Vancouver's Kerrisdale exchange, says when it comes to telephone conversations. men run a poor second to the daintier sex. | longest conversation rec-| orded here she says, was made | by two women who discussed var- | ious feminine topics for eight ours "I checked the eight-hour con- versation," Miss Ralph said, 'and I've known a six-hour talk here at Kerrisdale exchange." Two-hour conversations are rec- orded daily and considered not un- usual, i Next comes the younger genera- on. 'You should see our switch- board when the teen-agers start calling one another after an Elvis Presley television appearance. suppose they are calling each | other to say how wonderful he| BABY BONDS CHEQUES CASHED HERE! ZELLER'S LTD. own "sexless'" platonic sentiment. |of almost gladly preferring a lat- |terday friendship rather than. sex {relationship with your husband.| was." Then comes father's chance. Every day during the World Series says Miss Ralph, there is 21 SIMCOE ST. S. has fostered his problem. { Medical writer Maxine Davis, in| her latest book The Sexual Re-| HEALTH RUILDER | Norway and Newfoundland are | sponsibility of Women( Dial Press) the main exporters of cod liver) makes the point (see page 187)/0il | that wives have "a profound re- sponsibility in maintaining an active conjugal relationship which | granted normal health and strength, is beneficial to both! partners." Says this author: "The husband will be potent for more years than the wife has been led to believe. if she shows continuing interest' in sexual lovemaking. LOVE CREATES RAPPORT Psychoanalyst Dr. Erich Fromm | affords the supplementary view that "Sexual happiness--even the! knowledge of the so-called sexual! technique--is the result of love! He adds: "The study of the most frequent sexual problems-- | frigidity in women, and the more or less severe forms of psychic] |impotenoe in men--shows that the {cause is not in a lack of know-| ledge of the right technique, but |in the inhibitions which make it {impossible to love. | 'Fear or hatred for the other |sex is at the bottom of those dif-| {ficulties which prevent a person| from giving himself complet-| ely, from acting spontaneously,| from trusting the sexual partner in the immediacy and directness of physical closeness," Dr. {Fromm explains (page 89) in The Art of Loving (Harpers). | To help your husband: 1. Get him to a medical specialist, for a | thorough medical check-up. 2.| |Take stock of your theories of love with a family relations coun-| sellor, to see if vour behavior | needs mending. M.H. | Mary Haworth counsels through| her column, not by mail or per-| sonal interview. Write her in| care of this newspaper. : BURNS Semi-Annual Clearance Sale Of Shoes Continues, with many drastic reductions + + OVER 700 PAIR OF MENS. WOMENS AND CHILDRENS SHOES UP TO 2/3 DISCOUNT --y dd. ded ead OUR FINEST LINES OF MENS AND WOMENS FALL SHOES V4 DISCOUNT | supervisory commission from see« C soap or detergent suds and they'll|ingale," gave her first concert in ling little beyond the hotel and the embassy at Hanoi. Hanoi is in the northern sector {of Viet Nam, split from southern {Viet Nam which remained in | French control after the Indo-| {china armistice between the {French and the Viet Minh was reached in 1954. At Hanoi, she said, "we met the "Our greatest job was re-locat- ing people from one section of the country to the other. They had - 300 days in which to decide where; be dry and ready to use five min-| New York in 1850, when she was utes later. 129. wished to settle. In other| ways, we helped to get the coun-| try settled and to keep peace within the ranks." Conditions in north Viet Nam were "sometimes shocking." "The women labor hard all day THE WOMEN'S WELFARE LEAGUE' OF OSHAWA high level personnel but never the in the rice paddies for very little. people. There was no shopping, Russia talks about mechanization, no movies, no nightclubs. but you can't mechanize a wet "GRIM, DINGY" {rice paddy. That is still a stoop- Hanoi used to be a "bright, | ing-over, hand operation glamorous city," she added. 'But! "The Vietnamese are a gentle it has grown grim and dingy un-/ courteous, friendly folk. Many of der the cheerless regime of the them are wonderful artisans. The Communists." women delight in seeing pretty invites you to attend their ANNUAL MEETING SIMCOE HALL SETTLEMENT HOUSE 10 Fisher Street, Oshawa" Guest Speaker: MR. A. M. KIRKPATRICK Executive Director, John Howard Society of Ontario DEFIES TRADITIO Japan's fun - loving Princess Suga Takako, younger daughter of Emperor Hirohito, is about to shatter tradition in Japan's ancient imperial household. The princess, seen above, wants to do the unheard of thing at least for imperial princesses -- of going to col > to major in Miss Leriger has been a much- clothes on Westerners. Both men egy a EEE o Brushes Designed | to suds-mop floors or spread wax Monday, January 28th |a long, slender brush that does an efficient job. Special brushes Once upon a time, a woman they are so reasonably priced and kept one good scrub brush handy |2ll of them are easy to keep clean ent-day housekeepers, doesn't it? OF synthetic bristles. shed soil so Imagine using one brush for all quickly. It $s so easy to make sure sidered essential. Naturally you wouldn't dream bottle brush! You use a little but- ter brush to lighly grease a skil- pastry or rolls English literature instead of For general disawashing. there And, according to reliable pan, to clean each tine of a fork, 1 ' sources, it is 'practically a cer- FOR FLOORS tainty her highness will get her Then, there's a sponge yarn way." brush (which actually is a mop) ) # / LJ / ] travelled member of Canadian|and women take 'ad interest in | evently For Special Jobs at 2:00 p.m. | are designed tc keep tables and to make her hossework easier. and in good condition for their household nbs! Today. for easier, of preparing vegetables without a let or pan, while another little simply learning how to be a is a useful long - handled brush Lillian. Mae Marsh 1 4 RICHMOND ST. E. embassies since the Second World one's shoes. Vietnamese have few | To take care of dusting and E 8 Speed Up Results work surfaces clean. Just that -- one good scrub brush! specific tasks. quicker running of the home, a vegetable brush! You wouldn't brush does the job of spreading good wife after graduation from with bristles actfully designed to SCHOOL OF DANCINR War. She served at Washington, shoes. Hats? They have no hats." {washing Venetian blinds, there's By ELEANOR ROSS The beauty of most brushes is It sounds amazing to most pres-| Nylon bristles, or other plastic whole line-up of brushes is con- try to suds out bottles without a ENROLL NOW melted butter or egg white on the the Peers' school this spring. |get into every corner of a square D. E A Ballet, Tap, Toe, Character, For Information s hone R A 3-4212 OPERATED UNDER GOVERNMENT CHARTER Baton, Pre-School, Acrobatic, ot the Masonic Temple, Centre and Saturday. Street, Friday INFORMATION: RA 3-7253 cream that penetrates dee removes makeup . 1.50, 2.75, 4.25, 8.00. ARDENA SKIN LOTION ready for makeup . , . wi this effective lotion to w cream. 1.50, 3.50, 5.50. ARDENA CLEANSING CREAM -- Cleanse first with this . with a kind of swift PREPARATIONS come to EATON'S For you . . . here and now . . . all of Miss Arden's preparations. Her incomparable creams and lotions . . . superbly-textured powders and foundations for correct skin care. Her famous, unforgettable perfumes . . . her first-in-fashion make-up harmonies -- lovelier than anything you've ever used . . . all bearing the mark of unerring taste that is so definitely Elizabeth Arden. We are proud to present this distinguished family of Essentials for Loveliness. Do come in and see them. Ma, Bruce SPECIAL NEW YORK CONSULTANT FOR ELIZABETH ARDEN COSMETICS IN PERSON IN OUR COSMETIC DEPT. ALL DAY THURSDAY CONSULTATIONS WITHOUT CHARGE ARDENA SPECIAL ASTRINGENT -- A matchless lotion for oily and mature skins. 'Wonderful when left on over- night under Orange Skin Cream or Perfection Cream, 3.00, 5.25. . dislodges grime, magic! p, deep . . ARDENA VELVA CREAM -- An exquisitely bland emol- lient cream to soothe and smooth the most delicate skin, To be used daily on normal, young or sensitive skins, 1.50, 3.00, 4.50. -- Your skin Is never quite thout the refreshing touch of hisk awoy the last trace of ARDENA ORANGE SKIN CREAM -- An incomparable cream, rich in softening, smoothing properties Applied nightly it will do wonders for 'skin naturally dry, or maturing skin. 1.50, 4.50, 6.50. | PHONE RA 5-7373 | EATON'S MALL LEVEL, Dept. 312 | PHONE RA 57373 | EATON'S » OSHAWA

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy