"| Staff And Girls | -| Ashburn Scene | pi |Of Pretty Wedding | At CGIT Camp 4 | The marriage of Carol Mour-| At CGIT Camp Pretoria this |een Lumney and Benito Mario } i | week have been director, Mrs. oR I pg 10 roe 8 | Clarence Penfound, Courtice; | business manager, Miss Carol | James, Pickering; assistant di- rector, Lorna Wearn, Enniskil- |len; swimming instructor, Miss | Mrs. : IMcKay, Oshawa; | { {Terry Thompson, 1 Ginny Crossley, Windsor; cook, Annie Allison, Oshawa; nurse, Mrs. G. Clement, Oshawa, | Discovery group leaders: Mrs, D. Devolin, Ajax; Mrs, W. Me- Lean, Scarborough; Miss Suzan Miss Carolyn Buss, Oshawa; Miss Eleanor Cal- |vert, Oshawa; Miss Connie Nid- iery, Bowmanville, Assistant leaders: Miss Linda Morley, Pickering; Miss Doris Martin, Bowmanville; Miss Dor- othy Willson, Brougham. Campers: Terry Elliott, Monica Link, Barbara Devolin, Lynda Kemp from Ajax; Marie Beckett, Heather Rena Graham, from | Judy Edwards, Nancy Williams, Ketcheson, Bowmanville; Judy Walker, | Linda Wilson, Judy Butler, Mar- garet Chumbley, Margaret Thom- son, Marilyn Lancaster, Linda Henderson, Jackie Burgess, Linda MacDonald, from Belle- ville. Margaret Miler from Brougham; 'Betty Jane Werry, Susan Wearn, from Enniskillen; | Sandra Tiffin, Westhill; Barbara Kennedy, Brooklin; Joan West- lake, Jean Baker, from Solina; Joanne Davey, Port Hope; Heather Mattice, Lynda Call, Newcastle: Donna Porter, New- tonville; Wendy Kimura, Marilyn La Brie, Janice Egoroff, Picker- ing; Margaret Wigston, Susan Bryant, Elaine Howard, Whitby; Barbara Wilder, Sarnia; Gay Bale, Toronto. Betty Lynn Edgar, - Susan Osborne, Karen Johnson, Marie Flavelle, Pamela Frauts, Dey Brownlee, Norma Lonsberry, Marilyn Russell, Gloria Russell, Sandra Currell, PhyMis Murdock, Louise Murdock, Beverley Mur- dock, Irene Samkavas, Rose Saussilk, Beverley Miller, Louise Miller, Pamela Miller, Sheila Keys, from Oshawa SOCIAI NOTICES | AT HOME Mr. and Mrs. Douglas H Lander, Thornton's road north, Oshawa, will be at home to their relatives and friends on Tuesday, August 20, from 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 i p.m. on the occasion of their sil- | ver wedding anniversary, ] | PANCHO IS EASY TO SEW, FUN TO WEAR | that fasten the shoulders. Jf you would like to know how to make the poncho, simply send | a self addressed, stamped envelope to the Needlecraft I"e- | partment of The Times-Ga- | zette. Enclose ten cents for | hand and ask for Fane | Poncho Americano adapts for | a work: tunic; or pairs with the summer scene the tradi- | slim - jm pants Jor casual ing. Si I asy to tional garment of our south-of- lounging. Simple and eas sew, the poncho is made from the border neighbors. Suited to | two straight pieces of fabric; | purposes, this versatile many closes on each side with slim slip-on design goes gaily down | buckles, which are sheathed in to the sea as a beach coat; | the same bright material as brightens household routine as the cover - your - own buttons | Americano. Graham. |. A reception was held at the| home of the bride's parents. To Muriel Wallace, Walter Scott |,% ENGAGEMENT Mr. and Mrs. C. W, Milburn of Whitby wish to announce the en- gagement of their daughter, Thelma Ann, to Robert Irwin Cruikshanks, son of Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Cruikshanks of Eagle Lake, Ontario. The marriage will take place on Friday, September 6, 1957, .at Faith Baptist Church, Whitby. "NEW FRIENDS | Presbyterian Church, Ashburn, | The bride is the daughter of | {Lieutenant and Mrs. Russell H, | Lunney of Regina, Saveaicnewar, | -'and the bridegroom is the son of |Mr, and Mrs, Raphaele Ranieri lof Toronto. The Reverend Samuel Hender- son of St, Catharines officiated, | |The wedding music was played! by Mrs. Wesley Ruttan of Toron- to a Ashburn sang. Given in marriage b; nd Mr, Kenneth Heron of her fa- {ther the bride wore a long torso | ballerina gown of white nylon with a finger-tip veil and ear- stephanotis. ried pink sweetheart roses and Patricia McLellan who was matron - of - honor wore a full skirted turquoise nylon dress. The bridesmaid, Miss Sylvia Lunney, vas similarly gowned in yellow. The flower girls were Miss Laura Ranieri, niece o' the bridegroom, in yel- low and Miss Lynn McLellan, niece of the bride, in turquoise. All carried nosegays of shasta chrysanthemums Mr. Mal Bain of Toronto acted as best man. Ushering were Mr. David Livingstone, Gino Ranieri, A reception was held in the receive Mr. Church hall. To bride's mother wore navy. blue with pink accessories. The bride groom's mother assisting was in navy blue with white accessories. Later the couple Whithy, Toronto and the a wedding trip to Wasaga Beach and will live travelling, the in Toronto. bride For a mauve sheath dress and duster with harmonizing accessories. don, him THE AGE OF INNOCENCE skeptical of the Pamela Corinne, daughter of Mr and Mrs. Rob- ert Cannons, Gibbons street. Pamela who was one year old on July 21, is the granddaugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph A wee bit camera 18 Consecon and Mr and Mrs, Clifford Irwin, Osh- awa, and great - granddaughter of Mrs. Thomas Irwin Oshawa, and Mr, and Mrs. C. H, Steen- burgh, Picton --Photo by Hornsby Studio Cannons, Women Jo Aldwinckle, Women's Editor Dial RA 3-3474 8 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Saturday, August 1(, 1957 PERSONALS Mr. and Mrs. Jack McLaughlin, Greenwood avenue, have as their guest, Mr, McLaughlin's sister, {Miss Gladys McLaughlin, from | Tuscon, Arizona, Little items of social news are {always welcome for this column and small daughter. Before leav- ing ou their long trip via the super . transcontinental they were tendered a farewell party by some friends at the home of Mr, and Mrs. A. G. Floyd. Flirting, much TAKE HEED LONDON, Eng. (CP)--Dr. John Flew, of University College, Lon- | told Bridgewater Hospital nurses if a patient wants to flirt a little then a nurse should let said Dr. "will help him to get well all quicker -- and knows, it might be an exciting | experience for you." Flew, who 0) Pictured following their mar- | riage recently at Northminster United Church are Mr, and Mrs, Donelag Allan Smith, For- merly Miss Lucille Marion Carnochan, the bride is_the daughter of Mr. and Mrs, How- ~ ADDING THEIR SIGNATURES ard Carnochan of Myrtle and the bridegroom is the son of Mr, and Mrs. Herbert White- house of Yarmouth, Nova Scotia, The couple will live in Oshawa. Photo by Hornsby Studio os od ow . . Are United In Marriage : GE, SL g blue pr { silk with matching] 5 the ridegr: 's | The marriage of Miiriel Evelyn French tulle with long polnteq|i2chet and the bridegroom's Wallace and Walter George Scott sleeves and square neckline and , ynatching duster coat. Each had was solemnized by the Reverend a fingertip veil. She carried a pire accessorizs and a corsage George Telford DD, in the manse cascade of pink roses and white of pink rpg En of St. Andrew's United Church chrysanthemums For : last Friday. The bride is the| She was attended by her sister, .qyple daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Miss Katherine Wallace, who gtate "Sdn d : Among the many greetings re- | Everybody likes to read about ceived by Mr. and Mrs, E. H. what people are doing so if you peever on the occasion of their have been on a irip or are en- golden wedding anniversary on tertaining a guest from out of Wednesday 'mes- {town just telephone the social sage from le Mich. department at 33474 and share ge] Starr lab 19 motored in the United your pleasure with others, There ! : For travelling: the bride | uy is no charge for these para- their wedding trip the minister of Would You Like More Convenience and Leisure? Mrs. G. K. Drynan who is holidaying in G t Britain, sends word from Chester where she saw one of the ancient Mir- acle Plays in the refectory of the old cathedral. She says she is fascinated by the quaint, wall led city and loved what she 'saw days of Scotland and Ireland. Would you like to have more time each day to devote to your children, to recreation, to gardening, or some other summertime pursuit? Labour saving electrical appliances can give you this extra time; at the flick of a switch they whittle down to minutes time-consuming chores. DO IT WITH HYDRO FOR ONLY A FEW CENTS A DAY Wallace and the bridegroom is wore a waltz-length dress of po 'hose a beige dress with pi : inter: rate i f hose ¢ i Ss pink ac- graphs and the interest rate, the son of Mr. and Mrs. James der blue nylon over taffeta. She cegsories and a corsage of pink| among your acquaintances, is length wn of nylon lace and' The best man was Mr. James their home in Oshawa. | Quebec, formerly of Oshawa, will {next week, Rossland road west, are spend- spending a few days in Toronto § MONTREAL (CP) -- The first|trip. They're wonderful. I'm es 7 i | J | | Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Metcalfe, have the same interests and talk, Canadian children look healthy their vacation spent in Vancou-|been visiting their daughter, Mrs. the 26th hereditary chief of the games as ours at home. You sel Happy little "bugs" will 'make 1 di Ww T h Camerons with the old clan. dren, girls aged 14 and 13, and | odds and ends of gay fabrics. amazing to me how the same will get dresses, skirts and C | (coins) for this pattern (stamps|serve says time has changed|tanned by Mrs. Olds, with an zrt nacarry Castle in Inverness- rence Seaway project, but almost shire, Scotland, a 19th - century equally by the way Canadian plainly NAME, ADDRESS, PAT-| A plump, jolly woman, Mrs. what other ornamentation I am . 3 FREE patterns, printed in our |alive. When a chief rides in cere- white people believe GOOD HOUSEKEEPER That was one difference be new Alice Brooks Needlecraft monial dress, a young brave ap-|that the feathers worn by the I think any woman today tween Canadian women and her ] } 1-1 ¢ iing, toys, dolls, others. Send outfit, he's wearing some of the The men of the tribe go on long can even cook haggis," "but we don't always try. We 25 cents for your copy of this|many products of the skilled|travels and hunt the eagle and she says. like gardening. We like our com Scott, all of Oshawa, carried a cascade of yellow roses and white chrysanthe-| | high. Given in marriage by her chrysanthemums and wore white mums : father, the bride wore a waltz. accessories Mr. and Mrs. Scott are making g Mrs. Ray Crossley of Montreal, - |be visiting her sister, Mrs. Vic- . . . I {tor H. Godden for a few Home And Children Chief Topic | TWICE PRETTY! : : | Mr. and Mrs. W. H. J. Harmer, Mrs, J. G. Geikie has been Ww | 5 ' Of Canadian, Scottish omen | ing their vacation at Long Is- at the Park Plaza {land, New York. lady of the Cameron clan says pecially impressed with your 4 | Mr. and Mrs. Victor H. God-|King street easf, have returned women in Canada and Britain stoves." N 7 4 » > den have returned home from from Vancouver where they have about them the same way. and happy, she says, but "they y . | ver, B,C., visiting their son, Mr. |Stefan Liszkowski, and Mr. Lisz- Mrs. Donald Cameron, wife of don't seem io play as m By ALICE BROOKS Jack Godden and Mrs. Godden kowski. Clan Cameron, is touring this/dom see a child there without a conversation pieces as pillows country with her husband to ball in his hand." on your porch or patio. Each strengthen the ties of Canadian| Mrs. Cameron has four chil | "bug" is made in pieces . . . use| . . . "Home and children are the boys aged 10 and three. Cowboy Pattern 7088: transfer pattern Handi ft A Th H t g chief topics here, just as they are suits will remind the boys of for pillows: two 11 x 13%; one Cralis S er €rl a e at home," she said. '""And it's their parents' trip, and the girls {14 x 17 inches; directions CALGARY (CP) -- Mrs. Olive sun. The hides, brought back by Send THIRTY - FIVE CENTS Olds of the Blackfoot Indian re- her hunter son, are soaked and problems and the same discus- blouses sions occur here as there." Mrs. Cameron was impressed | cannot be acceptedy to D aily|many things for the Indians, but that prevents shrinkage. Home to Mrs. Cameron is Ach- by the Rockies and the St. Law- | Times - Gazette, Household Arts|there are some things that must] When enough hides are ready/! |Dept., Oshawa, Ontario. Print/not change. "I collect together my beads and mansion of 14 bedrooms which women dress. They're chic |TERN NUMBER. | Olds spends most of her working going to use on the article, and she runs with the help of three "even when they're wearing A bonus for our readers: two |C2y keeping the old memories set to work servants, slacks." ' "Many 3 Book for 1957! Plus a variety|Pears in his beaded-hide costume|chiefs and dancers are just feath- ghould be able to do any job in countryivomen of designs to order crochet, {Or a chicken dancer performs injers from fowl," she said. "No er home, says Mrs Cameron 'British women can be smartly | knitting, embroidery, huck weay- his elaborate bead and feather proud Indian would wear such She likes cooking. While English- dressed if they try," she smiles : : : I'v : needlecraft book -- now! {hands of Mrs. Olds. | shoot it. | of hve. poked by Bose into a lot fort. Perhaps we're a bit lazy EE - She recalled that many years! "They bring us back the eagles'| of Canadian kitchens on this about our general appearance." ago her great-grandmother called tails and its feathers and from | DAINTY STITCHING all the cake tins." | Flowers can blossom The electronic type of rar = ; .. |in your stitting room will bake a white Lait in | room. Embroider sheer organdie] "As my great-grandmother and tomahawks. . three minutes, instead of the |curtains with © delicate violets, |™Y grandmother taught me to A few years ago a baby girl usual 25 minutes tr ji ; 4 |sew, so they explained to me the was left orphaned on the reserve. Is On Th w These ranges cook: with - flirtatious pansies or a colorfull meaning of each article of ap- Mrs. Olds took the infant, Vilma e ay waves Whar aie tp he picre | garden bouquet, say interior dec-|parel," said Mrs. Olds. 'They Turning Rope EDMONTON (CP) -- In the cules in the food to produce heat orators. accented by [taught me the reason for .the| Vilma, who is 12, and Mrs kitchen of the future the home- The air in the range, and the curtains with floral motifs, lure number of feathers in a head: Olds said. "One day soon I cun maker will be able to produce a range itself, remain at room dress, the reason for placing cer- give up my work, knowing that roast beef dinner, complete with temperature sunlight into your room and it's|i.i, colored feathers in the tails!my three daugters will carry on vegetables and pie, in about 50 Such ranges now would. be By ANNE ADAMS so easy to do on a modern ma- of the dancers' costumes, and the art and will not let it die | minutes. worth about $1,795, but Miss > le girl many more things." They too will pass it on' to their Her baked potatoes will. take Mann estimates they will be | tows Printed She makes clothes from hides children just as it was passed on only four minutes, and an egg within range of the average ; ; for her husband, daughters ond to me." can be done in 20 seconds budget in a few year time | . - - 28 stronive Monreal gil | They Plastic Will Not Fail You If You Recognize Its Uses already cooking in seconds, Miss wife completely from the And a neat collar style for school, transparent muslin, sheer nylon Every woman knows that alum For ------ ; her to her side, and told her she|these the headdresses and the all year must learn the arts of beading, dancers' costumes are made." | or bed-| tanning hides 2nd shaping outfits. She also makes shoes and even Complete Dinner In 50 Minutes For one'cent you can For one cent you can use an electric ironer for use an electric floor 53 minutes. polisher for 2%2 hours. For one cent you can use ah electric vacuum cleaner for 1% hours. Windows, Figures based on the average cost per kilowatt whose mother | chine. You can.embroider an all hour te. domestic. custamers In: Hydro municipalities Pattern is lover design or place accents sim scoop- ply along the hem of the curtain . g Embroidered flowers are partic won't free the house ularly fragile and feminine on e can have a neck sunfrock- with embroidery. BEER | Geraldine Mann, who came orig- kitchen," she reminded. "No one Tucked s! »as3 A ip | inally frem Prince Rupert, B.C., wants that, The kitchen is w id Res ¥ 1 sa 4 oN aor organdie |ONTARIO[& is a home economist for a manu- the housewife is most creative. ol rinied Pattern 4503: Child's -- facturer of electric, gas and elec- But cooking in seconds will 10. Size 6, upper tronic ranges, and has been test- her more time to be creat version takes 3 yards 35-inch; ing the engineering models of and allow her more time Ya yard contrast, Transfer electronic stoves family." Printed directions on each pat- CAKE GOOD TEST tern part. Easier, accurate "At times I've made as many FORTY CENTS (40 ¢) in as 64 white cakes in a day," she HAMILTON, Ont, (CP amps can accept said. "I've found e cakes one ward Bomford decided t e print of the best 1 often bake the cigar y ADDRESS oven his wife presented STYLE WER 3 ng \NNE ADAMS 2imost no time o obtain an materials t 2 natern antique tapestry effect, so 'ex- There are a ag th y Daily Times-Ga i i said the fath £ C0 1zette, Pattern | qyisite in the traditional or mod- types of plasti Dept., Oshawa, Ont, lern room. elal jobs to de Sizes 2, 4, 6, 8, MACHINE STITCHING Give your throw pillows a rich tapestry texture by covering them with fapric which you have % or on flexible previously embroidered on your or properties. She youd ahd baths machine. Follow the design or But with plastics, it's an- dreds of other 8 pan household | p fabric wit olor 1 2 > print of the fab i ith c Morful| shar 'story. She might ask for-a'ft is soft to t : ip embroidery stitche B hand . Lis t t h and 3 4 *hard" plastic or a "soft" plas vould take mont but with i, inum and stainless steel are two thene, used 1 on factit different materials each with its icecube baby juice containers and hun- trays GETTING COSTLY items. tough Go Modern... Live Better Electrically but tk t 4 rar i ne Of eh god ¥ a ng or h » machin takes in "identifying these important chipping. It has excellent resis The I household ac Although po ance to and de ythene can water, it distinctive with spe tergent stand reasonab hot ishould not be boiled, man 5, each rom top think I fo and side to side. The protocol, part of the job is washing seven, ---