Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 18 Sep 1957, p. 9

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Tay [) ak BAG FOR GYM SHOES i |Back to school! It is a time | ready for your daughter to use. | cords to make it easy to carry tol excitement for the young | It requires no pattern, and Is | and to hang up. For easy sew- lobes, but for mother it 1 . easily made in one or two eve- | ing instructions, simply send a HT ! er it always | ning. It is made of heavy cot- = stamped, self - addressed en- ibkings the problem of keeping | ton or denim for sturdy wear, velope plus 10¢ for handling to iséhool equipment in order and with the binding id school = the Needlecraft Department of imarking it so it won't be lost. | colors, and her own initials on this paper, requesting Gym ore all the flurry starts, | the pocket. The bag is deep | Shoes and Sock Bag, Leaflet {why not have this gym bag all | and roomy, with drawstring | No. S-5000. More Families Can Afford Help | A Wf a small segment of an estimated 1,390,000 working women, the of the whole labor force. ler, women's total being one - quarter" | Women, THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Wednesday, September 18, 1957 § WOMAN'S WORLD Well, says Dr. John A. Schind- co-founder of the Monroe Clinic at Monroe, Wis., and au- thor of the best-selling "ook, How to Live 365 Days a Year, the principal thing wrong with women is marriage. Dr. Schindler has just written a new book, Woman's Guide to Better Living, in which he says that the bulk of medical practice n the United States is concerned with emotionally induced illness. Three out of four emotionally up- set patients in every doctor's of- | fice, he says, are women. More- | over, most of them are married | | WHY 1S THIS? What Is Wrong With Women? Marriage Says Dr. Schindler [ | | Mrs. L. M. Cartledge has be- come president of the Guelph Elastic Hosiery Company # Limited in succession to her late | husband, John J. Cartledge who died August 6. An estimated 10- to 12-ounce 7 baby, perhaps the smallest child | on record born alive, died just 24 hours after it was born. The baby girl was born 4% months pre- maturely to Mrs. Mérrill Hanson, 22, of Clarion, Iowa. A new large picture of Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth was presented to the Town of Orillia by the Lady Margaret Alexander | Chapter of the IODE, The presen- | 7 tation was made byt hree officers of the local IODE Chapter, Re-| gent Mrs. Ruth Mealing; vice re- | gent Mrs, Kay Bacon and Stand- | 7 Dr. Schindler, being of an in-|ard Bearer Mrs. Eleanor James. | quiring turn of mind, began prob- They were ing for the answer to a highly [Council by Alderman Mrs. Nor- {important question--Why do so man Post. introduced to the In making the pres- {many married women blow their (entation, Mrs, Mealing pointed | tops? | The reason, he now states, Is that wives and mothers have been {handed the greatest and most dif- {ficult of all possible jobs--that of | managing a marriage and raising a successful family. This, says he, is a job that re-| Chief Librarian Isabel out that the frame of the picture had been made by the pupils of | the King Street School in Orillia. ' The first male will invade a | domain normally reserved for |} women when Sudbury Public Lib- || rary gets its first male librarian. |} McLean |{ quires the highest abilities, tal- |told the library board that Peter |} ents and training -- and many |Hallsworth, of Manchester, Eng-|/ | women just aren't equal to the {jand, will | job. | |tinues, is that adequate training is not available, personal weak- ness is great, problems are le- blue-eyed brunette gion--and so many women sur- {town | | | way in a marriage an |sudden start picking the rose: |the wallpaper. TOUGH SEX | Physically, vey their lives along about mid- d all of a says the doctor, The reason some fail, he con- |as general professional assistant. | |women 'are much tougher than| arrive in Sudbury |} around Sept. 26 to take up duties' Mary O'Neill, an 18-year-old from Ridge- was crowned national | |tomato queen as the tomato fes- tival concluded here Saturday s off | night. Top prize is a $600 scholar- |ship. Nancy Ferris, 17, or Harrow 7 7 5 2 » By MARY FRAN BURKE Canadian Press Staff Writer TORONTO (CP) -- The Cana- dian woman who plans her fall fashions strategy with a knowing eye is advised to try temporary hair colors for added glamot. "Her whole Appeapasce will take on a fresh look," says Gene Zlo- tek, Toronto hairdresser. "Any woman can make au- tumn fashions in taupes, reds and dramatic blacks, most be- coming outfits by pampering her ' |hair until it has an added sheen and gloss.' EASILY REMOVED Rinses also add new life and brightness to the hair, And in ap- plying hair colors it is to be re- Z lm ed that they can be re- : \moved with one shampoo. The rinses and tints on the market today can really be called "hair cosmetics." Besides, Mr. Zlotek said, they hide hair- color faults. Blondes usually have trouble with their hair in their early teens when the golden lights start to darken. "| "Their common complaint is "mousey hair "said Mr. Zlotek. He recommends brightening the hair with reddish rinses for a strawberry-blonde look. Pink or blue shaded rinses will also solve {the problem. | ¥or "poor" hair when no | Tinted Hair Gives Chic Look To Autumn-Toned Wardrobe amount of brushing or Josgs of vitamin B has helped, Mr. Slotek suggests ph rinses, pis a erto lost and pe Dos hi creamier at the same time," he said AUTUMN PICK-UP With the coming of fall many women find that months under the hot sun have left hair with either a brassy look er an uneven color. Mr. Zlotek says a rinse, one or two shades darker than the nat- ural hair color, is the solution, This will even out the eolor, blend the streaks and take away that brassy look that every woman hates. oh , -, = grey w ppear," said. However, for who complain of * gy streaks" in their grey r, he Suggests a light platinum or slate se. 1f you are troubled with faded ends, apply a hair color to the ends using swabs of cotton. Mr, Zlotek cautions care when apply- ing to keep rinses away from the rest of the hair or the results could be ending with disastrous, three different colors. "A plus look can be had by highlighting the hair with a var- jety of rinses . . . lavender, am- ber and blue colors highlight blaok hair, blue in a variety and plati for blond: nga y EE We] [RIV .%4 3.¢n) RECORDS {and Betty Wiper, 17, of Leaming- | 4 ton, were runners-up. Pretty 16-year-old Laurel Dale 98 quality so fine normally costs you $3.98 wonderful hi-fi quality # wonderful tunes wonderful name artists! Round The World in 80 Days Hoosier Mot Shets But Servants Are Hard To Find | _ By CAROLYN WILLETT Canadian Press Staff Writer OTTAWA (CP) -- By choice or ity, many Canadian fami- lies today would probably define a maid as a household helper they're getting along without, Back in 1951 there were 25 do- mestic servants for every 1.000 Post-war immigrants have not provided a particularly useful source of domestic help, the re. port said. Of some 20,300 immigrants be- tween 1946 and 1951 who voiced intentions of becoming domestic servants, 'there is evidence that a good many either took other families, a total of some 80,000 work or married," it notes. domestics. and this was less than | half the number 10 years earlier. ranks, To augment domestic service more than 300 women | for do- | have come from the British West | contract Ee the sup- Indies ply. "One can smaller dian labor for ployed in private households in| the future," service industri the Bank' of Montreal for the : commission on Canada's omic prospects. C UED SCARCITY since conclude that a workers are expected this year, a on of the Cana-| National Employment Service of ce will be em- ficial said. states a report on seeking domestics indicate a par- es prepared by adox. ar S 1955. About 200 additional But the report found would-be domestics deserting kitchens for industry. And while an unprecedented number of married women now are working, the study found that of conception. working wives do not promote greater employment in private households. A changing outlook on the whole question of servants is a more important influence, the re- port said. Technological ad- vances as well as increased use of household appliances liad tended to lessen the desire for servants, even where a family jean afford them. Laundries, dry- But the long lists of want-ads In effect, while there is an un- satisfied demand for a short sup- ply of domestics, and more fam- ilies which can &fford servants, fewer women and men want to e report predicted that by phecome household workers. | there will be about 125,000 domestic workers, for a much er total of families than the domestics served in 1951. CHANGING OUTLOOK In 1951, domestic workers, 95 By WILLIAM BOYD | Canadian Press Staff Writer | CAMP WAINWRIGHT, Alta. (@P)~A slight, attractive Van- couver grandmother showed here ghe is just at home on the parade round as keeping house for her amily, { Sgt. Lily Brown. who has an in- fant grand-daughter, was with 200 members of the Canadian Wom- en's Army Corps from Western Canada who trained for two weeks at Camp Wainwright. Lily, who looks nearer 30 than #. and who served with the Red Cross in her native England, thoved to Vancouver in 1947. She has three sons and a married yabl a daughter. The trim blonde was active in all phases of camp life, whether i.e showing a class the cor- application ot a splint or run- ping a track and field program. BUSY CAMP Lieut. Roy Jardine of Edmon- ton, a veteran of 24 years with the regular army and militia who was in charge of CWAC training, said *'I wish I had a hundred like her." camp day was long and ed for the 200 housewives, others, school teachers and ste- graphers who for two weeks ere just "soldiers." Beginning | With parade square drill 8 a m., the girls, depending on at at | their specific army trades, stu- died driving, automobile mechan- ics, nursing or communications. A mother of three, attending her second camp, said she always felt she was a neat housekeeper but that after two weeks of army | i1ife she found she was doing her | chores at home faster and better. | The girls ate meals prepared by regular army cooks in one of the large mess kitchen. 'This makes it almost like a holiday," said Cpl. M. T. Smythe of Cal- gary. The girls have certain amen- medical care. Our Plan is start-| ities, They are not required to sleep in tents, but bunk comfort y in barrack dormitories. 16 to room. There is ample hot water and laundering facilities. Precautions were also taken prior to a man reading exercise | to make sure the ones who missed a rendezvous would not 'Mom or Dad' can send to their | wander off on the prairie. The love-hungry child far across the test was in a two - square-mile area, which was periodically cir- cled by trucks. GOLDEN JUBILEE KITCHENER. Ont. (CP)--The life of 'preachers' children' and their parents isn't an easy one, but the ministry is a "rewarding life,' 'said Rev. and Mrs. C. R. Kauth as they celebrated their | 50th wedding anniversary. Mr. Kauth retired three years ago. JUST TWO MORE DAYS SALE ENDS F PATTE' c SA WALLPAPER Every Second Roll For 1 Cent Plus Rexatone, C.L.L. 85 Years at 85 Simcoe St. North RIDAY 6 P.M. LE 1: Paint Specials, etc. PAINT AND WALLPAPER LTD. Oshawa baker: jes and restaurants have in- {ereased, and luxyry apartments (offer maid service at cost. and living may lessen the demand for do- The change in the structure abits of the family i mestic servants in future, the re- port suggested. Need One Thousan Iper cent of them women. formed Foster Parents Grandmother Sets Fast Pace Kt CWAC Training Camp One thousand Canadian Foster | Parents are urgently needed if ciation the children of Viet Nam are to survive the long. cold winter ap- | proaching, said Mrs. Lenore Sor-|jast winter. |in, Associate Director of Foster Guide received the Silver Cross, | Parents' Plan Inc., when she visited Montreal Headquarters re- cently, Mrs. Sorin explained, 'Over 800,000 refugees have the Communists in the Northern part of the country and have settled in the South. These people are sick, hungry and poverty-stricken. have never seen so much dis- ease, Little children suffer from everything from pellagra to le- prosy. They cannot possibly sur- vive another winter unless we help them. They need warm clothing, food, shelter as well as ing this work right now but we need one thousand more Cana. dians to help us!" A foster Parent can give a Viet My Fair Ledy Themes From the Movies 12 Top Hits Lena Horne Sings Cal Carnivel in Hi-Fi Honky Tonk Plene « Nutcracker Suite oe Ink Spots ® A Tribute te Eddie Duchin o Classic Faveurites @ Porter and Berlin Favourites @ Music to Love By LS men. They live longer, have more |9f Clinton, outclassed nearly 100) |energy and have a better chance | boys at Western Fair Monday and lof getting born in the first place, Set a precedent by becoming the being stronger from the moment (first girl to win the 4-H junior ; Ki i ; ih COMFORTABLE TO WEAR Striped woo) jersey in black, | ihe, back; a oje-piece dress I sashed gant Anpheity nie on Gor | ort. | . » the o Piano By Starlight d sleeve for added protection. ecords today at this low, low Serenade oe An Mour of Tchaikovsky ! Each in Hi Don't delay! Get price! , brightly your favorite R | SHOPPING CENTRE STORE championship for live-stock judg- | Mentally they're on a par with men, also. It's just in the emo- EAE 5; of Gratien, won the tional department that they are|Schior championship. Laurel best. _ Hi gti ge Y 8réleq 118 other contestants, includ- y P- ing 20 girls, for her first major Wome Bl SS Brain Sur n {up. 'Maturity provides the ans- nearly 500 boys and girls entered 0 e geo wers to all the problems of|in 4-H contests this year, "the mariage na manernot, be be. tugs 'sums since west WHO Does Not Shave The Scalp lieves. Fair began.sponsoring 4-H events) | edition of the Quebec Provincial skilled in tricks of the hair-|for practical purposes, sterile. | Exhibition ® home -- spon | Muriel Gidley Stafford, To-| dressing trade described today|The patient also uses sterile | on m Spon-|ronto, has been elected president|how he performed brain pins, i | ed by the Kinsmen Club of of the Canadian "ollege of Oxgan- |iions on women patients pi comb. -- Quebec, was won last night by |ists--the first time since the col-| harming a hair on their heads. United ton avenue, Quebec. Mrs. Lafond, | woman h y nual congress of the | who was mot in attendance at the woman has held the post. | yampoos, hair sprays, combs|States and Canadian sections, of \drawing for the house, was holder | |and bobby pins play a role in the|the International Cotiege © JVll {of ticket number 121,420. Her | delicate surgery. | geons, he s surg! | Ordinarily, the hair is cut and : i |Cote, president of the Kinsmen| Wi CWPC A d A : |part in the hair exactly where he Club, with the help of a little girl ns wara is g plans the incision. He wets the . : | sion is made in the. skull. The ji gown with an antiseptic solu- chosen from the huge crowd| CALGARY (CP)--Ann Francis loss of hair creates a serious yon and combs it back out of the gathered in front of the Central of Ottawa, well-known radio com- psychological problem for some way on either side of the part women, | The Canadian Gir} Guide A {radio section of the 1956-57 mem. | Then the hair is sprayed twoj eo Betty Van jin goad Sorpetition SPON- 'professor of neursorgery at ting compound to hold the hair | Duzen, 18, for rescuing her baby Press Club. anadian Women's 'George Washington - University, firmly in position. Surgical tow- T fr he ¢ said the first step in the new els or dressings are then fastened The young Orillia dal for two scripts used by CBC, technique is to shampoo the hair|as close to the part as possible. Edna May Guttman of Toronto | | all ical . [the association's second highest received 'honorable mention for |SPECid y prepared surgical deter- in the usual fashion. After the award for gallantry risking life, [her scripts describing the Strat. eo ed that ait th . leessary brain Surgery: the} 4 ; e a at all the germs in|scalp is sewn together in e! {Mrs. J. H. Killoran of Waubau- of Oedipus Rex. also broadcast'the scalp appear to be gone onlusual way. shene, division commander for Tr |Simeoe North and Parry Sound. Betty ran up the stairs of her {burning home brother, Truman, from his crib ing and farm know-how. Donald grey and red with a His advice to women is--grow prize at any fair. There were of the z957|Mine years ago. CHICAGO (AP) -- A surgeon|the third day and the scalp is,| Mrs. Yves Lafond of 1035 Monc-|lege' In a paper prepared for the an ego's inception. in 1903 that Dr. Jonathan M. Williams said Ottawa Wo : [lucky ticket was drawn by Pierre man a straight, curved or horseshoe the scalp shaved before an inci- Palace. |mentator, is the winner in the Dr. Williams, assistant' clinical or three times with a wave-set-| {brother from their burning home| She won the $100 prize and me- once daily for five days with a] The surgeon makes his incision The presentation was made by ford festival opening and filming | to snatch her and carry him to safety. Oril Valeria Kerr, for many years on the nursing staff of the Hospital for Sick Children, died last Thursday at the Kingston General Hospital. Since her re- {tirement in 1956 she had been living at Sydenham, Borr at Far- ran's Point, Miss Kerr graduated from Ottawa Ladies' College and tudied at the Toronto Conserva- Namese child a -- a real chance to live and be happy. Most important is the love and understanding a Foster seas in his war-torn country. Please become a Foster Parent. Write for information to Foster Parents' Plan Inc., P.O. Box 65, Station B, Montreal, 'Que. tory of Music before entering nursing. Miss Kerr was a de- scendant of a family long estab- lished in Eastern Ontario. Her father, the late George Kerr, and an uncle, the late Joseph Kerr, were members of the Ontario | Legislature. Miss Kerr leaves a Isister, Mrs. J. L. Homer of King- ston. "KRYLASTIC" Weather Stripping NEW!! Finger-Tip Control Buttons While Selections A and SAVE 10% For Cash or Lay-A- and put the savings in you pocket. Just becouse you don' have the ready cash does no mean that you have to wai over . . . plan end save yourself in today end tremendous 'selections, Come 68 SIMCOK ST. N. Choose Your Fall Coat Now . .. 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Kool Lite . . . and Kool Side featuring the new Roll1Up, "Open and Close from Inside', adj end ble types . « . available in a variety of color combinations end styles. Way bl di r t t t LES EVENISS SALES LTD. 15 PRINCE STREET OSHAWA a RA 5-5451

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