Oshawa Times (1958-), 13 Jul 1962, p. 8

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@ THE OSHAWA TIMES, Fridey, July 13, 1962 hg agen Mr. and Mrs. Wybrand Lloyd Dekker sign the register after their recent marriage in Whitby United Church. The bride, the former Lynda Vel- ma Diane Crawford, is the, Stealing in Stores Pastime For Girls Visiting in Britain | LONDON (CP)---Girls from} North America and Europe do nearly one - third of Britain's shoplifting, a report published here shows. The three-year study of 1,500|steal men six to one. Most men} cases shows foreign students or| 'THE REGISTER daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Garnet E. Crawford of Whitby. | The bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Wybrand Dekker of Whitby and the late Mr. Dek- ker. -- Photo By Sneyd gest some foreign girls who were not made to feel at home in Britain steal for "revenge." Most girls caught were middle-class and had above- average intelligence, the report says. : Thefts ranged from small quantities of food to items as large as an eight-yard roll of carpet. The report shows women out- steal books. single girls doing domestic work|-------- in return for accommodation steal because "it's easy" and "everybody does it." Two girls described a Paris|made his debut here at a con-| aware of employment agency where the ease of shoplifting in various HELPS CAUSE LONDON (CP)--Lowell Gor- don, 32-year-old English tenor, cert organized by the Interna- tional Help for Children Fund. KEEP IN TRIM Is Not Always By IDA JEAN KAIN There is a widespread notion that eating more than your share of nourishing food will help you to get well faster after surgery. But, greedy as the dehydrated tissues are for fluid, the body's need for food convalescent period. Pyotein--yes. It helps speed the' repair processes. But snacks--not. They help to while away idle hours but also help to pack on extra pounds. Due to enforced limited activity immediately following surgery, the body's caloric requirements drops to about 12% calories per pound in a 24-hour period. Compare this to the 16 calories per pound needed to maintain weight in normal activity and you can see how a few eggnogs, creamy milkshakes and gifts of candy can add a pound or two every week. It's easy to understand a post-operative weight gain. But instead of taking the attitude that this is inevitable, be on guard to forestall it. The one thing you don't want to have to cope with is unnecessary pounds! A little forethought as you are convalescing will pay beautiful dividends in the years ahead. What about a weight gain following a hysterectomy? Is this a foregone conclusion? gain but thousands of women do not gain. An authority in this field expressed it this way: "This operation usually occurs at a time of life when the energetic demands of raising a family are lessened. There's more leisure for social activi- ties which are always conducive Post-Operative Weight Gain is actually cut down during the : Inevitable calorie requirement is tapering " But if this warning comes too late for you, all is not lost. Take hope from this letter: "After a major operation, the pounds crept on. When I started following your protective diet combined with exercise I wore size 20. Now, almost two years later and 50 pounds lighter, I easily fit into a size 14 dress. "The important point I want to bring out is not the fact that I was successful in reducing and restoring my confidence, but the manner in which I exercised to bring about this change. Due to my operation, I could not dothe difficult straining type of calisthenics often called for, but I was de- termined to find some way. Here are the two exercises I used: "For the hips -- sit on the floor, lean slightly back, with legs stretched out, held to- gether.. In a rocking motion, roll from side to side as far as possible -- 50 counts. I lost} four inches this way. "For waist and hips--lie out- stretched on floor, arms out at shoulder level. Raise right leg and swing it across left, touch- ing floor with toe. Swing back |- and touch on right side. Repeuat| 10. times with each leg. "This routine takes only about five minutes and is just enough to be effective and yet not too much to be tiring. My favorite time is right after the children leave for school. Besides doing my figure a world of good, the exercise was helpful in stimu- lating circulation and making me-feel peppier and ready to meet the day's challenge." to overeating. At the same time CHILD GUIDANCE Early Home Training stops School Drop-Outs By GARRY C. MYERS, Ph.D. | . The general public is growing} the tragedy of quitting} | school by so many. boys and|him. There it is! |few. moments at a stretch; they] jwill begin to read to him and keep on reading to him for |years and-years and later with 1 | "WEDDING PRINCIPALS Vivian Yvonne Houghland | recently became the bride of Maurice James Carl. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Houghland of Whitby and the bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Clifton Carl of Fraserville, Ontario. The couple are resid- ing in Oshawa. --tIreland Studio. TO MAKE MERINGUE Meringue is used for many and beater are free from all ANN LANDERS Overworked Housewife Defends Sloppy Dear Ann Landers: In answer to the question you put to the housewives of America--"How did you look when you went marketing today?" I would like , |to reply. I looked like a sloppy, ill- groomed, over - worked house- } |wife. And here is why: After playing chef, laundress, char- woman, chauffeur and nurse for a family of six, I pulled a few weeds, painted the storeroom -land fixed some leaky faucets. {Then I started to bake a cake. I discovered I was short a few eggs, so--resplendent in grass- stained pedal-pushers, and hair in curlers, I made a quick trip to the market. Of course I ran into the minister, my. son's math teacher and the president of the League of Women Voters. Frankly, I didn't give a hoot. My husband doesn't happen to like curlers in his face at night, so I pin my hair up during the day. By the time he comes home for dinner I'm showered, brushed and lipsticked--looking like a silverware ad in my crisp little housedress. When he pats my freshly- scrubbed face and runs_ his fingers through my curly hair do you think I give a plugged nickel what the people in the market thought about my ap- pearance three hours earlier?-- ELEPHANT HIDE Dear Elephant Hide: Lei's hope you never run into your husband when you're slopping around the neighborhood look- ing like a mangy dog. Dear Ann Landers: I am con- cerned about the sex life of college students. Our fourth |child, not 18, will be a sopho- /jmore in college next fall, Her boy friend is attractive and 'intelligent. He will be a senior. | They both hold campus offices Our other three children are college graduates. We want this i|girl to get her degree, too. But ;|I learned recently that she has ;|been sexually intimate with this young man and now I feel we should not allow her to return \to college in the fall. if she became pregnant I would never forgive myself. Dress Dear' Mother: 1 can under- stand your deep disappoin'- ment, but you're on the wrong track. Refusing to send your daughter back to college would! be purely punitive and would Serve no useful purpose. A girl so punished might retaliate by becoming promiscuous. | sug- gets that you have a frank talk with her. Scolding and recrimi- nations will do no good. Explain that sex outside of marriage is 'dangerous, foolish and short- sighted, and that she is playing with dynamite. Dear Ann Landers: Recently I went to a funeral home to pay my last respects to a friend and) neighobr. I was shocked to see) the children of the d d RETURNS TO BRITAIN - MANCHESTER, England (AP)--The Manchester /Uni soccer team bought Denis Law, a Scottish internationglist, for $322,000 Thursday from Torino of Italy. It was the largest: ish stars sold to Italian teams last year. Like some of the oth: ers, he wasn't happy in Italy and asked to be 'traded back Highest 'previous price paid by a British club was $280,000 by. Tottenham Hotspur for Jimmy Greaves, the Eng- lish internationalist, last De- cember. Greaves was bought from Milan after four months with the Italian team. NOTED EDUCATOR Virginia Gildersleeve was as- sociated with Barnard College, first as a professor and later dean, from 1911 until retirement in 1947. FAMOUS PLANT The Gobelins state-controlled chatting. nonchalantly and tak- ing pictures with flash - bulb cameras. The oldest son had a movie camera, They took pic- tures of their mother beside the casket, Then they took shots of the floral offerings and candids) of the people as they entered! the funeral home. The final straw was when' one of the girls took a picture of| |her father as he lay- in the! |casket. | | I could contain myself no} jlonger so I asked her what she! was doing. She said they wanted| to send pictures to relatives out of state who could not: attend) jthe funeral. I. was appalled. Tell me,} please, am I being unduly criti-| cal? If so, I will change my| way of thinking--WILLING TO! LISTEN Dear Willing: Cameras and |flash bulbs have no place at a funeral home. Of course it is) the prerogative of the family to| do as they wish, but in my} opinion such goings-on are in abominable taste. ANCIENT RACE Believed to have migrated from North Africa, the Tberians had settled in eastern Spain in the 6th ¢entury BC. tapestry works in Paris started as a dye works in the 15th cen- J WORE \NTEREST 17 a DEPOSIT RECEIPTS Interest on daily balance, redeemable | ANY time Minimum Deposit $5,000.00 GUARANTY | TRUST Company of Canada CAPITAL AND RESERVE $18,000,000.00 32-KING ST. E. 728-1653 NEXT KINSMEN SUPER CAR BINGO | FRIDAY, JULY $7500.00 IN TOTAL PRIZES 13th--8:30 P.M. We have made great financial sacrifices for our children. This girl's conduct is a deep disap- pointment to me. Am I right to feel that since she has failed us, we should not allow her the privilege of a higher education. Please give some badly needed counsel to a -- LET DOWN traces of fat. Two level table- spoons of sugar per egg white should be added gradually at the beginning of beating so that it will be completely dis- solved by the time meringue reaches peak volume. Perfect- ly beaten meringue is glossy and stands in soft peaks when $1200.00 SNOWBALL IF WON IN 54 NUMBERS $900.00 SNOWBALL IF WON IN 53 NUMBERS BIG GAME FOR '62 VALIANT DELUXE SEDAN AUTOMATIC OR $2000.00 IN CASH MANY FREE DOORPRIZES ' AT THE PETERBORO MEMORIAL CENTRE rt los ; ' son | | : London stores was the favorite/He studied for three years at|#irls before finishing high) weep ap HOME desserts and is a favorite top- topic of conversation. ._,_|the Royal Conservatory in Re-|School -- almost a million of) is parents will ever seek to| ping for fruit cream pie. Use In one store, 30 of 37 girls|cina and then in Italy, them a year. find ways at home to help him,| only fresh eggs and separate The rate of unemployment,|on entering school, to learn to) while cold but allow whites to Sa START YOUNG were foreign-born. pape even among hi | | . af Spe Ey ee g high school gradu-|read, to read better and to con-| The report eee id T. om Brsongg see al eB Mar' ates two or three years out of|tinue enjoying success at atl) waren fe toot teiperaue aca sotlaty Taoiee published a new booklet aimed| S°200l, is about 13 per cent.|school learning. before beating. Be sure bow! University, and Mrs. Joycelat 10-year-old boys. It gives ad-\ mong Be agin ee pian He will grow up in a home it Is from 'where no one will ever doubt| Prince |age-range, the Institute for the Study and Treatment of Delinquency, sug- research assistant at|vice on the art of courting and sex ques- answers adolescent tions. - _ | |They will explain things to him FIT FOR A PRINCESS Jean Desses who designed the trousseau for Princess Sophia of Greece, shows this evening dress in his Summer collection. It is in white tery- lene batiste printed with red, pink and orange chysanthe- mums. The dress is slim with a deeply scooped neckline back and front. A sweeping train falls from the back and hangs severely straight just touching the ground. |per cent, | TIME TELLS Two-thirds of our nation's un-| employed men and women have less than a high school educa- tion. Dropouts are the last to |be hired and the first to be fired. Also, every year about 175,000 girls leave school to marry. As you know, reading is the basic educational skill. Yet studies from all parts of our nation reveal that the average} dropout is at least two years re- tarded in reading ability by the time he quits school. Moreover, {nine out of every 10 dropouts jhave been held back in some |grade at least a year. Dropouts fail three times as many mse as "stay-ins", | \THEY'RE NOT DULL Though the average dropout | tends to score lower on an IQ test than other students, not nearly all of them do so. A na-| tionwide study, made by the U.S, department of labor,| showed that 70 per cent of the dropouts studied had 1Q scores} above 90. Also, an intensive study in the state of New York revealed that 13 per cent of dropouts had IQ scores above 110. The majority of dropouts do come from families of the lower i - economic categories, where educational opportuni- ties, cultural backgrounds and horizons are limited, where ed- ucation is viewed with indiffer- ence or distrust, sometimes resentment. Parents who really care that) their children stay in school, at least till graduation from high) school, need to plan to this end! practically from the time the first child is born. They need ito use their influence, even then, to provide the best pos- |sible schools for all children, |to keep improving their own |minds, enriching their own cul- ture, broadening their own edu- jeation, building a home library jand laying the foundation for ja reading family. They need to 'seek the best possible ways to junderstand each child, disci- pline him reasonably well and win his esteem and co-opera- tion. | As soon as he can grunt or; gesture a question, they will answer him or find the answer. | as soon as he will listen for a WIFE PRESERVER It's possible to brew a single cup of coffee by using a special two - section unit which fits on top of the cup, letting drip-grind that he will keep on going to school till he graduates from high school, or even for many years beyond. PARENTS' QUESTIONS Q. My daughter is three. We} taught her to share and be gen- érous, which she does very well. Now other children take and pull things from her whether! they are hers or theirs. Instead of taking things back from them she comes crying to me. A. Obviously you went too far in teaching her to share. Perhaps she has so many things that she supposes she'll more when they are taken from her. | Gradually let her to look after herself. learn | | | TOPS FOR TEENS By ANNE ADAMS Look! It's the TV_ intern shirt teens love -- and on a double bill with the side-but- toned pop-top that's become a classic. Whip up both now. Printed Pattern 4986: Teen Sizes 10, 12, 14, 16. Size 12 } | | NEWS IN BRIEF SAFETY TRAINING Children who are taught prop-| erly how to light oil lamps ana wood stoves are more likely to| have respect for fire. | USEFUL HERB The aromatic oil of the seed| § of the coriander, a European herb, .is used in medicine and in flavoring foods. NOTED EPICURE Anthelme Brillat Savarin, French lawyer who was a fa- mous expert on the art of dining died in 1826. KNITTING FRAME Framework knitting was in- troduced in Britain in 1589 with invention of the stocking frame by Rev. W. Lee. one third ounce the newest and smaliest | Mateo HEARING AID . ever developed A triumph in miniaturization, with amazing performance, in clarity and volume, It's so tiny that you enjoy maximum. con- cealment--and complete wear- ing comfort. Galaxy Four transistors, full 45db am- intern shirt 2% yards 35-inch; pop-top takes 1% yards. | FORTY CENTS (40c.) in| coins (no stamps, please) for this pattern. Ontario residents add lc. sales tax. Print plainly) SIZE, NAME, DRESS, STYLE NUMBER. Send order to ANNE ADAMS, c-o The Oshawa Times Pattern Dept., Oshawa, Ontario. SPECIAL Summer Pattern) Catalog. More than 100 styles! coffee filter through with boil- ing water. -- sun, sport, day, dance, work, ! travel, All sizes! Send 35c. \ plification, yet weighs less than one-third 'ounce. telephone switch. Has external ----_---- -- -- 4 MAICO! HEARING SERVICE I 850 Yonge St., Toronto | r ! WaAlInut 4-2317 Write for free booklet, 1 NAME ASP Ress | city een OT-MV-7-13-62 al SE a ee | beater is lifted. MOTHER erving ale or lager? _ Get both...save money too 12 '50' ALE- .»» IN FOUR EASY-CARRY TRAYS Both ale and lager for less than a separate 'carton of each! And for extra convenience, the Party Case is divided into four easy-carry trays. Serve ale and lager. The best of both...in Labatt's Summer Party Case. LABATTS SUMMER PARI 12 PILSENER 4

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