JO'S JOURNAL BY JO ALDWINCKLE Women's Editor of The Times 'Upstairs heard yer for rain and, what TT gts a on ¢, before and after, July 1 is singled out from a bundle of grey skies a number of sunburnt necks and arms, stage in evidence but I'd rather have in disturbing, to me, is creeping into our Dom- . I believe that in the beginning July 1 a national holiday which would mean engaged in essential services would have to way that a skeleton staff works shifts on t is disarming to me to see that some chain stores, houses, markets and meray sig hye -- na- tional holiday as a great opportunity sales and pro- This means that clerks who would otherwise enjoy a are obliged to work. It's the old cash-register com- at it again and every time the bell rings it's tolling for our civil rights. The Importance Of A Holiday I'm all for statutory holidays, Most Canadians work hard and these holidays spaced through the year afford families a chance to be together which can be a rare thing when the members are all working and on different shifts, to relax which is necessary if the tempo of work is to be maintained, and to become aware of the significance of the day set apart. Therefore I see no reason for factories to take it upon themselves to change the date of the ordained holiday and give their employees the next day off instead. This mans that everybody does not have the holiday on the same day which in some way defeats its purpose. I hate to see this trend because who knows where it will end. Will somebody getting bright idea that Christmas Day should always be the last Monday in December? Does it matter? Of course it matters and those who default should be disciplined. From My Mail Box SIMCOE STREET United - Church will be the setting for the wedding of Miss Cheryl Ann Wilson and Mr. Ziegfried Peter Magda on Saturday, August 28, at 4:00 Haven't had time to read any good books lately but I've had some interesting correspondence. : "Old Timer" writes to tell me of an old church he dis- covered on a Sunday outing and,please, Old Timer next time you write give me your telephone number, I'd like to have a chat with you. The old church between Oshawa and Peterborough bears a frontal stone inscribed 'Methodist Church 1862" or 1882 as this is difficult to decipher. "Old Timer" continues, The door was open. It had pulled from the hinges and could not be closed at all. I wondered when it had last been used for service and if there might be an organ inside, So being careful of the old floor I ventured inside. "Wonder of wonders, there stood gn old organ in the I sat down on the stool and tried the bellows and was able to play it. My attempt to use all the keys forth some sour notes but I was able to bring forth of two old hymns. I turned, and there was the low pulpit, nicely made (no doubt home made) and the order of service was 1943. "The old church must have known some real good sing- ing as there was no accommodation for a choir. Then, I wondered who might have been the last one to preach and the last one to have played the organ. My grandson re- marked that I had to pump with my feet, never having geen a pump organ before.He wanted to know where were "Outside in the churchyard were several tombstones. Some inscriptions dated back to 1842. He saw one to a man and his wife and to a son killed in action in 1915. The ages ran all the way from two.years to 103." Thank you "OldTimer"'. Maybe some reader could en- lighten us further on this old church? Still on the subject of churches, Mrs. William Henning informs me that through the past five or six years every summer windows in Cedardale United Church are broken amounting to hundreds of dollars, through vandalism or éare- less children playing ball or throwing stones on the pre- mises Notices have been posted on the property but have been disregarded. All The Windows Broken "Within the last month, all the windows in the church have been broken and rocks found on the Communion Table. Two years ago thieves entered by a window and stole artic- les belonging to cubs and scouts including the Wolf Head. The city police have been informed of this vandalism and are doing everything to help the situation. It is very discour- aging to members of Cedardale United Church to feel that there are not enough Christian people in their neighborhood to respect God's House." Thank you for writing Mrs. Henning. This is indeed a shameful situation and it is better that we all know about it, then perhaps some solution will be forthcoming. Am I right in believing that the church was originally Cedardale School and quite old? I don't wish to dwell in the past but you may have some history that you could share with us. Thinking of churches, reminds me . . . How may old country readers remember the song 'There Was I Waiting et the Church . . . ?It was a top-liner in the heyday of the music hall, poking fun at the bride left stranded by her intended. It's not.so funny when it really happens and it did last week in Oshawa. After waiting until the next wed- ding party arrived, the pale shaken little bride and her bridesmaids went quietly away. One seldom, if ever, hears of breach of promise cases in this part of the world but I suppose the English law still MISS DIANA Jacenty, daughter of the Reverend and Mrs. John Jacenty, has become engaged to Mr. John Alexander Nichol, son of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Nich- ol, all of Oshawa. The wed- ding is to take place in the Ukrainian Presby an Church, July 24, at 3:00 p.m. The bride-to-be is a graduate of the Oshawa General Hos- pital School of Nursing, Class of 1964, and is at pre- sent on the nursing staff of the hospital. Monsignor Gives Advice To Grads Of St. Joseph's H-S Monsignor: Paul Dwyer ad- dressed the graduating class of St. Joseph's High School at the closing meeting of the Catholic Parent-Teacher association. The monsignor stressed the importance of continuing educa- tion to a higher level and co- operation between parents and students. He told the graduates that. there was still a long road of learning ahead and quoted Mark Twain, saying that at 17 he was amazed at how little his father knew, but at 21 was astounded at how much _ his father had learned in four years. Two new awards given by the CP-TA for the most improved boy and girl in the class, were won by Gregory Price and Linda McLaughlin. Monsignor Dwyer presented) each of the graduates with a scapular and officially installed the new executive as follows: President: Mrs. Joseph Pilking- ton; vice-president, Mrs. Robert Fraser; secretary, Mrs. Howard Kane and treasurer, Mrs. George Fairhart. The nominating committee consisted of Mrs. A. M. Dixon, Mrs. William Hastings and Mrs. N. C. Michael. Mr. Donald Leach presented the Reverend A. G. Quesnelle obtains that it a betrothed woman proof that a marriage was planned that she has paid for the necessary trousseau | and then she is jilted she can sue the ex-fiance. | Many girls would not want to do this. They could not face | the gossip and publicity and would rather suffer their broken | hearts in silence. , | One bride-to-be is doing just this. After six years of courtship, the date of the wedding was set and a large | reception arranged. An apartment was rented and furnished | and friends and relatives heaped gifts on the popular Seats fe ge - a nee today but there will be no week the bridegroom announ pwc galley 4 ced that he had ' Drivers -- Don't Desert Us Some one pushed the panic button last week and word flew around that the bus drivers were on strike. They were, for a few hours. They could have thrown hundreds of work- ers and regular passengers into a difficult situation but they didn't. What promulgated this drastic turn of events? Dissatis- faction with the delay in the ratificationof a new union con- tract which has been dragging on for five months. The crux of the matter as usual is more pay. I under- tand that the driver of a garbage truck gets $2.48 per hour a bus driver $2.27. When you consider the responsibility at _ vege vay neon cargo and compare the rates seem that the paying passengers ar est than trash CS Pp Fi e€ something 'oman calling from Upper window as ga j moves past: "Am I too late for the o--" baoeae Weary Collector: 'No, lady, jump right in," f 1 the university's plant science| department says Alberta is the -|hart gave the treasurer's re- |shirts, jterm. _|per cent by weed infestation in | Alberta, In addition, wheat with with a small token of apprecia- tion and wished him well on his new appointment as pastor of Bay Ridges. Sister Mary Beatrice's class received the attendance prize. Prior to the election, Mrs. Sterling Morison conducted a brief business meeting. Mrs. Robert MacDonald read the minutes and Mrs. George Fair- port. Mrs. Morison reminded the parents about school uniforms, navy blue tunics and white blouses for the girls and for the boys, grey pants and blue polo available for the next Mrs. Dennis Noonan arranged the social hour, assisted by Mrs. Donald Patterson and Mrs. George Price. camba, won't damage grain) crops when applied in the con- centrations needed to eliminate Tartary buckwheat, Dr. Vanden Born says. He says crop yields are re- duced am average of about 15 more than a small amount of WEDDING BELLS ARE IN THE AIR p.m. The bride-to-be is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Wallace Lloyd Wilson, Osh- awa. The prospective bride- groom, son of Mr. and Mrs. Antoni Magda, Oshawa, is a TWO WHITBY families will be united in the mar- riage of Mr. John Wilfred McDona'd and Miss Bonnie Marie Agg whose engage- ment is announced today. Their wedding is to take place in All Saint's Anglican Church, Whitby, August 7, at 4:00 p.m. Mr. McDonald iain yiete- dame donan ath dina aeamnade an Wemen 10 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Soturday, July 10, 1965 graduate of Queen's Univer- sity with a Bachelor of Com- merce degree. He plans to Women In New NEW YORK AP) -- You'd think that heating houses was [a out of style the way fash- ion women this fall. lesigners plan to bundle up Mannequins with pretty faces and well-turned legs had little chance to show off these assets --so covered were they as they paraded past fashion writers Thursday during the second day of fall previews called the American Designer Series, Misses who wore boots at the Anne Fogarty show reappeared attend Osgoode Hall Law School in September so the couple will make their home in Toronto. at the Pauline Trigere perform- ance in spats to match their fuzzy tweed suits. Under their cutaway jackets, they wore jersey blouses with attached hoods that mearly con- cealed their faces. Even the sheaths in which they appeared later came with foot-high col- _ jneck-hiders, although they hid ~ |much of the head as well. WEAR FURS After scurrying in and. out in a flurry of styles including rain- coats as full as embrellas and tunic - like escort coats over skinny princess dresses, - the models returned coddled in opu- let furs, Little white mink suits, broad- tail evening gowns, chic ermine boleros worn backwards or for- wards, and different kinds of scarves, all five yards long, and sometimes studded with jewels, were in the lineup of hot and lars called cachecous, meaning| is the son of Mrs. Wilfred McDonald and the late Mr. McDonald. His fiancee, a graduate of Toronto Teach- er's College and a member of the teaching staff of Lin- coln Avenue Public School, Pickering, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Agg. 'FORT -- MING MARRIAGE Mr. and Mrs. Charles Michel Parfit, North Bay, wish to an- novnce the forthcoming mar- riage of their only daughter, Charlene Dorothy, to Mr. Robert Hugh Gilchrist, son of Mr. and Mrs. Hugh R, Gilchrist, Oshawa. The ceremony is to take place on Saturday, July 31, 1965, at North Bay, Ontario, ENGAGEMENT The enga tis a of Sandra Christana, youngest daughter of Mrs, James Nichols, Oshawa, and the late Mr. Nich- ols, to Mr. William Thomas Stewart, son of Mrs. Edward Stewart, Oshawa, and the late Mr. Stewart. The ceremony is to take place on Saturday, August 21, 1965 at 2:30 p.m, in the Sal- vation Army Citadel, Oshawa. ENGAGEMENT Mr. and Mrs. Burnett Jamie- son, Balsam, Ontario, wish to announce the engagement of their younger daughter, Mary Jean, to Mr. Duncan Slater Mar- tin, older son of Mr. and Mrs. Sydney Martin, Pickering, On- tario. The wedding will take place on Saturday, August 7, 1965, at 2:00 p.m. in Mount Zion United Church, Balsam. ENGAGEMENT The Reverend and Mrs. John Jacenty wish to announce the engagement of their youngest daughter, Diana Oksana, to Mr. John Alexander Nichol, son of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Nichol, all of Oshawa. The wedding is to take place on Saturday, July 24, 1965, at 3:00 p.m. in the Ukkrainian Presbyterian Church HOUSEHOLD HINT Dirt will slide off a waxed dustpan easily. To wax, heat in the oven and rub lightly with a bar of paraffin, making sure to cover the entire surface: WIFE PRESERVER Baked apples and stuffed pep- pers keep their shapes better if baked in a buttered muffin tin. SOCIAL NOTICES -- ed| jeast who presented the bride-to- | |Mrs. Harold E. Armstrong. ENGAGEMENT Mr. and Hrs, Raymond Tay- high-priced fashions for fall. Fashion Designers Bundle Fall Styles On. the other hand, Lilly Dache calculated to make her- self the heroine of husbands by introducing heat-producing furs at bargain prices. She gave prestige to the pauper belts-- particularly squirrel, muskrat and rabbit--with a good dye job and some chic styling. Some of Lilly's new stocking styles were embroidered. Some were jewelled. Others were woolly. Some of her hats were feathered, others were fur pill- boxes bound to the models' heads by yards and yards of face-imprisoning veiling. GOES TO PARIS Oleg Cassini went off to Paris, leaving his brother, Igor, to be the commentator on the first couture collection Oleg has de- signed in several seasons. | The designer exposed as much bosom as decency allows, which is quite a lot these days. | He served up furs but in small doses as borders as hem- lines and those deep, deep. de- colletege necklines. black and white. Elinor Simmons designed for the Malcolm Starr house a line of elegant evening wear. Many dresses blazed with jewels. Oth- ers were simple, high-necked and long-sleeved. Betty Carol's collection for mam'selle included childlike smock dresses, fluid shirts, long torsoed dresses, and free- wheeling pleats. By ELEANOR ROSS Before we trek to the beach, we always like to prowl what our friends hunting grounds -- the notions department of our favorite store. course, know is our pet We have our list, of but there is always lor of Oshawa wish to ne the engagement of their daugh- ter, Barbara Jean, to Mr. Ron- ald Norman Keith, son of Mr. and Mrs. Norman Keith of Win- nipeg, Manitoba. The marriage is to take place on Saturda) August 7, 1965, at 4.00 p.m. in Simcoe Street United Church, Oshawa. FORTHCOMING MARRIAGE Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Lloyd Wilson wish to announce the forthcoming marriage of their daughter, Cheryl Ann, to Mr. Ziegfried Peter Magda, son of Mr. and Mrs. Antoni Magda, all of Oshawa. The ceremony will take place on Saturday, August 28, at "°30 p.m. in Simcoe Street United Church. ENGAGEMENT | Mr, and Mrs. Ronald Agg, Whitby, wish to announce the engagement of their daughter, Bonnie Marie, to Mr. John Wil- fred McDonald, son of Mrs. Wil- fred McDonald, Whitby, and the late Mr. McDonald. The wed- ding is to take place on Satur- in All Saint's Anglican Church, Whitby. Kathryn F rost Feted By Friends | Miss Kathryn Patricia Frost [whose marriage to Mr. Grant | Heath Armstrong is taking place today has been honored at show- ers and parties during the past weeks. Mrs. Alan Dearborn, Baldwin street, held a miscel- laneous shower at her home, as- sisted by Mrs. Glen Parks and Mrs, Clarence Dove. | Mrs, Ivan Morrison was host- jess at a party for neighbors, |past and present, on Athol street be with an electric carving knife some impul. much of the merchandise is ir- resistible. frames and lenses. day, August 7, 1965, at 4:00 p.m.|< buying What's new in sunglasses? Well, there are the big, bold, black - framed, bombe glasses made with large elliptical Practical, with an intriguing look, they keep out dust and grime as well as blinding sunlight. All the newest sunglasses are big and bold--striking yet. useful. Newest idea for "shore" duty is the all-in-one beach bag and mat, made to accommodate from one to six sun-worshippers. The shoulder - strap bag has multi, self-pockets and extra outside vinyl pockets. On the sands, just unravel the bag and there's the beach mat. And some models have inflatable head-rests. CHOICE OF FOUR There are four versions of the bag-mat and each is easy to carry and fun to use. And the price is a mere pittance, even for the: biggest job. The beach cover-up for after- swim that is selling best is the Ashore For Shore Duty -- All-In-One Beach Bag multi-colored, floral terrycloth poncho, its low neck edged with white ball fringe. It even has a matching roller case, if you want to set your hair after a dip. Or, for a dressier after-swim look, there is, at the notion counters, a handsome street- length, terry lounger done in a swirled poppy flower design. A FORT WILLIAM (CP)--Mod- ern woman is frustrated be- cause many of her talents are unused when she is confined to her maternal role in life, a Roman Catholic women's group was told Thursday. Mrs. H. T. Cunningham, pub- lic health nurse and medical social worker at St. Joseph's Hospital in Port Arthur, was at the annual convention of the Catholic Women's League On- tario Provincial Council. "The modern woman is frus- trated because of her attempts to equal her male counterpart," Mrs. Cunningham said. "She does not realize she was made to be neither subordinate to man aor in competition with him but to be his partner and to complement him." IMAGE DISTORTED Mrs, Cunningham said _frus- tration has evolved from distor- tion of the modern female speaking to a workshop session| " Confined To Maternal Role Modern Woman Is Frustrated . image. Without a reasonable~ degree of self - know a; woman is a person to» put together a jigsaw puzzle" when several of the most im- portant pieces are missing. $ A woman's maternal role is: an important factor in her life,' personality and work--but it is. only one part. . va The speaker said the» woman's professional goal is -a° paradoxical one: To make herself more and: more unneeded in the day-to-. day attention to her children as* they grow in independence, and. as their sense of responsibility' develops, so that they will be, ready for the world and its. problems when. they leave the' protecting mest of home. , The Lord's condemnation' falls on those who bury their. talents, Mrs. Cunningham said, 5Sadding that most Canadian' women are unaware of the tal- ents they possess, A favorite color scheme was} RUG & UPHOLSTERY CLEANING In Your Home . . . or Our Plant PHONE 725-9961 OSHAW, DIVISION OF 3 CLEANING CONTRACTORS emvccsner LLEANERG 2 Botty INTERIOR DECORATOR FURNITURE DRAPERIES BROADLOOM 15 King Street East CUSTOM MADE DRAPES Phone 725-2686 drawstring can be adjusted for an off- or on-the-shoulder ruf- fled neckline and there are two roomy pockets. It's nice for in- doors, too, and nicely priced. HEADY FASHIONS ever and are, indeed, part of the fashion picture. Various im- |provements have been added so that the caps are glamorous ac- cessories to the latest styled swimsuits." One model has a separate detachable shirred da- cron crepe bonnet that slips on over curler rollers, Another one for those who wear their hair set under a swimcap stretches to go over rollers or fits per- fectly over the sleekest coif- fures. Some caps are made of tier on tier of loops and others of crazy looking, colorful leaves. FULL OF FRILLS Other models are full of frills, lace and flowers, while still an- other version has a distinct) Chanel look. vepilees o> Foods = Scugog Roads, 4 miles north of Bowmanville. Open Daily (0 A.M. to 10 P.M. offering the district's finest FRESH FRUITS & VEGETABLES ®@ Special Prices On Freezer @ Phone 263-2193 GARDENS 5 points corner Taunton and Bathing caps are prettier than| DRUG STORES OPEN THIS SUNDAY 12:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M. 28 KING ST. EAST RITSON 264 KING ST. EAST KARN DRUGS LIMITED JURY & LOVELL LIMITED 530 SIMCOE ST. SOUTH PHONE 723-4621 PHONE 725-5370 PHONE 725-3546 for ve the receipts issued by the ATTENTION GENERAL MOTORS EMPLOYEES Save Your Prescription Receipts Commencing Merch 1, 1965, Blue Cross Prescription Drug Benefit Plen will honor receipts for prescriptions from qualified a Le ib under the terms of the egreement. ae of your choles. He or Se pony assist you in making come eligible. THE OSHAWA PHARMACISTS ASSOCIATION es you In Quantities "BUY THE BEST AT BUDGET PRICES" and two Royal Albert cups and ha saucers in the Moss Rose pat-| tern. On behalf of her bridge club, Mrs. Harold Armstrong present- ed Miss Frost with a floral china table centre and friends and neighbors of the prospec- tive bridegroom on Brock street} east made a presentation of an| electric tea kettle. | Following the rehearsal last night, the wedding party with their husbands and wives were) entertained at the home of the) |bridegroom's parents, Mr. 'and| buckwheat in it is reduced in Find Weed Killer, only province where Tartary To Salvage Grain fy, prov is a major farm EDMONTON (CP)--A_herbi-|problem. cide for use on Tartary buck-| About 2,500,000 acres of Al- wheat, a weed that costs farm-|berta farmland show scattered ers in Alberta about $10,000,000] infestations of the weed and an- a year, has been developed by) other 500,000 to 750,000 acres are researchers at the University of seriously infested. The problem Alberta, Edmonton. is worst in central Alberta. | ] grade, and therefore in value. Decide To Dance? LEARN ALL THE NEW STEPS Brush up on the old favourites ARTHUR MURRAY franchised studio Dr, William Vanden Born of| The new herbicide, called di- | 11V_ Simeoe &. 728-1681 | | 74 Celina Street FOR THE FINEST Custom and Ready Made DRAPES in the lotest Shades and Fabrics... see... Mé&C DRY GOODS & DRAPERIES DRAPERY TRACKS EXPERTLY INSTALLED 723-7827 SERVICE STATIONS OPEN THIS SUNDAY 7:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. PRESTON'S SUN 331 PARK R 531 809 SIMCO OSHAWA ESSO SERVICE KING ST. W., AT PARK RD. -- 728-1601 925 SIMCOE ST, NORTH CRANFIELD'S B-A STATION ROBINSON'S ESSO STATION 89 SIMCOE ST. SOUTH FLOYD. PRICE SUNOCO STATION RITSON RD. SOUTH DON DOWN SHELL STATION 97 KING ST, EAST : GANGEMI SERVICE STATION OCO STATION BD. SOUTH EST. $. 723-2245 "COMPOUNDING YOUR PHYSICIAN'S PRESCRIPTION IS OUR PROFESSION" Jury. & Lovell "PRESCRIPTION CHEMISTS" OSHAWA WHITBY BOWMANVILLE "WE SEND MEDICINE TO EUROPE"