Oshawa Times (1958-), 17 Mar 1966, p. 15

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Many Out-of-Town Guests Attend 50-50 Club's Annual Spring Dance Members and friends of the 50-9 Club of Simcoe Street United Church enjoyed an eve- ning Of ballroom and square danting Saturday evening at the opus dance eid in ine | Memorial Hall. ue and Mre Nanold Haut den, presidents and Mr. and Mrs. John K. Moffat Jr., wel- comed the guests at the door. Guests were present from Bow- manville, Kedron, Courtice, Whitby and Brooklin as well as from King Street United Church and Harmony Road United Church. | The hall was suitably decor- ated with yellow streamers and| spring blossoms. Credit goes to Mr. and Mrs. John K. Moffat) Jr. and Mr. and Mrs. Reginald} Piper. Music was supplied by), Ted Taylor and his orchestra. | Mr. Colin Daniel acted as master of ceremonies for the! night. Prizes were won by Mr. ; Roy Andrews, Mr. and Mrs, and Mrs. John Keys, Mrs, Robert Stevens, Mr. Mrs. Donald Morris, Mr. Mrs. Cecil Colling and Mr. Mrs. Lloyd Brown. A buffet supper was served! by the executive. The eg ie were Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Mc-| Leod and Mr. and Mrs. eolien Salmers. Those signing the guest book were: Mr. and Mrs. Donald Rowe, Mr. and Mrs. Reginald Piper, Mr. and Mrs. Stephen} Salmers, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mitchell, Mr. and \Mrs. Orval Jackson, Mr. and Wtrs> Moody, Mr. and Mrs. /Ernest Hilts, Mr. and Mrs. Angus! Bryans, Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Mc- Leod, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Preston, Mr. and Mrs. William} Shepherd, the Reverend and | Mrs. John K. Moffatt, Mr. and} Mrs. Walter Roe, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Houlden, Mr. and Mrs. | John Keys. Mr. and Mrs. John K. Moffat} Jr., Mr. and Mrs. William Rus- nell, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Brown, | >| Mr. and Mrs. Frank Singer, Mr. |Mrs. Gary Gales, Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. Jelle Bakker, Mr. Mrs. Harold. Linton, Mr. Mrs. Donald Howe, Mr. Mrs, Keith Buchanan, Mr. Mrs. William Rosnak, Mr. Mrs. Waiter Davis, Mr. |Mrs. Douglas Forrester, = 4 ae Andeawe Me Mrs. 2 H. Pitcher, 'Mr. Mrs. Harry Toenjes, Mr. and and and and and and Mr. aoa and and Donald Thompson, Mr. and Mrs. Russell Hayward, Mr. and Mrs, Stanley McLean, Mr. Har- old Miles, Miss Carolyn Hay- |ward, Mr. and. Mrs. Douglas McDougall, Mr. and Mrs. James Hall. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Sewell, and Mrs. Donald Owen, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Harnden, Mr. and Mrs. Alan Hutcheon, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Rowe, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Siblock, and Mrs. Donald Morri- , Mr. and Mrs. Ray Hodson, iMr. and Mrs. Charles Hamer, . and Mrs. Donald Duncan, ..and Mrs. B. D. Hitchens, and Mrs, Elmer Parks, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wood, Miss Lynda Singer, Mr. Charles Crowther, Mr. and Mrs. Nich- olas Gulenchyn, Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Mcintyre. Arthur Bathe, Byron Worden, | Norman Gem- Jack Mc- Michael | Allan Orest | Mr. and Mrs Mr. and Mrs. }Mr. and Mrs. mell, Mr. and Mrs. Gee, Mr. and Mrs. Mayko, Mr. and Mrs. Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. Salmers, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon; Lemon, Mr. and_Mrs. Cecil Col- lings, Mr. and Mrs. John Mc- Keen, Mr. and Mrs. Douglas | Love, Mr. and Mrs. William Snowden, Mr. and Mrs, Robert Stevens, Mr. and Mrs. Donald} Allin, Mr. and Mrs. Donald} Morris, Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Kemp, Mr. and Mrs. Earl! Campbell, Mr. and Mrs. Hay- ward Murdoch, Mr. and Mrs. Roland Arnold, Mr. an THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursday, Merch 17, 1966 5 Job's Challenge By ROBERTA ROESCH Dear Roberta Roesch: How Can a woman gei her relatives to sympathize with the needs of her inh when the relatives don't feel she should work? In my case, I work with my| husband in a business he re- cently started, and until we get it on the road we have to bring home paper work nearly every night. Neither of us minds working this hard since we are chal- lenged by what we are doing. But my mother, who thinks that-a wife shouldn't work, dis- approves of the whole procedure and irritates me daily by saying that if I must go to work I ought} to seek employment where I can forget about my job at 5 o'clock every day. She constan'ly makes it a point to say that women who are really smart always look for the kind of job that they can "'turn off'? when} they leave the office. I personally feel that as long as I am working, I like a job that is demanding. But I am PET LINENS A collection of cats and dogs} that want to add beauty to your | linens. You'll like them. The animals,, done in black| jsimple stitches, the flowers all] lin bright colors, Pattern 7043: Lloyd| Anderson, Mr. and Mrs. John leery of 11 motifs from 6% 10.15%" & 2" * aurty -five cents (coins) for each pattern (no stamps, please) to Alice Brooks, care of| The Oshawa Times, Needlecraft Dept., 60 Front Street West, Toronto 1. Ontario residents add| 1 cent sales tax. Print plainly} PATTERN NUMBER, NAME ADDRESS. GIANT 1966 Needlecraft Cata-| d Mrs. {log stars knit, crochet -- many|DRESS, STYI LE NUMBER. Frederick Britten and Mr. and|more needlecraft designs, 3 free| Mrs. Colin Daniel. Author Kept In Suspense patterns printed in catalog, {Send 25 cents. NEW! 12 Collectors' Quilt quilting motifs. Finest patterns Patterns for you in color, with) a 4791 SIZES 2-8 gradually reaching the boiling | Point about my mother's atti- Rewards People For Extra Work tude. How can I change her views? Mrs. T. J. Dear Mrs. T. J.: It is possible you will never change your mviier 5 Views, ip since all too often it is impossi- ble to resolve the conflict in positions of two generations, If you and your husband be- lieve in what you are doing and agree that it is right for you, steel yourself to this irritation and try to pass it off without rancor. If you are still told repeatedly that smart women always look for jobs that they can forget at 5 o'clock, console yourself with the viewpoint of advertising man James Adams. He once made the provocative statement that the person who can leave the office and "turn it off," so to speak, hasn't much of a job to turn off. | COFFIN WALKS BY NIGHT PECKHAM, England (AP)-- Police in this London suburb are trying to find out who put a coffin in the middle of a main street late one night. It had been stolen from a wate: house several miles away but} no-one knows how or why. LOVE SCALLOPS | | 3 | 'We all love scallops,' the 50% MORE INTEREST :| young set agrees, Especially] '|when they top off a fashionable} skimmer with stitching down) the front. Short sleeve version! |has scalloped cuffs. Printed Pattern 4791: |dren's Sizes 2, 4, 6, 8. ltakes 1% yards 45-inch. FIFTY CENTS (50 cents) in coins (no stamsp, please) for leach pattern. Ontario residents add 2 cent sales tax. Print plainly SIZE, NAME AD- 100% MORE Chil- Size 6 OFFERS the Oshawa working man Send order to ANNE ADAMS, care of The Oshawa Times, 60 |Front Street West, Toronto 1, Pattern Dept. COME ALIVE FOR SPRING! Send for our new Spring-| Central Ontario Trust HOURS 50% More Interest on savings (We ALWAYS have) 4%2% paid and compounded § quorterly from the day the account is opened. No waiting $4 period. Minimum account, 100% More WALKER'S ES = dese Ener ER PES IERE a POUNTAINHEAD OF SERVICE Saving Hours a.m. to 6 p.m. Mondey te ever collected from famous;)Summer Pattern Catalog, 125 museums, Send 60 cents for new/top shapes for sun, fun, dancing, | Museum Quilt Book No. 2. De-\dining, everyday! One free pat- Writing Her Own Novel TORONTO (CP) After five, books of non - fiction, Agnes Newton Keith is writing a novel that is keeping her in suspense. |" "T don't know who is the cen-| tral character," the California| author says. "There's a man and a woman gho are the main characters. One of them will take over. | think it will end in Japan. -| but when I say it will end in| Japan, it's like a ouija board.| It takes control." | The white-haired Mrs. Keith, an American who has lived in Canada at various times during the last 30 years, is best known as the author of Three Came Home. It deals with her experi- ences and those of her husband and two-year-old son when they were imprisoned in North Bor- neo by the Japanese during sal Second World War. The book was made into al film and it's only now that she! can watch it without reliving) the wartime experiences. } "When I saw the movie in| 1950 I found I was getting in-| volved all over again. But I sasv| it lately on TV and I just thought it was a good movie. That two-year-old boy in the} movie I was struggling to keep) alive and care for now is a| marine in Viet Nam. So it's Viet Nam that I'm involved with now." WORKED AS REPORTER | Interviewed during a visit to) Toronto, Mrs. Keith talked) about a writing career that started with flaming love stories, a job as a campus cor-| respondent in Berkeley, Calif.,| and a turn as an $84-a-month| reporter in San Francisco. | Her newspaper career ended | in violence. "T was going out of the news-| paper door when a man I mover) saw before hit me twice with an iron bar. He was happily trying to hit me again when an old raan stopped him. I had a) fractured skull and was ill for} quite a while." Of Mrs. Keith's five books, all| written after her marriage to aj Canadian, only one was pro-| duced under what she considers ideal conditions. That was the last one, Children of Allah, writ- ten in her home in Victoria| after she and her husband, a} forestry expert with the UN| BUILDS AID GROUP EDMONTON (CP) -- Micka-| line Kowalski, Junior: Red! Cross supervisor in northern Alberta, spent a year in Pak- istan training eight college graduates as Red Cross field) organizers. Her year was an experiment which may be ap- plied to other countries as well. | 5% Discount You Bring Teas Ad, FoR ALL YOUR Bridal Shoes TINTED PREE CHOOSE DANCEY'S ie DOWNTOWN OSHAWA |my husband checks write for accuracy." Food and Agricultural Organiza- tion, returned from nine years! in in Libya. "We had a woman to look | after the house and prepare the meals. So I was free to write. | I started at nine in the morning and worked till nine at night) with time out for lunch, coffee in the afternoon and a walk) | with the dog. . . . I started the | day after Christmas and fin- ished in mid-August. "TI suppose I don't do it prop- erly. I haven't an outline when I start. I rewrite a lot. I don't talk about it with anyone but what I luxe Quilt Book No. 1 -- sixteen j complete Patterns. 60 cents. ltern -- clip coupon in Catalog. {Send 50 cents. Plus! @ 4% Personal Chequing Why Pay More. SAVE! ON PREMIUM QUALIT FUEL OIL Phone 668-3341 DX FUEL OIL Serving Oshawa -- Whitby & Ajax Districts Accounts--no service charges @ 6% Guoranteed Investment Certificates--1 to S yeors @ Investment Funds 16. Thursday o.m, to 9 p.m. Fridey a.m. to 5 p.m. Seturday Estate Planning Mortgage Loans Reo! 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So if you need $50 ask our manager about Matter of fact, what's COMPANY LIMITED -- PHONE 725-6531 for the money 2 for show. 3 to get ready or Spring A-Go-Go! a ORLON® DOUBLE KNIT SUIT: Contrasting knit trim runs around neckline, front, hem and cuffs of jacket, Permanently pleated skirt. Side zipper closing, Machine washable, Never needs ironing, Red, blue. 8-14. 12.98 b DRESS COAT: Wool houndstooth check with leatherette trimmed collar and buttons. Button-topped inverted back -- Side slit pockets, Beige, navy. 7-12. 22. 98 Also available in sizes 4-6X. Blue, navy. 19.98 e¢ SWINGER SHIFT: Solid white torso lace-lavished. Bow tie, ruffle- cuffles and pleated fluttering flare in gay red gingham. Back zipper. 7-12, 1 2.98 *Reg'd. T.M, SHOPPING 18 CONVENIENT ON A WALKER'S PLAN ACCOUNT WALKER'S Where Good Taste In Fashion Is Not Expensive Open Daily 9.30 a.m. to 6 p.m. Thursday & Friday to 9 p.m.

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