OSHAWA NEWLYWEDS TOUR NASSAU NASSAU, Bahamas--New- lyweds, Mr. and Mrs, Ger- ald D. Nelson of 119 Non- quon Road, apartment 506, set out for a motor scooter ride through the picturesque Bahamas capital. They honeymooned at Montagu Beach, Nassau, following their marriage recently at St. George's Memorial Church, (Anglican) Oshawa The bride is the former Patricia. Margaret Etman- ski, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry J. Etmanski, 548 Wychwood Street. He is the son of Mrs, Leta Nelson, Juliana drive. Their honey- moon coincided with that of Luci and Pat Nugent. Bahamas Ministry of Tourism photo by Lorenzo Lockhart. Marketing Early In The Week Much Easier For The Shopper By JEAN SHARP Canadian Press Women's Editor TORONTO (CP) -- The ad- vice of one experienced food shopper on how to. organize your shopping effectively is to begin by relaxing. Choose the time and method that fits best into your schedule, do a little thinking about food buying, and be flexible. Mrs. G. B. Armstrong is it of the. Toronto i ich of the Consumers As- sociation of Canada and mother of five children: She says you can take the fuss and frustration out of shopping if you plan it to suit you and your family's likes, schedule and budget. Don't let other people's advice, admonish- ments or penny-pinching hints harass you. "If you're a person who has to have a list, make one. I think every housewife will at least have a list made men- tally so she knows what she needs to replace. But if you have beef on your list and get into the store and find beef is high priced and there's a spe- cial on chicken, I think you have to be prepared to scrap your list. It's only sensible to switch to replace an item with something of equal food value." Mrs, Armstrong says OSHAWA DELEGATE AT CONVENTION Mrs. Walter Campbell, delegate and president of the Pilot Club of Oshawa is shown conferring with Pro- fessor Meralda I. Brennan, of Shenandoah, Pennsyl- vania, the newly installed president of Pilot Club in- ternational, at Pilot's 45th annual convention -held re- cently at the Shera- ton-Cleveland Hotel in -Cle- veland, Ohio. Mrs. Camp- bell was one of approxi- mately 1,000 who attended the convention as repre- sentative of the more than 470 Pilot Clubs from the United States (including Hawaii), Canada, England, Japan, France and Ber- muda. The Pilot Club is a classified civic and serv- ive. ssnamization for pro- fessional an executive business women with its International Headquarters in Macon, Georgia. THE HOUSE OF FLAIRE COIFFEURS Offers Oshawe and Vicinity Personal Services In . . « em @ Pedi (Foot Care) @ Faciols @ Eyebrow Arching % @ Make-up Consulting @ Eyebrow and eyelash Tinting Jane Poulson For Your Personal Appointment Phone 723-6901 (Ultimate in Hair Styling end Shaping) 14 ONTARIO ST. watching food you. plan. "If one store at a distance | from you has one week, you ads may help short ribs on watch. It may turn up in other stores near you in the next two or three weeks." Mrs. Armstrong says she regularly divides her shopping among three Stores to get what she wants at the best prices. She says she considers it worth her while because she has the time and because the stores are on a route that is on her way home. "That isn't necessarily the best way for everyone. Each individual must decide. Have you a car? Do you sure it doe: you walk? Are sn't pay you to stick to one store? Sometimes it's better for a mother to haye half an hour's rest than to save two cents. "There are a few things you can do if you're in a position to choose your shopping time. Some stores have better price specials on Monday and Tues- day than at the end of the week. Sometimes the produce is fresher at the beginning of the week. "Probably you won't be as rushed, and there aren't crowds, so time you definitely can save by sh the week. opping early in 'And if you can shop in the morning, less crowded a it's cooler, quieter, nd you're prob- ably rested and not in so big a rush to grab you see." the first thing READ PAPERS Mrs. Armst rong says it pays tO read newspaper arti- cles on food. "They are a terrific fund of information. The food editors' columns will tell you when some things are a good buy in your area, Tight for freezi Mrs, small economy what fruit is ing. Armstrong says one she practises hen en, eens. 8 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday. August 24, 1966 15. By GARRY C. MYERS, PhD Many mothers are writing to me of children learning to read at three, four, or five years of age. A mother writes: "We have a boy, four, who has been reading a little since he was 3%, I think this is from association, If he once hears a word and sees it at the same time, he remembers it and can say it the next time he sees it. He now can read the whole of a television schedule, although he is not limited to just that. He also reads ads, signs, etc. He cannot read sentences though. He just picks out words and says them. He does go farther. He knows the word 'telephone' and our brand of graham crackers and he was able to say 'telegram' when he saw the word. Now he has started to print some things --his name, his sisters' and) brothers' names, his numbers | up to 10. Other than these things | _the is normal: for four. My problem is what to do-- should he be encouraged or left alone or ignored? He won't go to kindergarten for another 114 years. | ENCOURAGE READING My reply in part: It seems that you are pro- ceeding sensibly with that child. |Go on helping him learn the |words and labels he is inter-| ested in. I doubt if you should) give him any formal lessons in| reading. Watch yourself that| you don't show off his reading, tives and neighbors. If he has one of the children's magazines he may find many short features in it he can read alone or with your help. In it jare many harder stories and features he would like to have you read to him. I don't advise you to use a primer or first reader with your son. Attractively illustrated books with nursery rhymes and very short stories would be better. Include some poems by Robert. Louis Stevenson and A. A. Milne. Peter Rabbit and ga stories should appeal to m, USE TYPEWRITER Before he is old enough for Grade 1 he may listen to stories hard enough for Grade 3 or 4 children to read. If you have a typewriter he may like to type a few names and words in addition to print- ing them by hand. Sometimes he might like to type short fa- miliar words as you spell them. You should call his attention t6 some letters and help him identify some of the ABCs. He} might be interested in some basic sounds as of the clock, hissing radiator, or dog. He may grow so attracted to reading as not to care for nor- mal fun he greatly needs with is to freeze an occasional handful of fruit from her sum- mer shopping. "A handful here, a handful there. You don't spend any more and the fruit 'salad you've made bit by bit over the summer could replace ex- pensive oranges in the win- ter,' "You can read everything that's published, but what you want to know is what's it go- ing to do for you. Once you find a product you like, stay with it, as long as it contin- ues ies to suit you,' Mother please! I'd rather choose them myself! If your youngster's healthfully, they need are correctly shaped and properly fitted. Come in now-and see of school and party s girls of all ages. All Clarkson, feet are to develop How To Encourage Pre-Schooler In Reading And Other Activities other children of his age. Do encourage him to draw and paint and make things for fun with his hands from paper, cardboard; wood and clay. Gladly answer all his questions and enjoy his creations with his hands and yarns he spins out of his head. ANSWERING QUESTIONS Q. How dangerous are candy pills and candy cigarettes? A. Each year 28,000 children in the United States are poi- soned from taking too many pills, mest of them supposed by the children to be candy. An- nually 100 children die from this cause. Dr James L. Goddard, head of the food and drug ad ministration, pleads with drug | manufacturers to Cease making candy pills and candy ciga- rettes. | | | fone hundred guests ' | er, Gibbons Street Congratulations On Anniversary Mr. and - Mrs, Robert Brew- Gibbons street, celebrated their 25th wedding anniversary|. y holding a reception for over at their ome. The at-home was ar- anged by their daughter, Miss Patricia Brewer. To receive, the bride of 25 years wore a two-piece white |dress with an over-blouse em- exploits to other children, rela-| § RECOGNITION In recognition of her con- tinuing endeavors on be- half of the Pythian. Sisters, the women's. order of the Knights of Pythias, Mrs. G. E. Fitches, Masson street. has received her Supreme Temple degree. A member of the order for 16 years, Mrs. Fitches is a past chief of Ontario Tem- ple, No. 1, (Oshawa) and past grand chief of Grand Temple (Ontario). The Supreme 'Temple degree was bestowed at the bi- ennial session in Indian- apolis, Indiana. Offers Booklet On Fashion Shows | To Women's Clubs) Amateur fashion shows can be a smashing success or & broidered in multi - colored threads and a corsage of pink roses and white chrysanthe- mums. Pouring tea were Mrs. Thom- as Simmons and Mrs. George Simmons and serving were iKatherine Michael, Susan |Michael, Laurie Gail Simmons, |Margaret Michael and Joan /Taylor. The Misses Margaret and Joanne Simmons kept the guest book and greeting guests jat the door were Miss Patricia Researchers Find Your High Heels Not So Injurious TORONTO (CP)--Three 'Tor- onto researchers said Thursday the high heel even the spike, may not be as injurious to wom- en's feet as is generally thought. The research team consists of Dr. Cy' M. Godfrey, clinical teacher at the University of Toronto faculty of medicine, Dr. C. A. Lawson, director of phys- ical medicine at Sunnybrook Hospital and W. A. Stewart of the hospital's prosthetic depart- ment. The 'team showed, through electronic analysis of footprints, that well-made high heels dis- tribute the weight over a large area for comfort. , The research team warned, however, that high heels may be injurious in other unrelated screaming failure. But clubwomen who know the | ropes find fashion shows Roth fun -- and financially reward- | ing. | To help women's groups) through the throes of a success-| ful amateur fashion show, the| Canada Mink Breeders Asso-| ciation has just produced a} compact booklet, "May We! Lend A Hand," which outlines | the necessary steps for pre- paring and staging a show. The booklet details duties of| each member of the fashion | show team, facilities required,| tips on modelling, commentat- ing, publicity, speeches, light-) ing, music, props and many other facets of a fashion show.) "May We Lend A Hand' is available free from the Can- ada Mink Breeders Association, | 1760 Lakeshore Road, West, | Ontario. a & school shoes that the: new selection ways. MR. AND MRS. ROBERT BREWER | Michael Starr, MP, Pair Receive Brewer and her 'fiance, Mr. Michael Doran of Toronto. Mrs. Norman Michael, Osh- awa, the former Miss Mary Simmons, maid of honor at the wedding, received with the bride, her sister; also another sister, Mrs, Claude DePratto. The table was set with a three-tier cake and an arrange- ment of roses'and white candles in branching candelabra. Among the guests were the Reverend N. J. Gignac and the Reverend Joseph Borg and the Honorable and Mrs. Starr. Congratulations were received from Mr. Albert Walker, MLA, and Mrs. Walker and telephone calls were received from rela- tives in LaJolla, California, and Whitecourt, Alberta. M@rried in St. Gregory's Roman Catholic Church by the Reverend Wilfred Murphy, the bride is the former Miss Doris Simmons of Oshawa. Mr. Brew- er is a native of Wildwood, Alberta, The couple has one daughter, Miss Patricia Brew- er, a graduate of St. Michael's Hospital School of Nursing, Toronto, and at present a member of the nursing staff in Children's Surgery at the Oshawa General Hospital. Family presentations, includ- ing a television set, were made and many other gifts and floral tributes' received, A dinner party for immediate members of the family was held later in the evening. CAN'T SPEND IT MONTREAL (CP) -- The Greater Montreal Council of the Arts had a surplus of $250,000 last year although it spent more then $400,000 on subsidiz- ing organizations and individu- als. Total revenue was $665,79), of which $339,733 was from the city government. BLACK'S LADIES' WEAR hoes for boys and are well made, of good materials, over correct. lasts, BURNS 1 KING i. bea' SHOE STORE WEST -- OSHAWA 631/692 Mix or Match Them Skirt . 17.00 Short Sleeve Pullover ..... 9.00 Long Sleeve Pullover Cardigans Glenayr PURE WOOL FASHION TREND BLACK'S LADIES' WEAR LTD. ¢ AND \do with at 'Macdonal Tasty Addition Corn on the cob is always |delicious, But often there are a few cobs left over afterwards. If avs wondering what to food specialists Tnstitute, lint "salad yesmeey om. pie acta cup mayonnaise 1 rere (8-ounce) creamed cot- e cheese in -- "dash peppe' 1 cup corn canes. cut. from fresh coeked ears mold. 1+ | ter, color and taste, it RSS TIE ad nd ent etd Sa ed Leftover Cobs Of Corn To Salad to 15 pin pp or 'atid ou is firm at edge but soft in r pincsiitiig witol cepling salad greens, com- -- all remaining inpredeats. Turn gelatin (partially set) in- Suits. Yell 's. cotiage eeee luffy, mixture. Pour into mold (1- quart) and chill until firm. Turn = on salad greens, Makes six to. eight servings, Foamtreads take care of your children's feet when they take off their shoes The right children's slipper is just as important as the right children's shoe. A slipper should help growing feet grow right. Foamtreads do just that! They have a special heel counter that can't be broken down, moulded foam rubber soles that won't wear out and leather outsoles that won't mark floors, And the soles are guaranteed not to separate from the uppers. Foamtread slippers come in a variety of styles and pester hy There's a Foamtread slipper to fit and please Ronis K Get them at leading department stores and at these eri ia shops, Tvsanen toons oe 5008A 25 SIMCOE ST. AGNEW-SURPASS SHOES LTD. S., OSHAWA OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE SET THE PULLOVER--Whether you're off for a day of fun or an evening of friendship and chatter, you'll feel relaxed in this "London Rib" mock- & C0. SHOE STORE 1 KING ST. W. 725-4611 -- OSHAWA, ONT. turtle pullover with long sleeves and neck zipper. Just imagine--machine- washable, 100% English Botany wool in lots of new shades for Fall,. Each $14.00 119 BROCK ST. COLLINS SHOES Open Friday Evening Until 9 P.M. S., WHITBY PHONE 668-3476 SLIMS--To compliment your sweater, these perfectly tailored pure wool worsted slims woven from 100% superfine English Botany. They're dry-cleanable and dyed-to-perfectly-match any Kitten Botany wool sweater, Each $18.00 DANC EY'S IN DOWNTOWN OSHAWA "Where Good Shoes Cost Less" DAVIDSON'S SHOES 31 SIMCOE NORTH OSHAWA, 725-3312 ONT. PURE VIRGIN WOOL Look for the Woolmark on the when you shop 72 Simcoe' North Open Firdays till 9 MAHER SHOE STORES OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE ZELLER'S OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE