WEDDING ALBUM A record for your Wedding Album is provided by The Oshawa Times Women's Page. Forms are available at The Oshawa Times office. Early publication of this wedding 'record is facilitated by submitting the completed form and a picture of the bride to the Women's Editor as soon as- possible after the ceremory. ames of out-of-town guests You are asked to submit the attending the wedding to the social editor either before or the day after the wedding. In a double-ring ceremony in St. Mary of the People Roman Catholic Church, Judith, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, John Goreski was united in mar- riage to Kenneth Ambrose, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Ambrose, all of Oshawa. The Reverend Norbert Giz- nac officiated and the soloist was Mrs. Edward Flegal, ac- companied by Mrs. Philip Les- ley. Given in' marriage by her father, the bride was wearing a formal gown of imported Chantilly lace featuring a bodice styled with a scalloped sweetheart neckline and _lily- point sleeves. The bouffant skirt was gathered into soft folds at the back forming a bustle which cascaded into a chapel train and was enhanced by a row of self roses. Her peau McComb Due to the absence of her father who is in government service in South Viet Nam, Eileen Collins was given in marriage by her eldest brother, Mr. Brian Collins, when she be came the bride of Ross Ray- mond McComb in St. Gertrude's Roman Catholic Church last Saturday afternoon. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bartholomev Col- lins, Oshawa, and the bride- groom is the son of Mr. Ray- mond McComb of London, On- tario, and the late Mrs. Mc Comb. The ceremony was performed by the Reverend Takacs Mrs. Clifford Lucas sang and was accompanied at the organ by Miss Connie Lucas. Carrying two white orchids nestled in stephanotis, the bride wore a mantilla gown of French silk over taffeta with an Alen- con lace bodice and elbow- length sleeves, topped with a - Goreskl de soie wedding ring headdress held her elbow length veil, sprinkled with sequins, and she carried a bouquet of red roses and white carnations. Miss Dianne Forestall was the maid of honor and_ the bridesmaids were Miss Bev- erley Baker and Miss __ Gail McMaster, all of Oshawa. Mr. Edward Glover, Oshawa, was the best man and those ushering were Mr. Robert Bino, Oshawa and Mr. Wayne Goreski, Port Perry. After the reception held in the church hall the couple left for a honeymoon with the bride donning for travelling a two- piece ensemble of a blue floral brocade dress with white ac- cessories and a corsage of yellow roses. Mr. and Mrs. Ambrose are lresiding at 1221 Simcoe Stree: \North, Oshawa. - Collins ee self rose and lillies of the valley, secured her bouffant well of silk illusion and she wore her grand-| mother's engagement ring for "something old". Mrs. Bartholomew Collins Jr.| was the matron of honor and} the bridesmaids were Miss] Frazer, Oshawa and Miss, Carol Hansom of St. Catharines. | Tamara and Stephen Collins, \both of Oshawa, were flower {girl and ring bearer respecti- vely. Mr. William McComb, London, | Ontario, acted as best man and| ushered were Gaston Mercier and Bart Collins. Following a reception in the UAW Hall, the couple left on a wedding trip to Cape Cod.| As they left, the bride was wear | ing a two-piece beige silk suit with matching accessories and) a pink mohair picture hat. } Mr. and Mrs. McComb will) return to reside in Oshawa. Guescts attended from Wales, New York City and Niagara French silk taffeta coat caught at the shoulders with bows. A Falls, London, Aurora and Peterborough, Ontario. Hindu Woman Starts Toy Library nadian group hopes to send two young Canadians between 10 jand 15 to school in India. "The foundation came into existence eight years ago in In- dia and it now has two stores In Toronto | TORONTO (CP)--A branch of | aa intezaational children's 'toy; library" is being formed here} by Veerendra Adhiya, formerly) of India, with the help of ada's high commissioner to In-| dia, Roland Michener. | Mr. Adhiya said in an inter- view Thursday the exchange is) ean-|C! in New Delhi Mr. Adhiya said. "The shelves are toys from the eight countries belonging to the foundation. | hildren a toy, just as! they would a library book, for two weeks," Twenty-five people interested} in a Canadian group met this) MR. AND MRS. KENNETH AMBROSE --Aldsworth Photography 'Watch Your Li By MARILYN ARGUE OTTAWA (CP) -- Your little finger is a shy type. Just watch the next time you pick up a book or a glass. Chances are you've got your thumb and three fingers firmly wrapped aroufd it and your lit- tle finger kind of sideways. That's why the RCMP single- fingerprint section only keeps a record of the other eight finger- prints. Criminals are a lot like you, in some ways, Wilma Parcher, a brown- eyed blonde in her late 20s, has ehecked incriminating finger- prints found on everything from bottles. She is one of the nine mem- bers of the single-fingerprint section who process some 1,000 prints every year. The prints, received from po- lice departments across the country, belong to persons sus- pected of such crimes as auto theft, robbery, kidnapping, ab- duction or murder. Fingerprints and Bombay," | found at the scene of the crime | or the testifying. are sent in for identification lined" with| With the 500,000 on file belonging | to known offenders. In the single-fingerprint sec- tion alone "we were able to identify about 10 per cent of the |prints. sent in last year," says Miss Parcher, "and that was a record." called Share-Your-Toys Foun-|Week at the home of Mr. Mich-| cans FOR PATIENCE dation and has branches in eight countries manned by vol-| unteers. | ener, in Canada on home leave. DRESS IN PAPER A search can end successfully in 20 minutes, or it may mean checking the files for two weeks The foundation also helps in| A New York department store|and «coming up with nothing. the exchange of pen pals and "child ambassadors." The Ca-| which recently introduced paper dresses sold 1,800 in two weeks. "You need a lot of patience in this job." EVERY PENNY HELPS . President of the Associa- tion for Retarded Children, Mr. Donald Sweet is seen helping Karen Eaton, 6, and Debbie MacNeill, 11, count the pennies, nickles and dimes they collected for his association. The girls held a garden party at Karen's home on Seneca street with the help of Michael and Timothy Eaton, Susan and Darlene Fraser, Nancy Nor- wick and April MacNeill. They introduced a fortune teller, a pet display, bingo, e darts, bean guessing, a re- freshment stand and a danc- ing contest. Neighborhood children and their mothers attended and the proceeds amounted to close to five dollars. Fingerprint Expert Says | Power, Oshawa, wish to an- {The ceremony will take place q Oshawa. 1966. ttle Finger' Once a possible match has been located, it is compared with the sample under a high- powered magnifying glass. If the new arrival doesnt match anything in the files, it is kept for an extended period and every five months the act goes on again. | Prospective technicians for} the single - fingerprint section) take an intensive six - week course and usually spend a year or more in the main fingerprint MR. AND MRS. R. R. McCOMB --Laing Studio section where the work is not quite so detailed. | | There are 10 main types of) |/prints, with names like ulnar} jdressing-table mirrors to POP/loop and tented arch, and an| jinfinite number of intricate in-| jdividual patterns. In her five years with the) section, Miss Parcher has made} identifications that have helped |put several criminals behind bars, including one murderer. }But she has never given evi- jdence in court. The regular |RCMP. members who supervise land check the work take care Seeing how it really is has put her off the detective novels she used to read. "Now I think they're kind of boring." SOCIAL NOTICES FORTHCOMING MARRIAGE Mr. and Mrs. -Lewis R. nounce the forthcoming mar- riage of their daughter, Joyce Constance, to Mr. Thomas Andrew Moffatt, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Moffatt, Brechin. on Saturday, September 24, 1966 at 12.30 p.m. in St. Mary of the People Roman Catholic Church, MARRIAGE Mrs. Marjorie White wishes to announce the marriage of her daughter, Edith Madeline, | to Mr. Dino Mazzotta, son of Mr. and 'Mrs. Gaetano Mazotta, | all of Oshawa. The ceremony took place on Friday, August 19, GOLDEN WEDDING On the occasion. of their 50th) wedding anniversary, Mr. and| Mrs. Arthur O'Connor will wel-| of thanksgiving on Saturday, September 3, 1966, at 12 o'clock noon in St. Francis de Sales Roman Catholic Church, Pick- ering, and will be at home from 2:00. to 5:00 p.m. and 7:00 to 9:00 p.m. that same day at} Maplehurst Farm, 3rd Con-| cession, Pickering. CWL Reports Member-Increase HAMILTON (CP) -- Member- ship in the Catholic Women's} League of Canada has increased | by 48,000 in the past year, ac-| cording to the national -presi-| dent, Catherine Toal of London, | Ont. | Miss Toal said. 7 new parish councils were formed. Total membership now is 163,467. She was reporting 'on tional convention. Ottawa Entomologist's Job Identifies Creepy Crawlers By MARILYN ARGUE OTTAWA (CP) Got a beetle in your house? Or a weevil, a platoon of ants or, horrors, a bedbug? Keep calm. You ¢an find out how to turf them all out with a letier or phone call to Isabel Creelman, scientific information division, Central Experimental Farm, Ottawa. If you have bugs you can't identify, she'll comfort you. She is used to calls in which her end of the conversation runs like this: "Goodness, that big, And it's got hairs, too... eh? on | the red part or the beigéT Hmmm. Does it seem to be eating the carpet or just sit- ting on top?" Sometimes she asks callers with crawlers to slip some in a little bottle and send them along to the farm. Entomolo- gists there can identify the most exotic insects and tell you what to do about them. Miss Creelman began work- ing in an antomology lab dur- ing summers off from a BA course at Queen's University, Kingston, Ont. After gradua- tion she naturally joined the similar setup in the depart- ment of agriculture here. A blue - eyed strawberry blonde, she has a liberal sprinkling of freckles earned in her half - acre garden. Brought up on a fruit farm in the Niagara peninsula, she now lives in a mixed farming community 30 miles south of Ottawa. In 15 years on the job she has seen quite a few bugs and she says they're mostly OK. Personally I'm not fond of large spiders but I'm inter- ested in living things and that includes insects," BUSY IN JUNE Her files on insect pest con- ditions across Canada hold 125,000 cards detailing 3,000 species from abacarus hystrix (grain rust mite) to zygos- pila exclamationis (sunflower beetle). In June, her peak season, she'll get up to 30 desperate calls a day. "But all summer people are bothered with ants, indoors and outdoors. Later there are wasp's nests, dog, cat and human fleas, clothes moths, carpet beetles, cock- roaches, fruit flies, house flies and bedbugs." You don't have to be stuck with any of them, though con- trol must be a_ continuous process. "Insecticides now have 2 » 1 affact = last for several weeks and kill the young as they hatch, It's not like the days when you used kerosene or javex and killed what you hit.' She says the move of high- rise apartment-dwellers to the freshly-built suburbs has put a lot of people who hardly know what bugs are right in the front line. "A lot of these suburbs were «fields a year ago and all the same insects are still there. They come into | the houses--there's nothing to stop them. But this just lasts a few years." It has been a bumper sea- son for mosquitoes this year because of the damp spring. "There were lots of puddles HOUSEHOLD HINT If you have used the white | of an egg in a recipe, refriger- the|ate the yolk intact with a cup opening day of the annual na-|of coid water. It will keep for |several days. Safe, 725-8501 Oshawa Times Photo . V GET RID OF THEM fast & efficient pest control in homes, business & industry for them to breed in and the swamps didn't dry up." But there are lots of good repellents on the market, thanks to research done dur- ing the Korean/ War when malarial mosquitoes were a problem. Miss Creelman recommends careful reading of directions on labels of insect spray and repellent. Misuse can be dan- gerous, even fatal. "After all, they are poisons." THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, August 31, 1966 19 SOCIAL & PERSONAL go Aiawancaie, Women aruiive Telephone 723-3474 for Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Clancy, Simeoe street south, have as their guests, her cousins, Miss Barbara Terry and Mrs. Flo- rence Miller of . Hornchurch, Essex; who are holiday visitors from England for six weeks. Guests of Mrs, Roy McKnight, Somerville street, are her daughter and son-in-law, Mrs. Arthur Mandell and Mr.. Man- dell pf Baltimore, Maryland, who will be sailing September 9 for Great Britain where they will both enter the University of Glasgow. Out-of-town guests attending the Tietze-Holtby. wedding Sat- urday in, Prince Albert United Church were: Mr. and Mrs. Carl Tietze, Mr. and Mrs, Don- ald Tietze, Mr. and Mrs. R. ©. Tietze and daughters, all of Rome, New York; Mr. and Mrs. August Cassi, and Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Markant, Mrs. Dora Josephson, Mr. and Mrs. Join Kopka, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Wagner, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Bercaw, all of Linden, New Jersey; Miss Mar- garet Fogerty, Mr. and Mrs. George Kin and Cynthia, all of Westfield, New Jersey; Dr. and Mrs. Lowell Miller, De- cater, Illinois; Mr, and Mrs. James J. Ledden, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Wright, all of Whitby; Mr. and Mrs, Thomas Jermyn, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Women's Department Stevens, Mr. and Mrs. C. M. McLean, Mr. and Mrs. Ford Martin and Jean, all of Osh- awa; Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey Bailey, Mr. and Mrs. Sydney Bailey, Mr. and Mrs. Norman Bailey, Mr. and Mrs. George Vick, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Lockhart and Mr. and Mrs. Lorne Gray, all of Brooklin; Mr. and Mrs. Norman Clarke, and Mr, and Mrs. Ernest Smuryhwaite, all of Concord, Ontario; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Squires, Cooksville; Mr. and Mrs, Doyle Thomson and fam- ily, Miss Carol Dagenais, New- market; Mr. and Mrs. John Ward, West Rouge; Mr. and Mrs. Harry Kiezsbrink, Scar- borough; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wiggins, Toronto; Dr. and Mrs. Mrs. Robert Huitema, Mr. and| E. M. McLean, North Bay; Mr. jand Mrs. P. C. Christoffersen, |Toronto; Mr. and Mrs. Aubrey Buchner, Brantford; Mr. and |Mrs. Duncan Dewar, Prescott; and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Gross, Chatham; Mr. Horace Simp- son, Whitby; Mr. and Mrs. Neil Malcolm, Blackstock; Mr. and Mrs. Clifton Moore, Oshawa; Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Tietze, Linden, New Jersey; Mr. Joseph. Pang, Roselle, New Jersey. Fitted Waistline ~ Returns To Fashion By PEGGY MASSIN PARIS (Reuters) -- Designer Hubert de Givenchy, | loose, unshaped chemise «has been his stock in trade for the last 10 years, rediscovered the waistline in his winter collection shown to the press here Mon- day, ¢ He brought back belts and a fitted midriff paired with wider skirts and replaced the chemise styles, with narrow, shoestring eh circling the natural waist- e He used belts on everything, including. coats. and suits. Other silhouette highlights were the return of wide rounded shoulders, paired with deep-cut raglan sleeves, and wide-swing- ing tent coats with fullness con- trolled at the front by a leather cord slotted through the side seams. He also revived capes, fea- tured. in . close-fitting . cocoon styles. Dress hemlines grazed. the knees, Coats were all shorter than dress length and in mono- chromatic colors, with shoes and stockings in the same dark tones, He showed heavy - textured stockings and fishnet tights, worn with flat-heeled brogue or Oxford shoes. Colors featured neavy blue, sometimes teamed with bright red, green or beige. Suits had long boxy jackets, with wide skirts tucked with deep inverted pleats at each side. Long wool jersey bodices in solid tones were paired with blanket plaid or window-pane checked tartans. In formal clothes, there were sari- draped dresses in soft crepes of puckered silks, worked with one sleeve and an assymetrical neckline. | OCCUPIES PULPIT RED DEER, Alta. (AP) -- Rosemary Dowling, born in He- maruka, Alta., is one of the province's few woman minis- ters, at Parkland Church of Christ. She spent the first week of her ministry frying hambur- gers in the church's booth. at the Red Deer Fair. CHERNEY'S FURNITURE WORLD--80 KING ST. Student's desk set EAST (DOWNTOWN) OSHAWA