Oshawa Times (1958-), 19 Oct 1966, p. 18

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WHILE A cowboy wears & Sports coat with suede Popular Hard-Wearing Corduroy Climbs High-Fashion Ladder By MARGARET NESS NEW YORK (CP)--Corduroy, fh and out of popularity since the 17th century, has climbed Dack into high fashion. The word éomés from the French cord du roi and was the cloth first used by the outdoor servants of French kings. From then on it was mainly ed by peasant workers in Furope except for a period of larity as a textile fabric in e 18th century. om til the Second W: War, Me juroy was overshadowed by other fabrics. After the war, bathrobes, housecoats and jack- ets: were made of corduroy. Then dresses, especially jump* ers, became popular. By 1956 Oleg Cassini was in- corduroy in a group of shea Next came corduroy street wear. it is no longer re- garded merely as @ casual or fabric. i fall one of the most in- hg coats in Originala's psig kage says the feal-fall news is the thick and thin cuts that give an illusion of even wider wale. And for more elegance, on-the-round corduroy takes on an ottoman look, This was particularly handsome in a white pantsuit. It's even difficult to recog nize some corduroys today. Lady Hathaway Sportswear, for example, introduced a cord with so deep a pile and so ony a look that you'd almost it was velvet, Several versions were shown in the New York collection, in A-line or 8 ht skirts or in cigarette-s lacks, Included was a weskit, Teally new look, especially for boys and Fall interest in the pant-suit has brought corduroy to the fore. Unusual was a purple printed suit with a vest in goid and black. Another suit in bone color sported high Edwardian lapels Uuduiecuat useu piaie sive for @ pant-suit with the jacketlll | MONTGOMERY'S Ladies' SELLOUT SALE | Final Week Specials! | EVERYTHING HALF PRICE © FRENCH KID GLOVES and collared in lynx. _ . Fall coats also take to cor @uroy, Trench coats are partic. glarly lar with wide ribs, One win! @ herringbone effect. Originala tent style, dou- showed bie-breasted and in the brass color this firm features for fall. ASK FOR KIDNAPPER OSLO, Norway (AP)--Police Chief Lars l'Abbe Lund said Mon West Germany has asked for extradition of a man of kidnapping a four two months ago, The girl was kidnapped while her mother, |i Regina Kliewer, a secretary in leather shoulder patch- es and an orion collar and lining by John Welts, a@ Corduroy is especially: popu- lar with the younger crowd. Smart for a young schoolgir! is a suit in red floral printed cord, the open jacket showing off a egy > gr A ye Fo ean play hard ina fron' dered, corduroy overall. in cof- fee with black stripes, Alyssa suggests cord for the very young in a hip-rider skirt attached to a long - sleéved printed shirt. For another ¢a+ sual young lady or her pre-teen sister, rosebuds printed on thul berry corduroy make a hand- some dress with a white knit turtleneck top. John Witz has designed sev- eral men's corduroy jackets and coats for Lakeland. One rae oie coat in nar- row wale is low-button, double- breasted with oversize patch pockets, flap-buttoned. It's lined and collared in orion pile. For the younger man there was a corduroy pea jacket-coat with epaulettes and a deep col- lared gold wool sweater, com- pleted by @ corduroy Dutch Boy éap. the elementary grades and par- ents, see the values in helping of putting into the hands of a child interesting books which are different from his school read- cause they are different, Bée- sides they help him enrich his Pt be smaller horse fan models coffee corduroy over- alls with black pin stripes, worn with a beigé b roa d- eloth shirt, : - (CP Photo) CHILD GUIDANCE Children's Magazines Encourage Better Reading By GARRY C. MYERS, PAD Having been éditor of a chil: dren's .magazine for over 20 years, what I'm go to sa here may be a@ littlé biased. I shall try, however, to be objec: tive. More reading specialists and regular classroom teachéfs in children to read and read better, ing books. Usually these books are interesting to the child be- reading vocabulary. Many parents and teachers are beginning to discover that magazines for children in the elementary grades provide in- teresting and effective supple- mentary reading materials for their children. : These magazines usually dif- fer more widely from school readers than do most other Outdoor Gardening In Russia «| Is Done In Apartment Balconies By JOHN BEST MOSCOW (CP)--In Russia, which has almost one-seventh of all the world's land, what do you @o when you want enough dirt to fill a flowerpot? Tn Moscow, you do what many Russians do: You drive off to the fields around the city and help yourself. After all, there's no private property any more. This excursion solved one of the problems for my flower-lov- ing wife in a metropolis where! there are hardly any private gardens such as are found in on backyard in Canada. oscow, almost entirely, lives in apartments. In the morning, as the sun pours over nearby rooftops, my wife, Joan, opens a small side door to our 12th-floor apartment and steps out on the small bal- cony. She pours water from a large bottle into three long, rectangu- lar boxes and a few earthen pots. Then she steps back into the doorway to survey raptur- model is injil ously the vivid flowers that! | overflow their containers to give }the square, ugly balcony the} The daily ritual epitomizes gardening in Moscow, where the average balcony measures about 10 feet long by 30 inches wide, A rusty iron railing contains bars standing about 40 inches high, Its' a good thing flowers are not claustrophobic. On our balcony 10 different varieties blow and bloom, Some come from seeds, some from plants obtained at a state store, and one, a handsome geranium; from 4 cutting donated by a@ friend. The boxes were made by en- trepreneurs at a nearby market for a ruble each. They came equipped with hooks designed to allow the boxes to hang over the side of the balcony. But as the hooks don't fit properly, the boxes sit on the floor, Fertilizer is obtainable from the state stores, but only the kind you use for indoor cultiva- tion of plants. Some Canadian friends of ours, not content with this, went off. to the country to collect manure from domestic animals. Their plants responded magnif- igently to the treatment. buppletientary reading mate- rials; 'Theik 'appearance and content don't seem to be like schoolbooks. They have a broad range of reading materials, var- ying widely within the same volume in interest appeal and reading difficulty. Besides, the magazine comes to the child at regular inter- vals, about once a month. PURSUE INTEREST With so many different items in each volume, he can browse through it and pause to read or listen to what. appéals to him most. If the child is in the mid- die or higher elementary grades and does not read well at his grade levél, he can pick out to read what he is able to read with ease, He can do this right in the midst of his chums or classmates and feel unashamed. How different a child's feel- ing of response then.from that when he is given a book easy enough for him to read but labeled, or obviously appearing, for ¢hildren much younger than .|women's prison in Canada, It Regulations Restrict Rehabilitation ead! et the ie nday that regulations at proper pebabilita: Mrs, Hogarth said the socte 3 Ang ty of three staff the last six months. tendent Isobel when: shé said al administration wastes the prise ad up on other regula. By ; i taries, Mrs. in an interview, Hogarth M Riehmand danion = tha charge Monday, saying that "the institution is working ex: tremely well and there has been absolu ho interference in programs for inmate training and treatment." Miss Macneill said regulations forced oh the women's prison are maximum security regula- tions, enforced' at the nearby men's pefiitefitiaty. This situa- tion @xisted because thé wom- en's prison was the only federal contains all types of prisoners including those requiring med- ieal a a Sypris treatment. "Having the women's prison under the regiohal setup is wrong and unnecessary," Mrs. Hogarth said. 'We feel women could be better treated under théir own system." SOCIAL NOTICE FORTHCOMING MARRIAGE Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Stack- aruk, Oshawa, wish to announce the fortheoming marriage of ~~. eas A reception at their home marked the silver wedding. an- niversary of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Saunders, Daflington boulevard south. The bride, the former Mar- garet Hurst, well known as a soloist in Oshawa and district, and Mr. Saunders were mar- ried in St. Andrew's United Church by the late Reverend George Telford. They have three children, John, Billy and Lenore, all at home, MARRIED 2 Reception Marks Silver Wedding For Mr. And Mrs. L. Saunders eo 5 YEARS Miss Lenore Saunders kept the guest book. Among the guests was the maid of honor of 25 years ago, Mrs. John Richardson. The anniversary pair received Many gifts and cards, among them a money tree of 25 silver dollars from their children. The evening was spent sing- ing and dancing to the music of Joseph Dixon at the organ, with accordion selections by Mrs. Roland Morris and Billy Saunders. their daughter, Marjorie Stéph- anie, to Ronald Percy Cooper, son of Mr. and Mrs. Percy , Whitby. The ceremony is to take place on Saturday, October 29, 1966 at 3.30 p.m. in All Saints' Anglican Church, Whitby. BEATS U.S. SYSTEM MONTREAL (CP)Dr. Carol Meyer, @ professor of social work at Columbia University in New York, said Friday that Canada's social insurance system is supérior to that of the United States. "I teach my students about the Canadian programs and tell them to cross their fingers that they might be implemented in the United States," said Dr. Meyer, in Montreal to deliver a lecture. dren for supplementing their schoolwork, which many of the adult magazines have. he is, Yet he can feel comfort-|> Fortunately, too, many par- able reading from a children's Magazine; he can save face. Teachers and parénts looking for temedial reading materials might well consider a number of the children's magazines. There is a goodly number of children's magazines now which have been developing rapidly in recent years. Wise teachers in the grades are making several of them available in every class- room, just as they are making available a number of books from which children may choose to read for pleasure. SEEKING VALUE Parents, too, are seeing the values of having several dif- ferent children's magazines for their youngster to enjoy at home, even for those too young ents and teachers are beginning to realize that children's maga- zinés may have great value to their children in the early grades, even before entering school. Of course, the parents of the preschool child must spend time with him, reading and explaining to him, if he is to profit so early from the use of a children's magazine. ANSWERING QUESTIGNS Q. What do, you think of the oft-heard argument that parents should hot be held responsible for vandalism by their children lest such measures destroy the good parent-child relations. A. It's absurd. Already this relationship is not good or the vandalism hardly would have occurred. BOYS' Charcoal Grey CONFIRMAT assistance in furthering your BLACK'S: CURLING WEAR Visit Black's for the latest In fashionable Curling Weer, | SWEATERS ION SUITS only $14.88 USE YOUR CREDIT OSHAWA SHOP Open Thursday ond PING CENTRE Friday till 9 p.m. to enter school. These maga- zines provide much good mate- tial to read from to the pre- school child. The value of some children's magazines for young children has caught on rather slowly with young rents. Many of them subscribing to a number of adult magazines have not been aware Of the need by children to have some maga- zines for themselves. At the secondary level, teach- ers and parents have grown more and more aware. of the interest and value to their chil- Boeee. of a greenhouse. A eran 2 | i | | i 1 | | 1 | i) i | i | H et a RR RENE Wear 6-8-10 Button _ Block -- Brown -- Navy (HARVEY WOODS) © LINGERIE © DRESSES © SKIRTS © DUSTERS HEAR OPEN HOUSE THURS., OCT. 20 79 SIMCOE ST. N. Dave Hinschberger AT THE Electrohome Organ From 7:00 P.M.-- 10:00 P.M, | JACKETS from 19.95 PPLRLLAL from 29.95 PP LE PANTS from 19.95 Pale edad ely, BLACK'S LADIES' WEAR LTD. OVER $8,500.00 IN PRIZES! OWN TOWN Dee 72 SIMCOE NORTH Opeh Fridays Till 9 P.M. = Meat Market For Personalized * Service Week-End Specials ! ALL MEAT GOVERNMENT INSPECTED STEAKS xz | 79% DNACTC PRs wu" Wing nHyunviv FRESH ' LEG 'O PORK Roast 12 or whole SLICED. BREAKFAST BACON 11. nk. SLICED -- FRESH SIDE PORK SPARE RIBS 2..*l * FREEZER SPECIAL ° Rump Boneless Round Steck 1 WEEK ONLY Montreal, was visiting her | wealthy grandfather. The child |} was found later abandoned and || unharmed. | | MINK STOLES WHITE FOX FURS Ss RENTALS 463 Ritson Rd. $., Oshewe 723-3338 BEEF a ag HINDQUARTERS vu. 48° HOGS wre WHOLE No charge for Cutting, Wrapping end Freezing HERE IS A WONDERFUL OPPORTUNITY TO FIND OUT HOW EASILY YOU CAN PLAY AN ELECTROHOME ORGAN Coffee and Donuts Will Be Served PHONE 728-2921 © KITTEN SWEATERS © JEWELLERY Shop Eorly for Christmas and Save . . . Everything Must Be Sold! 3 Monigomery's Ladies Wear 26 KING EAST... OSHAWA... Next Door To Karn's Drug S OPEN ALL DAY WEDNESDAY @ CLOSED « ALL BAY MONDAY @ Norm Fisher's Meat Market tore 22 Simcoe St. North Phone 723-3732

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