ly in sha the holiday » home hos. nuch a part ear for so UND 1 announces t, it isn't rush around e half way iving room as well it uld be at hes, though season it ause in the llers, take give the over to re- xt tide of AGUE 1 was in mas meet. rmy Home illiam Giy- f the final nt was the john Wood e children ay, "The nas" with § narrator in Decem- ne Fellow 's. Robert . The sec. nm by Mrs. Played a y her son | the Arc- ip served 8 Decem- ATO s first in- octors be- sy. | = hh eOCS~ = BB A GROUP of merry- ? Se, makers, caught New Year's Eve at a dance in THE FIRST New Year's Eve party to be held in the new Legion Hall took place 4 THIS YELLOW coat- dress, sporting patch pock- ets and licorice buttons, is designed for wear on a American Art Lover Promotes Saturday evening, when members of Branch 43 of the Royal Canadian Legion winter cruise ship. Coat- dress for cruises range from sport clothes to last- evening-out dance wear. i Touring Pop Art Exhibition By KARIN MOSER York, the idea of introducing (CP Photo) | 4 St. John Orthodox. Hall, were these members of the entertained their wives and guests. Shown here from the left are: Mrs. Brian Collins, Mr. Collins, Mrs. Winter Cruise Wardrobe Needs One Basic Costume, A Light Suit By MARGARET NESS TORONTO (CP)--Planning a winter cruise or a sun re- sort vacation? You'll need quite a different wardrobe than the one required for that European jaunt last summer. But there's one basic out- fit for all three types of holi- days--a suit. : _ Duplate Sports and Social Club; i lite >} Mr. cier, Miss Dianne and Cleo Thompson. --Oshawa Times Photos Mer- Flood Gaston Mercier, trend now is toward the one- piece cover-up look. However, suits of this sort seem to be cut so skimpily | and are joined in the middle so sketchily as to create as much interest as the bikini. There's even interest in the tunic swim dress. If you're planning a Febru- On a cruise, a suit is excel-. ary - March visit to Portugal, lent for those excursions ashore. It could be a cool linen, such as a chevron print in turquoise and beige with overblouse. If you're plane - hopping and sightseeing in Europe during the winter, even in southern countries, a- wool suit is the answer. It's per- fect for the relatively warm days. And when it's cool it can be topped with a wool or knitted coat. Even in the warm Carib- bean, Florida or California, a cotton or linen suit is handy for jaunts to town or to other hotels for Junch. Naturally bright colors or white are the rule here, A cruise usually demands a wider range of clothes than a small resort hotel or a tour. There is a dress etiquette for different hours of the day aboard ship. One thing you'll almost feel obliged to take along is a floor-length evening gown. It takes up packing space, even if it's lightweight chiffon, but you'll feel right with it. SHORT FOR HOTELS the Canary Islands or the Spanish Costa def Sol, you'll still find the beaches on the chilly side. But tuck one swim suit into your luggage just in case. The way you travel will de- termine how much you take along. A cruise lets you take the most luggage so you can pack extra casual daytime and evening dresses, velvet stoles, poolside costumes and costume jewelry. LIMITS ON LUGGAGE If u're flying to the Caribbean, Mexico, Hawaii or Eqrope you are restricted to 44 pounds for economy class \or 66 pounds for first- class passage. On domestic flights --Can- ada and the United States-- you can take two bags re- gardiess of weight but they must fit within precise size limits and you're also allowed to take a small overnight case on to. the plane. If you're bound for Europe on your own, the less luggage you have to handle the better time you'll have. And even conducted tours usually place a limit of one bag per per- gr 1 ' At a resort hotel, unless ae son. That means you'll have it's ultra swank, the dinner and danving entertainment needn't be so formal. A short silver brocade gown with its own jacket for cool evenings is ideal. For both cruise and resort wear several swim suits are a good investment. Re- cent California showings indi- cate that the bikini may have reached ils peak and that the |tions available to them, to pare down your wardrobe to essentials. Even if you're staying at home this winter, it's not a bad time to start shopping for cottons and sun clothes. The resort fashions on display during the winter are the cream of the crop, and most store buyers order from the resort collections with sum- mer in mind. reaped. By making art exhibi-|artists as Allan D'Arcangelo of you Buffalo, N.Y.; Jim Dine, Cincin- | 'have a chance to give part of nati; Allen Jones, Southampton, what you have reaped back in'England; Gerald Laing, New-) 72 3 'a l 163 another form." OPENED IN TORONTO Officials of a tobacco com- Forks, pany, Benson and Hedges (Can-| Philadelphia; John Wesley, Los | ada) Ltd., listened to her and MONTREAL (CP) -- Nina Canadians to a really fantastic | decided to bring a pop art exhi- Kaiden is a New York public relations consultant with'a pas- sion for art. | She is convinced there's no better way to get it before the publie*than by persuading her clients to sponsor art shows. At the moment her particular interest is pop art and one|real. world's fair would rer loaiy Jan. 6-27; Ont., result is an exhibition making a reporter during a stopover in Montreal." | of Canadian people to partici- tion and I knew the-967eNtont- pate in the world, of interpreta Hag them. But I had something ex- jaft exhibition kept going round |pition to Canada as a centennial }and round in my head,"' she told | project, sponsor. castle - upon - Tyne, England; Mel Ramos, Sacramento, Calif.; James Rosenquist, Grand N.D.; Andy Warhol, Angeles, and Tom Wesselmann, Cincinnati. Subjects range. from a star- one of several it will tling image of Jacqueline Ken- nedy to moonscapes and still : | The show includes the work life and the graphics were exe- "I could sense the eagerness of 11 pop artists. It opened in|cuted in such modern materials will be seen, in Saint John, March 10\- 26; London? a cross-country tour of Canada.|Citing to offer them, so I did." Ont., April 10-May 1; Winnipeg Mrs. Kaiden, 35, petite and) energetic, is the vice-president of one of New York's largest public relations firms, Her approach to business andj industry ran along these lines: "Look, this is pop art. It says something! Share it with the! } Sept. 4-29; Vancouver Oct. Nov. 3; 4; Calgary Dec. 18-Jan- 1. The- exhibition comprises 31 These "Sitting at my desk in New'people from whom you havejoriginal graphi€s by such'through verbal description." | QUymmauaennEER EERE | St. Catharines, | m, 'onto, then moved to Hamil-/as metallic plastic, styrene, sil- ' and Montreal, During 1967 ver foil and vinyl. "The works of these creators be seen to be truly ap- iated,"' says Mrs. Kaiden, "as color, dimension and tex- 13-|ture all play vitally important | Victoria Nov. 15-Dec. parts in transmitting a certain, feeling or particular message. can't be interpreted 4 d CHHEH, THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, Johuery 4, 1967 ---- 723-3474 for | Mr. Eric Wesstby~is spend- jing the New Year holiday with relatives in Flin Flon, Mani- toba. Christmas .dinner guests at |the home of Mr. .and Mrs. |Lawrence French were Mr. and |Mrs. Frank Russell, Danehill Acres, Orillia; Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Smith, Highland Creek; Mrs. Laurence Beal, | Mrs. Clifford Hagerty and Har- jvie; Miss Carol Colborne, Har: old Barwell and Donna; and |Mr. and Mrs. Cyril French, all iw of Oshawa. In the afternoon Christmas visits were made to 'Laurence Beal, who is con- valescing in Oshawa General Hospital. | Work | Is Cure-All me. But I must have lost it in | For Unhappiness moving. If your life is 'filled with Won't you reprint it at some emptiness, seek the opportunity future time for the sake of of work. ' people who need it." That's what we have said in- "n ] u numerable times in the course RECALLS QUOTATION of the past few years. And ap- In looking back at things I parently that's a statement we have written, I believe the quo- made in the column that evoked tation the reader remembers is ek 3 t one that's a favorite with me Several years ago,"' writes . 5 one of our readers from Con- and one that I have been ad necticut, "'you published a won- vised once hung on the wall of derful quotation about work in the reception room in a medical your column. institution. "At the time, this column and As far as I have been able to | quotation helped me more than determine in numerous at- jI can tell you because it came tempts, the author is unknown. to my attention while I was But he or she deserves a medal filled with loneliness and de- for these words which, if you spair. will let them, can replace an "T was living with an empty aching emptiness with a won- marriage which I had to main- derful fullness of life. jtain for family reasons. Even,' Here is the quotation: as I pitied myself for this «1¢ yoy are poor, work. If you plight, 1 was also suffering from are rich, work. If you are burd- the disheartening feeling that ened with seemingly unfair re- my daughter, who had just sponsibilities, work. sitgrowing men ee *5) ot you are happy, continue : to work; idleness gives room for NO LONGER LONELY doubts and fears. If sorrow over- "T needed something I didn't, whelms you and loved ones have, but I found what I seem not true, work. If disap-| neéded, to some degree at least, pointments come, work. |when I read the quotation you "If faith falters and reason | printed. fails, just work. When dreams | "Now I'm deeply involved in a are shattered and hopes seem |job and my life is no longer dead--work, work as if your life who were celebrating their 7th | the |lonely. But history is repeating were in peril; it really is. itself in my daughter's life. She} "No matter what |such loose ends she doesn't) material remedy |has sought professional counsel- physical afflictions." ing because she, too has rea- sons for doing her part to main- jtain her marriage. | EDMONTON (CP) -- Cross 'The first thing the counselor of Christ Lutheran Church op- |told her was to find some kind|erates a day nursery in its of work so she won't have 80,basement for children with many hours to brood. But nO pearing and speech defects. It one can get her to do this. costs $25,000 a year to run and "T've looked high and low for more than 60 per cent of the |your column and quotation in| money is raised by the school's |the hope it will help my daugh-|own organizers and from dona- jter in the same way it helped ' tions. Former Resident Quite Happy 'With Quebec Way Of Life | New Year holdiay guests at!club and a bridge club and | the home of Mr. and Mrs. skiing and skating. Skidoos are | Jack Flath, Westmoreland ave-)"the thing" too and often the nue, have been Mr. and Mrs.|skiers hitch themselves to ski- IE. N. Weldon, who motored doos and I've seen planes fly- |back to their home at Rose-ing low over the lakes with mere, near Ste. Therese yes- skaters in tow. | terday. "With all this social life nd | Always active in women's 9tdoor activity gee us Ace \projects and undertakings in|trying to learn to s sgt Bags» we RAISE OWN FUNDS Oshawa, Mrs. Weldon is find-|S0 we have to make e for ling a new kind of fun in Que-|lessons and I think are bec. + |progressing. We are only ten "Ro. : ««~| Miles from Montreal where ev- of sia, Thethee akclk a Dow Ste. Therese and in the hee residential section that is al eees spat both Poet oA most completely English speak-| 5, li h. oa a merit ing. The General Motors fami-| jn nies De ee are lies that have come to live) iacauar Siist ob on want there have built beautiful hom-|,, ec ihe wonvarwent An es and the whole area is most French, particularly as a com- attractive. ee |pliment to those who have been "We are enjoying the climate.'sq friendly to us. Wherever! | had 28 inches of snow on Christ- derstandings, I'm sure they jmas Eve and on Christmas haye stemmed from ignorance |Day the effect was of an oil on hoth sides." |painting. | Mr. Weldon is plant 'mana- "The French - Canadians we ger at General Motors of Ca- jhave come to know are very|nada, Ste. Therese plan{-and| \friendly, full of traditional fun|he and Mrs. Weldon expect, fand great party givers. There eventually to return to Osh- 'are always cocktail parties, awa. "Whenever that may be," |dinner parties and the very Mrs. Weldon concluded, "we |popular wine and cheese par- shall certainly miss the life at |ties. Then there's the curling! Rosemere." | Has Your Food Dollar Lost It's $-t-r-e-t-c-h-? Phone Cs and Stretch FOOD CLUB Your Dollar Guaranteed To Save You $100.00 Year le | HE FOOD PLAN THAT HAS PROVEN ITSELF CHAMBERS FOOD LTD. ~ 933 Ritson Rd. S., Oshawa --- | aes in your food pion, Please have your Representative | NAME .....° i ADDRESS DATE PHONE The air is dry and crisp. We|there might have been misun- SOCIAL & PERSONAL | Jo Aldwinckle, Women's Editor Women's Department Boxing Day dinner guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs, Law- rence French were Mr. and Mrs.. Andrew Thompson, Andrew, Nancy, and Kirk, all of. Willowdale; and Mr. and Mrs. Mervin Cairns, Brenda, Cheryl and Sandra, all of Oshawa. Spot dance prize winners at the annual New Year's Eve party held at the Grandview Golf Club were Mr. and Mrs. James Loreno, Miss Diane Hamilton and. Dale Cross. The door priz@was won by Mr. and Mrs. John Farmer. About 100 guests danced to the recorded music of Aubrey Hollis. Mr. and Mrs. John Konarowski pre- pared and served a -buffet sup- per during intermission. Mr. and Mrs. John ee | Ritson Road North, - entertain- ed their friends~at a cocktail party New Year's Eve, prior, to the 48th Highlanders' Ball held at the Mosspark Armories, Toronto. Those attending were: Mr. and Mrs.. George King, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Keith and Mr. and Mrs, .Edwafd Hol- land, all of Oshawa and Mr and Mrs. Robert Mit ll and daughter,Miss Eileen Mitchell and Mr. and Mrs, Richard Wil- son Toronto. Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Brown, Masson street, spent the New Year holidays with rela- tives at Long Island, New York A capacity attendance of 250 attended the Centennial New Year's Eve Ball sponsored by the Liberal Associations of On- tario and Oshawa ridings at the Carousel Motel. The chef's masterpiece, a four - hundred pound ice sculpture in the form of a swan, was the focal point| of a spectacular buffet and dancing to Bill Millar's orches- fra until the early hours of Canada's centennial year com- pleted a successful evening. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Pullen wedding anniversary led dance. Nearly members and Bradley and his committee with imusic by "Cam" Warren and his orchestra sixty | their) wee . x (eRe se Family Dinner MR. AND MRs. W. E. BOTTRELL Oshawa Times Photo Party Marks Golden Wedding Anniversary A small family dinner party at the Spruce Villa Hotel mark- ed the golden wedding anniver- sary of Mr, and Mrs. W. E. Bottrell, Hortop street. Mrs. Bottrell, the former Lib- by Mae Wainwright, waeborn in Parry Sound, and William Karl Bottrell -was born in the I Sound. District, They were married in Whitestone,' Ontario, on December 27, 1916 arry with the Reverend James Thompson officiating. The couple resided in the Parry Sound District uritil 1926 when they moved to Oshawa, where 'Mr. Bottrell took emp-|Pearson. loyment at General Motors. When he retired in 1960 he was in the Inspection Department. Mr. and Mrs. Bottrell have one son, William Glenn and two grandchildren, Paul Rich- ard and Patrice Louise. Preceding the dinner party, a small reception was. held at the home with close neighbors and friends calling to offer con- gratulations Many gifts, flowers and cards were received including a mes- sage of congratulations from the Prime Minister' of Canada, the Right Honorable Lester B. 725-6553 RENT-A-CAR DAY -- WEEK -- MONTH $8.00 PER DAY ails you,/anniversary waltz at the Wood- | 725-6553 is in her late 20s, and the state work. Work faithfully, and work | view Community Centre's New of her marriage has left her at| with faith. Work is the greatest) Year's available. | couples, know which way to turn. She 'Work will cure both mental and guests, attended the dance : which was @rranged by Elwood RUTHERFORD'S | CAR AND TRUCK RENTALS PLUS LOW MILEAGE CHARGE 14 ALBERT ST, Oshawa expanded operation. Sauna and Exerci New Dining Loun (Licensed Under \ Bowmanville X ANNOUNCEMENT : THE SFipieg &/ Jakslesanpioron HOTELS - Due to Extensive Interior Renovations Our DINING FACILITIES WILL CLOSE TEMPORARILY Although Our AOTEL FACILITIES WILL REMAIN OPEN We apologize for any inconvenience that you may suffer. But we hope in the future to be able to compensate you with our 4 Watch For Our _ Grand RE-OPENING @ With 23 New Electrically Heated and Air Conditioned Rooms An Indoor and Outdoor Swimming Pool se Rooms Improved Banquet and Convention Facilities New Buffeteria for faster service ges L.C.B.0.) Automotive Service Centre Increased Parking Hing Dillman MOTOR HOTELS BOWMANVILLE 623-3373 \ Ne