'Should Choose Kitchen Gadgets As Safe, Efficient Working Tools By JEAN SHARP CP Women's Editor TORONTO (CP)--If you are just beginning to organize a kitchen, it may help you to find 'your way through the hundreds of types of knives and pots and small appliances on the market if you remem- ber you are looking for effi- cient working tools. Consider whether it is the item that will do the job best, consider safety, sanitation, quality, your storage space, your needs and taste. Dr. Elizabeth Upton, associ- ate professor on the faculty of food sciences at the University of Toronto, says "'I think these things are more important than following someone's rule that says you can't set up housekeeping until you have these five knives." Buying individual pieces makes more sense in terms of efficiency and economy, Dr. Upton says. "If you buy a set of sauce- Pans, you will probably find you never use some and wish you had several of other sizes. If you buy a set all the pieces will be copper clad or aluminum or steel and you will probably find you want a frying pan, for instance, in some other material. "You get far greater flexi- bility buying separate pieces than purchasing in sets. "It is also economically sound to pay for top quality, The less you pay, the less you're going to get. It is bet- ter in something like a hand rotary beater to choose one that fits your hand and pay $7 than to pay $2 and buy READY FOR SCANDINAVIAN DISPLAY | Mrs. R. T. Bryant, Rose- hill boulevard, wearing her national dress, is seen at her spinning wheel, the use and technique of which she will demonstrate in the com- ing exhibition of Scanda- navian arts and crafts. The exhibition, to be held Friday and Saturday in the audi- torium of McLaughlin Pub- lic Library, will include spinning, . weaving, wood carving and painting by Oshawa and district resi- dents of Scandanavian de- scent. Character dances of Denmark, Norway and Swe- den will be performed on Friday evening by students of the Burns School of Danc- ing and.on Saturday after- noon by students of the Harvey Dance Academy. Scandanavian music from the McLaughlin Music Li- brary will add an authentic background to the tion which has been a big undertaking by a_ small group as part of their con- tribution to Canada's birth- day. The group is learning and reviving adult folk dances and Mrs. Bryant is anxious to contact two or four more couples, either Swedish or Norwegian, to complete the sets. --Oshawa Times Photo Canadian Women, Literary Stars Introduced By Chief Librarian Miss Enid Wallace, chief li- brarian, McLaughlin Public Li- brary, introduced some centen- nial reading to members of the} Lyceum Club and Women's Art, Association at its meeting this) week. She recommended a new book "Modern Canadian _ Stories" with an introduction by Earl Birney and singled out the writ- ing of Michael Lowry and Mazo de la Roche. She also intro- duced an illustrated history of the City of Peterborough pub- lished by the University of Tor- onto Press and expressed the) wish that a similar project) might be undertaken {in Osh- awa, Following the theme of "Three Little Maids," Miss Wallace selected 'Sarah Binks," L. M. Montgomery and Mazo de la Roche as her characters. | "Sarah Binks is the central character in the novel by A. P. Hebert,"' she explained and rec- ommended its satirical humor. Recording the lives of twenty famous Canadian women, a new book, "The Clear Spirit | included L. M. Montgomery and Mazo de la Roche, Miss Wal- lace's second and third char- acters. Miss Wallace reminded her listeners that L. M. Montgom- ery who wrote "Anne of Green Gables" lived in Leaskdale, near Uxbridge, Ontario, from 1912 to 1926. She died in Toronto in 1926 and is buried in Caven- dish, PEI. "Her youthful outlook and sense of fun endear her to suc- lace said. She described Mazo de la Roche as an enduring Canadian writer whose status had not yet been fully recognized. Her fam- ily resided in Galt, for three years, Orillia where Mazo went to school and was called Mazie Roach, and finally, Bronte, where her father purchased a fruit farm. Mazo's latent ability was dis- covered when she won a $10,000 prize for a story published in the Atlantic Monthly. In recog- nition, the City of Toronto gave her a civic reception. Crown. Prosecutor | Female Variety | court appeals, bail forfeitures and welfare cases. She says all of them mean court experience, and she loves every minute in court. "T didn't twist her arm or Amazes West EDMONTON (CP)--"You de- fend me?" a man. charged with a traffic offence asked dubiously when he first saw his defence) counsel. - When pretty Margaret Cor- mack won the case for him he changed his opinion. oe Miss Cormack, a solicitor with anything," said her father. He was appointed to the judgeship in 1963, the same year |she graduated from the Univer-| | sity of Alberta with Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Law de- grees, She then articled for a year with an Edmonton firm, was ad- mitted to the bar, and took a two-month vacation to visit the attorney - general's depart-| Australia and New Zealand. ment, said in an interview that people "still raise their eye- brows" when she walks into a courtroom gowned in black. The daughter of J.S. Cormack, Northern Alberta district court judge, she broke an invisible Did she think magistrates and judges might rule against her because she's a woman? "I |should hope not," she said. HOUSEHOLD HINT A little bit of cologne added barrier late last year when shejto the rinse water will elimi- became the first female Crown prosecutor in Alberta. Although the department had). female solicitors before, and one acts as counsel for the local juvenile and family court, none had prosecuted in open court. But Miss Cormack made up her mind long ago to enter law school and apply to the attor-| ney-general's department for a) job. She wanted to do courtroom work and said she never even thought of going into private practice as the few other female lawyers in Edmonton tend to do. "You get stuck on mortgages," | she explained. ENJOYS COURT WORK In her few months fr pee attorney-general's office she has handled trial cases, district nate the "'wooly" smell of new- lly washed sweaters. ceeding generations," Miss Wal-) Mazo de 'la Roche shunned public life and went to quietly in England which called her second home. She later adopted two English chil-| 'dren after their parents, her friends, died. Her closest com- panion was her cousin, Caroline Clement who shared her home. Miss de la Roche wrote 17 books in the Jalna series which have) been translated into many lan- guages and sold all over the world, | Miss Wallace also gave an) insight into the administration of the library. "We are ex- tremely fortunate,' she said, "that our fine building was} donated by Colonel R. S. Mc-; Laughlin, relieving the taxpayer) of a tremendous mortgage. The library is supported by munici-| al and provincial grants which} cover staff salaries, books and equipment and administered by} the Library Board, composed of three members from city coun-| cil, three from the board of education, two from the sep-| arate school board and _ the mayor's representative. | "The library is linked with libraries and library schools| across Canada and the staff is) headed by six professional li-| brarians: Miss Ruth Brooking, head of the circulation depart- ment; Mrs. Honor Buttars, ref- erence librarian; Miss Edna} Jamieson, youth room librarian) Mrs. Kathleen Foy, boys' and girls' department, librarian; | Roman Storoschuk, head of the cataloguing department, and David Wu, book - mobile li- brarian. | Mrs, Avern Taylor presided) and Mrs. W. P. Whittington in-! troduced the speaker. SOCIAL NOTICE FORTHCOMING MARRIAGE Mr, and Mrs, Leslie McFar-| lane, Whitby, announce the) forthcoming marriage of Anne) Jacqueline Kenney, daughter of| Mrs. McFarlane and the late Russel J. Kenney, to Wayne| Arthur Yarrow, son of Mr. and Mrs, Clarence Yarrow of Whit- by. The ceremony is to take place on Saturday, March 4, 1967, at 2:00 p.m. in St. John's Anglican Church, Port Whitby. | PRINCESS COIFFEURS 39 SIMCOE STREET NORTH INDIVIDUAL HAIR STYLING BY | Michael Cordi or Lorenzo leraci for Perfect Hair Care. Brush or Helr Spray. SPECIAL OFFER... on Perms -- Bleaches, or Hair Coloring, FREE! Heir OPEN: Tues., Thur. & Fri. Evenings for Appointment PHONE 723-0301 exhibi- lesting evening of hair fashions. | |The affair was live} she) three or four over several | years."' DON'T BUY PRICE Dr. Upton adds, however, | that the most expensive item is not necessarily the best one, "Easy cleanability is not al- ways sufficiently looked at. The fancier a thing is, the more it's going to catch dirt. These things are working tools, they're functional, and maybe if we looked at them that way it would help. "Your own value judgments come in, too--do you like the feel of this beater? 'People should see that a saucepan is well balanced. Some are may tip. "Safety is a feature you pay for. A composition handle that doesn't conduct heat costs more than a metal handle. "The best - made knives have a metal tang--the part that goes into the handle-- held securely by metal fasten- | ings. You can see this, and poor knives don't show it. "If you consider storage as a factor you will probably buy a lot less. I'm thinking of such things as a corn popper with limited use and a bulky shape." Dr. Upton says she thinks the same considerations apply to small electric appliances with, perhaps, special em- phasis on how much you would use them. "I sometimes think people get them then look for places to use them." Apart from the most ob- vious items, Dr. Upton sug- gests a meat thermometer and a good cookbook as start- ing tools that will get use. "I think a meat ther- mometer is generally helpful to a new cook, and a candy thermometer if anybody these days is making candy at | home. "There are several basic cookbooks . available to tell you how to make a custard | Wemen "THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, February 15, 1967 15 19th Guide Company Presents All-Round Cord to Denise Waters handle-heavy and | |the cord from |tain, Mrs, William Tymchuk 4 | Waters, who placed jarm. jtain, and Denise's parents, Mr. jusing his very jhats with attached braids the young fry! |sandwiches | served, The first All-Round cord to be a awarded in the 19th Guide Com- pany was presented to Denise Waters at a ceremony held at | Guide House. Mrs. F. §. Wotton, Commissioner, District after receiving the guide cap Mrs. Leslie the cord around her . granddaughter's presented it to Mrs, Richard Dingman, presi- dent of the Parent Committee, presented Denise with a pin from the committee. The guides, brownies, the guide cap- and Mrs. Donald Salsbury, pre- sented her with gifts. Mrs. Wotton presented badges to other guides who had earned them. A skit was presented, songs were sung followed by refresh- ments including a suitably in- scribed cake. DENISE WATERS when young Master wee sister model, demonstrated small hair pieces Weiss, as a some and for included Mrs, Lorne Good- man, Mrs. W. F. Mercer, Mrs. Kenneth Van Courte, Mrs. T. J Gearing, Mrs. A. T. McLaugh- lin, Mrs. Dean McLaughlin, Mrs. Robert Skitch, Mrs. Chris-| topher Janetos, Mrs. Allan A.} Preston, Mrs. Ronald Elliott,| Mrs. S. P, Sereda and Mrs.| committee |Lloyd Oke. Following the demonstration and coffee were Mrs. Goulding's 'sionism and abstract form. =}ment of the exhibition was most | | Morris. | | Local Artists' High Standards | Noted In Lyceum Exhibition By JO ALDWINCKLE crackles. For a change of mood, There is still a day left for|contrast this with "Sunday ithe art exhibition by local;Morning" by W. T. Baron, artists on view in the auditor-| Whose painting of a deserted ium of the McLaughlin Public| Main street is quite impressive, Library. The show is a centen-| . Non-objective art is well rep- nial project of the Lyceum Club resented in the exhibition indi- and Women's Art Association/cating the gradual acceptance of and is one of the best the club this most difficult medium. has sponsored in many years, |"Upthrust", by Alexandra It includes oil and water Luke, is a vigorous message in colors, ink and crayon sketches Orange and yellow, lifting the interpreted in realism, impres- SP!rit. There is movement, strength and design in Paul Nielson's "The Wind', swirling and eddy- gratifying and the selection ig in contrasting blues and committee regrets. that due to/Ye-catching' among the ab- the lack of space more entries|Stracts are "Winnipeg Goldeye"' could not be hung as many bY Mollie Barton Carswell and were deserving of a place, | 1ce Palace'? by W. Earle. Outstanding in their class are, There are also some inter- the character sketch of an old @sting pieces of sculpture by woman "La Vieille" by Mollie Borge Rasmussen of Pickering Barton Carswell and a portrait 274 Marjorie Oxenham of Osh- in oils, "Carolyn", by Betty ?¥4- "| The whole exhibition, which ends Thursday night, sets a high standard of creativity and workmanship. The response to the announce- In the school of realism, 'The Vale Farm, June', by E. Smith and Margaret Humphrey's 'Raglan', are interesting and James Kraemer's 'Main Street Stucco" has a free style that) Matted suede can be touched introduces a mood, jup by rubbing gently with an This sense of feeling 1s ap-,emery-board parent in the paintings '1 and. -- ne Se ar aiaced "2" by Brian §. Mudd; the first,,| EARN UP TO $100. A WEEK OR MORE a composition in sepia, is warm and deep and the second, lonely HOUSEHOLD HINT s a ' 'a ; IG PAY JOBS WAITING mailboxes against a vast sky BIG tf fener Stat / A contains a wealth of meaning Hees Ncgduaea wade Sylva Armstrong's mauve and cerise tones on a warm neutral| background, create a gay im-} in principal cities offer ex- clusive "MARVEL TOUCH" DAY or EVENINGS. For free pression, redolent of summer. training Complete course Entitled 'Summer Melody",! brochure, aticlupid visit the free-style floral arrange-} ment breathes a misty frag-| MARVEL BEAUTY rance. SCHOOLS Established over 40 years Dept. OT. 219 Bloor St. W. TORONTO Noteworthy, too, in the feel-| ing it imparts, Roy Allen's "For- est Fire at Night', sears and| instead of just gourmet types of things. The Canadian Cook Book published by Ryerson Press is one, and the Joy of Cooking by Irma Rombauer." Two Hundred Curlers Attracted To Hair - Styling Demonstration The main lounge of the Osh: | awa Curling Club was the scene recently of a very inter- | sponsored by| the Ladies' Section of the club,| and featured John Weiss and several other operators from! his establishment. | The president, Mrs. Russell) Reeve, extended a warm wel-| come to the gathering of two) hundred women. Mrs. Giles Goulding, conven-|was also given. the club's ways and| An amusing episode was pro- added her|vided by the two small chil- welcome and introduced Mr.|dren of Mr. marca Weiss, Dy ; a ser of Means committee, Weiss. As the program progressed) the audience was shown by the|f! various operators the many | techniques of comb-outs with live models, some of! styling. These were done | with live models, some of! whom were made even more! elegant by the application of wiglets and postiches. A demon- stration of wigs and demi-wigs who and jf) 1 if AAT KRAR ARAN RR ERATE RAE RRR TO IOK [st peste pe matress ae srpwtere ot tis rie! VVVVVVAV Me N Ro "NORM" FISHER' Meat Market For Personalized Service ALL MEAT GOVERNMENT INSPECTED Week-End Specials ! SAUSAGE wu. 49° RIB STEAKS w. 59° PICKLED ROLLS uw. 59* BREAD 24-07. LOAVES 3 ove 89° LEAN MINCED CHUCK STEAK RIB STEW SKINLESS WIENERS CHICKEN WINGS SHOULDER LAMB CHOPS COUNTRY SAUSAGE BY THE PIECE NA BEEF LIVER ANY ONE ITEM . SEE WHAT '1.00 WILL BUY 2 Ihs, 4 ibs. 2 Ibs, 4 Ibs, 3 Ibs. 2 Ibs, P _ I el | . 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