14 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursdey, April 13, 1967 ANN LANDERS Uninvited, Unexpected Drop-ins Are Uncivil Dear Aim Landers: whose house was a mess andthe first letter. company dropped in unexpect-| If you believe an open door edly just as she was trying to)means an open heart, you must get a new baby ready for bed.jalso believe a closed door Her husband mumbled some-|means a closed heart. This I thing to the guests about how |feel is unjust. More often than afful the place looked andjnot a closed door simply looked and ended up saying,|means, "I am busy." "My wife hasn't cleaned the} Since you shared your sign house since the baby came." | with me, I would like to share agree that the husbandjone with you. writer who sult ant have said this, but it|lives in Michigan told me about seems to me too much em-|it several years ago. It was i jnailed to the door of his home hasis is placed on the looks of |"@l oH. the house these days and not|and read: "If you are unin- enough is said about warm-|Vited and unexpected you are hearted hospitality. jalso un . leo . e. agro away and let me do my work." I, ~*~ ag mri eve Beech I agree with the wit who said, tere nen ae eetldn't care| The most difficult thing about ee set the bea the looks | eisure time 4s eh keep people of the house. I love people and|{'0™ using yours. I figure they are real friends if} poor ann Landers: Remem- they feel they can come bY/nor the letter from the girl without a formal invitation. Do| 110.6 navy boy friend got him- dg ig | Se Ann?--Open if transferred to another part 4 lof the world when he learned Dear Open Open: No, I 40|cshe was pregnant? She advised not. But I'll get back to you a)i girls whose steadies want to later, For now here is a letter| play house to ask them to sign from a woman who does agree|_ paper saying they had slept with you. |together on such and such a Dear Ann Landers: I was up-jnight. This, she said, would do set with your reply to the hus-| wonders to diminish--if not kill band who apologized for the/--the sex drive. looks of their apartment when} When our daughter turned 16 unexpected guests dropped in.|her father gave her this advice: You said the guests should apol-|"If a boy asks you to go the ogize, since they were the ones/limit to prove your love, tell who barged in. |him he'll have to speak to your Our home is open to anyonej|father because your father is and everyone who. wishes enter. I make no pretense of|you live under his roof." being the world's greatest} Our daughter followed his in- housekeeper. I happen to like/structions and said it produced people better than I like clean-|the most shocked expressions ing house. |she had ever seen.--Mrs. J. Several years ago we had a; Dear Mrs.: I'm not surprised. sign printed. I placed this sign|If there's anything a guy in our entrance way. It reads:|doesn't want to be reminded of} "Although you will find the/at a time like that it's a girl's| house a mess, please come in|father. | and enjoy yourself. The place/ | doesn't always look like this.| CHOICE BACON - days its: worse, saute Top quality side bacon should 'Dear Eiith: Thanks for let-|be ride Ae grote bel pe |meat, s this aking, an ting us know how it is at your | ot ise thik Hie of laa |to fat, which determines the SOCIAL NOTICES |tenderness of the bacon. Uni- form streaking also means less AT HOME shrinkage when the bacon is Mr. and Mrs. George Bray of |cooked. Raglan will be at home to their} ---- relatives and friends on Satur- day, April 22, 1967, from 2:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. and 7:00 p.m. to 8:00 p.m. on the occasion of their.50th wedding anniversary. FORTHCOMING MARRIAGE Mr. and Mrs. Norman Fred- erick Bird, Oshawa, wish to an- nounce the forthcoming mar- riage of their youngest daugh- ter, Marilyn Joyce, to Wayne Ambrose Plazek, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ambrose Pilazek, WIFE PRESERVER pol age! a pene reg is Bd Stand a table knife in glasses 1967 at 430 p.m. in St. John|°T Jars that must be filled with the Evangelist Roman Catholic|boiling liquids. They won't Church, Whitby. crack. cool color ful co-ordinates The fashion-wise shopper plans for spring- summer. Her choice? Easy care cotton and Kodel separates by PANTINO. 10-18 | | Sleeveless top 11.00 | Skirt 11.00 Slims 13.00 Jacket top 17.00 Jamaicas 9.00 Poncho top 15.00 "we invite your charge" Fashions since 1867 OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE I felt house. And now I will respond| sorry for the young woman |to both you and the writer of| to|responsible for you as long as| THIS BRIGHT green cu- lotted jump suit by Origin- ala features geomatric arm- holes and is worn with a brief jacket with epaulettes and a gilt studded, zip-up front. This military look is considered the most popu- lar for spring. --CP Photo SALUTE TO CANADA centennial. The bill, declaring BOSTON (AP) -- Massachu-|July 1 a state holiday, has been setts is passing its first bilingual] filed in both English and French bill in the commonwealth's his-|and copies are being sent to tory to celebrate the Canadian!Canada. beautiful practical e @cryliec fiber CHEMSTRA ACRILAN Acrilan fiber is man-made under Chemstrand's exacting quality standards, traditional properties of the finest carpeting with important modern advantages. Amiong the super- lor features is Acrilan's affinity to dye. The fiber is uniformly white ond clean, and zealously takes any color imaginable. That is why you see Acrilan in a magnificient spectrum of colors, Acrilan is available by such famous manufecturers as Hard- ing, Borrymore and Crosley Karastan, PRICED FROM $895 to 8] 550 ANGUS-GRAYDON | CARPET COMPANY LIMITED 282 KING ST. WEST 728-6254 | It Incorporates the Suits For All Occasions Come In Many Styles, Shapes, Colors By MARGARET NESS NEW YORK (CP)--It's suit time, weather permitting, and this season's suit takes many shapes. Most popular is the mili- taire, with epauletted shoul- ders or tab trim, and brass buttons. Some continue the Eisenhower jacket banding. But many of the suits have taken to short pants, a natural result of last season's trou- sered suit. The short pants are both skinny and culotte style. Newest is the jumpsuit with jacket. Jacket collars are often absent and when shown are neat and _ unobtrusive. Sleeves usually end just above the wrist-bone. Suits came into high fashion early this century and for years were identified with spring. Then the costume look of dress with jacket or coat overshadowed the suit. Lately the suit, on its own merit, has been revived. Christian Dior - New York evaluates this spring's suit as 'important' and designer Gaston Berthelot says: "It has a_ slightly wider skirt achieved by either an A-line skirt or by a flare of pleats. It is a moving skirt, topped by a pretty shell blouse of silk and a neat but ever-so- easy little jacket buttoned in the double- or single-breasted or the side-closing manner." Militaire: The Dior suits in the military look include the tab trim of a putty wool with a black-and-putty silk blouse. Paris likes this look in Phil- ippe Venet's clear red wool in a battledress style. Originala includes an Eisenhower-type jacket with a_ knife-pleated skirt. Another almost battle- jacketed suit is Jack Sar- noff's, with matching navy shell and a_ back-and-front panelled skirt. Safari: Another popular suit style is the safar, adapted from the belted jackets of the big game hunters, Most of these are short-pants suits but a few team up with Straight skirts. At the Union Label fashion show in Mont- real , Lee Parker presented the skirt style in a black-and- cognac window-pane check. In New York, Oscar de la Renta designed the safari in white linen, complete with short pants, vest and four gold buttons. White for Spring: White is popular with most of the de- singers, often with a color contrast or print for the blouse. Christian Dior - New York contrasted a white wool with brown leather belt and the Dior-name print in brown on a white blouse. Norman Norell completely edged a long tunic-jacketed white suit in navy silk, even around both the tunic and skirt hems. Spring Colors: But vivid col- ors are popular this spring, too, Junior Sophisticates likes the latest favorite, yellow in a mango liner suit with a paisley print blouse. Jacques Tiffeau thinks nothing of a tweed in robin's egg blue and yellow or shrimp and tobacco. Both combinations appear in his long - sleeved suits. with short pleated skirts and his short-sleeved suits with back vents. Spring Suit Fabrics: Wool, of course, is always good for spring but as the weather warms up other fabrics take the spotlight. Included are and some of the man-made silk - and - worsted, shark- skin, gabardine, cottons, linen and some of the man-made fibres and blends. One inter- esting fabric appeared at the Union Label fashions in Mont- real, a cotton corduroy suit by Irving Milgrom of Toronto, with a krinkly look. The skirt was laminated for a rounded effect. At the same show, Fit- well of Vancouver combined silk-and-worsted in a navy- and-white suit, with a crepe overblouse. Pants Suit: The pants look is still strong for spring. Latest is the short ver- sion. Pauline Trigere intro- duces her own version, a criss-cross skirt which she calls a jupe-culotte. One, in khaki, even has its own wes- it. Oscar de la Renta's knee- high pants outfits are slim- legged with hip-length short- sleeved tunics that make the pants look minimal. These come in solid colors as white tunic and blue shorts or in prints. All have matching mesh_ stockings. Cuddlecoat has numerous pants suits, some with jackets shaped like a riding habit, others in gang- ster stripes. The Bermuda length seems popular in the short version. Mary Quant introduced it in London. in horizontal wide stripes and an open neckline with Dandy lapels. A Ben Reig suit combined pink-and- white-squares for the jacket with white pants and over- blouse. Several long - pants suits were in the, Montreal pres- entation. One, which won an | award, was a fencing jacket version in bright orange wool, by Frankroy of Winnipeg. An- other was from White Stag of Edmonton, in a_ pin-striped cotton with the colors in the | the solid and stripes reversed for the jacket and slacks. FISHED TO. DEATH VITORIA, Spain (AP) -- A 49-year-old fisherman, Rafael Lezameta, fought a trout to the death--his own. While other anglers watched, he landed two trout and then hooked a bigger one. While playing it he sud- denly collapsed and was pro-| nounced dead of a heart attack. y In Janior Sixes -- 5 to 15 Im Misses Sizes -- 8 to 16 From $25.00 to $35.00 é> sq. yd. me 7 IRVING POSWNS F rm rainy-day pe and go gaily through the showes." Complete coverage for the Action Set in In lovely spring in-feshion colours, ty NS SPORTSWEAR LTD. OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE We Carry A Complete Range of Irving Posluns Coats and Suits. OPEN TONIGHT AND FRIDAY UNTIL 9 P.M, SEIGNEUR'S Oshawa Shopping Centre FASHION TAKES A Knit Look FOR '6/7 Most popular, the she-shells, making a new entrance in glowing fabrics and colors, Orlon® knit. Front, diamond patterned in Jacy eye- let. Back, plain with peep-hole button closing. Coral, beige and blue, S.M.Le 4.98 Of washable "Polysilk" yarn, Allover honeycomb ribbed pattern, Turtle neck with nylon back- zipper closing. White, blue, yellow and crangs, 8, M, Is 4.98 A new look for an old favorite. Cuffed muscle sleeve, ribbed pullover. Orlon® knit. Turtle neck detail, with nylon back zipper closing, White, aqua, orange and lemon, S.M.L, 8.98 The scene stealer, Collarless, bulky Orlon® Cardigan, novelty ribbed and liberally accented with eyelet. Gold, Maple Leaf button trim. White only. §, M. L, 7.98 WALKER's Where good taste in fashion is not expensive OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE -- 728-4626 Bowmanville, 5 King St. East 623-54 The Church guests the Re speake! congre; musica were \ Lloyd Osborn Ghurch Mrs. street, membe view -- Miss M ley Cr George of the freshm D. D the hor dinner Scarbo Mrs. F ing. / ing we Oshaw: Pickeri lard, T Hosti coming being | sel Inn Avery, pond, | kins, a Varcoe cribbas Mrs. drive, candid: dienne- held ir 29, spc adien-} candid: Helene Diane Rollan lippe were i of cere outline for the assiste Croix, Mrs. Vi Mem Partne don ar to atte tion dz sponso ter an Crossn be Ma Mrs. J old Mc Mac: Rideou preside Mrs. street, April Auxiliz lance. appoin slate | electio the ho! A pot: meetin freshr Clayto PM: To | Dur Pleasz Club, Knox made and J Mrs. § made chairn ordina ward A ie receiv! of Cr expres knittin by PM made clothe: ple an Com contin of fiv the "' This vy to car The ing he 26. N must April | Oshaw and N mn Baki ash tr