Oshawa Times (1958-), 19 Jul 1967, p. 15

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LE PRINTS _ yard 8 come in a variety Il want them for iorts and halters-- nts. By "Walker's", nk, violet, gold, ete, IMELAINE" y 'd cose is completely ariety of colors in ming floral designs, rs and mini skirts, D CORDUROY y d stosuds! In all of sley and floral dee ou love for suits, coats. Red, blue, , etc. 86" widths, A LINING C ard onderful for chile ne decor, as it is ike. Navy, gold, ly, peacock, vioe rning rose, royal TUFFED TOYS A ird easy to sew for gifts to make a d washable. As- n beagle, brown use. 36" widths. entre Till 9 p.m, 45] Wemen THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, July 19, 1967 75) Buffet Dinner Honors Pair ANIMALS - Would you believe tigers, giraffes, leopards, turtles and even a rhinoceros or two, all hanging out to- gether? They all belong to the "Animals - in - Paper" series of prints used for hal- ter dresses, craftans, eve- ning gowns, pant suits and all kinds of exciting fashion clothes. Illustrated here is = |held recently on the occasion of + Charles Wickett, and the late On 25th Wedding Anniversary Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ayers, Adelaide Avenue West, were }guests of honor at a reception Dawna Ormiston and Mrs, Foote, Mrs. Fred Ayers' aunt, presided over the guest book. Mr. Orville Eagle acted as Master of Ceremonies accom- panied by Mrs. Orville Eagle, The Reverend L. Wesley Her- bert proposed a toast to which their silver wedding anniver- sary. Mrs. Ayers is the former Hazel Wickett, daughter of Mrs. : jation. Mr. Fred Ayers replied. A buf- fet dinner was served, arranged by Miss Bonnie Ayers and as- sisted by Miss Dawna Ormiston. Mr. and Mrs. Ayers were the recipients of a china dinner service and numerous other gifts. A long distance telephone call of congratulations was re- ceived from James Biro of San Diego, California. | Mr. and Mrs. Ayers are active Charles Wickett. Fred Ayers is the son of Robert Ayers and the late Mrs. Robert Ayres, all of Oshawa. The couple was married at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles. Wickett, Simcoe Street South, July 11, 1942 by the Rev- erend J. V. McNeely. They have one daughter, Miss Bonnie Ayers. Charles Wickett. Mrs. Reginald|&, Both 1966 graduates of the University of Toronto, Kathrin Claire LaRush and Gary M. Deering will ex- change marriage vows in St. Gregory the Great Roman Catholic Church, August 19, according to to- day's announcement by Mr. and Mrs. Gordon La- On arrival at the Masonic Temple the honored pair was |led to the head table decorated Happy with silver candelabra, flowers) 4 : ; church. and a three-tier wedding cake. Guests were Greeting the guests at the door New Brunswick |were Miss Bonnie Ayers, Miss : jin the work of Kingsview United) Church and members of the Doubles Club at this present from Picton, Belle- ville, Port Hope, Lindsay, Little Britain, Toronto, Hamilton, Ux- 4 | Says Secretaries | bridge, Whitby and Oshawa. i Need No Union TORONTO (CP) -- Canadian bosses need not worry about |their secretaries forming a un- jion says Merle Law of London, Ont., international president of the National Secretaries Associ-| ; Secretaries think like manage- ment, she says. They "need no! bargaining units." | "Why should they when con-} ditions are so good? Besides | management recognizes the sec- long wrap-around eve- ning gown in rhino print. These delightfully dispos- able clothes can be worn a dozen times, are flame-re- tarded and non-allergenic. High fashion clothes with- out high fashion prices mark the beginning of a new era of disposability for Canadians. the Profits From 'Paper Things' Support National Ballet By JEAN SHARP CP Women's Editor TORONTO (CP)--Standing behind the National Ballet of Canada is a budding chain of stores specializing in the sale of all sorts of things made of paper. Two such stores are in operation and two more are soon to open. Run by volun- teers from the National Bal- let Guild of Canada, they turn their profits over to the ballet company to help pay its ex- penses. The stores are called Paper Things and they sell such items as paper flowers, gift wrap, place mats, writing paper, bags, decorations and even paper birds. The original Paper Things is a boutique in Toronto's Colonnade, an indoor shop- ping centre in the fashionable Bay Bloor area. It was opened in October, 1963, and last year made $17,000 profit. A. second store is operated in Windsor, Ont., by the local branch of the guild. Montreal will open one in Westmount Plaza and Toronto will get a second, in the downtown Tor- onto Dominion Centre. Mrs. St. Clair Balfour, who has been chairman of the original store, will be chair- man of the new Toronto out- let, due to open in September. Mrs. Balfour, wife of the president of Southam Press Ltd., says the stores are staffed entirely by volunteers who work as buyers, sales clerks and stock room staff. FOUR-HOUR SHIFTS It takes about 50 volun- teers, including the chairman whose job has become almost a full-time one as business has increased. The Toronto store is open six days a week. Sales volunteers work one four-hour shift each week. They are organized by a vol- unteer chairn.an with the help of daily captains. Mrs. Balfour explains the guild's main function is to raise money. It also sells tick- ets and dispenses information about ballet and the com- pany. The store helps it do all these things. People aren't necessarily aware at first that the guild: runs the store but they see publicity posters there and the volunteers wear smocks EXPERT RE-FINISHING On all Types of Furniture French that identify the organization. Customers can pick up ticket- order forms and information in the store. "People are contributing now that we wouldn't reach in any other way,' Mrs. Bal- four says. As a bonus, the store gives members an extra sense of involvement and has been a morale-booster for the whole group. "We needed a_ continuing project so we shouldn't have to be casting about for ways of making money or jumping at. a project whether it was suitable or not. "We thought paper was a coming thing and we could develop this idea and narrow | the field of buying. With an ordinary gift shop our field would have 'been so vast we wouldn't have known what to do. "We try to keep our prices competitive. We don't mark things up because we are the National Ballet Guild. We have a buying staff who go to the gift shows and keep in touch with suppliers." REMOVE WRAPPINGS When you buy fresh poultry, remove the store wrappings as soon as possible and re-wrap loosely in waxed paper or jaluminum foil. Store in the \coldest part of the refrigera- tor but use within three days. Frozen chicken should be kept frozen until it is time to thaw it for the cooking. Home eco- jnomists at Macdonald Institute, | University of Guelph, advise that once defrosted, chicken should be cooked within 24 hours. HOUSEHOLD HINT Toddler's dresses look best if only the bottoms of the skirts are starched. This way neck- lines and arm holes won't be oi scratchy and uncomfort- able. OSHAWA TIMES PICTURE | RE-PRINTS Available At NU-WAY PHOTO SERVICE 251 King St. £., Oshawe 8 x 10 -- 1.50 each lretary as a very definite part | lof the n-anagement team." Ruth C. Ruth of Kansas City jone of five finalists in the inter- |national Secretary of the Year} contest, agrees that conditions are good. | The five finalists, all Amer- ican, range in age from 35 to © 49 and are certified professional| * secretaries who have passed a |12-hour examination to qualify.| SHARON LYNN HURST Hayes STARS GO FISHING | CAMPBELL RIVER, BC.| Oshawa Beauty, \(CP)--Film star Kathy : : land her actor-husband Glenn A Miami Graduate, |Ford were presented with a 5 {carved Indian mask by Reeve As Air Stewardess \K. N. MacDonald while on a! recent fishing trip to Campbell! Miss Oshawa, 1964, up in the 1965 Miss Pageant, has sprouted wings and is spanning the Pacific as |fishing was excellent. FORTHCOMING MARRIAGE Mr, and Mrs. Gordon A. La- Rush, Oshawa, wish to announce the forthcoming marriage of their daughter, Kathrin Claire, to Gary Mervyn Deering, son of Mr. and Mrs. Mervyn Deering of Peterborough. The ceremony ways' stewardess, The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Baillie Hurst, Ross- land Road East, is a_ recent graduate of the airline's Inter- national Stewardess College in Miami, Florida. Wearing her new gold wings on the horizon is to take place on Saturday,|Dlue, high-fashion uniform, she| August 19, 1967, at St. Gregory |iS serving aboard jet clipper) the Great Roman Catholic! flights from Los Angeles, Cali- | Church. fornia, to Hawaii and the South | Sea Islands, FORTHCOMING MARRIAGE | 'The tall, hazel-eyed beauty Mr. and Mrs. Mark H.|won an art studies scholarship Lockyer, Brooklin, wish to an-|for her prize in the Miss Can- nounce the forthcoming mar-|ada Pageant. Besides painting, riage of their only daughter,|she also excells at snow and Roberta May, to John Charles| water skiing and dancing. Miss Plews, son of Mr. and Mis. | Hurst has toured Europe, is a Charles J. Plews, Oshawa. The! graduate of O'Neill Collegiate marriage is to take place on|and Vocational Institute and, Saturday, August 19, 1967, atilater attended business college 3:00 p.m. in the Grace Lutheran|and too IBM training. She Church, Oshawa. speaks fluent French. During her five weeks' train- AT HOME ing in Miami the new stew Mr. and Mrs. George J. W.jardess shared luxury _ hotel- |Larocque, 575 Montcalm Ave-|type quarters and classes with nue, will be at home to their|/young women students from all friends and neighbors on Satur- parts of the world. The college day, July 22, from 2:00 to 6:00) annually awards wings to some |p.m. on the occasion of their|1,200 graduates, has a year- 25th wedding anniversary, round enrollment of 125 to 150.) | Black's Clearance | SALE Now In Progress Coats, Suits, Dresses, Gowns & Sportswear | | 7» 50% OFF REGULAR PRICES All Sales Final -- Alterations Extra Shop Early for Best Selection BLACK'S Ladies' Wear Limited Polishing - Restoration "M Antques 5x7 -- 1.25 each 72 Simcoe St. N. 725-1912 Oshawa Upholstering Co. 20% Discount on Orders y 725-0311 ot 5 or More Pictures Open Friday till 9 P.M. j Top Coats Copied From Elite Guard! Steal Style Show ROME (AP)--Rome fashions have gone on military ma-| noeuvres, Fabiani was the commanding officer who put soldier styles on parade Monday. Coats and suits had the stiff, high collars that Napoleon made famous. Shoulders were briskly -- Epaultes were everywhere Flag red and Prussian blue were the regimental colors he used, Coats were hoxily straight and loose in back, Then there was the modified military tent, an| old Fabiani favorite but less! wide this season. | Skirts still looked short al- though belted raincoats were de- signed to keep the calves dry. DRESSY BOWLER High crowned fedoras were in plushy felt. British bowler hats were in mink or beaded for eve- ning. Schoolboy grey flannel made ja divided skirt and shortie jack-| let with a shell blouse in lighter] grey. Velvet was promoted to the deluxe class by being threaded with glitter yarns in diagonal checks. Two trouser suits, one, Sharon|in black and the other in mole-| flowers River. Miss Hayes reported the Lynn Hurst, sixth place runner-|brown velvet, had wide legs and|cuffs gave a fresh and feminine Canada|Were cut ribcage-high to meet! touch. stand-up collar jackets. Short-waisted white blouses in GRADUATES TO BE WED" B38 Rush, parents of the bride- to-be. Miss LaRush grad- uated in occupational and physical therapy and is a member of the staff of Osh- awa General Hospital. Her fiance graduated in physi- cal and health education and will teach at Central Collegiate in the fall. - (milk. And with the milk, would TO GRADUATE Joyce Amelia daughter of Mr. Sydney J. awa, will graduate from the Nightingale School of Nurs- Gedge, and Mrs, Gedge of Osh- ing of Mount Sinai Hospi- tal, Toronto at the exercises to be held at the Ryerson Polytechnical Institute, Fri- day, July 21. Miss Gedge graduated from O'Neill Col- legiate and Vocational In- Stitute and will join the staff of the Oshawa General Hos- prettying fronts Necklines have higher. Lancetti's never tall a Pan American World Air-|tiny tucks with giupure laceitouched the ear lobes. Fiories for curves. You want a and % | KEEP IN TRIM By IDA JEAN KAIN Underweights, the dietitian will take the calories from your angle today. Weight-gaining can be an uphill struggle for the thin boy or girl. To gain needed pounds, you must have basic good nutrition, plus extra cal- healthier, better - functioning system, and more bounce to the ounce, Are you free to gain? Talk with your family doctor. He will likely give you a clean bill of health and suggest more iron- rich and energy-boosting foods. If you haven't much appetite, it's easy to undereat. Poor ap- |petite can stem from anemia, faulty food habits, irregularity of meals, hurried eating, con- | Basic Nutrition, Extra Rest For More Bounce To The Ounce ! | ning meal will work wonders. | Lie down, relax, let go with! your mind and your muscles. Nervous tension can take the joy out of day-to-day living, and| squander calories. "'Fantigue" is the word Choice--Cereal--hot or cold, served with whole milk or egg. Toast -- Vary the bread-- raisin, whole-grain or enriched, margarine or butter. Milk--Glass of whole milk, cocoa, made with milk. Lunch Choice--Choose protein - rich dish with meat, fish, chicken or cheese base. ° Bread--Bread, roll or muffin, If carrying lunch, have a pro- tein-rich sandwich. Choice--Vegetable or salad, if that here. | available. Guard against that energy| Milk--Whole milk, one glass: drain. A rest before the evening Dessert--Fruit or ice creams meal is wonderfully calming. | Late Afternoon Pickup: Glass Give weight-gaining top pri- of milk, crackers. ority for the next 30 days. No/| ' cigarettes, coffee or cokes. Get DINNER eight hours of sleep most nights.| Choice--Generous serving of Take time to eat good. meals.|Protein-rich food--meat, fish or You'll soon begin to feel like a| Poultry. new person. The second month| Vegetable--Potato or rice sec- you'll gain by the scales, and|ond vegetable--green or yellow. like what you see in the mirror.| Salad' -- Vegetable or fruit-- raw; bread, roll or bread-butter. GAINING MENU Milk--Glass whole milk. Breakfast Dessert -- Baked apple, cus- applies stipation or chronic fatigue. Let the doctor help you get on the right course. | You can gain only on the foods |you assimilate. The protective |foods which furnish their full share of the essential nutrients jaid in assimilation. It is neces- sary to eat well-balanced meals with a protein food at each of the three meals, plus nourishing snacks in between. Build your meals around milk, vegetables, fruits and juices, meat, fish, chicken, eggs, cheese, whole - grain cereal, bread and butter. These foods are basic to good nutrition. COAX APPETITE Breakfast can boost your en- ergy. Not hungry? Coax your appetite. Eat a little whole- grain cereal. Sip a glass of not a_ hot, toasted, buttered slice of raisin bread taste yummy? Appetite comes with eating regularly, At mid-morning have milk and a graham cracker. No sweets between meals. Sit down to eat lunch, Enjoy your food-- don't rush. What about exercise? Outdoor jexercise will normalize your ap- |petite and help you to tone up inside as well as muscularly. If you are tense and overly tired, a 30-minute rest before the eve. en ----| WIFE PRESERVER | y mud - splashed! prevent gravel. Lomptete'y Cooked ust Odd tr Wise ADSED Vitawes cteaiere Gerber OATMEAL CEREAL with BANANA Another great Gerber idea! ae An all-time favourite flavour for babies, tion is now in two Gerber varieties. Mixed Cereal with Banana was so popular we just had to bring out the new Oatmeal Cereal with Banana. Two great time savers for mother! And, like all Gerber | Cereals that you simply mix with | milk, both are enriched with iron and important B-vitamins. You'll find they keep fresh, too. They're packed with inner foil wrap to keep out moisture. Isn't that typical of the extra care you expect from a company that specializes in good things for babies? ay = + Taking baby te Expo 677 Way. Gerber Baby Foods. exclusively, will be provided tree as a special service in 'The Nursery'. Expo's haby-care centre on Hie Sainte-Helene, operated under the auspices of Expo and The City of Montreal. Babies are our business...our only business! Gerber Baby Foods, NIAGARA FALLS. CANADA basement windows, remove 3- been inches of soil turtles) window and replace with clean in front of the _ Choice--Orange, grapefruit or|tard, ice cream or fruit with juice; melon or strawberries, | custard. GLAZIER'S SUMMER SALE +++ continues with values to save you many dollars on better quality merchandise. Come see for your- self. Here are a few of the many savings. Ladies' Beiter VALUE TO 39.98 SALE. PRICE 24.99 VALUE TO 19.98 : SALE PRICE l 2.99 VALUE TO 16.98 SALE PRICE 9.99 s Special Rack Clearing mostly one ef @ kind dresses and shifts -- et rly -- 4.99 4 Ladies Casual Dresses the cereal-banana combina- Clearing 3 racks of dresses for cosuol or street weer, all washable, in Dan River eotton. Arnel Terrylene, and other washable eottons. Sizes 10 to 20, 14% to 24% and 38 to 54. Reg. Values te 5.98. Sole 2 FOR 5.99 Reg. Values i sore 2 ror 4:99 to 9.98. Sale 2 FOR 9.99 te 98. Sale 2 tor 1:99 SLEEVELESS Bathing Suiis BLOUSES Regulor and oversizes in the lot. ue to specs aya OFF Reg. 4.98 ond 5.98 SALE LADIES' PRICE 1,99 In sizes 10 te 20, 14% to 244 PEDAL PUSHERS ree Lede Pecal eoee -- | clearing 4 group of styles by zi better Canadian Makes -- Sleeveless and some with Sizes 8 to 18 sleeves. For back te Scheel dress and casuel weer. REDUCED i, OFF uP TO Values te 6.98 SALE 1 ou . PRICE LADIES' SHORTS In short Burmuda styles, mostly small checks or patterns. Some ploirt shades in the lot. 2 1 00 SALE PRICE aie Pairs Sa No this is not a printers mistake! LADIES' SLIMS In stretch or cotton. Many shades in sizes 10 to 20, Value to 8.98. SALE PRICE _MEN'S SUITS Clearing better suits, mostly one of a kind, but al! ex- cellent styles and shades. Reg. to 89.95. SALE PRICE ; 44.99 MEN'S WORK PANTS & CASUALS 2.99 Clearing all lines and styles. Volue to 8.98, SALE PRICE Many more "in store savings" come see for yourself, Open Every Thurs and Fri. Till 9:00 P.M. And All Boy Wednesday @ PLENTY OF FREE PARKING @ @ EASY CREDIT TERMS @ NO INTEREST OR CARRYING CHARGES GLAZIER'S 498 SIMCOE ST. SOUTH (Across from South Simeoe School) -- -_- --_

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