Oshawa Times (1958-), 21 Aug 1967, p. 8

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GOLDEN WEDDING CELEBRATION HOSTED BY FAMILY The Carousel Inn was the scene of the 50th wed- married on August 20, 1917 in St. Gregory's Roman Ca- tholic Church by the late ding anniversary celebra- tion of Mr. and Mrs. Fred- erick Habberfield, Masson Street, Oshawa. The occas- jon was marked Sunday with a family dinner. Mr. and Mrs. Habberfield were Reverend H. W. Murray. They have three children, Mrs William Hastings, (Mil- dred) Oshawa; Stafford Habberfield, Burlington; Jo- seph Habberfield, Birming- ham, Michigan and seven grandchildren. After 45 years of service with Gen- eral Motors, Mr. F. Hab- berfield retired in June, 1966. Guests attended from Jacksonville, Illinois; Birm- ingham; Michigan; Ottawa; Kirkfield; Belleville; Tor- onto; Burlington. NDP To Press For Equal Rights For All Women TORONTO (CP)--The fourth federal convention of the New Democratic Party Thursday in- structed the party executive to mission on the status of women Wemen submit a brief to the royal com- 10 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, August 21, 1967 demanding that women be "'lib- erated from archaic legal re. strictions."" Delegates approved a resolu- tion which said the brief should stress equal pay and employ- ment opportunities for women and back-to-work training for those out of the labor market! a falece @ fatally. HALIFAX (CP)--Anna Leo- It said the brief should seek} NOWeNns, heroine of the musi- child-care centres for both the| @! The King and I, is mainly woman who works and the| 'emembered as the gay, light- woman who stays at home. hearted British governess "The needs of the pre-school} W40 with laughter and song child, particularly in urban cen- tamed the court of the tyran- tres, are not provided for in| ical King of Siam. many communities because of| But Anna was a far more lack of space, facilities, super-| formidable figure than the vision and opportunities to asso-| frothy, formidable woman ciate with other children," the} beloved by script writers. Sh resolution said. wasa brilliant, eloquent Anna, Heroine Of The King And I Was Halifax Suffrage Leader Widowed when her husband died of sunstroke in Singa- pore, Anna opened a school for officers' children. It was a success and she was offered the position of governess at Heed court of the king in Bang- 'ok. She arrived in Siam in 1862 and, in a book about her years there, she described her first meeting with King Mongkut. ted WOULD DEDUCT EXPENSES 'ae a The brief would propose work- uring the 20 years she ing mothers be permitted to de-| lived in Halifax in the late duct housekeeping or babysit-| 19th century--a time when ting expenses for income-tax| Women were expected to purposes. devote their lives to home, "The same right should be ac-| Church and family--she was a corded to widowers and other| Pioneer in the movement for men who must help to care for} Women's suffrage, played a children while at work." prominent part in the city's Women who do not care to work outside the home "should be given a substantial tax credit against the family's income tax payments as a partial offset to the salary the woman in busi- ness gets." ANN LANDERS Voice Of Experience Dear Ann Landers: Every now and then you print a letter/and do the things he should) from a teen-ager who thinks/have gotten done before he she knows it all and insists she is mature enough to get mar- ried. Since I am 17 and consid- Warns Other Teenagers to go out with the boys again | married you. | "So finally you eat the lousy meal by yourself and go to bed ering marriage, a friend sent! and cry your eyes out. When he me the enclosed letter. It was/qoes come home you can tell writter by another teen-ager/he's been drinking but you who describes what it is like to|don't say a word because he be married too young. I hope/hates to be told anything. So you wil print this letter. Ann, it} yoy try to go to sleep and was enough to make me change/qream about your parents and my mind. It might do the same| your brothers and the kids you} for someone else: Here itis: | "Dear In Love: Let me tell you what it is like to be mar- ried at 17. It is like living in this dump on the third floor. Your only window looks out on somebody else's third floor dump. "Tt is like coming home s0 tired you feel nearly dead from standing all day at your check- er's job in the supermarket. But you don't dare sit down because you might never get up. And there are so many things you have to do--cooking and washing and ironing. But you go through the motions and you hate your job. "You ask yourself, 'Why don't you quit?' And you know why. Because there are grocery bills and drug bills and the rent to pay. And Jimmy's crummy little check from the lumber- yard won't cover them. That's why. | "Then you tell the sitter) good-bye and you try to play with the baby until Jimmy knew at school. You think about the great meals your mother used te cook and how nice your room was at home. Then you remember how she tried to talk you out of marrying so young and you got mad at her and called her a dried up old woman and accused her of hav- ing forgotten what it was like to be in love. "You try to push the thoughts of other boys out of your mind but they keep coming back. Especially that certain boy who gave you your first kiss. He won the state science prize and is going to be a doctor. "You wonder how different your life would have been if you had gone to college. You have the feeling that Jimmy and the baby are all part of a bad dream. But you know it's no dream. It's for real. So you j}reach over to touch Jimmy and he pushes you away and says something mean. So you cry yourself to sleep and wake up with a splitting headache. What comes home. Only sometimes you don't feel like it. But you|@ way to start another day of| do it anyway because you feel guilty about being away from her all day. Then you mix the formula and wash diapers and how long it will be before she can tel] that you hate it. And wouldn't it be awful if she knew|I could print a letter similar to} this every day of the week, but} "Then Jimmy doesn't come|what's the use? Are you listen-|; already? jhard work! | "Tf you meet |give her this letter.--Sorry" Dear Readers: home and you know he decided!'ing out there? I hope so. anyone who |thinks she knows what it is like lto be married at 17 please tell you hate doing it. You wonderjher about me. Or better yet, Dalton Ray Woods will take as his bride Elspeth King on September 9, 1967. The prospective bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. ANNOUNCE WEDDING PLANS cultural and social life and helped prepare the way for establishment of Nova Sco- tia's first art college in 1887. Despite her busy life, Anna always considered her most important task to be the edu- cation of her grandchildren. Her granddaughter, Anna Harriet Leonowens F yshe, used to recall that Anna never allowed her grandchil- dren to go to other children's houses or parties. "But after a long day of instruction and homework came the happy hours of lis- tening to the enthralling sto- ries of grandmama's life, travels and exciting adven- tures," Miss Fyshe wrote in her memoirs. MARRIED BROKER Anna's daughter Avis mar- ried New York stockbroker Thomas Fyshe but not before Anna had made it clear she would consent only if she could live with the couple. Anna's son Louis, who had shared her adventures in Siam, accepted a post at the court of the King of Siam and married the daughter of a British diplomat there. Harry Thompson Woods of Oshawa and the bride-elect is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Bickle King of Woodstock. The wedding is to take place in Woodstock. Self - Appraisal By ROBERTA ROESCH 'Instead of being at loose ends all day, pull yourself together,"' says fashion photog- rapher Barbara Johns Waters- ton, who has written a book with a cover that says Pull Yourself Together. Barbara herself has been doing this--and succeeding rather well--ever since she dis- covered, when she was 15, that her 14-year-old sister was becoming a swan while she remained an ugly duckling. "The night my hero of the hour asked my sister out," she said, "I made up my mind once and for all that I'd make some- thing of my life and my looks." Since Barbara believed that to do this she would have to | decide who she was, she began to find her vocational self by working summers and vaca- tions in a fashion specialty shop jin her town. : | 'With fashion her professional MINT If ,during the summer months ahead, you are planning to be either jet- propelled or grounded loll- ing about doing nothing, smashing chic and colorful separates are part of the answer to your clothes problem. This smart two- part summer costume of lightweight Arnel, is given * Ais JULEP a julep-frosted look by us- ing a minty green color for the no-waist, knife pleated skirt, pairing it with a pris- tine white tailored cardigan edged in the same green. Both skirt and cardigan can mix-mate with other con- trasting color wardrobe items, By Tracy Adrian t .|much improved, who mumbled 'iwhen she spoke and kept her and personal goal, Barbara went on to a junior college and enrolled in a liberal arts course. Following her gradua- tion, she began to work in the training squad of a New York department store. Subsequently that job; went around the world} with an aunt; wrote a fashion! column for a magazine in Con- necticut; worked as a secretary and assistant for two New York fashion magazines; became a fashion reporter for one of New York's newspapers; and, event-} ually, moved into free-lance Psychology Works Best In Group Talks VANCOUVER (CP)--The Career's First Steps To Success , Determination fashion photography so she could match her working hours with those of her actor hus- band, Sam Waterston. VOLUME EVOLVED Her book, Pull Yourself Together, evolved from her own natural interest in looking and being her best. It also resulted bec$use of the way her friends} asked her for advice. "The fact that I pulled myself together with very little to go on makes me believe that any- one can do it with a little con- centration and planning," Bar- bara said. "You can make it on as little time and money as you are| spending now. I know, because I made it for a long time on a small salary. It's not what you do, it's how. And it's not only how you do it, but when. "When you know what your capabilities are and what you want, you're free to do any- thing in your job,' Barbara said. "'You can concentrate and contribute to your career. "And speaking of contributing to your work and making some- thing of it," she said. "I think it's necessary to pull yourself Anna left Halifax in 1897 to take her granddaughter to Leipzig, Germany, to study music. Later she joined the Fyshes in Montreal where she lived for 15 years, managing the household after her daughter's death. Anna spent her childhood in Wales and went to India at 15 to join her mother and stepfa- ther. There she met and mar- ried Major Thomas Louis "We the marble steps and entered the brilliant hall unannounced, Ranged on the carpet were many pros- trate, mute and motionless forms, over whose heads to step was a temptation drolly natural as it was dangerous." HAD 67 CHILDREN The king shook hands with Anna and then began march- ing up and down "in quick step, putting one foot before the other with mathematical precision as if under drill." Suddenly, pointing a fore- finger at Anna, the king asked: 'How old shall you be?" "Scarcely able to repress a smile at a proceeding so absurd, and with my sex's distaste for so serious a ques- tion, I demurely replied, 'One mineee® and fifty years old." The meeting ended with the MR. Mr. and Mrs, George Clark, Mill Street celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary recently by holding a reception at Storie THE STARS SAY By ESTRELLITA FOR TUESDAY While a.m. aspects will be on the mild side, that will be a good period in which to plan afternoon activities. More vig- orous influences, which will prevail after noon, will encour- age accomplishment in impor- tant interests. FOR THE BIRTHDAY If Tuesday is your birthday, your horoscope indicates that this next year in your life will be extremely important where your career and finances are concerned. Even if progress should seem somewhat slow at king introducing Anna to one of his wives, Lady Talap, tell- ing her he had 67 children and her job was to educate them and "as many of my wives, likewise, as may wish to learn English." Anna's duties als oincluded helping the king with his Eng- lish and correspondence. One of her pupils was Prince Chulalongkorn who became king in 1868 and, largely due to her influence, abolished slavery. Til health eventually forced present, do not become discour- aged. For, if you take advan- tage of all available opportuni- ties, are co-operative with both superiors and associates, promote your highly original and ideas in a convincing manner, results should prove truly rewarding--even if not immedi- ate. Best periods along finan- cial lines: Between Dec. 21 and Feb 15, next June (an excellent month for expansion). July and August. Do be conservative during the forthcoming October and November, Months in which you should note job and (or) business uptrends: September, the afore- mentioned late December- Anna to return to England. Leaving her son in Ireland, she travelled with her daugh- ter to America where her books on India and Siam were published. The Siamese were furious and sent agents to buy up a whole edition of Anna's book on Siam to kee the Americans from reading it. They also refused to pay a legacy left to her by King Re AND MRS. GEORGE CLARK -- On 50th Wedding Anniversary Park Club House on Mill Street. The honored couple was mar- ried at St. George's Church, children, twins, Mrs. : Hunt, (Blanche) and William Clark, and two grand-daughters, Misses Kathy and Laura Hunt, all of Oshawa. The guest book was attended Medical Journal Urges Checkups For 'Pill' Users TORONTO (CP)--The Cana- dian Medical Journal says women usin shou'd receive regular check- ups because of a "slight but contraceptive pills real risk of thrombosis." The journal says in an edito- rial that before prescribing the Pill, doctors should examine thelr patients for any condition that might predispose them to thrombosis, clot in a blood vessel or in one of the cavities of the heart. The conilition can be fatal but the editurial notes that such block- age is quite rare. The warning is based on three preliminary medical stud- les recently completed in Brit- however.|2in which showed a significant Statistical relationship between thrombosis and the use of the en by women of reproductive ge. August 11, 1917. They have two) J. W.|ward Clark, Mrs. Thrombosis results from a| by and Reception Honors Mill Street Pair'??..."ec0°5 ewes st" | Clark. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Parsons presented the pair with a set of captain's chairs on behalf of friends and neighbors, many other gifts were also received. Tea was poured by Mrs. Ed- Ted Bathe, Mrs. Bert Bathe, Mrs. Frank Bathe, Mrs. John Camerson, Mrs. Gar Riggs, Mrs. Arthur Bathe, Mrs. Perc Carter, Mrs. Alfred Spencer and Mrs. Her- bert Bathe. Serving were nieces, a daughter-in-law and Mrs. J, W. Hunt. Of special note were messages of congratulations received from Prime Minister Lester B, Pear- son; Michael Starr, MP; Pre- mier John Robarts and Albert V. Walker, MPP. Guests attended from Brook- lin, Prince Albert, Port Perry, Bowmanville, Cadmus, Scar- borough, Kitchener and Wasaga Beach. OSHAWA TIMES PICTURE RE-PRINTS Available At NU-WAY PHOTO SERVICE 251 King St. &., Oshawe 8 x 10 -- 1.50 each 5x7 -- 1.25 each 20% Discount en Orders of 5 or More Pictures Mongkut. Anna died in 1914 and is buried in Mount Royal ceme- mid-February period, April, mid-May, June and July. Along personal lines: Best cycles for romance: September, with more punch is in demand now says the vice-president of an old French perfume house. Alvin Welzel of Houbigant Perfumes, a firm founded in 1775, says perfumes used to contain 11 to 15 per cent of fra- grant substance but the per- centage now is 50 per cent and it's going to go higher. "Feu de cologne used to be one per cent and it's now three to four per cent." Tororito, Mr Welzel said it's easier nowadays to keep up with changing fashions in per- fume. A century ago there were only a few hundred ingredients available. for manufacture of perfumes; today chemists come Leonowens. tery in Montreal. up with about 38,000 new sub- French Put on ok <n, hang although "we take only a few." More Scent One thing that bothers. Mr. Welzel is that, whereas women In Perfumes usualiy know how to wear per- TORONTO (CP)--Perfume|fume and freshen it during the day, men are reluctant to carry a little cologne in their pockets to restore the scent. may use after-shave lotion, and body cologne, they usually end the day smelling mostly of human body. keep a travelling-sized bottle in the desk drawer at the office." late December (both all-around good periods for all Leoites), next April and May. The bal- ance of 1967 does not promise much in the way of travel, except for short trips, but you can look forward to extremely propitious periods for taking longer journeys next February and (or) during the weeks between May 15 and Sept. 10 of next year. If careful to avoid As a result, although they| friction in close circles during Career School of Hairdressing @ GOVERNMENT LICENSED @ Enrolling Now For Day And Evening Classes BEGINNING SEPTEMBER 5, 1967 FOR INFORMATION CALL; 576-3558 145 KING WEST, OSHAWA such products asjearly March and early June, deodorants|your domestic and social life should prove most harmonious. A child born on this day wil) be endowed with a sparkling persnality, a delightful sense of humor and great versatility in| "It might be a good idea to Interviewed during a visit to/f together mentally and be unaf- she gave up|raid of your boss and your| work. awed by them, accomplish anything." | ENGAGEMENT Mr, and Mrs. Vernon Bickle King of Woodstock announce the engagement of their daugh- ter, Elspeth, to Dalton Ray Woods, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Thompson Woods of Oshawa. The wedding is to take place, Saturday, September 9,| 1967 in Woodstock. psychology. Yhis is where everyone shucks their shoes, sits in a cir- cle and, in the words of clinical psychologist Dr. Lee Pulos of Vancouver, "'we see ourselves as others see us." Dr. Pulos referred to one par- ticipant, a mousey girl whose perscnal appearance could be head down. She told the group she was to have an interview |for a job. | One member told her she would never get it, so they played out the drama of a job interview, with a male member of the group acting as the appli- cant, They acted it out four times before they felt she might have a chance. Dr. Pulos said it made the girl see herself and resulted in a personality change, "group" is the thing now in| |OSHAWA VIC TANNY'S CANADA'S LARGEST "The minute you are over-| you can't! THERE IS A PERFECT AGE FOR CHILDREN . . . when they're too old to cry at night and too young to borrow the car. Don't worry PB about money. You've got en- ough right now to lest you the rest of your life -- un- less you buy some- thing. A lot of trouble in this world Is caused by combin- ing a narrow mind with a wide mouth. me BOB EAKINS Said the secretary to her boss: "I've taken' all the criticism of my work I'm going to take. How do you spell 'quit'? We'll all be better off finan- cially if we act our wage. both the arts and sciences. | | ! | | | | PENNY HORTON GARY HANEWICH Both the young people shown above enrolled at the Oshawa Business College in the Fall Term, September 1966. Both completed their courses early in May and obtained excellent positions. THE SAME OPPORTUNITY AWAITS YOU FALL TERM OPENS SEPTEMBER 5, 1967 Choose from one of these JOB-ORIENTED Courses: EXECUTIVE SECRETARIAL BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION 12 mos. Grade 12 required *12 mos, Grade 12 required Accounting 11 mos, Grade 11 required Secretarial 11 mos. Grade 11 required Steno-Clerical 10 mos. Grade 10 required Junior Clerical 9 mos. Grade 9 required Individual ij 1 4 seal, OPEN SOON | AE aa methods turn out a better job at less cost than it would be worth while to do them at home. Give us o call. | 10 Simcoe St. North, includes: McBEE Accounting and DATA Processing, Stenotype machine shorthand Hy speed Longhand. Dial 725-3375 Gillard | CLEANIT SERVICE LTD. AND FINEST CHAIN QF HFAITH SPa'S She got the job, DRY CLEANING, SHIRT LAUNDERING 7 55 DIAING Fics ceuscseaes Address ..... Clip and mail this coupon for complete details on career courses and Time-Saving Training. What Thanks Do I Get? This may be the case in some homes! But seldom in the home where clever wife sends her carpets and draperies to BAKER'S for their fast, efficient cleaning service! In fact, if you're looking for a compliment tonight, do just that! BAKER'S service is so thorough and revitalizing they're sure hubby will be as pleased as you. Why not call BAKER'S right now! Others are! "Free Pick-Up and Delivery" p----~ "JUST ONE CALL DOES THEM ALL" "--"" "Over 80 Years Experience" BAKER CARPET Cleaning Co. CALL ZENITH 9-9100 We Pay The Charge TORONTO | Distri Toronto Stock Quotations in 2----Odd lot, xd rights, xw--Ex-v from previous Stock Sales Acme Gas 150 Advocate 100 Ang U Dev 34 Armore 20 Arcadia 100 Atl C Cop 13 Bankeno 5 Bethim 20 Black Bay 60 BL Hawk = 25 Bralorne 170 Brov! Reef 15 Brunswk 28 Bunker H 20 Calmor 1B 200 Cam Mine = 810 Camflo 1 c Tung 56 Cc Keely 100 Cc Nisto 51S Can-fer 10 Cantri 50 Captain 15 Cassiar 10 Cent Pat V Chestrvi'e 8 Coch will 20 Coniagas 5 Conigo 15 Con-Key 100 Cc Bell 3712 Cc Callinan $00 Con Fardy 2 Cc Halli 291 Neg 4160 Con Nichol 650 C Rambler 15 © Red Pop 760 Copreorp 100 Cop Fields 36 Cop Man 671 Craigmt 30 Daering 1s D'Aragon 10 D'Elda 265 Denison x Discovry Jor Donal 3900 Dunraine 5 East Sull 2! 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