TO LIVE IN OSHAWA Mr. and Mrs. John Douglas Burnett whose marriage was solemnized recently in the par- sonage of Simcoe Street United Church. Formerly Miss Gloria Helen Proctor the bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter E. Proétor and the bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Gor- don Burnett, all of Oshawa. . Photo by Hornsby studio @® Christ Memorial Church W.A. Celebrates 25th Another milestone was marked bh the Woman's Auxiliary of Christ lemorial Church last evening when it celebrated its 25th anni- versary at a turkey supper held in the lower hall of the church. Seated at the head table which was centered with a birthday cake and vases of spring flowers were the president, Mrs. H. W. Ward, the Rev. and Mrs. H. D. Clever- don; Mr. Thomas Hopkins, peoples warden, and Mrs. Hopkins, Mr. Frank Brown, rector's warden, and Mrs. Brown Mrs. A, 8 Evans, and Mrs. James Scarrow, vice presi- dents, Mrs, H. M. Coggins, treas- urer; Mrs. W. G. Corben, Mrs. J. E. Long, Mrs J. B Broadbent and Mrs W R. Fisher past presidents, Mrs George Allchin, Mrs. B. W. Andrews. and Mrs, H. A Twilley, past treasurers. In welcoming the many guests Mrs. Ward mentioned specially the eleven charter members, nine of whom were present, namely, Mrs. George Dayan,m Mrs, J. B. Broad- bent, Mrs. James Scarrow Mrs. W. G. Corben M,rs. J E, Nors- . B. W Andrews Mrs N . A Twilley and Mrs. Jack Cottingham Un- avoidably absent were Mrs, F, M. Williams and Mrs. Fred Ayling. Former members present from out of town were Mrs. E. L. Barn- hart, Brockville; Mrs. Bruce Hall, Kingston; Mrs. George Farncombe, Newcastle; Mrs. George Allchin, Bowmanville and Mrs. D. Miller, Columbus. Some interesting highlights of the WA since its formation were given by Mrs. W. G. Corben who stated that on April 2, 1928, a number of interested Anglican women met at the rectory of Christ Church new parish when it was decided to start afternoon WA for the Church. eetings were held at the homes of various members of the parish as the basement of the new parish was not built. The first presi- was Mrs. R. B. Patterson. The first meeting was held on April 10, 1928, when 30 women join- . The second meeting was held Anniversary on April 17 when it was arranged to open an account at the as $21.00 had already been raised from a sale of home cooking and $42.00 were the proceeds from an afternoon tea. irs were pur- chased for the tent which was us- ed during the summer months whil the basement was being construct- ed. By September an amount of $374.94 was realized and a furnace, stove and small organ were pur- chased for the official opening of the basement. At the second sale of work in 1929 over $700.00 was realized. Pledges were met and a great deal of welfare work carried out and many items purchased to aid the WA in the Church. By 1930 $1,175.00 had been handed over to the wardens. For some years the average at- tendance was 12, now it is 50. When the upper structure of the church was built a stained glass window was the gift of the WA and a credence table and sedelia chair were given in memory of its first president, Mrs. R. B. Patter- son. Recently the WA had helped a student who was studying for the ministry and a daughter of one of its members was in training as a deaconess at the Anglican training school in Toronto. A gift of new pew frontals had been' given for the new pews. Now having two other organiza- tions in connection with the curch the WA was enabled to concen- trate more on its original work and aim: "To work and pray for missions; to awaken zeal among the women of the parish; to dif- fuse knowledge of missionary work." ® The soloist of the evening was Mrs. Buce Hall, president of the Kingston WA who sang 'Thanks be to God' and "I'll Walk Beside You," accompanying herself on the pianp. Mrs, W. G. Corben gave two readings. The dinner was served by mem- bers of the Afternoon Guild. THE FAMOUS hu. Built for Rugged Wear & those Suffering with Foot Trouble Garagemen, Fectory Workers, efc. widths. Sizes: Narrow Medium Wide For proper fit the SERVICE BOOT Is | made in Narrow, Medium and Wide 6-12 6-12 7-12 Sede. SERVICE BOOT The additional support and correct balance built into this famous boot takes the foot strain out of @ day's work for the man who really uses his foot in heavy types of work, - DANCEY'S 18 SIMCOE SOUTH DIAL 5-1833 "THE MIXING BOWL Hello Homemakers-to-be! the summer bride of '53, will day-dreaming about keeping house. Your mind's eye may see your new kitchen with such photograpic clearness that you have mentally wrung out the dish cloth, put the pretty dishes back on the self and settled back to enjoy it. But face to face with your first actual shop- trip for utensils you won't w where to begin! Soon, some- one (planning a shower) will be quizzing you as to what you want in kitchenware. The kitchen section of your hard- ware is a fascinating place. Look around and decide on your prefer- ence in material and color, then you may dream "out loud" to those who ure about what you would to have, TAKE A TIP 1. If you and your fiancee decide on the stove, then you can take the measurements of the oven as a guide to cookie sheets, roast pan- and drop cake tins since cookie sheets should be 2 inches less in each dimension' than the oven shelf. The size of muffin pans and layer cake pans sould per- mit placing two on one shelf with a little space at ends and sides of oven. 2. With a rangette the best buy will be a set of saucepans in steam- er design or wedge shape, and small baking pans are advisable. 3. Your choice of kitchenware should be considered from a stand- point of cost, durability, care re- quired, - satisfactory performance and appearance. 4. Efficient cooking pans fit the small or large electric element, have straigt sides and lids that set into the rim. SUGGESTED LIST OF KITCHENWARE A. Cutlery Bread knife, carving knife, util- ity knife, 2 vegetable knives, mear fork, pair shears (all stainless steel), egg lifter, can opener, bot- tle opener, knife sharpener, set of cookie cutters, set of measuring spoons, wooden spoon, cutlery box and a set of stainless steel knives, forks and spoons. Desirable Cutlery: Pastry blen- der, krimper, 2 funnels, egg slicer, set skewers, cookie press, vege- table peeler, tongs onion chopper nut mincer skimmer, ladel, apple bank | corer, spatula, biscuit cutters, pan- cake turner, extra set measuring spoons. B. Mixing Utensils Nest of mixing bowls 1 cup and 1 pint measures, rotary egg beat er, potato masher, grater set, wire strainer, reamer, bread board, rolling pin food chopper flour sift- er, rubber scraper. Desirable mixing utensils: Set of measuring cups pastry cloth and cover, 2 pitchers, 2 scoops, port- able electric mixer, potato ricer, puree, household scales, beverage shaker, C. Top of Range Utensils 3 saucepans (1 qt. 2 qt., 3 qt. size) with inset lids, double boiler, frying pan or chicken fryer, coffee pot, pressure saucepan, steamer, electric kettle, tea pot. Desirable pans: 1 griddle, elec- tric waffle iron, automatic toaster, preserving kettle with rack, fry kettle or electric casserole, and 4 ramekins, custard cups, jelly roll pan, 2 pie plates, cake rack, min- ute minder. Desirable: Anoter baking sheet, loaf pan, square pan and cake rack, timbale molds, tube pan (spring bottom), 3 fruit pans, lay- er pans, 8 x 10 baking pan, oven- proor platter and meat thermome- E. Storage . Set of refrigerator dishes with covers, set of oven glass dishes, set of canisters, bread box, 2 thermos, plastic covers. Desirable: Individual molds, ring mold, picnic kit, vegetable bag or container, juice container. F. Cleaning Utensils 12 tea towels (linen), 6 hand Some Suggestions in Kitchenware For the Summer Bride of 1953 towels or paper towelling, oven be | mitts, dish pan, vegetable brush, broom, dust pan, mop and pail. Desirable: Pot holders, sink strainer, dish drainer, rubber mat, oven mat, dish mop soap box, radiator brush, scrub brush, dust mop garbage container, THE QUESTION BOX Mrs. K. T. asks: Can evaporated milk that has spoiled in an open tin be used as sour milk? Answer: No. While an open can may spoil it will not turn sour. Mrs. N. Mc. asks: Why should a package cake mix result in cakes with lumps and cracks in the centre? Answer: Take the following pre- cautions: (1) measure the liquid accurately in measuring cup. (2) do not beat too long. (3) when batter is poured into pan gently drop each pan, held 3 inches above the table. (4) after baking, leave pans upright on the cake rack un- til Jukewarm then turn out on rack. Anne Allan invites you to write to her in care of this paper. Send in your suggestions on homema- ing problems and watch this col- umn for replies. ROUGE IS WHERE YOU PUT IT Latest place Is over the temples to the hairline and a little over the outer part of the eyelid. Very fetching and young-making. For a pleasant climax to a family drive, you'll save more than enough to pay for your gas . . . BY SHOPPING AT GLECOFF'S IGA SUPER MARKET 174 Ritson Rd. South Open Every Evening until 10 p.m. WATCH FOR OUR IGA AD IN TOMORROW'S TIMES-GAZETTE They come from the east and they come from the west. They come from all streets afar to shop et our store. For velues galore! In taxis, by bus and by car. Shop and Save Every Day at our Everyday Low Prices! As on added ettraction! With every purchase of $3.00 and over you get a FREE DRAW on a Rogers-Majestic Radio. Drawn the last Saturday in the month. GLECOFF'S IGA SUPER MARKET 174 Ritson Rd. South NEW -- FROM late SIMCOE S. AT ATHOL TISSUE «An imported sewirfg treat to tailor and wear . . . Choose it now for children's clothes, gay curtains yarns in the most stunning WARD'S spring and summer dresses, . Woven from fine combed color arrangement of plaids and checks we have yet shown . . . 10 beautiful colors and patterns . . « 36" wide. ONLY' YARD DIAL 5-1151 YOU. THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Wednesday, April 15 1988 » Can Help Wipe Out DREADED CANCER . By Giving Generously in the Campaign For... The killer Cancer is no respector of persons , , . it can strike anyone. It can be licked, but it will take the enthusiastic co-operation of everyone. We must learn more about it. . . . research is needed to defeat it , . . those that are suffering cancer now must be helped. All this takes money, but it will be the best investment you ever made. You know someone with cancer , . . you know their suffering . . . Can you say "no" to a canvasser when he asks for a generous contribution? CANCER MUST BE BEATEN . . . DO YOUR PART NOW! » RESEARCH « EDUCATION « WELFARE ® Sponsored by the Oshawa and District Shrine Club Every Cent That You Can Give Will Help + To Save a Life . . . It May Be Yours! HAVE YOUR CONTRIBUTION READY Bring Your Donations To 110 KING ST. WEST -- OSHAWA or Mail to P.O. Box 57, Oshawa Officials of the Ontario County Unit of the Can. Cancer Society CAMPAIGN CHAIRMAN, WILLIAM DUNCAN HONORARY PRESIDENT -- W. A. WECKER, O\B.E. HONORARY VICE-PRESIDENT -- T. L. WILSON HONORARY TREASURER -- T. HOPKINS ® ADVISORY COMMITTEE © MISS MARY BOURNE, Chairman GEORGE ANSLEY PRESIDENT -- L. F. McLAUGHLIN SECRETARY -- N. W. PURDY TREASURER -- ARTHUR.CROCKETT ® WOMEN'S COMMITTEE o MRS. O, D. FRIEND, Chairman DR. DORCAS LOVELL