\ vttawa YWCA | Novel Wall Coverings Raises Question Highlight New Rooms Ot Discrimination By ELEANOR ROSS tion-plece rocms that weren't By CAROLYN WILLETT New model rooms create an practical or even overly attrac- Canadian Press Staff Writer |illusion oF, pate via Sever bas: we. weatmiis ia NTO vali | ow 7 | OTTAWA (CP) -- The Ottawa dling of color an unc TY ents were most in- ooo en i it TR ey ewhat over o sunplh | one Women's Christian Asso- arrangement of furniture and ac-|teresting. One wall, done in a Morningstar's idea of a good way |doing today; gradually and in. [ciation wants community doors | ceccories. Color charm and com- Spanish stone pattern wallpaper to present the science of nutrition|exorably closing the gap between |38 wide open as its own when it|patible pieces are combined ef-|of orange cork, cleverly overlaid to the public in an imteresting the colonel's lady and Judy °0M®S to accepting individuals of fectively. on a Chinese red ground, in- fashion. ; another race. CONVERSATION PIECES trigued all spectators. She is director of the food sec- The YWCA itself provides a "¢ course, as is true with the walls were) tion of the Canadian Association residence where young women of fashion showings there were a covered with grass cloth and also of Consumers, and she was one all races and creeds learn to live so. ciartlers 2 few = conversa with silk wallpaper. : of four experts who took part in happily tooether. But with room : COLORFUL EFFECT a panel discussion at a recent for only 60 residents, the down. A foyer was papered in a bold, b SHULTON conference here for Canadian town YW residence can't accom- ' swirly pattern of receding greens y food editors. modate all comers. cuse for refusing accommoda- printed on a ground of Tejido tex- / 4 Oh BOSS, sill 3 ew sok |" With a list of inspected and ap- tion, Mrs. Baker said. ture. As light struck the paper, res guce sald Mrs. Morniugstar, proved rooms outside the rest yovp oR GROUPS the colors changed and greens, "But because it helps fo keep the (dence, jhe YWCA helps pe ople) The YW residence here is home |tans, golds and white were high- a ee vi he Its pA about some Wo main pro. oy lighted. RR veiling lent - persons--women studen fixture hair the color it was when we| renters refusing to accommodate | rom Bermuda and girls from the|bulbs enhanced the colorful ef- yore Shildsen, it 1s Worlh a see Solered girls or 20 had heen Jeter | West Indies who work in Ottawa fast, on Joo & r las d tic servants. ined glass fixtures "If we thought that by prac- a committee study of the prob. "Loot vear six Bermuda students us ned gi 8 flan as avid 1 tising the principles of good nu- lem, and a special scholarship student bulbs were increasingly utilized Es Se et rs 3 et he rc ed or : - dence. About e West In- ture lines included a new we would study the articles Tndigh Damber jin ites dies group met at the residence Chinese modern group that was avidly," she sggsaed, tion that landlords refusing ac. Weekly for their British West In- most pleasing. Cabinets set vin HONEST ADVERTISING commodation because of colo pe dies Club. framed base were attractive. ion 5: r B 4 1 Mrs. Morningstar Tapped exag- removed from the YW accommo.| Mrs. Baker said Bermuda girls| Cane was used in many furni- gerated advertising clalms, and dation list, and further urged that/ Were given Canadian room-|tyre groupings as well as in win- {suggested that products be| church congregations and groups mates. It helped the newcomers dow treatments, Sliding panels of marked with their best qualities. adjust better and brought them cane shutters gave a cool, un- "Mrs. Consumer can be hood- cluttered look to tall windows and and missionary societies be asked |} 1p di {] _ |into the whole YW group. {winked once by exaggerated t help deal with the problem set the mood for the off-black fin- |claims, but she will not be a re- | ish of the furniture. the West In- Mrs Winnifred Baker, YW The problems of v 3 counsellor, sald in an interview dies §TOUP appear more complex. ; peat buyer, and in the food field Chest-on-chest units continue to that is important. We should get thrive and many pieces, although the association feels it is part of jos DIFFICULT its job to help educate the com-| away from high-sounding phrases ) P Suna com- Many of the West Indies groub joer are larger scaled. and advertising in the abstract, |} Scft, tranquil color pervaded munity in the need for acceptance came here intent on getting new ny" ; ne of the prettiest bed MARY HAWORTH'S MAIL [Frage ia ee chairman | fig one oes fooms we THI OSHAWA TIMES, Pridey, October 2, 1959 7 wood Looks and Nutrition Go Hand In Hand Speaker Says |basket by the boss' wife," she gray did well in a setting of touches of emerald green as & aqua and hydrangea blue with! tonie. Just like fresh flowers... that's what you'll say, too, when you've tried delightful By EDNA BLAKELY Canadian Press Staff Writer said. object is an often-expressed ex- /ollet Water 2 oz. $1.28 und 4 oz. $1.78 {SEE KCO-OPERATION 464) SIZES 2-10 i) WF Fal¥s invitation to pin - up pearls from a heaped - high fasions meets with lavish jewel gleaming mound. Crystal icicles acceptance. Here couture jew- fall fluently from a matching els cambine the sheen of pearl wristlet, while clusters of pearls and the shimmer of pearls and crystals nestle light- erystuls, The mobile pin show- ly on the earlobes. ers a cascade of crystals and --By TRACY ADRIAN of persons on a non-discrimina: raining or finding other employ- tion basis. ment when their stint as domes-| "oon Cer lof nutrition at Macdonald Col- Directoire furniture in misty Globe-Trotting Mate Leaves Matron Desperately Lonely | sumer understanding. "A nutritionist is faced at the {outset with the necessity of trans. | [lating a scientific lingo into everyday terms before he can| {gro couple as boarders, the YW of employment, I {talked her into giving the tenants |a try. | "As a result, the landlady found ity often was not due to color but {the couple charming. And she to lack of |found her other tenants liked also urged that immigration offi- The YW committee report, in| | stating that this lack of opportun- education and training, TWO MODERN STORES IN OSHAWA Mrs. Fram sald that one tics is finished. " |case where a landlady first re- | , found dif- |lege, Montreal, blamed technical ¢ . nciacy re-| They have, however nd language as a barrier to con- @ Dear Mary Haworth: I've been reading your column for six |fused to accept an American Ne-|ficulty in moving to other types years, looking for a problem like mine. But none eppears. So here goes: My husbund travels all over the world in the course of his work, which he loves. This past year he was away six months at a time; and I cat stand it any more! This has been going on since we married, nine years ago; and| though I've always minded ter- ribly, it #s only since my 30th birthday, two years ago, that it seems unbearable. I've begun to doubt his fidelity when he's on the other side of the world; and these doubts are made worse by stories I hear, concerning the conduct of certain of his col leagues. . ; OPEN Va TONIGHT RETAILERS TO THRIFTY canNApians TILL 9 P.M. tics, church, PTA, doing thel,ne effectively to communicate | grubby jobs that others bypass.|n inition information to the ma- | | GAY PARTNERS | This, plus housework and kids, s5nio of the public," he said. By ANNE ADAMS keeps me busy during the week; but oh !those weekends. Lately CHANGING TREND Mrs. Dorothy Dew, associate All the girls love the gay swing of the dress, jaunty bows them, too." | cials carefully outline employ- The fear other tenants might ment opportunities in Canada. I've begun to have dreams--both waking and sleeping -- that I editor of a national women's shouldnt have, and I'm really magazine, told the group that so- wol . cial-econcmic trends start at the Y DON'T FOOL SELF modern supermarket, ay Bh img Bhi Dear T.P.: Sometimes the best The gap between the youngi oo... natern: Half-size dress. | one can "do, in a bad situation housewife and the highly-paid eX" printed Pattern 4641: Chil | that can't be changed, or con- ecutive's wife is closing, she said. dre es o yi i. hig structively abandoned forthwith, "For the first time in our his-| 4 oss takes 1% yards 85-inch; | is simply to work up the courage tory all the home - permanented | so vet requires 1 yard. "5 to look facts in the face And mothers in our country have only "pinteq directions on each pat-| ponder, concisely, just what aught to stretch out a hand to pick upli., part. Easier, accurate | y f the same food that c i . to be done--when, as and if aja packet o ; t| Send FORTY CENTS (40 cents) change can be made, _ |has just been tossed into her in coins (stamps cannot be ac-| As I get the picture, something cepted) for this pattern. Please] is wrong with your marriage. 1! Assuming Ben makes a pitch for print plainly SIZE, NAME, AD: seems you have serious, if 10 the hearthside and gets fired, DRESS, STYLE NUMBER. CAN'T ASK HIM sive, cause to be concerned about| gyi); that's all to the good--if he| Send order to ANNE ADAMS, | Even if I could prevail upon| Ben's hobo design for living, and ji onq¢ to get on the right track|care of The Oshawa Times, Osh-| him to give up his work, which I| the meaning back of it. in the most important undertak-awa, Ontario, Pattern Dept. can't, he would never forgive me| The significant factor, mot to i. of his life, namely, the role for taking hiim away from his be- be overlooked if you want the| ¢"p, pang and fal her. o-- loged career. : truth, jo Jight youl t DB back to/ yy advice is to talk 'turkey to you ¥ b| y in my ible living, is that Ben seems A i y attitude, yom're right. We had|actually to prefer this perennial | Beh on bis Jest A 1 AVE THIS AM! | strain of this half-living; that. We're Not In The Directory l tion and similar in-| "holiday from domesticity" ar-| terests before marriage and I'd/rangement -- rather than make ;.. you and the kids travel Yor... with him, or he cuts out the In what they accomplish, the potency of many of today's drugs is as dramatic as the power that thrusts a giant space rocket into orbit. Because they are so potent, these drugs are prescribed and dispensed in small quantities ~in tiny capsule, tablets and drops. So affective are they that a single dose effects more «rg than a bottle-full of yesteryear's medicines. TG At first consideration you may feel that you pay a lot of money for a little medicine--but measured in terms of § recovery and fewer and smaller medical appreciate that they are the world's biggest bargains, Lt a : world, Wp Sass, all exatses wise, that would keep the family . paid. we e two children| together, 'as a companionable fig anda tab in sub bin: and] unit. Mary Haworth counsels {& nobody fo leave the children with| Don't argue that it cant he --and not a penny to spare on| dome. Of course it can, if Ben trips for me. - {wants to; and if he insists. Whe- My social life stops when Ben|ther he globe trots in the service is away. A woman without a man| of his government, or in the inter-| is absolutely fifth wheel in Sub-|ests of private capital, the fact] urbia_ Anyhow, most of our en-|is that any first-rate employer tertaining i& "shop" --and shop| would respect the right of a valu. closes down when Ben's not here.| able man to be associated with MEANS SHARING his family while doing his job. Of the few waymen I know in my| INTO THE OPEN position, one or two have devel-| Thus, if Ben takes a stand, he oped careers and 'lives of {heir|could obtain eitner a travel al- own" --whatevier that is. It cer-|lowance, to cover the costs of aj tainly isn't may idea of married| gypsy life for his whole house-| life--which inghudes sharing bed. hold. Or a seitled assignment to board and trombles. Speaking of make a stable home Me possible. | troubles, mine always come when| Surely Ben knows that a man, Ben is gone. . . . properly loyal to wife and chil- Please, Mary, don't tell me to|dren, wouldn't continue indefin- fill my life with activities. I'm In itely in a plush routine that leaves activities up te my neck--poli-'them forsaken much of the time. Cherney's 24th 7 through her column, not by mail or personal interview. Write Mer in care of this newspaper. love to go brarre'ling around the appropriate adiustments, career- » travel. Or else. ~~ M.H | Dial RA 8-5661 ned Jos FLANNELETTE GIRLS' 1.98 Little girls' pyjamas, sizes 3- 6. Cosy-warm flannelette, two-piece style. Printed yoke in novelty patterns. Thrift priced. 1 BEAUTY SALON & BARBER SHOP Cutting Small Girls' Hair @ * Specialty Styling by Vera Open Saturday, 9 to 6 969 SIMCOE N. ot SUNSET (acoss fom the North Oshawa Bank) I (SPECIAL) { Cold Wave .. 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