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The Oshawa Times, 20 Jul 1960, p. 8

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omen Jo Aldwinckle, Women's Editor Dial RA 3-3474 8 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, July 20, 1960 Marlene Dawson, Gary Morgan Married Recently In Oshawa The Rev. Mervin A. Bury offi-| centred with pink baby chrysan- ciated at the marriage, at King themums, ven . Mr. Ronald Hotston, Street United Church, recently, of best man, and ushering were Marlene Margaret Ann, daughter|\1- Morgan Sears, Toronto, Mr. of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Daw-| Roger Pye, Whitby, and Messrs. son of Oshawa, to Mr. Gary Robert Eagleson and Donal Mec- Charles Morgan, son of Mr. and Clennan of Oshawa. Mrs. Albert Morgan of Barrie. The wedding reception was held Th: wedding music was played| at the Flying Dutchman Motor b> Mr. Rhyddid Williams and Motel in Bowmanville. Receiving, Mr. Donald Allman sang, ""The|the bride's mother was gowned in Wedding Prayer", "The Lord's Dior blue silk chiffon with Prayer", and "O Perfect Love". |a closefitting white hat and Given in marriage by her matching accessories. Her cor- father, the bride wore a floor- sage was white carnations edged len-th, split level gown of silk!in pink. The bridegroom's mother organza with a bodice of guipure| assisting, was in a ch gne 1 encrusted with seed pearls. lace sheath with a large picture Her three-quarter length veil was hat, and matching accessories. held by a tiny crown and she Her corsage was of gold carna- carried a bouquet of white feath- tions edged in bronze. ered carnations centred with pink] The newly wedded pair left by| sweetheart roses. |plane for a honeymoon in Ber-| Miss Diane Hubbell of Oshawa, muda. For travelling the bride was maid of honor. Miss Barbara wore a white suit with spring Greig, of Oshawa, Miss Sally green accessories and a corsage Somers of Peterborough, Mrs. of pink feathered carnations. The Ronald Hotston of Picton and|couple will reside at 315 Sague- Miss Evelyn Dawson of Oshawa|nay avenue, Oshawa. were bridesmaids. They wore] Out of town guests were pres- identical dresses of pale turquoise| ent from Colborne, Warkworth, organza over taffeta. Their|Picton, Peterborough, 'Whitby, matching beaded caps held a|Scarboro, Toronto, Oakville, { Ot The Compromised Widow short veil. They carried nosegays| Stratford, Sharron, Sudbury and DEAR MARY HAWORTH: I him if I chose to, as I am shap-|0f white feathered carnations' Boston. give hearty endorsement to your|ely, youthful looking and usually|- TE awa. The marriage is to take place on Saturday, August 20, in St. Paul's Presbyterian Church.--Photos by Ireland. [Don't Let Child |Taste The Flowers | | Flowers look good enough to |eat, to children! They're chronic : {nibblers and almost anything Mrs. John Sparling, Dale and and everything goes into thelr Richard of Montreal, are spend-!| . ing a vacvation with her mother, Mouths. But it could be danger- Mrs. E. A. Lovell, at her summer |°uS to put flowers that have been home at Bonniebrae Point. sprayed with DDT in the mouth, Needless to say, both children The Misses Florence and Rose 2nd adults can become ill if they Hawkes, assisted by Mrs. Albert|SWallow DDT or other garden Wilson, Miss Etta Holmes and|SPrays or dusts. Miss Cora Cruse, entertained the| If your child psychology fails to members of the Business and|discourage the youngsters from Professional Women's Club at a|putting treated flowers in their dessert party on Monday eve-/mouths and making themselves ning, July 18, in honor of Mrs. i!' look on the container of the Vera Sanderson, a member of the|chemical you used for the instruc. announced today to Mr. Hubert Oliver Gillard, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Johnston, all of Osh- The engagement of Marlene Jean, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. W. (Bob) Crowells is being PERSONALS Vancouver, are visiting her par- ents Mr. ard Mrs. Alfred Met- calfe, King street east. auvale Longo and Rosina Longo | Mr. Stravato. Nino Zingone is are the son and daughter of | the son of Mr. and Mrs. Emilio Mr, and Mrs. Lorenzo Longo | Zingone of Italy, The newly of Oshawa. Emidia Stravato is | wedded couples will live in | the daughter of Mrs, Francesco Oshawa, Stravato of Italy and the late | --Photos by Mary's studio were married at the same time. Pictured on the left, Pasquale Longo took as his bride, Emidia Stravato, and Rosina Longo became the bride of Nino Zingone. Pas- Czech Refugee To Study On Scholarship In Italy MONTREAL (CP) -- The task gather and sister went to Nor- of learning fluent Italian by au-|way, where they lived for three tumn is not unduly disturbing to|years. Eva thereupon learned Eva Kubikova. | Norwegian. As one of six Canadian stu-| tv, i 1g dents who won Italian Ve si iD SHE HEV I advice to G. Y., the lonely widow|taken to be about 35. ment scholarships for a year'sits college immediately. "But at|V1o has allowed herself fo drift| He is sweet, lively, thoughtful, study in Italy, Eva will begin/the time I could not speak any i0to an unsavory affair. Her dil-|considerate, and--as I phrase it In a double wedding recently | Longo, at Holy Cross Roman Catholic | Church a brother and Pasquale Longo and Rosina Miss Josephine Bellew of Otta wa, formerly of Oshawa, is guest at the home of Mrs, Fre McBrien, RR 2, Whitby. Miss Helen Willard entertained the members of the executive of the Oshawa and district Register- ed Music Teachers' Association following a meeting held on Mon- day evening at her home on Tennyson avenue, at which Mrs. Charles Naylor presided. Mrs. Eileen Wilson, RR 2, Whitby, was in Ottawa last week- end where she attended the Adey- Moffat wedding. sister, MARY HAWORTH'S MAIL Readers Re-Open The Case medical studies in Rome in No-|English so I had to go to high/émma, plus your advice, paral-| 'eagerly standing on the Fomber, R ve th | school instead," says Eva. leis my Jpesionce Some 18 yee mestioid of life." Occasionally he ns to arrive there six : ago; and I can tell you, it works! |dates a girl hi ; but nd. She graduated - second in her| g is age; but spends weeks early so that she can prac ase Zatvoted later. To meet| With me, as with G. Y., the more time with me--coming for Has ber alias a0 exes tional | the requirements for a Bachelor(vacuum and confusion engen- | Visits, often bringing ice cream linguist. Born in et fof Avis doctor of Varjmopoiisidercy a |" sali wouiriuatioas, she was among the children who| College here, Eva then began to|death made me easy prey for the oo \ETIMES LONELY survived the massacre of Lidice| Study Latin at night. She also first "wolf at my door' who of-|™ : in 1942 and were deported toStudied French language and lit- fered male companionship, in the| He is a small town boy who bi oe epo: hot. Erature. {loneliness so recently and shock-|8raduatec from college last year, Germany. Her father was shot, |ingly created by death has a job here, and probably is a as were all the men in the vil- NOT DIFFICULT 1|bit lonely at times. His room- lage. Her mother was sent to a «ys. a | After a siege of conflict, I} : ti | "Italian as languages go is not|t,rned to my pastor, and together | Mate is away weekends, and most sonceniration camp. | difficult," says Eva. "Once you|we evaluated the import of what|Sundays he visits 'me. I think LEARNED GERMAN [Rew 8 Lew languages you havely ooo doing, thus strengthening |°f myself as his "Jonesville By the time mother and daugh-|little difficulty in picking up an-l;y resolve to terminate the re- cy { mother" as well as his friend; ter were reunited in Czechoslo-|other one. : lationship at any cost (here is the|2nd am always glad to see him. Eva, like the five other Cana-|decisive factor, I think). I was vakia after the war, young Eval {T plan to invite a pretty young spoke fluent German. |dian students selected for schol-|pelped to find ways and means|Sil I know to dinner to meet After they were forced to go to|arships, will have her boat fare to follow through on this decision, him, some day soon. Germany again, this time as ref-|paid to and from Italy by the|py a cleansing renewal of confi-| My advice to the smitten wi- You are invited by the Social Department to send in any little items of interest. News of teas, surprise parties, showers, anni- versaries and comings and go- ings are always very acceptable and for which there is no charge. Please write or telephone RA 3-3474 local 18. Mrs. George Martin and son, Charles, Mrs. J. E. Denyer and con, Paul, and Mrs. Fred Fern- ley and Michael and Judith are guests at Rockwynn Lodge, Burks Falls. Mrs. Stefan Liszkowski and daughters, Marta and Andrea of club, who is leaving shortly tol|tions for relief. take up residence in Toronto. The party was held at the home| of the Misses Hawkes, Mary new work and home, Miss Grace street. During the evening, Mrs, | Anderson, on behalf of the club, Eileen Wilson, president of the|presented the guest of honor wich club, expressed the regret of thea beautiful pin and earring set. club to Mrs. Sanderson, that she Miss Marie Shantz expressed the was leaving Oshawa and extend.|thanks of those present to the ed to her very best wishes from Misses Hawkes and 'their all the members for every suc-|ants for the lovely party and eve. cess and future happiness in her|ning. BUDGET TERMS Si GLAZIER'S SUMMER CLEARANCE Coating Prevents | ugees from their homeland, Eva, |Italian government. She will re-|jence in life and myself. |dow, as regards her May-Decem- her mother and her new step-|ceive about $100 a month living| . . yse ber passion, is to try "to ort S allowance in addition'to her uni Essentials For Good Homemaker OTTAWA (CP)--Girls are not born magically endowed with all versity fees and books. medicine her career, says: {HARDENS WOMEN The realization that drove me The students are free to choose(to these restorative measures the courses they wish to take and |was my awareness that I was on may attend the university ofithe way to becoming an "affair- their choice. | worn" embittered woman; for 1 knew that moral default can so easily become a habit pattern, Eva, who has decided to make the "Insight, foresight, virtues and graces" required of a good homemaker, says the Canadian Association of Consumers. Its monthly bulletin says the skills required to be a good wife and mother must be acquired and adds: "Let our nation's educators take heed lest we become the lamentable victims of an intel lectual snobbery which overlooks the tremendous importange of universal training for future homemakers and consumers." It" mentions as essential the qualities of a good cook, nutri- tionist, child- and husband - psy- chologist, economist, teacher, nurse, interior decorator, hostess and manager. "As soon as wedding vows are exchanged the bride is respon- sible for the physical health, moral tone, spiritual insight and economic stability of one of the country's integral units which will determine the ultimate char- acter of the nation itself. "These highly-skilled jobs must be learned. . . . If they are not learned before marriage, danger- ous shoals may wreck the ship. If they are never learned, the home that results becomes, al- most inevitably, a national lia-| bility rather than a national as- set, producing irresponsible, sel- fish, delinquent and even danger- ously-criminal citizens." and that the worth of human life is the sum total of its response ito events. So of course I would become a "hard" woman if I per- sisted in self-damaging action. I was very fortunate in having a pastor who was a vital and |realistic person, capable of ac- cepting human frailty with equ- animity. If G. Y. is not so blessed at present, I suggest she search for a clergyman. thus endowed, as the choice of confidante is of extreme importance, in my opin- ion. an antagonistic parting, may observe that hard feelings won't be a problem with a philandering married man. Piqued or no, his i |first concern is to save face at # |home, so he's hardly in a posi- tion to give trouble. I am happily remarried and the affair is but a remote memory. Too many years of full joyous living have intervened, to credit it with any reality.--F. A. . Plans are being made today for the marriage of Joanne Carol, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, James A. Barron of Osh- awa, to Mr. Royton George Gorham, son of Mr. and Mrs P. Gorham of Toronto. The wedding is to take place "in First Baptist Church on Satur- | The J day, August 20, |situation. I am a spinster, 43, | having a pleasant association MAY-DECEMBER LOVE DEAR MARY HAWORTH: I am interested in the 39-year-old |widow's love (her 'first love," she says) for a young man, 23; and your evaluation. NEWLYWEDS Pictured after their wedding recont.y in Albert Street Unit- ed Church are Mr. and Mrs, Bernard George Sharpe. For | merly Alorine Bethel Adair Forint 3 the bride is the | with a young man, 23. I am not in love with him, nor he with me. But as he, too, is somewhat girl- shy (as you said of the other lad), I probably could exploit Apropos G. Y.'s wish to avoid] There is some similarity to my| men her own age--though I grant you it isn't easy. Her romantic rhapsodies about her student roomer's beautiful eyes; ete., sound a bit foolish, and stem from loneliness, I imagine, that could be dispelled in more suit- able ways.--C. S. HITS PREGNANT WIFE? | DEAR MARY HAWORTH: |What do you think of a man who {will strike his pregnant wife? |This man has temper tantrums, |pounds with his fists on any- |thing; won't sit and talk sens- |ibly. Maybe you can get through to him.--A. B BEASTS ARE BETTER Dear A. B.: A man who strikes his pregnant wife is an |abnormality in nature, a psycho- path -- without conscience and compassion, probably. He is cer- tainly not a rational man, in the full meaning of the word. Even the beasts wouldn't claim him as kin, In the animal kingdom, ruled by instinct rather than reason, the male beast instinctively pro- Celebrating her first birth- day today is Heather Ann Brough who is seen with her brother, four-year-old Edward Gordon. Heather and Teddy are the children of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Brough, Wilson road north, They are the grand- wi 4 mr : "THIS IS SISTER'S BIRTHDAY" children of Mr. and Mrs, Jef- frey Brough, Madoc, and Mrs. Malcolm Bradshaw, Shannon- ville, and great-grandchildren of Mr. James Spicer, Flinton, Ontario. and Mr. Richard Ib- botson, Colborne, Ontario. --Photo by Hornsby SOCIAL NOTICE tects his mate and their young during the reproductive season. A psychopath usually is a hope- less case, because his mind is closed to help. However, psychia- tric care may 'normalize' those who co-operate.~M. H. (Mary Haworth counsels| {through her column, not by mail [or personal interview. Write her in care of this newspaper). HOUSEHOLD HINT Rub the bottoms of barbecue pots and pans with a cake of soap before using them. When you wash them, the smoke stain ENGAGEMENT and Mrs. A. W. (Bob) Crowells wish to announce the engagement of their daughter, Marlene Jean, to Mr. Hubert Oliver Gillard, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Johnston, all of Osh- awa. The marriage is to take place in St. Paul's Presbyterian Church on Saturday, August 20, at 3 o'clock. Mr marriage will take place at First Baptist Church on Saturday, Aug- ust 20 at 4 p.m. ENGAGEMENT Mr. and Mrs. Fred Holroya of Hampton wish to announce the engagement of their youngest daughter, Eileen May, to Mr. Lionel James Hickey, son of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Hickey of Osh- awa. The wedding is to take Splitting Of Nail There is nothing so annoying as splitting, breaking fimger| nails; they catch in everything one touches besides looking un-| sightly. The condition of our nails| is an indication of our state of health because nails, like our hair, are an outgrowth of the skin. Our nails are affected by the same conditions that affect the general surface of the skin, but a nail may be broken, cut in two or lost completely through injury, without affecting its re-growth. | provided thai the matrix, which| is the root of the nail, remains| undamaged. The matrix is situ-| ated between the visible half- moon and the first joint of the finger. Care must be taken in pushing back the cuticle in the region of the half-moon, since a too vigorous effort here may] affect the growing nails. I There is a new product on the| market which has been specially designed to reinforce the nail. It is applied like a nail polish, al- though it is not a nail polish. Upon application it bonds itself instantly to the nail surface and in so doing, helps to harden and strengthen the nail, thus pre- venting splitting, peeling, crack- ing nails. It does not claim to cure splitting, peeling nails but it will prevent the condition while place on Saturday, August 6, 1960, at 10.30 o'clock in St. Joseph's Roman Catholic Church, Bowmanville. you have it on. Naturally it] should be applied before nail polish and gives you relief from this very distressing condition. {egy |Z== "Glozier's are clearing their entire stock of Summer ] merchandise at low, low prices. Below are a few of «a the mony savings as advertised in yesterday's Oshawa Times. If you still have your copy, please look, it up. ni 688 crirrrenenees OR eee. 899 I reeeer. 1198 99° a 23.00 SR | 59° And Many More Savings . . . See Them Today at Sead had Ql ® LADIES COTTON DRESSES As low as BETTER SUMMER DRESSES As low es LADIES BATHING SUITS As low eos LADIES SUMMER CASUAL SHOES Clearing at. GIRLS SUMMER DRESSES As low es GIRLS PEDAL PUSHERS Reduced to . . : . GIRLS SUMMER CASUAL SHOES Reduced to ® MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE Sport Shirts BOYS CHINO PANTS Reduced to ® BOYS SHORTS Reduced to [2c] = oc ad Ske co 4 BW ---- cv 139000 EN Ty 498 SIMCOE S. (Across from Simcoe South Scheel) BUDGET TERMS ENGAGEMENT Mr. and Mrs. James A. Barron| of Oshawa wish to announce the| engagement of their eldest daugh- ter, Joanne Carol, to Mr. Royton George Gorham, s~n of Mr. and will come off easily. Mrs. P. Gorham, of Toronto. The "THE STARS SAY By ESTRELLITA {FOR TOMORROW Except for family and -house- hold matters, some adverse plan- |etary influences affect this day. |Be careful in business and finan- |cial interests, and don't count too \much on social affairs or the |furtherance oi romance. FOR THE BIRTHDAY If tomorrow is your birthday, your horoscope indicates that you should make excellent headway in job matters during the coming year; also fine monetary gains especially during August, Novem- ber, early December and the first six months of 1961. Valuable so- cial contacts, opportunities to travel and contentment in attrac- tive surroundings are presaged for August, January and next May. Avoid extravagance during September, late December and March, however. You may have to guard against emotional stress in late February, but this you can do if you will relax, and resolve to look upon obstacles in your path as mere challenges to be met and bested! Look for an exceptionally good business opportunity in Jan- {uary. And, if you happen to be daughter of Mr. and i..s. Roy- |engaged in a do don Kenneth Adair of Oshawa your best in October. A child and the bridegroom is the born on this day will be thrifty grandson of Mrs. Ethel Sharpe and practical, but will be un: of Trenton. /} reasonably jealous of others 1 --Photo" sy Mary's studio 'times. . SHOP WOOLWORTH'S FIRST 4 DRAWERS 6 DRAWERS UTILITY CABINETS $1.29 $1.49 FOR PINS, SNAPS, BUTTONS, NEEDLES, ETC. Shop in Comfort in our Air-Conditioned Store il OPEN FRIDAY NIG HT UNTIL 9 P.M. Thursday morning sharp Dancey's shoe sale will With lots of shoes, bargains galore, They're all displayed inside the store, On Simcoe Street South, Of Downtown Oshawa's The Athol Street lot for Then to our store you will be close, Toke lots of time to choose your shoes You serve yourself in thi And because the reducti No exchanges, no refun ay. at ten, begin, the very heart busy mart. parking use, s sale of shoes, ons are so great, ds we must state.

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