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The Oshawa Times, 10 Oct 1961, p. 9

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Table Settings Should Harmonize With Food One of our topflight industrial designers, famous for his table- ware designs and settings, has distinct ideas about table set- tings. Since he has specialized in excellent design at prices that most of us can afford, his ideas apply to the average household. SET THE STAGE He thinks that table settings should be approached just as a stage setting would be prepared. This designer loathes monot- ony--as do most homemakers. But how often do we do any- thing about it? A meal, to be really success ful, apart from its nutritional content and balance, should be approached from two directions --first the food, then the table setting. The designer maintains| that these should be harmo- nious. TABLE "WARDROBE" He advocates a real "ward-| | robe" of table settings, espe-| cially a variety of serving dishes. And when the plates,| cups, bowls and platters have something of the character of the food being served, the mea! | will be doubly enjoyed. For instance, lacquer bowls with horn spoons give character and interest to Oriental dishes.| Rough pottery casseroles plus! large wooden spoons add some-| thing to casserole dishes. | Baskets for hot breads, anti-| que soup tureens or copper ket- tles for soups and heart-shaped dishes with fancy silver spoons| for desserts all have an unmis- takable harmony. The color of plates, glassware and serving dishes shou'd be| chosen to harmonize with the colors of the food served. SENSIBLE PRICES The stores are full of delight- ful tableware at sensible prices. And the variety stores have a wonderful stock of items for table settings. So there is no need to invest much money when shopping for china and glassware. Accessorizing a table can be as much fun as accessorizing clothes. There is really no ex- cuse for sinking into monotony, MICHAEL Son of Mr. and Mrs. William Harnden, Norwood Court is Michael William. Michael celebrated his first birthday on August 15. He is the grand- son of Mr. and Mrs. George Sheridan of Oshawa and Mr. and Mrs. Elgie Harnden, Bow- manville. --Photo by Ireland had a new, bright red wagon with great glee. screamed objection, but the wagon. FORCED TO SHARE How To Help A Child Share His Playthings At a picnic place once I saw a father with his son, four, who The little lad was proudly hav- ing fun with this wagon until an- other tot with his father came along, approaching the wagon At once the wagon - pwiet s father tried to get him to share Persuasion , failing, the own- er's father proceeded to force his son to share, even paddling the lad. But his son only grew raged. Wisely the father of the second boy soon told his own son not to touch the wagon, and this lad obeyed. Then he led his boy away. The wagon - owner's father would have been wiser if he had explained to the second boy and his father that this was a brand- new wagon and that he believed his son would be willing to share its use by and by. If he had waited for some while his lad would have probably done so. But even if he would not, the issue should not have been forced. Senator Thomas Dodd of Con forum to air the possible ill ef: fect on children of TV pro and horror. programs are harmful to chil dren, and do contribute to de linquency and crime, are ar rayed against the forces of the the air that belongs to the pub lic. LODGES AND SOCIETIES (DAUGHTERS OF ENGLAND The regular meeting of The Daughters of England, "Em- press of India" Lodge 28 was (held in the Orange Temple. Worthy president, Sister E: Taylor, presided with vice- president, Sister Edna Huband| | assisting. | | The devotional period was led| {by Sister Ethel Cockerham in! {the absence of the Chaplain. | A welcome was given to visit- ors from Prince Albert Lodge! Tips On Storing Fresh Vegetables From The Garden If your house basement has a temperature range of 55 to 65 degrees Fah., and is fairly dry, |you can store tomatoes, pump- __|kins and squash. Any cool, dry dith| location is ideal for storing dry beans and peas. A lot of tomatoes are still out |in the garden at the time of the ~ Save these from Ni freezing by picking and plac- |ing them in the basement to Select only the fruits first frost. ripen. before this committee.' one by Dr. Albert Bunda o Stanford University, violence displayed twice much aggression as those no exposed to it. Another report was the testi Msgr. Joseph E. Scheider, di rector of the Youth Council o television had become a stand ard household item. Teenage Crimes Cited As Stemming From TV The Senate juvenile delin- quency committee, headed by necticut, has provided a public grams of crime, murder, gore The forces who believe such broadcasting companies who are| fattening their purses with these| kinds of programs which pollute The press has been giving generous space to the testimony Among the press reports was showing that children who watched TV mony of the Right Reverend the National Catholic Welfare Conference. He said it was hard to dismiss the fact that crime increased 98 per cent between 1950 and 1960, during which time tee, to the press reporting its hearings, and to the special writ- ers on TV for leading newspa- pers, the public is growing aroused as never before over the many programs of violence, gore and horror on TV. Parents who really care about the number and kind of TV pro- grams of violence that the broadcasting companies are sending into their homes should subscribe to the NAFBRAT Quarterly, 882 Victoria Avenue, Los Angeles 5, California, for $2.50 a year. NAFBRAT is the "National Association for Better Radio and Television." (My reprint, Our Children, TV and the Church, may be had by sending a self-addressed U.S. DON'T COMMAND the stage with loving patience when he does. . THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, October 10, 1967 NEW MONSTER? KESWICK, England (CP)-- Scotland's legendary Loch Ness monster has a rival south of the border. People have re- ported seeing a creature in a Cumberland lake and described it as 13 feet long, with three humps on its back and a py- thon's head. A team of frogmen investigated and found only six golf balls and a fishing rod. YY WOOLWORTHS uper Bakery Specials BAKED FRESH DAILY IN OUR OWN KITCHEN! to win the neighbor child grad- k 4 ually to share some of his toys with your daughter, when you would strongly applaud his doing so. (My bulletins, "The Very Sel- fish Child" and "Tot Learning To Be Sociable," may be had by sending a self-addressed U.S. stamped envelope .0 me in care of this newspaper.) Don't command the tot to share. Ask him to do so and set violence on TV if the father or mother watches these programs, especially while the children are present? A. No. If parents were to boy- cott these programs their chil- dren would be more ready to do so, too. : PROPER THAWING PARENTS' QUESTIONS Best place to thaw frozen Q. Is it reasonable to forbid|poultry is the refrigerator, al- children to view programs of lowing five hours per pound. so he might choose py and by 10 share. Generously applaud him Suppose your little child shares and his playmate does not. A Minnesota mother writes: "I am having quite a prob- lem with the boy next door, who is three years old and refuses to share his toys. "My little girl is three, and I have been trying very hard to teach her to share her things with her friends which, I must say, she is very good about. However, she wants to know why she has to share her toys with this boy, when he never shares his things with her." Here's my reply in part: Suppose you let your little daughter, as the neighbor child comes in, put away some of her | own toys she prizes highest. If | he asks for some he had been, playing with, your daughter » might say to him, "They are|p mine, I put them away." Later, if she chooses to bring | them back and let him share them, praise her. Yet she will know she has a right to her own possessions and the other child will see that she chooses to share or not share. This will seem reasonable to your child. RESPECT OWNERSHIP Before long each of these chil- vVvVevw | | d Delicious -- Home Style New Reci AUTUMN SPICE dren may choose to share his or | her things more and more, so | Special ! long as each owner feels sure SPECIAL PRICES ALL THIS WEEK !! This Week ! his or her ownership will be re- spected. | With slow, quiet words of per- | suasion you might also be able Special, This Week! FY VS FV WYN stamped envelope to me In care of this newspaper.) : PARENTS' QUESTIONS Q. We promised our son, | that when he had saved half the| amount to buy a bicycle, we| would pay the rest so he could| buy it. But with a third of the| price saved, he wants us to buy it now and let him gradually pay his part later. | A. Hold firmly to your agree-| ment. Don't expect a child to| pay for a dead horse. The Smartest Person Is Not | f t f AT'S GREAT NEWS FOR HOME OWNERS !! Oshawa Public Utilities CASES CITED He cited the case of a boy who, rejected by a girl as a weak- ling, raped and murdered a 16- year-old girl, after seeing on TV| {spread out on a table. Discard/how men proved their strength. | read by secretary, Sister Doris| » Sist |any that may be rotting. Light; He also told of a teen-age boy McDonald, also thank you cards Er |who, after watching a moronic| and letters. Reports of various|\S NOt essential. Do not let the Tv A tation] : [tem . character enjoying sadistic committees were given. perature go below 55 de: os "mutilated his own body. Final arrangments were SD OF Shove 70 degrees. "I lay this case directly to made for the penny sale on! umpkins and squash must television," the clergyman said Tuesday, Oct. 17, at 8 o'clock, | % fully mature before going At the same session, Abraham {members were asked to have|into storage. Cut them from the , "piicoff, Secretary of Health, their donations In early. |vines, leaving the stem on.|Eqycation and Welfare, urged |Pile them in some warm loca-|the TV industry: : During the business session, the Worthy President of Prin-| tion for about 2 weeks so that| «For heaven's sake, show the good as well as the seamy side cess Alberta Lodge, gave a they cure properly before base- of life." ary Street H-S M talk. ment storage. Then, space Plans were made for the bus/them a bit on shelves in the! Also, he urged parents to "get Resumes Meetings trip, to Rose of Brampton Lodge| coolest part of the basement.|tough" with their children who The first meeting of the sea-lon Wednesday, October 25. The|Handle carefully, because bruis-|sit for hours "like a vegetable" son of the Mary Street Home|bus will leave the Oshawa Ter-|ed skins can lead to rotting. [Watching TV violence. and School Association was a|minal at 6 p.m. Dry beans and peas may be/UP TO PARENTS most successful one with the| Refreshments wer served by best stored in an unheated lo- "A child," he said, "watches principal and teachers in charge, Sisters Marlene Brannigan, (cation, such as an outside what he is permitted to watch After the singing of O Canada| Christine Aitchison and Patricia porch, Pick the beans and peas and listens to what he is per- and repeating the Lord's Pray-|upand. las soon as they are ripe, mitted to listen to. Parents must er, Mrs. H. B. Armstrong well Mave an edible. decorativel SE ¢23, Hem out in a warm, ee with comed od and new members pineapple for cocktail tidbits poly, Fane er Polls BI ihe television industry." ny cel mbers of shaping liverwurst moistened | go te coeds iT poly Page or Thanks to this Senate commit. LJ the executive and the committee with mayonaise around an in-| Lillian Mae. Marsh. | chairman and then turned the|verted jelly glass. Score it and|5 25S jars. SCHOOL OF DANCING | | next portion of the meeting overimake "eyes" with olive slices. D.LA. for using the same table pieces for every meal. Give your im-| agination a chance to exercise itself for a change. CHEERIER START Fresh color and design will get you off to a cheerier start at the kitchen sink, for there is certainly nothing more diffi- cult about washing lovely, new colorful dishes, than about wash- ing the same old pieces. So give yourself a chance to get more pleasure out of 'setting the stage" at mealtime. that have gone from a daik The One Quickest to See Through a Thing, But to See a Thing Through Keep your eyes on the future ! You can still Register at the Oshawa Business College for Spec- || ialized Business Training. |i Day School Classes enroll any Monday Evening Closses-- Yuesdey end Thursdey 7:00 - 9:00 p.m. f Special Classes for Housewlves- Shiftworkers Teenage Typing = for pupils from Grades 6, 7, B. Got Pree Literature on ofl Courses end Services Avaliable. Business College DIAL 725-3375 10 SIMCOE STREET NORTH Oshawa, Ontarle No. 7 Toronto. green t light ; " | 0 a lighter green or Sister Jean Fitches reported pink color -- this shows that on flowers an | w and cards sent to they have started to ripen. sick members. Fh th tn eh The quarterly report was o.com ins allow trays, or Commission -=-- announces --- NEW LOW RATES - for -- ALL ELECTRIC HOME HEATING! Now You Can Enjoy The Most Luxurious, Safe and Convenient Heat Of All! SPECIAL NEW LOW RATES Make It Possible For You To Enjoy This Modern Way To Complete Heating Comfort. 10% REDUCTION OLD RATE . . . . .. 1.50 per KwH. Net NEW LOW RATE . . . 1.35 Per KwH. Net (BILLED MONTHLY ON A SEPARATE METER) The wiry-haired Airedale ter- rier, noted for its courage, weighs from 40 to 45 pounds. to Mr. G. A. Harper, principal Top with iris leaves and foes of Mary Street School. with crackers. Mr. Harper spoke very briefly to the assembled parents, in-| | cluding many fathers. He men- tioned that when tte school closed last June, it was with an enrolment of 281 pupils and that when the school opened for the | new term this Sentember the| enrolment number had climbed to 292 children. He spoke of the| field dav in which the school had participated and of the me-| dals won bv the students and also advised the parents that two of the teachers, Mr. Junkin and Miss Van Deuren, had be:| gan teams of soccer for the! havs and softhall for the cirls The patrol for Street Sohaol. Mr. Harper said. | is now roincidersd one nf the hetter gneg in tha rity hv Safety Control Police stoh's Rofare introducine the tear ing staff for tha comine vear.| Mr. Harner said that he thourht| | the narents to know that the average teaching exnerience of the staff. as na whole, was 12 vears and he felt sure that if the parents sen'| their children to school well' rested and ready to learn, they | would experience no difficulty] | in keeping up with their studies. | | Mr. Harper then introduced| | the teachers and the meeting broke up into smaller groups as| the parents went to the class-| f rooms of their own children where the teacher went into de-| | tail explaining the curriculum)! for the coming vear and what it was expected that each child' would accomplish within that! time. i Mrs. Armstrong then recalled] | the meeting to the business por-| | ton. The secretary, Mrs. B. A.|/ Sonley and the treasurer, Mrs. || W. H. Hamley, each gave their|| respective reports and Mrs. W || M. Broadbent brought in the|| budget for the year 1961-62, which was adopted by the meet. |} ing. Mrs. Armstrong also ad-|: vised the group that the Home|} and School Association Regional |" Conference is to be held in Cen-| tral Collegiate Institute on Oct- ober 21, and that Mary Street Association would be sponsoring a rummage sale at Simcoe Hall during the first week of Nov- ember. Refreshments were served by the mothers of the pupils in grade six with the help of the social convenors, Mrs. C. M Root and Mrs. R. J. Glover. En I samy | Ballet, Top, Toe, Baton, Pre-School, Character, Acrobatis | FRIDAYS and SATURDAYS AT THE MASONIC TEMPLE #91 CENTRE ST., OSHAWA Information: 723-7253 safety Marv| i Con- | | | i h would he han If You Are Planning a New Home Then Why Not Go Modern With Electric Home Heating! .+. In Many Cases It Costs LESS To Install Than Conventional Flame-Type Systems! Electric Home Heating is available in several easy forms to instal. | : ] . It can be a compact baseboard installed along the base of exterior walls. It pos be Tlil oa bed i f . . - . ded i N Fl it can v R of radiant glass panels installed in the walls. Tee inthe flour or exiting, © Fumes . . . No Pipes . . . No Furnace . . - No Fuel Storage Space . . . No Wi Chimney sees YOU control the heat of each room where oa ot Hoe. nd po od J or H . « there's never any overheating waste . . . Just set the thermostats and Electricity does the rest. undreds are turning to ELECTRIC HOME HEATING EVERY DAY ... Why Not You? ® EASY TO OPERATE eo SAFE eo CLEAN e MODERN eo ECONOMICAL TO OPERATE. Wednesday--Oct. 11th--9 a.m. to 6 p.m Peggy's Beauty Salon Corner Ritson end Si { A ds ia mt Z Soka the pelts are worked in horl- rzontal strips. The coat has bell - shaped elbow - length sleeves and is trimmed with a lavish diamond blue fox collar, A turban of peau de soie is in matching blue. --By TRACY ADRIAN yi LUXURIOUS From Mr. John's 'society collection" of beautiful furs comes this handsome street. length theatre coat design- ed on wrap - around lines. Made of soft mole dyed the deepest, richest diamond blue, For Further Information Write or Phone "OSHAWA PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION Henry F. Baldwin, Chairman 723.4624 St. South--S$i Ploxe For Appointments -- Phone 723-1921 Peggy, with over 16 years experience in hair styling, cutting and 'permanent waving offers you a free shampoo and set with every permanent wave booking taken on Opening Day. Geo. F. Shreve, Gen. Mgr. Bl da des nd. At dd Ai. od

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