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Oshawa Times (1958-), 28 Jul 1966, p. 13

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CHILDREN ENTERTAIN AT YWCA DAY CAMP CLOSING PROGRAM THESE YOUNG girls may not be the June Taylor Dancers, but they are part of a double line of dancers THE QUALITY of the program can be judged by the rapt attention of the many faces in the audi- ence, part of which is shown here, as they watch some of the youngsters put on doing the Watussi, as they show what they have learn- ed at the Annual YWCA Day Camp which conclud- ed its activities last week, "Little Red Riding Hood" under the direction of sen- jor councillors Pat Buziak and Cathy Shaw and jun; ior councillors Martha Wright and Anne Baxter, Another skit, "Mary Had A After the performance, the names of about 60 field day winners were announced, Program was arranged by Councillors and campers Little Lamb," directed by senior councillors, Mary Jeffs and Mary Gigereski and junior councillor Janet Taylor, was just as well received, Prizes were awarded to Kathy Cairns and Elizabeth Dixon for Wigs And Wiglets Fun To Wear Only If Given Special Care By JEAN SHARP CP Women's Editor TORONTO (CP)--The most expensive wigs are hand- made, of European hair, Al- most hair by hair, strands are pulled through the mesh foun- dation with a tool like an embroidery hook. The hair in machine-made wigs is stitched on the mesh in rows. Toronto wig maker Peter Suba says this process results in a heavier, warmer foundation, and a wig that will not stand as close an in- spection as a hand-made one, Mr, Suba says, for instance, he would not recommend too short a hair cut on a machine- made wig because the rows of stitching might show Mr. Suba says wigs and hair pieces are usually made of Eurepean hair, Oriental hair, yak hair, an acrylic fibre artificial hair or a mix- ture, SETS EASILY He says European hair is considered the most flexible, the finest and therefore eas- jest to set and best at holding a set Wig prices range from about $50 to $500. Hair pieces may cost from $20 to $100 Mr, Suba says you can often get some idea of what they are made of and how by no- put your wig on it every night, People will buy an ex: pensive wig and not spend a bit more to care for it, I had a customer who kept hers on a lamp shade when she wasn't wearing it, ~and it eventually took the shade's hexagonal shape," DON'T WASH WIG Mr. Suba says a wig might need to be set in dry rollers every couple of weeks, de- pending on how much it is used, In the meantime, if the set droops a bit, you can touch it up with a dry pin curl over night, Don't wet the curl or the pin or clip might leave a rust mark } "No matter what kind 6f wig you have, don't put it in water and try to wash it. It will mat and the hair works back through the foundation, Your wig will be ruined, "If you want to clean it at home, take the back combing out gently with a nylon brush. Then, working outdoors or in a well-ventilated place, dip it a few times in a bowl of carbon tetrachloride, Don't rub it. Then leave it in the solution for 20 to 30 minutes dip it up and down again a few times and hang it up to dry outdoors or in a well ventilated place. Incidentally, don't use a plastic bowl, The carbon tet will dissolve it, Eskimo Baby Visits Niagara NIAGARA FALLS, Ont. (CP) Eileen Margaret Boyd, whose Eskimo name is Dingmariuk (Little Bird), is a well-travelled 10-month-old, She spent this spring going from Yellowknife, N.W.T,, to Glasgow to Spain and back to Yellowknife, by way of Niagara Falls, She and her adopted mother, |Mrs, Jack Boyd, went to Scot- land and Spain for a visit with Mrs, Boyd's parents, The detour | Well Travelled | | SOCIAL NOTICE and every group put on some type of _ entertain- ment, including skits, dane- es and singing interspersed by commercials, the best pictures taken dur- ing camp; to Nancy Hart and Lee Sutherland for win- ning the singing contest; and to groups 2 and. 12 for most points collected dur- ing the variety hour, --Oshawa Times Photos | FORTHCOMING MARRIAGE Mr, and Mrs, Harold Mosier, |Whitby, wish to announce the forthcoming marriage of their daughter, Keitha Ruth, to Stan- ley Joseph Seneco, son of Mrs, Joseph Seneco, Oshawa,' and ithe late Mr, Seneco, The wed: ding is to take place on Satur: day, August 27, 1966 at 4:00 pam, in All. Saints' Anglican Church, Whitby, on the route home was made to visit friends Mr, and Mrs, Boyd knew when they lived in Niag- ara-on-the-Lake, Mr, Boyd is a_ mechanical superintendent for Giant Gold Mines Lid. in Yellowknife, The couple have a six - year « old named Jacqueline, who was born to them, and an adopted son, Jimmy, 9, who is a blend of Ojibway Indian, Spanish, Russian, Irish and American | Negro, The Boyds are of the Baha'! World Faith and moved to Yel- lowknife last September to as- sist in Baha'i work there Mrs, Boyd says their faith has much to do with the adoptions, "The world is in such a mess j|that we came to the conclusion that it is composed of individ- uals and that it is very tm- portant what every individual WIFE PRESERVER Avoid '"'gardener's nails" by scraping fingertips over a damp bar of soap before going out: doors, The soap washes out la- jter, taking dirt and grime with -|Blessed Virgin Mary [Wcmon THE OSHAWA TIMES, Thursdey, July 28, 1966 3/~ Elaborate Plans Are Complete For Luci's White House Wedding By FRANCES LEWINE WASHINGTON (AP) -- The lilies of the valley are planted, the cook has baked a sample' cake and had it approved, the choirs are rehearsing. Every- thing's about ready for Luci Johnson's wedding to Patrick 3, Nugent Aug. 4. It's going to be a wedding of sentiment and history, You couldn't get more senti- mental than President John- son's 19-year-old, blue - ba black-haired daughter, Luci. And having a president's daughter hold a reception in the White House is something that hasn't happened in 52 years, Luci sald she was getting ner- vous as the big day loomed closer, "But I'm not just nervous," she sald, 'I'm happy, excited, filled with hopes, dreams, de- sires -- @ ee of emotions, including a little bit of apprehension and a great deal of happiness,' Her 23-year-old fiance was kept busy on active summer duty with his air national guard reserve unit in Savannah, Ga., until shortly before the wed- ding. WIN SON AT LAST The president was described as "awfully glad to be getting a son at last," Mrs, Johnson has spent an- xious months planning, working on her daughter's trousseau coping with every detail, in ing the big decision; no tele- vision from the church and lim- ited press coverage of the wedding scene, : Seven months ago--on Christ- mas Eve -- the Johnsons an- nounced from their Texas ranch that Luci, a nursing school freshman, was engaged to a tall, blonde, good-looking, little known young man from Wau- kegan, Ill. Son of investment counsellor Gerard Nugent, and of Tillle Jocius Nugent, young "Paddy" was newly graduated from col- lege, where he majored in his- tory, On their first real date, Nu- gent took Luci to his senior prom at Marquette University in Milwaukee, where the presi- dent's daughter donned a sil- ver-blonde wig to dodge report: ers, Despite the limelight-and the eye of the secret service (Luci said she never went out on a date alone with Nugent) -- the r managed to bl m. And so, at noon Saturday, Aug. 6, before 700 friends and relatives, the president,.in cut- away coat and striped pants, will escort his daughter down the aisle of the Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in northeast Washington, CHOOSE TWO RINGS It is the largest Roman Catho- lic church in the United States, and the seventh largest in the world, They'll walk a distance longer than a football field to get to the altar, Contemplating the slow, 400- foot journey of the 26-member bridal procession, 18 - year-old bridesmaid Helene Lindow of Washington found the prospect "a little scary." It will be a double-ring cere- mony, 'That's what 90 to 95 per cent of Catholic couples pre- fer nowadays," a spokesman for the archdiocese uf Washing: ton reported, Seventy - year - old Arch: bishop Patrick A, O'Boyle, who rarely officiates at such occas- ions, will celebrate the 80-min- ute nuptial mass for the presi- dent's daughter and her fiance, A lifelong friend of the Nu- gent family, Rev. John Kuzins- kas, 40, assistant pastor of the Church of the Nativity of the in Chi- cago, will marry the couple in a 10-minute ceremony, A choir of 100 voices will sing and the wedding music will be played on a $250,000 pipe organ considered one of the greatest in the Western world, Luci, five feet, four inches tall and slimmed down "to please Pat' to 110 pounds and a size seven, has picked an ele- gant, long, white bridal gown. Her mother said it's "the kind you would hand down to your grandchildren." PINK GOWNS MATCH The 12 bridesmaids, including Luci's 22-year-old sister, Lynda, the maid of honor, will wear it gowns of blending pink. The NOW OPEN! six-foot, one + inch bridegroom and his 12 groomsmen will wear formal morning attire. Young friends and relatives will attend the bride and bride- groom, with two five-year-olds serving as flower girl and ring bearer, Nugent's father Is te be stend- in best man for another son, Marine Lieut, Gerard Nugent Jr, on duty in Viet Nam, A few things the Johnsons and the White House made plain about this wedding: It is a personal and family event, not a state occasion, Though the church could seat 3,500, they asked 700 to attend. They did not invite world fig- ures, diplomats or officials un- less they were close friends, Everyone invited to the church also was to be a guest at a White House reception aft- erwards, ~The church may be im- mense and spectacular, but Luci and Nugent picked it be- cause they had often wor- shipped there together. CONVERTED AT 16 Luel, originally Episcopalian (Anglican) like her mother, converted to Catholicism on her 16th birthday, Like any other parents of the bride, the Johnsons are footing the bill for the wedding. A fam- ily spokesman said the John- sons long ago established a special account to handle all .|the wedding costs from engrav- ing invitations to buying a trouss As to how much it's all going to cost, the White House said only: "Weddings come high now." Lilies of the valley for Luci's bridal bouquet have been green- house grown by White House gardeners, The big tiered wedding cake will be the production of presi- dential pastry chef Ferdinand Louvat, a 52-year-old French: man who comes from the vil- lage of Voiron, near Grenoble, He baked sample fruit cake and plain layers There was one main plea from Luci through it all. She doesn't want to be called a teen-age bride. Although she turned 19 July 2, Luci main- tains "I'm going on 20." "Ours is no irresponsible teen-age marriage," she said, Heiress to at least $500,000 herself, Luci announced early they'd live on young Nugent's income, which ranged from $03.50 a month on military duty to $5,180 as a member of the District of Columbia education! 4 advisory commission, But he's improved his salary consider- rec: since joining a new edu- cational consultant firm here, REPORTERS PERSISTENT In planning this wedding, the White House has had to cope with a deluge of requests from news media, But church coverage here will be held down to a small pool of reporters. Mrs, Johnson personally told TV officials of her declalen to keep things 'more personal and private' by banning TV cam- eras from inside the church. Through it all, Nugent is play- ing a quiet, prince consort sort of role, so retiring in pub- Ne he's mistaken for a secret service man, Like many a bridegroom be- fore him, Nugent commented wistfully at one point: "Sometimes I think a small wedding would have been nice," THE STARS SAY By ESTRELLITA FOR TOMORROW You may find yourself up against some confusing situa- tions now. A happy event or ment in the agen gy of plans. Take all in stride, how- ever. Matters should be righted within 24 hours. FOR THE BIRTHDAY If tomorrow is your birthday, while Be song may not make much financial progress during the next five months, you will, if you can put aside your innate love of luxuries fora time and stress the practical side of your nature, make fine advances along monetary lines, beginning with Jan. 1, 1967, There are sev- eral other "ifs." too: It will be most important that you limit expenditures and avoid specula- tion during the first week in August and throughout Septem- ber, November and December; that you make no financial com- mitments during the latter two months, and that you make and launch long-range plans for ex- pansion--to cover at least two years--during September and October. If you follow this course, you should attain fine results during the first three months of next year, to be fol- lowed by another profitable three month cycle, beginning on June 1, On the job front, look for Grandmother Gets Arts Degree At 51 REGINA (CP) -- Four years ago, on her graduation day, Maura Young said to her mother: "Mum, why don't you go to university? I think you'd love i," Mum went -- and loved it. In May, Wilhelmine Frances Young graduated from the Uni- versity of Saskatchewan Regina campus with a bachelor of arts degree, The 5l-year-old grand- mother hasn't made up her mind whether to return in the fall for post-graduate work. Study was one of the biggest problms, "Sometimes the housework didn't get done but I tried to arrange things so I could be your horoscope indicates that) good chances to advance dur- ing the latter half of August, the last week in September, the last two weeks in October, the end of December, next Feb- ruary and May. Dramatic ac- tors and writers, many of whom are Leoites, should have marked successes in December, January, March, May and -| Tine 'Personal affairs will be under generally good aspects for the next 12 months, with especially generous influences governing romance during the latter half of December, in. February, May and June; travel in late Oc- tober, late December, January, April and June, A child born on this day will be endowed with a magnetic personality and would make an excellent salesman: will also be unusually dependable and cour- home as much as possible," she sald, "Things became much more difficult when Joe became a federal candidate," Mr. Young, a former city alderman, complicated his wife's extracurricular life by running as a Liberal candidate in the last three federal elec- tions, "His campaigns sometimes meant I wasn't prepared for my classes. During the four years there were three campaigns and the one year there wasn't was the year I didn't get my Maura, now Mrs. Ken Thomp- son of Regina, and Mrs. Frank Miller of Winnipeg were strong supporters of their mother's scholastic career. "The kids were so proud they could hardly wait for the marks. It took me a little while to go back after being away from it for 30 years." Before her marriage in 1936 Mrs. Young took normal school training and taught at Cosine, Sask., for three years. She doesn't plan to return to full-time teaching. "I'm interested in supple- mentary education, special help for the weaker student," she said, "If the time comes when supplementary education is needed right in the school, | I might go back. If I do go back | to university in the fall, I would | like to take courses in student counselling." JEWELLERS 20 SIMCOE STREET NORTH OPEN STOREWIDE FRIDAYS TILL 9 P.M, MIDSUMMER CLEARANCE ENDS SATURDAY! ageous in the face of difficulty. COTTON SHIFTS each, 8 98 only To shift you now smoothly from sammer into fall. The dramatic little shift! Terrificly chic! In fall Gb"s newest darker tone prints. Sleeveless and scoop necked to show off your patiently acquired sammer tan. French pockets. To belt or not to belt, according to your whim. Crisp, cool cotton, 10 to 20, Coin Operated LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS Opposite Steinberg's EAST MALL PLAZA King St. East does, Every little action taken by every individual is enor mously important to the whole state of the world, It is like throwing a stone in-a pool and the ripples spreading "We felt this was something jwe could do. We don't know jhow much effect it has had and 'I don't think we ever will "We are trying to break down the barriers -- for there are enormous barriers between the Indian and the white people. These barriers will have to be eliminated. It is past the point of pin-pointing the blame, It is no good blaming anyone." ticing what is not mentioned "If it is European hair and hand-made, the ad will say so, If it just says wigs, they are probably synthetic fibre or a mixture, If it says hu man hair, it is probably Ori- ental hair." If you do buy either a wig or a hair piece, good care will lengthen its life. Ask when you buy it where you can get it cared for--cleaned and set They need knowledgeable care "If you buy a wig, get a | geod block in the right size it will cost $10 or $15, and "Your wig will dry in about a half an hour. Put it on the block, wet it gently and set it with large rollers, Then you might use your dryer be- cause of the possibility of rust "Whatever you do, don't bleach or tint a wig. That means peroxide and peroxide will weaken the foundation and might ruin your wig, A hair piece might take a little tinting, but carefully "When you store a wig, put a: light fabric cover over it Don't use plastic, that will | keep moisture in," ONLY 2 DAYS LEFT OF SAVINGS 50% RIP TO: ccnte ess WALKER"S Where quod torte in fashion is not expen sre, OSHAWA SHOPPING CENTRE

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