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Oshawa Times (1958-), 10 Jul 1967, p. 11

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D OWN ORCHESTRA REAL (CP) -- Lucia wski, for 13 years com- | residence for the . Dance Company of wkins appearing at rforms on a percussion she created. Using musical notations she piano's strings and 'ums and rattles of ood, glass and paper. quire About TANNY'S NADA'S LARGEST FINEST CHA HEALTH SPA's an to have messy you've given your too, become and trample of feet ime for BAKER'S your carpets and dition. -- beck egain in elivery" HEM ALL" rience" IRKET RIO gah es , miles down the CREATES A NEEDLEWORK PICTURE A Silk thread and subtle stitches by Mrs. Ilona Pomery, Annis street, have combined handsomely to produce a fine tapestry. Mrs. Pomery's fall scene from an Ontario forest was done on needlework canvas Girl Guides From Many Lands | To Camp With Canadian Girls || By JEAN SHARP CP Women's Editor A fisherman, a Women's Institute, a drama group, a Kiwanis club and a weaving guild are all involved in show- ing 2,000 girl guides from 11 countries something of Can- | ada's heritage. The guides' major centen- nial project is a camp to be held on Morrison and @airne islands in the St. Lawrence River July 15-25. About 1,400 Canadian guides, rangers and cadets will be there from all provinces and territories. Their guests will be 104 guides and several leaders from countries that have con- tributed to Canada's culture-- Britain, France, The Nether- lands, Germany, Iceland, Denmark, the United States, Finland, Japan, Sweden and, it is hoped, Israel. The girls will live in tents on the islands and guides and their families have offered hospitality to any of the vis- itors who may be able to stay on after July 25. The emphasis will be on Canada's heritage. A Toronto drama_ group helped plan a Stratford-style | outdoor stage and portable screens for impressionist scenery to serve two events. One, called the Canada Tree, is by Prof. James Reaney of the University of Western Ontario. It's a sort of | pageant of Canada's growth since 1867. DIRECTING BY MAIL Mrs. Woodburn Thompson of Richmond Hill, Ont., has been directing her cast of 192 by mail. "They've had a letter telling them they were chosen and another letter saying 'Please learn everything I've sent.'"" Another production, Women of Canada, has been organized by Mrs. R. H. Booth of Sim- RS | But as skirts inch up and up--|riety of colors, SHE KNOWS THE ANSWE 'despite all that talk about the|tones, Shimmery nylons are! |mid-calf length on the way back/liked for evening. | Colors and textures offer a stockings of brighter color and) wide range for matching or con-| trasting costume, This season's colorful dresses | shoes, Contrasting colors are liked "slack-and-wet" colors are co-|by those who don't get along ordinated with equally colorful! with the top-to-toe look. Some- stockings which are wild orjtimes contrasts are bold--such!| subtle, solid or print--as well as a< navy blue with neon green. sheer and shimmery or thick White shoes and hose with such jcolors as brown or y The fashion target is the to-\bine as another favorite device. Vicki Lawrason of Isling- ton, Ontario, took her first look at Winnipeg and West- ern Canada when she ar- rived there as one of the information hostesses «for the Pan-American Games. Vicki, who is 21, has already travelled in excess of 15,000 miles in South America including 1800 Amazon < é without a_ preliminary drawing and is 22 inches by 40 inches long. Several shades of green, brown, beige and blue were used. The petit-point and needle- point tapestry was started three years ago but Mrs. Pomery decided to finish it for centennial year, She worked on it during the fall and winter months and has estimated there has been at least two years of con- stant work given to it. It cost a minimum of $50 to make and now hangs proudly on the living room coe, Ont. Its sketches will | demonstrate the guide !aws in the lives of such women as Madeleine de Vercheres, Judge Helen MacGill and a Canadian pioneer known. as Ma Perkins, who is said to have travelled 900 miles in a | covered wagon with eight chil- |= dren to join her husband in the West. | The guides will live in sub- |} camps representing six areas of Canada, and that's where the fisherman and others en- ter the picture. Guides in each section will learn handicrafts associated with that area, and each will make her own souvenir, Miss Reg.N., who recently grad- uated from the University of Western Ontario with a Judith A. Rose, A guide leader has been taking rope-tying lessons from a fisherman in Lunenburg, N.S., and will teach the At- lantic sub-camp to make such things as shopping bags. The Pacific sub-camp will learn totem pole carving, In- dian bead work and burlap painting. Upper Canada will hook rugs, Lower Canada will do rug and wool weaving, the | Far North will make Ookpiks, | Eskimos stencils and soap- stone carving, the Prairies will make quilts. Mrs. E. Cole Thurston of Waterloo, Ont., the camp | commandant, says the Wom- en's Institute at Riverside Heights near the camp will : 5 4 ag ' Eskimo carving of a dancing demonstrate quilting, the Car- bear is to go on permanent dis-| Arua Yr, td eg gaint e To teak jplay in Canada House, the cen- me |tennial year gift of their skills and the Kiwanis club in Dunbarton, near Tor- onto, has made frames. diploma in Public Health Nursing, and David Rod- ney Truax who graduated with a Bachelor of Sci- ence degree from the same university and is engaged in post-graduate studies there in chemistry, will be married here August 12. By CAROL KENNEDY i ta0n: rug-hooking | WAS THIS THE ORIGIN? Most likely version of origin of O Canada is that it Ritchie at a centennial luncheon S HER CENTENNIAL PROJECT GRADUATES TO BE WED Canadian dress Women's Club members in Lon- stressed the 'tremendous out- conducted pouring' of loyalty and affec-| meeting He treatment services for emotion- The green soapstone carving, tion for the Queen displayed on/especially welcomed Mr, and ally disturbed children, | The group asked that the des- | d_ their ignation "Canadian" be added family of Edmonton, Alberta..|to assessment and property tax | Remarks appropriate to the|rolls in addition to "alien"? and % \kle. heard more four-lette lately? A New York psychia coming chic. psychiatrist -- it's the sation. Fifty years ago Today |sweetly and turn the It's all part of play four-letter word game Hartogs terms it, wh wall of Mrs. Pomery's home. The needlework pic- ture was much = admired while on display in The Oshawa Folk Festival ex- hibition of arts and treas- ures in the McLaughlin Public Library. --Oshawa Times Photo Miss Rose who has accept- ed a position on the staff of Middlesex County Health Unit, London, Ontario, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. K. A. Rose, Oshawa, and her fiance is the. son of Mr. and Mrs. E. H, Truax of Walkerton; On- tario. The ceremony is to take place in St. Paul's Presbyterian Church at 4,30 p.m, {place in Canada House where|the farm of LONDON (CP) -- A superb)he hoped it would bring pleasure! Orville Osborne, In _his to the club, Ritchie \sculptor Pauta of Cape Dorset,|British papers have suggested|beth, Ontario, Baffin Island, was presented to| crowds were sparse and the wel-|Mrs. Alex the High Commissioner Charles come somewhat muted. "There were 60,000 on Parlia- "| vides "a socially accept {jection surface for 1 |motives and instinctual needs."| - published | {book, Four-Letter Word Games In his recently 'the psychiatrist attribut jereasing popularity of talk' to. the Chatter drome: jmerly taboo words in class speech. He says |from 1959, when a U.S _ court liberated Lady jley's Lover from the censorship. HAS SHOCK VALUE | "The lower classes the acceptance of for- trist and psychoanalyst, Dr. Renatus Har- togs, says obscene words are be-| Surprisingly -- except to decorous middie - class matron who is making the most of her oppor- tunities to drop four-letter bon mots into sophisticated conver- air blue jwith barracks language. ing the as Dr; ich pro- able pro- repressed es the in- "dirt ley sy' middle- it dates . district Chatte bonds of always |have used these words," said |Dr. Hartogs in an \"but now in certain class circles it's very sive' -- put that in quo drop a little word that h 3 | value. "Now there is a definite loos- jening of traditional moral val-| ues, which primarily to hide behind what I shame barrier.' It has jaggressive intellectuall | sexually, they are more value." conversational gambits wishes and images. interview, middle- 'progres- tes --to as shock} affects} women, who have been forced! call 'the) not been \the role of women to be rebel-| lious, but as they become more y and|_ inclined to use words that reflect anti- He says that cocktail parties -- "where flirtation and quasi- sexual pursuit are part of a stylized ritual'? -- are the prin-! Society Matrons Find New Imag In Vulgar Words Formerly Tab By JOY MILLER AP Women's Editor she would) have managed to have her skirt} {creep demurely above her an-| she may smile} | On Social Welfare|"no ne. The sportsuit The dirty word expresses|were unanimous] something of a person's secret| Thursday at the final session of "At the|the Ontario Catholic Women's | Women THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, July 10, 1967 J] dressed, By this kind of word game, the person can -- at least NEW YORK (AP)--Have you the symbolic level -- strike pattern co-ordination, r words 4 balance between his of society." The four - letter word game was allows a woman to remain phys- ically within accepted bounds to emphasize that while committing sy mboli | ments pas transgressions, he says "Her stylish use of trum of restraints." WM sista 'asia NEW TEACHER Mary Marlene Mullen, daughter of Mr, and Mrs, Morley Mullen, Oshawa, graduated from Toronto Teachers' College recently and has accepted a posi- tion with the Whitby Township School Board. Miss Mullen, a_ graduate of. O'Neill Collegiate and Vocational Institute, will teach Grade I this fall at Meadowcrest Public School, Brooklin. CWL Resolutions LONDON, Ont, (CP) -- Nine-|man with a sports car, the cipal playground for these new|teen resolutions covering sub-| jacket length is too short to sit jjects from abortion to housin eé the Edwardian elegance Friday | group's own needs and the norms and rules profanity conscious men can look forward openly violates nothing moreiig this year: than fading conventions of po-| lite discourse; yet by implica-|jines in coats and suits make tion it overthrows a broad spec- shoulders seem broader, Trou- --jand wool knit. |New York Designer Introduces Glamor | In Men's Fashions NEW YORK (AP)--Men are no less masculine in green shoes } and cinnamon shorts, or for that matter in orange coats with silken honey-brown slacks. It made an heroic effort to win the conservatives over to To enjoy the convenience of paying all your bills with one monthly payment... at a fashion show arranged as a part of the New York couture semi-annual fall-style previews. Huskies hopped onto the runway while a men's fash- \ion magazine editor described silhouette, hemlines, color and just. as it is done at women's fashion shows. | However, the 'commentator careful to use a lot of | words like "beefy" and "burly" these gar- ere not sissy stuff. Here is what he says clothes Silhouette -- Narrower waist- _|sers are spare and still not as tight as they are worn on Car- naby Street in London. 3-BUTTONS OUT INTERNATIONAL Add up the bills you're now paying, month after month... Style -- Edwardian double and pay them off with cash from GAC International. Then breasted suits, with four and six you make only one payment each month... and chances eurons ed agen Fire ba are it will be considerably lower than the total you are now fon aingibshrensted: sulte are paying. That one budget-fitted monthly payment lets you plan ahead .. . provide for extra spending money out of every paycheck. Stop in or call for prompt, personal service. Get a cash advance from GAC International to pay your bills... or for any good reason, okay, but three - button styles are out. Deep side vents in coats are losing ground to box pleats and deep-centre vents. Hemlines--The fitted Edward- n coat is a little longer, but) the preferred coat length is se- veral inches above the knee. | Color--In shirts a soft orange shade called cinnamon, a lime green, and workshirt blue are the things to wear, with pat- terned ties and silk handker- chiefs of the same color, but another pattern. In suits new LOANS UP TO $5000 GAC INTERNATIONAL FINANCE CORP., LTO. OSHAWA 52'% Simcoe Street, North, ...ssess00sPhOne 728-7325 RICHMOND HILL colors are green -- a brighter 20 Yonge Street, South..........0+ «Phone 884-4458 jthan olive hue -- and various |shades of golden brown from 25 Bloor Street, rim baad {sweet honey to whisky your. 2 (Blo | Green is great for shoes. 22% Dundas Street, West. ui N VOGUE ig ee, as 'cialis ane 3034 Danforth Avenue Phone 699-9687 (Opposite Shoppers World) about as bold as a man ought 64 Vaughn ROA, ....0s-css-eveenee Phone $34-8816 wo |to go," decreed the commenia- jtor, Stripes range from chalk 2645 Eglinton Avenue, East. we --sthene 261-7276 ty-es to conservative pi (Eglinton at Brimley Roa ita \ a S44A St, Clait Avenue, West.........Phone S31-1197 a ' (St. Clair at Oakwoor Sportswear--Any color goes. 2087 Yonge Street Phone 481-6836 |Sweaters are high-necked and - @ Blocks below Eglinton Ave.) in bulky patterns, Mixing tex- 2907A Dundas Street, West.......... Phone 767-3168 | tures is the trick to being sharp, G1 Block West of Keele St.) for example, suede, corduroy |. Practicalities--There now are permanently creased Cord u- r oys, crushable hats, and re- was designed for the business 8 lon. {same time it tests society's re- League annual convention. | To Family Pi Mr RR centennial-theme ad-|fet style at 1.00 p.m. sharp. Orville the short which -- follow President Whyte an Welcome Members --__----_------| From Edmonton Eskimo Carving Presented To Canada House, London cnic ved, and action, or at least the reaction} jof the person to whom it is ad-/CWL to reaffirm its resistance} jto permissive abortion legisla- | tion | provincial The annual Down fan.ily re-| low-income and recommended problem is found. Other resolutions asked for in-| for continua: | union and picnic was held re-|tion of the monthly youth allow- cently in the "Picnic Flats" on ance until creased tax exemptions groups; over community centres ordination . the work of the noted Eskimo/her recent Canadian visit. Some|Mrs, Henry Schmidt of Lam-| STRESS 'CANADIAN' and Mr, was commissioned to mark the Friday by Mrs. Harold Shenk- ment Hill and it takes a lot to\occasion were made by Walter|"British subject." lvisit to Quebec City in 1880 of | ian of Ottawa, club president,| get 60,000 Ottawans out of their \the Governor-General, the Mar-|who conceived and organized offices, even," said the Halifax-| Schmidt, quis of Lorne. the glittering centennial -- | held here last April. | carving portrays the bear nim- | been valued at $600 by London jart dealer Charles Gimpel, an | expert on Eskimo art. Gimpel was one of three male |GIFT 'MAGNIFICENT' Ritchie, who also received the gift of a Pauta drawing of a |snowy owl, described the bear | By ELEANOR ROSS {siery to the attention of many of us who had thought nice flesh levening things. River, She is fluent In six languages, including Nahu- att, a form of the ancient Aztec language spoken in some. parts of South Amer- ica. Vicki, along with thir- --legs move into the spotlight in| bolder, more diverse texture. and patent leather shoes in wild teen other mu/ti-lingual girls, will be staffing the press and information situated at Winni- pee's International. airport and the downtown Royal ges chalky. Alexandra Hotel. , 'Hosiery Goes Wild With Color | To Compliment High Hems tal, _ uninterrupted Legs are on the march--pa- neckline to shoe. |rading onto the fashion stage at | INTERESTING TEXTURES ja steady pace. The short skirt] Textures are extremely inter-| certainly brought legs and ho- lesting with hosiery knitted, jeolored, smooth, sheer nylons oF Plasticized--never just plain. | were the ultimate in hosiery,| Opaque, bulky, and fishnet or) | with perhaps a bit of glitter with open mesh stockings are right| jfor daytime and come in @ va- ball/born diplomat with a chuckle. Three past governors-general| Down, Standing 21 inches high, the of Canada were presented at the Whyte, Edmonton. head table: Countess Alexander} Lady Tweesmuir, the look from | that is| crocheted, elasticized, shades and| dress and low com- |Beath, Columbus; Lambeth Whyte, Edmonton; Brooklin; and Orville Osborne Icently. lunched at the Savoy Hotel with of John Buchan, Ist 10 women club members ar-/Tweedsmuir, who succeeded Edmonton, Alberta Db jrayed in all their pastel-colored Bessborough and died in office {sobel Robbins. |summer finery. jin 1940. Following the mee Mabel! Alex | Separate \ Heber asked public support of separ-| extended to Grade 13 from Grade 10 and extended non-Catholic parents be allowed | bly balanced on one foot. It has/of Tunis, CWC honorary presi- congratulations on behalf of alljt0 send their children to aj dent; the dowager Countess of Bessborough, chatelaine of Ri- deau Hall from 1931 to 1935, and Susan, Lillian ate Three resolutions dealt with CWL| schools. The schools be |present to Mr. and Mrs, Jack| Separate school and be taxed {Coates who were married re- 8 8 separate school supporter. | The group also asked the Eng- | | Prize for the guest. travelling lish Catholic Education Associ- jguests, including Ritchie, who) frail-looking but dignified widow the farthest distance was pre- ation to review the recent re- baron sented to Mrs. Alex Whyte of °FSanization of the provincial vy Miss educational structure. ting Coffee and cake were served at 4.00 o'clock. ENGAGEMENT Mr. their An engagement of daughter, Judith David Truax, son of Mr. and Mrs, &. H. Truax of Walkerton, marriage jtake place on Saturday, August Ontario. The 12, 1967, at 4.30 p.m, Paul's Presbyterian Oshawa. SOCIAL NOTICE and Mrs. K. A. | Oshawa, wish to announce the Rose, eldest ne, to will in St. Church, a was i a t Lady Tweedsmuir, who rarely novel sports program was con-| Provincial group, succeeding} ventures to public occasions ducted der the direction of Mrs. Eldon Keon of Calumet from her country home in the yr. Frank Sullivan. Cotswold village of Buford, was jearving as a "magnificent ex-| accompanied by the youngest of | pression of wit and genius," and/her three sons, William Buchan, -- said it would have an honoredja public relations consultant. Mary M. Dobell named president of Island: GARY NESBITT Representative SUN LIFE Assurance Company of Canada Oshawa Shopping Centre Phone 725-4563 '| The group asked the national the minister of Public | welfare initiate a program of | rental supplements until a solu-| tion to the current housing students reach 21; | and. Mrs. sale of BB and pellet guns only 4, Bow- to licensed persons to thousands of visiting Cana-| manville, with 67 present. dians. 16; for urban A hot dinner was served buf-| renewal and public housing de- |velopments; development of Osborne non - profit nursing homes, and business/ provincial co of of Toronto) the | STOREWIDE SUMMER CLEARANCE up 0 oa 0 yf off SPORTSWEAR SHORTS SEPARATES T-SHIRTS TOPS SWIMWEAR SLIMS SeFwveraler fashions since 1867

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