_ Zany Ads Effective For Job Agency ‘A WEDDING TRIP to Pocono Mountains, Penna., U.S.A., followed the May wedding of Marguerite Elizabeth (Margo) Lillie and Dr. Douglas Wayne Carscadden in the Church of St. Wilfrid, Islington. Dr. S. A. R. Wood performed the ceremony. BY SHEILA COO "Once upon a time there was a client who, due to unforeseen civenmstances. were forced to have an empty office and need secretaries with shorthand, and dictatypists . without it. They need order clerks who take orâ€" ders and stock clerks who conâ€" trol stock, and although they don‘t want the ones that do weither, I have another client who does. Providing they have transportation, that is. T h a t empty office needs a bookkeeper who can add up and wants to sit down, and needs a filing clerk for the person who can‘t and wants to stand up. If I missed anything, please let me know and l‘ll try and do better CARSCADDENâ€"LILLIE leave their pleasant small town location and come to Toronto, (they got evicted when a rather large piece of metal landed on the landlord‘s toe). So now they next This kooky message is from the "Help Wanted Female" colâ€" umns of a recent edition of The Advertiser, and is typical of the zany kind of advertising that has placed the Lynn Tate Perâ€" Vows Exchanged At St. Wilfrid‘s Miss Joan Carsc dden, the groom‘s cousin, was the maid of honor, and the bridesmaids were Miss Mary Ann Squires, Miss Susan Coyle and , Mra. Pam Nitchke. Mr. Roy Johnson Lillie gave his daughter in marriage. She looked charming in a gown iif white chiffon over taffeta with appliqued | white daisies. . The long sleeves were caught at the wrist, flaring into a cuff. Her tulle veil which was held in place with seed pearls and small flowers cascaded over her chape! train which was also appliqued with tiny daisies. She carried a bouquet.of pink roses and white carnations. j Wedding vows were exchanged recently between Marguerite Elizabeth (Margo) Lilli: and Dr. Douglas Wayne Carscadden. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Johnson Lillie of Farningham Cres., Islington, and the groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Douglas Carseadden of Park Blvd. The Church of St. Wilfrid, Islington, was decorated with pink and white mums, snapâ€" dragons and gladinli for the esremony‘ which was performed by Dr. S. A. R. Wood. Robert Stilwell was the organist. All wore gowns of pink chif DAY â€" WEEK â€" MONTH â€" YEAR CALL DAVE LAMBERT 2559151 0OsSs WEMP CAR and TRUCK RENT ALS WEMP is LIMITEG LAKE SHORE BLYD. w. sonnel Agency squarely in the public eye in just two short years. Who is Lynn Tate? She‘s a pert 30 yearâ€"old from Epsom, England, who came to Canada seven years ago, and has a tremendous empathy for people. After working for Canada Manpower for two years she went to work for the Retarded Children‘s Association dving family counselling. _ Lynn soon found that a numâ€" ber of social ills were caused by people being unemployed or working at the wrong job. She felt that many personnel agencies were not performing a community service, chiefly beâ€" cause most personnel consultâ€" ants were working on a comâ€" mission basis. This motivated them to place people in jobs for a monetary reason rather than matching the right job to the right person, she says. "Ninetyâ€"eight percent of the movement in the employment field is due to some form of social incompatibility rather than job performance or salary disputes," says Miss Tate. "If fon ovef taffeta with appliques in rose and green at the neck and empire waistline. . Their headpieces were also pink with rose and green appliques, and they carried bouquets of pink and white feathered carnations. The best man, was John Thompson of Hamilton while Jack Clissold of Bramalea, Jim Hutton of Toronto and David Weeks of Toronto served as ushers. _ Ashley and Crippen were the photographers. The reception was held at the National Club, the bride‘s mother receiving in a floor length gown with matching roat in chamâ€" pagne brocade. Her corsage was of green orchids, and gloves, hat and bag in matching chamâ€" pagne.: _ The groom‘s mother wore a floor length gown of turquoise blue crepe with lace top trimmed in seed pearls and and â€" bag pagne. wore a turquoise top trimmed in seed sequins. She had m cessories and wore a | corsage and white g For her wedding Pocono Mounts, Pen the bride wore a n ahd jacket ensemble mauve turtle <kin she white hat and gloves Mr. and Hartadale pom enponninewnner ies ced in ul oi Onut e: â€" The ) a floor uoise blue trimmed in nf Photo by Ashley and Crippen Mark town . M had ma wore a w white gl wedding atching cham # snn N oom‘s _ mother L ,; " Pe M A.) ngth gown of & P ~~==3 A repe with lace t mmz e * se w55 2 L eed pearls and PWP 3 S3 1. Sdcadicn . 1 matching aeâ€" E§ a * tb £* H oa“"h?tr orchid r’ m ard o Set _;", ’?:. te gloves R R P en fr 4 ding . trip to P r#â€.“,, A :;’fl"fl" J4 j{ Penna., U.S.A., ] f / nna zi B \,..: A mauve dress y Â¥0 y‘ 2 _ aâ€"R Keel ble with darker hi . R d had .*® shoes and hag C Cks icar L. Â¥Md wves. The enuple wÂ¥ /~’ \" and Wond a" guests included E. Braden . of Enpmmmmmmmpnmmmmpmmppmntommmonmmmmponmonmmmmmmmmnnmmnmmnmes Mr. and Mra THE BEST INVESTMENT â€" A HOME OF YOUR OWN ching â€" chamâ€" om‘s _ mother th gown of pe with lace d pearls and matching ®eâ€" a white orchid gloves. Lynn Says No To Race Bias Tate Quebec Man Weds Alderwood Bride people are not happy in their work it spills over into their daily lives in every area." Lynn rented a one room ofâ€" Toronto. She had no capital, no contacts, no clients, no appliâ€" cants, but within one month she was solvent. This was accomplished by the sheer physical work of daily visits to factories, offices, stores, hospitals, in short, anywhere people worked where help might be required. She not only promised prospective employers to supply them with staff, but gave them a three month guarâ€" Maureen Marie Ange Lefebyre, daughter of Simone Lefebyre, of Savona Drive, Alderwood, beâ€" came the bride of Louis Michele Lafrance, son of Joseph and Emilienne Lafrance of Trois Rivieres, P.Q., in a June 24 ceremony at St. Ambrose Roman Catholie â€" Church _ which _ was decoratedâ€"with pink andâ€"white standards. The Rev. A. J. Tipping officiâ€" ated at the ceremony, Mrs. Mary Desiri was the organist and Miss Sandra Cahute the soloist. LAFRANCEâ€"LEFEBVRE RITES The bride was given in marâ€" riage by her father. She wore an empire waist dress: of silk organza over taffeta, on the A line, with lace bodice, bell shaped sleeves and chapel train. Herlace sleeveless coat featured scalâ€" lopped edging and a hood in lace. She carried a cascade of white roses and stephanotis inâ€" terspersed with ivy. The maid of honor was Miss Louise Lafrance and the bridesâ€" maid was Miss Suzanne Lefebâ€" vre. They wore floor length dresses on empire lines of light blue â€" shantung with _ rounded necklines and bell sleeves. Wearâ€" ing a shasta daisy in their hair F. Williams of London, Ontario; Mr. and Mrs. R. Rogers of Port Elgin; Mr. and Mrs. O. M. Steer of Peterborough; Mr. and Mrs. BY_ LOUISE DAVIS GRACIOUS HOSTESSING Dear Louise: We are giving a dinner party for 14 at our home. Should I have place cards My husband will carve the turkey. Are the legs to the right or left? Should the bird be on the table when the guests asâ€" semble? Do you think we will need two of us to do the serving? I would appreciate any other pointers. w on l c B us G.P.H., Long Branch LOUISE DAVIS ANSWERS: To avoid delays in seating your guests, I do advise place cards. Keeping food hot is of prime importance. If you are having a salad, it would be a good idea to have it already on the plates and set in front between the knife and the fork. Your salad fork would then be placed to the left of the dinner fork. But if the turkey and vegetables will be the first course, all should be on the table justâ€"before the seating. A â€"hostessâ€"would avoid having her guests at an "empty" table as they are being seated. Your husband will be much too busy with his carving to manage the servingsof the vegeâ€" tables so I suggest you take over that duty to expedite the serving. In fact, doing all the carving at the table would be so timeâ€"taking that the bird and vegetables would get from cool to cold. I strongly advise that a good part of the carving be done in the kitchen beforeâ€" hand and the slices be arranged on an extra platter and kept piping hot when the two platters are brought to the table. In this way, getting the filled plates to each person can be managed quickly and "hotly." TODAY‘S ETIQUETTE M:(“dmldq-l‘yflfl ts a auiqm&flqml!mhy:mfln now, i yz mon mortgage gn- :.m-vhp...)-tlhm-yh Now is the best time to build for your family‘s f:;.-ï¬--l“lmuh-.m CcONSULT A MEMBER OF THE TORONTO REAL ESTATE BOARD Miss Tate relies heavily on skillful interviewing before placâ€" ing her~applicants in jobs. She does no aptitude or psychologiâ€" cal testing, leaving these tasks to the qualified psychologists who are properly the only ones allowed by law to administer such tests. If the applicant posâ€" sesses special shorthand or typâ€" in_ skills she does witness a demonstration but prefers to deâ€" vote the greater part of the inâ€" terview just to listening. In recent years, more and more employers are making use of personnel agencies to obtain help. In most cases it is less costly than advertising privâ€" ately, and the follow up work of interviewing, ‘and testing many applicants can be time consumâ€" ing. For a reasonable fee the agency takes all these chores out of the hands of the emâ€" ployer and sends him, in most cases, a thoroughly capable employee. antee to replace applicants free The reception was held at the Pickfair restaurant, the bride‘s mother â€"receivingâ€"inâ€"anâ€"apple green sparkle crepe dress and jacket with matching shoes, a tulle and crepe hat, gold purse and yellow rosebud corsage. The groom‘s mother was in a navy blue shantung dress with white appliques on the bodice, blue and white wide brimmed hat, matchâ€" ing straw bag and shoes and a pink rosebud corsage. they carried small cascades of shasta daisies. Mr. Joseph Lafrance, the groom‘s father, acted as best man â€" while Michel Lafrance served as usher. Piper Studios were the photographers. Destination of the wedding trip was unknown. For it, the bride chose an A line dress of blue linen with white linen yoke and matching blue packet. Her hat was a blue and white pillbox, her accessories were patent, and her corsage â€" was a â€" white gardenia. The couple will live in Ste.â€" Therese de Blainville, P.Q. Out of town guests were from Shawinigan, Trois Rivieres, Ottawa, Montreal, Kapuskasing and Michigan. A. Taylor of Peterborough; Dr. and Mrs. A. Perkins of Barrie: Mr. .and Mrs. R. Agnew of Barrie. There is absolutely no charge Boumeut Listine staviee to the job applicant. At Lynn ‘Tate‘s agency he gets a profesâ€" sional evaluation of his personal value on the labour market, he does not waste time going from interview to interview, and each person ‘is presented to his prosâ€" pective employer in his best light. "People," says Lynn, "are inâ€" variably nervous when they come in to apply for a job." They are frequently overly aware of their own inadequacies. We are now getting a goodly proportion of middle aged married women who have spent many years in their own home raising children but are now ready to reâ€"enter the labour force. Some are eager for work but full of confusion as to their own worth. We often recommend job retraining. At all times we try to advise what is best for the individual aid best for the community. Lynn Tate refuses to handle orders from firms or individuals where discrimination is pracâ€" tised. On a couple of occasions she has had managers call her back to apologize after they had specifiel "no Negroes, no Jews, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Lafrance were married at St. Ambrose Roman Catholic Church, Alderwood. The bride is the former Maureen Marie Ange Lefebvre, daughter of Ernest and Simone Lefebvre of Savona Drive. The couple will live in Ste.â€"Therese de Blainville, P.Q. us o â€" PERFORMANCE Doesn‘t Move You SV OUR PRICES WILL!! C IF MERE BEAUTY POWER AND mo one from the United Kingâ€" dom," and Lynn has brusquely turned down the account. personnel ageney, with only partâ€"time secretarial help, Lynn into the local Industrial Manâ€" agement committee. Her social awareness led her to approach ment buildings.. Now mothers take turns each weekâ€"day supâ€" ervising preâ€"school tots. So well has the experiment worked out that it is contemplated setting up more playrooms on the same basis throughout other apartâ€" ments. about setting up a playroom for "Mr. Kaplan was perfectly willâ€" ing to set up the playroom," Lynn say. "It was just that no one had ever @sked him." Is Lynn really a kook? If she is, it must be what it takes to run a one woman orâ€" ganization, treat people like huâ€" man beings, be genuinely interâ€" ested in their happiness, and spend your leisure time trying to improve your community. â€"A Piper Studios photograph and agencies last ‘year recruited also reports that total immigration skilled or professional employees to Ontario last year was 107,621 overseas through the Ontario Deâ€" â€"second highestâ€"annual total since partment of Economics and Deâ€" the Second World War, and 37 velopment‘s immigration branch. per cent more than in 1965. More than 330 Ontario companies The department‘s annual review 1965 PONTIAC _ PARISIENNE 4 Dr. Mardtop. Fully equipped. Excellent condition~ throughout. 2 Year G/W Worranty, Lic. 79250K. â€" MOTORS LIMITED 170 LAKESHORE RD. E. F SALE NO MONEY DOWN 1964 GALAXIE 500 XL 2 Dr. Hardtop. Radio. 8 Cyl. Autoâ€" matic, power steering, . power brakes, etc. Don‘t delay on this hard to find model. 2 Year G/W warranty. Lic. 602â€"913. â€" Wes £2,2955 ks 1,975 PRICE 1 PRic 1,9175 PRICE 1 1965 CHEVROLET BEL AIR WAGON. 8 cyl. _ Automatic. Rado. W/W. Just the ticket for the family man. Come in and test drive today. 2 year G/W warranty. Lic. 47178X. No Payments till Sept. 1967 Instant Financing « Instant Terms SALE 2 166 PRICE 1 1965 GALAXIE 500 CONâ€" VERTIBLE. Fully equipped. For the utmost in driving pleasure come in and see this well cared for model. 2 year G/W warranty. Lic. 41937A. Was $2,495 s 2,225 PRICE 1 Paic 2, 225 PRICE 1 1961 MERCURY 4 Door. 8 eyl. Auto. _ Power steering. _ Power Brakes. Radio. Lic. 605â€"844. Was $1,095 SALE PRICE ELN 278â€"1019 or 278â€"5244 Your Dealer for Ford â€" Falcon â€" Fairlane â€" Mustang â€" Thunderbird â€" W Was THIS WEEK‘S SPECIAL ons t 2 2 $2,085 $695 â€" Thursdaoy, July 27, 1967 â€" > 1966 AUSTIN 1100 4 DOOR SEDAN. Real economy car, in new car condition. 2 year G/W warranty. She 1,275 PRICE 1 1965 PLYMOUTH FORDOR. Block with red interior. A.A.1 condition. Four brand new tires. Automatic, etc. 2 yeer G/W warranty. Come down and see for yourself. Lic. 31572. Was $1,825 SALE I 655 PRICE i1 GOING TO EXPO! 1964 RAMBLER WAGON. Fold down seats, automatic transmisâ€" sion, radio, w/w. _ Wonderful automobile for the family that likes trips to the country 2 year warranty. Lic. 50476X,. SALE PRICE transmission. Blue with matchâ€" ing â€" interior. _ Excellent â€" transâ€" portation. Lic. J13508. Was $995 SALE _ 50 PRICE B 1960 â€"PONTIAC.â€"â€"â€" Automatic 1963 MERCURY FORDOR. Raven black with red interior. Just been traded in. 2 year G/W worranty. Lic. 628â€"648. Was $1,195 SALE PRICE &1 za= Was o + 24 9 4 P L R Was w ,:;) PORT CREDIT $1,355 $825