Ontario Community Newspapers

Porcupine Advance, 3 Oct 1940, 1, p. 7

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THUIHIOAY. 3RIDD. 10940 caught and workmapnship. We suggest you come in toâ€"da sturdy Britishn overcoatings VOuUu wishâ€"bu stvle model properly selection It takes time to tailor an Overroat 17‘% Pine Street North International TAILORS Mark Bowie Co. Schumacher Have You Ordered Y our WM. L. LEISHMAN TIP TOP TAILORS ostumes Have The Patriotic Touch This Season .30 ud Agents for International Tail Kensington erfect fift der n( ind Phone 106 SCF They‘ll be tops with you the minute you see them â€"these smart new fall Kensingtons in Snap and Roll brim and Homburg models. â€" Come in‘ and get yours early while the choice is widest. the great ood STt ry when TDon and ney Suits do it. Make you longerâ€"waistâ€" ed, more willowly, with the fulness econtrolled in pleated skirts; hipâ€"length jackets and fingertip coats that seem to stretch the top half of you. Selfâ€" Fur does it. Gives you a new jndeâ€" finiteness> ofâ€" outline, sweeping ~softly around the hem of a dres;s or edging the panels of a draped dinner gown. Blurâ€" ring the revers of a suit or cutting a great are around a coat collar. Through her romances thread the yellcew brown of khaki, the steel blue of wings, and the deep tones of the sea. And she marches down the aisle to the sound of bugles blowing. War budzets sharpen her instinects for sound buying. International finance turns her eyes to the Canadian market, the British sales front. And yetâ€"being a womanâ€"she must be smart. Vivid as the Scotch broom on the island uplands at Virtoria. Gay as a heady day in the Laurentians. Lovely as a prairie twilight. Chatelaine gives you the Canadian womanâ€"and her new fashion formula., What Our Clothes Will Be Like We‘re going to look taller and looser, as though somebody had let out a tuck, all down the silhouette. And everyâ€" thing we wear has something to do with the new picture. Hats do it. Add to the ssense of more natural proportions. Because they sit definitely on your head, but stray all over the place from that beginning. Szoop away up in front, dip in the Back, sweep sidewise, or curl over to give your ppmpadour a good billing. Coats do it. Make you slenderer all the way along, with their looser,‘ narrower lines. (Instead Oof being bunshed here and sprayed out there.) And with those ties and drapings we haven‘t seen "since the last war. (Wonder if we‘ll ever let them make us go buttonless again, clutching our coats to us for dear life?) . War Work and Activity Having Decided Influence on Fashions in Clothing Toâ€"day. â€" Hats, Furs, Coats, Suits, Dresses, All Take Their Part in New Picture. For through her activities at home, or downtown, runs the steady obligato of war work, war work, war work. Throuzh her hours of relaxation and play swings the beat of troops marchâ€" ing, camps Oopening, soldiers dating, fliers leaving. New Fashion Formula Is That Clothes Must Register for Service (From <Chatelaine) There‘s a fresh simplicity and ease Oof line . . . the fountainâ€"pen silhouâ€" ette‘s important . . . hats fit ... emâ€" broidery blazes . . . jarkets are longer . . . drapes drip from everywhere. But the biggest style news isâ€"there‘s a new fashion formula! Canada‘s busy woman of today needs clothes that register for service, Timmins Announcement was made yesterday by Mr. J. L. Murray, principal of the Timmins High and Vocational School that a scholarship awarded by Sam Bucovetsky, Limited, had been won this year by Jack Stingle, who is now nttending Victoria College at Toronto University. The scholarship is awardâ€" ed for the year‘s work in his studies as well as other activities in the school and was decided upon by a number of senior members of the staff. Jack Stingle Wins S. Bucovetsky Ltd. Scholarship, 1940 A jaunty sports coat Of white teddy bear wool, which, m‘ dears, is reverâ€" sible, is the dream of every young lady, who wants to have many clothes. This coat will take the place of two in your wardrobe, and the looselyâ€"fitted hood saves the purchase of another hat. One thing is certain. The whole Canadian fashion formula will be conâ€" ecocted to reflect the busy useful lives of Canadian women today. And to interpret their love of color outdoors, of gracious) dressing in their homes and at night, and their sense of good deâ€" s10n From England, Ireland. Scotland, Australia, will continue to come the finest in woollens and linens and silks. Fabrics now fashioned into some of the most exciting of new season styles by the great English designers, and strongâ€" ly influencing US. fashions. And as our Canadian designers deâ€" velop strength and power,; they‘ll be turning their eyes on Canada for inâ€" spiration. Already they are using soldier, sailor and airman uniforms for touches in our tailored clothes. And just as the United States today looks at the costumes of its Indians and the landscape of its country for fashion ideas, Canada may turn to Our Mounâ€" ties, our Indians, our Frenchâ€"Canadian influences, our Georgian Bay and Rocky Mountain colors. Wellâ€"Paris is blacked out. In this issue we bring you the last lovely evening gowns from the hands of the great designers who were once centred there. There won‘t be any more for a long time. New York provides suggesâ€" tions especially for the young, gay things. Hollywood has always) affected our makeâ€"up and hairâ€"do‘s strongly. And we‘ll still watch the movie stars for ideas in both these important fashâ€" ion phases. And costume pictures and glamorous clothes of the stars will afâ€" fect our stvles. Blacks home first in color, with the allâ€"Mlack outfit, from tip to toe, hitting a new high this autumn. Then there‘ll be lots of coppers and goldenâ€"glinted browns, or deepâ€"deep tones of green, and iblueâ€"greys;, rich and glowing. With dashes of red and vivid blue and yellow for spice. Where Will They Come From? Mostly, right from where they‘ve been ccming from for a long timeâ€" Canada, and the rest of the British Eimp‘re. But clothes, you say, are more than cloth and stitthes. They‘re ideas. Innovations. Color. Trimâ€" ming. . Combinations. Even those Canadian claszssâ€"the shirtmaker frock and the skirt and sweater, the lace tea dress with a jacket and the dinner gown with its simple bolero, are longer lined, more flexible in fit. _ The very fabri‘s of the new season make for softened lines. Por new jerâ€" seys, velvets, fine wools, velveteens ars all manipulated into gentle tusckings. pleats and drapes; And then, the use of avccessories beâ€" ccmes more subtle, Gloves and bags are likely to repeat your costume ton*s, in lighter or deeper shades, instead of striking their own note. Stockings reâ€" flect your ensemble shades more often than not. Veils, toning with your hai, get their interest through delicate traceries of pattern, smart new effects in draping like the costumeâ€"party mask, the delicate illusion of net on a tailorâ€" ed hat (as our cover girl wears it). seem more sketched than blocket T woâ€"inâ€"One A THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TTMMINS, ONTARIO The ambpassador was said to have made _ no. definite promicts except to refer the matter to his government, the French island of Martinique in the Caribbean were reported in diplomatic quarters toâ€"day. Usually well informed persons said they understood this was one of the principal topics discussed yesterday of President Roosevelt and Henri Haye, ambassador from the Vichy Governâ€" ment. The planes, purchased by the former Angloâ€"French Purchasing Mission, were taken to the island aboard the French aircraft carrier Bearn about the time of the Frenchâ€"German armistice. Washington, Oct. 2%â€"United States efforts to recover more than 100 Americanâ€"built war planes lying idle on Arrow ties and shirts, Stanfield underwear, Hart Shoes and other well known lines of accessories all are carâ€" ried by Mark Bowie Company. United States Now Tries to Recover Planes Sold France Mark Bowie and Co. carry the famâ€" ous Stetson hat, renowned the world over for its quality long wearing ability. Fashion Craft, Society Brand and Warren K. Cook suit and coating samples give the prospective suit buyâ€" er a wide range of cloths and patterns from which to choosse. In addition a large number of overcoats and topâ€" coats as well as raincoats are carried in stock. U.S. War Head Makes "Break" to Newspapermen From the top of his head to his heels, Mark Bowie Company, are prepared to cutfit the Porcupine man for any ozcasion, sport, dress or work. A large and varid stock of merchandise enâ€" ables the management of this longâ€" established store to do a real job on haberdashery and footwear. Another new addition to Helena Rukinstein‘s Flower Shop Bouquet serâ€" ies, of which Apple Blossom, English Garden, American Garden, and French Garden colognes are already favourites of thousands of women, is the Autumn Garden colosne, which bears the clear tang of a late garden, and has capturâ€" ed the mood and spirit of the season. Long â€" Established d a s h‘ers Carr Rangce of Brands. _ _Not only do these basic styles preâ€" dominate in the changing fashions of each season, basic colors also retain vearâ€"round pspularity. Realizing this fact and the consequent simplication it brings; to cosmetic colours, Madame Helena Rubinstein press>nts her Classics in for Fall 1940, as featured at Sutheriland‘s Drug Store. Here are six exquisite classic reds in coâ€"ordinated makeâ€"ups which have perâ€" isted through the yvears, have won the hearts and lips of women everywhere. With just one or at most two of them, the discriminating woman can harmonâ€" ize every costume colour with her own natural beauty and avoid the confusion: and needless expense of repeated changes every time a new cosmetic colour breaks the fashion headlines. The six classics are, Life Red, Rico Red, Sporting Pink, Red Coral, Red Raspâ€" berry and Red Velvet. Mark Bowie Co. Will QOutfit Man From Head to Heels Notable Classics in Cosmeties at Sutherland‘s Drug Atf the toj ‘turban, wi fur. a: hat ‘selow | trim of le« The mode of living on this side of the Atlantic has developed a definite gsroup of fasiions particularly adapted to women‘s activities. Year after year aiscernins women in Canada and America have demanded these fashions in new versions. Consequently, both costumes and aczsessories have become known as Clastics. Trim your hat set Pfor a styvle Helena Featured your hat with furâ€"and you‘ll be ‘ a styleâ€"happy fall and winter; > top you see the everâ€"popular , with a high pume of silver r. and the wideâ€"brimmed sailor elow, bears a wide, braidâ€"like f lecpard. Oh, so smart . . . Accent on Hats iblished Haberâ€" ‘ s Carry Wide instein Products (GP Officers and men of the First Divisâ€" ion are contributing a day‘s pay to buy a Spitfire fighter for the RAF. ‘The pool is expected to total $33,375. The department of National Defense has issued revised orders regarding the granting of leave in the CASF. Unâ€" der new rules officers and men may be granted leave up to 14 days with pay after six months‘ continuous serâ€" vice. When the Crown prosecutor attemptâ€" ed to determine the reason for Stevens pleading guilty at the summary trial before Magistrate McKessock on Aug. 26, the accused answered that he only entered the plea of guilt in order to get out pf jail. His trial on that date was five days before it should have been heard in police court. "I‘m a better Canadian than you are," he hurled at Crown Attorney Wilkins during the crossâ€"examina"on. "What are you trving to do?" he auesâ€" "What are you trying to dc tioned. For afternoon teaâ€"isn‘t it a The softly shirred bodice, fu and slightly flared skift make practical fulfillment of tha Hlack afterncon dress. ce changed to make this ar new frock. New Trial Ordered in Case of Italian in Sudbury Charge Woollen and other children‘s wear are shown in large quantities in the children‘s shop of Shaheen‘s. Shahsen‘s also feature the dressos and aczessories to complete your enâ€" semble . . . there you will find sports ensembles, afternoon dresses, and eveâ€" ning wear. A large stock of boautiful autumn and winter coats has been received by Shaheen‘s Ladies‘ Wear, and many of the ciats are displayed in the spacious show windows. Trimmed in fine furs, the coats are displayed in the spacious tweeds and all the fine wools which will keep you snug during the cold months ahead. International Tailors Guarantee Finest Value tweeds, sergos, saxonies, worsteds, chevicts and many ¢thers in every *hade and style are on display at this for your selection. The newest London and New York; style: are available and the vnion ecraftsmen of Tip Top Tailors, which: this agen:cy represents, guarantese to hand cut and tailor clcthing to your cwn measurements | Suitings, topsoatings, overcoating, i j "More Value for Less Money" is Slogan of Schuâ€" macher Shop. Autumn and Wirter Coats Featured at Shaheen‘s Store ‘"‘More <lothing value for less money" hbas long been the slozan of Internaâ€" tional Tailors, 27 First avenue, Stchuâ€" macher, who have teen dressing Porâ€" cupine men for Ilong enough to be able to do a good job. Modish Access plete the Co REVISE LEAVES N CASF An Afternoon Thril , _ _The monthly general meeting of the fn S StOl‘e ~Ladies‘ Auxiliary of. / the . Canadian ILegxcn will be conducted: on Monday \-.()} ies to Comâ€", evening, Oct. 7th,â€"at the ‘Legion . hall. All members are asked to be in atâ€" costume. tendanee â€"isn‘t it a darling? bodice, full sleeves, skigt make this the Accessories may this an entirely ‘castic manner, any statements any way, shap: mphatically the he three Crown dream 4 | A special noteâ€"Will the relatives of the soldiers serving _ with the forces in England, pleas> getâ€"in touch with the Thirteen tables: of whist were playâ€" ed at the regular Tuesday evening whist drive in the tournament conductâ€" ed ty the Ladies‘ Auxiliary of the Canâ€" £dGian Legion. Winners at whist were: Ladios: ist, Mrs, Peressini; 2nd, Mrs. J. McDonald, and 3rd, Mrs. Sinclair wonr on a out from Mrs. Topping;. Gentlemen: ist, Mrs. J. Shaw; 2nd, Mss G. Harwood, hoth playing as gentlemen), and 3rd, MVr. W. Bszanson, MC.‘s were Mrs. Harvey and Mrs. Hardy., Monthly Meeting of Ladies‘ Auxiliary on Monday, Oct. 7 Shaheen‘s Dep‘t. Store SALON 10 to% 15% OFF Bardessono Block The season‘s outstanding fashion hits in lavishly furâ€"trimmed Coats! Unforgettably low priced for such luxurious quality! Every important fashion in magnificently tailored stylesâ€"topped with rich selected furs! Choose‘ your coat at Shaheen‘s nowâ€"and save J. BERT SUTHERLAND Why Wait! 11 PINE STREET NORTH Costs in our SINCLAIR â€" THE VALET HIGH QUALITY MEN‘s sUITS AT LoOWEsT PRICES, Opposite Town Hall, Timmins PHONE 625 Complexion Perfection CLEANERS and DYERS Join the beauty parade of 1940, Have an exquisitely fresh, smooth conplexion that arouses admirâ€" ation wherever you go. Uss Helena Rubinstein‘s beauty preâ€" parations. Sold exclusively at SButherland‘s N BASEMENT o OFF 12:"" to 22 °* THIS WEEK ONLY See The New Helena Rubiastein Classics ~Fine Fabrlcs. h H1gh Styles ! UGC * IS § with WITH The bedy was found by a bus driver who said he stopped his vehicle after it had passed over some obstruction. It was believed the baron was run down in the blackout. Ladies‘ Auxiliary of the Canadian Legion. This is for the Comfort Fund, as the auxiliary will send parcels to the soldiers, ‘Phone Mrs. R. Hardy, 1879 J. or contact her at 6 Transmisâ€" sion Line; or Mrs, W. A. Devine, 962â€" W., or 283 James street. London, Oct. 2â€"Baron d‘Arnauld de Vitrolles, 60, French minister to The Netherlands; before the German invasâ€" ion, was found dead in the blackout near Piccadilly last night. French Exâ€"Minister Found Dead During London Blackout Beauty Preparations V alues in our Phone 808 THMMMINS T immins

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