---- eR ---- a -- RETR ANNASE TEENIE ® "RRPEROFIRFER LE 2220 4 £3 0 wv « " = © - a &@ » od port © w« - i * » pd fis ¢ » - » ol » w wa = @ EE FE ET Tt Er rR TL TI it a raves jes who have good- figures should comes to the way . WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 12, 1949 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE BEAUTY FOR YOU Sermonette for By BELEN JAMESOX It is a grand and glorious bless- ing to have a fine figure. It is mice to possess pleasing contours, to be as slender as a lily. But, if grace is lacking, the picture is not attrac- tive. The American girl, glorified to the nth degree, spending mil- Hons on cosmetics, millions more in beauty shops, dolled up in the finest raiment the world has to offer, seldom think of carriage. She does not walk in pride and splen~ dor. She merely gets there, wher~ ever she is going. Teachers of phy- sical education state, sadly, that good posture is a rare quality. Among the offenders are those who swing their hips to a marked degree. This unpleasant habit, that makes a woman icuous, is ly unlovely when a girl is dressed in slacks. Only those lass- wear them; they give accent to every defective line, every bulge. A prominent tummy, an over-develop- ed rear, can be camouflaged to a certain extent by skirts, but slacks call attention to them. Certain ones ke to wear the pants, and evi- dently don't care how they look. Men, who are conservative when it their women dress, prefer to see their ladies in feminine attire. In walking, the movements of the body should be rhythmic, with perfect harmony of muscle action. Rhythm is-lacking when one shoul- der or. the other pushes forward with each step; that is what hap- pens when hip-swinging goes on. Girls who exhibit this affectation seem - almost to be walking side wise .and one does not have to be eritical to believe that they are drawing attention to their anatomi- eal lines. And that is not pretty. With the spinal column carried tall, there can bk no loose-pointed Wiping. Take the kinks out of the ckbone, fall into an even, pleas- ing stride and one has style and manner. Women with overexpanded mid- sections increase their width amid- ships by slouchy locomotion. Let ' Hip- Swingers +e them cut out this unlovely prac- tice, walk with energy, erectness and grace and they will notice, in a very short time, a decided im- provement of contour and lessened measurements, ; Hip-swingers are shallow. breath- ers because they can't do their swing and keep the chest fully ex- panded. It is only when chest ex- pansion is normal that sufficient air trickles down to the cellars of the lungs, forces out stale air. That leads to" another beauty ill, a coarse complexion, or a pale or sal- low one. Unless breathing is deep, circula- tion is likely to be sluggist. Brisk blood-streams bring color to the cheeks and lips, sparkle to the eyes. GLAMORIZING Before Your Home Permanent By HELWN \ FOLLETT t, hair sh Before having a per oil, says Suoen Star Jeff Donnell. ] SINCE the home permanent be- came a frenzy, pretties of high school age are giving themselves Favorite Crochet Here's just what you want for that company-to-lunch set. An oval doily in the pineapple design, with matching round ones. Easy-crochet doilies for table, buffet, or dresser, Pattern 7004; crochet directions. Our improved pattern -- visual with easy-to-see charts and photos, and complete directions -- makes needlework easy. Send TWENTY - FIVE CENTS Send your order to DAILY TIMES Id be conditioned witl. hot mineral @ a end curls. These young ladies should know that, while the per- manent treatment does no real damage to the hair shafts, it is necessary to do a little recondition- ing now and then. Three weeks before the curling session is on, oil treatments should, begin so as to relax the silky threads. Give 'the tresses a rousing brushing, strand by strand. Send the brush through them with a rolling 'motion. Mineral Oil Part the hair at various places, epply hot mineral oil along the partings. You can use a small brush for the purpose, a pledget of cot- ton or a large medicine dropper. When the oil is distributed, spread fingers and thumbs over the scalp, give the flesh a brisk friction. Hold the fingers stationary, knead with the thumbs, using a rotary move- ment. Apply the oil generously to the ends of the hair if it is' shoulder length. The farther away from the scalp, the drier the shafts. Pile the ends atop your head,put on a tow- er, turban style, and go to bed. Thorough Shampoo The shampoo in the morning must be extra thorough. Start with a rinsing of fairly hot water, using a strong current from a bath spray. No matter what shampoo medium you use--soap, cream or oil--there must be three applications and as many 8. One should have at least three of i displaced persons camps, lwant to do something important." Hellywood Highlights By BOB THOMAS Hollywood -- (AP)--Ingrid Berg- man leaves next month for Italy to make a film about women in "I wish I did have something planned in Hollywood," said the Swede, who recently returned from making a film in England, "but good scripts are hard to find. I She sald theg ItaMan trip will be strictly for work and she won't take her family. During a pause at an NBC air show, Miss German added, "I'm afraid to play the New York stage again, I guess I will sometime, but they'll compare, and I might not find another script that suits me as well as 'Joan o: Lorraine." People and Things! Humphrey Bogart is hepped up on his producing career, but would just as soon cut down on his acting. "Twenty years ago when I was 21, I liked acting," he sald on the "Tokyo Joe" set, "Now it wouldn't appal me to stop working and sail awhile." (Note to Bogie: Weren't you 21, 27 years ago?) Jane Wyman has no plans for the future. She has been announced for Alfred Hitchcock's "Man Run- ning," but there's no script yet and the film won't be made until May. She says she won't do "Serenade." What she'd like to do is "The Glass Menagerie." Greer Garson has a trophy she values almost as highly as her Oscar, It's a gold watch as a token of esteem from the acrobats she worked with in "Julia Misbeheaves." The head of the group has said, "Give me four months of training with her and I'd make her a great acrobat." Veronica Lake says she has be- | ¢ome "the grandma of the Para- mount lot." She has been there longer than any other actress. She plays a dope fiend in "Slatterly's Hurricane," but no mention of it can be made on the screen, for censorship reasons. She wonders if audiences will get the idea, Just Oh-So Simple! Boon for a busy mother! TWO, pattern parts, plus the ripply little peplum -- no shoulder-seams, no side-skirt seams. Cut and sew this precious dress in ONE day easily! Pattern 4993 comes 'in sizes 2,| 4, 6, 8.-8ize 6 frocks 2% yards 35- inch fabric; panties % yd. This pattern, easy to use, sim-' ple to sew, is tested for fit. Has complete illustrated instructions. Send TWENTY-FIVE CENTS accepted) for this pattern. Print plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS PATTERN NUMBER. : Send your order to DAILY TIMES GAZETTE, Pattern Department, Oshawa. London -- (CP) -- More than 80 awards will be made yearly for the best kept railroad stations on the Southern Region of Britain's na- tionalized railways. Among the judging points: Tidiness of plat. forms offices, waiting rooms and display of station gardens. these lubricating treatments be- fore giving oneself the permanent. Let them be one week apart. But do the brushing every single night. Nothing like it. It is the best kind of a tonic to make the hair grow thick and long, to put the glamor- ous shimmer on the glorious crest. Do You Need A Good Baby Sitter? We can solve your problem by guaranteeing you seven days a week Baby Sitting Service at moderate prices. We can only accept For further particulars TELEPHONE 740 GAZETTE Pattern Department. Oshawa. a nt ad adi, a a limited clientele. 3 Si A pr WHAT SHOULD 1 DO ABOUT Street- Length Dress at Reception? By MKS. CORNELIUS BEECKMAN Dear Mis. Beeckman: | * The son of a very dear friend of mine is to be mi soon, and we have a very perpl em. It is to be a large church wedding at 530 pm. and the bride is to wear a bridal dress with a long train, and a wedding veil. Besides the maid of honor and best man, there will be four bridcamaids and four ush- ers. The bridegroom, best man, and ushers will wear white dinner jac- kets, although the bridegroom's mother wanted them to wear tuxe- dos. Now the bride has requested my friend (bridegroom's mother) to' wear a street-length dress instead of the long dinner dress she had planned to wear. The reason given is that the bride's mother wanted to wear a street-length dress, After the ceremony there is to be a large reception, and the bridegroom's mother thinks she will be inappro-~ priately dressed, if she wears a street-length dress. We would ap- preciate your advice. WwW. M Any advice from anyone would, I feel sure, be of no value in this eir- cumstance, for the bride and her mother have made the decisions. It is their prerogative to make the de- cisions, and it is the social duty of the bridegroom and his family to abide by these decisions. Apparent- ly the bride-to-be considers her wedding an evening wedding al- though she has named a day-time hour . . . six o'clock is really the very earliest hour at which men may correctly wear dinner jackets (either the regular black dinner jac- ket or the white dinner jacket ap- propriate for your climate). Then the "long train" on the bride's dress of course suggests a formal type of wedding, whereas tuxedos (with elther black or white dinner jac kets) and, even more importantly (as the bridegroom's mother cor- rectly feels) street-length dresses for 'the mothers," suggest an informal- ity quite out-of-keeping with that long-trained bridal dress. However, the bridegroom's mother must abide by the decision of the bride's mother, who is the hostess, But I'm sure your friend can choose such a lovely afterngon dress, and with a charming hat and accessories to harmonize, she will be fortified as much as possible, in her double role as bridesgroom's mother and wom- an guest of honor, USUALLY NOT NECESSARY FOR FAMILY TO ASK "WHO IS . CALLING?" Dear Mrs. Beeckman: We're having a famny discussion which 3) Jeveloping into quite an "argument" . . . will you settle it, please? It's about the telephone. Two of us think that. when the tele- phone call is for a member of the family who is at home, it is not necessary for the answerer to ask "Who is calling?" . . ., that this is proper (1) when the person as-ea for is not at home, or (2) wh" ha or she has requested that this question be asked of anyone call- ing. The other family members think that this question should al- ways be asked, because it makes it easier for the person being called. With which do agree? Dorothy S. I agree with the first group . . . that in the general routine of fam- ily telephone-answering, this ques- tion is not necessary if the person called is at home, unless the ques- tion has been requested. And there's one more point . . , there is often more than a bit of sugges- tion of "curiosity" in a member of the family asking this question, when unsolicited. (Mrs, Beeckman will be glad to answer question submitted by read- ers.) A Physician Advises You By HERMAN A BUNDESEN MD CAUSE OF BACKACHE I do net belleve that anybody knows just how many kinds of back- ache there are, nor do we know what it is that causes a number of these backaches, We do know that when the pain is in the back part of the legs and lower part of the back the condition is usually known as sciatica. Sci- atica may be produced by a variety of conditions. Similarly, pain in the arm may be brought akout by many disorders, so, in those instances in which pain in the arm is present, a thorough study by the physician should be carried out. Once the cause' is found, proper treatment may be promptly emploved. May Cause Pain Disturbances of the spinal cord or brain, such as may be produced by infections or tumors, may cause | Easy to Use "SALA TEA BAC Firiest Quality- ] A DS | pain in the arm. The disorder lead- ing to arm pain may be one that affects the nerve roots. Conditions affecting the spine may cause pres- sure: on the nerves coming from the spinal cord and passing, into the arm, For example, broken bones in the spine, infections of these bones, tumors, and arthritis or inflamma- tion of the joints in the spine all may contribute to pain in the arms. Next in the group of causes is one known as a cervical rib, a condition in which there is an extra rib, at- tached to the spine at the base ef the neck, which causes pressure on the nerves. A muscle known as the 'scalenus anticus muscle, which is located in the neck, may also press on the nerves and produce pain in the arm. In some cases, pain in the arm is due to a disorder affecting the | structure of the arm itself. Broken bones, neuritis or infection of the nerves, or conditions § blood vessels, may factors. % To find the cause Ny i | we arm, X-rays of th shoulder may be hel ing thevcase. A thorou examination should also out, including the nece ratory tests. It is often ¥ to have a study made bj gist to determine wi the nervous system Many times it is ad sult an orthopedic that conditions aff and muscles may be present. } As I have stated, ti to be used depends eng the uto- There are bargains feCOg- The Times-Gazette ¢hstan- ----ir with cause of the diffici 454 SIMCOE (25¢) in coins (stamps cannot be - gineer- ince at te been PHONE" 1062 MEN'S TIES _ Reg. up to 1.00. SALE PRICE .. MEN'S SHIRTS «Jines. PRICE SALE PRICE .... V.hite and colored prints. Broken Reg. up to $3.75 BOYS' COTTON COMBINATIONS Long sleeves, ankle length, Sizes 24 to 34. Reg. $2.29. SALE PRICE ... BOYS' LINED SPLIT LEATHER MITTS ner isn BO SALE 2.79 3 . 1.69 454 SIMCOE SOUTH p \ FANCY TABLE CLOTHS: 52x54 and 68x81. Reg. 6.95. Sale Price FANCY COTTON TABLE CLOTHS: 49x68. Reg. 2.98, : Sale Price ..... LYRE AERO PURE IRISH LINEN DAMASK TABLE CLOTHS: 54x54. Reg. 6.95. Sale Price : 63x63. Reg. 8.75. . . brings you unsurpassed values in Ladies' Wear, Men's Wear, Children's Wear and Yard Goods. soiled goods are being sacrificed at duced prices. These are just a few of the many great values offered during this sale. our way of saying "Thank You" for your kind patronage during the past year, on Some of our broken lines and counter- greatly re- This is SALE * * this, the occasion of our First Anniversary. Our Sale starts TOMORROW.- Drop in and browse around! LADIES' FLANNELETTE NIGHT GOWNS Small, medium and large, Reg. 2.69. Sale Price ® 2.98 1.98 Reg, Up to 1,09 N sy COTTON BROADCLOTH 36" wide. White, SALE PRICE Striped, Grey, 54" wide. SALE PRICE Tan, Red and Black. Reg. 45c, FLANNELETTE -- 36 ins. Wide plain blue and pink. Reg. 55c. SALE PRICE .. Yard COTTON PLAID - Reg. 1.29. SALE PRICE ..... Q8¢ ALL WOOL DONEGAL TWEED * Pink, Grey, 39: YARD es 36 ins. Wide Reg. 2.85, YARD 1.98 Frank Simmons, Prop. PHONE 1062