Daily Times-Gazette, 8 Aug 1949, p. 8

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. AGE EIGHT In The dome. Personals Accounts of social events and of visitors to and from the city are appreciated by the Social Department. SELEPHONE 35 Mr. George Chow has returned rom an extended trip to China. * * * Mr. James Byrnes visited recently ith relatives at Crowe Lake. > + 4 Miss Bernie Simons is spending vacation with members of her umily at North Channel. * + + b Mr. F. V. Evans visited with Mr. nd Mrs. David Evans at Wark- rorth recently. * + @ . Mr. Everett Maycock has been isiting hi parental home at Wark- orth. ~ OF INTEREST TO WOMEN -~ 2: * + @ Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Gomme ere recent guests of Mr, and Mrs. 7len Hancock at Warkworth. * + Mrs. Harold Hart, Masson Street, 1as - a recent visitor to Camp Jomak, Dorset, Haliburton. Pp) [ Mr. and Mrs. Ray Collins and | laughter visited recently with Mr. | | | | | | nd Mrs. W. J. Amell at Cardinal. * + & Mrs. Gordon D. Conant is stay- | ng for a few days at the Ontario | 7irl Guides Camp, Sprucedale. * &* Mr. and Mrs. G. T. Brooks and | tud, Alexandra Street, have return- | d from two weeks vacation at their | ottage at Brechin. * + Wed In Double-Ring Ceremony MR. AND MRS. BRENTON RECTOR Eileen Reddick, is the daughter of whose marriage was solemnized recently. The bride, formerly Miss Lois Mr. and Mrs. Harry Reddick of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Parrott and | genoa and the bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Rector, laughters, Carol and Ann, have] eturned from a vacation to Wasaga | each. | * + & Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Baxter, Al-| any Street, returned last evening rom a vacation spent in Bobcay- | eon. ; ob Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Coppin and | fr. and Mrs, R. E. Saunders have eturned from a vacation to Buf- alo. > + bP | Miss Muriel Cowie and Miss Ber- | ice Proctor have returned home fter spending their vacation in luebec and the Laurentians. * + oP Mrs. Cy Elsey and daughter, 'arol Anne, Rosehill Boulevard, re visiting Mr. and Mrs. George fercer at Kendal for a few days. : * % Mr. and Mrs. Don Trotter and amily were recent guests. of Mr. | nd Mrs. Ernest Anderson at] lueensboro. LA RR Mr, and Mrs. D. Little and Mr lex Walker have been vacationing fith Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Little at 'ardinal. LE Mr. and Mrs. Mel Jolley and amily of Hamilton, were week- nd guests of Mr. and Mrs. A, G. ioppin, Arthur Street. * + Pb Messrs. Alan and Joan Hart and| fom Storie are members of the| taff at Camp Comak, Dorset, in| he highlands of Haliburton. | Ln I : | Mr. and Mrs, Clayton Meisen-| eimer, Ontario Street, returned on| aturday, from a vacation in Sud- ury where they visited relatives nd friends. | + | Mr. and Mrs. A. V. Walker and lobert and Judy, French = Street, eturned last evening from a vaca- ion at Cedar Beach, Lake Simcoe. > + , Mr. and Mrs. W. Lonsberry ac-| ompanied by Mr. and Mrs. A. angley, of Bowmanville, were| uests last week of Mr. and Mrs. | 'om Buck at Peterborough. * Mrs. Mason Chamberlain, Queen jtreet, has had as her guests her aughter, Mrs. Theodore Schamer- jorn and Mr. Schamerhorn, of Hill- | rest, Belleville. * * * Mr. Frank Adey, Gibbon Street, 1as returned after spending a week vith Mr. and Mrs. Richard Lewis nd son, Dick, at their cottage at selmont Lake, + % Mr. and Mrs. George W. Stacey md Miss Carol Ann Stacey have eturned home from a two-weeks' acation at Brandy Island, Honey farbour. $ + @ Mr. and Mrs. James N. Flucker ind children, David, Joan and Douglas, were week-end visitors at he home of Mr. and Mrs. M. Mc- ntyre Hood, Simcoe Street South. * + Among those attending the 26th Criennial Assembly of the Order of he Eastern Star which is being 1eld in Toronto during this week we Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Wood, Mrs. '. E. Baxter, Mrs, William Duncan, drs. T. H Dunlop, Mrs Harry jtewart, Mrs A, S. McLeese, Mrs. V. A. Forbes. : * + @ Mr. and Mrs. William Major, of Windsor, who are the guests of fheir daughter, Mrs. Kenneth Spence, and Mr. Spence, Ontario Jtreet, Ajax, visited their cousins, vr. and Mrs. A. T. McCarthy, Rit- on Road South, last Friday. They | ilso paid a visit to Camp. Samac.| Mrs. Major is president of the! Auxiliary of - the Windsor Scout Froop No. 31. rv 1t is desirable, when you are buy- | ng fresh. vegetables for family neals, to choose those of medium | lize and regular shape, | | SKIN IRRITATIONS ing, chafing and chapping with Cuticura. Helps heal. Buy at your druggist today. CUTICURA 384% :5¢ ee | tryside spread out under me like of Nova Scotia. --Photo by Hornsby Studio. Female Sharpshooter Only Girl At Meet Burr of Ottawa is a lone avoman among 178 sharpshooting males at the Ontario Rifle Association meet | now under way here. But it doesn't | bother her. Shouldering her heavy .303-calibre army rifle, she voices her hopes of paying her holiday expenses by her target skill. "I did it last year," she said, "and I had only been shooting for a few months, I still get butterflies though when the marker says 'On Target' and we are shooting in earnest." Muriel, 33 and attractive, is a Virologist: "I fwunt influenza and | polio bugs in a laboratory at the National Health and Welfare Bu- reau." She grew up in Saskatoon and sharpened her hazel eyes potting at Saskatchewan gophers with a .22 rifle before coming to the capital seven years ago. An executive of the National Defence Headquarters Rifle Club in Ottawa, she was in- troduced to the spot a little over a year ago. Wearing the same type of motley clothing worn by all rifle enthusi- asts, Muriel can be spotted by the wide-brimmed felt hat she wears, pinned up on the side Aussie- fashion. It's the widest on the range. Her padded, unpréssed officer's jacket clashes with a pair of baggy blue slacks and a pair of yellow bobby socks are folded over a pair of light leather scampers. She intends to spend the second week of her holidays next week at the Dominion of Canada Rifle As- sociation meet at Ottawa Back home in Saskatoon are her parents, four brothers and a sister, but they are a bit of a disappoint- ment--*"none of them rifle shots." Flying Is Hobby Of Young Grandma Montreal--(CP)--Mrs. B. Mieana, Pexsian-born of German and French descent, is going all. out to prove that "life begins at 40." Beside being a grandmother at 49, Mrs. Mieana has her United States . private pilot's licence and expects to receive her commercial licence after she has completed more flying hours, She is not elig- ible for a commercial pilot's licence in Canada because she is over the age limit. While living in New York, Mrs. Mieana frequently strolled along the Hudson River. One day she no- ticed a sign about a flying club. Her curiosity aroused she found what looked like the back of a small hanger and in the hanger a small-yellow seaplane. The owner came by and offered a lift. Mrs. Mi- eana declined the offer saying that she would never ride in a smail plane unless she was piloting it. The couple made arrangements for Mrs. Mieana's first flying lesson and she was on her way to being a pilot. : She says she tells her friends that its safer up in-- the air han driving a car along a crowded highway where you have to guess the other fellow's mind and are av the mercy of careless drivers. "During my first lessons I was so intent upon controlling the move~ ments of the stick and rudder than I entirely forgot about being sus- pended in the air, It was just like sitting in a chair in my living room. Later I began to look at the coun- a huge bowl and my thrill and en- joyment were increased manifold." Mrs, Miena hopes that she'll soon be able to fly to Chicago to see her grandchildren. She has two sons, Ricardo and Rafael, both of whom live in Chicago. HEAT DETERS HOPES . Brocton Hill, Staffordshire, Eng- land --(CP)-- Women golfers ha a bar set up at the ninth hole, complete with barmen, drinks and buckets of ice. But the heat was so intense during the championship play that half the competitors didn't get thay far, 50 he knows what he's about. He also has an understand- ing and devoted wife, Eva, who is cheerful and doesn't insist on baby- ing her husband too much. 7 Considerate Wife Can Help Husband Long Branch--(CP)--Muriel: M. With Weak Heart New York --(CP)-- Don't scare your husband to death, girls, just because he has a heart condition. Whether or not a man lives as a useful and contented citizen after surviving a heart attack depends largely on his wife, Yale Harrison, God for My Heart Attack." says Charles author of "Thank Harrison has a cardiac condition writing Just to prove it, shortly after his release from hospital, she threw a party. "I thought it was wise," she said, "and I was right. Charles be- gan to look himself again." Harrison is a gregarious type and Mrs. Harrison often has friends in. Naturally she doesn't invite people who would irritate or annoy her husband. they don't have friendly arguments sometimes," she says. * Mrs, Harrison is unlike one wife she knows who won't let her diac husband out of the house even to vote. "Actually I think she likes Gis dependence on her. But he goes around looking scared all the time. A cardiac isn't an invalid." "But that doesn't mean car=- The Harrisons' favorite indoor amusements are playing cards or checkers, and listening stack of records. to their Both Mr. and Mrs. Harrison are gourmets so they never have "just anything for dinner." ' Since Mrs. Harrison is a public school teacher in New York they plan their whole week's menus in advance on Sunday nights. Harri- son frequently does. the cooking. One rule they believe in and strictly adhere to is to-bed-before- midnight. Heart sufferers are told to get lots of rest and, as Mrs. Har- rison has to get up at 7 a.m. she doesn't mind at all. 'Uppers" Found In Library"Loot Vancouver --(CP)-- A treasure of assorted articles left in books re- turned to the public library here gives librarians a few laughs -- and sometimes a bit of annoyance, They have found objects ranging from photos and keys to lipsticks, crochet needles and even a hair- brush. Not so welcome are chocolate smears and wads of chewing gum, 'most noted in children's books. The library's lost and found drawer has held dresses, trousers, money, watches and a cream cake. But, the staff hastens to add, such things were left in the building -- not in books. And the librarians are still look- ing for one certain book borrower. He left the uppers of a set of false teeth as a book mark, Baby Teeth Vital For Future Health Ottawa --(CP)-- When baby reaches the age of three, the Do- minion health and welfare depart- ment says, it's time to take him to toe dentist. By this time he has all 20 of his "baby" or foundation . teeth which are important to him both healthy growth and for appear- for ance. In a new booklet, "For Smiles that Last,"" the department says that foundation teeth "act as path- finders for permanent teeth, and guide them to their proper spaces. "Crowded, irregular permanent teeth are often the result of too early loss of one or more founda- tion teeth." To reduce tooth decay give the child milk instead of soft drinks, peanut butter sandwiches instead of candy bars, crackers and cheese in- stead of gum, fruit instead of cake -- for his after-school snacks. THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE MR. AND MRS. whose marriage took place recently. Oshawa. HARRY BENNETT McGRATH Formerly Miss Eunice Muriel Parks, the bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Parks of Bancroft, and the bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter McGrath of | --Photo by Hornsby. Studio. Clothes Always New On Television Trio London --(CP)-- Three smart fashion-wise girls are Mary Mal- colm, Sylvia Peters and Joan Gil- bert, London's television announ- cer-interviewers. Officials at Alexandra Palace, British Broadcasting Corporation television headquarters, predict that as television grows the trio will build up the world's biggest fireside fashion parade. Latest: fashions will be shown in plays, reviews and parlor games. Fashion houses will advise the al- ready expert wardrobe department in tomorrow's trends. At the moment the wardrobe de- partment provides dresses for the three announcer-reviewers. An of- ficial explained: "Every time they appear before the cameras they will be modelling the very latest in afternoon and evening dresses, tailored suits and even sports clothes. "They won't own them. Their wardrobe will cost thousands of pounds. But all the clothes will be made by expert seamstresses in our own wardrobe department. The three girls never wear the same dresses twice running on broadcasts. And what about the men? Well, MacDonald Hobley (who looks somewhat like a combination of Frank Sinatra and Prince Philip) is the only male announcer and it is planned to put him, too, into vari- ous ensembles of natty clothing. Interesting Exhibits Loaned To C.N.E. The central boxes of the Old Curiosity Stop in the Women's Building at the Exhibition are be- ing reserved for some of the pre- cious treasures belonging to the wives of Canada's Lieutenant-Gov- ernors. Other well-khown figures invited to send exhibitors include Cardinal McGuigan and Most Rev. George Frederick Kingston, Primate of all Canada. The interior furnishings of a pioneer Canadian log cabin are be- ing brought in their entirety from the Burridge Century House, Plea- sant Point, Lindsay, for display in the Women's Building at the C.N.E. They are being loaned to the Ex- hibition by Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Burridge of Lindsay. The attractive quilt designs based on Canadian life done by Toronto artist Thor Hansen and used in the making of quilts for the Midland quilt and rug fair, will be on view for all to see in the Women's Build- ing at the C.N.E. The Women's Di- rector has also arranged to display the quilts made from these patterns which recently drew wide attention at the fair in Midland. Among the most interesting patterns are the Canadian wild goose and the old grist mill, First Woman Doctor May Have Memorial Hastings, England. -- (Reuters)-- Antiquarians want to save the home of Britain's first woman doc- tor, Dr. Elizabeth Blackwell, who worked here for thirty years and died in 1910. . On the Regency building, dam- aged by bombing, is a tablet which reads: "Here lived and worked for 30 years Dr. Elizabeth Blackwell. Born at Bristol, 1821. Died at Hast- ings, 1910. The first woman to graduate in medicine in the United States in New York, 1849. The first woman to be placed on the British Medical Register, 1859." The house, overlooking the Eng- lish Channel, has been unoccupied for twenty years. The antiquarians hope some move for preservation, besides anything they may themselves do, may come from British and United States medical societies. Social Notices Marriage en PJ hay En ENGAGEMENT Mr, and Mrs. Harry A. Suddard wish to announce the engagement of their youngest daughter, Mary Lorraine, to James Bruce Murdoch, son of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew E. Murdoch, all of Oshawa. The mar- riage will take place on Saturday, September 10, in St. George's An- glican Church, at 4:00 p.m. MARRIAGE The marriage of Annie Salome Caverly, daughter of Mrs. Salome Caverly and the late Harvey Caver- Jy, to Mr. Bethel Clark, son of Mrs. Martha Clark and the late Buren Clark, Logan, West Virginia, took place on Thursday, August 4, in the Pilgrim Hplines: Church, Athol Street West, with the Reverend J. W. Bray officiating. New Or Old Look Which Shall It Be? By ED CREACH New York (AP)--Park your coats on that hitching post, gents, and let's amble down Fifth Avenue while the women folks are finishing their marshmallow sundaes. The big stores with the chromium } 'ated floorwalkers broke out a few million dollars' worth of female fall finery over the week-end, and you might as well see what you're going to get nicked for. Pay no mind to all that fancy advertising. Here's what it boils down to: The French new new look is bat- tling it out for the national fashion title with the American back-to-the- 1920's look. You should worry which one wins, Either way, it's going to cost you. How does the new look differ from the old new look? Well, the hem hangs higher. Thirteen-and-a-half inches from the floor, Remember that! You might be asked about it on a give- away program. Also, the new look has something called a floating panél, not to be confused with floating power. The floating panel is a kind of misplaced bib. It hangs down from the waist, apron-wise. Now then, in the next block, the new old look. Gad, what memories it brings back --the Charleston, Clara Bow, prohi- bition. The tight, or hobble skirt is back. Short, too -- 'way up what we used to call the limb. And get that waist line, half-way down the hip. Let's face it, men -- the oatmeal box figure may be on its way back. Cooking Exhibit To Be Judged By Men If the way to a man's heart is through his stomach; then 16 men at this year's CN.E. should be com- pletely enraptured with Canada's best cooks. For this year at the Ex, for the first time, judges of the cooking, canning and home baking are to be men -- and men only! Not one of the 16 can be con- sidered inexperienced, even by the best of the women cooks, for all are members of the Ontario - Bakery Production Men's Club. As mem- bers they have sampled hundreds of cakes, bread and pies before to- day. Among them are men from Hamilton, London, Bowmanville, Brantford and Toronto, Heaviest going, judging day, will be tasting the hundreds of apple pies competing for the top prize of $100. Next in quantity will be butter tarts, that's if the men can take it, all 16 are to be guests of the wo- Balcony men's director at the Restaurant and later at the grand- stand performance, '| style and smothered with gold se- MONDAY, AUGUST 8, 1949 Whitby Man and Oshawa Bride . MR. AND MRS. DONALD HUTCHISON YUILL whose marriage took place recently. Katherine May Bond, is the daughter of Mrs. Albert Harris of Brooklin, and the late Mr. Blake Bond, and the bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Yuill of Whitby. --Photo by Hornsby Studio. Rose Petal Skirts, Molyneux Feature Paris --(AP)-- Massive collars and rose petal skirts featured Cap- tain Molyneux's presentation of new Fall models Friday. His petal skirt shown on after- noon and evening dresses were bal- let, affairs plastered all over with giant rose petals made of the same material as the dress. | He also used a scalloped petal | finish on many of his hemlines. Molyneux's collars, stiff as a| board, stand up to ear level before | sloping down to the shoulder line. | He shows them extensively on stif- | fened double breasted box coats and suits and in a mild form on dresses. Two other designers, Manguin and Schiaparelli, also featured variations of the high-collar theme. Manguin shows a cape-and-shawl variety on both fitted and loose coats and Schiaparelli uses standup wings collars that fly away toward the back of the neck. Suits were fancy and not classic cut. Peplums were of varied length and usually protruded in front. Some were fluted and faced with leopard skin or vivid colored taffeta or satin. Pockets sat at both front and back and the waistlines were tight. Molyneux's fitted jackets were shorter than those shown by other designers and often were teamed with swing skirts. Box jackets which seem to be growing in popularity were shown straight-cup and hip- length by Molyneux who trims them with immense fur cuffs. od Mincing Steps Vogue For Fall Fashions Paris (AP)--Mincing steps were in vogue when Jacques Fath Sunday night gave a three-hour fall fashion show. The sheath skirts he showed for evening wear were so tight the mannequins looked as though they were being wheeled along instead of walking. Fath features the sheath skirt throughout his collection but those he showed for day wear, made walk- ing more feasible. He varies it by buttoning either a full-cut goder or pleated panel onto the back or front. This treatment makes it look half pencil-straight, | half flared. He slits up one side of a black moire . cocktail dress and buttons in a bodet or tulle. Fath shows no tailor-mades but prefers thigh-length loose jackets belted slightly into the waist, giving a blouse effect to the back. All are teamed with tight pencil skirts. He makes them in soft tweeds and woollens, in shades of grey, beige, palma and violet. One dazzling suit was built on this quins. Fath shows a lot of flying panels that grow down from bloused back bodices and overskirts that are short in front, long at the back and set over sheath skirts. He introduces demure choir-boy collars which he sets on plain navy dresses with huge pocket flaps set beneath the bust. He even uses them on bronze or gold sequin shirtwaist blouses that are teamed with sheath or tulle ballet skirts, Shyness Now Over Mixing" Is Easy London --(CP)--British boys and girls have become more sociable since the war, says T. Driscoll, youth club organizer in London's Bermondsey district. "Many of us remember how on club social nights before the war the boys and girls would separate as if by magic," Driscoll said. "The girls would take all the chairs on one side of the hall and the boys those on the other. To get them to mix needed frequent ap- peals. "Today it is just the opposite." Illustrated Folder Helps Parents To Understand Children Ottawa.--The real problem dealing with children who lie or steal 1s in "learning the motives." To help parents understand some of the more common reasons for such behavior, the mental health division of the Department of Na- | tional Health and Welfare has just issued an illustrated folder "Lying and Stealing -- What Makes My | Child Dishonest?" as the latest in its series of child training publica- tions. Because it's hard for grownups to enter into the child's world, parents often deal unwisely with his fan- cies; the small child's ideas of amounts and quantities are vague and it takes time for him to be accurate in their use, the folder points out. He will use them in- discriminately until he finds out what they mean. Witness the four- year-old who says he has "hundreds and thousands of dollars in his bank!" Children who lack playmates often live in more of a fairy-tale atmosphere than others. The child who misses this companionship may use his daydreams to compensate for it, coming up with some wildly imaginative stories. Then there's the child who, failing to get atten- tion, talks big to impress and win notice. : "Seek the why's behind the lies and remember that your child de- velops honesty by the examples he sees in his daily living." The folder offers guidance to parents in deal- ing with the chronic liar and dwells briefly on the subject of punish- ment. un As for the child who takes things not belonging to him, "how soon he learns the lesson of private prop- erty will depend on what he sees and hears in the family life. Your child should learn this distinction as soon as possible." The folder then goes on to show how the parent can teach the child this approach to what's rightfully his and what should be respected as belonging to others. It points out that the child of school age rarely steals just to possess an article. «Usually there's a deeper reason, the need to satisfy some driving inner need." Most cases can be handled by the parents, say Ine mental health experts, and severa «do's" and "dont's" are given. Like others in the series, the folder "Lying and Stealing may be obtained free from local healt! units or through provincial depart- ments of health. of heath. A LEGAY PROBLEM real --(CP)-- MIS. Mary Wig wants to know who's ¥ plame for her broken window. pedestrian got in the way 0. 3 truck and the truck swerved = hit a post. The post vibrated a shook loose an insulator which flew into the air and through Mrs. Wilkes' window. She lives in a fourth-floor apartment. -- CAST "SINISTER" LIGHT eenstown, South Africa--(Reu- es The Frontier Hospital may take out its green glass windows-- they make the patients look sicker than they are. Doctors told the hos- pital board that the green panes cast a "sinister light" on patients, making them look as if they had severe -jaundice. And patients got a shock when they saw their re- flection under such conditions. PIPES ARE VOGUE London --(CP)-- A factory, Is making ladies' smoking "pipes" in different colors to match their dresses. The pipes are small ones which contain one upright cigarette. EE -------------- NOVELIST'S LOCKS RETURNED Chawton, Hampshire, England -- (CP)--Locks of novelist Jane Aus- ten's hair are being given by a Baltimore, O., woman to the cot- tage museum opened by the Jane Austen Society here. The bride, formerly Miss June | in| Groups , Cluba ducilion: CANADIAN LEGION LADIES AUX. The Ladies Auxiliary, Canadian Legion 43, will hold a business meet- ing tomorrow at 8 p.m. The Annual Outing will be held on Tuesday, August 16, to Buffalo. Two buses have been chartered and will leave at 6:45 a.m. Final arrange- ments for this trip will be made at the meeting. Mrs. A. Chryk and Mrs. M. Bell are convenors for the outing. Blame Selfish Men For Underfed Wives London-- (Reuters) --Grossly sel- fish husbands are blamed for 8 fact that mothers in 37 out of 100 British working-class families are believed to be suffering from de- bility and chronic ailment due to poor feeding, This conclusion was reached by a group of social work students ins vestigating the conditions of wives and mothers in an industrial area, They were helped by experts, It was found that these mothers had given their meat, bacon and egg ration to their husbands. The reports said that the mother of a family usually expended far more energy than the father, She should be encouraged to pay close attention to her own diet 'and health and her husband should see she has her proper share of the femily rations. The students say the need is great for urgent efforts to educate both husbands and wives in these matters through women's institutes and townswomen's guilds. The students' report also suggest= ed that wives of business and pro- fessional men work harder than wives of manual workers. But the latter break down more frequently from nerve strain. The report said women of 'the | middle class had been trained to | make better use of their physical | and mental resources, and that { they lived in more pleasant sur- roundings, have wider social con- tacts and enjoy a better annual holiday. Men Less Selfish Gifts Go To Wives Sheffield, England --(OP)-- Wel- fare Officer Isobel Burnett of a Eheffield factory says men are be= coming notably less selfish. She says she ought to know be- cause it's her job, when a factory employee retires, to ask him what sort of a farewell gift he would like. "They used to ask for something just for themselves," she says. "Whatever the value of the gift it would always be something for the man alone -- a watch, a rack of pipes or an engraved umbrella. "Now men want gifts they can share with their wives, or something the women will especially appreci- ate -- a comfortable chair for her, cutlery or even a vacuum cleaner, "Perhaps in time theyll get around to choosing pearls or bane gles for their wives as their own re tirement persents!" Hosiery Is Keyed To New Ensembles Since fashion-wise women every where are recognizing the important part their hosiery can play in giv- ing them a completely well-dressed look, the colorful new fall coat will present an opportunity for some beautifully keyed ensembles. ~The big fall coat trend to watch is toward "plumage tweeds"' -- the same practical, ever-popular tweed -- but transformed into a palette of rich colors. To achieve a blended- hem-to-toe look, the style-conscious woman will be able to find many vibrant, dramatic new shades of "her favorite full-fashioned hosiery. Navy will be just as important for fall as it was for spring --and sheer, full-fashioned hose in slenderizing, shadowy nylon, pro= vide the perfect matching accessory. A bright, splashy red coat is one of those morale-building items that every woman loves to have in her wardrobe; ' stylists expect it to be in the fashion spotlight this fall, especially for casual coats. To soften the effect, the wearer should choose quieter hosiery tones, This year, she will find particularly smart beige and grey shades in full- fashioned hosiery, to key effectively with her red coat. Camel color is back --and prome ises to be a significant coat color again this fall. To match it, full- fashioned hosiery will be available in blonde and gold-cast neutral shades, and in new fall tones of lighter brown. GLASS COOKING UTENSILS Never use knives or rough scour- ing materials to clean glass cooking ware. Scraping with a knife of scouring with steel wool may scratch the protective surface of the glass and eventually lead to a crack. Even a slight scratch may make the glass less resistant to breakage. Generally glass cooking utensils need only soaking in lukewarm water and then washing in soap- suds for thorough cleaning. Adding paking soda to the soaking Water may help loosen food that has baked on. If some brownish traces still remain, remove them by rubbing with dry baking soda. eo ------ a Lillian Mae Marsh SCHOOL OF DANCING LLET, TAP, TOE, CHARACTER RAittiation sat. Morning, Sept. 17 Masonic Temple, Centre St.

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