Daily Times-Gazette, 31 Mar 1950, p. 7

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La | BEAUTY FOR YOU :- | Long Thigh Line For Good Figure By HELEN JAMESON When you fare forth to buy your- self an evening frock, you will have a wide choic:. as far as the skirt portion is concerned. It can be full and balloonish, it can be sk , it can be betwixt-and-be- tw Ledy Fashion isn't the ty- rant she used to be. She seems to have, awakened to the fact that feminine shapes come in many patterns; what suits one does not suit another, See the pretty lady on the silver screen as she slinks and slithers along in a sheath gown that fits her lovely frame without a sign of a crinkle. Observe the beauteous model as she struts her stuff at the fashion show, appearing to 'walk on air. Mcst of them are tall, long, slender creatures. They have the long thigh lines that seem to be @ requisite this season. Dress designers are stressing this effect. Corsetieres are doing their best to create it for the cash cus- tomers. The waist must be trim, hips must be neat, the feminine shape carrying a highly energized appearance that comes from snap- Py posters. An old mode has been revived in the sheath design--the gown is long, te bodice snugly fit- ted, there is smoothness over the hips, rather than bouffant effects, and there is flare below the knees. 'This season's styles should inspire the plumpies to start on a remodel- ing campaign, because the kind of clothes that are being displayed in th hops are figure revealing to th h degree. Women with a diaphragmatic bulge -- which is a polite way of referring to the spare tire abaft the 'waistline -- lose out on sartorial joys. They should not bear with this affliction, as it can be correc- ted by bending and stretching ex- ercises and torso-twisting. No fig- ure defect so destroys harmony of line as the tummy that refuses to stay flat and neat. Over-develop- ed hips are not half as bad, though bad enough, goodness knows. To have mislaid one's waistline is to bid farewell to youthful appearance. Some foundation garments have the inner girdle that puts restraint | Wi HIT || i (TI 3-3 You will hr e a wide choice of evening frocks. * + * and pressure on the mid-section. This trick flattens the waist at the sides, so it becomes rounder--looks smaller, more slender, A cleverly-cut, correctly-fitted corset will dissemble defects, cam- ouflage them to a certain extent. It is a joy and a blessing to the woman who hasn't the will to set- tle down to routine exercises that will delete adipose padding, put her in form again. She should not, of course, depend upon this anatomi- cal prop. By means of a non-fat- tening diet and only the mildest exercises, she can force the bath- room scales to give a more cheer- ful report. Just cutting down on fats, starch- es and sweets will often turn the trick. Fashion F lashes NEW HANDLING gives addition- al interest and appeal to fox. Pearl platinum fox, spaced with bands of matching silk crepe, makes a fitted tunic coat that is very at- tractive. * + + THERE'S NEWS in the lingerie world, what with the introduction of permanent pleating for slips. Nylon tricot is used for a slip that is e completely of permanent pl . It is belted and bordered with nylon lace and closes with a tiny pearl-button-fastened placket. cri, RR INCREASING in beauty and charm all the time are half-size New! Apron-Frock ! Here's that new apron-dress for your darling! Princess frock has tiny yokes, angel-wings. And to dress it up even more--a frilly apron, She'll just love this! Pattern 4816 comes in sizes 3, 4, 6, 8. Size 6 frock, 1% yards 35- inch; apron, % yard. This pattern, easy to use, sim- to sew, is tested for fit. Has lete illustrated instructions. Send TWENTY-FIVE CENTS (25¢) in coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern Print plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRLSS. STYLE NUMBER, Send order to ANNE ADAMS care of The Daily Tines-GaZette Pattern Department (shawa Our NEW Anne Adams Spring Pattern Book is ready! Send Twenty-five Cents more In coins now for your copy Magir one-yara | patterns, smart new fashions tot | everybody Plus a free pattern printed right in the book--a stun- 8 one-yard blouse, fashions. A beauty, in navy or black taffeta, has a simple, flared silhouette with step-in closing and is done on soft shirt-walst lines. One side of the bodice is worked in shell tucks, balanced by similar de- tail on the opposite side of 'the skirt, * + + INDISPENSABLE to the well- rounded wardrobe of the busy wo- man is the well-handled silk suit: White window-pane checks on navy blue taffeta makes a pretty suit. The jacket top has a rolled collar and flat triangular pockets border- ed with bias strips of the fabric. Self buttons and fairly full skirt. * + + NOT SO MANY full-length coats about for Spring, but those on or- der are very smart. Navy blue wool jersey, cut on slender lines, makes a handsome coat. A deep, rounded cape collar is lined in red wool jer- sey, and there is red lining, too, for the big patch pocket that juts out on one hip. Tops in Knitting Here are two top fashions, bol- ero and jacket, to wear with sim- ply everything! Both are knit on TWO needles--in a jiffy! Jiffy-knits to wear over play- suits, évening dresses -- anything! Pattern 7205; knitting directions. | Our improved pattern -- visual | with easy-to-see charts and photos, | and complete directions -- makes needlework easy. Send TWENTY-FIVE CEN1S 1p coins for this pattern (stamps can- not be accepted) to The Dally Times-Gazette. Pattern Dept. Osh- awa. Print plainly NAME, AD- | DRELS, PATTERN NUMBER i Just. off the press our new Alice Brooks Needlework catalogue! Send twenty-five cents tb coins for your copy [liustrations of designs for crocheting, knitting. embroidery toys, quilts, chiidren's clothes Free needlework pattern is po.nted Ip | book. J Chysician Advises You By HERMAN M. BUNDESEN, M.D. DYSENTERY AMEBIASIS or amebic dysentery is a condition which is not too difficult to clear up if treated promptly and thoroughly. In many people it becomes chronic and per- sists for years if not treated in this way; in others, it only apparently disappears and then flares up again from time to time. The patient with this condition suffers from repeated attacks of diarrhea and there is often blood and evcessive amounts of mucus in the bowel movements. A definite diagnosis can only be made by finding the parasite, which causes the disease, in the bowel movements. A real cure can only be obtained by killing the parasites, not only in the bowel but wherever they mal have lodged in the tissues, as, for instance, in the liver where they sometimes form abscesses. Many Drugs Tried A great many drugs have been tried for this purpose. While many are good, none is completely satisfactory. * One of these, used for many years in treating this condition, is eme- tine, particularly when there are abscesses in the liver. There are others containing iodine, such as vioform and diodoquin. Drugs, con- taining arsenic, such as acetarsone GLAMORIZ:NG :- Put Your Best 'By HELEN FOLLETT Foot Forward Perfect choice for a day's shopping pumps. They have a smart Pilgrim * ANSWER this question, and no, fooling: Are you able to put in a day of shopping without pain? The reply of the average woman will be "No." The trouble may be | frayed nerves, backache, leg pains and carbarsone, have also been used with excellent results. Aureo- | mycin has proven valuable in many | cases. More recently, patients with amebic dysentery have been treated with drugs called thioarsenites. It | was found in a study of 82 patients | that 74 were freed of the endamoeba after one course of treatment. The | treatment period varied from seven to twenty-four days. Some of the | patients vomited or became sick at their stomachs after the first three | days of treatment. Coating the tab- lets so that the drug was not ab- sorbed in the stomach made it possible to complete the treatment in all but one case. There were no other signs of reactions to the drugs except for increased bowel move- | ments, which cleared up .after the | third to fifth day of treatment. Gained Weight With this treatment, patients | gained in weight because they were | able to take more food. There was | an increase in the number of red | cells in the blood, as well as in the | amount of coloring matter, although the patients were not given any special diet. In those patients who had severe diarrhea, the number of bowel movements was reduced to three or fewer daily. These first studies seem to indi- cate that the thioarsenites may bg | tasty new fillings can be devised | particularly effective in the treat- | ment of amebiasis. Whether they | are better than the commonly em- | ployed remedies can only be de-! termined after further investigations | are made and the results of these | different preparations compared. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS M. C.: Will wearing a tight brassiere make the breasts larger? Answer: Wearing a tight brassiere | will nof make the breasts larger. | CHEESE AND BUTTER | | for | find or headaches, and all because the feet hurt like sin. | the correct last or they short or too tight. are at the root of many troubles, including nasty dispositions and | wrinkles, A day of counter hopping may total up to eight miles, believe it or ctirl up your nose: Surveys have been made by individuals are interested in the subject. say: | goods trek, They They should the flexible leather soles. give snug support at prevent rubbing with blisters and calloused spots. Oxford Shoe to medium heels are best clothes, millinery or Low stalking LJ Shoes are not | are too | 1l-fitting shoes | who | Before you start on your dry | make sure your feet are | encased in comfortable shoes with | heel to | consequent | expedition are these medium-heeled buckle, flexible leather soles. * what have you. The good old ox- ford is woman's best friend, if she | would only realize it. It helps to | maintain the posture and body bal- ance during the daily hoofing. 0: you come home foot weary, bathe your trotters in tepid water, dry briskly, have a friction with mineral oil or borated talcum. Then wriggle your toes. They will enjoy exercise after being huddled to- | gether all day long. The oil will soften the cuticle about your toenails, so that is a | good time to detach it from the | nail fabric by means of the orange wood stick. For trimming the nails | you should have clippers, save your precious manicure scissors for worthier purposes. Trim straight across. If you cut the nails down at the sides you will be in for plenty .of trouble. The flesh will harden and bank and, eventually, you will have than which there likely to bring | 1 {up | ingrowing nails, is nothing more | depressed spirits. "The Experts Say BY KAY R REX Canadian Press Staff Writer Ottawa--(CP)--At this time of the year mother has to go some to new treats for those daily school lunches. Sandwiches are inevitable but which 'will make Junior look forward to his noon-day meal. Sandwich Fillings Vegetables -- sliced tomatoes and | cucumbers; shredded lettuce with chopped peanuts or cheese-- grated carrot with orange juice or honey; chopped onion with peanut butter; celery and apple chopped. To each | | of these add dressing and salt and | pepper as needed. Fruit -- mashed banana with pea- | | nut butter. Eggs -- hard cooked, chopped with | grated onion to flavor, curry, chop- At the opening of business on | ped cucumber or pickle. Add dress- March 1, the stocks of creamery butter on hand in Canada amount- | ed to 36,578,000 pounds, according. to | the Dominion Bureau of Statistics, Cold storage warehouses had store 28,307,000 pcunds, while dairy | factories held 8,041,000 pounds. Butter in transit amounted 230,000 pounds. er than last year by 17.8 million pounds. The five-year average of March 1 stocks is 18,489,000 pounds. The Februray, 1950 "'out-of-storage" movement was 9.7 million pounds as | compared with a similar movement of 89 million pounds last year. The total stocks of cheese on | March 1 were 38,613,000 consisting | of 38,206,000 pounds Canadian 65,- 600 pounds imported and 342,000 pounds in transit. The summary total was higher than last year hy 10.7 million pounds and showed an "out-of-storage" movement of 2.6 million pounds. LUMBER WORK SLOW Oslo -- (CP) -- Timber cutting in Norway is far behind schedule due to too much snow, lack of labor, and a late start. So far only slightly more than half of original esti- mates has been brought out of the | forests. to | The total was high- | ing to taste. Meat and fish -- cooked meat fine- ly chopped or sliced; fish flaked, | crisp bacon with pickle syrup or in | salad dressing to moisten. A thermos of hot soup also is a | welcomo addition to the school lunch, which may be completed by cookies for dessert. Gingerbread also is ideal. Ingredients: 2'4 cups flour; % cup wheat germ (if desired); '2 cup sugar; 1': teaspoons ginger; '2 teaspoon cinnamon; . %: teaspoon | soda; one teaspoon salt; 2% cup | molasses; four tablespoons softened fat; 2 cup boiling water; 12 cup seedless raisins (may be omitted); one egg (if omitted use a little more liquid). Mix and sift dry ingredients, add raisins which have been washed and floured. Make hole in the middle of mixture, pour in -molasses, fat and boiling water (beaten egg if used). Mix quickly. Pour into but- tered pan or muffin-tins, bake in miderately slow oven about 50 min- utes | minutes). What's black, white and read all over? The answer is Want Ads. a Here's a pattern to please both knitters and crochet enthusiasts. The square form an attractive design bordered by a | motifs are knitted of crochet cotton and deep fringe. For instructions for making this KNITTED BEDSPREAD, just send | | MOTHER ANOWS a stamped, self-addressed envelope t asking for Leaflet No. 6129 o the Needlework Dept. of this paper melted | (individual servings 25 to 30. Sweet Export | | Britain's drive for exports to the dollar areas extends even to food-.| stuffs such as sugar. This attendant | at the Home exhibition at Olympia, | London, samples a cube of sugar, | specially wrapped for eyport to the| United States. ALL THE TIME The Federal Bureau of Investi- | gation estimated that a serious crime was committed in the United States every 18.7 seconds during 1948. | Hollywood 'Highlights By BOR THOMAS Hollywood (AP)--Ralph Edwards is celebrating 10 years of squirting seltzer water in the face of the United States. Just a decade ago, a bright young radio announcer went on the air in New York with a show called "Truth or Consequences". The gim- mick was that the contestant suf- fered dire results if he failed to answer a question correctly. The truth element "went by the window eight years ago," Edwards admits, but the consequences have 'kept the show in the top ratings and its operator in a top income bracket. The Stunts Among the "T. or C." stunts: Filling New York's Town Hall to hear the violin concert of Yiffnuff, who turned out to be a housewife contestant who had never touched a violin. Racing a, man on a pogo stick from the Los Angeles international airport to city hall against another person who had to fly around the world first. (The pogo stick man won). Making a man live on a traffic island at a busy intersection for three weeks. Started In 1940 Edwards' trail of nonsense began in 1940. His first contestant was a sailor who had to act out the role of a grocer clerk with a lolly- pop in his mouth. The gob won $5 for his trouble. The "T. or C." prizes have so mounted that the winner of a re- cent contest took $25,000 in cash and a similar amount of merchan- dise. Edwards claims to have rais- | ed $8,000,000 for the Heart, Cancer, Polio, Mental 000,000 worth of war bonds. "> ~ OF INTEREST TO WOMEN -- ~.2, Salada Tea Bags are handy for afternoon tea SALADA TEA BAGS WHAT SHOULD I DO ABOUT :- Family Fued and Wedding Plans? By MRS. CORNELIUS BEECKMAN Dear Mrs. Beeckman: 1. My younger sister mdrried shortly, and she has asked me to take, in her wedding, the part our mother would have taken had she lived. My sister has been reared by an aunt, but this aunt has absolutely refused to take any part in any of the wedding pre- parations. Therefore, since this un- pleasantness exists, could I proper- ly issue the invitations in my name? | If you say that I may, what word- ing would be appropriate? I am married, live many miles from my hometown, and some of the guests who will be invited I knew well as a child, but I haven't seen them for many years. The wedding is to be small and inforinal, and my sister | would like to have a wedding break- Health and other | fast funds and to have helped sell $500,- this small group of guests. For this | | breakfast she has Edwards has been speechless only | once during the decade. "1 walk recalled. the plank pirate-style," "I leaned over the tank | had just made 'a contestant | he | be proper to serve it buffet style? | to interview him as he came out | and he gave me a tug. Into the water I went, microphone, watch, wallet, tuxedo and all." Prescription Tests Check On Druggists London --(CP)-- Two London doctors who objected to supplying test prescriptions on the ground they would be parties to "snooping" | on druggists, were told by the Medical Benefit Committee their view was mistaken. that | The committee said that under | National Health Service regulations practitioners are asked to supply | to explain every plan, from time to time, prescriptions for use in testing drugs and appliances. All doctors but two asked for these test prescriptions had complied. "We are of the opinion that the two practitioners hold a mistaken view of the position," mittee told the London executive council of the National Service. | to the com- | PO" siderate and loyal, Health | "The request of the coun- | cil is not made with the object of | setting a trap for the chemist, but | only to confirm that he is dispen- | sing in accordance with his agree- ment." Wife Preservers y 4 ] 3 le Geo Green| 32 / [© Do not wax venetian blinds. Steel or aluminum slats do not need this extra protection, and wood should not be waxed unless you are sure you never will want to repaint them. The paint won't hold if the wood is greasy with wax. ¢ | / ) / FRESHER. NEW ! BrAn-NEW! TRY THESE CRISPER, LARGER FLAKES! YOU'LL BE GLAD you changed! Mm- Mm! Really crisp! Fresher because they're Kellogg's Bran Flakes! TRY THEM AT NO RISK! Double your money back if you don't agree Kellogg's are fresher than other bran flakes. Send empty carton to Kellogg's, Box 4-A, London, Ontario. HELPFUL, TOO! Contain the bulk many need to help keep regular. Try them. following the ceremony, for been offered the use of a small hall connected to her church, 2. About this breakfast. Would it If for it is, what is the proper place the bride and bridegroom? 3. At-an informal reception of this | kind could we dispense with the receiving-line,- since present are all close friends of the bride and bridegroom? We'd be so grateful for any suy- gestions you'll give us! Thank you. | P.H. 1. This is a sweet and appealing request your sister has made to you, and of coure you must do every- thing possible to make the day a happy and memorable one for her and her brid2aroom. First, how- ever, no matt:r what the reascn| for the "unpleasantness" between | yeur aunt and your sister, I ser- iously urge you to urge your sister wardly and as devotedly as she pos- sibly can under the circumstances, her aunt who has generously shared her home with 'her during these years. You must bring every possible influence on her to be con- to do everything possible to bring about a reconcil- iation, even a' the last minute. Your aunt must be told when the wedding is to be, must be invited to come. . .and if your sister doesn't do this, you as older as ding, should. Your notes of invitation read somewhat like this: Dear Ruth, My sister Frances and George Griggs are to be married on Sat- urday, (date), in Grace Church, at | twelve o'clock, and we all hope th at | you and Phil will come to the] church for the ceremony and af- | terward to a simple wedding break- fast in the small hall adjoining the! is to be| those to be| straightfor- | sister, | niece, and as hostess of the wed- | might | | church. It's to bg a small, infor mal wedding, and we hope you two dear friends will tell us you'll be there. Dearest greetings from Fred and me, and we're looking. forward to seeing you on the tenth. Devotedly, 2. By all means plan to have the easy informality of buffet service. t's not necessary to have a bride's table, not customary with such in- formality. 3. Please have a receiving-line, a short, informal one. This will not only register that the wedding is "sponsored" by you, but also gives a dramatic beginning to the festi- vities, before the breakfast. You, as hostess, stand first in the line; next, if possible, the bridegroom's mother; next, the bridegroom and as his right, the bride; then her at- tendant, or first, maid of honor, then bridesmaids. This gives charm and dignity to the occasion, and shouldn't be omitted because all the guests are intimate friends of | the bride and bridegroom. (If your { aunt changes her mind about pare ticipating, invite her to stand first {in the line, and you might stan' next to her.) THE MENACE OF FEAR One of the worst aspects of cane | cer is the fear it inspires in its | victims, In many cases fear of | long hospitalization and surgery with its attendant expenses causes people who suspect they may have | cancer to put off having an ex- amination uniil it is too late. Many cases of early cancer can be cured. | You risk your life when you play with time. In these davs of high prices housewives should organize a foed- buying schedule, accenting the low- er cost, higher food value foods at | the exnense-of the high cost, low food value items. EANIN pRY CLEANING PHONE 4430 For Free Pickup & Delivery --- By = Motor City Cleaners 182 SIMCOE SOUTH ONLY 52620 DOWN DELIV ERS A BRAND NEW 1950 GURNEY COMBINATION COAL AND ELECTRIC aT DELU ABLE TOP RANGE One-piece Top Even-Heat Oven Roomy Warming Com- partment Utility Drawers Lamp Assembly and Minute Minder: Your Present Stove as Part Payment Balance $3. 00 Weekly! ARONS' RADIO & 426 SIMCOE ST. S. ELECTRIC PHONE 249

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