THE DAILY TI MES-GAZETTE \ BEAUTY FOR YOU :- Crinkles Around the Eyes By HELEN JAMESOH Movie stars are keen for wearing sun glasses. Pulchritude is their 'stock in trade and the fear of pre- " mature wrinkles is nothing less than a frenzy. Accordion pleats on the feminine phiz first appear around the eyes. fquinting invites 'them, so protective measures must be taken against exposure to strong rays of the sun, Eyes, like precious gems, must :- have a pleasing setting. Their love- : liness depends to a certain extent upon their surroundings; not only the tissues, but the lashes. If they are luscious, warm, melting orbs they make their attractive way ever under beauty handicaps. But why 'mot fight a winning battle against defects that may arrive with the birthdays? You can't change the color (prob- . ably you wouldn't want to) and you cannot alter the shape or the size, 'but you can glamorize them as many a would-be-lovely has been : taught by her favorite beautician. , Use cream freely on your lids; do ' mot wipe it all away. Eyelids that glisten perform like reflectors. Keep the powder pad away from them. The dull, velvety finish is becom- ing to the rest of your face, but not there, Cream makes the eyes look misty-moisty-dewy. Of such delicate fibers are eye- Yds composed, it is not wise to . give anything but the lightest mas- + sage. Rubbing them is not good for Topflight Twosome A little set with a Jot of snap-- the kind girls adore! Send her back - to. school in this jumper, tabbed for smartness, flared for fashion. Cute blouse in pattern! Pattern 4610 in Girls' sizes 6, 8, 10, 12, 14. Size 10 jumper, 2% yards 3v-inch; blouse, 1 yard. This pattern, easy to use, simple to sew, is tested for fit. Has com- plete illustrated instructions. Send TWENTY-FIVE CENTS in coins (25c) (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern. Print plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE NUMBER. Send order to ANNE ADAMS, care of The Daily Times-Gazette, Pattern Dept, 57 Simcoe Street South, Oshawa, Ontario. Send Twenty-five Cents now (In coins) for our Fall and Winter Pat- tern Book by Anne Adams. The best of the new season fashion in easy- to-sew patterns for all. Christmas gifts, too, plus Pree a thrifty pat- tern for making a child's dress from a man's shirt, F Turkey-tracks are often called "laughing wrinkles." > + @ \ the optic mechanism; it may im- pair vision, we are told. When applying an eye cream, place the first finger on the upper lid, sweep outward to the temple, do several little circles there, come back under the eye to starting point. These movements iron away incipient lines as hot iron erases crinkles in fabrics. Eyelids are the shutters of the soul windows, and they can be kept firm and in normal condition by using a little care. Not only the lids, but the surrounding flesh will suffer if you develop the squinting habit. This may come upon you if your eyes need professional atten- tion. If you find it difficult to thread a needle or read the names in a telephone directory, you can know that the hour has come when you must wear specs. That need not depress you. Opti- clans have heard the call of good looks, have designed special lenses and special frames to suit indivi- duals features. Not like other days when every woman wore round, tor- toise-shell-rimmed glasses that made her look academic and owlish. Turkey tracks are often called laughing wrinkles, but no woman laughs because she has them. They are not as hateful as frowns, if that is any comfort to the afflicted one. Air Women Venture Into Arctic Circle Churchill, Man.--(OP)--Go North' young woman--but just for a visit, not to live. This is the advice of two Cana- dian army women who recently re- turned to this Hudson Bay port af- ter a trip by air to Cornwallis Isl- and, about 1,100 miles north of here and 600 miles north of the Arctic Circle. In making the trip Aug. 3 in an R.CAF, airplane, Capt. F. M. Brochman of Maryhill, Ont, ma- tron at Fort Churchill Hospital, and Lieut. Margaret Willox of Vic- toria, B.C. dietician for Prairie Comand, became the first-known white women to go that far north in Canada. The flight was made to return a man to his post at the weather sta- tion at Cornwallis. He had been in hospital at Churchill. Flying time for the round trip was 16 hours. Capt. Brochman described Corn- wallis as "a gravel pile." "We saw no birds, no animal life except several very cute huskypups at the weather station. The men told us they had killed a polar bear up a creek just before we ar- rived." The pair found a clump of Golden Arctic poppies growing beside a small pool. To remove ink spots on carpet, work cornmeal, talcum powder or salt around the fresh stains. WHEN CARE COUNTS Patrons we serve, have the same implicit faith in this pharmacy that they have in their physicians. Prompt, dependable service may mean everything -- when one of your family is ill! POWELLS DRUG STORE DISPENSING CHEMISTS 35%2 SIMCOE ST. NORTH PHONE 1360 Hollywood Highlights By BOB THOMAS Hollywood-- (AP)--"I am sick and tired of me." I thought I had heard everything from the mouths of movie stars, but this was something new. The speak- er was Gloria Swanson. She had just returned from touring the United States, and talking 14 hours a day, mostly about herself. She had holed up in her moun- taintop home and was virtually in- communicado. She consented to see me, particularly since I promis- ed not to make her talk about Gloria Swanson. Not much, anyway. "The living is wonderful here," she began, "That's the trouble; it's too good. This is not the right place for the movie industry. : Treason "That may sound like treason, but I've always believed it. I think it was a shame when the entire movie industry moved to Califor- "The trouble with Hollywood is that everybody eats, breathes and talks movies here. You can get no different viewpoints. The living is easy and people get lazy and their creative powers suffer because of it. "If I were a producer, I would insist that the creative workers, particularly the writers, had to spend at least six months out of every two years away from Holly- The glamorous grandma is still, amazed by the renaissance of her career. I remarked that it closely parallelled that of Bill (Hopalong) Boyd, who was a silent star of the same vintage. Its Wonderful "Isn't it wonderful about Bill?" she said. "I went up to his house not long ago and we had a nice, long chat. We were both amazed." What: about the future for La Swanson? First of all, she'll take a rest at Malibu Lodge in British Columbia. Then shell return to consider the many scripts she has been reading. "What can I do after 'Sunset Blvd'--retire to a monastery and I've got t okeep working. And the quit, as some have suggested? No, best thing I can see is to get as much of a change as possible. Who knows--I might do a musical west- ern. "I oan see it now: 'Hopalong Swanson Sings Again'" Berries, Stone Fruits Spoil When Picked In the Heat of Sun Ottawa -- High summer tem- peratures at time of picking are very hard on soft fruits such as berries, cherries, apricots, peaches and plums. Unlike apples and oranges, which remain firm for a reasonable time after picking, ber- ries and stone fruits deteriorate rapa. orticulturists of the Department of Agriculture point out that even when these fruits are being picked for a local market, no time should be lost in getting them from the heat of the field, at least into a cool basement. Where more distant marketing is involved, the fruit should be pre-cooled with artificial refrigeration to check over-ripen- ing before loading into refrigerator cars, This can be done by stacking the fruit loosely in an insulated room and by means of a fan, circu- lating a large volume of air through a bunker of ice. An alternate method is a cold air diffuser unit in the room operating under mechanical refrigeration. Under either system, depending on volume of air circulation, method of stacking, temperature of air and amount of fruit in storage, field heat of fruit may be reduced to a temperature of 45 degrees within 8 to 24 hours. Fruit pre-cooled in this way_and loaded into an iced refrigerator car can travel satisfactorily for several days. To obtain full benefit from pre-cooling, soft fruits should be held under refrigeration at point of distribution until sold. GLAMORIZING :- How To Keep Legs Lovely By HELEN FOLLETT Pretty legs enhance summer fashions, so be sure to keep them smooth and lovely. wife. Wi This day, let's talk about love- ly legginess. Perhaps you have golden calves at this season of the year. Some reckless lassies went in for sunburn in a big way, their legs looked boiled and then they blistered and scaled, never d.l tan. Same with some faces. That is why the beauty shops are besieged with cash-customers . who want to get their precious hides in form again. Bobhy soxers are -leg-conscious and well they should be, as some are no credit to the amalgamated association of beauty seekers. They have goose flesh, little red roirts that are anything but attractive. To be rid of them they have only to give themselves a few treatments, scrubbing with hot soap suds, rins- ing, drying and massaging with lanoline or cocoabutter. Care of this kind should continue all through the winter season as it keeps the flesh from getting chap- ped. Good Depilatory There are depilatories that will remove fuzzers that may be pres- ent. They come in different forms, one being a powder that is made into a paste by mixing with water. You put it on, let it dry. When you wash it Bway along comes the fur. Or, if you wish, you oan buy a tiny razor that will serve the same pur- pose. These tiny instruments are convenient for use in the arm pits, too. Stockings that have seams of an- other color are smart. To be truly fastidious the color of the seam should match that of your frock. Then, if you desire, you can have shoes to match. Fun, eh? Every- thing new in the way of make-up and dress is more or less exciting, helps the! sisters to carry on. With skirts a bit shorter, shoes are in the limelight. Smart wom- en seek modes that flatter the feet and the ankles and they will have no irouble finding them in the shops. And, may we say that a simple, pretty shoe, of attrac- edged leather soles have it all over the tricky, novelty type of which one soon tires? HOUSEHOLD HINT Delicious and economical sweets can be made from grapefruit, orange and lemon peels. Cut peel into narrow strips, boil until tender, then glaze in sugar syrup. The car or truck that suits you Is listed in Classified Section 32 Use a good depilatory at the first sign of fuzziness & A 4 Pin-Money Luxury The thrifty homemaker will prize this! New luxury for sheets, pil- lowslips takes so little time. Easy 8-to-the-inch cross-stitch! Colorful! Pattern 7412; transfer one 6%x20%; two 6%x13%-inch motifs, Crochet directions. Send TWENTY-FIVE CENTS tn coins for this pattern (stamps can- not be accepted) to The Dally limes-Gazette Paitern Dept. Osh- awa, Print plainly NAME, AD- DRESS, PATTERN NUMBER. Just . off thé press -- our new Alice Brooks Needlework catalogue! Send twenty-five cents in coins for your copy. Illustrations of designs for crocheting, knitting, embroidery toys, quilts, children's clothes, Free needlework pattern i= in book. When cleaning a grease spot from a garment, work from the inside to drive the grease spot out. . GURNEY ELECTRIC RANGES Have Gone Up in Price! BUY... BARONS' RADIO & ELECTRIC Will Sell Their Present Compleie Stock at THE OLD MONEY-SAVING PRICES SAVE SSSSS WHILE THEY LAST! Your present stove accepted as part paym n small, easy payments. BARONS' RADIO 426 SIMCOE ST. S. and ELECTRIC PHONE 249 «| tion may be A Physician: Advises You By HERMAN M. BUNDESEN, M.D. FAMOUS YEAR IN MEDICINE the history of medicine. year, the role of insects as disease- carriers. was. first discovered when Smith and Kilborne showed that cattle fever is spread by ticks, Within 20 years, investigators proved that some of the more im- portant diseases affecting man -- malaria, yellow fever, typhus and plague--were also spread by in- sects. This discovery introduced a new principle 'into the control of these contagious diseases, that of preventing contact between insect- carriers and man. Serious Iliness At first, the attempt was made to destroy pests, such as houses flies, fleas, mosquitoes, and lice, whose presence carried the threat of serious illness, by draining or filling - their breeding places, and by the use of smudge fires and other forms of heat. Later, insec- ticides were developed, but it was only with the development of DDT during the last war that they really became effective. Tens of thousands of disease casualties, as well as thousands of deaths, have been prevented by the use of DDT spraying. Of the mil- lions of people who have been ex- posed to DDT, there have been ap- parently no injuries recognized to people themselves. Prolonged Action What makes DDT so effective is that its action is prolonged for months after the original spray- ing. With the increasing use of DDT, however, certain flaws de- veloped. One is that humans, while not apparently injured by its use, may develop certain symp- toms if they are in contact with it for too long a period of time. In human beings it appears to have a cumulative effect, in that with each successive use its harmful ef- fect is added to that from prev- ious applications. 'A second flaw in DDT is that certain insects, such as flies, are beginning to develop a resistance to it, and strains of them are now growing up whic are able to resist it. 1s But DDT must still be consid- ered a most useful agent because it has spurred the development of other substances with the same property of destroying insects a long time after the original appli- cation. These newer substances appear to be less harmful to hu- mans, as well as to domestic ani- mals, than DDT. Among them are chlordane, lindane, chlorinated camphene, and a compound known as 497. I am sure that many more substances will be discovered in the near future having properties like those of DDT, but less harm- ful than ft 'is. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS A Reader: My. réd blood. cells are 3,850,000, What is best for: my condition? Answer: It seems that you have anemia, which means a lessening of the red cells and coloring in the blood. You should have an examination to determine the cause of the anemia so that the condi- If you wish to make fancy decor- ations for cakes or cookies for holi- days or children's parties and you have no pastry tubes, roll a sheet of heavy paper into a long cone shape. Fill the cone with icing squeeze gently through small end and use to pipe decorations. Dear Mrs. Beeckman: Is there any one phrase that is always. correct to use to acknowl edge an introduction, any kind of introduction? / XYZ. Yes! "How do you do" is always correct. And you can add warmth and charm and friendlwess to these words by adding the name of the person being introduced to you... "How do you do, Mr, Chatfield". . . by your pleasant manner, and by the friendly tone of voice. Married Attendants Dear Mrs. Beeckman: I am to be married in October, but have not yet invited my at- tendants because I am uncertain about one point. I intend to have WHAT SHOULD 1 DO ABOUT :- : Acknowledging an Introduction? |- By MRS. CORNELIUS BEECKMAN cessories. This would be particular ly true for the renting of your house "for several months," for most people, if these items were not in their convenient possession, cer- tainly would not want to buy them for this comparatively short time, Customarily dishes and kitchen utensils are included, certainly gare den tools if you suggest your ten- ant's keeping up the garden or even a lawn, : To give boys' shoes a good water- prof treatment, apply ht ski wax. Use a stiff brush and rub the shoes thoroughly with the wax.. Then use a cloth to rub the shoes after the wav has hardened. four bridesmaids, as well as a ma- tron of honor. As my girl friends are all married, would it be correct to 'have an all-married bridal par- ty? J.D. Yes, When the Boy Doesn't Chip in On The Birthday Present Dear Mrs. Beeckman: A very dear friend of mine is celebrating her sixteenth birthday by giving a mixed party. She is in- viting her best girl friends, and has asked them to invite their own es- corts, Should each girl be expected to buy a present only or for herself and the boy also? If the boy does not chip in on the birthday present, should the card be signed with the girl"s name only, or with her name and the boy's name as well? Puzzled Teen-ager. If the boy whom the gir] has invited to the birthday party doesn't tell her that he is bringing a pres- ent to the birhday-er (he really | should bring a present, no matter how simple and how very expensive) present with the girl, I think she should just negotiate. her own present and sign her name only. What Furnishings Dear Mrs. Beeckman: I may have to rent my house fur- nished for several months, and I wish you weculd tell me what one is required to leave in the house in the way of furnishings. I would rather not give the use of table linen and bed linen, blankets, and so forth. What about dishes, kitchen utensils, garden tools? . MY. There is no set regulation about providing the use of these kinds of equipment. But in the majority of cases, these items you mention are included in the 'furnishings'. . .the possibility of renting your house, or of renting it as a so-called "fur- nished house", may very well de- or doesn't suggest. contributing to a | | WAS AMAZED AT HOW MUCH CLEANER AND FRESHER MY DRESSES WERE AFTER ONE SANITONE DRY CLEANING! "You'd hardly believe one dry' cleaner could be so far ahead in getting dirt out of clothes! * Sanitone-clean means spots out, too, and no stale' dry cleaning odor! The Sanitofie Cleaner gets all our work from now on!" pend on your providing these ac ® DRESSMAKING! e DESIGNING! FOR FREE: =~ *- PICK-UP 'AND DELIVERY Whitby ® Ajox @ Pickering Phone Zenith. 13000 ..® Port Perry .... Phone 36 (No Toll Charge) ® ALTERATIONS! . First Class Dressmaking. and Designing. . Work Guaranteed. One Week's Service. Delivery on Completion. PHONE 6165-J 127 CADILLAC SOUTH 50 MILL ST. PHONE 2520 SIZES 14-46 PATTENICK'S FINAL SUMMER || DRESS CLEARANCE | | 150 DRESSES || REG. VALUES TO $7.98 "2.00 ALL OTHER SUMMER MERCHANDISE REDUCED FOR QUICK CLEARANCE . . PATTENICK'S CERI LM 1 141 gy 8