THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE. PACE SEVEN - OF INTE ) | BEAUTY FOR YOU:- Facial Exercises By HELEN JAMESON Out stalking spring dry goods? "Everybody - do." Pause, then, at some busy corner and take a look at the sisters. Do they appear to be happy? Not many. There are few radiant faces. Eyes are looking straight ahead, purses are clutched with tight fingers, faces show ten- 'sion, . Of course, life is delirious and the world 1s crazy, but tension ~only makes the physical and mental machinery less efficient. Certainly, wrecking the only face one has will not make life more blissful or zest- ful. There is always the woman in the looking glass to rebuke us. If your face is showing signs of strain and tension, there is a little system' of facial exercises -- used in some beauty establishments -- that may make for smoothness and relaxation. This ritual is far-regch- ing with its benefits because it 'calms the nervous system and sends one's thoughts in cheerful channels. There is a close bond between body, mind and appearance. Do not for- get that, my friend. First you exercise the facial fibers, then you relax them, then you give yourself a brisk, five-minute mas- sage, and then you feel very right- cous, having done your duty by . yourself. . 'Lie down on your back and go limp all over. Pretend to say the word "me-ow," with the "me," the lips go into a pucker. "ow," the lips are parted and the corners stretched far back. The muscles of the cheeks will stretch, then relax as the lips return to first position. This stunt is a fine idea for the girl with hollow cheeks, especially if she will follow it by anointing her face with a heavy skin food and -- placing fingers and thumbs outspread -- lifting the trumpeter's muscles. This is a fav- orite movement of facial operators. To treat the double chin, pucker With the | Cit = Distributed by King Features Syndicate. Pretend to say "Me-ow." * F the lips, lift the lower one over the upper and send the head forward and back, pulling hard on the mus- cles of the throat and jawline. A creaming should follow. That extra chin should be picked up between finger and thumb with a pinching movement to dissolve the fat cells. This is another movement in which beauty operators have considerabe confidence. If tissues have softened, do not overlook the value of ice frictions. + +» A Physician "Advises You By HERMAN M. BUNDESEN, M.D. ULCER OF STOMACH IN recent years, many patients with severe. stomach ulcer have been treated by-operation to cut the va- gus nerve which governs the activi= ty and movements of the stomach. Results of this measure have led doctors on a search for drugs which might have the same effect in de- pressing the activity of this nerve and hence curtailing stomach mo- tion. Among those found is one known as tetraethyl ammonium chloride. A study was made of 27 patients, with various types of ulcer of the stomach and bowel, who were treate ed with the preparation. Some ul- cers of the stomach are what are known as penetrating ulcers, that is, they have eaten deep into the tissues. In five of the patients with this type of 'ulcer, the tetraethyl ammonium chloride was started immediately upon admission to the hospital because of the need to con- trol pain. : Rest in Bed Eighteeen other patients were first put on a standard ulcer man- agement, including diet, rest in bed, and alkaline preparations, as well as such drugs as belladonna, and such quieting preparations as the barbiturates. After this treatment had been carried out for varying periods of time on these patients, it was stopped, and the drug tet- raethyl ammonium chloride was started. The time of starting the drug depended upon whether or not the standard form of treatment gave relief from pain. §T TO WOMEN -- In Jhe omumuruty. | GLAMORIZING:- | 8y HELEN In all but one case the drug was | given by injection into a muscle and, in most instances, it was ad- ministered twice a day. All cases of ulcer with severe pain responded to the treatment with immediate relief from pain, and this pain re- lief could be maintained as long as the drug was administered. Spasm is Relieved The pain of ulcer, it is thought, | is due to stretching of 'the stomach, When the tetraethyl ammonium chloride is administered, it blocks the action of the vagus nerve, the movements of the stomach are halt- ed, and spasm is relieved. In this way, the stretching of the stomach cannot continue, and pain disap- pears. It would appear that the drug is an effective agent for relieving severe pain in peptic ulcer. Whe- ther or not its continued use would produce a cure cannot as yet be stated. With this preparation, there may be occasional slight blurring of the vision and some lowering of the blood pressure, but these symp- toms are not severe. FESTIVAL AT GLASGOW The largest single event in Scot- land's contribution to the Festival of Britain will be staged In Glas- gow's Kelvin Hall May 28-August 18 and feature the story of man's conquest of power by means of coal and water, * Top a Stack of Hot Pancakes With Golden Honey for a Treat in the country is proud of a well-planned," well- prepared meal. And every wife in the world likes to see her family lean back after that meal, con- tented, happy, and well fed. The beauty of it all is that this combination of a well-planned dinner and well-satisfied family is the easiest thing in the world to accomplish. And all because of a simple menu called pancakes and honey. What could be easier to make, and what could be more delicious, than a plateful of griddle-hot pan- cakes? Top them with plenty of honey, and your meal is complete; your family won't want anything else, Pancakes aren't just a breakfast dish, although they earned a good reputation as a morning waker-up- per. Serve them at lunch with tiny pork sausages, a crisp lettuce salad, and of course, a container of energy-giving honey. For an easy but good-to-eat sup- per, try this menu: pancakes serv- ed with lots of butter and delicious honey, which is sold in most groc- ery stores. Round out your menu with a fresh fruit salad with whip- ped cream dressing and a pot of tea. Put a layer of honey butter be- tween each layer of pancakes and watch the smiles spread across the faces around your dinner table. It's made simply by mixing equal parts of honey and butter. The best part of this simple menu, of course, is its low cost. As honey is in abundant supply on the grocer's shelves, it is economical to use. New pancake mixes make pancake meals even easier to prepare. But whether you prefer a quick mix package or your own favorite recipe, you can't serve pancakes more temptingly than when you serve them with honey Flakes Griddle Cakes 1 cup sifted flour 2%; teaspoons double-acting bak- ing powder %, teaspoon salt 1 tablespoon sugar 1 egg, well beaten 1% cups milk 3 tablespoons melted shortening 1 cup 40% bran flakes or wheat flakes, slightly crushed, Sift flour once, measure, add bak- ing powder, salt and sugar, and sift- a: Combine egg and milk; add Every cook ™: to flor, mixing only un- { $il smooth. Add shortening and nuke on hot griddle. Serve Linats, with honey. Makes about 12 cakes. Instead of greasing the griddle, rub it with a little bag of salt be- fore baking each batch of cakes. This 'keeps cakes from sticking and saves grease. For salt bag, tie Ja cup salt in cheesecloth. Note: 1% cups corn flakes may be substituted for flakes in 'above re- cipe, Buttermilk Pancakes 3 cups flour 1 teaspoon salt 2 teaspoons baking powder 2 tablespoons sugar 1, teaspoon soda 2 cups buttermilk 2 eggs 3 tablespoons melted shortening Sift dry ingredients together. Combine milk, beaten eggs and shortening. Add dry ingredients. Bea} well. Makes approximately 16 cakes, Finds Children's Food Habits Poor Toronto, April 3.--(CP) -- Chil- dren under 10 are getting a less adequate diet than those over 10, Margaret Smith of the Health League of Canada says in the league's magazine Health, Direc- tor of the league's nutrition divis- ion, Miss Smith based her findings on a survey among 14 Ontario rur- al schools. Only 21 per cent under 10 years had enough vitamin D while among children over 10, 39 per cent had sufficient vitamin D. Most drank enough milk but less than half those under 10 enough fruit juice, vitamin C, while 67 per cent of children over 10 got enough vita- min C. 'Wite Preservers ed an arm pot- It comes from the beef chuck, and has a 'round bone and cross section of ve ribs. A small round muscle ear the round bone is surrounded by eon- nective tissue. This cut should be cooked Sized Up to 52 4976 sizes 3--s2 Arnel Choose a good design for your good fabric! This "is charming, with cape-flared sleeves, deep col- lar, paneled skirt, Definitely slen- derizing too, and flattering! Pattern 4976 comes in sizes 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48, 50, 52. Size 36 takes 4% yards 35-inch; % yard contrast. This pattern, easy to use, simple to sew, is tested for fit. Has com- plete illustrated instructions. Send TWENTY-FIVE CENTS (25¢) in coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern. Print plainly Size, Name, Address, Style Number. > Send order to The Daily Times- Gazette Pattern Dept, 57 Simcoe Street South, Oshawa, Ontario. READY NOW! Your brand new Anne Adams Spring Pattern Book! Send Twenty-five cents for this col- lection of the smartest new-season fashions for all ages and sizes. There are one-yard patterns, one- pattern-part patterns and FREE instructions to make a double-en- velope handbag! -, | beauty griefs. So remember to * | | PERFECT posture | poise, grace and style. | star would ever have made the | | grade without it. expresses Back of it is| such a common trouble that one | | comes to the conclusion that many | girls and women just won't take the trouble to carry with beauty. Think of all the] money that is flung for gay and | handsome raiment and how care- | lessly much of it is worn. The | together loses charm when it is | carried by a slouchy, slumping fig- | urge. in the way a woman waiks, stands | subject would be uppermost in| one's mind. Not only that, but good | health program. cause it keeps the musculature strong. © The inner organs stay | where they should. If the chest | is contracted, breathing is shallow. If the abdomen is not held close the digestive organs may drop out of place, causing later. trouble. * | Poor Posture Doesn't Pay FOLLETT Poor posture throws your whole body out of line and brings on many keep your shoulders back and your chin up, says Screen Star Betty Underwood. LJ] By the simple practice of keep- inward and upward, many postural defects can be overcome. Of course, a woman shouldn't permit herself to get them in the first place. Bending and torso-twisting exercises are helpful when the placed by the "settled look." Observe the lovelies of the screen and stage. They have the light step. They have beautiful backs the shoulders to fall Shoulders fall into easy permitted forward. ! lines, avoiding the suggestion of | aren't sufficiently ; There is infinitely so much beauty | militant squaring which is not -de- | moved to the big new Indian hospi- sirable. A woman's figure should have a rigid look. Poor posture often results in carriage should be a part of the stiff muscles. Exercise the stiffness | It performs as | out, Put your hands on your hips, | dian Health Service of the Depart- an insurance against fat cells be- |lift on your toes slowly, taking a | ment of National Health and Wel- deep breath. Down on the heels and exhale. Go in for outdoor sports. They will keep you agile and the good fresh air, pumped into your breathing bellows, will keep your complexion colorful. Fashion Flashes INTRIGUING ideas mark Spring millinery collections--one designer going all-out for veils. Some are painted in lacy eye-shadow effects over the eyes--gauzy in back--for wear over hats, or separately for evening to cover the head in a-goft, in-the-clouds effect. * oP ONE WAY TO ARRIVE at a nice suit wardrobe is to invest in a good plaid wool topper, cut on boxy lines, and ensemble it with a couple of slim skirts that pick up dominant themes in the plaid. One girl did this nicely with a topper plaided in misty blue and red on a gray ground. She had a gray skirt and a light blue wool skirt, the latter dyed to almost tone with the misty medium blue of the topper. Result: two very smart suits. Lf AE A BIT OF SPRING is smartly in- troduced by one store that shows sprays of violets and lilac attach- ed to pins or combs to be worn at the shignon, or on either side of the hair with a tiny pillbox hat. LE SHEER LUXURY that is very wearable is nicely typified by a duster coat of pure silk organza printed in a large leaf and petal design in tones of orange, green lemon and white. With it a choker- high, sleeveless sheath dress in or- ange birdseye pique with interest- ing buttoned neckline bands and pocket detail. Here's a pretty way. to decorate a set of bathroom. Crochet a large, medium and FV.-388. Please encl Flower Basket Trim For Towels pastel towels as a gift or for your own small green basket for the bath towel, hand towel and face cloth and fill them with crocheted flowers in shades of pink, blue, yellow, lavender and purple. For crochet instructions for this BASKET TOWEL SET just write to the Needlework Dept. of this paper asking for Leaflet Ad t, d self Pp se, a d envelope. Hollywood Highlights By 'BOB THOMAS Hollywood-- (AP) -- Small and rollypoly, she walked across the stage, looking like anybody's favor- ite aunt. When the wave of warm applause died down, she squinted a smile and sighed: "How wonder- ful of you!" » Josephine Hull reached a height of her career that moment at the Pantages Theatre last Thursday night. She embraced the Oscar which she had won for her support- ing role in "Harvey" and walked off stage. "Yes, this is the highest honer I have ever been given," she told me. "Frank Fay and I won the Donald- son awards for appearing in 'Har- vey' as .a play, but the Academy Award is much better known, Not Sure Thing "Really, I wouldn't have been sur- prised if I hadn't won. I had the advantage over the other contenders in that I had played the role for four years on the stage and knew its values." Everyone agrees it couldn't have happened to a nicer lady. In her nearly 50 years in the theatre, she has created a host of admirers. She was born' 67 years ago in Newton, just outside Boston. In 1902 she joined a Boston stock company at $6 a week. She travel- led in several road companies until she married Shelley Hull, older bro- ther of actor Henry Hull, "I gave up the stage so we could be together," she recalled. She re- tired for nine years, until 1919, when her husband died in the flu epidemic. She intends to keep the stage her primary interest, limiting her films to a one-a-year contract with Uni- versal-International. Her current assignment is "Fine Day," in which she is again cavorting with ani- mals. "Pirst it was Harvey," she laugh- {ed, "now I'm playing with a skunk named Annabelle. Fortunately for | me, Annabelle has heen defrosted." This superb tea guarantees the flavour ANGE PE of every cup SALADA " 0! (OE WHAT SHOULD [ DO ABOUT:- Form, of Name for Widow? By MRS. CORNELIUS BEECKMAN Dear Mrs. Beeckman: Which is the correct name for a widow, "Mrs. Ruth Smith" or "Mrs. John Smith"? Recent Widow Her name remains "Mrs. John Smith." . Don't Ask Guest About Coming to Wedding. . .Mail the Invitation Dear Mrs. Beeckman: Would it be proper to ask if one would accept a wedding 'invitation before mailing it to the person? I have just heard of this question, and I think it might be the right thing for me to do. My daughter is to be married soon, and there are a few co-workers of mine whom I would like to invite. But as we know 'only one another and not the husbands, they may feel we are only strangers would not accept the invitation to the wedding. I would not want them to feel that they would have to buy gifts and not come. A friend, A.B. Would these be invitations to the No movie | ing the chest high, the abdomen | g | Favorite of North [Is Maritime Nurse Moose Factory (CP)--Irene (Fran) | Mann nips sickness in the bud in themselves | youthful silhouette has been dis- | the Indian settlements near this | Hudson Bay post and the Indians love her. | This tall girl's job is to trek to | lonely settlements on James Bay on grandest frock ever cut and sewed { which they would not have if they | her mission of preventive health | education. | She herself treats cases which serious to be re- tal here. A native of Campbellton, or sits that you would think the | have ease, grace and softness, never | N.B.,, she also wages a continuous campaign to improve sanitary con- ! ditions. Fran is a field nurse for the In- | fare. She has been doing her job | since the service was started 18 | months ago. ! Three times a week she is taken | to the north end of the settlement | by snowmobile. She works the rest | of the way and back on foot; house by house. Another three days are | spent in calls to patient requiring regular treatment. | There is one call that she makes | every day--to the Indian residential | school, where she keeps an eye on | the welfare of more than 300 pupils. | Temperatures frequently are taken, | as are X-ray examinations for tu- | berculosis, the disease to which the | Indian is most subject. { Fran moves through the village to | the accompaniment of howling | sleigh dogs, staked and chained be- | fore each home. Many are vicious, | but they, too, have got to know her. She's never been bitten. Hers was a lonely job till last autumn when the new hospital was opened. Now there is a big staff and Fran has plenty of company. She takes her work calmly. | "The Indians are good - people," she says, "All they need is a little Tops All Blouses Ve Biol It's the top! Use it to make a Costume of your suit or skirt! Easy sewing, simplest stitchery -- just right for multi-color effect. Pattern C7426 has embroidery transfer, blouse pattern in sizes 12, 14, 16, 18. State#size. | Send TWENTY-FIVE CENTS in| coin for this pattern (stamps can- | not be accepted) to The Daily - | Times Gazette (Pattern Dept.), 57 | Simcoe Street South, Oshawa, On- | tario. Print plainly Name, Address, | Pattern, Number. Just out! Send Twenty-five Cents now for your copy of our new Alice Brooks Needlework Cata- log! Illustrations of crafts and hobbies for all. ting, embroidery and other fas- cinating handwork. A Free pat- tern is printed in the book! Before you put an apple into a child's packed lunch, be sure to wash it with a vegetable brush and dry it on a elean towel. 1) HEWETSONS D €R fec]r € For growing children or husky youngsters. Popular with parents and children. SIX REASONS WHY it pays to buy "HEWETSON'S" Room for growing feete Arches that support ® Snug around ankles ® Straight-tread lasts o Soft, durable uppers ® Rugged, long-wear soles ® LEARNS SOMETHING NEW ey ® SF hi : 3 a "Something old, something new, something borrowed, something blve" | "Whoever wrote this rhyme must have realized how important blue i8 to happy -home-making. For instance, to get the whitest wash-- ' the kind that makes a bride proud --I've found one must use Reckitt's Blue. Just a swish or two in the rinse prevents any yellow singe in my beautiful trousseau,' and Reckitt's Blue costs less than two cents a washing." B-4-R and perhaps | New crochet, knit- | | 1 | | GENERAL , church ceremony only, or to the reception also? If, as I judge, they | are invitations to the church only, | it would be simple, natural to send them to the co-workers you wish | to invite, and leave it to them to {do as they wish about coming andlor sending wedding presents. {Or you may, if you wish, address { the invitations to "Mr, and Mrs."-- even though you don't know their® husbands. However, if it is invita= | tions to the reception you are con=- sidering, you might send these in- | vitations, and then at once explain | that you and your daughter want |ed them to be invited, but please | not to consider sending her a wed- ding present, this at her special | request. Special Problems For The Christen- ing of Their Two Children | Dear Mrs. Beeckman: | We have two children, ages one | year and two years, and they haye | not as yet been christened. We had | hoped to take them to be christen- |ed by their grandfather, who is a | minister, but he lives so far dis- | tant from here and we have al | ready waited so long that we -are j now going ahead with our plans for the christening here. (1) We are strangers here, and don't know anyone well enough to ask them to be godparents. Can we, the par- ents, each take one of the child- ren to the altar? (2) Should the children be dressed all in white? (3) Do we present the fee in an {envelope to the minister after the | services? How do we determine the correct amount. . .and should it be doubled for two children? ER. (1)' Yes, your husband could take the older child, and you take the younger child. (If you wish, or if godparents are a requirement in your denomination, you might ask | some acquaintances, perhaps co- { workers of your husband or some people connected with your. church, to be proxy godparents for rela- tives. or friends you would have chosen as. godparents if the chris- tening were to be in your former { home city. You might talk this over with the minister when you { consult him about the plans, (2) Yes, (3) Your husband hands the fee in an envelope to the minister. The minister would be sorry, I know, if You werry about the amount "to { glve him. There is no fixed amount; | give what you wish, can comfort- ably afford, and don't think an | amount has to be doubled because there are to be two ceremonies, LA SE Hint on How-To-Be-Popular. . . Mind Your Own Business Your friends will like you more -.and Jonger!. ..if you don't consider it your "duty" or respon- | sibility to offer them your unsoli- cited advice. Mind your manners .mind your own business! | { | | | Se rn HLL, ERTS | right into BU GES i ELECTRIC FLOOR POLISHER 3 EASY BUDGET TERMS MEAGHER'S 92 SIMCOE N. S5KING w, Phone 4600 PHONE 42