Daily Times-Gazette, 26 Jul 1951, p. 7

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THURSDAY, JULY 26, 1951 THE DAILY TIMES-.GAZETTE PAGE SEVEN BEAUTY FOR YOU:- Perfume Will Dramatize You By HELEN The enjoyment of perfume is in the wearing of it. Floretted odors "are a luxury, of course, but think what they do for you. They give you an uplift, make you feel rich and beautiful and chic. To gain the full value of them, use enough to be surrounded by fragrance. Too many times a woman will bring home a precious vial and will feel that she must conserve it. She uses a few drops now and then, and sud- denly finds that the precious fluid has practically evaporated. It doesn't make sense. Do you know that the chemistry of a person's skin may slightly change the character of a perfume? 8o it won't do to be a copy-cat, to purchase the scent used by your best friend--the one that makes you take a deep breath when you are near her. It may not be the happy choice for you. When deciding what to buy at the perfume counter, test some on the back of your hand, 'Wait a moment until the alcoholic content has evaporated, then take a Jong sniff. If it gives you pleasure, it is for you, Your nore is the de- ciding factor. If you are going out on a big date and your ringlets are slightly wilted, moisten them with toilet wa- ter instead of water. They will dry in double-quick time, and their subtle fragrance wi form a halo for you. ' One of the most interesting de- velopments along the beauty .line during the last two decades has been the tremendous increase in the use of perfumes. Formerly wo- men had read so much, and had heard so much, about the vulgarity of strong scents, that they felt they were not qualified to make a selec- tion. Then there were the husbands who declared they didn't like to have the Little Woman walk in an aura of perfume, Well, a lot of wa- ter has run under the beauty bridge and over the pulchritude dam since those days. Now a woman feels jus- tified in robbing the household bud- get so she can have a pretty crystal bottle on her dressing table. The use of a fragrant liquid, sug- gesting old-fashioned gardens, is one way for a woman to express herself, just as she expresses her- self in the manner in which she arranges her hair and in the style | of clothes she wears. It is a power- | ful aid in creating personality. It really isn't necessary to spend money lavishly. There are delight- ful toilet waters that are inexpen- sive and can be used freely. A fric- tion after the bath will not only make you feel cleaner, but it will tone the skin, and you will carry the enchanting aroma all day long. Sachets are wonderful buys. Place ALL-CANADA FUR SHOW The romdice of Canada's fur in- dustry, highlighting the luxury furs of ermine, broadtail and mink, will be shown in a new "Fabulous Furs of Canada" show to be pre- sented twice daily at the CNE. This display of luxury furs, in- cluding some of the new fox mu- tations, such as sapphire blue, is said to be the most valuable ever assembled in a Canadian fshion runway at any one time. Newest styling for the 1951-52 season will climax the showing, to begin with the use of fury by the early set- tiers. To store your meat, remove the meat-man's wrappings at once, and loosely wrap meat in waxed paper, leaving the ends exposed. Store in coldest part of refrizera- tor. Roasts may be held for several days, if desired, before cooking. S-- COLLETTE SPECIAL! Halt price on all work done by our two advanced apprentices on MON., TUES. & WED. Phone 3-9511 and ask for JEAN or MARGARET JAMESON Oistribeted by King Features Syndicate. Your nose is the deciding factor. * oo / them on dress hangers. In no time at all your entire wardrobe will smell sweet. Five-Inch Square Wonderful handiwork for hot weather! These squares are tiny and easy to handle. Do them separ- ately, join for spread or cloth. Filet-crochet square, five inches in No. 50 cotton. Edging too! Pat- tern 7348; charts; directions. Send TWENTY-FIVE CENTS In coins for this pattern (stamps can- not be accepted) to The Daily Times- Gazette Household Arts Dept., Oshawa. Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS, PATTERN NUMBER. Needleworkers! Have you seen our 1951 Alice Brooks Needlework catalog? Send Twenty-five cents for your copy today; Illustrations of patterns for crochet, knitting, embroidery. and other fascinating handwork. A Free Pattern is print- ed in the book. - % "When life has been well spent, ege is a loss of what we can well spare -- muscular strength, organic ii instincts and gross bulk. "But wisdom, which was infancy, is young pi in fourscore yeary, and dropping off obstruc- tions, leaves the mind purifi ed and. wise." --Emerson. ..To augment the richness of wisdom, is modern medi- cine, a comforting ally of the aged. For the physician, together with the pharmacist, stands ready to alleviate the infirmities of age in the interest of happier, healthier, and longer lives. 'KARN'S DRUG STORE 28 KING ST. E. - OSHAWA, ONT. Next to Post Office Dial 3-4621 Prompt Delive OO NTEREST TO WOMEN - A Physician Advises You By HERMAN M. BUNDESEN, M.D. TREATMENT OF CIRRHOSIS ' CIRRHOSIS, or hardening of, the liver, is a condition in which nor- mal, hardworking liver cells are replaced with scar tissue which can perform no function. This disease has long been associated with heavy drinking, but it can also occur in non-drinkers as well. In former years, there was very little which could be done about it, but today it is being treated most successfully by means of diet and the new drugs, methionine and choline, DILATED VEINS PRESENT .One of the marked effects of liv- er damage is the collection of fluid in the tissues and abdominal cav- ity. Varicose or dilated veins are frequently present in the area around the rectum as well as at the point where the esophagus joins the stomach. In treating this condition, it is important that the patient have 'las much rest in bed as possible to lower the demands upon the liver. The patient should employ a diet high in protein, starches and su- gars in ordér to protect the liver against further injury. The amount of fat intake should be kept at a minimum, but should not be ab- solutely restricted. The newer drugs, mentioned ear- lier, have been used very success- fully in preventing injury to the liver, In very severe cases, the giv- ing of plasma or albumin into a vein may be advisable. The amount of salt in the diet should be dim- inished. FLUID IN ABDOMEN When the patient has a great amount of fluid in the abdomen, it may be advisable to remove it by means of a needle, Sometimes the mercurial diuretics, which stimu- late kidney action, are used, but they are rarely needed if the salt intake isekept at a bare minimum. It is important for the patient with cirrhosis to discontinue the use of alcoholic beverages, If adequate nutrition is main- tained, if the liver is not too greatly damaged and if complica- tions, such as bleeding from the varicose veins of the esophacus, which may occur in this condition, do not take place, the patient has an excellent chance of living a fairly normal life. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS 'AF.R.: I have a discharge from the navel. Can you tell me what causes it? Answer: The discharge may be caused by an infection, or may be due to a connection between the bowel or bladder and the navel. You should have this condition checked by your physician. A shoe bag hung on a closet or kitchen door is an ideal place in which to keep small cleaning equip- ment. Wife Preservers a 7-23 When a recipe calls for a quantity of melted butter or margarine, be i measure the butter after melting, not before. GLAMORIZING:- Ld USUALLY women are more aware of the lure of long, black, up-tilted eyelashes than of the eyerows. Yet it is the latter that give expression to the eyes and have much to do with the character of the face. Ordinarily not much more is needed in the way of modern im- provements than tidying up the orders, deleting a few stray fuzzers that have wandered away from the fold. Apply hot water, the tweezers will work more easily, and the girl who uses them won't find herself making faces in"the mirror because of a little twinging discomfort. WIDELY SET EYES One may give the impression of more widely set eyes by shortening the eyebrow line at the inner terminals. It often happens that a fairly straight line conforms better to other features than the arched one, in which case it is best to let nature have her way. This you can detegmine by changing the pattern with an eyebrow crayon. Observe the results in the mirror, decide which design is more glamorizing. Strange to say, there have been varying fashions in eyebrows. Our foremothers applied olive oil to theirs to make them more pro- nounced and abundant. The Gre- cian eyerow was straight and nar- row; by that you will know shat tweezing is not just a modern diversion. - Later periods show the MRS. L. COTTENHAM Dressmaking & Alterations 14)2 Bond St. E. CLOSED for HOLIDAYS! -- from -- Monday, July 30th to Monday, August 27th "Teo Canada" via the on your trip to or from the West { See Canada . : . aboard your transcontinental train-- the DOMINION --a new high in travel comfort. Break your rail journey to or from the West with a Great Lakes Cruise--cruise Georgian Bay, Lake Huron, and Lake Superior . . . gay, shipboard atmosphere, deck sports . . ; and only meals and berth extra! Weekly sailings by S.S: Keewatin and S.S. Assiniboia . . . June 9 to September 8. Special boat train from Toronto to ship's side at Port McNicoll--direct connection at Fort, William to the West. Full information and reservations from any Canadian Pacific agent. F. B. MOSS, City Passenger Agent, Canadian Pacific Railway, 11% King Street E., Oshawa . Eyebrows Are More Becoming By HELEN FOLLETT Lovely, well-groomed eyebrows add glamor to the sparkling eyes of Movie Star Janet Leigh. Her brows follow the natural Hl e. * * extremely arched eyebrow, and finally one of more moderate lines. NO FIXED MODE At the present time we have no fixed mode as applied to the pretty twin "crescent moons" on the fore- head. They can be straight, arched slightly, or more definitely arched, according to the effect upon the facescape. As long as they harmon- ize with a girl's particular type of face, it is enough, provided they add to the sum-total of attractive- ness and play up the eyes. Most women have recovered from the practice of practically deleting the growth or weeding it down to a thread-like line that gave many of the sisters a scared, half-witted ex- pression. If your clothesline looks soiled, try winding it*ardund the agitator of your washing machine. Wash in hot soapsuds, rinse in the machine, and hang up to dry. Hollywood Highlights By FRANKLIN ARTHUR Hollywood (AP) -- Some days the news is new and old, hot and cold. For example: New to Hollywood is' an Italian gal who will dance the hula in her first movie role. If that sounds incongruous, so does her English. It's good, but it frequently lapses into such phrases as "hot stuff" and '"'that's the Reed." All this can be traced to the in- fluence of the U.S. army when it went into Franca Faldini's native Rome. She learned a lot of U.S. slang. Later she went to a school of English, with the result that she also speaks the polished variety. POLISHED TONGUE It was sufficiently polished, in fact, to win her a job as inter- preter when Gregory Ratoff brought an American cast to Italy in 1948 to make 'Black Magic." Ratoff gave her a minor part in the picture. She studied to be a teacher, came to this country on a vacation this summer. Her path led to Hol- lywood for a visit with some of the folks she'd met on the Ratoff picture. She'd been in town a few days when a talent scout proposed a screen test. Today's note on the old in Hol- lywood comes via Sendai, Japan, near where the U.S. army's 40th division is training. Seems that in their spare time, the men go to the local movies. Complained one soldier: "I stod® in line for two hours and when I got inside what was playing? The Dead End Kids. Want to buy, sell or trade? -- A classified ad and the deal is made. Wile Preservers = ey When a light bulb burns out, try tap- ping it lightly with your fist. The blow with the electricity turned on may cause a slight arc which will fuse the broken filament wires together so that the bulb will last for some time longer. In Jhe Co j Discover How Good Iced Tea Can Be! Make tea double strength and while still hot pour into glasses filled with cracked Ice . . . Add sugar and lemon to taste. SALADK ICED TEA WHAT SHOULD J] DO ABOUT» Addressing Husband's Relatives By MRS. CORNELIUS BEECKMAN Dear Mrs. Beeckman: My husband and I were married last May, and now his company has transferred him back to his home city, where he has many rela- tives whom I have never met. Aunts, uncles, cousins, as well as two married brothers and one mar- ried sister. How should I address all these relatives of my husband --by "Mr" and "Mrs.'] until they perhaps suggest that all _shem by their first names? (I am young- er than most of them.) "Yes, I'm Wondering Here's an easy answer, to remem- ber . . . you call all of your hus- band's relatives exactly what he calls them: "Adnt Margaret," "Uncle John," Cousin Dorothy," "Florence," op by the nicknames used by your husband in address- ing thems" Don't even wait for them tg-suggest that you call them by their first names, for they will expett you to call them by the name your husband uses for them. (And incidentally, your husband, in turn, addresses your relatives by the name you use in speaking to them.) i Here's a Mother Who Knows How fo be a Hostess to Her Daughter's Friends Dear Mrs. Beeckman: Last spring a classmate of mihe in high school (we were-both sen- iors, and she commuted to school from a suburb) mentioned several times that she would like to have me come to the important dance of the summer at the Yacht Club to which they belong, a large dance and quite formal. Of course I gaid I'd love to come; Last evening she telephoned me about the dance, the date, and so forth, and asked if I would come to visit them for the Jong weekend. Then she said her mother would lke to speak with me, her mother repeated the invitation, told me about the dance and Suggested what to bring to wear to it, and told me about other parties for the weekend. She told me the time of the train they would meet on Thursday afternoon, and then told me about " a very good train" I could take back on Tuesday, early-afternoon. After I had thanked her and we had fin- ished talking, she asked to speak to Mother, and repeated all these plans to her. I thought it was strange that she told me about so many "plans" . . . it sounded a bit 'bragging' to me, something her daughter never does. But I was most surprised when she 'informed' me when to leave. But Mother insists that this is the proper thing to do. Do you agree with Mother or with me? --Peggy T. Your mother is completely right, Peggy! Everything your classmate's MRS. BEECKMAN (Continued on Page 9) CHESTERFIELD © Recovered © Re-built! ® Lowest factory prices! ® $100 Trade-in Alowance on your present suite! TORCNTO FURNITURE MFG. CO. 315 Celina St. Diel 3-8549 ANNOUNCING! The Opening Of A New.... GENERAL @ ELECTRIC Dealership For Oshawa and District SHAWA APPLIANCES 004 Simcoe St. South (Opposite Simcoe South School) GRAND OPENING LN - purchase of a G.E. washer. Offer good for a limited time FREE! FREE! The Exclusive G.E. Daily Dipper with every only. SPECIAL! $169.95 504 SIMCOE ST. S. : Appliances DIAL 5-4331 OSHAWA'S ONLY APPLIANCE STORE HA NDLING G.E. APPLIANCES EXCLUSIVELY

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