§ THE DAILY TIMES-CGAZETTE, Thursday, August 18, 1054 Wome JO ALDWINCKLE * WOMEN'S EDITOR DIAL 3-3474 BP do iat CLEVER LIGHTWEIGHT WITH autumn in the offing la- dies' fancies will turn to the new suited look. There are many ver- sions this season and one of the most prominent and popualr is the youthful theme which con- sists of an ensemble of the jack- et and full skirt. Pictured is a short jacket with a small velvet collar, notched cuffs and mate- rial covered buttons. The shoul- ders are neatly squared off and thes tuxedo influence is very evi- dent in cut. The graceful skirt is gored and is half-calf length. Of fine worsted flannel. --By TRACY ADRIAN. TOASTER-COVER! By ALICE BROOKS She protects your toaster brightens your kitchen! Everyone is sure to fall in love with her on sight. Make her of scraps -- the gayer the prettier! azaar money - maker! Pattern 7332: embroidery transfer, pattern pieces for gay Toaster Doll. Send TWENTY-FIVE CENTS in coins for this pattern (stamps can- not be accepted) to Daily Times- Bazetle, Bopselold Arts Dept., Osh- awa, Ontario. Print plainly NAME ADDRESS, PATTERN NUMBER. Lyric Soprano From Australia Likened To Melba TORONTO (CP)--An Australian girl now working and studying in Toronto for a musical career re- sembles her famous countrywoman Dame Nellie Melba, and even sings something like the gréat so- prano who in 1931. Denise Wray is a comely 28-year- old, endowed with a bubb! per- sonality, auburn hair, dee wn eyes and lyric soprano voice. She came here after a year of study in the United States and a tour of Europe. These were rewards for being picked from among 2,000 contest- ants in Australia as the girl most likely to carry on the Melba tra- dition. The contest was staged last year by the American producers of the film life of Melba, made in Australia. CLOSE RESEMBLANCE She was chosen by Eugene Goos- sens, orch Melba at fhe prime of her opera career in the 20's. He said Miss Wray bore "a remarkable resem- blance to the young Melba both vocally and physically." In Toronto Miss Wray is aiming at any of three fields--radip, tele- vision or musical comedy. ) Her initial idea was to work in New York, until she found the U.S. immigration quota for Aus- tralians is 100 a year, and that it's filled for the next 12 years. When Miss Wray was 15 she won her first vocal scholarship. The second came at 17. Later she toured Australia in the "Student . Prince," "Song of Nor- way," and "Oklahoma "' with the only professional company in the country. She sang Carmen and Faust in Sydney and toured with the South Australian Symphony. Miss Wray is a girl of many talents. While she was studying and running her own radio pro- gram she taught a kindergarten class on the side. She hopes soon to bring her mother to live with her in Canada, ADM 16 BOND W. 20% ON ALL - REFRIGERATORS FOWLER T.V. "THE TELEVISION SPECIALISTS" IRAL DIAL 5-1685 * | frustration. tra conductor for MARY HAWORTH'S MAIL Dear Mary Haworth: I am a girl nearly 46 and feel as though fife had passed me by? Due to the care of ill and aging parents, some- got away. left in the way of a future for me -- when the suly thing I really longed for was real honest-to-goodness happiness, with a beautiful marriage and a nice family? 'In my cir Cf it seems there is nothing to look forward to, but old age and the end of life. I feel myself to be the most lonely person on earth, with parents gone, brothers all married and only emp- tiness in the future prospect. ize of course that I am to have good health and a g job -- assets which many ple don't have. But where is wrod How can I find it? I am sure there must be many more gils like me -- and I would ve: much like to know how they feel. And the bachelors? They seem to want to remain that way. Thank you 4 ny instructive comment. MENTAL BLUEPRINTS Dear C. C.: Never mind how other spinsters and bachelors may feel -- how they may reconcile themselves to their lot, or their choice, as the case may be. If . |you are lonely and despondent in © |your single state, don't gravitate to others in similar "plight" (if _ |that's how you see it). The type of association that tends to mirror |your own distress would merely prolong your stay in a bog of Rather, utilize your. leisure to draft mental blueprints of the re- ally satisfactory program-of-living you want -- knowing confidently (while planning) that with God's Gives Life To Care Of Parents Now Wants To Find Happiness help. "all ' things are possible to him that Pelicvetn 5 confidently ou want -- kno! {While planning) tiie with God's help "all things are possible to him that believeth." - The gist of your narrative indi- cates that, thus far in your ex- perience, you've simp vaguely, like a chip on --never focuss 0! , posi vely, ed pic piness" that u mig Man's thought is creative, as we know. An English monk, Brother Mandus, writing in a current riodical, tells us: "Man in own power has created great cities, works of art, music, motor cars, factories, a multitude of things. But I would remind you that every- thing he has ever made was born in his mind , , . His great power, therefore, lies in his conscious- ness, in the invisible world of thought . , . We think, and some- thing js created . . . Thoughts are living things. BELIEF VITAL "Increasingly, today, we are be- inning to ow the power of thought and its infinite creative potential," says Brother Mandus. 'And thank God, we are beginning to understand that when we turn our thoughts into the unseen Con- sciousness of the Father we be- come open channels through which His Almighty Power may operate. It is literally true that we may ask of Him what we will, and He will produce it according to our ability to accept it." That is, ac- cording to our belief. During your parents' life, you were more or less assimilated into their experience, having no life of your own, figuratively speaking. e current And because you accepted tence on these terms, in effect lif passed you by. But now, thrown THE STARS SAY on your own, your is waking (fortunately) to the po- tential wealth that you never claimed. In Mark 11:24 God gives to all His children a blank cheque, as it were, to be honored when (if ever) they get around to filling it in -- by: knowing s cal what they want and ask for it. Here is how St. Mark records the Master's pledge: "Whatthings soever ye desire, when ye pray, believe that ye receive them and ye shall have them." Read 'The drifted | Sermon on The Mount" (Harper and Brothers) by Emmet Fox, to get the hang of writing your ticket, so far as your future is con- cerned. P.S.: You might marry a wid. | lin ower with children, who' need you to round out their dream of a lovely home life. --M.H. Mary Haworth counsels through her column, not by mail or per- sonal interview. Write her in care of this newspaper. -- 3 Lae : WIFE PRESERVER When you have to go out on rainy day, set an ordinary paper cup in a convenient corner of the hall, Then when you return with a dripping umbrella, put the tip in the cup to catch the drippings un- il it has dripped enough to be op- ened and dried all over. |e.aro. Geren By A FOR TOMORROW Do not let many circumstance force you into hasty action tomor- row. Take time to make decisions and Pp! are concerned, it would be best to postpone action for the Hime heing. Avoid participating in quarre which concern others -- especially Srgumets between married coup- es. ' The influences during the eve- ning hours could cause some emo- tional tension but, paradoxically, they are favorable for develop- ment along spiritual or altruistic es. FOR THE BIRTHDAY If tomorrow is your birthday, your: horoscope indicates that for the balance of the year it would be advisable to stick to estab- lished routines since the aspects do not particularly favor new en- terprises. If occupational chores seem mondtonous, try to exercise your ski' and talents little bet- ter than you have in the past and you may find your work mort re- warding from a remunerative standpoint. The fail merahs will be excellent for creative endeavors and, if you |® get an opportunity to help a frierd or business associate out of a dif- do so, since the favor will be re- ficult situation during this period, turned a thousandfold. Try, also, to cultivate some new acquain- tances. A child born on this day will be enthusiastic, luxury-loving and en- dowd with the qualities of leader- ship. . ANCHOVY DRESSING Serve anchovy dressing on egg salad. To make, blend one table- spoon anchovy paste into one-half cup French dressing add one ea- spoon chopped parsley and onion. INDIAN MAIDEN HONORED A group of colorfully - garbed Iroquois children sit at the base of a statue of Kateri Tekakwitha, Indian Christian maiden who be- came famous nearly 300 years for her devotion to the Virgin. The statue was unveiled "at the Indian village of -Caughnawaga, south of Montreal, The six-foot bronze monument was unveiled by Msgr. Giovanni Panico, apos- tolic delegate to Canada. 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