Oshawa Times (1958-), 18 Jun 1965, p. 38

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i i i i ' ; a 16A__THE OSHAWA: TIMES, Fridey, June 18,. 1965 Cotton at its shimmering best from Spain is modelled . Pre-Wedding Care Of Bridal Gown After months of exhausting ef- fort, the great day comes -- your wedding day. Your hair is set, makeup per- fect, only an hour before you set out on the march to the altar. You get your gown from where you carefully hung it when the store delivered it two weeks ago. On it goes -- and then disaster! Ugly sunburst creases spread down from the waist along the length of the train. There is a frantic flurry -- off comes the dress, hair is mussed, there is hurried consultation on how to press out the pleats in the yards of heavy fabric. But chances are no amount of pressing will make them dis- appear completely. By now, only a tailor could properly smooth out the gown. CALL FOR HELP The same fate faces the bride who failes to remove her gown from its box .until the day of the wedding. She might be able to press out the worst of the wrinkles. But the overall effect makes the gown look as though it had been slept in. This is the moment when brid- al consultants are apt to get hysterical calls for help. Their chief advice is how to prevent such disaster. Keep the gown boxes until four days before the wedding. Then hang it up in. a warm room with a sheet underneath for the train. This will hang out packing wrinkles. Don't hook the train up_ to keep it off the floor. This de- yelops a fan shaped crease that is extremely difficult to press out. Spread the train carefully over the sheet. Spread a clean white sheet over the car floor and seat. To avoid a rumpled look, do not sit ON the. BLESS. 9 vec sm ey os SSB FHS A GG Bk BR eee Ss a A SHIMMERING EVENING GOWN by the 1965 Maid of Cotton, Miss Judy Hill. A long, sim- ply cut gown of chalk white cotton pique with a pique jacket 'encrusted with pale rose and white stones. So Do Brides NEW YORK (AP)--Note to June brides: Here's a thumnail Sketch of the changes you may expect in your bridegroom, after the wedding. sae You fell in love with a gor- geous hunk of man, no doubt. What appealed to you was not only his innate charm, but also his handsome appearance. You {were proud of him when you 'walked down the street together |-- his look of glowing good: health, his air of good groom- .|ing, his immaculate linen and well-pressed_ suit. Well: get set for a_ shock. Even before the honeymoon is over you may wake up some morning to behold a _ bristly, shaggy creature yawning and scratching as he pulls on a pair of dirty dungarees and a torn T-shirt, saying: : "Gosh, it's great not to have to dress up any more, What say we go fishing, baby?" Could. this be your prince charming, your knight in shining armour? ' It could be and it is, says Bill Doniger of New York, an author- ity who has spent most of his adult life in research on the habits, character and protective coloration: of the human male. With his brother, Harry, Bill runs one of the world's largest men's sportswear firms, and in the course of business sutides the manners and appearance of men throughout the world. "Tittle boys are born with a fondness for good, honest dirt,"' he says. "They hate to wash their ears, and prefer their ears, and prefer their clothes '| well muddied-up. "This continues until the age of 15, when the boy suddenly discovers, overnight a miracle happens. He starts taking show- ers without having to be bound and gagged, he experiments with his dad's razor, he puts goo on his hair and acquires a stock of sweet-smelling toil- etries. "Now this guy keeps getting neater and neater until he gets married. After that he reverts to his basic nature and gets slop- pier and sloppier for about 1 or 15 years. His wife starts pro- ducing babies and they move to the country, where she joins him HONEYMOON in -PARADI Your memorable event must be perfect ! ! Visit beautiful lands across the oceans, yet only hours away. For the least cost and utmost in comfort, call TRAVEL SERVICE 25 King Street East 723-9441 or 723-7001 2 RES BS OO Bee wee ae ee ee Grooms Change, 2 in the 'let's be casual' move-jguy suddenly takes 'a look at - ~ wears blue boven and|himself and screams. He alse s. . He wears an ng he| takes aJook ; ind mut- can haul out of the attic. ~ | ters bg Masel, "Where aid she "Then in his middle 30's the' come from?' RENTALS yee = a! . Register Your Wedding Now at / Oshawa Shopping Cenfre 723-1371 36 King East Downtown Oshai. 723-7611 - DAVIDSON'S SHOE STORE 31 Simcoe St. N. wntown Oshawa

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