ey are allowed to sit jour. : he ingredients together. ith a fork, to re the f foods used in the salad greens into ather than cut with a r a fresher taste, ingredients that: will alatable and attractive a dressing that is in flavor and consis. Use a minimum of avored foods. LANZER \BINETS im Fs atsddebd nooo eee IRK GUARANTEED FREE SriMAvES 4S FRENCH ST. OSHAWA ne 576-2980 GULAR 2005 G6. LIST ZAIc | IE FILM OUTDOOR SUGG. LIST 5 2¢ EPSOM SALT Lane's svenson Rd. N. 1131 and 2 ncoe Pharmacy ncoe St. North 23-3418 CORPS AUXILIARY PRESENTS PROJECTOR Members of the Ladies' Auxiliary, Canadian Corps Unit 42 visited Hillsdale Manor, home for the aged, and presented a slide pro- jector to Oshawa's senior citizens. The slide projec-' tor would also be used to enable relatives and friends of the residents there, to view slides of trips and other events related to their families. Photo shows Miss' Florence Tallman, seated, a resident at the Manor, as she tried out the KEEP IN TRIM Fun Tests For Teenagers Discover Excess Fat By IDA JEAN KAIN There are some fun tests that show whether you are a lean teen, or a fat and flabby one. If you have a lot of fat that doesn't fit your frame, your mir- ror will reveal it. But for mod- erate degrees of overweight, the picture is not so clear. Speaking before a group of teen-age leaders at a National Youth Congress, Dr. Olaf Mick- elsen, professor of nutrition at Michigan State University, gave some clues for determining the t of fat ddi lean, the floaters have excess fat padding. As you physics stu-| dents know, the Specific gravity of adipose tissue is less than the specific gravity of muscle. Fat floats. Try the pinch test. Since much of the excess fat in the body is right under the skin, it is possible to get a rough an- swer to the question '"'How fat am I?" Lean slightly to one side to relax the skin. Between your thumb and index finger, pick up a fold of skin midway them on for size. In a swimming pool, lying motionless in the water, 'do you sink or float? The sinkers are top of hip bone and lowest rib. If the skinfold is ap- proximately an inch or less thick, that's normal. If it's more than an inch, take action. ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED is the son of Mr. and Mrs. The engagement of Gail Marie Maddock to Anthony Reginald Newell is an- nounced today by the future bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs, Clifford R. Maddock. The prospective bridegroom: gift, assisted by Canadian Corps Auxiliary president, Mrs. William Watts, left. Also in the picture are, Mrs. Verna Corby, treas- urer, and Donald Pottle, assistant superintendent at the Manor. --Oshawa Times Photo An evaluation of the amount of excess fat is important be- fore you make your decision as to whether you are "too fat." Otherwise you may attempt to) take off pounds when there isn' "| any surplus fat padding. Talk it over with your family doctor. For example: Football play- \@rs were tested at the height of |the season. Some of them weighed 25 percent more than the desirable weight for their] height as stipulated on standard | charts. Yet actual analysis showed a minimal amount of body fat. These players were not fat; their weight was in big bones and heavy muscle. The time for athletes to watch that skinfold test is after their foot- ball and physically active days years the doctor may warn, "That's not muscle, Mister; that's fat." Summed up: You can be heavy by the scales' without be- ing overly fat. Conversely, you can be fat and flabby without weighing heavy on the scales. The new approach to weight is: How much of your weight is in fat? By the way, while you're tak- ing that sink-or-swim test, go on and really swim. Swimming 13 lengths of a 40-foot pool. makes a good workout--a fifth of a mile. Do that three times a week and you'll be fit, not fat. Tomorrow: How to cut appe- tite down to size. MARRIAGE The marriage of Miss Nancy- lynn Cosier to Robert Joseph Meagher took place on Friday, June 30, 1967, at Sim- coe Street United Church with the Reverend Wesley Herbert! Officiating. ENGAGEMENT Mr. and Mrs, Clifford R. Reginald G. Newell, all of Oshawa. The marriage is to take place in St. Ger- trude's Roman _ Catholic Church, August 19, at 2.30 p.m. Carpet, New Accessories Can Transform By ELEANOR ROSS Whenever a bathroom is one of the units in a model room or model house display, it usu- ally attracts the most attention. But, like some of the bath- rooms depicted in magazines, most of the models are s0|; glamorous that they are remote|? from the average bathroom, |§ even the decorator - inspired variety. Sunken tubs, window- walls curtained in costly, shim- mering fabric, and marble basins with gold fixtures aren't for most folks. While it may seem well-nigh impossible to change com- pletely the appearance of a small bathroom, actually it can be co-ordinated to reflect the "period" chosen for the rest of the home--and without struc- tural or costly renovating. Whether the decor is modern, French or Italian Provincial, Early American, or even Orien- .tal, the bathroom can be made over in keeping with the flavor of the decor. ACHIEVE NEW LOOK For example, a distinctly Co- ee ah Ry he Bathroom lonial look can be achieved by) replacing the existing light fix-) ture with one of the carriag A |Maddock wish to announce the| jengagement of their only jdaughter, Gail Marie, to | Anthony Reginald Newell, son }of Mr, and Mrs, Reginald G. |Newell, all of Oshawa. The jmarriage is to take place on|\, Sp LE August 19, 1967, at) 2.30 p.m. in St. | SAVED FOR FLAG | SALT LAKE CITY (AP)--A| ipatriotic seventh grader | |thought her school should have | | American flags in the rooms so} she saved up $15 to buy some.| \Mary Jane Edwards, 12, took ithe money to Mayor J. Bracken} lamp variety di 2 towel rings and bars, providing owels with an American eagle motif or small check pattern, and placing glass apothecary jars filled with soap and bath salts on the toilet tank or a shelf. For a Victorian effect--and Victorian is enjoying a long run --try an ornately framed mir- ror, an "ice cream parlor" light fixture with white-glass globe, towels in lush tones of purple or moss green and car- peting in one of these rich shades. note of luxury to any bathroom. can be cut and fitted by a home into a washer and dryer. Even tire room, SRO Ue Carpeting certainly adds a For complete practicality, it handyman--or woman, It should be cut in sections sized to fit if more dramatic changes aren't in the current budget, just a new shower cur- tain can give a lift to the en- Enquire About VIC TANNY'S C DA'S LARGEST ake FINEST CHAIN OF HEALTH SPA'S OPEN SOON OSHAWA are over. Otherwise in a few) SOCIAL NOTICES | the tus Allan| : Gertrude's| | Roman Catholic Church. | Wemen THE NAA TIMES, Wadnneeeyi: muy 12, 1967 19) [Skinny - Minis Not For The Portly By JEAN SPRAIN WILSON | NEW YORK (AP) -- For the mid-aged woman with a maxi-| figure, the mini-skirt {s a revolt-| ing situation. Such women would like to re- volt inst fashion houses that By JEAN SHARP CP Women's Editor TORONTO (CP) -- The morning suit or white tie and tails worn by men today may be the height of formality but the pre-Confederation versions had a more basic, everyday function. In the 1830s and 1840s they were riding or shooting jack- ets, by the middle of the 19th century they had been adapted for general wear and it was only as the decades passed that they became formal, | For this reason, today's morning suit wouldn't look completely outlandish to the Fathers of Confederation, pic- tures of whom show them wearing frock coats. Frock coats were just be- ginning to be formal in the 1860s, says Mrs. K. B. Brett, curator of the textile depart- ment of the Royal Ontario Museum. In that decade the lounge 'suit was the everyday fashion. It was also in the 1860s that parts of men's suits were made to match for the first time. Waistcoats or coats matched trousers. "And the decline of the gay waistcoat began. Until then jackets were dark and trou- sers light, in buff colors or grey. Black was for formal wear which had been dark blue. The black evening coat was not unlike today's." | COLLARS STARCHED Shirts with detachable col- lars came in during the 1850s and '60s. The collars weren't high but were starched to stand straight up in a single layer, sometimes with wing fronts, or straight but doubled over. The narrow: tie was most popular though men still wore flowing cravats or wide bow-type ties. There were no cuffs and no creases on trousers. Creases first came in the 1890s, Mrs, Brett says. They were loose- cut peg top style in the 1860s, cut in a more slender line in later years, Double-breasted waistcoats buttoned quite high and most were cut straight across at the waist, like the vest worn with morning suit today. Bowler hats came into style in the 1860s but they had low crowns unlike the higher, rounder. crowns of more re- cent years. Mrs. Brett says the mu- seum must rely more than it likes on contemporary pic- tures and fashion copy for its information on men's clothes of the 19th century. That's be- cause the clothes themselves weren't preserved, They were cut down for boys or given to the needy or simply worn out and thrown away. MEN RESISTED CHANGE "The only things that do re- main are dinner jackets and evening clothes. We'd give anything to have a_ tweed | suit." | A couple of prizes in the museum's possession are a hand-made linen shirt with | pleated front and a pair of homespun trousers made in Both were country wear. The trousers are striped in a mattress-ticking pattern. Much of the museum's in- formation is from Englisn and American sources, Mrs. Brett says. The English, especially, set the styles and made much of the clothing worn in Can- | ada. But fashion pictures of Today' S Tail- Coats Survival Of 19th Century Male Attire then." years. | that period bear about the | same relation to what men | Lee who got in touch with a Veterans of Foreign Wars post} |Which provided 36 flags for the jschool and returned Mary Jane' 's money. insist on stuffing the ladies into! |bosomless baby dresses that end alarmingly short of their expec- tations. | But designers who showed off jtheir creations Wednesday, the first day of New York Couture Group's four-day program of » |previews, made the point that short skirts are right for the young. Even so the midi-aged found a few friends among styie! houses on the early portion «of the schedule. Though Townley's designer, Chuck Howard, was stingy about chest room, iis skirts were, most often, ampie. Since no one can ignore the young altogether in today's youth-oriented society, his show also produced several long- | ster-med beauties in tunics over tights. The stems in these in- stances were stockinged in bright paisleys, broad stripes or |bull's eyes to match what little was left of the costume. Brownell ran true to the form lof the fully-endowed female, promising to cut some sizes to 20. Along with modest hemlines, the house also was benefactor of the scissors skirt--a_ single pleat beginning at the midriff and opening wide to the hemline jwhich flatteringly conceals a | widened hipline. | With Monte-Sano it doesn't |matter where your hemline hits as long as you keep thin. Emphasizing this point of |view were skinny-pinny manne- © | quins in straight line dresses un-| der equally reedy coats. Dinner} gowns were also of the fiat-| chested, flat-everywhere vari- ety. This formal suit, worn by Robert Baldwin in To- ronto in the 1850s, has six satin-covered buttons and false button holes. It closes with a single hook and eye at the chest. The court coat is of black broadcloth. The pantaloons, which have a buttoned side fly, are of napped twill and the fronts are padded and quilted to WIFE PRESERVER If the barbecue grill won't last another season, give it a coat of rust-inhibiting paint and make a Planter out of it mid .thigh. The suit is on display at the Royal On- tario Museum in Toronto. JUST FOR (CP Photo) | MONEY? actually wore as they do to- |The top money you can earn as a day Marvel graduate is only a start. Send ay. for our free brochure which describes | all the wonderful, glamorous career opportunities you can enjoy as a Mar- vel_trained professional --_ hairstylist. Write or visit: MARVEL BEAUTY SCHOOL | "You read what was fash- ionable, then you look at old pictures and see what the men were actually wearing. They are conservative today. They like their comfortable |210 Bloor St. W., Toronto i mat vpal Dey or tvaniag' Course' braaenes' bi old suits. They were the same |O07 iieipal cities. 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