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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 1 Oct 1959, p. 9

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THUI~SDAY, OCT. ut, 1959 TEE CANADIAN STATMAN. EOWMAIIVILLN, OUTAE& PAGE NINU Teenagers And Makeup How much makeup should a teenager wear? At 13, she'Il probably dlaim a desperate de- pendence on everything from. eyeliner ta hair colar. At 16 é she'll probably go back ta "Just When she's first allowed ta dip i.nto casmetics without get- ting her knuckles rapped, a 13- year-old wil. diligently follow ail the helpful beauty hinta de- signed for women twlce her age. Makeup ta her, becames a magie means of changing her face froin a schoolgirl ta a movie star or a model. After aperiad of Urne, trial and error, uhe'l /realLze she hasn't become aid and beautiful - ju#t a littie averly decorated. B ut dimly, through the makeup, she'fl begin to see a few natural assets stru glig to be noticed under ail that paint and powder. That's when she'1i. start taking same o! it off. ' ýer re a few things that thelp her decide what ta vertan. Complexion Many teenage complexions are a problem in themselves and should not be tampered with'too much until the skin is back ta normal. They are usually char- acterized by olliness, possibly blackheads and pimples. An oily complexion requîmes really RAI LWAY TIME TABLE CHANGES Effective SUNDAY, OCT. 25 Consult yaur Ticket Agent for further Infonmatios deep cl.ansing to clear the pores o! waste matter. Cutting down on the consum ton af rich, greasy foods an sets will help enormoualy. Coin. pressed powder applied directly over the skln with a puff Wl]] help ta camouflage minor blem- ishes as well as point Up natural skin tones. Lips This Iswhere a teenager can eally shine. There are sa m*any petty, creamy, lustrous shades available that any teenager can afford ta change and combine them. Actually the rifles for lip miagic are the saine for teenagers and grown-ups alike: 1. The shade la wmong if l dominates your features, blurs the shape o! your mouth ar looks unreal. If you look pret- tier, the shade is for you. 2. The dark shades look heut in the- evenlng when artificial llght washes out and softens the colons. But with teenagers in mind, Pond's have developed a wonderfully new High Lustre lipstick in Misty Pink. 3. If yau want to enlarge your mouth, bring the color slightly belaw your lower lipline. 4. To make your mouth ap- pea amaller,. apply. your lip- sick sut withln its natura] boundaries. 5. Don't ever try ta add ta the size o! your mouth by painting above the upper lip. Its autline is s0 firmnI indicated that lip-, stick brought over this rim wilI only look artificial and more than a little untidy. 6. Try more than onc shade of lipstick. It's false economy ta wear ane tube down toaa stubble. Only a dlean, fresh llpstick can produce a dlean fresh lipline. 7. For an interesting effcct, try two shades at once. Use a darkcr shade ta outline your lips (with a brush if nccessary) and a lighter one for the mnside. Pond's High Lustre cornes in three distinctive cases In thre sizes s0 the young teenager can mlx and vary her shades ta ber Turn Old Furnituro Into Cash with S TA TES M A C LAS S 1F1E D S Phone MArket 3-3303 *0 I ,, Friday and Saturday, Oct. 2 -3 ROY w. OldamobtIe Cherrolot aid Corafr Caui NO WNAN VILE ChsvMlsI Trck. COUITICE Phono MA 34335 Phon MA 3-3922 'heart's content without Invest- ing a great deal a! mnoney. Eye Makeup While it may not sound cx- citing, sleep wiUl do more than cosmetie ta keep a young cye clear and hright. However you can improve their aspect by keeping yaur eyebrows brushcd and tmained int9 a natural arch. Pluck any stragglers that have wandcrcd across the bridge o! your nase, but stop theme. 0 a 0 A MacDuff Ottawa Report Which Wo 1 The possibility of a political revolu- ïtion banga over Quebec now that death bas ended the long and autocratic rule'of Premier- Duplessis as head of the power- ful, ultra-nationalistic Union Nationale IGovernment. t In some quartera it is argued that 9nothing will be cbanged, that under the rleadership of the new premier, Paul Sauve, everything will go on as it had bof ore, but that is almost inconceivable. tEver since Duplessis created it in 1936, the Union Nationale bas flot been a party in the normal songe, but a personai instru- iment, one that had Its foundation in bis own cunning and personality. Over an 18-year period since 1936 ho managed to keep it in power through one of the most efficient party machines the country bas *ever known and an appeai ta almost every conceivabie French-Canadian fear and prejudice. setPremier Duplessis' appeai was os- >snially ta the people in the country, people whose roots lay deepiy in the past. iBefome tbem ho ralsed the image of deep plots being batched in other parts of the country ta deprive them of their birth- right - their religion, their language and their culture. The rural parts of Quebec, Lwbere bis appeai was greatost, are also disproportîonately represented in the legisiature compared with the beavily Lincreased urban population. But over bis years in office Quebec bas undergone a startling change, with the province growing from a rural economy inta an industriai giant. This Ltransformation bas brought with it equally startling social changes and a new attitude towards political que stions. Througb contrai of the political'machine, government patronage and bis own far- reacbing personal appeai, Premier Du- plessis was able ta, retain power wbiie resisting change. Mr. Sauve, more liberally inclined than bis prodecessor - and in any case not strong enougb ta stand against the tide, may weli mark the beginning of a new era in Quebec politics. Because there is stili a strong element within the Union Nationale party that is far ta the rigbt of anything else on the Canadian political stage and doeply im- bued witb the Duplessis tradition, Mr. Sauve wil undoubtedly move cautiousiy, but move ho will. With "Le Chef" gone, he is undoubt- edly aware of the fact that the provincial Liberai party under the new leadership of the Hon. Joan Lesage, a young and energetic former ministor in the St. Laurent Cabinet, now poses much more of a threat ta the U.N. government. He is bound ta move dloser ta the centre, ta adopt many of the social welf are measures that have operated for yea.rs in the sister province of Ontario. Among the first changes that are likeiy ta be instituted by Premier Sauve are acceptance of the national bospitai insurance program and of university grants froni the federai govemument. a Premier Duplessis inever qulte closed the door on the former, although he remained very cool about it to the end, but he made it clear time and again that so long as he lived he would always oppose the acceptance of grants for educa- tion ini any forni from the federal author- Mtes. Now that he bas gone, Premier Sauve is epected to find a form, under which the acceptance -of université granta will be palatable. In ail other provinces both these measures have been accepted as a matter of course. Their acceptance by Quebec, however, will represent an almost revo- lutionary change of attitude, and an indi- cation that Sauve tees the political neces- sity of new measures suited to an urban industrial society. For the Liberals Ini thé province the death of the wlly old leader and founder of the Union Nationale party Is a mixed blessing. In a sense the party is weaker now that he is no longer its leader, but his passing at the same time removes the choicest target for Liberal attack. If Premier Sauve can manage to hold on through the next election be niay win time to consolidate his position and set back bis party's eventual defeat for years to corne. Capital Hill Capsules The federal government's butter price support program is facing a crisis as surplus stocks in storage head for a new ail-time high. By the first of September the volume of butter in storage across the country jumped to 124,084,000 pounds, 10,000,000 pounds above the seasonal peak that-wasi bit in November last year and only 3,700,000 pounds below the record of 127,-ý 800,000 in November, 1955. With butter expected to continue pil- ing up for another month or so, there seemed littie doubt that the surplus on hand this year would far exceed tho 1955 high. Tbis would present the government with a serious disposai problem and per- baps the necessity of dropping the present 64-cent support price or selling to consum- ers at a loss. The federal governniont bas been' urged to oliniinate the eight-year-old ban on manufacturer-imposed retail selling prices. Justice Minister Fulton was call-, ed on to abolish the law making resale price maintenance illegal by representa- tives of the manufacturers, retailers, and wbolesalers organized under the Dis- tributive Trades Advisory Committee. Whiie in opposition the Conservative party fought a strong rear guard action against the Liberal legislation, but so far has given no indication that it is prepared to wipe it off the statute books completely. It did make a niove to soften it last ses- sion, bowever, when it introduced legisia- tion to curb loss-leader selling. The bill was withdrawn at the tail-end of the session for further study._______ 1 amm- ammà a - J E- - das4 169us ui Weekly Ruffrd Grouse Studies Underway K. I. Irlzawa, Biologlst Ruffed grouse hunters in the Lindsay Forest District wil play an important raie in g rause studies being carricd eut by members o! the Department of Lands and Fomcsts. Studies o! age and sex ratio o! the grouse kil are being made in an effort ta abta~n a better un- derstanding of their population fluctuations. The methods currently used for distinguishing maies from femaies and aduit birds froni juveniles wcre developed in Michigan and Wisconsin. This system is based on the appear- ance of wing feathcrs and an the length a! tail feathers. ln bath states there is only anc subspecies o! uf!ed grouse, but ln Ontario theme are four races of grouse wluich vary sornewhat in size. To place Ontario stu- dies of ruffed grouse on as firm a footing as possible, it wili be neccssary ta check tail feather mneasurements from a large sample of grouse thmoughout the province. Hunters a! this district are asked to co-operate in this un- dctaking cither by allowing Departinent personnel ta collect wings and talle from their birds in the field or by sending la ta the Depatment at Lindsay, compiete sets o! wings and tails from their birds, if they are not chccked la the field. The wings and tala froin each bird shauld he piaced la an indivi- duel envelope or bag and infor- mation on the date and iocaiity o! kili (township, pre!emabiy) and the hunter's naie should accompany each package. The Came of the Misaing Uppers Veteran Departznent af Lands and Fomeets Ohief Ranger Bil Sarginson, whill on a cone picking expedition recently, found his upper dentures weme making his mouth uncomfort- able. Placing thbe trouble mak- ers in bis shirt pocket, he pro- ceeded about h:s wark, stoop- ing here and there ta examine fallen canes. Alas, at home that evening ho realized he had lost his very valuabie aid ta mastication! The hearty steak placed befome himn went unnoticed as be !unied and sputtered, wondering whcre, oh wheme, his errant bit o! "crack. ery" might be. Early next morning, Bill zoused bis sicepy cmew and set ýout determined to locate bis misij vdarprty. Afles search- Report 1l Ing several hours In vain, Bill cxclaimed in despair, "I know, it, I know It, those *!x/x* squim- rels have found my tecth and run off with them!" The sarne*day a communfiquel was lssued fram meUic oodr-' bam headquarters requesting ail hunters in the area ta be on Uic look out for a squirrel run- ring about with protruding overslzed teeth. Don't shoot -t, you'll ruin a per!ectly good sut of uppersI! Glant Fish Caught la Kawarthau An American visitor ta this arca, Mr. W. Hinkie o! Eliwoodi City, Penna., had thc thrill o! a fishine, lifetime recently when he hookcd a 27'h pound, 50 inch musky while tmolling ln Pigeon Lake. Alter battling Uic !lsh for fifteen minutes, Mr. Hinkie was1 able ta land it, giving visible proaf why the Kawartha Lakes are renowncd throughout North Amemica for musky fishing. D. R. Wilson, District Fomester. KENDAL Mrs. Annie Evans, Mms. John Morris, Orono, and Robert Mor- tan a! Bethany, whom Milt Robinson had flot secn far 13 years, visited him Wednesday evening. Mme. Win. Mercer le!t Mon-e day to visit Mm. and Mrs. A. Grant. Uxbridge, and went onj wÏiýth thinta-visit-relativeës -ni Paisley. Mrs. Alva Swarbmick la not. no weil at present and is stay-, ine n Oono ithMr. and Mrs.' Mm. and Mns. Paul Mercer,' Guelph, spent the weekend with hem parents, Mm. and Mrs. Fred Warren. Mm. and Mrs. Ayiward Little and famiy, Mamkham. were wlth hismomther, Mm Neya Little on Sunday. Mr. and Mre. Gardon Lang- staff and Mr. and Mis. George! Mercer and family attended Uic: stock car races at Sutton. Mary and David Loftbouses o! Thomton's Corner, weme with their aunt, Miss C. W. Stewart, for the weckend. Miss Kathleen Geach has started hem teaching career at Burketon school and Miss Phyl- lis Jackson at Central, until new school la completed in ]Bowmanvllle. Miss Susan Fo,-, ter bas entered Civic Hospital, Peterborougli to tr*in as a Yy Quebec? Inurse. We wlsh hmtebs of aucem ln their chassa ca- reers. IGueste wlth Allen Posters' durlng lat week were Allen Ldsyand bis bride fromn kmwJ)tm Mr. and Mmrs.Bull Peachy, ýamilton, Mmr. Diçk Westcott o! Teeterville and Mr. and Mns. BillWarlng o! Nor- Mrs. Mary Luxon, Mms W. Mercer, M.r. and Mrs. Ray Hughes and Gloria spent the week-end at Mrs. Luxons cot- tage on Lake Kuahog. Many trees are nicely coioured whUle other leaves are brown and curley as if the frost lias been too beavy. Guests the pait week wlth Mr. and Mrs. Roy Foster were Mrs. Burroughs and Gary a! Teeterville, and Mr. and Mm:. Doug. Ho!! man of Watemford. Mnm. G. Cathcart, Miss C. W. Stewart Mrm. Reg Elliott, Mmm. Eddie Couraux, Mrs. Luxon and Mrs. H. Poster, o! Kendal W.l., were guests o! the Newtanvile W.I. Wednesday evenîng and with the ladies of Sauina W.I. enjoyed hearing a talk by Mr. James Lovekin, president o! the Durharn Club. Miss Kathleen Jackson, nurse- in-training at Civic Hospital, Ottawa, has returned home after belng a patient ia Bow- manville Hospital last week. Miss Margaret Jackson R.N, is home for a while before lcavingI for Las Angeles, Califamnia. Bobby Falls' !ricnds were de- lightcd ta welcom.e him back ta Sunday School and church on Sunday. Mms. B. Alexander and Ken- dal folks were sumprised and greatly pleased that Blake was able ta corne home from Osh- awa Hospital on Saturday and Is looking. much better. He lai ta get up for an hour cach day On Saturday Mm. and Mrs. Ken Soper visited Mm. and Mis. Roy Kean and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Kean at Orillia. Mr. and Mme. Clarence Ther- tell and family, Miss Selena Therteil and Miss Joyce Elliott attendcd Roseneath faim on Sat- urday. Hatcuher Fosters took i the fair at Lindsay, Saturday. Mr. and Mis. Harmy Mercer and Mr. and Mrs. Don Mercer and family viuited Roy Mercer Sunday. Mr. anid Mrs. Orval Zealand and !amily weme guests a! Mm. and Mrs. John Thampson, Sun- day. On Sunday MIss MéBride of SCobourg visited hem sister, Mme. Chas. Thompson. Mrs. Eari Smith la visiting in Cobaurg with ber uncle and aunt. A Word To the Wives When epreading meringue an a pie filiing, be sure ta spmcad it ta the very edge o! the crust ta seal it. This avoids that I"sbrunken island" look. Re- imember, too, that eggs at room temperature yicld more mer- ingue, and that suger shoul be added very slawly as yau beat the meringue. bmogue t hou,.wM , eo rr piture wid.w olhde sUd. sud. t. fMI flte ronaswIIlafresh cair. Thot& whet the 34d. By do*%. cbse n gupan"est la b.euwdSUm white 0* ".es d efnhaIy mdwtlay.,mlifetime #ru"ha Ses decorate VUb LOW PRICE» FABimCS: HIGH FABJUON RESULT9 DraPery fabrics dan be cost- ly. And the selectian of fabric for your living-room, especial- ly, ahould be a cameful,- long term investinent But n every *ther room ln tàhe h e, yau can considor un- orthocwx materials that help trita Your house-keeping bud- get. Patchwork floor length dra- peries for the bedroam are a new vogue. These cari be mnade from coloumed sheets or bargain remnants. The "patches"$ should be long rectangles-don't get i-. volved with irregular shapes- and confine yaurself ta two or three solid colours. The resuits can be decidediy handsome. Terrycloth by the yard or oversize bathtowels are a fav- ourite for bathroom windows. If your ceramlc tUle walls arc a solid colour and your floor bas no pattern, you may like pattemned terrycloth. Your dur- tains might ho café style with large brase rings ilipped tbrôugh a bmass rod. Terrycloth 1: also useful ta caver cushions for the recrea- Ia!n or child's roarn. Bur]ap, dcnlmn and corduroy are popular for draperies. And bath denim and corduroy can be used for upholstery, too. A friend recently updated ber dowdy, old-fashlaned din- ing-room chairs with corduroy. The wood o! the Victomian chairs was painted in a taugh, TG DAY TO BENEFIT UNICEF (The United Nations Children's Fund) FRIDAY andi SATURDAY OCT. 2nd and OCT. 3 rd Sponsored by Bowmaniville Business and Professional Women'S Club "FOR ALL TEM WORLD'S CHILDREN" O~UARANTEED >d rit Service Improvements 'i àfree deivery LU MBER Opse-Ihe eWtdoors cornes lnu, etosed-duit and drafts or* moW &A f ed the hecyloat storm cannot cause a rett le. Cma bmad see Ibis supub new window now. We b baveiSyl ta#0umatchery tosle. Dowmuiwilse NArket 3-5715 EXPERT SHGE REPAIR Quality Materials Used Satisfaction Guaranteed BOWMA NVI LLE SHOE REPAIR 80 King St. West Peter Curtis, Prop. I NVITATION You are cordially invifed foa attend showing of 1960 OLDSMOBILE CHEVROLET AND THE NEW GENERAL MOTORS ECONOMY CAR COR VAIR IN OUR SHOWROOM 6 ATIS FA CTIG0NI E a Flrst Mortgages arrangei yi Home Planning Blue Pr Budget Plan for Home c Accurate Estimates ie E Competitive prices wltb Church Street M owmanville NICHOLS- NICHOLSON HORIZONTAL SLIDINO aliclobWINDOWS ,Pletur. Whul<w vlew-ali<l.a opens ai a touehb SHPPARD Y GILL LUMBER "E VERYTHING FOR BUILDERS" off-white ennuie! and the seats and backs wsre upholstered Iii pink ad white checked cordu- roy. The same fabrie waa reo peated at the windows. Perky des cottons are at home at your kitchen window. If you have a modern kitchen, complete with ceramic tile walls, mosaie tile counters and up to, date appliances, indulge in any type of pattern. Run hie gamut from. mad modern de- sign to prim provincial. 'How- ever, if your kitchen frankly needs remodelling, confine your choice of patterned fabrics to traditional designs. Don't feel henimeci in by aid- fashioned concepts about fab- rics. Shopping in the drapery department can be expensive- sa try the dress fabric depart- ments. If the material Is service- able and washablethen, use it wlth confidence. Next Week: Do IT YOUR- SELF BUDGET STRETCHERS. FINE QUALIT? MONUMENTS AND MARKERS OF STAFFORD BROS. Monumental Works 318 Dundas St. E.. Whitbp Phone Wbîtby IWObawk 8-3552 > THUPMAY, OCT. lot IM Tac CANADL4» STATMOUX, DOWMANVUI^ CINTAMU PAGE NnM Mît, 'twýl 96 MU SL L

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