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Daily Times-Gazette, 4 Feb 1947, p. 7

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4 » to win going THE DAILY T IMES-GAZETTE | TUESDAY, FFEBRUARY 4, 1947 BEAUTY FOR YOU-- Exercise Wards Off Beauty Woes By HELEN JAMESON Beauticians have a lot to say these days about the need of brisk circulation, if hair, complexion and at pulchritude Face H] g 4 iH HE | ) i i i : BEREE 2k i i 1 : E a ' gs FES § : 4 i | ; g 2 | i F § § | | EEE} ef = [i i 1 5% 8 i H gi 2 iit M1 Hl ® H g 8 § § R 8 Fit i } gé | HE ili H i ; " » K5EE3 FETE 8 £ Pretty little hothouse plants, who step out of doors only when the weather is favorable, and who hate the mention of the word exercise, Middle-aged women who love soft cushions invite fat cells. >» W develop complexions and color of blanched celery. Their wails are loud in the land. They don't realize that good apptarance is dependent up- on regard for i Jaws of alths They lack animal and spirit, of- ten get moody, are pests in the family circle. Ten minutes of setting up exer- cises every morning are well worth while, By contraction and expan- sion of the muscles, the circulation is speeded up. Moderate exercise strengthens the heart, as it streng- thens all the organs of the body, Women depend altogether too much upon cosmetics, especially make-up. These aids are fun to play with, and they boost morale. But, after all, the rouge pad and the lipstick are merely makeshifts, The Movie Column Canadian Press Staff Writer With the release of "The Yearl- ,' Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer has proved it can make a beautiful, sensitive streen tation of a theme that is the beaten track for the movies--the temader affection between a parent and child. Rawlings' sim- ple story is followed almost flaw- and brings a breath of fresh the Academy Award." the Lots John Garfield, now a free-lance actor, has incorporated himself for business reasons but, for tax con- siderations, has retained only 20 Thank you, Miss Patterson, for our grand letter. You see, i Suds is Concentrated. Super Suds sudsier, 1 lasting suds, for , longer-las easier and quicker os, ning And Suds costs no more than washday soap. [1 Conjuring Seasoi Back in Britain Ebony wands, silk handkerchiefs, and china eggs are being polished, pressed and dusted. It is the con- juring season. ere are 40 to 50 magical socie- ties in Britain, with a membership running into thousands. Many more who are not members of clubs, so- cleties, rings or circles also "do a few tricks." How do people start conjuring, and why? One personality in the magical world did leave an explanation. John Nevil Maskelyne, father of a famous family, who made his name spirif performing that decided him. duplicated their show and insisted on telling the world that he had no spiritualistic aids but depended on simple trickery. Finest Performer David Devant, whose name Is inevitably linked with that of Mas- kelyne, was acknowledged by all magiciang to have been the finest ormer of them all. He died dur- the last war. | In the prime of his career infan- tile paralysis ended his ability to perform, but although the public lost, conjurers gained, for he de- voted the rest of his life to giving lessons. Another topline magician who died during the war was Walter Jeans, of Leeds. He invented many ilusions, but his first love was sleight of hand, Once he showed the £1,000 diamond challenge jewel which he was prepared to surren- der--but never did--to anyone who was adjudged a better sleight of hand performer than he. Bombastic, you may think? Not a bit. Jeans was gentle, modest, self-effacing. His only interest w; to see the standard of magic improved, Conjurers Secretive Conjurers , are often accused of being secretive. And little wonder. For once the secret of a trick has been revealed the audience lose in- Similarly, a performer seldom re- trick to the same audience. ] tend to do so, go- ing through what seems the same routine and offering a plausible ex- planation as he does so. But the re- sult turns out differently. and the audience remain just as pu -- and just as entertained. Many years ago the Magic Circle decided that any member guilty of tell! "how it was done" would be expelled. a popular magazine. Here was a quandary. But the Circle was re- lentless, and years elapsed before he was re-elected, Soothes Baby's Nose Mentholatum ears a clog, {2 Es NTHOLATU COMFORY n ® HAIR STYLING ® MACHINE AND - LADIES! Now you can have those BEAUTY TREATMENTS AT HOME By Telephoning 2741J . .. The "Travelling Beauty Aid" (By MRS. BLANCHE SLOAN) Specializing in ® FACIALS MACHINELESS PERMANENTS' We specialize in beauty treatments for the bed-ridden, either at home or in the hospital. ; ® MANICURES Then Devant wrote for] Hoarseness a Sign Not to Be Ignored Ar---- By HERMAN X. BUNDESEN, D. WE usually think of hoarse- ness as a sign of sore throat or of an ordinary cold and yet, this familiar symptom may be caused by dozens of otMer conditions, some of which are of the utmost seriousness. A number of these disorders are located in the larynx or voice box, while others affect the body as a whole. For instance, tumor growths in the larynx / hoarseness, but so may syphilis and tuberculosis, chronic lead poi- soning, diphtheria, nerve inflam- mation, heart disorders and some diseases of the brain and spinal cord, ; ; Other Causes Other causes of hoarseness in- clude cancer either in the larynx itself or in the structures around it, such as the windpipe, esopha- gus and thyroid gland. For these reasons it should be obvious that hoarseness is noth- ing to pass off with a shrug. Un. til the cause is found, proper treatment cannot be given, That is why the doctor makes a careful study in each case. Furthermore, it must be remembered that some of the conditions which cause hoarseness may turn out to be larynx, If this condition is discov. ered early and properly treated, it can be completely relieved in eight out of ten cases, Later, it is A person who suffers from hoarseness for longer than two or three weeks should not delay in having an examination of the larynx made with an instrument known as a laryngoscope. This is a tube with lights which can be passed into the larynx so that the physician can look directly at the larygeal lining membrane. Furth- ermore, if a growth is present a bit of the tissue from it can be removed and examined under the microscope to make sure of the diagnosis. Of course, a general physical examination should also be car- ried out, including an X-ray of the chest so that any disorders which may be present and respon- sible for hoarseness may be dis- covered. In any event, long-con- tinued hoar®eness is a matter for some concern and should never be neglected. Waits 4 Hours, Gets Nylons, Also Cold By ED CREACH London, Feb. 3--(AP)-- My wife went shopping for nylons today and the doctor says she'll be back on her "feet soon if she stays in bed and takes her pills regularly. She read in the paper that the first big lot to reach the stores in England since 1941 was going on sale this morning. "The stores open at 9," she sald, "so I'll get there at 8:30 and avoid the rush. In the light of what she told me from her sickbed a few hours later, we are framing that statement as a sterling example of women's in- tuition. $d "Aaahhhchoo," said my wife. "Well, you know, it was cold when I left this morning and it was rain- ing, when it wasn't snowing. "Regardless of all that, there was a queue half-way around the block at Selfridge's. Some of those wom- en had been there since 7 o'clock. 'It's foolish, but it's fun,' one girl told me. "I knew I wouldn't stand a chance so I walked down Bond St. The first clerk I asked said: 'Ma- dam, if we had every pair of ny- lons in London, they would have been spoken for last Tuesday.' "Another store said 'yes,' they had nylons, but the manager was keeping them locked up. Another Valentin For A DD Anne Addams A lovely little party frock for your little sweetheart! Pattern 4660 is such a dainty dirndl frock with its gay flower embroidery and perky tie-bow at front. Adorable! This pattern, easy to use, simple to sew, is tested for fit. Includes | complete illustrated instructions, Send TWENTY CENTS (20c) in coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern. Print plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, PAT. TERN NUMBER, Send your order to DAILY TIMES GAZETTE, , Pattern Department, 'Oshawa. produce | serious, particularly cancer of the | £ Glamorizing Care Can Keep By HELEN Your Neck Lovely FOLLETT When you cream your face at night be sure to include your neck. J * WHEN attending to the nightly anointing and petting of your sa- cred complexion, do you include your neck? Don't you know that face and neck may get a color di- vorce, one being peaches and cream, and the other one yallery? 'The friction of furs, scarves and coat collars often causes roughness, red- ness or discolorations. No help to you when you sail forth in your very best dry goods to find gay recrea- tion when the lights are on. Take a survey. You may need to do a little bleaching of the skin sur- face of your neck. A mixture of equal parts of peroxide and strain- éd lemon juice may turn the trick after a few applications. Slap it on with cotton, Make the lotion fresh twice a week. When It Dries As soon as it dries--you can race through a few chapters of your mys- tery thriller while waiting for that to happen--get out the massage cream, and see what can be done in the way of softening and refining the cutaneous covering. Necks often have a way of aging *® * before faces, mainly because they are in need of beautifying treat- ments or because the head is not held erect. Let your chin droop and the muscles of the throat will do a sit-down strike, get soft, lose re- siliency. Then what? You've guess- ed it. Fiddle strings or necklace creases. Women Who Sew Typists and women who sew, must learn not to let the head fall far forward. The neck alone won't be the victim of this back habit; the tissues along the jaw line will Alo soften, impairing youthful con- our, By way of keeping the southern portion of your countenance in form, try this exercise. Sit in a straight back chair, chest high, head balanced, hands on hips. Turn the head slowly to the right, as far as ever you can, then do an upward tilt, With the head turned sidewise, send your nose as high in the air as you can. There will be a muscle pull from jaws to collar bones. Back to first position and repeat, turn- ing to the left. place--"here my wife's voice broke a little--"'was selling to every 10th customer, and I was number nine. "By this time I was cold and wet and beginning to sniffle, but-I kept trying. I got into two different queues. The people in one of them sald they heard nylons were going on sale at noon, The people in the other were just queueing from force of habit, I guess. "Anyhow, my feet hurt and I wag developing a bad cough 'and since I was passing the doctor's office, I thought I'd better go in." "I take it," I said, "that you didn't get any nylons." "Oh, I was offered a pair," she sald, "but they were those seamless cmes that make you look as if you had leg make-up on--so I didn't take them.* The Experts Say By KAY REX Canadian Press Staff Writer Ottawa, Feb 3--(CP)--What- ever the party snacks you'll be preparing this week--whether for the monthly meeting of the neigh- borhood bridge club, or as an af- ter-the-hockey-game dish for the sport fans in the family--you'll be looking for something that's hot, nourishing and tasty. And it there are men present you won't go far wrong in serving a cheese dish. In the good old days Welsh rabbit meant bread and cheese-- the Welshman's rabbit or meat. Later the name was used to designate a concoction made with malted cheese and served on bread. Today rabbit or "rarebit," as it is generally known, has many mo. dern variations, and home econo- mists of the consumer section, Dominion department of agricul- ture, have their special recipe. Cheese Vegetable Rarebit: one cup tomato juice, one tablespoon fat, 13 teaspoons mustard, two teaspoons Worcestershire sauce, salt and pepper, one egg, three cups cheese (grated), tlLree cups cooked vegetables, six slices bread. Heat the tomato juice, fat, mustard, Worcestershire sauce, salt and pepper in the top of a double boiler. Add well-beaten egg and cook until mixture thickens (about three minutes), Add grated cheese and stir until melted. Arrange hot vegetables on toast or in toast cups (made by pressing slices of fresh bread in- to muffin tins and toasting in a hot oven), Pour sauce over vege- tables and serve immediately. This quantity serves six. And, incidentally, in preparing any cheese dish always remember that cheese becomes stringy if cooked at too high a temperature. Melt cheese over hot water and keep the heat low for a smooth rabbit. ' It it's védriety you're after in the dinner menu these days why not try a main course of liver, kidney, heart, tongue or sweet- breads, as a change from the usu- a] cuts of meat, which nowadays are not only difficult to obtain, but also are more expensive? Health authorities point out they all are rich in essential] Vitamin A and iron, and help to ensure healthy eyes and rich blood. A taste for liver often must be cultivated--and especially among the younger members -of the fam- ily. For a new method of cooking, try grinding and mixing with chopped onion, After rolling in flour, fry in cooking oil as you would meat-balls, Spanish Rice Meat Dish: § cup rice washed and cooked till soft, one pound hamburg steak, one onion, one tin tomato soup, § cup bread crumbs, 3% cup grated cheese, one teaspoon salt, § tea- spoon pepper, Brown meat and onion in fry- ing pan over slow fire add rice and tomato soup, and cook 15 minutes, Place in hakipg dish, sprinkle bread crumbs and grated cheese on top and bake in slow oven 30 minutes, Lady Cripps Gives Gifts from China Lady Cripps lately returned from her Far East tour as president of the British United Aid to China Fund has been disiributing gifts from Madame Chiang Kai-shek to "her verg good friends in England." Mandarin jackets went to Prin- cess Alice and Miss Sarah Church- ill, Chinese embroideries to Lady Mountbatten, and a nice length of silk brocade to Lady Seymour, wife of the former Ambasador to China. Cheltenham (England), resident Miss Gertrude Chess, 66, has sailed for Toronto to marry Albert Black- more, widower whom she has not seen for 40 years. DUSTBANE THERE IS NO DUST ON MY MANTEL SINCE | SWEEP MY BASEMENT WITH 'DUSTBANE" GRO CHAIN AND ERY H \NADA '1 Oshawa. Professor Gives Advice to Youth Dr. C. E. M. Joad, Britains philo- sopher, teacher, author, radio Brains Trust member, and ex-Civil Servant, talked practical philosophy to at a meeting at the Schoolboys Exhibition, now drawing And here are some of the things he said: y Money Although a lot of e pretend that they do not care ut it, be- lieve me, it is "all my eye." Money is very important, and the older you get, the more important it becomes And the first thing you must in- sist on doing when you go into a job (atts? PAGE SEVEN SALI 'EE £A is to see that you get paid a r ably high wage or salary... If you do not, get another job. ' Money does not make you happy . + Jbut jt enables you to be miser- able in comfort, Fame 'The second thing that might want when you grow older--some- thing that I've always wanted -- fame. If you want to be famous you must not go into the Civil Service, and you had probably better not go into an office at all, because almost ev in offices is not heard of anywhere else. There is one drawback--that you think you have never got enough.. However famous you may be there is always somebody more famous than you... Women They are not as mysterious as they were. When I was a boy they were s0 covered up that I thought all women were solid down to the ankles where they branched into a pair of feet. However, you know more about them now than I did. You will know much more in years to come, and, God help you, you will almost cer- tainly marry one of them. At 93 Leaves Choir . Sang There 70 Years Still singing in St. Paul's Ca- thedral Choir is a remarkable lit- tle man with rosy cheeks and grey moustache: remarkable because he has sung in those same stalls for 70 years, Mr, Henry James Dutton is 98, has sung in choirs sinec he was ten. Now he has handed in his re- signation--not because his voice is gone, but because his legs are get- ting "just a little tottery." It will take effect on Easter Sun- day, when Mr. Dutton will be 94. He is a bachelor and will retire to the house in Herne Hill where he lives alone, to listen to the radio. He will not tune into programs of modern music, because he doesn't like it. He prefers, he says, some- thing with a tune to it. British Architect Replans London Zoo Dear Mrs. Beeckman: We have just moved into our new housewarming; and we would very much appreciate your advice about special questions concerning this plan. 1. First, there is the problem of how to invite the guests. We have a great many close friends whom we will be mviting in, from time to time, to spend the evening with us and see our new house. But we have also a great many friends whom we don't know intimately enough for this kind of invitation, but who, we feel, would like to come to see us in our new home, This presents an invitation problem. For this Housewarming should we send out invitations to all of our friends, or is it proper to put some sort of announcement of the Housewarm- ing and invitation tg it in the news- paper? A lot of our casual friends 80 to our church: we don't know them well enough to invite them at any other time, but they might like to come to a general party like a Housewarming. There would it be proper to ask the minister to extend an invitation througn the church bulletin? As to the kind of Invitation, would you please suggest what would be most appropriate? (I take it for granted these would be handwrit- ten notes?) 2. Next is the problem of the hours for a Housewarming. What is the usual time? My mother suggests Open House on a Sunday afternoon. In that case we would have to serve all afternoon and since we have two small children, it would be difficult to entertain, serve the guests, and also keep watch of the children. On the other hand, if we chose evening hours, the children would be asleep, but the many out-of-town friends we would like to have might not be able to come in the evening. To complicate this problem more, we have asked our minister to sing "Bless This House". He has gra- clously consented, but now I am disturbed as to guests arriving as he is singing or after he has finish- A British architect who is still | ed. in his thirties has begun a big job --the rerlanning and modernizing of that famous London resort the Zoological Gardens, in Regent's Park. 'The architect is Mr. F. A. Sten- gelhofen. Hs learned a good deal about zoological architecture in his last job as chief draughtsman to Sir John Burnett Tait, and Lorne, the Bedfordsquare firm of architects who were engaged on planning Zoo improvements bolore the war. His first ® will be to plan a new elephant house. The site is likely to be in the main Gardens possibly where the out-of-date antelope house now stands. Such a site would obviate the elephants' daily journeys to the tunnel to and from "work." Rebuilding will, of course, wait on Government sanction House Brighteners It's amazing what an occasional slip-cover will do to brighten your home! Make these gay ones for pro- tection with minimum work. Small slip-covers for varied ac- cessories. Instructions 7477 for slip covers for 5 varied articles. Our improved 'pattern -- visual with easy-to-see charts and photos, and complete directions -- makes needlework easy. Send TWENTY CENTS (20c) in coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern. Print plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, PAT- 'NUMBER. Send your order to DAILY TIMES. GAZETTE, Pattern Department, ~ J. GQ. 1. My suggestion is that you send individual invitations to the list of friends you want to invite to your Housewarming, This is the proper way to invite guests to a party, and by their personal quality it honors the guests. Your invitations should not be extended by a newspaper announcement. A particularly convenient form of invitation to a Housewarming is by Informals, the folded-over card en- graved on the front with "Mr. and Mrs. . . .." and the new address en- graved on the lower right corner. (Or buy plain Informals, write the name in the center of the first page, and the address in the lower right corner). The invitation writ- ten inside may read: HOUSEWARMING Sunday, February 23 Four to seven If inviting your church friends means too many guests at one time, you might name another date for them (including some other ac- quaintances perhaps), and have the minister extend the invitation by the church bulletin. (Wouldn't an invitation extended via the church bulletin include all church mem- bers? If so, I should certainly think you would need another party date.) 2. Your mother's suggestion is for the customary time .... Open House on a Sunday afternoon: usually four to seven, but may be three or four to six or seven. (Couldn't you, for that day, hire a sitter to stay upstairs with the chil- dren?) If you name the late-afternoon hours, I suggest you schedule the minister's singing of "Bless Thiy House" for, say, five o'clock, when the majority of the guests will be house; we would like to give a (Vi WHAT SHOULD I DO ABOUT-- Holding a Housewarming? By MRS. CORNELIUS BEBCKMAN present. (You might include delightful piece of news on your tation, if you wish to... . your guests would like to know about this, and would then, of course, be present at that hour), I suggest also that you invite sev eral of your women relatives or ine timate friends to be "deputy hostess es" to preside over the tea-table, two for each hour of the party. (Mrs. Beeckman wil] be glad answer questions on What Should I Do? submitted by readers.) this in- Englishman Advises On Hollywood Film Mr. Alfred Willlam Burt, ki of the Central Criminal Court, gone to Hollywood to act as tech- nical adviser to the build: of » replica of Court No. 1 of the Old Balley. 'The model is to be used in film "The Paradine Case" by Alfred Hitchcock, and will cost £12,500 to erect. Correct details of robing the sheriffs and aldermen, the carrying of posies, and the normal proces- sion when the judge takes his seat will be part of Mr. Burt's job, He has spent more than 40 years in the service of the City Corpora~ tion and is known by every crown- ed head in Europe who has been entertained by lord mayors. All-British Mr. Burt has been granted eight weeks' leave of absence. Gregory Peck, Ann Todd and Sir Cedric Hardwicke are appearing in - "The Paradine Case," which 49 Ann Todd's first Hollywood film. She went there last summer, but shooting was delayed until lass month, David O. Selznick, the producer who made "Gone With the Wind" and has just completed Hollywood's most lavish Western, "Duel in the Sun"--has engaged an almost alle British cast. He is anxious to re-create the OM Bailey correctly in every detail, and asked Mz. Burl 10 Sums 0. The sft 0. A delegation from Stockholm County Council inspected London's underground system in connection with the building of an under- ground railway in Stockholm, - d FASTER and costs less, tool irri ts ner BE £46, * clogging! GILLETT'S 'DRAIN CLEANER Prevents and clears clogged drains For better-tasting bran flakes, look for Kellogg's golden - yellow package. ry the big economy size. As you know, some of the people need Kellogg's ran Flakes all of the time + «+ + all the ple need Kellogg's Bran Flakes some of the time . . . so isn't it lucky they taste so good.

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