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Daily Times-Gazette, 24 Mar 1948, p. 8

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PAGE EIGHT THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE 'WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24, 1948 | BEAUTY FOR YOU A Physician Advises You GLAMORIZING | Hollywood | The Experts Say en on cu By KAY REX salt; ts: two tablespoons gelatine; e-quarter cup cold water; 1% ps boiling water; one teaspoon one-eight teaspoon pepper; three tablespoons vinegar; two tea- spoons grated onion; one table spoon sugar; one-half teaspoon spicy meat sauce; 1% cups pureed cooked spinach; one hard-cooked eg Canadian Press Staff Writer Ottawa.--(CP)--Whether it's a "company" meal, or just a family affair, here is a New Look din- ner calculated to do any housewife pond, Saut inwredi Sie Soak gelatine in cold water for pees SoS ca ERIE: 1% fine" mia, Add boiling water Peri flour, 17% Toasporns are Pep | and stir until dissolved. Add salt, ; Sikedh, : pepper, vinegar, onion, sugar, and Syd; Utes Jablegoons cooking sauce. Cool until partially set. Fold Selly: fanduatier Cup red currant i; pureed spinach. In the bottom Jelly; four tablespoons lemon juice; | of each of eight individual moulds Sa0ee Spoon orcestershire | place a slice of hard-cooked egg Gut 'steak into one inch cubes and pour spinach mixture. Chill Est A intil firm and unmould to serve. and roll in flour seasoned with salt ig i and pepper. Fry in oil until brown Fight SOV and then cover and cook slowly, 20 minutes, turning frequently. Add mustard, sauce, jelly, and lem- on juice and continue cooking, stir- ring constantly until beef is coated with a glaze of jelly. The desert accompanying this main course should be something light and easily digested, such as fresh fruit, or Prune Whip. Ingredients: one pint prune pulp; one quart whipped cream; 1': cups sugar; one teaspoon vanilla; one cup chopped nuts. _ Fold the prune pulp and nuts | into the whipped cream, and chill | before serving. i Saint Patrick's day may be over, | but the spirit of that Irish holi- | day lingers, Providing a good =| cuse for parties and special "green" dishes. Highlights| By BOB THOMAS - Keep Nails Looking Neat By HEKMAN N. BUNDESEN, M.D. By HELEN FOLLETT Care for Your Forehead By HELEN JAMESON I is well to make one's eyebrows behave, Lift them too high and too often and, in the course of time, your forehead may become corru- gated. There will be horrid little railroad tracks streaking from one temple to the other. With the up. swept hairdo the brow must be sa. tin.smootin. In other days, with other fashions, women would wear bangs or .pull down their tress. es to curtain foreheads that did not qualify. Not now. Foreheads are naked and unashamed. Swept back coiffures have survived these many years for a very good reason; they give the feminine face a freshly.washed appearance. They're neat. An unblemished brow is a satis. faction to a woman who is no long. er within finger touch of her youthful days. It tells a story, too. Frown lines come te those indivi. duals who are easily irritated, who pull their eyebrows together, and to those who are inclined always to be too serious. Practically all fore. head lines are self-inflicted, The woman who dramatizes her- self, who must give emphasis to everything she says, is likely to develop facial gestures that impair delicate tissues. Perhaps you suspect, Mrs. Forty, that frowns and forehead lines are | MINOR FOOT ILLS PRIMITIVE man does not have the comforts of civilization but, on the other hand, he misses one of its prime discomforts, too. He does not have trouble with his feet, That is a disability which seems to be re. served for civilized men alone, par. ticularly for those who live in cities and must walk on hard level pave. ments or stand long hours at the work which earns their living. Of course, there are other factors, also, which may account for aching, painful feet in the individual case. For instance, people who are over. weight seem to suffer espepially from foot trouble. Prolonged illness often makes for difficulty in this way, too, because it tends to weaken the muscles of the feet. Perhaps the greatest factor of all is the wearing of imprecper or poor- ly-fitting shoes. This is particularly true of women. As we all know, feet vary greatly in shape. . Some individuals have long, narrow feet; others have short, wide feet. Thus, if alj people wore the same type of shoes, the foot structure would be crowded in some instances, while in other ca. ses, the shoes would be too loose. Of course, crowding leads to corns, bunions, and ingrown toe-nails, while wearing shoes that are too loose makes for, calluses and corns. Hollywood.--(AP)--Greer Gar- son, who is calling herself 'The New Garson" these days, will get something new in film schedules. She scheduled to make three | movies this year. Through most of her career, the Irish actress has averaged one picture a year. "Now I have to make up for lost time," she said, indicating her last two movies. After "Julia Mis- behaves," she will probably do "The Forsyte Saga" and then "The Saintly Miss Peters" -- planned after, the "Mrs. Miniver" sequel, which may be made in Britain. Hollywood Gandhi J. Carroll Naish told me an in- teresting project on "The Missing Bandit" set. He has an offer from a British outfit to star in a film biography of Gandhi -- if he can shelve 40 pounds. The actor says he'd relish the assignment and is consulting with his doctors to see if he can drop the poundage . . . Walter Wanger's next film will be "The Bastille," and for a shrewd reason. He'll make use of sets made for the expensive Bergman opus, "Joan of Arc." He also reports he may film "The Ballad and the Source" in Britain. The Picture Set Burt Lancaster was explaining = £2) ON) CHE 20 Household Hints: The problem of quick icings for plain cakes is solved if the housewife keeps on hand a mixture of brown sugar and | cinnamon, and a second mixture of grated maple sugar and chopped walnuts. A generous sprinkling of either on top of cake batter melts into icing as the cake bakes. Wife Preservers 4 Foreheads are naked and unashamed on the way. If so, take old meanie Time by the cowlick and get after them. You can keep them from digging 'in. After your bedtime face washing every night, get out the massage cream; it is your very good friend. Spread it on evenly, starting low down on the neck and working up. ward, Necks are nearly always ne. glected, which seems a pity. Smooth the cream along the jaw- line. Do little circles in front of your ears. You can use rotary mo. tions on your cheeks if you are eareful not to push the flesh' up under the eyes. Now. for incipient' frowns; place the thumb at the lower end, first finger at the upper terminal. Hold the finger stationary; work up- LE ward with the thumb, You will lift up the flesh, iron the little grooves that are forming. There is a slick and easy move- ment that many facial operators use on the forehead. You can do it too, if you try. Place the fingers of both hands, one group facing the 'other in :the middle of the forehead. As one group sweeps upward, the other one goes down, and both travel from one side of the forehead to the other. Finish the treatment with brisk slapping to hustle up the blood streams. Use the balls of the fin. gers, While the cream remains on, have an ice friction. WHAT SHOULD 1 DO ABOUT An Easter Table Setting? By MRS. CORNELIUS BEECKMAN Lovely words come to our minds when we think of setting our Eas- ter tables . . . early Spring flowers, gay colors, pastel-shaded linens, bright patterns of china, shining silver, All these.are festive touches. Perhaps have your Easter break- fast table blossom in a yellow cloth or doilies--yellow, the color of daffodils and sunlight and downy Easter chicks. Your centrepiece may be of bright yellow tulips, or pink or lavender, for a charming con- trast. The half grapefruit or orange at each place will carry out the sunlit color-scheme. . . + Or use a traditional] centrepiece of eggs. The children will be en- chanted to see a' eemntrepiece of colored eggs on the Easter break- fast table, the eggs dyed to har- monize with the linen and nestling in a large white pottery or silver dish lined with shining leaves. And an Easter rabbit "on guard" at each side. Or the colored eggs may he in compotes, low or footed white dishes, flanking an all-white flower centrepiece. Or . . . and this is a most dramatic idea . . . down the centre of the table have a parade of pert, white-painted flower-pots containing hyacinths, all of one color or rainbow-hued. Chilled grapefruit orange-half may be the first course of your breakfast, Of the special tradition of unhulled strawberries on each plate, with a little mound of pow- dered sugar in the middle. Then . eggs, of course, will be featured in the main course, maybe with slices | matic centrepiece for an | nished with sliced Easter table. ) An appealing, centrepiece, simple and inexpensive, is one made en- tirely of daisies. And still in high fashion are the centrepieces made of old-fashioned ~ bouquets, small flowers snugly circled around a central rose-bud. Always lovely, too, are small flowers . . . gardenias, camellias, pansies, hyacinths, frees- ias , . . floating in shallow, white glass bowls. For the luncheon table two smaller bowls holding floating flowers may flank the central bowl; for the dinner table, candlesticks flank the centre bowl. Your pastel-shaded glassware will be appropriately gay on your luncheon table, but white glasses seem more suitable for dinner tables. At either meal, at each guest's place put a gay little Easter basket filled with vari-colored candy eggs. And capture fresh Spring "colors in your food items for luncheon or dinner: Sprigs of mint on the fruit cup; accessories such as rose-bud radishes, slivers of carrot, hearts of celery and scallions, if you dare; mint jelly with the roast lamb; peas and carrots; creamed spinach gar- egg; parsley garnishing the meat platter; lush greens in your salad; a gala shade of ice cream or sherbet (or for the sauce thereon); and a gay pink or yellow frosting on the cake or cookies. And with the affer-lunch- eon or after-dinner coffee, serve, instead of loaf sugar, pastel-shaded of crisp bacon or bacon in curls and garnished with sprigs of pars- ley. There should be a delicious hot | bread . . . hot cross buns or coffee | cake filled with raisins, or popovers, or muffins, or tiny hot biscuits. or toast cut with a cookie cutter in the form of chickens or Easter lilies. And coffee, perhaps with chocolate as an alternative. { 5 crystals 'of rock candy. Happy Easter to you , . . and to | yours! (Mrs. Beeckman will be. glad: to answer questions submitted "by | readers.) It Happens If your gala Easter table is to be | set for luncheon or dinner, your | table setting will still be festive, but | perhaps with a more dignified air. | For your luncheon or dinner table | you might also use a pastel linen | cloth or place mats, and for a| centrepiece one large white glass or gilver dish filled with lilies-of- the-valley. Calla lilies, white or yel- low--used alone or combined with] mimosa--make an especially dra- INSULATE AND SAVE! Fuel-oil burners phone: SEALTITE INSULATION $08 SIMCOE 8., OSHAWA, ONT. | PHONE: 3136R or 3258W ~/ Tomorrow St. George's Eve. W. A, Calvary Baptist W. M. Circle. Christ Church Eve. Guild. 4th Oshawa Mothers' Aux, St. George's After W. A, Board of Seouth Mother's Aux.'s, LR AT SIMCOE HALL Nursery School Simcoe Hall Public Library Girls (11, 12) Arts and Crafts Boys (6, 7, 8) Woodworking Piano lessons by appointment Girls Teen.age Club Boys Stamp and Coin Club de ob AT THE X.W.CA. Handcraft Display Handcraft Registrations SCHNEIDERS REAKFAST BACON SLICED 5 2 Boston Cream Pie ,B y THE FOOD SHOP 42 SIMCOE ST. N. N PHONE 2855 vY AL33VS OID IW It isa well.known fact that from five to ten times as many women as men have foot troubles. The reason for this is not hard to find--it lies in the wearing of high-heeled shoes that throw the body weight on the front part of the foot which was never intended to bear the entire weight of the body. Furthermore, if there is any weakness of the feet, the wearing of high-heeled shoes will only exaggerate the difficulty. Low-heeled shoes. are better for the feet, in spite of the false idea some people have that wearing such shoes may lead to falling of the arches. The important factor in keeping feet strong and free from trouble. 1. Cleanliness. 2. The wearing of proper stock- ings or socks. : 3. Selection of the rignt kind of shoes. Daily bathing of the feet and thorough drying are important. Some may favor the use of a bland foot powder. The stockings should, of course, be neither too: tight Yor too loose. It is helpful to change socks every day, and to have sev- eral pairs of shoes, alternating their wear, Insofar as shoes are concerned, they must fit well and be properly constructed. The toes should be broad enough, the heel not too high. and the part of the shoe around the heel of the foot should fitsnug- ly. If foot trouble develops, the serv. ices of a physician should be ob- tained so that the exact type of disorder present may be determin. ed and proper treatment started. Many cases of painful, aching feet can be easily corrected by atten. tion to these matters of foot care, plus such specialized treatment as exercise and the wearing of felt arch, It is only in a few cases that protracted treatment is needed. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS J. W. G.: 1 have a pain in my leg when I walk a few minutes. The toes of this foot feel numb and cold. What can be done about this dis. order? Answer: It Is likely that your difficulty is due to a disturbance of the circulation. It is possible that you have what is known as Buer. gér's disease. The exact cause of this condition is. unknown. However, it has been found that in this disease the walls of the blood vessels become thick- pads in the shoes to support the * * Home care of the finger nails should consist of something more than brushing on the rosy glow. But does it? Not always. It is the opinion of your good looks reporter that women took. better care of their talons in the old days when polish was not used to cover up evi- dence of neglect, Nails should be more than presentable they should be in a healthy condition, of fine coloring, with surrounding cuticle neat and normal. The cuticle should never be cut except when the nails have been { long neglected and the flesh has grown up onto the nail fabric and | fastened itself securely. Then the | nger tips must be soaked in warm { soap suds until the flesh is soft, | the orange wood stick used-to de- | tach it, shreds and shags nipped | away with the curved, needle-point | scissors. Even then, the cuticle at | the nail base should not be clipped. If it is, it will renew itself and thicken, Manicurists use nippers for this purpose. They are less likely A special polish with hypo-allergenic qualities has been developed for women who have a nail polish sensitivity. * to cause wounds than the scissors. One should be wary of snipping and clipping. The slightest wound will invite infection, and an infected finger nail may develop into sérious trouble, Easy 'Enough It is easy enough to keep the nails in form. After using your complexion cream at night, give the leavings to those coral sheaths upon your finger tips. Rub briskly. The nail fabric is transparent, made of overlapping cells that push out from the matrix, It is the blood streams in the underlying flesh that give it coloring. A five minute massage is beneficial. It not only softens the cuticle, but it imparts health to the nails themselves, pre- venting the formation of ridges, keeping the nails from drying out and breaking. Some women are sensitive to cer- tain resins and plasticisers used in making nail polish, For them, a spe- cial polish with hypo-allergic quali- ties has been developed. TIPS FOR TEENS Let Us Answer By ~"JINOR If something is getting you down or putting furrows in your. brow, send in the sad story and we'll | try to find a solution to the prob- lem. Like this-- | "While reading your column re- | cently, I came to the sentence, | 'Nothing cheapens a girl or boy so | quickly as necking in theaters.' Do you consider holding hands neck- ing? Is it necking when a boy | puts his arm around you in the | theater?" --Ans. No, holding hands isn't | necking. A boy's arm around you | isn't necking, either but it's bad | taste, bad manners," annoying to | others in the theater and leads to | necking. So it does cheapen girls | I'and boys who do it in public. Why | act differently in a theater than | anywhere else in public? You are just as visible there as you are on ened, and there may be a clot in| the blood vessels. This tends to | shut off some of the blood that | should be carried to the muscles and other tissues of the leg. \ Old Favorite Is New Grandma knew--sp do you! What an easy, inexpensive way to make colorful household and personal ac. cessories. 3 huck-weaving designs. These three huck.-towelling = de. signs can have many variations! Pattern 7355 has charts; directions, Our improved pattern -- visual With easy.to.see charts and photos, and complete directions '-- makes needlework easy. Send TWENTY-FIVE CENT (25¢) in coins (stamps cannot Is accepted) for this pattern, Print plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS PATTERN NUMBER. Send your order tc DAILY TIMES GAZETTE Pattern uy : Department, irnN+ Your Ballerina \ Everybody's in love with you in this! Pattern 4648 is the answer to a maiden's prayer for that new, smooth, swish silhouette! And sew. easy--why the skirts in ONE piece! This pattern, easy to use, simple to sew, is tested for fit, Includes complete illustrated instructions. Pattern 4646 comes in Jr. Miss sizes 11, 13, 15, 17. Size 13 takes 3% yds. 39.in.; % yd. contrast, Send' TWENTY-FIVE CENTS (25¢) in' colns (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern. Print plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS PATTERN NUMBER. and id order to DAILY TIMES Pattern Department, LOsbawa, : ' PA Your Questions WILLIAMS why he broke away from tough guy roles: "I was becoming typed against my will in forceful, law- less parts. I wanted to try some- thing different, but the producers wouldn't listen to me. "It cost me $50,000 to be able to play a more subdued role in 'All My Sons." Again I played a weak character in 'Sorry, Wrong num- ber,' but it took a lot of sales- manship to get the part. I don't be- lieve an actor should wander too far from his basic type, but to stick to it exclusively is jeopardiz- | ing his career." . ' Over Necking i Linda Darnell and Rex Harrison | will have some torrid love scenes in "Unfaithfully Yours." a 20th- Fox statistician added up 16 clinches in the script, not to men- tion various pecks and pats. Said Linda after a clinch: "Amber was never like this" . . . - Frank Sinatra says he'll be do- | ing a lot of dancing with Gene | Kelly in their baseball picture. Re- | member their wonderful routines | in "Anchors Aweigh?" the picture | is now called "In The Good Old | Summertime," but Gene wants it | to be "Take Me Out To The Bal! Game." He only wrote it. | If your east iron gas burners and oven racks have a tendency to rust, give them an occasional light coat of mineral oil, which | is a good rust prevenkive. get" better acquainted while play- ing tennis, bowling, skating or hik- ing to a picnic spot. To make boys think of you as a possible date, dress up in date clothes occasionally on weekends and for school affairs. | } x | Main Street. Theaters aren't THAT dark. "My gir friends and I ave all 17, yet none of us has ever had a date. | Not one. We're not ugly, so please | tell us what to do. We're not boy- | crazy, but we don't want to miss | dances, dates and fun that other | girls have." --Ans. You're right. . You shouldn't' miss * darices, dates and fun, Now's the time, to, enjoy them, but you can't simply wait until the fun comes. to. you.. Be friendly and interested in the boys you know. When they talk to you, show that you're impressed. What about outdoor. sports? Outdoor doings will help to give |, you a well-balanced, interesting personality.' Besides, it's easy to For Fine Flavor friends together and plan a party mer section, Dominion department of agriculture, suggest a spinach salad with the flavor of spring and the color of old Erin. Home economists of the consu- | Saint Patrick's Salad -- ingredi-. A damp sponge applied to upholstered furnitore will help to remove dog and cat hairs as well as Lint. _ : { | | { i | | | Get girl | or a picnic, inviting the boys you | | know best, whether they're your | idea of a romance or not. main thing is to start "circulat- | ing, because once you begin to The | | have dates, more will come your | way. For tips on games for party | fun, send a stamped, self-address- | 'ed envelope to Elinor Williams at | | this paper.) SHOP FIRST AT ... | KIDDY CITY | for those [ NEW SPRING OUTFITS For the Little Tots! | (time WITH LAURA SECORD CANDIES NO OTHER SOAP YOU NEED NO BLEACH... the "extra suds "wash clothes cleaner, whiter! And colors stay bright! --_ | | . No other soap in the world can remove more dirt . wash clothes cleaner . . . wash white clothes whiter than new Super Suds. And you need no bleach! Try Super Suds to-day. If you're not com- pletely satisfied re- turn the unused portion of your package and we'll give you double your money back. At your dealer's now! OVED! Super Suds gives up to 98% MORE sine oho, 24 a wn fend ht er Suds gives Vp 18 ne than Mrs. Helen Hicks says: "I've proved Super Suds' extra suds get white clothes whiter -- colored things brighter!" Cu, 2 » Easter! It's a time for friends gathering round, for renewing friendships, for recall- ing old-time memories. Nothing can more appropriately convey your Easter Greetings than the old-time goodness of Laura Secord Candies. The finest of foods are used in making them--sweet-cream butter, fruits, nutmeats, pure clover honey, maple syrup. No wonder they've been the choice of lovers of fine candies for three generations. Everyone--both young ond old --will enjoy the delicious Lavra Secord Easter eggs and novelties.

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