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Daily Times-Gazette, 15 Dec 1948, p. 10

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PAGE TEN >= THE DAILY "TIMES-GAZETTE f % WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1948 BEAUTY FOR YOU - - Prominent Collar Bon By RELEN JAMESON We have with us a new Figure Ideal. It is trim and neat, vibrant and alive, graceful and strong. It is significant of the woman of today, who {8 active and capable. There must be no surplus fat. There must not be a display of bones. The skinny girl is as out of the picture as the one who carries around too much dipose tissue. ; 2 'This jdea that normal measure- ments are essential for style is a good one. Fashion is a powerful force for making the sisters look af- ter their health, have respect for the goddess Hygieia. « They'll work hard for the sake of an attractive appearance. It is probably the only incentive that will cause the light- weight to consume the kind of food that will build curves. One of her griefs appears in the form of prominent collar bones. No matter How skinny she is, she need not have them. Usually, they are the direct result of incorrect pos- ture. When shoulders are thrust for- ward, the head is lowered, Yhe spin- al column is not attending to busi- ness, and out pop those disfiguring little shelves south of the chin. Let her pull up her backbone, draw in her abdominal fibers, ex- pand her chest and they disappear. That should be a permanent pose. Certain exercises will strengthen the muscles of the chest, shoulders and back. With back muscles strong, posture will improve. "Here is exactly what happens when you evercise," says Dorothy Nye in her interesting book "New Bodies For Old." "Your mind or- ders\a certain part of your body to move. The muscles in that part contract. They relax and again con- tract. The blood is rushed in and out of them. The heart works fast- er and harder to, give these muscles more blood. With every movement they use up oxygen and food in the blood streams. They call on the Gay Jellied Salad To Serve Your Guests This is a festive salad that ap- peals. Have it for Eve dinner or for a buffet meal when Diet will help. * kB blood for more -- five, six, eight times more. "The lungs work more deeply and faster to supply more oxygen. The liver is urged to give up its emer- gency food supply. veins contract' and dilate as the rich blood courses vigorously along to the active muscles. Fatigue poi- sons which would otherwise linger to pollute the system are forced along and out. Knots in the nerves are ironed away." Arteries and Corrective exercises normalize the body. Here is a good one for the girl with prominent collar bones: Double your hands tightly. Send them straight out in front on a line with tense. Send them upward and far back, then swing them down to the knees and back to first position. the shoulders, muscles Diet will help. More fats, starches and sweets should be added when collar bones show. guests drop in during the holidays. You can prepare it in the morning to serve in the evening. * + * TOMATO ASPARAGUS SALAD MOULD ) Red Layer tablespoon gelatin. cup cold water. cups cocktail vegetable juices. tablespoon lemon juice. cup pimiento. tablespoons minced onion. 7-0z. tin shrimp. Soften gelatin in cold water. Heat vegetable juices to simmer point. Remove from heat; add gelatin, stirring until it dissolves. Cool. Add lemon juice, pimiento and onion, Rinse ring mould with cold water; line mould with shrimp. Pour in vegetable: juices mixture. Chill; when firm cover with following: %. cup cold water. 1 tablespoon gelatin, * +b Green Layer % cup condensed asparagus soup. % cup hot water. % cup mayonnaise. % cup finely diced green pepper. Soak gelatin in cold water, Place soup in saucepan; stir until smooth. Add hot water gradually while stir- _ pepper over red layer. Chill; serve on | watercress or endive. Makes 8 gen- For a buffet, serve the salad with scalloped potatoes, cold sliced ham, carrot sticks, cloverleaf rolls, pears, fruft cake and coffee. - TOYS 'SHELLCRAFT - @ Largest and most varied selection Oshawa © New items arriving daily ® A deposit will hold them until wanted REDDICK'S TOYTOWN 182 SIMCOE ST. Ss. er ----ter rr... stitchery! 10 motifs 2%x8 to 5'%x10 inches, The Luxury Touch Longing fof luxury? Add this touch of cutwork to your towels and linens; see how rich it makes you feel! Ten small easy-do motifs! Just try this eutwork and easy Pattern 7029; transfer; Our improved pattern -- visual with easy-to-see charts and photos, and complete directions -- makes needlework easy. Send TWENTY-FIVE CENTS (25¢) in coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern. plainl, PATTERN NUMBER. Print SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS Send. your order to DAILY TIMES GAZETTE, Pattern Department, r= | Oshawa. { Handbags Blouses Hosiery Lingerie Skirts 23} Simcoe St. S, Other branches located in: Ottawa, Hull, Just see our wonderful gift-ideas! Housecoats A gift box with every purchase. Reilm "Where Smart Young Women Shop" an" Montreal, Sherbrooke, Toronto, London, Cornwall, Windsor, Hamilton, Brantford, Kingston, Quebec. Gloves Scarves Sweaters Telephone 5303 A Physician Advises You By HERMAN A. RUNDESEN, M.D. TREATMENT OF ARTHRITIS SO many people suffer from some sort of arthritis and, unfortunately, too many of them are everlastingly trying some type of home treatment, so that when the doctor gets the case he often has to undo much of the damage that was done by this self medication. What all sufferers from arthritis should know is that the successful treatment of this con- dition depends to a great extent upon telling one type of arthritis from another and then using the measures that have been found most successful for the variety of the disease present. Arthritis means inflammaiton of the joints, but there cre a number of forms of the condition. For example, arthritis may de- velop in patients with gout. In ear- ly attacks of this disease, the gouty arthritis may be difficult to tell from other forms of acute inflam- mation of the joints. In such in- stances, givin the patients the drug known as colchicine may be helpful in making the diagnosis, since the colchcine will relieve the symptoms if the arthritis is due to gout, but will not bring any great benefits in arthritis due to other causes. Affected Joints In stubborn cases, X-ray treat- ments of the affected joints may be helpful. Other forms of treatment which have been found to be of value in reducing the weight to nor- mal and eliminating certain types of meat in the diet, that is, those which come from glands, such as sweetbreads. The use of the colchi- cine between attacks in severe cases may tend to lessen the severity and frequency of the attacks. Probably the most"common form of arthritis is that known as rheu- matoid arthritis, in which there is often some deformity of the joints. The cause is not, known, nor does there seem to be any single method of treatment which is successful. What it required is a broad pro- gram of treatment carefully ad- justed to each individual case, Warm Baths For example, heat may be applied by means of warm baths or an in- fra-red lamp to delieve the pain and stiffness. When the pain is con- trolled, exercises of the involved joints are helpful. Operations may be necessary to correct joint defor- mities. Mental and emotional dis- turbances should be eliminated whenever possible. Getting rid of infections in the teeth, tonsils, si- nuses, and elsewhere in the body is another part of the treatment, not because of any specific effect on the arthritis but because it will jmprove the patient's general health. Vita- mins and vaccines apparently have no great benefit, but may be useful in some cases. Treatment with certain prepara- tions of gold is beneficial in some few patients. The best results are obtained in the early active cases, in which destruction of the joint tissues has not occured. It must be borne in mind, however, that severe reaction to the gold sometimes of- cur. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS J. B.:Will penicillin overcome a stricture? Answer: Penicillin will have no effect in getting rid of a stricture. It might, however, eliminate the in- fection which produced the stric- ture. HOUSEHOLD HINT It will save the tablecloth if, when a small child eats at the table with adults, a plastic mat is put at his place. There are many attrac- tive designs on the market to choose fr. 1, and the child will enjoy a colorful, or perhaps an amusing one. GLAMORIZING * with toothbrushes. from clean. bristles packed close together. it to put hair in form, Complexion: Brush girl whose, skin is All the brushes you need for good grooming are contained in_ this overnight bag which also has extra room for night things. An association of dentists recent- ly made a survey, found that many brushes in daily use were in a sad state, not only worn out, but far Be fussy when selecting hair brush. A narrow one, with bristles set in groups, can be kept cleaner than the old-time, wide one with Brush your precious wool, strand by strand, with a, rolling motiom,| Neglect this grooming and your hair will lack luster. Nothing like | A complexion brush-is about the best present one can give a young | speckled with blackheads, Passing a soaped wash cloth over the face is a casual per- formance, especially for the teen- ager. With a brush a live' suds'can/ Brushes You Need for Beauty By HELKN FOLLETT . wid handy *» No good-looks equipment is com- be fluffed up. The little bladk points plete without a number of brushes. | will soon be discouraged. Get the best and replace them as soon as the bristles weaken. This practice is particularly necessary Have a tiny brush for your eye lashes and eye brows. Better still, have two, in case you use mascara, so they can be washed frequently. Bath Brush Most Important is a bath brush. The skin all over the body is in a state of decay and renewal, dead scales shedding, new ones taking their place. The baneful B O clings to dead scales; only soap suds and brisk friction will remove them. If you do your manicuring in- stead of trot-trotting to the beauty shop to have the beauteous oper- ator overhaul your talons, you will {need .a nail brush. By scrubbing your claws with soapy water and firm bristles you will soften and loosen the cuticle around the nails, 50 it can'be lifted by the orange wood stick, and hangnails will not torment you. A clothes brush is a "must" for good grooming. Give clothes, hats |a thorough brushing before each wearing. FIRST REAPER The first successful reaping machine yas invented in England in 1826 by the Rev, Patrick Bell. bowl, rather than around the motor. Protect the cord of your electric mixer during storage by coiling it in the mixer, HOUSEHOLD HINT When cleaning your vacuum cleaner after using, empty the bag, then reconnect the sweeper, leaving the top of the bag open. Put out- side near'udaor, ;urn- on cleaner, and the bag WHF be thoroughly cleaned by blowing the dust out. Christmas SHOPPING HOURS glo 5 SIMCOE ST: 8. : THIS WEDNESDAY Open All Day Until 6 p.m. STARTING THURS. THIS WEEK OPEN EVERY EVENING UNTIL PHONE 162 / CHRISTMAS! - ha HOPPE ATKINS HOSIERY & LINGERIE 10 SIMCOE S. PHONE 5358 _ | Bergen willbe through after Christ- Hollywood 9 - Highlights By BOB THOMAS By BOB THOMAS ood--(CP)--Al Jolson adds another note to the current radio chaos--he says h&s=quitting, too. "Radio is in a stagnant situation," he told me. "The people don't like it and the ham on this er doesn't like it, either." The mammy-singer will become the third big star to retire from the air. Fred Allen says hell quit after next spring to write a book. Edgar mas, to "sit and look over the situation" until next September. "Bergen is right," Jolson declar- ed. "We work too hard, and for what? I'm making $5500 a week' on thesair show and I'm lucky if I can keép 10 per 'cent of it. Those capital gains, deals don't help much." He added that the weekly radio formula has gotten him down. "Every week Oscar Levant insults me, using words that I don't un- derstand--and I don't think he does either," he said. "It's a rut." Like "Bergen, Jolson said he couldn't figure how give-away and amateur shows can take listeners away from entertainment shows. Amateurs Maybe "Maybe I should do the same thing," he jested. "Maybe I should say, 'folks, 'I want you to hear a bay I discovered under one of my orange trees; hé plays a mean har- monica.' Then I'd bring out Larry Adler." Jolson said he'll quit radio after the present season, but he added a loophole: . . "I'd sign up tomorrow for less money if I could do a show record- ed on tape. "Doing a live show is murder. If you go wrong on a song, you can't say, 'Mr. Jones, let's play it over again,' When I have to stick to a script, my hands are tied, my mouth is tied and my kisser is tied. "But if the show was recorded, I could ad lib all I wanted. I could do 45 or 50 minutes and then cut the record down to a good half-hour." Capsule Review "Family. Honeymoon" (U-I) pres- ents those comedy veterans, Clau- dette Colbert and Fred MacMurray in anothér merry mixup. This time she's a widow with three kids and she marries Fred and all go on the Honeymoon. Need I elaborate? The co-stars are well trained to handle the comic situations and the laughs are many, PROVIDE VITAMIN C Potatoes, tomatoes and turnips provide much of the vitamin C in the diet of Canadians. Wife Preservers WN ce TE la \i Eas nil] ARE: 'hen you are preparing soiled clothes to send to the laundry, do hot fold sheets and other flat work before putting them in the laundry bag. They must une folded at the laundry to insure proper ¢leansing. WHAT SHOULD I DO ABOUT Sending Cards After Bereavement? By MRS. CORNELIUS BEECKMAN Dear Mrs. Beeckman: I am a widow, my husband having died in March of this year. Iam in doubt as to' whether or not it would be correct for me to send Christmas cards this year, What is your ad- vice? £ ; R. H. Whether or not you d Christmas cards depends entirely on your own feelings. There is no impropriety in your sending cards this year, and your relatives and friends probably won't want you to send them if 'the effort of sending them adds to 'the strain you have been. through. On the other hand, if your spirit is so gal- lant and 'generously-friendly that you are inclined to forget your own unhappiness and to wish happiness to your relatives and friends, of course this is proper, and indeed it will be a deep inspiration to your friends. If you do decide to send cards this Christmas, choose ones of suitable design and mood, and send them only to relatives and intimate friends ... not to mere acquain- tances. Or, if you prefer, choose the cards with only the word "Greet- ings" on the cover, and on the blank inside pages write a message of a sentence or two: or write on plain white semi-note paper. Perhaps: "Greetings from my heart to your heart. And a devoted wish for your happiness at Christmas-time and in the New Year." Fiance's Mother Shouldn't Give Shower, Certainly Not Greenback Shower Dear Mrs. Beeckman: My son, who is engaged, is going into service soon, and while he is away his girl is going to live with her family. A group of my friends have suggested to me that I give a greenback shower for my son's fian- cee, but I am not at all sure if this would be the right thing for me to do. If it is, please tell me how I should go about giving it, for I have never been to a greenback shower, His Mother Your friends have not. given you good advice ... and I urge you not | to follow it. Instead, be guided by | your own instinct ... apparently it's right, for you yourself doubted the propriety 'of your friends' sug gestion. In the first place, it is not considered good taste for a member of the family of either the bride- to-be or the groom-to-be to give a bridal shower ... this gives the un- attractive impression that it is a very-obviously-planned gift-promo- tion. And in the second place, a shower invitation that asks for a "contribution" of money is lacking in taste afd grace. My suggestion is that you plan to give a tea or other late-afternoon party on a Saturday or Sunday, in honor of your son's fiancee, thus paying her charming compliment, and having the opportunity of introducing your Y relatives. and friends who haven't met her. Boys Prefer "Mr." to "Master" On Their Cards and Envelopes Dear Mrs. Beeckman: How should I address the Christe" mas cards I am sending to some young boys, several of them nephews of mine ... with "Master" or "Mr." before their names, or with just the name without a title? Alice &. All boys, no matter how young, like to have their letters and cards addressed to "Mr." (And I don't see why a very young boy shouldn't have "Mr." before his name, just as a very young girl has "Miss" before her name ... her title doesn't vary just because she is "very young.") Although "Master" is correct for very young boys, "Mr." is just as correct, and generally more accept able to the boy. ALWAYS, on an envelope or card, write a title before the name of a boy or girl ... it is rude not to use the title before the name. Word "Christmas" Means What You Make It Mean By Mrs. Beeckman To you and you and you it can ba a real inspiration" if you apply to the word CHRISTMAS the idea that Alice-in-Wonderland applied to all words ... "'That's a great deal to make one word mean,' said Alice in a thoughtful tone." CHRISTMAS ... a great deal to make one word mean! Lodges and Socioli VICTORY LODGE NO. 583 Mrs. Eric McIndless was elected Worthy Mistress of Victory Lodge, No. 583, at its regular meeting. Wor- thy mistress Mrs. Clark Slack and deputy mistress, Mrs. Eric McIndless presided. ' Visitors were welcomed from Oak- leigh Lodge. Election of officers was held with past mistress Mrs. Matthew Love of Oakleigh Lodge officiating. Scrutineers were Mrs. Jack Mec- Knight of Victory Lodge; Mrs. J. W. McDonald and Mrs. Frank Mills of Oakleigh Lodge. Offices are filled for the coming year as follows: Past Mistress, Mrs. Clark Slack; Deputy Mistress, Mrs. Agnes Wellman; Jr. Deputy Mis- tress, Mrs. Viola McClimond; Chap- lain, Mrs. Mary McClimond; Re- cording Secretary, Mrs, Elda How- ard; Financial secretary, Mrs. Mar- te jorie Hackett; Treasurer, Mrs. Elsie Duke; Guardian, Mrs. Mary Smith; Director of Ceremonies, Mrs. Ena White; First Lecture--Mrs, Lilian Olmstead; Second Lecture, Mrs. Ree ta Thomas; Inner Guard--Mrs. An- nie Burgess; Outer Guard, Mr. Fred Lewis; - Second Committee, Mrs, Floence McKnight; Third Commite tee, Mrs. Fred Lewis; Fourth Com= mittee, Mrs. Gertrude Young; Fifth Committee, Mrs. Alice Lee; Audie tors, Mrs. Gertrude Young and Mrs, Florence Boyle; Sick Committee, Mrs. Reta Thomas, Mrs. Marjorie Hackett and Mrs. Ena White. Installation of officers will be held on Dec. 22. A Christmas supper will follow the installation and there will be an exchange of gifts. Members are asked to be at the Orange Teme ple at 7:30 sharp for this meeting, "ANGORA" BERETS Pearls "Oshawa's Leadin, Sportswear 33 Simcoe St. N. Shopper Phone 3518 WATCH fos per pts HRISTMAS GIFTS FOR MOTHER "Give Mom 'one of these" for CHRISTMAS! LADIES' 38 TO 50 Washable Material. $3. Lovely, made. (White only) SPECIAL ....... LADIES' Rayon Knit. (All sizes) Tea Rose only. Special OVERSIZE SLIPS LADIES' LARGE SIZE BLOUSES Sizes 38 to 44. Good quality Jersey, and lace trimmed. White only. Reg. $6.95. spectar 93.98 Well 49 SUL oR PANTIES & BLOOMERS Panties with banded leg, in heavy $1.19 Eh tk SKIRTS A few large size skirts, 38 to 44, Al« pine material. Black Navy, Green .........,. Navy, $3.98 .TO CLEAR, SIZES 11 TO 52 .. sees esas GROUP 1 y = MISSES "COATS COAT | ANY DRESS IN OUR STORE 570.00 { To GOAT A; pew, .... 19.00 Finest Quality. Sizes 12-44 s's 9» TOGOAT ................ 525.00 MID-TOWN SHOPPE 154 SIMCOE S. * PHONE 5322 §

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