MARILYN WAKELIN | | | | | “GEORGE WOTTON J+ WILL WED-AT TRINITY — Staff—Sergeant-—and— Mrs, Lloyd Wakelin, Charlottetown, announce the engagement of their eldest daughter, Lois Marilyn to George, Frederick Wotton; Dartmouth, N.S. The Guardian, Charlottetown, Mon., Aug. 8, 1966. 7 of Mr. and Mrs. ton, Trinity lottetown, bs Everett Wot- Charlottetown United Church, Char- at 2.30 p.m. “Expert Say Look At Jawline To Determine-Shape Of Face By MARILYN ARGUE OTTAWA (CP) — If ~ you don’t like the shape. your face is in, find out what shape it is, says a—Paris— makeup- ex~ Gert. Look. at your jawline, says ‘Paul Flaubert, “consultant- for an international makeup firm. “The shape of the jaw deter- mines.- whether your face is round, square, © oval pointed. » Once -you: figure: that out, you'llknow wtiat to do with your eyebrows .— your most important feature. A trim, dark - -haired, 31- year-old bachelor, My. Flau- bert began’ his—eareer~ eight years ago putting heavy stage ~ makeup ‘on opera stars. ! Now he owns beauty schools in Eu- rope and makes up designers’ models for fashion showings. In-the last six years he has toured Scandinavia, Asia, Australia and -North~ America telling women what to do with their-faces-in English, French, German, Swedish and Danish. _.-He finds the same problems ‘|— whether he’s meeting delicate Thai teen-agers or fiery Span- dish beauties. “Some are too lazy to use the ‘right makeup and’ ‘some use’ too much. Makeup should “be a’‘weil,. not .a, mask," But back to the eyebrows. <r call . them the key of oe face.”” VARY. THE SLANT For a: round or square face . -the highest. part= of the brow* |" “arch should be dead centre. If your face is pointed or oval, brows.should slant up to the highest: point at the ends: Rouge ‘on a_ round should. shade near the nose and down along the line from__ of the nose to the corner mouth. On a pointed or oval face rouge should be. kept away from the nose, high on the cheekbone back to temple. To get a steady curve when applying eyeliner, lay a hand mirror flat on your dressing table and look down into it “You can see what you're do- ing and your von doesn't flicker.”’ Brown eyes about bright ahoald forget blue shadow. _Blue,..grey_of- green _eyés can wear almost any color. ‘But if they are very light, I find’ black liner too strong.. It makes them look like cat's eyes.”” For daytime, Mr. Flaubert suggests white shadow’on the bone under the brow. For eve- ning, he advises combinations * such as almond green under the brow near the nose, and pink beginning under the mid- ‘dle of the brow and, shaded out-to-the—end. “That’s a contrasting fect, rather than. a. shadow, which is especially. ‘good on brown eyes. I'like smoke grey’ | with pink as well, but not blue. That's too ‘much’ of a contrast.’’ FALSE LASHES OK False eyelashes are defi nitely part of the effect, even in. daytime if they are prop- erly trimmed. “Some women feél naked when they take off their false eyelashes, so they wear one ef- face | the | a | or | | with the jars_and tubes, sh he'll” t { f } |charm |(see diegram!) skimmer. Note young curve of the col- les Sizes 10 12, 14, 16, Size 14 requires 2% yards 30 - jinch fabric | coins (no stamps, jeach -pattern. Ontario residents | ladd 3 cents sales. tax. |plainly' SIZE, NAME, pair all the time and add an- | other layer for evening,” Teen-agers should learn a beauty routine along with necessary,—and—special-creams | suffer. “en don't talk about | a. good makeup. They. talk about ‘sports -or: cars. But>-a =) ithe low |DRESS, STYLE NUMBER. _ Send order to ANNE ADAMS, | care of {tern Dept., |onto i; Ont. - their geometry and ancient history, he says: A’ girl of 14 should use cleansing milk and | toning —lotion,. medicated if for acne problems. Mr. Flauvert says makeup |, should be taught:in school. “After all, women wear it all the time. Why don't: they talk about it? What's the dif- ference between painting on a | Piece of paper and painting on |a face?’ ge The consultant’ says there |_ should be no op-art effects_in a daytime - face. | hat.’ ether’ _>mMay 30s or 408 for thousands has been, offered by an Indiana University doctor who has-been | experimenting ‘with i | Of brain tissue to the spinal’ cok umn. / further - “A young working gist a needs some- good eye makeup, | ‘protective lotion, rouge in the | Tight places, light lipstick and | some: powder on her nose.’ If she’s. too heavy- handed | bad Jnakeup—they talk about f ee Mr.. Flaubert stresses the we Importance of thinking Qerurey ‘When her she is ‘be at a. woman starts to own personality, beautiful. ‘She her peak in “Women: shouldn’t be scared to get. older. They~ should think ‘I have achieved some- thing in my’ life; I have learned to -grow old.’.I think that’s a quality of mature beautiful __ women.’ Hog pe Offere vias For Thousands DETROIT (UPI) — New hope of paraplegics | ~ Dr, Leslie Ww. ’ Freeman, Di- |rector of Surgical Research at Indiana _ the process to the persons niost} jinterested — the U.S. National Marriage | Paraplegic to take place Sept. 3,.1966, at |tion meeting in Detroit. , |. He said the process, which has |béen used on dogs .with spinal column-damage;--must- be-refined before it will be used on humans. University, described Foundation Con- “T think this process will spur a lot more research on the sub- ject,”” Freeman said. : Freeman, working with Dr. Chun Ching of Taiwan, has been seeking a way to replace scar tis-| |_| sue. formed --on the spinal col- umn. This scar tissue, formed either by accident or disease, re- sults in the blockage of nerve im- pulses brain to the lower part of the body and_results in paralysis. transmitted from The experiments at Indiana | University have involved the re-|for each pattern moval of a section of brain tissue | please) to Alice Brooks, care of fromthe animal, The tissue is|Guardian - Patriot then placed in a culture for} Dept., being|1, Ont.. transplahted to the damaged por- | cents sales tax. tion of. the spinal column. growth. before-, Freeman. said the experiments | is improv- her ” transplants? the as a princess Velvet _ ribbon — is the rest an | Pattern stitch. Thirty - five cents 60 Front St., Ontari | PATTERN | ADDRESS. Giant |—_ Many more ‘catalog. Send 25 cents: Dey ee tach geaes a reg eb tra) Make a little girl feel pretty in this airy, charming dress: drawn ‘through shell-stitch yoke —— easy-to-memorize Quick crochet. Pattern 7110:.¢ sizésy-2;>-4,-6-incl. (coins) (no stamps, /- Néedlecraft W., Toronto residents add 2 Print plainly NUMBER, NAME, 1966. Needie- show that blood supply and nerve |craft Catatog~stars knit; crochet |. impulse conduction _jed through—the ‘transplanting of 'signs. 3 free patterns.printed in live tissue. needlecraft at Wedgeport byear. ufacturers’ agent, Captain is Dr. The Canadian team, by invitation on a- coast-to-coast basis, consists of two surgeons, a Supreme Court judge, an out- doors writer-sportsman, a _man- a- civil sery- ant.and a pharmacist. Normand J Belliveau, 43, of Belliveau Cove, N.S., president-elect of the Ca- nadian Medical Association, s5i--|who- was” a member of the 1965 Uy ¢ Sacer | team. . em seeming Ta | fe OCDEE members: | Oliver L. . Vardy, John's, called Mr. Tuna of New- foundland, a civil former provincial 60, servant and| cabinet muin- i compete | and Cape Mafy against teams from United States, Mexico, the Brit-! ish Caribbean, Greece and Ven- ezuela. The Americans. won iast of ‘Canadian flag last ‘year. up. in- pharmacist off ns. the St. the Dr. Ray N. Lawson, cialist who ,has Supreme ~ Court, Michael Cramond, , levery St. the 1963 National ‘fished “Three-Veteran Angiers On Canada Tuna Entry ; HALIFAX (CP)—Three veter- jister, ans of international competition and_four._newcomers ma €anada’s entry for the 1 ternational Tuna. Cup mat Nova- Scotia Aug. 16-19. The :Canadians will Alfred -Trask, 66 = year - from. Yarmouth, | Two fi .. Whose__648-pound “fish won | listed in consulting services. tournament | for the Britisn | Commonwealth team in 1956. selected} amateur radio operator and | astronomer. fl | Mr. Justice David M. Dick- wt [without fear of who fs fished under the tables and one in son, 45, of the New Brunswick a devoted” At- lantic salmon angler. He will be the first member of the bench! to take. part in the match. 4, out. | doors writer for “the Vancouver | Province and small boat Geren signer, who has caught almost} northern hemisphere ocean gamie-fish; ffom trout to marlin, in both oceans. He won) Newspaper Award for sports writing. port business ‘only __rarely, ‘sources say. -de- By JAMES NELSON OTTAWA (CP) — A six-year- |are both anxious to” have it used } old amendment to the Combines |™ore than it is. But business-| Anyestigation Act which was ‘in- | men apparently haven't clk | tended to. facilitate Canadian ex-.| 9n-t9 it-as they might. has been | trade .department | Act Amendment ls Not Being Used =: -. |who pushed. for the amendment | The 1960 amendment was to permit Canadian firms te. join ~The, department and- the-ran! together in -export consortia der the anti-combines law The idea was that firms would be able to work together co-op- eratively export prices for pe in setting orders in a way would be illegal on the dome market. ‘ But so‘ far only two such con- sortia have been formed in the plant ‘and animal products field —one in canned fruits and vege- |ucts. None has been formed in old | the indttstrial- machinery —field.-' have been estab- A trade department official | says the export combine Jin, 42, of| fruits and vegetables: is appar- Montreal, a noted cancer spe-| efitly working well. Several’ and | firms are hunted in. many parts of the |-Canadian subsidiaries /world. A man of many _inter- ests, he is an aviator, organist, involved, gtannent can firms. | STILL; TRYING "' Government ” Must Decide By: MOHSIN ALI LONDON ‘Reuters!—The gov- ernment must decide + soon whether: to. ask the Western European Union and. NATO to give-it the go-ahead for possi-, ductions in poultry prod- ble cuts in Britain's 59,000.mem- | Germany would be part of the- ber force in West Germany: ¢ ea myittary porchasen in Brit po ita n Wants an ai dec: ‘cision on .the “problem. becausa=". as part of its latést. economig! austerify.’ measures aimed at. improving its trading: balance” of payments- it wants to save, as much foreign exchange ae possible. : Financial savings through re- British forces ine British, government's plan te The WEU links Britain with) slash its-military-and—civil-ex- | the six Common Market + tions of wast Germany, Italy, ° Belgium, Luxembourg. British ministers face’an im- portant policy decision on whether and when: congultajions should be started, ‘informed sources said Saturday. na- France, Holland and Britain. last month told West ! penditure overseas by. at least £100..800,000. ($300,000, 000), ~ STUDY DRUNKS TORONTO (CP) — The avers age person jailed for drunken. . / hess is 49 years. old, unemé - anderweight and @-+ ploved avy drinker for 20° years, says But the official said the de-| Germany that unless it relieved a team of Teyonto doctors,/psy-” it of the entire foreign exchange | eholocists “and social workers in | partment hasn't had a‘ great) deal of s promoting the consortia idea in other fields, al-| though it is still trying. One of the men who sponsored | Alvin | | the 1960 amendment | Hamilton, party | spokesman on western , agricul.’ ture and“trade, who was - re- sources minister and . subse- quently agriculture minister in the Diefenbaker government... He said in a recent: interview that Canadian Should take advantage of the 1960 law in relation to trade with Communist countries. Those countries, he said, are ‘accustomed to dealing with cen- tralized purchasing or sales or- ganizations like the Canadian | oe board. ping-pong ~ balls far-out Hamilton had in mind, he said |it is unlikely that any single firm in “Canada could manufac- ture and ship—or or production ofa single state- trading agency abroad. But several firms in Canada could combine ina consortia to |do the job with _the- knowledge business is not liable to Sroeece: businessmen asa} 000 example of ‘what Mr.( import -and}q ee PURITY DAIRY .: I : ae Dial 4.7125 : 28 Phone. 4-5595; 4.3434 | costs, some of the British forces |in West Germany would have be’ withdrawn. The Bonn..government Friday venereal the current Canadian ‘medical-- Journal. Liver, venereal and- and -respirator dis-= told Britain in an interim reply eases wore the most common that it would do-everything it could to. find an acceptable solution’ to the foreign exchange Studied," — costs. problem. : ‘But it said it could not wive a full and final answer until the report of an Anglo-West . Ger- man__ ministerial studying the problem had. been received the end of next month. | DON’T EXPECT DEMANDS Sources said,it was clear} there was no hope of West Ger- | many meeting the full aang demand. The foreign “exchange costs are. funning at about ia 000° ($280,000,0007- annually commissilon found _among 227 drunke = : Ue REWINDING aa tS Storey Electric Ltd. 136 Prince St., Ch town [== = om = 7 Need insurance? Wl this the West Germans at ores MOTOR BIKE, ent_pay about £54,000,000 ($160 000,000) mainly through civil eer , “Parents Prefer 3 . Purity Preducis” 317 Kent St. ion. | such a combine in. export 4 seoeooe Seeeeeet) i ae {SLAND CHEV: OLDS INVITES You TO DRIVE TO THE FAIR IN STYLE! HOME = ~ WEEK” 7+ 4 door. ial at— EASY SEE DIAGRAM Pussy-cat bow adds‘ piquant to a beautifully simple liar side darts. Printed Pattern, 4935: 18, 20. FIFTY CENTS please) Print Guardian-Patriot Pat-_ 60 Front St. W., Tor. By Popular Demand». Miss- (50 cents) rf for If AD. | driven 25,000 miles. with low mileage. Station wagon with Like new. Price 1963 FORD Actual 31,600. miles. Don’t long to see this one. Real spée- $1295 1964 CHEVROLET Bel Air 4 door sedan, like _new. Believe it or ‘SPECIAL 1965 CHEV. 4 door Bel Air with automatic _ mileage only walt too “2 1964 CHEVROLET Station wagon with V-8 éngine. Spotless inside end out, Pricedivery reasonable at toa 1963 CHEVROLET ~ six cylinder engine, transmission, radio and 4 brand new white wall inttea, ‘ x not only ~ 2095 1735 Price Used Car Sale... - prices have been drastically less. Be early—get the best buy on the lot! 40 UNITS ym condition. Very reasonable at .............. 1961 FORD Galaxie 4 door V-8A reat cream_puff. seen to appreciate. Like new interior. Price .... 1962 BUICK 4 door, fully equipped, privately’ " owned by local ihank executive. Perfect condition. Bile PHOS a 1964 CHEVROLET UST BE. SOLD 1962 CHEVROLET BY 3 Pp. M. FRIDAY! 1961 CHEVROLET 4 door 6 cylinder with autmatic transmission, two tone paint and new whitewall tires. owner car with very low mileage and in spotless $1395 ‘$169 ‘Another one Must be $1 195 $1495 i STARTS TODAY - END THIS FRIDAY AT? PM. esponse to our great new car sale was so ovéiwhelming we find we are SSrenmecied with : used units. OUR LOT MUST BE CLEARED, and so we are featuring ¢.gigantic Pre-Old Home Week ‘cut... plus you will find. $100’ bill in the glove ere wer of every car priced over $1,000, and a $50. an bill in avery cor selling at $1, 000 or FIRE, LIFE. SEE. ..... LEN HOOKEY Co-Op Ins. AUTO, I e { over Old Home Week (2 SPENDING MONEY FREE! You can have fun at the. fair at our expense! Buy the ear of your choice—if it’s $1,000 _ you receive a $100 bill . . . if it's $1,000 or under you receive a $50 bill. See the races—enjoy a ‘midway and vaudeville, ALL AT OUR EXPENSE! With every car over $1,0000 car. All ready to roH . TOR UMN cite yasus cine pear soe © .NO DOWN PAYMENT © OPEN EVERY NIGHT UNTIL ? $100.00 . $50.00 ‘With every car $1,000 or under. $1595. 1963 OLDS Ta door ;fully- equipped—with_ automatic - trans., power steering, power brakes, etc. If you are 13°ton long wheel base. Completely reconditioned. in the market for a big car see this one be- . Less than 20,000 miles... 1962 CHEVROLET 3 ton cab and chassis. New V-8 motor recently -in- -4 door 6 cylinder standard car. A real economy stalled. Good tires and body. Ready for work. Special price $1395 > 1963 FORD 1961 CHEVROYET 4 door 6 cylinder standard with two tone pi ‘ and radio. Mechanically looker For sale at only ENJOY THE FAIR AT OUR EXPENSE! Fairlane 500 with V-8 engine.autematic trans. - radio. A one owner car, A Immaculate condition. $3800 car when miles. fore you buy. $ Seas * ar Going for 55 eee hess 1995 Real bar: gaint at on a eggs ge ‘driven . only 32,000 $1875 A real $1289 : sound “THE OUTCASTS” — “MONDAY, AUGUST 8th. _ ROLLAWAY CLUB 9.30 - 12.30. Admission 7c 2 . trans., radio, white walls and two tone. ’ Snecial low, low price of — 1995 Perfect condition. ———e? ; ‘If you liked them: last time ‘) . : You'll love them this time. | igs satin - ots ust * 4 — o : * p aii *S: - ‘ " * ’ rr) ; A : 5 a wane - ee ae | ‘ 7 ‘ a ‘ en sae