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Detroit Free Press from Detroit, Michigan • Page 30

Location:
Detroit, Michigan
Issue Date:
Page:
30
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

4 -II Sunday, June 15, 1958 DETROIT FREE PRESS THE TRUTH ABOUT YOUR TEETH 'Mi-fpk 'si- Vl FOR TEENS- The Golden Boy Who Wasn't Quite So Golden BY DR. STEPHEN SHEFFREY Frea Prei Special Writer On Dec. 2, 1585, the sun being in conjunction with Saturn in the sign of Aries, forces of nutrition were much more powerful than normal and resulted in a peculiar miracle. IN YOUR HOUSE Every Saving Is So Vital These Days BY NANCY LOWE Free Press Special Writer Nothing impresses me more than the ingenuity of people who know how to "make do," when something they need isn't available or is too expensive. I remember a friend who decided she couldn't afford cut flowers for a centerpiece.

She could, however, afford a dollar for a flat of petunias at the farmers' market. She got enough flowers for a centerpiece and had enough left over for several more bouquets, including a nosegay in the bathroom. What's more, the petunias, planted in her yard, kept producing flowers all summer. On a less exotic note, we're reminded that women tend to think of a double boiler in terms of one unit. Actually, both top and bottom can be used separately, in place of two other pans you might consider buying.

COLLEGE WOMEN! Thi summer let John Robert Power' instructor train you to carry youraelf with "Power Girl a Murine to make the most of your good looks! Short, budget course with personalized instruction now forming. Write, phone or stop in today for details. Ask for your copy of tha free booklet, Thsl Special Look. john robert POWERS SCHOOL 1125 Book Detroit 26. WO 2-S3M Such was the theory of cium needed before birth isn't worth overeating for.

NEXT SUNDAY: Tooth decay and pregnancy. medical professor from Hel-stadt when in 1893 he viewed the wonder of the ages a golden tooth in the mouth of an eight-year-old Silesian boy. The professor was certain that a warm spell on that late fall day when the boy was born resulted in the de Mrs. James Wilding Fox Birmingham Girl Married To Mr. Fox Mrs.

George F. deClaire Bride Wears Heirloom Mantilla I wnnnwARD AVENUt WOODWARD AVENUt NORTHLAND CENTER EASTLAND CENTER posit of gold on the tooth. Furthermore, the prof a-soned, It was a sign of future war and pestilence (a safe prediction in any THIS BEING no time for many of us to buy a new television set, a suggestion from Mrs. C. J.

Downing, of Clawson, might be helpful. "My set has a small screen," she writes, "but a large mahogany cabinet, and we have to keep it for a while at least." When 3Irs. Downing painted her living room a soft pink, the set looked like a real monster so she painted it the same color as the walls. "The children are delighted," she reports, "and it's even easier to keep clean, as I used a good satin luster paint. It blends right in with the walls and somehow it even seems to make the small screen large.

"When we do get our new, sleek model, I'll put the pink one in the rec room and paint it red or some gay color." What Brightens Linoleum? -4 A Papal Blessing was bestowed upon Donna Lynn Wartena and George F. deClaire during their wedding Saturday in St. Clare of Montefalco Church. The bride's silk taffeta and organza gown formed a cathedral train. Her heirloom mantilla of rosepointe lace extended the length of the gown.

The couple motored South after a reception at the Grosse Pointe Yacht Club. Their parents are the Donald Wartenas, of Edgemont Park, and the Benjamin de-Claires, of Berkshire Road. IN" MINT GREEN" embroidered organza over silk taffeta, and carrying a colonial bouquet of white carnations, Beverly Wartena was her sister's maid of honor. Bridesmaids included Suzanne Wiggins, Constance Degnan, Mrs. Charles Dwyer, Gail Winningham, of Bloomfield Hills, and Helen Meadows, of Fort Lauderdale, Fla.

Dan King came from Indianapolis, to be best man. Ushers were Robert deClaire; Russell Chappell, Gerald Fix and William Brashear, all of Royal Oak, and Francis Drinan, of Saginaw. For her daughter's wedding, Mrs. Wartena chose pink-champagne lace and organza, with a pink feather hat and pink orchid corsage. Mrs.

deClaire wore shaded green Alen-con lace, with rose flowered hat and a white orchid corsage. In a regency gown of candlelight peau de soie, Virginia Ann Beresford became the bride of James Wilding Fox during rites Saturday evening in Christ Church, Cranbrook. A garden reception followed at the Bloomfield Hills home of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Alfred Beresford.

The bridegroom's parents are Dr. and Mrs. E. Carleton Fox, of Birmingham. Pearl and crystal beads were encrusted on the bodice of the bride's gown and Fointe de'Angleterre lace edged her tulle veil.

She carried white Phalaenopsis orchids with trailing vines. BARBARA BARKER was maid of honor, with Mrs. Wade Hampton Oliver, Mrs. Ronald Schopp, Gail Glover and Mrs. James T.

Beresford as bridesmaids. The bride's cousin and godchild, Lucinda Jean Crim, was flower girl. The attendants were dressed alike In white embroidered organdy over azure blue with velvet streamers from waist to hemline in back. They carried blue delphinium. Kingsley Brown, was best man.

Ushers included John Booth Beresford, Daniel Booth Beresford, Stephen Farr Booth, John Winthrop Crim, Carleton C. Patterson, William R. Kent and L. James Schneider. fashion bollcvos In A serious question from a Mies Coe needs your answer.

She wants to know what to do about linoleum that will not take a wax or a shine. "It's dull. Period. Has been thoroughly cleaned and all old wax removed. Even used professional polisher to no avail.

What to do?" I hope you have a suggestion. era or human development to date), and finally of a Golden Age before Judgment Day. "Eyewash!" aaid many'of his colleagues. Any learned man should know better. Only a few persons thought to cast a suspicious look at the tooth.

Even after the gold wore through on the biting surface, many refused to believe that they had been hoaxed by a local goldsmith. FORTUNATELY, we're a lot more sophisticated today, so nobody can kid us Into believing that a gold tooth can occur naturally. But we're fairly well attached to other odd beliefs about teeth, particularly concerning calcium. Calcium Is of course necessary to life and proper nutrition, and the average American diet is said to be deficient in calcium, but our teeth are not the big calcium customers of the body. At birth, the calcium already deposited In a baby's teeth amounts to 7 grains the weight of one and a half regular aspirin tablet.

It's the amount of calcium In a pint of milk. Toothwise, then, the cal ATS 10.98 A Timely Suggestion On days like the ones we've had this spring, it's actually fun to hang out the laundry. Mrs. Edward Sanke, of Carlisle however, would have us give a thought to how we hang it. Colored clothes, she advises, are best hung inside out.

This will keep fading inside and make sure that folds and such don't come out a different color. lf a 1 3 si Flirtatious feathers framing your face in a cloud of flattery. You'll love the look of elegance in our delightful feather wigs. Black, pastels, pheasants, brights. one of a collection front 3.98 to 29.98 Hal sketched in Black or White Millinery Salon Fourth Floor also Kline's Northland and Eastland Center Double Trouble She calls herself "Embarrassed," but I think you'll agree that our Highland Park reader shouldn't be ashamed of these two questions.

She wants, first, to know how to remove stains in her bathtub caused by colored hair rinse. When she washed her hair under the shower the rinse came out of her hair but stayed on the tub. Secondly, she says, the smells of cigarette smoke i vwf4 fn and the damp earth of her plants in her small apartment defy all commercial deodorizers. Is there a good remedy for them? I know you can help her with both problems, and 1 hops we'll hear your answers. What ideas for easier housekeeping, household questions or answers to other readers' questions would you like to share? Write to "In Your House," Detroit Free Press, Detroit 31, Mich.

WOODWARD AVENUE NORTHLAND CENTER EASTLAND CENTER AFTER A RECEPTION at Dearborn Inn, Mr. and Mrs. E. Frank Moelich (Joyce Mae Karol) left for Mexico City and Acapulco. They were married Saturday In St.

Anthony Shrine, Duns Scotus College. The bride is the daughter of the James S. Karol of Vaughan and her husband is the son of Mrs. E. F.

Moelich, of Kenmore, N.Y., and the late Mr. Moelich. A GARDEN reception at the Stephens Road home of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Hazen Joseph Schumacher, followed the wedding of Nancy Quinn Schumacher and Simon O'Shea, Saturday In St.

Paul's Church on the lake shore. The bridegroom's parents are the senior O'Sheas, of Curtis Ave. The newlyweds are traveling to their new home in Brooklyn Heights, N.Y. FLORIDA was the destination of the Thomas E. Mor-rins (Shirley Ann Smith) after their wedding Saturday in St.

Paul's Church on the lake shore. The reception was held at the Whittier Hotel. Parents of the couple are the Kenneth W. Smiths, of McKinley Road, and the Thomas J. Morrlns, of Atlantic City, N.

J. The newlyweds will also live In Atlantic City. Hum w. if Nouhans Go To the East -Shop Downtown Monday 'til NEW YORK was the destination of Mr. and Mrs.

Robert George Nouhan (Christine Stella Napieraj) after their wed-ling Saturday In St. Hyacinth's Church. The bride Is the daughter of Mrs. Vincent Napieraj, of Frederick Ave. Her husband's parents are the Joseph G.

Nouhans, of Piper Blvd. The newlyweds will live in the Hotel Briggs when they 8 1 WOODWARD AVENUE NORTHLAND CENTER EASTLAND CENTER .95 $63 Special Selling! famed brands SPECTATORS 1 WOODWARD AVENUE 10 VVU KORTHtAND CENTER fl EASTLAND CENTER iWi 5 At! M0I1MD uW T6ducV- deseT er 4 rotten ho? from 0 bag. A $3 a pair saving on the smartest, newest spectator you ever wore. New pointed toe, slender heel and unusual strap detailing on the vamp. In brown with white or navy with white.

Phone and Mail Order Promptly Filled WO 3-7200 Kline' Fourth Floor Sho Salon, alae Northland and Eastland Center! Go Ploi 10 Feil To Shimmering white satin, studded with simulated pearls and monogrammed in gold silver or white. Covered in Vinyl for added beauty. Unequalled for elegance with its lucite handle- Custom made, allow 2 to 3 weeks delivery by CHARLES S. KAHN Handbag Street Floor also Kline's Northland and Eastland Centers.

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