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Show 1: J TI1E BULLETIN, BINGHAM CANYON, UTAH j WOMAN'S WORLD Play Down Bad Features, Point Up Good Ones for True Beauty By Ertta Haley WHO really care how WOMEN look can really achieve true beauty. This does not come from hit and miss care or snap judgements on choice of clothing. It's the result of careful study of your good points as well as weak ones, then playing down one fea-ture while pointing up another. Many women say they are con-fused by all that's offered them in the way of clothing, they don't know what they should choose. Vou can easily learn principles and then study them in relation to yourself for most effective application. It sometimes helps to know why you should not wear certain hats or dresses, because this helps you re-member them and also t laches you to look for certain details which will help dramatize best features. Certain styles of hats and dresses are good for all face and figure types, but naturally they must be worn differently so they can look their best. The same applies to colors. Blue, tor example has been called the American woman's best color, be-cause whether you are redhead, brunette, blonde, gray, white or In- - face, as well as hat materials like rough straw which will only em-phasize the coarseness. Too delicate materials will give the same effect as too harsh colors and materials. Cute bows and trim-mings, brilliant flowers and metal-lic trimmings should be eliminated from hats. Let hairdo and bats between, you can safely choose it However, to be most effective, you should be able to choose the best shade of blue for your particular coloring. There's an answer, too, for those with real problems that clothing and proper choice of jewelry can answer. The scarred neck can be covered easily, as can the lined throat. Prominent neckbones can be hidden with the correct jewelry and neckline. Such beauty debits as freckles are easily minimized, and sallow com-plexions can be improved with prop-er attention to color. Whatever the problem, there's an answer for you. d individuals should also avoid harsh colors. Col-ored veiling is excellent for min-imizing this fault, and so are muted shades of dusty rose, gray, pale yellow, green and gray-blue- . You can well imagine what effect polka dots have if the face is freckled, but also to be avoided are anything which might suggest or accent freckles such as flower cen-ters and perforated bags and other accessories. Freckles are less no-ticeable if you wear plain materials. If you must wear figured materials, choose stripes. If you're blonde, feminine, with hazel eyes and the pink and white complexion, you have few worries. Stay with feminine clothing, but avoid frills or fuss. With chestnut hair and brown eyes, you can wear daring color combinations and choose those which are vivid and striking. Pale, colors will age or sober you too much. When you have good gray or blue eyes and want to dramatize them, place matching or lighter blue next to the face. If the eyes are dull, use a deeper blue shade. Too much eye make-u- p and too bright colors should be discarded. Hats Need Fitting To Face and Figure Hats should be chosen to suit both face and figure, as well as the clothes with which they're to be worn. You may want to observe the effects of the hat closely In a small mirror, but the final choice should always be made after you've seen how it looks in the full length mir-ror. Those with a very narrow silhouette should not give the ap-pearance of toppling over with a gigantic hat Better balance can be achieved in the small or medium brimmed hat. The large hats should be chosen Normalize Necklines With Proper Apparel Anything which would emphasize thinness is to be avoided if the neck is long and thin. These include necklines, curls piled high on the head, tight, narrow waves, or highly perched hats. Try to get width in the hairdo by smoothing the crown and having curls at either side. Have hats that cover the head, forehead, ears and back of the neck so the thin neckline can be broken. Circular hair arrangement, yokes and full gathered bodices are on the taboo list if the neck is short and thick. Open necklines, simple bodice lines and tapered effects in the ihairdo will counteract the short 'look. try mr-m-u. i ihii.imh i accent your best features. to go with the somewhat full skirts as they look too disproportionate with skimpy, short or narrow skirts. Skirts may be worn slightly longer with the large brimmed hats to give smarter appearance. One of the smartest ways to de-cide what hats or clothing are right for you is to pick those which do for you what face or figure does not. A good example of this is in sloping shoulders. The hat should have some upward movement to counteract the slope In the shoulder. Wearing a soft hairdo will help, too. Avoid the severe hair dress and mushroom-brimme- d hat that only accent shoulder sag. Most women can wear berets, but the style should be chosen carefully. An older woman or one with a large nose looks stunning in profile types now shown. If you're tall, have one that's worn flat and forward to cut down height. Those who are young and short wear them best to the Jewelry at the neck can be of great help for heavy necklines. Tight chokers, naturally, are to be avoid-ed, but pearls or beads that are graduated to form an oval, espe-cially when worn with a simple V neckline, can be very effective. Short bobs or hair ar-rangements will make scrawny necks look all the more so, while soft, long bobs break the long look. In clothing choose dresses that are built high; in sun or evening apparel avoid the open, strapless tops and use wide straps. Lines or scars on the neck call for covering with well arranged hat veiling or scarves. These both should be draped softly, as the severe or prim look will dim the personality. Clips used at either side of the neckline give width to a simple dress that is worn to cover prom-inent neckbones. Clumpy or in-significant jewelry used for this type of neck is ineffective and will detract from the smart look you can have. back of the head. Brimmed hats, no matter how handsome, should never be set on uncovered ears. Soften them by placing a curl or cluster of curls at ears, or place a bow which fits near the ear on the hat. Complexion Helps Determine Best Color For You Those who have coarse complex-ione- d skins should soften the harsh effect of their skin by wearing soft, shades. It's best to avoid brilliant colors right next to the How to Dramatize Features Successfully Have you small features? Fluff the hair softly to frame the face. Avoid coarse fabrics and harsh col-ors that crowd them out. Do you have hard features? Soft-en them with unstudied, casual ef-fects in hats and accessories. Sharp hat lines and the severe look in clothes will only make you seem unapproachable. - - ' i v ?&s' liil Entertain at Luncheon With Colorful, Tasty, Easily Prepared Menus ENTERTAINING YOUR church, club or friends at luneieon during the warm weather need be no prob-lem if you start out with ready made menus that are easily pre-pared. Those giv-- 4 ffl en in the col- - Um" t0day haVC nrSy'fiHl been planned for H&Q<X their colorful ap-A- k kV Peal- - and thev're VWrf J f"" f tasty food My I that is guaran- - teed to please. Your guests will be more apt to enjoy the luncheon if they find you awaiting them, looking as cool and delightful as though you had Just stepped out of the proverbial hat box. Desserts and salad should be planned so they may be prepared the evening before. This cherry mousse made In mold Is a cool Invitation to lazy ummertime appetites. Made of smooth, whipped cream and sprinkled throughout with tempt-ing bits of tart red cherries, this dessert is bound to please. LYNN CHAMBERS' MENU Oven Fried Chicken Cranberry Sauce Mashed Potatoes Cream Gravy Sliced Cucumber-Tomat- o Salad Carrot Sticks Radishes Celery Coconut Ice Cream Balls Chocolate Cup Cakes Beverage Recipes Given Menu I Oven-Frie- d Chicken Sweet rotators with Cranberry Glaze Green Bean Salad Rolls Relishes Pineapple Whip Prepare chicken as for fried chicken (dredge with flour, salt and pepper, and fry until golden brown in skillet). After browning, transfer to roasting pan or casserole. Add water, if desired. Cover and bake In a moderate (350) oven until ten-der, about 1 to 1" hours. Pineapple Whip (Serves 6) 1 No. 2 can crushed pineapple 16 marshmallows, cut In eights H pint whipping cream Combine crushed pineapple and marshmallows, reserving a few pieces of pineapple for garnish. Cover; let stand f 1 in the refrigera-LU- - jj tor f0r at ieast rV" If j an hour. Just be- - rJ 'ore serving, n ?a; jS-J- drain well. Whip .T 5i.5 cream and fold I i.!T'....;,J I n i o pineapple mixture. Pile in-to chilled sherbet glasses and top with pineapple pieces. Brown chops thoroughly without added fat. Add salt and water; cover and cook for 30 minutes. Re-move chops; add dry Ingredients, liquid and green pepper and pine-apple, cut in pieces. Simmer until thick stirring constantly. Add chops and let simmer for 10 to 15 min-utes. Cherry Mousse (Serves 1 No. 2 can sour red cherries Vt cup sugar 4 drops red food coloring teaspoon salt 2 teaspoons gelatin teaspoon almond extract 1 cup heavy cream, whipped Drain cherries and grind them medium fine; combine with sugar and food coloring. Heat to boiling and cook one minute. Remove from heat and add ff Wj salt. Soften gel- - , atin in one if tablespoon of 7W?.OfN i U ' C e' d'Pped w'''fl!vij 4 from ground fy&fiVl'fc? cherries, then rHifPx stlr int0 hot "ITreTTv cherry mixture unti geiatin is dissolved. Chill until cherry mix-ture is thick, then fold in whipped cream lightly but thoroughly. Turn Immediately into cold refrigerator tray and freeze at lowest tempera-ture until firm. Return to normal temperature ti let mousse mellow. Menu III Chilled Apricot Nectar Sea Food Salad In Tomato Cups Potato Chips Pickle Fans Coconut Ice Cream Balls How to prepare: Chill apricot nectar and all salad ingredients overnight. Ice cream balls may be made in advance if they can be frozen in refrigerator. Huo'ir' Oram Balls (Makes 12) Cranberry Glazed Sweet Potatoes (Serves 6) 1 cop canned jellied cranberry sauce Yi cup brown sugar 4 large sweet potatoes, cooked or canned Crush cranberry sauce with fork and combine with brown sugar. Spoon over sweet potatoes which have been halved and placed in a greased casserole. Bake in a mod-erate (350) oven for 30 minutes. Menu II. Hawaiian Braised Pork Chops Fluffy White Rice Green Salad Cherry Mousse Beverage Cookies How to Prepare: The evening be-fore, prepare Cherry Mousse; also, wash greens for vegetables and re-frigerate to chill. On the morning of the luncheon, prepare pork chops and place in oven to bake; cook rice while pork chops bake. Hawaiian Braised Pork Chops (Serves 6) 6 loin pork chops (about 2 pounds) Hi teaspoons salt 1 cup water 2 tablespoons cornstarch teaspoon cloves Y cup pineapple juice 1 small grefn pepper 3 slices pineapple 2 cups moist coconut 3 pints vanilla Ice cream Food coloring (red, yel-low or green) Place coconut in glass jar and add whatever color food coloring is desired. Cap jar and shake vigor-ously until color is distributed even-ly on coconut. Scoop ice cream into balls, two inches in diameter. Roll in coconut until well coated. Place in freezing tray or freezer until serving time. Seafood Salad (Serves 6) 1 can tuna fish, crabmeat, shrimp 2 tablespoons French dressing 1 cup diced celery cup diced cucumber 2 tablespoons chopped radishes 2 tablespoons lemon Juice H cup mayonnaise Salt and pepper to taste Flake tuna fish and shrimp; re-move black line from shrimp. Mix all seafood together and add French dressing. Marinate for 15 minutes. Add remaining ingred-ients and toss lightly. Oven-frie- d chicken with cran-berry glazed sweet potatoes makes a colorful and tasty luncheon menu team. With a hearty main course like this, you'll want a frothy pineapple-marshmallo- w dessert as sug-gested in the column. LYNN SAYS: Put Wild greens to Use As Cooked or Raw Vegetables Wild greens can be useful as a vegetable. They're cooked like other greens and are delicious. Strong-flavore- d wild greens are better when parboiled for two or three minutes in lots of water. Drain and cook as for other greens. For cooking greens, use lightly, salted boiling water, and cook un-til leaves Just wilt and greens are tender. Season and serve. If the wild green hunt does not yield much, you might try combin-ing several different kinds to give enough for a vegetable. Wild greens will wilt quickly. Plan to use them as rapidly as pos- sible to get them at their best, and for their vitamins and min- erals too. Discard wilted and damaged leaves, and cut off roots when you prepare them for use. Lift out of water several times to dislodge all By INEZ GERHARD MICHAEL RABIN, will probably make August 10th a day to remember, when he makes his network debut on The Telephone Hour. Rotlzinski, directing the Havana Philharmonic when Rabin made his world debut last April, said "He is marvelous, fantastic. He has a tremendous fu-ture!" Jascha Heifetz and other WAX famed musicians have also advised nnd encouraged this young genius. Not that Michael thinks of himself tts one; his bicycle is one of his most prized possessions, he likes to swim and collect stamps and play ping pong, looks forward to having n car. That he may be one of the world's greatest violinists Is no con-cern of his. Male stars who've felt smug about the two hours' make-u- p and hairdressing the girls require should be warned by what happened to Mel Ferrer. The star of Robert Ros-sen'- s "The Brave Bulls," for Co-lumbia, needed a full two hours and 15 minutes each time he dressed In the matador's costume for bullfighting scenes with four aides assisting him. The U.S. State Department has endorsed the Walter Huston Memor-ial International Scholarship now being set up to finance the educa-tion of two English speaking stu-dents from Trikkala, Greece, at the University of Arizona. Fibber MoGee and Molly have a kitchen wall that Is really a kitchen, which makes it all too easy for Fibber to Indulge his love for cooking when they give a party. The August Woman's Home Companion's picture lay-out shows what a fine Idea this Is; that wall has everything from a barbecue to a sink, and affords privacy from the neigh-bors as well. Hollywood homes are among the country's most attractive, thanks to top decorators. But any clever woman rwri copy the charming ar-rangements of curtains in the homes of Betty Hutton, Burns and Allen, the Bob Cobbs, Gale Gordons and Cedric Gibbons, as they are shown in this same Companion. The Burns' sun room and dining bay are especially effective. Mala Powers, scored so notably during the first few days of her starring role In "Outrage" that she was signed for roles in Goldwyn's "Edge of Doom" and Stanley Kramer's "Cyrano de Bergerac" before "Outrage" was completed. Ted Mack and the "Original Ama-teur Hour," which filled Madison Square Garden for their benefit for the New York Foundling Hos-pital, will stage their next benefit from San Francisco for the Dis-abled American Veterans. Len Doyle, "Harrington" of "Mr. District Attorney," built his own home in Milford, Pa, exactly to suit him; did everything from clearing the land to putting in the plumbing and refusing to have a j telephone doesn't like phones. To j reach "him in a hurry Ed Byron, i the show's director, has to notify j the state police and have somebody f tell Doyle. j Because he has so much dif-ficulty getting away for vaca-tions. Ben Grauer has signed a lease on a Bucks Coun-ty, Pa., farm. Ills hundred acre retreat Is about 2 hours drive from NBC studios, and Ezra Stone is a neighbor. All available expert swordsmen were rounded up by Director Mich-ael Gordon for filming a mass dueling sequence in Stanley Kram-er's "Cyrano de Bergerac." Script called for Jose Ferrer to take on 100 men simultaneously. ODDS AND ENDS . . . Joan Fon-taine's favorite year is 1941. when she won an Oscar and the New ork Film Circle's award as best tctress, learned to fly a plane and shot a hole in one in golf . .. Para-mount will film "About Mrs. Les-lie," new book by the author of "Bad Girl," Vina Delmar a guod story that will have to be rewrit-ten to pass the censors . . . Her-bert Rawlinson, "Hollywood Star Playhouse" host, made his first pic-ture in 1912. Serviceable Cloth A' lAi'l r s r v . j t fl f4 J2Z Zmj Tablecloths that combine new service and beauty are now be-ing made of a vinylite plastic film that Is colorfully printed to give the appearance of fine block linen. These will cut down summer laundering because they can be kept clean easily and quickly by sponging, and need no ironing. Two popular sizes In red, green, yellow, blue, plum, chartreuse and grey are available. B Annette Passes Out g,.. By Richard Hill Wilkinson SEPTEMBER Bill decided he 1' wasn't in love. He told himself It romance. He had been a summer regretted it. He couldn't walk out He had to and leave Annette flat. offer some sort of explanation. The wind whipped in their faces as the roadster sped through the night. Annette r 1 snuggled con-- tcntediy at his -- Minute 3 . .. shoulder. FlCtlOn He swung the I ' roadster off the highway. They bumped along a wagon road, presently emerging In-to a clearing. Bill stopped. Toward the north the horizon was illumin-ated by a dull glow. Lights from the town. Bill turned. Annette said: "Oh, Bill, I'm so glad we came out here. It was here you first told me you loved me. Remember?" "Sure. I remember." "Say it now. Bill. Say you love me!" Bill had Intended to say Just the opposite. Without knowing why, he pitied her. He spoke, but what he said was: "Of course I love you. You know that." It was as If she Impelled him to say it. "Kiss me, Bill. Kiss me and say it again." He kissed her, repeating the words, cursing himself for doing so. Why did she have to cling to him so? He got a grip on himself. He formed the words in his mind. "Bill, I've got a surprise for you." "Surprise?" "I'm going back to Belfast with you. I've got a job there for the winter. We'll be together all win-ter. Bill, Isn't it grand!" Lord! Now he was in for it. He hadn't expected that. Well, he'd have to be blunt, cruel. He'd have to tell her once and for all. TLL!" There was terror In her tone. He turned quickly. She was looking away from him toward the horizon where the dull glow had been. The dull glow he had thought to be town lights had developed in-to astonishing brilliance. "Fire! The whole ridge is ablaze. Say, we'd better get going!" He jammed his foot down on the starter. The motor whirred, and that was all. Bill swore, yanking out the choke. There was a sput-tering whine, a cough, silence. Bill opened the roadster's door. "Come on! Engine's dead. We'll have to run for it." He yanked her out of the car, started running along the wagon road, dragging her behind him. He hadn't realized that fire could be like this. The speed of its approach amazed him. "Bill! Wait! You're going too fast." Bill turned just as she fell for-ward. He knelt beside her. "Try 11111 MM "I'm going back to Belfast with you," Annette said. "I've got a Job there for the winter." and get up. We've got to keep go-ing. It's our only chance." Pitifully she tried, sank to the ground, moaning softly. He stooped and lifted her in his arms. "Bill, don't! You can't! Go on and leave me. There's no use in both of us " He went on blindly. Behind him now he could hear the crackle of flames. The road ahead was alight from the brilliance of the fire. It required no effort to move. Then suddenly, ahead, he saw the main highway. There were lights there. The lights from automobiles and trucks. Bill lay sprawled in the back seat of a joggling touring car. He opened his eyes and saw Annette. Behind her the sky was dull red. "Bill, why did you do it? Why didn't you leave me there when when you knew " He said: "Say, what do you take me for? Leave behind the girl I love!" "Oh. Bill, I've known for a month you didn't. I wouldn't let myself be-lieve I was losing you. I wouldnt fruth"0U hanCe t0 tel1 Bill swallowed. So that was itT So that was the re-.s- she had Suddenly he hfted hr in his arms Annette," he whispered, "say you ove me. Say it. and kiss me. dar-- Crocheted Jacket 80, p.... ffj&Zli lfc;UiJlliilillaiiijl.a,.,,l.ll,,,j,a,.lj:iilJW J His and Hers n NEW version of the mostpo- - lar of potholders to del; home-make- rs and bazaar 'Hers' are beruffledin'g red cotton and 'His' are stripeo blue. Fun to make and practi-too- l Pattern No. 5100 consists of Instructions, stitch Ulu tion and material requirement!. Br.nmu iikule NEEDLEWORI 630 South Wells St., Chltlt ), m Enclose 20 cents for pattern. No Nam Address Under Oath A cinema actor, suing for breach of contract, described.1, self as the greatest actor is world. One of his friends took him task for so loudly singing his : praises. "I know," replied the actor, must have sounded somewhat :i ceited, but, remember, I was oath." 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