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Show How shirts can be wife-savers , Now a man can have all the j style he wants in a shirt, yet ( be assured that it will keep its , freshly pressed look all day. But still be kind to his wife. ( How? Many of this fall's ; shirts are permanently pressed 1 and need never see the iron , again. They promise to keep their original shape and crisp-ness crisp-ness after many launderings. All of the traditional styles are found in permanent press long sleeves, short sleeves, whites, colors, stripes, broadcloth broad-cloth or oxford. Most are polyester-cottons, although certain stvles are anrjearine" in svn- thetic blends and even corduroys. cordu-roys. When it is manufactured, the entire shirt receives the permanent per-manent press treatment sleeves, the body of the shirt, and details such as collars, cuffs and yoke. When iising an automatic washer, let the color of the shirt determine the temperature tempera-ture of the water you use. Use hot or warm water for white and light colored shirts, cold water for those that are brightly colored. (Liquid or dissolved granular detergent will work best in cold water). Use the regular speed of agitation agi-tation for a five-minute wash period. The wash-and-wear setting on your dryer is ideal for permanently per-manently pressed shirts because be-cause it provides the proper temperature for removing any wrinkles. The Maytag Co. recommends rec-ommends that you remove the shirts from the dryer as soon as it has stopped tumbling in order to prevent wrinkles that might form if the shirt were left lying in the warm dryer. History and lesson features DUP meet The home of Helen Ashcraft was the meeting place for Camp Mountain View DUP last Thursday. The lesson on pioneer forts was presented by Minnie Groesbeck and the h istory by Maraby Beardall on her grandmother, grand-mother, Ann Muir of Croft-herd, Croft-herd, Scotland. Grandsons of the hostess, Kent and Gary Anderson of Benjamin, entertained with vocal vo-cal duets during the afternoon. The meeting concluded with refreshments served to 25 members by hostesses Lela Sumsion, Catherine Russell, Melda Porter and Mrs.' Ashcraft. Ash-craft. The game of bowling, a pop- ular sport in England and Canada, was once banned by : English monarchs, who felt it distracted able bodied men from the practice of archery, according to the National Geographic Geo-graphic Magazine. |