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Show PAGE SIX THE TIMES- - NEWS, NEPHI, UTAH WOMAN'S WORLD Be I Thursday, October 13, 1949 MEN WOMEN WANTED AT ONCE Smart! Full or part time, just send name, address for free copy of Salesman Magazine gmng Specialty hundreds of immediate openings with reliable firms. Sales experience unnecesbook tellsary We send free Children Need Clothes that 'Belong7 AND SEWING SELECTING children can be lots For Rough Wear of fun. When dressed properly and admired by all who see them, mothers feel that the reward is worth all the time consumed. More Important even than having people admire your children is the g sense of grooming, poise and that is being developed in your youngsters as you choose clothes for them which meet that standard of fashion rightness. True, you don't have to worry about hemlines on little girl's dresses as about your own, or about the extent of the cuff on a little' boy's trousers as your husband is concerned about his, but still there's a certain amount of fashion which needs consideration. Certain styles may be better on your little girl than others, for they do have small individual figure problems. Then, too, colors can be as important to them as they are to adults. Some do more for them than others, as you can easily find out just by trying on a few things. Your little boy and girl can probably look just as adorable as some you've seen pictured even though their clothes budget is limited and mother does the sewing. Tasteful selection of colors and fabrics and well-bein- -- it " X ? h st,M 1T-if i. 1 1 t garments. The latter never wash they're in constant need of mending, and the style is impaired unless proper sewing techniques are used. Select Fabrics, Fasteners) For Washing Ease New designs and colors are available in fabrics every season, but there is little change in actual fabrics to use for children's clothing. Novelty fabrics are for adults, be they men or women, but the more conservative materials look better en the youngsters. For play clothes, select the sturdy materials which wash easily, ana are sunfast: corduroy, broadcloth, duck, denim, gingham, poplin, percale, calico, rayon, seersucker and cotton gabardine. In dress clothes, linen, chambray, dotted pique, swiss, organdie, sheer cottons, fine lawn and muslin may be employed. Although some textured materials, such as corduroy, are favored for play clothes, the smooth fabrics are much more popular for dress. The smooth surfaces mean easy ironing and less opportunity tor picking up dirt while being worn. All fabrics chosen should be sturdy enough to hold buttons, fasteners and such essentials. Don't be afraid to experiment on the different types of fasteners being shown even though you may never have seen them used on tot's clothing. y This yeung gentleman is well dressed for school or play in his smart jacket made of an worsted type fabric The fabric, woven from Avisco yarns, is color-faand completely washable, and will withstand all sorts of rough and tumble wear. There's a liberal sleeve and seam allowKATHLEEN NORRIS ance to let the clothing grow with the boy. late daddy and big brother as much as possible with good tailoring. Pants are full enough to drape or 'TIJE ARE IN A RUT, and it'a to have well pressed pleats. Shirts getting on our nerves. Lee are sewed carefully so they can look isn't as kind to me as he used to tailored and correct in even small be. I bore him. He seems tired and details. quiet all the time. If I start a sub It's discouraging to see children ject he may say wearily, "Let's not outgrowing clothes so rapidly, and talk about it.' Sometimes he says. for this reason many mothers like 'Please don't use that word.' Often Children develop grooming sens , to make clothing a bit. on the large he hardly seems to hear me. proper styling are the keys to clothside so the youngster can grow into "We are people," ing children attractivly. There's no better way to start continues the letter of Mildred Milit An armload of cheap fabrics that an inferiority complex in the young ler, of New York City. "Lee's salfade and thin with each laundering, ary is $100 a week. We pay $85 too or clothes skimpy styles large rent for five rooms in the West rewithout and sewing Sixties. Lee is 52, I am 47. We lost gard to what's good on the tot will our one son in 1945, and his widow do nothing more than cover him. has remarried and lives with our Good' fabrics chosen with a keen grandson in Los Angeles. Our eye as to what's right in style and daughter died as a , baby, so we color, sewed with care will make have weathered two great sorrows. of the youngsters angels even when But- until now I always felt that they're not! while Lee needed me I had reason If you start early to instill an apfor living. Now there isn't any preciation of quality, workmanship question that he feels himself tied and styling in your youngsters, to a woman who means nothing to you'll have given them qualities him. hard to duplicate. ' Security Isn't Enough Take Tips From "I am a good cook, I keep the Top Designers house going. We've never been in with well styled clothes. Any mother who sews for her In debt. We have a good nest-eg- g children would do well to copy some than to have them improperly fitted. government bonds, and insurance of the trade tricks to top children's Whether they tell you or not, they all that. But that isn't enough, is designers. For one thing, good qual- are aware of how people look at it, if one's heart is restless and artrousers and and other how their friends react unsatisfied, and life has grown dullthem, ity dresses, ticles of clothing are never skimpy. to their clothes, er and quieter day by day? There You'll find skirt fullness because Clothes often lose their style be- is no other woman in the case, I designers take tthe required two cause they are practical, and it's know, although Lee is at the age widths to make them perky. Deep far more satisfying to have them when men sometimes fall for flathems are employed because they fun to wear and be admired, than and interest. And physically, make skirts fluff out, not because to shy away from putting them on. tery we are both well sleep and eat you will want material for lengthenIt's easier to spend the few extra like the normal human animals we ing. hours doing more sewing than to are, 'and feel bewildered at this Collars should be appropriately undo damage to the spirit apathy that has fallen upon us. narrow, and tiny, well puffed It's better, too, to have a few "As for amusements, Lee has a sleeves are essential for chic. In carefully sewed clothes than a cocker he adores. He works on the boy's clothing, the trend is to simu- - closet full of hastily thrown together window garden which is quite a success. He likes walking, bridge, and a few special movies. I like THE READER'S COURTROOM- movies, am taking a weekly lesson in interior decoration, and love to two-butt- all-ray- st ing now, SPECIALTY SALES MAGAZINE Sib Floer Bell BaUdlng Ch.ea.ge. well, Implement Company Marks Anniversary. 5 1 Manure Spreader First Built in 1889 The beautiful simplicity of the necklines of the new wool dresses and the smartness of the many new types of upstanding collars combine to give a perfect foil for ornate necklaces. Setting the pace are the long strands which are looped as you desire. Equally good for the jewel neckline or a collared dress is the choker, usually highlighted with a pendant or e cluster. Earrings and pins repeat the motifs as desired. Typical examples are sketched, the choker of jade and pear!,' with a pendant of jade, coral, pearl and rhine-stonon gold filigree. The long necklace has opals with pearls, rhlnestones and a touch of green. pin-lik- i I The story of American free enterprise is graphically illustrated by two buildings at the Coldwater, Ohio, plant of the New Idea Division, AVCO manufacturing corporation, which this year is celebrating its I I ft::: W : . t-- 5y efis! wMjPZP ' rx i mi f ?f33e I i anniversary. golden implements and '"' """"" n iim es Crispness that speaks for Its elf I Hear Rice Krlsples snap! crackle I poplI in milk! energy food. America's favorite ready-to-e- at rice cereaL. Oee-llcio- us r One of these buildings (actually a series of connected buildings) covers over 15 acres and houses 705,000 square feet of manufacturing facilities. Newly expanded, it boasts one of the most' modern foundries in the nation and a full complement of equally modern production machines and processes. It is the plant in which New Idea produces its specialized line of farm iTIflE ( jF?ffin?Aw cms you mm equipment. Hun Don't Lose Happy Middle Years - Freight Car Is No Plaything -- By Will Bernard, ! a Child Falls Off a Freight Car, Is the Railroad to Blame? One Saturday afternoon, several box-ca- r boys began playing near on a railroad siding. One of the boys decided to climb the ladder. But just as he neared the top he lost his footing, fell, and broke his leg. Later damage suit was filed for the youngster against the railroad. The suit charged that the railroad was to blame for leaving such a "dangerous object" where children could get at it. However, the court rejected the boy's claim. box-ca- r The judge said that Isn't "dangerous" at all at least, not when it is sUnding still. applying for a marriage license, a young man took an oath that both be and his bride-to-b- e were over 21. Actually, the girl was only 18 years old. Later the youth was arrested on charge of perjury. At the trial, be argued that the oath "didn't count" because be hadn't bad his band up at the time I However, the court disagreed and found bim guilty. The judge said that raising one's band was a "mere formality" not an essential part of the oath that be look la court. When LLB- - A man got mad at his wife because his dinner wasn't ready at the hour he had "ordered" it. He seized heavy stick, turned bis wife over his knee, and gave her a couple of bard whacks. When arrested for assault and battery, the man claimed "the ancient privilege" of a husband to discipline his wife. But the court decided that such a privilege no longer exists nowadays, and found the man guilty. The judge ssid "This privi"... I mm good took . . lege, ancient though it may be. is fuss with curtains and flower arno longer acknowledged by our law." rangements. "I want to save our marriage. I Must o Jailer Protect want to go into the fifties busy, His Prisoners From happy and useful. Thousands of A "Kangaroo Court?" persons live as we do. on less and seem content. Neither A college student was jailed on money, nor had any religious traina charge of theft. That evening, Lee when I but we both beyoung, ing a special committee of prisoners lieve in sometimes go to and God, put the young man through a reg- church." ular "initiation ceremony" which oonsisted of beating bim up and Mysterious Element This is an ordinary enough story, taking whatever he had with him. A few days later the theft charge and yet it has one mysterious element Why is it, one asks, that what makes certain couples absolutely content, with a nice home, adequate income, health, companionship, isn't enough for other oouplesT Well, the answer is that oae couple has found what It wants, aad the other enc hasn't. The very fact that Mildred considers herself and Lee to be in a rut, shows that she doesn't belong there. That reaching out for Interests, his fusswas dropped and the student was ing with window boxes, her patient treed. The first thing be did was to attention while professional deoora-tor- s lecture to her, shows that both file a damage suit against the Jailer for tolerating a "kangeroo arc unsatisfied. Has it occurred to Mildred and eourt" fat the prisoa. The jailer protested he wasn't responsible for Lee to move out of the cityT The how the inmates treated each other, rent they arc paying would more but the court disagreed and be id than cover the monthly payments him liable. The judge said that an a small farm within well, not jailer's duty is not only to cob-C- an hour of the city, but an hour and his prisoners but to protect 30 minutes. Wouldn't buying small neglected farm somewhere them, too. give him a chance of gardening on a larger scale, give her a real chance at interior decoration, and y run, ingive the cocker an stead of a few moments of freedom morning and night? Mildred doesn't mention Lee's job. Is it a job that could be transferred to a smaller city, more accessible to suburban farms? There is no joy in the world like feeling the ground under your feet to be your own, like feeling that every faucet, every picket, every shingle you add tq it is making it more yours. You don't have to do without hot water, electric light and power, radio, gas stove, as your grandmother did when she moved into the country. You can still get your consomme canned and your peas picked. But you'll hear the logs crackle in your own fire, winter nights; you'll see the moonlight whitewash your own roofs and fences in summer. To say "we raised that rooster" when you serve the fried chicken, to send people home carrying armsful of d huckleberry and bunches of white violets, te hang your Monday wash out in blazing sunshine, and eat your Sunday breakfast under your own grape-arbothis is to find youth and life and delight again. Peaceful, busy, healthy, age is a goal worth working toward. It has to be achieved according to pattern, and with intelligent effort. Don't lose these middle years. -a all-da- long-legge- r, Grocer Would Revive Old Art Ramapo Mountaineer Basket Art Is Goal LADENTOWN, N. Y. Pincus Margulies, who opened a country store here 45 years ago, is attempting to revive the lost Ramapo mountaineer art of making baskets, scoops, salad bowls, spoons, chopping bowls and various other wooden utensils. "Pine's Store," a trading post both tor the mountaineers and the residents In near-b- y movie and professional colonies, has been run by the founder's son Harold since he returned from the war. When Margulies arrived here in 1904 there were 200 residents in this hamlet, and in the adjacent hills 153 mountaineers, descended from the mixed races who settled there before and during the Revolutionary war. Scotch, English and Hessian were the principal strains, with no Negro or Indian blood, such as predominates with the Jackson Whites, who also live In the Rama-po- s but miles to the west. The mountaineers were making and peddling their wood products to summer visitors when Margulies and his wife came from Brooklyn. He took over the trade and established outside markets. The weekly output of these 150 widely scattered mountain inhabitants soon reached 200 dozen baskets. 100 to 140 dozen scoops and a miscellaneous assortment of products, including colored baskets for the bon voyage steam' ship trade. "The mountaineer's dally income soon was $1.25," Margulies said. "I paid each only a small amount in cash, as they wanted to be paid off in merchandise and food from the store. When they were without money 1 gave them flour, tea, coffee, groceries, tobacco and medicine en credit. "They would rather have a stock pile of materials In the faO, and each spring I filled dozens of freight cars and their bills were paid." Mm ' ' - oi those lST .wtateadmenui oiA times more FOR ... August Reutsc hilling, who has been with the company 47 Contains Xofieted Sieving years, stands nostalgically at the forge in the "museum" HS t-i-nsl a replica of the original plant, it is the same forge at which he worked in his early days with the company, i and Stf If 41 f sura- Across the street is a small, wooden frame building occupying just 1440 square feet of space. In it are an old forge, and several simple machines of the kind used for manufacturing in the early 1900's. This is an almost exact replica of the modest structure In which Joseph Oppenheim first began building his now famous manure spreader in 1899 in the nearby village of Maria Stein, Ohio. The communities for miles' around Coldwater, and sales personnel throughout the nation, know it as the "museum." Large letters painted on the front wall identify the building as "New Inside Idea Spreader Works-1899.- " are the four rooms in which Oppenheim and six helpers fashioned the first one of the most important and most widely used implements ever devised by the farm imple- ment industry. The first room as you enter was the "forge and machine room," containing a forge, hand shear, hand punch press, hand threading machine, small high speed drill, benches and water tank for cooling " a gasoline engine. 5er - THE ORIGINAL BAUME ANALGESIQUE Right in pipes right in papers! That's why more and more men are smoking choice, crimp cut Prince Albert America's largest-sellin- g smoking tobacco. S 7 I 2 4 W Quonset 'Crib' Ji ' ' PRINCE ALBERT RIGHT FOR MY PIPE! RA. SMOKES COOL AND MILD AND HAS A GRAND, RICH TASTE, TOO I li i J xj 'AND pa. is MAKIN'S1 ft A u 1 right for. SMOKES, TOO! ITS A CINCH MILD, 70 ROLL EXTRA-TAST- ECTR- A- t1 Y CIGARETTES WITH CRJMP CUT HIM atutfi Shown here Is a new, Qnonset-typ- Fill un e for grain storage quarters which was built by Irvln McKib-be- n, of Maddork, N. D., throoch a commodity credit PRJNCE ALBERT! corporation financing program. McKlbben Is supervising the damping of the first load ef bis wheat crop buildInto the ing which was constructed by Agsce Steel Buildings, Ino. Tbe choice, naturally mild tobacco selected for ate In Prince Albert is specially treated to insure against tongue bite for extra smoking comfort. And the oew Humidor Top locks in crimp cut Prince Albert's freshness and flavor for greater smoking joy. newly-complet- Crossbred Held Finer Type of Beef Animals Experiments In breeding range cattle show that animal for animal crosabreds are a finer type than the purebred stock from which they stem originally. liveIn msking that assertion, stock specialist claims there Is a definite advantage that could result g from planned of beef animals, and lack of uniformity of color is not an Indies Uoa of Inferior market yield. More Men Smoke mm than any other ' tobacco cross-breedin- k TIM |