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Show BEAR RIVER VALLEY LEADER -- 1 Not Fashion, JflS;c face Type, ciflutf Ddrfe Your Hair Stye I " Si ar n short ii still toward ...rt tenirth of your rvn lj"'bd S hair should be J Remove Soap Traces it's 1 with the hair, "Sbe feature which enters the Kessionally styled i 1 've " J ! to ' TlUger JV'rt even though the one to wear hair styles Why? is thin and silky A ! I j! " r ! may have to have hair than her roundtheo-'V- er - ? 4 ' K A- f ' J - is the $ and cJ straight. as the way In will frequent-- k treated Tfcy are the appearance of the . Mes as well lrte frli j 2y when culately ... make ...qc moon! T, wi Bon trimmed freirs thinned and a sleek, groomed style. use j baby-fin- e hair can v,e with curled and fluffed nicely jttetfs of more eve the appearance irsead of skimpiness, espe- , ! hair may with heavy ' ' ' im-the hair is kept so j clean that the oil does r. cling the strands to-ie- " ecwrc Girls ould Avoid Boxy Effect unsymmetrical 4 slightly s hair suit the square faces means parting the hair will t xit This on wublt ( .... TEEM : Tht shape of your face .... or diagonal- - bight down the side I Duffy curls These should Loose are good on the not be done in straight a line, jid fall easily to pleasing effect. 1 Jive a Tdt however, but the temples the square-face- girl, it's not d hair too short, since is limits the hair arrangement Mderably and may result in the face a e effect is just what we're trying to e i- to cut the box-lik- -i i A " sides should be dressed flat curls at the ends. back, have the hair well-- soft the that it falls in lovely, of wave in '( hack, ending in soft end curls - assure you of looking well at so lines. back ait A suggestion of the heal the square-faceM not be too d wl then make it on the girl d since difficult to gracefully into hair Bring out natural hair highlights with a creme rinse which removes all trace of soap used for shampoo. This will give the hair a gleaming, clean appear ance, as well as making the hair softer to touch, easier to manage without snarls or tang-le- s that makes combing difficult. One of the outstanding properties of the rinse is its ability to remove scalp odor, thus giving the hair a new freshness. Vtttmwt hair style. hair-cut- I ' bPauty ' V wtt POfl' atten. ' ,h newest I,,. lines. Shampoos twice or three times a week may necessitate doing some at home. All sorts of aids are available to make it easier for you. creamy, good lathering shampoos, creme rinses that condition the hair, and curlers to set it. Setting the hair with cologne may be an idea for you since it is delightful and gives fragrance. Home dryers are available to cut down drying time, as are caps and turbans with layers of chemical in them which speed the drying of the quick-dryin- g Jhlr S rcpcalpd ".hite eye- - right. hair. . iWsi "Since I was 4, and Joe 8 and Lucile 9." The little girl went on sucking i thoughtfully on a mammoth lull pop, and 1 sat thoughtfully looking at the little girl. We were both at a company picnic. Spineless Women Suppose my mother had been the weak spineless woman who was so 1 obviously this girl's mother, mused. Suppose she had been so lacking in character herself that she could take nursery tantrums seriously, and had made them her excuse for robbing her girls and her boy of the priceless advantage of being together? I thought of what my brothers and sisters meant to me, and of the wisdom and gentleness of the government of both my mother and father, and of the long years almost half a century since children they left their orphaned, rich only in a devotion that all the busy years have never Versatile, Flattering shalceh, even for a day. TAILORED charm for the The love between sisters, the woman of slightly larger size love between brothers, their pride a beautifully fitting shirtwaister and interest in each other these so versatile and flattering. that's Lines Simple are among the greatest privileges If you like, make the sleeves and of life. No friendships are deeper OlMPLE princess lines make vestee effect in contrast. rooted, or more enduring or more for mother. This easy sewing fruitful. To bear these children, Pattern No. 8471 Is a perdarling puffed sleeve dress will forated n.ittein In Blren 'M, 3H. 3H, 40, 41, be perfect for parties and kinder- 44. 50 and fj.. Size M, 4'a yard! mi,, 411, garten. Tiny ruffling gives a yoke of 3tMnch. tj .fcki Ait:'M: 'Uil', iMtti6G "fc half-doze- Pies Need (See Recipes pastry shell, prick botand sides a fork. in a hot oven 10 to or 12 minutes tom with Bake (450) Know-Ho- w Below) LYNN CHAMBERS' MENU Broiled Lamb Chops Mint Jelly Hashed Brown Potatoes Buttered Zucchini Squash Grated Carrot Salad Date Muffins Blueberry Pie Beverage Recipe Given whites; pour over peaches. Bake in a hot (450") oven for 10 minutes; reduce heat to moderate (350) and bake for 30 minutes or until a knife comes out clean. Deluxe Chocolate Pie (Make 1 pie) 1 chocolate crumb crust 3 egg yolks, slightly beaten cup sugar teaspoon salt 1 cup milk, scalded 1 tablespoon unflavored gelatin Y cup cold water 1 teaspoon vanilla 3 egg whites, stiffly beaten 1 cup heavy cream, whipped Shaved Chocolate Combine egg yolks, sugar and salt; add milk slowly. Cook in top of double boiler until mixture coats spoon. Add gelatin softened in cold water. Stir until gelatin dissolves; add vanilla. Fold in egg whites and whipped cream. Pour into crust and chill until firm. Before serving garnish the top with shaved chocolate. (For doing this easily, use a clean razor blade on a bar of unsweetened chocolate to make the chocolate curls). Blueberry Pie (Makes 1 pie) Zii cups washed, picked blueberries cup sugar 1 2 tablespoons Yt cornstarch teaspoon salt 1 tablespoon lemon Juice 2 tablespoons butter Double crust pastry Combine blueberries with sugai which was mixed with cornstarch, salt and lemon Fill a juice. pastry lined pan and dot with butter. Top with crust and flute edges. Have gashes on top. Bake in a hot (450) oven for 10 minutes, reduce heat to moderate (350). Bake 30 minutes longer. a delightful variation ol pie with its crumbly, nut until golden topping that's so delicious. This, brown. If the shell is to be baked like a regular apple pie, may be with the filling, bake according to served with scoops of ice cream, if desired: directions in recipe. Crumbly Apple Pie pie) (Makes 1 PEACHES are on your mind IF 6 large tart apples a peaches and cream pie cup sugar that is really delectable: teaspoons cinnamon Southern Peach Cream Pie sugar li cup 1 pie) (Makes cup flour 1 unbaked pastry shell H oup butter 6 peach halves, fresh or cap pecan haWes canned 1 unbaked pastry shell H cup sugar Pare apples and cut into eighthi 1 tablespoon flour and arrange in pastry shell. extract almond teaspoon f with cup sugar Sprinkle teaspoon salt mixed with the cinnamon. Sifl 1 cup rich milk f cup sugar with remaining 2 egg yolks, beatn in cut butter. Work mix. flour and 1 tablespoon melted butter ture until crumbly and sprinkl 2 egg whites, beaten over apples. Dot with pecan halves. down side cut peaches, Arrange a hot (450) oven for 1C in pastry shell. Mix sugar, Cour Bake in reduce heat to mod then minutes, and salt. Combine dry ingredients and bake for 40 min erate (350) almond extract, egg with milk, in egg utes longer until apples are tender. yolks and butter. Fold HERE'S l'i one-hal- one-hal- LYNN SAYS: Wise Use of Leftovers Makes For Economy Add variety to waffles by using any of the following leftovers: of melted chopped bacon, 2 ounces kernel corn, whole chocolate, minced ham, nutmeats or chopped raw apples. can be Many dabs of leftovers added to French dressing to add Interest to salads. Add the last bit of honey to the dressing for fruit salads, or a bit of roquefort aheeie for green salads. Leftover biscuits, split In hat covered with cheese anc bacon, then broiled make a nici sandwich for soups oi open-facesalads. Leftover cocoa may be combined with coffee and served chillcc with a whipped cream topping foi a delicious beverage. Combine several different kindi of leftover fruit Juices for cooling first course beverages: plneapU and strawberry Juice; grape, lem on and pineapple Juice; raspberrj and pineapple Juice. and d villi' li l ljill V .8396 baked ffer, 8ummer always ... well-groome- In hot summer weather, hair more care than in cooler needs ttJ to achieve months. Perspiration and oils flow from the skin more freely, and more frequent shampooing is a i'??PHair Hid, necessity, both from a cleanliness and styling standpoint. Thin, silky hair will cling together when it's hot, and make you feel like you'd like an extra head of hair. You may need two or even three shampoos a week, in this case, so that the hair can be kept fluffed and curled properly. Heavy hair can be a problem, too. With heat it may become matted and develop odors more readily. If you're exposed to the sun, the hair may become dry and be as stiff as a board when you try dressing it. Soften it with frequent shampoos and apply gentle rinses or dressing to it to keep it pliable. s are needed in Frequent the hot weather since hair grows more rapidly. When hair Is cut, shaping is exceedingly important, for the short hairs do not fall in place as readily as long hair which you have trained daily to certain cv'tand, '' , s Pastry Perfection H the hair is heavy, to have it thinned i - Avoid bangs since these will give a RE YOUR PIES wonderful to wide effect to the face. The hair look at? Do they have a melt-ingl- y should be piled high on top, and in tender soft curls. Is the crust? The hair may be parted in one of filling a delighttwo ways: on the side, or from the ful surprise inside toward the center. stead of a disWhen the hair is thin, avoid hav appointment? cut too short, as the hair is ing it Unless you then unmanageable and will tend can answer a to give the face a broad look. If r e sounding the hair is heavy, it should be con"yes" to each of so thinned on the waves siderably those three questions, better take top will lie softly, and the sides a good look at tips given in this and back will have a slight sugcolumn. They'll help you reach of a wave, falling into soft gestion pastry making perfection if ybu end curls.' put the hints into practice. Pie is a dessert to have at any Fairly Short Style Good for Long Face luncheon or dinner, whether Light Long faces are radically different or heavy. It might be a rich apple from the two types xjust discussed pie, topped with scoops of ice and must, therefore, have distinctly cream if the meal itself has been different hair styles. You must shy on calories. Pies may be baked or chilled. round out the face and do this with Their crust m'ay be pastry or short, broadening lines. Start the part near the center, or crumb. Their fillings may be fruit, near the center and slant it to the berries, juice or eggs or combinations of these, so you see how much side. Hair at the sides should be variety pie can give your meals. If you have some especially dressed in soft and fluffy fashion to make the head look round. bright and lovely berries or fruit, Soft, fluffy curls may be worn on don't hide them under a top crust. the top, melting into crisp, outward- - Place a lattice crust or crumb topgoing curls at the sides. Keep the ping or a lacy fluting of whipped hair as short as possible for this cream on the pie, and let everyone type of face. Naturally hair must enjoy the handsome looks of the be slightly longer if the hair is pie. thin, since more is needed to make recipe for a the essential curls. HERE'S a foolproof shelL If you want pastry .which so many Sleek hair-do- s twice the double a make crust, long-face- d girls desire are out of recipe: place, since carls are needed to Pastry Shell broaden the face and head. How1 8 or (Makes ever, if you want to look neat, the 1 cup sifted flour d can be kept hair and Y. teaspoon salt thus achieve a sleek look without 5 tablespoons lard or actually being too much that way. shortening Bangs are very good with this 2 tablespoons Ice cold to of face since they tend type water shorten the long lines dramatically. flour and salt. Cut Sift It is a good idea to avoid straight in lardtogether with two knives or a pastry bangs, however, since softly curled blender. (Avoid using fingers, since bangs give a softer, rounder look. they're warm and will melt the The girl with the long face can- fat.) Sprinkle water in, while stirnot afford to have the hair too ring with a fork. Press dough into long at the back, since this will a ball, then roll lightly on a pastry naturally show when you look at cloth or board. Fold over and fit her from the front, and it will tend pie plate. Trim to give a longer appearance to the edge, fold under face which we are trying to avoid. and flute. For a Condition of Hair Helps Styling Princess Dress Is Fun to Sew Classic Style lor the Matron I HAVE a sister and i brother, but I don't know them." the girl said politely. "You don't know them!" 'No, ma'am. You see when we were little we quarrelled so terribly that Mama couldn't stand it, so she sent Joe to Grandma, and my Aunt Maggie took Lucile . . ." "And how long since you've seen them?" wlucb hair the type Even though you may J lUX," dce4 tf uie hair to curl a tendency ; '.Vd side be on the short with a mes the individual i SEWING CIRCLE PATTERNS Shame of Mothers r ; ... mu your own Ho r deter-you- KATHLEEN NURKlb "YES'M facial type own W I s Br Erlta Haley ?3 . mh L" n ew-rlt- effect. Pattern and S 6 No. B3M Is for sl7c yeun. SUt 3, 2, RFWINH riltC'I.F PATTKHN lKFT. C hlium 1, III. 6.1U South HrlU M. Fnclose 25 renl In coint for each S, 4, S'i vulds puttein demrcd. Pattern No. of The Fali and Winter Issue of FASHION a depend. ible KUe In planninK mnrt winter wardruhe. Special features, fabric news free putteru printed inside the book. 23 cents. Name is A "... and then toss off any obligation to train them, to develop their characters, to teach them the rules of mine and thine, and bear ing and forgiving, and sharing and helping, is a cruder injustice to them than if she had quietly put out their eyes. There's an ugly score building up against American mothers. It isn't punishable by law, but its results are so frightful that there is no juvenile court in the world that isn't staggered by them. Not long ago I was looking into the eager, wistful, puzzled faces of about 100 boys, their ages ranging between 7 and 16. They were living in an institution. I asked the boys to raise their hands. They numbered 16. Then I asked There were eight. for of them came from Seventy-si- x "broken homes." Do their mothers ever think, as they so relievedly shift off the small helpless son to some other woman's care, or rather to part of her care, what that means to the child? What it means to have no place at the no room in which evening-table- , treasure may be stored, books read, dreams dreamed? Do they ever think of those hours of utter, desolate loneliness? I don't believe they do. They haven't done much thinking up to this point, so why should they begin now? They've taken their wedding vow, as we all did; they've promised to be faithful, for better or worse, until the end. Children are a'care. Children keep parents at home. Parents don't want to stay at home. Sitters cost money. The bright, hopeful, loving eyes of the children have no appeal here. Somebody tells Mama that if Dad goes on acting that way, she can get a divofce, and put the little boys at St Peter's. Mama tells the good managers of St. Peter'a a pretty convincing story. She doesn't hesitate to blacken the name of the man she loved just a few years ago, the man who il the children's father. He is a skunk, and Mama is an abused angel, and the boys are herded like little sheep into the big bare anaesthetic-scenteInstitution, and promised letters, games, presents, clothes, thoughts and love and prayers by Mama. They never get any of these, by the way. With the children out of sight, parents forget promises. We can't have too much regimentation in this free country of ours. We can't stop divorces, desertions, selfish dads, mamas, undisciplined natures that break up homes at the first test. The judgrj In our courts of domestic relations do what they can. "Die churches do what they can. Whafl the answer? I djn't know. But I know that If business men and women broke their promise, dodged their obligations and threw over they responsibilities at many parents do, there wouldn't be any country. fully-orphan- th HOUSE sk Items of Interest to the Housewife MWrr-fi- fi Mailing Candy, Nuts Candy and nuts sent through the mails can be kept fresh and whole if they're packed in mason jars. Or, open an ordinary tin can almost all the way, empty it and wash thoroughly; then line the with waxed paper, fill it with nuts and candy and secure the lid with adhesive tape. Frosting Cakes You can prevent fresh frosting from running off the top and down the sides of cakos by dusting flour across the cake as soon as the frosting is put on. Not enough to alter the taste of the icing, but just enough to make it congeal. Serving Left-Ov- Beef er For Rainy Days A quick way to serve In rainy weather, lay a large-sizbeef without it is roast desk blotter just inside the to slice the meat, get the gravy front door so that wet overshoes piping hot and pour the hot gravy and galoshes can be put on it. over the cold meat. the blotter When the rain left-ov- er e stops, can be rolled up and kept in the hall closet. Ink Spots ' half-orphan- s. d Dm IMH A 4 the utter desolate loneliness . . Addresi If you can't get to an ink spot immediately, mix up a workable paste of milk and corn meal. Cover the spot liberally with the paste and let it stay 12 hours at least overnight before sweeping it up. Polish on Rug It shoe polish gets on a rug, try cleaning fluid. Follow it up with a regular washing soap and water and a little ammonia. Keeping Potatoes To keep potatoes from turning soft before you're ready to serve them, store them by spreading them out In a shallow box so air Dot and Cold Days Temperatures in Tibet run the length of the thermometer in one day. During the winter, in some places, the mercury rises to 110 degrees at noon and drops to 60 below at night. can circulate around them. FIRST AID rCeiling to tha AILING HOUSE IP WAC, MARINE or SPAR by Roger C. Whitman Find out Paper Over Heaters Cracks and Falls QUESTION: Can you tell me how to put ceiling paper on to make it stay? Up over our heaters it is cracked and falling down. We've tried skim milk paste, also the dried glue in our paste, without success. Answer: In such a case no paper will stay up with any degree of success. The heat will continue to dry out the paste and bake the paper. I suggest that you paint the ceilings. rrr1'3 V'Jii WW us YOU WERE A WAVE, I Y what Nursing offers youl V-- y aJaeaUoa Uftiuft la R. N. mar pponunitlae mmj Jmt la . b4Mptll, paUU beallk, lb C. L Bill -andr ellawaoe ytmt mi HlghW Of O'trt jnmr nllr -- mm -- Bwin . .l- - emu-M- i i would like i.. i i,m lontrnrin. a 1 |