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Show o h., 4 , i , ,;, , - , ;, , ,, . li , , - , , , .. ' - ' ,' . '' ' sir' " I Ug'' I '11 1 '''. '' .N.,..........m '' ) - 7 ' -- . , LC I 6 t'''''. do '''''' '''. ,1 ' ' , 1100; , ,,c ,..... , -,.- Rai Mg, NO ' s 1 '''! fr NEW &ant t ' 441 4 - I tipar Cooks Your Food . Hoots Your Rooms ,. 1;161 $ 0,1glaread you you bought this '''Nts.1,,.., ' -: -- eagewsoRoANdGE 0 V 0.'1 ?" --,-- -- ',,, i I:, 4iatiorP.."6"61161"1"1"1 ; ' .. 1 - . 4r 0 t. ti , 1 ""'4ill '.1 QrhAive:- - , ''..1 ;, trlit -- ..e,.,:9k.s, 14 - stop-- - " de futegoe leee 2124 Hieltlead CltiveSeotitosse Smotheest Style Cotter tee Me ''' 1.4'''''' P . . IP o one By Frances F.. Reid tit:, prza )0 well-dresse- , ; . ' , 0 ' for that d air, from toes to topper . . . make , : .. 'pL-1)- , ' , - 1 , .. . , , a q 11. V 4, . ,, II - YOU WANT TO MAKE your spare time pay off you Imight get an idea or so from Mrs. Christine Petersen of Twin Falls, Idaho. As a mother with a job as night hotel clerk supporting four children, she turned her talents to artcraft in leather for some extra income. Today her hobby is a profitable, full time occupation which she enjoys immensely. Her distinctive Western d jackets. purses, chaps, moccasins and other leather, creations are popular over the intermountain g West from cowboys to socialites at Sun , IT hand-toole- "4 11111 rodeo-ridin- Valley. A scant two yPers ago, Mrs. Petersen was working as night clerk at the Park Hotel and wondering how to Increase a dwindling income. In the long hours from midnight to 8 sin, she weighed a number of possible avocations. Remembrance of a girlhood spent on a large cattle and horse ranch in Montana merged with her experience as seamstress in a harness shop and gave her a desire to work with leather. , 1614.a1P1 bt, Give each of them one of these sav- stippling. As the bag took shape, hotel guests became fascinated by her work and hung over her desk by the hour. Someone suggested color might bring out the pattern but the war had made leatker oil and water dyes unobtainable. So. Mrs. Petersen ingeniously experimented with ordinary drawing ink in red., yellow, blue and greea. The process made the design beautifully AEPARTING GUST requested that a bag be sent her in California. As a result: Mrs. Petersen received orders for five 'more. Soon the demands of friends made it necessary to find a little workshop outside the hotel. She rented oue room above a downtown sports shop and began a killing work schedule. She went to her hotel job at midnight. went home in the morning to cetch a few hours sleep. Noon found her at her workshop where she remained until time to return to the hotel at night. Mrs.Petersen broadened her skill from shopping bags and purses to wcilets, jackets and other items. Her work calls for a variety of leathers. Jackets may be made of elkskin, buckskin, speepskin or goatskin; heavy purses of cowhide with .kidskin linings; coin purses of calfskin. All leathers used in carving or tooling must be treated to make them pliable and soft. 4 Get your copies of this 12 pogo colorfully illustrated "Home Bank" today. The price is only 35 cents each, to cover the cost of handling. Get your Books today! ,I,N AL '44rit tat NEE"- , amount. - . ,rtts ,...1 WHY NOT START TODAY? NaL,S;00- it Ait it it it qt1 IZ -21 xr tt top ..., Ar 1-- . ,, f' 0 ,, , ii.,) 11 I, ,,, , 11 5 Al:g9rotit'rZ3D0 g7 East 1st South St, ---- . IIb 5: LA.,Z7 JJ L141 Tall MAO C A i.A . v. ERID Ms. 444 I When the book is fined, bring it to us, and we will start your youngsters out with a Personal Savings Account of- - $2.00. Remember, too, that the American Savings and Loan Asso4,4rtaP ciation Pays you (current dividend A to rote) Per Annum on your Savings !Lk 744121111k,v1 regardless of the amount. Your ljlit 2, Savings Account is wekomed in any w,. PETERSEN SAID she was forced to quit her hotel job when a salesman's wife asked to take along a few sdmples and send back orders. On htr lecond trip the woman turned in such a list that Mrs. Petersen said she had to give up her night clerk job to meet commitments for Christmas delivery. People also began bringing in worn leather goods tor repair so she bought a heavy-dut- y tailoring machine. custom-mad- e in items, Mrs. she specialized Although Petersen didn't hesitate to tackle any taskshe felt she learned as she experimented. Orphaned at 13 and now the mother of four maturing youngsters, Mrs. Petersen has carried her family responsibility alone for the past ten years. She wanted her children to have education opportunities denied her. dog jumps, a dime is a baseball on its way for a home run, a quarter is a big brass horn played by a comical -plf, end so on. It has speces to accommodate two dollars in coins. then ,watch the fun ings books will begin. They lough with delight the colorful cartoons and funny at jingles, and right away they'll wont to start saving coins to fill in the picture's. You see, the coin spates ore cleverly arranged so that, in one place a penny becomes a balloon, in others, a nickel is a hoop through which a g 444 Imam! a DILC. g tat-tail- - - HOW TO TEACH YOUR YOUNGSTEilS TO SAVE 4 wood-burnin- 11111 nt SHE SAYS. I couldn't just sit idle hour after hour. More and more I wanted to work with my hands. to fashion something in leather. "On the ranch P used to tinker with the machinery, mend the harness and do all kinds of tasks usually assigned to boys. Particularly I liked the feel and smell of good leather.- - So, ordering three tools, Mrs. Petersen began her first endeavor with some soaps of leather. It was to be a shopping bag. As she tried her hand at simulated carving, it ocset might curred to her the children's prove useful. With the hot point needle she traced a des and carefully shaded it. The sign of ducks and background represented a painstaking process of saddle-stampin- (.1 Salt Lake City, Utah , ,i , , , I , ot i. ti) - ) , ,4 1 A. SUNDAV, NOVEMBER 28, 1948 1 11 |