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Show Page 4 .SOUTH SALT LAKE NEWS Thursday, September 5, 1968 Outdoor Painting Tips It's outdoor painting time, so begin with an inyour painting make-ovspection tour. Study the outside of your house thoroughly and carefully, especially trouble spots such as window and door frames and surrounding areas; bases of columns on porches and entranceways; steps, siding, areas and downspouts, under-eav- e anywhere moisture is likely to collect. If excessive cracking or peeling of the old coating has occured in these spots, removal of the paint will be er Start at the top and work your way to ground level, applying a layer of exterior house paint in the color of your choice. When using ladders to reach those high spots, keep your safety in mind. Don't overreach and move the ladder often. The best time to paint the exterior of your home is during a relatively dry time of year. The temperature should be above 40during the day and night. For painting the latter areas of your home use a 4K to 5 inch brush. When OFFICG IDG9 The career gal's desk is a crowded place and any item that can be used for three jobs instead of one merits the spot of honor. Kleenex tissues are indispensable for her after-hougo everywhere beauty when shes suffering through winter's colds, and act as for a fast desk clean up when things look dingy. When they disappear quickly, she knows the boss has been around her desk! Foot-squa- man-size-for-- re rs pick-me-u- p, duster-polishe- rs The Southgate Camp cl the National Utah Society of the Daughters of Pioneers will begin their meetings for the coming year on Friday, September 6th at 1 p.m. at the home of Chloe L. Blackner, 26 West Mal- vern Avenue. New officers Captain Vice Captain Vice Captain are as follows: Cookies Are Lunch Box Treat necessary for a lasting paint job. Use a scraper if only spot removing is called for. Reduce the damaged surface to the bare wood and then feather the edges of the area with coarse grained sandpaper. Your painting project does not begin with the painting, it starts with the proper preparation of the surface! All surfaces on which new paint is to be applied must be absolutely clean and smooth. Loose dirt should be removed with a dusting brush and all rust on metal surfaces should be completely eliminated with the aid of a wire brush and steel wool. Slightly roughened surfaces should be smoothed with sandpaper. If putty around window panes has cracked or loosened it should be removed and replaced. Cracks or holes around window or door frames and where different materials come together, such as joints between flashing and bricks, can be remedied with careful caulking. Check your paint dealer for the primer specifically suited for the surface to be painted, then apply it like a top coat with a I rush, spray gun or roller. With all the necessary preparations out of the way, the fun of painting begins! Check with your paint dealer to be sure you are using the best quality coating for the exterior building material of your home. Remember you are protecting your biggest pre-painti- painting such things as trim, a IK to 2 inch sash" brush is suggested. Use only the tips of your brushes not the sides. Smooth, even strokes should be used to work the paint into the sup face. If you are using an oil base paint, a thinner or solvent will be required to clean up brushes or rollers when you are finished. However, if a waterbased paint is used clean up right under the tap! When choosing paint keep in mind that porch floors and steps are usually constructed of wood or concrete. Foot traffic on these areas is extremely heavy, so be sure to use a durable paint. Most paint stores stock special porch and deck paints that wear very well under this hard use. The type of primer coat to use will vary according to the building material used. For example, wooden porches and steps would be primed with a thinned version of the top coat, while cement areas may need to be primed with an primer. A word of caution here: always read those labels! The manufacturer knows his product best. Keep in mind that porch floors should be repainted only in warm weather and after a number of dry days for thorough drying of the wood. Once you've started your paintfollow these helpful ing make-ovesuggestions and you'll be pleased with results! your alkali-resista- nt cup butter cup granulated sugar 1 cup brown sugar, firmly packed Vk cup chunk style peanut butter 1 egg 14 cup water 1 teaspoon vanilla 1 flour cup sifted 1 salt teaspoon Vk teaspoon baking soda 3 cups quick oatmeal, uncooked 1 package bordo imported diced dates (or use Bordo pitted whole dates, cut up) Vk Vi x. To make the cookies: Cream butter, sugars and peanut butter together. Add egg, water and vanilla and blend until creamy. Sift flour, salt and baking soda together. Add to creamed mixture and blend. Stir in uncooked oatmeal and Bordo imported diced dates. Mix until dates are coated and inoatmeal is moistened. At rounded teaspoonfuls tervals, drop of the mixture onto a greased cookie sheet. Bake in preheated 350 oven for minutes. (Do not overbake.) 2 This recipe yields between 4V4 and 3 dozen cookies. 10-1- shelves shallow with mounted on the wall for the display of small scale items. The wall Parlimentarian Chaplain Relics Registrar Mona Ellis Ida Burnett Zora Polts Vera Quilter Lillian Peck Meda Hanson Nora Lund historical matter and securing unprinted manuscripts, photographs, maps and all such data as shall aid in perfecting a record of the Utah Pioneers; by commemorating their entrance into the valley of Great Salt Lake on July 24, 1847 and such other advents and days as are important in the early history of this community; by publishing historical material; and by reviewing the lives of the pioneers: thus teaching their descendants ana the citizens of our country lessons of faith, courage, fortitude and pat- riotism. This association is national in its scope and is organized solely for historical, educational and public and purposes; it is non-politi- non-sectar- cal ian. WILE WILL WIN laughs at hubby's he is clever, because not jokes but because she is. A good wife We are faced with many vital issues in the 1968 campaign. War in Vietnam, riots in the streets, inflation and a teetering gold situation. The problems have not erupted adminovernight. The istration has made or magnified them. Johnson-Humphre- y With importance Senator Wallace F. Bennett has represented Utah and the Nation in speaking out against Arrange A Home Gallery spersed Organist Catherine mhis Bernice Allred Flora Allen Here's Why YOUR VOTE For Senator Bennett Is Vital Now Vote Sept 10 r, area above a bench, tabic, or chest is ideal for a small grouping of pictures. A long hall lends itself perfectly to a line of pictures hung at eye level along the full length of the area. Additional lighting is frequently necessary in a hall, t.nd it can be approached either of two ways. For a dramatic effect, light each picture individually from above. For even overall lighting, increase ceiling fixtures to approximate room lighting. Arrange pictures on the floor first to determine spacing and grouping. The task of hanging them is simplified by planning the grouping beforehand. Your results will produce compliments and comments from your own family as well as guests. Chorister Dorothy Johnson of ever-increasin- Turn hallways into a highlight of your home with clever arrangements of framed pictures. Too often hall space is neglected when it comes to decorating, and the hall is relegated to the role of utilitarian passageway. Artfully arranged, framed pictures and appropriate lighting can make the darkest corner an important part of the home, according to the Picture and Frame Institute. .Because space to view pictures in a hall is usually limited, the Institute suggests a variety of medium and small-siz- e pictures. Large pictures cannot be enjoyed as fully in any but the largest hall. Framed pictures might be inter- Sec. and Treas. Lesson Leader Scrapbook Historian Chloe L. Blackner Sponsor Vilate Coshow Violate Kleven All members are urged to attend The object of this association shall be to perpetuate the names and achievements of the men, women and children who were the pioneers in fowling this commonwealth; by preserving old landmarks, marking historical places, collecting relics and histories, establishing a library Peanut-Dat- e Looking for something crispy good :ind delicious for your youngsters' lunch box treats? Bordo Products Company, importers of nutritious pitted whole and diced dates, has this recipe suggestion for an uncommonly good cookie with all the ingredients children and adults favor. The ingredients are: Officer Slate DUP Announces New g injustice, unnecessary expenditures and commitments that jeopardize our future. BENNETT IS the only member of the Senate to serve on both the Finance Committee (that writes the tax laws) and the Banking and Currency Committee( that legislates monetary and gold policy). When the Republicans take control of the Senate he could have his choice of chairmanships of these or other committees. As Vice Chairman of the Senate Ethics Committee he brings a unique stature to himself and Utah. He was selected by his colleagues for his fairness, honesty, integnot sometimes, but always. rity Serving on two joint committees, Atomic Energy and Defense Production, he plays an important role in shaping our daily lives . . . now and in the future. He is BENNETT CARES Wallace Bennett is never too busy to help anyone with a government problem. Information on a wounded soldier in Vietnam . . . help for a family to cut government red tape . . . opportunities for students and other young men and women beginning useful, responsible lives. Theres time for a goverment problem you may have, too . . . and genuine help from the office of Utah's senior Senator. BENNETT DOES Senator can do many things. Some of them are his job and some are the result of his ability. Here's a brief list of some of the areas in which Sen. Bennett is doing a job for you and Utah: Agriculture, air service, reduction of crime, Customs office, defense, education, ethics, gold and silver, highways, imports, industry for Utah, fighting inflation, labor, mining, right to work, rural employment incentives, outdoor sports, water for Utah. A U. S. BENNETT SAYS "I am grateful for the honor and privilege of working for you in the Senate. The future poses problems, challenges and opportunities. With singleness of purpose I will continue to use my seniority and experience in your service." Take Time Take the time on Sept. 10 to vote in the Republican Primary. See that all voting-ag- e members of your family vote in the Republican Primary. Your vote put Bennett in the Seniority seat - let's keep him there for a stronger Utah. Vote Republican VOTE BENNETT Primary Sept. 10 (Paid Political ad by Volunteers for Bennett, Jaren L. Jones, Chairman) |