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Show Interior Decorator Wi!l Demonstrate Use of Colors 5- . -,. ' Is L.. roundings but also the personality as well. Going a step further, Mrs. Reid has this helpful hint to pass along to the women of America; just as a blonde would choose dusty blues blue greens and blue pinks for her personal clothing, so should she use these same colors in decorating decorat-ing her home. Those are her best colors for dressing, and her best colors for expressing her personality personal-ity in her home. Of course, if you happen to be a readhead, you'll be better off with wedgewood blue, most greens beige and brown, says Mrs. Reid. And brunettes should stick to yellow yel-low and its compliments. If your hair has turned to silver your luckier luck-ier than you think. No-one else can use beautiful Stuyvesant blue, purple and mauve quite as well as you. All these interesting professional tips on the use of color for free for the visiting next Monday, Aug. 28, when Tri-State Lumber Company Comp-any presents Mrs. Reid at their Delta, Utah, Store. Of even more importance, Mrs. Reid is bringing along the famous Devoe scientific color selector, which enables the operator to work out a color analysis for the subject. Just what the intracacies of this gadget are we frankly don't know. But we are assured it helps Mrs. Reid to determine your color range, color compliments and a col or scheme for your home. If it can do all those things, perhaps it isn't necessary to understand too much about it's wiring and electronic tubes and fuses. Oh yes - - - better bring along the man in the family, when you come. With another woman telling him about all these new changes in interior color schemes, he's going go-ing to be educated to the facts a lot quicker. Mrs. Norma C. Reid It is better to use plenty of color col-or and be interesting, at the risk of being vulgar, than to stick with too refined shades and end up dull according to a nationally famous color stylist, who arrives in Delta on August 28. A graduate of University of Michigan School of Architecture & Design, Mrs. Norma C. Reid has taught interior decorating for many years. In fact some of her pupils are leading representatives in the field Mrs. Reid has also spent several years in color research resear-ch and is now color stylist for Devoe and Reynolds Company, Inc. So, as you'll readily agree, the lady knows whereof she speaks. Hardly the gaudy, gay type, Mrs Reid still is a forceful personality who believes in color and plenty of it, so long as it's used correctly. And advice on proper shades to suit the individual is her strongest suit. For example, she says that the colors used in homes today should not only match the sur- |