The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980, May 25, 1958, Page 53, Image 53

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    re
Ml mskm
. f ,4 "' j '
nn
a
SOUCAKER T 5r"
VOKII IA 1TKOWC
I V DWAM
r ,', "'
4 J'
Hi-CECIL WATER FLOAT
for only 2 Hi-C Label and $2.00
(RETAIL VALUE $4.95)
Send for yours today.
Hi-C P. O. BOX 390 NEW YORK 10, N. Y.
(Ofltr void whara taxed or restricted)
ladiaa Necklact
Marion Ullmark
rant to make an Indian neck
lace? Here's how! Cut a piece
of heavy string 12 inches long.
Thread eight pieces of shell macaroni
on the string. Now cut four half-moon-shaped
pieces from colored paper, and
punch a hole in each. Thread one half
moon piece on the string. Add four
pieces of macaroni, another half-moon
and four more macaroni pieces. Con
tinue in this way until the half-moons
are used. Finish with eight more pieces
of shell macaroni. Knot the two ends
of the string to short lengths of ribbon
and tie around your neck.
Ptncil Charades
E. Trussed
'ere is a game that's fun for
a party or for your class at
school. Any number of people
from two to 30 or 40 can play it
Make a list of names which fit a
category, such as: presidents, capital
cities, book titles, etc. (For book titles
you could have Robinson Crusoe,
Treasure Island, Little Women, Dr. Do
little, Bob, Son of Battle, and Grimm's,
Fairy Tales.)
Have each player select a name from
the list without telling anyone else
what it is. Give each player a piece of
typing paper. On this he draws a pic
ture or pictures which give clues to the
name he has selected. Then he shows
the pictures to the group and asks them
to try to guess the name of the person,
place, or book pictured.
Here is an example. What U.S. Pres
ident do these pictures represent?
20
Let's Draw a DlMsaur
Ann Davidow
Diplodocus
The Dinosaur
Roamed the earth
In days of yore.
Though he galumphed
With might and main,
He only had a
Cricket's brain,
And all the bulk
He dragged behind
Would have dismayed
The largest mind.
Oh, what a clod
He seems to us,
The Dinosaur
-Diplodocus!
6
Cup Catch
Ida M. Pardua
f
This game is played with two paper cups and
a 12-inch piece of string.
Near the rim of each cup poke a small hole. Thread
the string into the hole and tie in a tight knot
Tie the other end of the string to the other cup.
To play, hold one cup in your hand and let the other
dangle. Now swing and try to land the bottom cup
in the one you are holding.
A Tricky Card Trick Tkat Baffles Everyoat!
Raqna Estil
. J l r-tt a
se a regular ai-cara aecic onume. noia
the deck face down in your hand and turn up
the top cardSay it is a six of any suit Lay
it on the table, face up.' Say "six" and then count off
the next cards, calling them "seven, eight, nine, ten,"
no matter what they actually are and lay them face
up on top of each other.
Move this pile to one side and take the next card.
Say it is an ace. Lay it on the table and begin count
ing off as before, beginning with "one" and con
tinuing to "ten." Move that pile aside.
- Make as many piles as there are cards but when
ever you turn up a jack, queen, or king as the first
card, place it on the bottom of the deck in your hand.
Suppose one of your top cards is a "ten." Leave this
by itself, counting it as a separate pile.
When you have too few cards left to count to "ten,"
or all the cards left in your hand are face cards, just
hold them. Then turn all the piles you have made,
face down without disturbing their order.
Now ask your friends to indicate three of the
piles any three and move them, still face down, to
one side.- Pick up all the others, put them with the
ones in your hand, and count off 19 no more, no
less. These you discard. Now count the remaining
cards out loud. Then turn up the top card of each
of the three piles remaining on the table the ones
your friends set aside. -You will find that the count
of the figures on these top cards will total the same
as the number of cards left in your hand. If, for
instance, the top cards are a six, a three, and a four
making 13; you have 13 cards left in your hand. It
never fails! It's fun! Try it! ""
21
. y . r . . .
A
i
c.
I
S3) :
" " ,
'I
V 8
X,
r i f
it'. " -
MM uouid 7
NOTHING... smooths, softens, satinizes
skin better than Lanolin Plus Liquid
Exclusive formula, 5 times richer in pure lanolin, begins where
nature leaves off, to help skin stay gloriously young
To look young and radiant, your skin needs
a steady supply of vital oils. But, as skin
matures, nature often becomes stingy with
these oils. Then come dryness, lines and
wrinkles.
That's when you need Lanolin Plus
Liquid. Its exclusive patented formula con
tains five times more lanolin than any other
cosmetic. It restores to dry skin nature's
closest duplication of your own skin oils. At
its touch, your skin becomes petal soft . . .
so fresh, so smooth, younger looking. Use
Lanolin Plus Liquid as cleanser, make-up
base, night conditioner. Five-times-richer
Lanolin Plus Liquid is also the ingredient '
in all Lanolin Plus Aids to Beauty.
it 1 1'.'
Upttick '35'
Try the other wonderful Lamoun Plus Beauty Aid
for face, hands and hair. $1 and up. Ia Canada, too.
Family Weekly, May IS, 195
Family Weekly, May 25, 1M