Friday, August 16, 1940 SOUTHERN OREGON MINER Go-to-School Headwear Will Include Chic Matched Turbans By CHERIE NICHOLAS a > Page 3 GENERAL HUGH 1. IÄTTERN JOHNSON Jaur: U mm * foiawa D epartment ÀAAAAAAAAAAAÀAAAAJ WNV flewirt and darts at the waistline. The circular skirt has a lovely, youth­ ful swing. Pattern No. 8727 is designed for sizes 14, 10, 18, 20; 40 and 42. Size 16 requires 4% yards of 39-inch m^erial without nap. Send order to: AN TO PEKHHING'S NUGGFHTION ITS high time to be tackling the go-to-school wardrobe problem. So far as millinery la concerned, thanks to the charming fashion of wearing bewitching little match tur­ bans, auch as have been so tre­ mendously popular of late, the col­ lege girls' plan of action la made perfectly clear. Just keep in mind the slogan "a matching turban with every frock or blouse or suit.’’ Sounds like a big order, doesn't It, but truth la it's as simple a way to get rid of the hat question as we know Not that new fall turbans arc go­ ing to repeat summer versions. In­ deed not! Just watch and see what happens when the fall style parade is in full swing. You arc going to aee the moat captivating, unusual little pompadour concoctions enroll under the turban regime, that fancy can picture. Designers are bending their efforts to create turbans that take kindly to the idea of being posed back of the new pompadour hairdo. So when you take a piece of your dress goods to match up a turban to go with your new fall frock be sure the model you select is the kind that will set off your fiattcring pompadour curls to perfection. Note the turban shown in the oval below to the left. Here a bright red drape is brought through a golden ring in a way that gives the exotic far cast caste to the picture It tells you that tur­ bans that tilt forward go fifty-fifty with the very new pompadour types. Assuming that you will be getting together a whole collection of tur­ bans to match (with each dress a self-fabric headpiece) we especially cite the "chignon" turban as a must have in the group. The turban with • chignon or with a bandanna tie Pompadour Felt Whether the hat be wide of brim, • tiny toque, a draped turban or a dramatic beret, milliners are tem­ pering them to the new pompadour hairdo. The model pictured accents sophisticated simplicity which is so Important just now. Its lavish brim with neat grosgrain ribbon band and short streamers at the back arc em­ inently style-right. Suede for Sports Is Coining for Fall Soft glove suede is being used by Voris, a West coast designer, in a collection of sports dresses for fall. One dress of suede, in a pottery pink shade, is collarless and has soft, unpressed pleats in the skirt. The belt is just a wide sash of brown suede. Another dress of beige suede has a fly-front closing, a per­ fectly straight skirt and deep, sad­ dle-stitched pockets on either hip. NEW YORK - General Pershing says that we ought to sell 50 "obso­ lete" destroyers to England to save our own country from Germany. On the same subject George Fielding Eliot says: "The question which we have to ask ourselves is a plain one. It ought not to be befuddled by such non-essentials as whether the trans­ fer of destroyers to Great Britain | would or would not be ‘an act of war*. It would be of course, but that is only an academic question . . . The legal definitions of interna­ tional conduct. , . are now obsolete." It seems that everything is now obsolete as far as it suits the pur­ pose of those who are hell-bent on getting this country Into a war for which it Is completely unprepared. The destroyers are "obsolete.” Our own engagements in treaties and conventions and the things we have always stood and sometimes fought for are, in international law, "ob­ solete.'' As to the destroyers being "obso­ lete": If they are, how does It hap­ pen, as men of this opinion intimate or argue, that the battle of Britain, the fate of the world's freedom and the safety of our own country de­ pend upon sending them to Britain? As an American officer said when it was being argued that we ought also to send over a million "obso­ lete" Springfield rifles, "No rifle is obsolete that will kill a man with at the nape of the neck la sure an aimed shot at 1.500 yards—espe­ newa that la news. You can cially when you have nothing with carry out the idea aa extreme which to replace it." as you please. Knotted and tied, A ship doesn't necessarily become the ends will atream down to "obsolete" or "surplus" simply be­ the waistline at the back or cause it is 10 years old. atop at the ahouldera. You can Nobody has shown this jnore get In the better ahopa a clever clearly and honestly than Major little chignon type auch aa LiUle Dache tnterpreta via a red. white Eliot. 1 don't know his qualifica­ and black ailk acarf manipulated tions as a naval expert, but apply­ aa you aee above to the left in the ing well known published naval standards and opinions as to the oval. Note the aaucy chignon frill 1 at the back and ace the impudent proper ratio of destroyers to battle- 1 ships. Major Eliot showed that prac­ bow to the fore dealgned to accent your widow'a peak to the utmoat. tically none of these destroyers is Thia type turban alao adapts itaelf surplus or can be taken without stripping our own navy. They are to the new pompadour hairdress. no more "surplus" than "obsolete *’ If you like bright stripes. tell the Just as a sidelight, most of them world thia fall via a atyliah peaked turban together with a gigantic are armed with four-inch and three- matching envelope bag of red, white, inch guns, as well as with anti­ Except for World yellow and blue atriped fabric aa aircraft guns. war 75 mm. artillery (about three- worn by the amartly clad young inch), cannon of higher caliber and woman pictured to the right. anti aircraft guns are what we do It adda to the glamour of the new not have, what we most need and jersey trucks that the majority of what we have the least prospect of them are accompanied with tur­ getting quickly. bans or toques made of the identi­ In Mr. Knudsen’s last progress cal jeraey. The Agure centered in report as published, "bottle-neck” the picture demonstrates how inter­ items of procurement were dis­ estingly the alliance of a atriped cussed as well as those in which jersey frock and a matching striped there were no bottle-necks. But he jersey draped turban work out. Here didn't mention cannon. He proba­ a reefer of dusty rose Aannel over bly didn't mention them because the a navy and white atriped Jersey 1 trouble there isn't just a bottle-neck. dreaa. navy shoes with dusty rose ’ It's a needle's eye and a flock of quilted bag and gloves add a defi­ camels. nite style touch, the cabochon twist Major Eliot is very frank and very of the matched jersey turban sup­ accurate in calling the shipment of plying the final touch of chic. See destroyers an "act of war." It is how tlatteringly it reveals the pom­ war itself. But it is vicarious war- padour. which, as said before, is the undercover war. The kind of war charactcriatic feature of the newer we have always condemned and turbans. pledged ourselves not to wage. The The vogue for matched fabric hats weakness of this position seems to me is expressed not only in turbans for to be this: Our policy always has this fall but we will see many been not to be aggressors in any brimmed sports hats made of tweeds war. We fight only when we are to match suits and coats to which attacked or threatened. add a shopping bag of the same and These war minded men are put behold a perfect ensemble for travel in the position of having to say. and and town wear. they do say. that we are so threat­ iReleused by Western Newspaper Union.) ened now—to the death. If that is not true, then we ought not to go to war—even to this blind-pig, bootleg war. If it is true, then we ought to go to war tomorrow—with every- 1 thing we have. In a fight to a knockout you can't "hit soft.” While the dress of the college girl • • • must assume a casual look, yet in LINDBERGH AND PERSHING reality it must observe most metic­ You can get a sample taste of ulous detail that insures for it style what "can happen here" from the distinction. debate in the senate blasting Charles You will thrill with delight at the Lindbergh's speech. sight of the new featherweight jer­ Three New Deal senators, than sey dresses styled in classic sim­ whom there are none whicher, plicity but spectacular at that be­ danced around the torture stake: cause of the fringed shawl of the Minton, Pepper and—with deep self-jersey that Is thrown noncha­ blushes for my own home state of lantly about one's shoulders. Oklahoma—that ineffable ex-teacher And then there are the newest-of- of elocution and Desarte, Josh Lee. the-new pinafore frocks. Can imagi­ These gentlemen offered to dis­ nation go beyond this—a navy dress embowel Lindbergh for saying that with a bright red pinafore of sheer wool with pleated apron skirt and if we are going to do business at a jumper top all carried out in de­ all after this war is over, we will mure little girl fashion yet skillfully have to do it with both victor and tuned to teen age wear? You will vanquished, even if the victor is Ger­ want to include one of the new and many, that we shall have to recon­ cile ourselves to this idea and that clever drawstring models done in jersey. They are fitted to waist with it would be wise to try to intercede to stop this war before it destroys drawstrings that tie in front. An­ any more of civilization. other suggestion is a plaid skirt with Some journals imply that Lind­ suede shirt in bright monotone. bergh's speech had been ghost-writ­ ten by Nazis and contrasted it with General Pershing’s urging that we send part of our navy—50 destroy­ ers—into this war by the subterfuge of "selling" them. Two-piece jacket-suits dramatize I disagree with part of what Lind­ color contrasts and blends more eye- bergh said, but the man who denies appealingly than ever. Some of the his right to say it as being un- new color contrast suggestions of­ American convicts himself thereby fered are olive green with mauve, of an un-American state of mind out- brown with pale blue, plum with Hitlering Hitler. pale blue, dark brown with toffee Black Jack at 80 is still one of tan, red with hunter’s green and so the world's great soldiers, but he on and on with the color spectrum knows as little naval strategy as I. fashion will make merry this fall. George Eliot unconsciously "obso- The schemes are worked out with monotone tweeds coupled with plaids leted" his text at the moment of its and stripes. Lots of plaid is 01« the utterance. However, it may later way for fall. It will be tailored into be dragooned by the apostate Knox. long coats, into separate jacket! and I happen to know that the navy doesn't agree with General Pershing. for the costume entire. Fashion Hints for The College Girl Solid Mrs. Newed entered the dining­ room and proudly placed the chicken on the table. “There you are, my dear, my first chicken!” she exclaimed. Mr. Newed gazed with admira­ tion at the bird’s shape. “It's wonderful, darling,” he beamed, "and how beautifully you’ve stuffed it.” "Stuffed?” she echoed. "But, my dear, this one wasn’t hollow.” ■ SEWINO C1KCI.K PATTERN DEPT, its New Montso.'nery Ave. See Francisco - • Calli. Enclose 15 cents in coms tor Pattern No........ ........ Size......... . Name .............. . ...................... ................... Address ....................................................... President Inviolable Good Dog There it a very tweet girl uho rtutterr. One night, when a man friend uat leav­ ing, rhe accompanied him to the door and raid: “George, are you coming egain next S-r-r-r-t----- ?“ The dog war on the doortlep. After George nai half a mile doun the road, with the dog gaining on him at every leap, it occurred to him that portibly the girl had intended to ray “Sunday“ inrtead of "Seize him“; hut it didn't occur to the dog for a mile or ro be­ yond that. Theoretically, the President of Vie United States cannot be legal­ ly arrested for any act whatso­ ever, even the commission of mur­ der. His person is inviolable dur­ ing his term of office and he is beyond the reach of any other de­ partment of the government, ex­ cept through impeachment. If the President were impeached, con­ victed and removed from office he would then be subject to arrest as a private citizen. The President might be arrested by mistake. DOES SAVE \ / There Are Two Way» to Get at Constipation "Do yeu find it more economi­ es! to do your own cooking?” "Oh, mRch! Since I have been cooking my husband only eats half what he used to.” Yes, and only two ways-befora and after It happen»! Instead of enduring those dull, tired, head­ achy days and then having to take an emergency cathartic-why not KEEP regular with Kellogg’s All-Bran? You can, if your con­ stipation Is the kind millions have -due to lack of “bulk" tn the diet. For All-Bran goes right to the catue of this trouble by supplying the “bulk" you need. Eat thia toasted, nutritious cereal regularly— with milk ar cream, or baked into muffins— drink plenty of water, and see if your life isn't a whole lot bright­ His Own Returns "Any birthday “Yes. I lent to surprises among your DERFECT to put on and wear presents?” * right now in flat crepe, silk Wilson gave me a book print or spun rayon, this beauti­ Brown six months ago.” fully cut shirtwaist fashion will be a cool delight on the hottest The moth leads an awful life: days of summer. No. 8727 will look be spends the summer in a fur so crisp and fresh, in striped lin­ coat and the winter in a bathing en, polka dot silk or brilliant white suit. sharkskin. And it will feel com­ er! Made by Kellogg's in Battle fortable and unhampering, be­ Creek. If your condition is chron­ Recount cause the lines are so simple and ic, it is wise to consult a physician. Marriage Registrar—Let’s see, free. The bodice can be fastened today's the sixteenth, isn’t it? with three buttons and turned Film Star—Say! What’s the big back in narrow, deep revers, or idea? It’s only my ninth. buttoned almost to the throat, with Glad Season shallow revers. He Knows Youth is to all the glad season Why not have it both ways, since "Are you going to put a ’Wet it’s so very easy to make? There’s of life; but often only by what it Paint’ sign on your gate?” practically no detailing to it—just attains or what it escapes.—Car­ "Certainly not! Do you think I a few gathers beneath the yoke lyle. want finger-marks all over it?” V Jlsk Me »Another A General Quiz ___ J PRESERVE THE The Quegtiona 1. Who wrote the poem in which appear the words: "Stone walls do not a prison make"? 2. Do the Eskimos have a word for any number beyond twenty? 3. When a military man speaks of logistics, he refers to what? 4. Which President of the United States lived to be 90 years of age? 5. Which of the following have the highest diplomatic rank—con­ suls, ambassadors, or ministers? 6. A long ton is equal to how many pounds? The Antwert FLAVOR AS WELL AS THE FRUIT ttitutt end Hetueheld Searchlight. If your dealer cannot supply send 20f with your dealer’s name for a Trial Package of 48 genuine Pe-Ko Jar Rings; sent prepaid. PE-KO EDGE JAR RUBBERS 1. Richard Lovelace (“To Al­ ---------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------- thea from Prison”). United States Rubber Company;||C' 2. No. Their word twenty actu­ Rockefeller C • n ♦ e r New York N Y ally means "a-man-counted-to-the- end.” 3. Logistics refers to transport Our Faults Valuable Book •nd supply. Other men ’s faults are before That is a good book which is 4. John Adams. opened with expectation and our eyes; our own behind our 5. Ambassadors. backs.—Seneca. closed with profit.—AlcotL fl. A long ton is 2,240 pounds. —he topped his league In pitching last year HAS TO BE MILD. CAMELS BURN SLOWER AND GIVE ME EXTRA MILDNESS. I LIKE ALL THOSE OTHER EXTRAS IN Color Contrast in Fall Wool Suits EXTRA MILDNESS EXTRA COOLNESS EXTRA FLAVOR • In recent laboratory tests, CAMELS burned 2596 flower than the average of the 15 other of the largest-selling brands tested—slower than wssy of them. That means, on the average, a smoking plui equal to «ET THE "EXTRAS” WITH SLOWER-BURNING CAMELS 5 EXTRA SMOKES PER PACKl THE CIGARETTE OF COSTLIER TOBACCOS