Southern Oregon miner. (Ashland, Or.) 1935-1946, August 30, 1940, Page 3, Image 3

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    SOUTHERN OREGON MINER
Friday, Auguri 30, 1940
Page 3
New Autumn Suit Silhouette
Registers Rigorous Changes
Easy-to-Make Slip
Flatters the Figure
By CHERIE NICHOLAS
("I\uti Hermany hut prohibited the
rnumrlint »/ imili by uornrn, o/io hp
rouga unit the u earing <>/ tlarki in
public.
Il brundi theta cuitiimi at
pagan." Nru• item J
To slaughter and to pillage
Is quite a proper course;
One bombs the Red Cross emblem
Without the least remorse;
To lie and trick and threaten
Is something big and fine
But polished nails and lip rouge—
They are a pagan sign!
II.
To tear up written treaties—
Ah, that is quite okay;
To break the solemn promise—
It's done by us each dayl
To jump on little nations
Is not wrong in the least.
But lacquer on a lady—
It truly marks the beast!
Ill
Machine-gunning the aged
Is something done in stride;
Great racial persecutions
Just help to swell our pride;
A blitzkrieg is a process
COOI. DRINKN ARK REFREHH1NG ON HOT SUMMER DAYS
(Recipes Below.)
Even on the stickiest, hottest sum-
Is Fattier fussy about his food?
I tart, icy drink
Then you'll surely want Eleanor
will refresh you.
Howe's cook book, "Feeding Fa­
Fruit drinks, in
ther." It has loads of recipes for
particular,
are
the foods father likes best-reci­
good; when you
pes which have been tested and
drink a frosty
approved by homemakers as well
tumbler of lemon­
as fathersl You can have a copy
ade or chilled or­
of this cook book by sending 10
ange juice, you
cents In coin. Address your let­
not only feel cooi-
ter to "Feeding Father," care of
er, you arc cooler, Fresh fruit drinks
Eleanor Howe, BIB N. Michigan
actually ward off the heat of sum-
Avenue, Chicago, Illinois.
mer.
Fruit beverages provide the min­
erals and vitamins the body re­ Pour Into the freezing compartment
quires. and. because of the sugar of Ice cream freezer. Pour in the
added for sweetening, are fairly stiffly beaten egg whites, assemble
high In food energy.
the freezer, and cover. Pack with
It’s very easy to serve "soda foun­ mixture of three parts crushed ice
tain specials" at home. Any combi­ to one part rock salt Freeze, un­
nation of fruit juices makes a de­ til turning becomes difficult Re­
lightful and refreshing beverage— move dasher, fold in chocolate, and
provided some of the more tart pack down the cream with a spoon.
juices, such as those from lemons, Cover, and allow to ripen for one
slightly sour oranges, or rhubarb- hour before serving.
Pineapple Raspberry Punch.
are used to keep the beverage from
(Serves 25)
tasting too sweet and fiat. Use slices
6 cups crushed pineapple
of orange or lemon, mint leaves,
8 cups raspberry juice
whole, fresh or canned cherries or
3 quarts gingerale
berries, for garnishing. Ice cubes
Crushed ice
for chilling fruit drinks or iced tea
Mix crushed pineapple and- the
might be frozen from orange or lem­
on juice, to avoid diluting the bev­ raspberry juice thoroughly. Just be­
erage. Mint leaves, bits of lemon fore serving, add gingerale and ice.
Fool Proof Cookies.
peel or cherries can be frozen Into
(Yield 3 dozen)
the cubes. For iced coffee, pour
2 cups flour
some of the coffee into the freezing
*4 cup brown sugar
tray of your refrigerator, and
% cup butter
freeze. Then use the coffee cubes
Mix and sift flour and sugar to­
for chilling the drink.
Sugar syrup, used for sweetening. gether. Then work butter into the
mixture with the
Is easily mixed throughout the whole
finger tips, form­
drink, and makes
ing a soft dough.
a smoother tast­
Roll to 14-inch in
ing, smoother tex­
thickness and cut
tured drink, than
with cookie cut­
when
unmelted
ter in any desired
sugar has been
shape. Brush with
added. To make
yolk of one egg,
the sugar syrup,
beaten, and dilut-
boil 4 cups of sug­
ar with 4 cups of water, for 10 min­ ed with *« teaspoon water. Bake
utes. Pour into clean, hot jars, and in a moderate oven (350 degrees)
seal. Store In refrigerator, and use approximately 12 minutes.
Chocolate Freese.
as needed.
(Makes 4 large glasses)
Serve crisp cookies or dainty
4 tablespoons sugar
sandwiches with iced drinks for sim­
4 tablespoons cocoa
ple afternoon or evening refresh­
*4 teaspoon salt
ments.
*4 cup boiling water
Lemonade.
2 cups milk (scalded)
Follow these three rules if you
V4 teaspoon vanilla
want to make perfect lemonade: Use
Crushed ice
fresh lemon juice and plenty of it;
Whipped cream
sweeten to the taste of each—not
Combine sugar, cocoa and salt
too much sweetening for folks who
like it sour—sweeter for those with Add boiling water and cook for 2
a sweet tooth; use Ice and more ice. minutes. Remove from fire, and
combine with scalded milk. Pour
For each person served, allow:
into glasses filled with crushed ice,
1 lemon
and serve with a spoonful of whipped
1 to 2 tablespoons sugar or honey
cream garnishing each glass
1 cup cold water
Blackberry CocktaU.
Ice
(Serves 4)
Extract lemon juice. Add sugar
Mix together 2 cups blackberry
or honey to taste. Stir to dissolve.
Add water. Serve over ice in large juice, 1 cup orange juice. Mi cup
glasses. Garnish with lemon slice lemon juice, and 1 cup water. Add
on rim of glass. To make lemon Mi cup sugar syrup and blend. Pour
fizz, make lemonade with carbon­ over ice and shake thoroughly. Gar­
nish with very thin slices of orange.
ated water.
Sugar syrup—Boil 1 cup water
and 2 cups sugar together for 1
"Simple Desserts for Summer
minute
Menus" is an article you'll want
Iced Coffee.
to read. Watch for it in this col­
Make coffee a little stronger than
umn next week.
usual. Cool, and serve in tall glasses
filled with cracked ice. Top with
Sugar Cookies.
whipped cream. If desired, cream
Mi cup butter
may be poured on the ice before
>4 cup granulated sugar
the coffee is added.
1 egg, well beaten
Iced Tea.
1!4 cups pastry flour
Rinse teapot with boiling water.
1 teaspoon baking powder
Place tea in pot, allowing one tea­
Mi teaspoon salt
spoon of the tea per cup. Pour
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
freshly boiling water over the tea
Cream butter, add sugar and egg. leaves and allow to steep, not boil,
Sift dry ingredients and add with for 3 to 5 minutes. Pour tea over
the extracts. Flour and sugar the chipped ice, to cool it quickly. Serve
board and roll the cookies on it. in tall glasses garnished with lemon
Dust heavily with sugar, roll it in a slices and sprigs of mint
little, cut in cookie shapes, and bake (Rolouaed by Western Newspaper Union.)
in a moderate oven (3S0 degrees)
Tip« on Wash Dresses
10 to 12 minutes.
When purchasing materials for
Chocolate Chip lee Cream.
washable garments, make sure that
(Makes 1 gallon)
buttons, belt buckles and shoulder
1 cup sugar
paddings are of the sort that will
■4 cup flour
stand up under frequent tubbings
2 quarts milk (scalded)
and that contrasting materials for
4 eggs (separated)
trimmings, braid or bindings are
4 teaspoons vanilla
also color-fast
14 teaspoon salt
2 cups semi-sweet chocolate (cut
Double Duty Equipment
In bits)
Ingeniously designed to do double
Combine sugar and flour, and add duty are two new pieces of house­
scalded milk slowly. Then cook hold equipment—a washer that be­
over low heat, stirring constantly. comes a useful kitchen table when It
Remove from heat. Beat egg yolks, isn’t in action and an ironer that
and blend with 14 cup of the hot folds into a handsome hardwood cab­
mixture, then add to the custard, to­ inet, suitable for use in the living
gether with vanilla and salt Chill. room.
Most civilized and gay—
| But fingernails when colored
They mark the heathen way.
IV.
To set the world on fire
Is quite a normal act;
To terrorize a planet
Is normal; it's a fact!
The U-boat and the bomber
We do not think unkind
, But slacks upon a woman
Reveal a savage mind.
V.
* A gas mask on a baby.
Ah, there's a pretty sight!
An ambulance when burning
Is perfectly all right;
A child in bombproof shelter
Is nothing very sad.
But lip rouge on a woman—
Ach, Gott! but that is bad!
• • •
j
;
1
,
I? EST dressed women have long
since proved through experience
the wisdom of investing in a new
suit at the very start-off of the au­
tumn season. In a smart suit and a
goodly supply of eye-thrilling ac­
cessories you have an investment
that will yield a hundred per cent to
the good right through until fur coat
time and then likely as not you will
be wearing your suit under your
coat on many a wintry day.
The call for a new suit (with ac­
cent on new) becomes positively
imperative this particular fall be­
cause lines have undergone such
drastic change they make a last-
year model look hopelessly passe.
The new silhouette somehow con­
trives to give the impression of be­
Tokyo is terribly indignant be­
ing narrow and straight though as a
cause Uncle Sam has decided not
matter of fact it does not at all
to sell her any more gasoline. Na­
times entirely eliminate pleats and
tions that chase democracies up
other devices that insure free and
dark alleys and run over them every
easy movement. As to jackets, they
chance they get can't see what on
are slimmed and lengthened to give
earth could make a democracy stop
the new long-torso look.
furnishing the gas and oil
Just now the world of fashion is
• • •
HOME EMERGENCY
all agog concerning the hand­
The way the Yanks are going, why some, neat and trim black silk suits
isn't it a good idea to forget about made either of faille or bengaline
giving those 50 destroyers to Eng­ or smart moire. The charming suit
land and give them to Joe Mc- centered in the picture is tailored of
Carthy?
black moire. The skirt is interest­
• • •
ing because it is skilfully manipu­
The question put by the French lated to preserve the coveted slen­
court to all those former leaders will i der line so indicative of the new
be obviously. "Do you plead guilty trend, at the same time that im­
pressed pleats are introduced. Also
or guilty?"
• • •
the long-torso contour, which is a
The treasury department reports major fashion law this season, is in­
that there were only 50 Americans terpreted in the smartly tailored
in 1B38 with incomes of more than
a million dollars. And nobody is
more surprised over it than the j
Americans with the incomes.
• • •
Long Gloves
NEW VERSION
You are a guardsman now.
You are a guardsman now;
To stay in one state
Your chance isn't great—
You are a guardsman now.
• • •
Quentin Reynolds calls General
De Gaulle "The Man Who Didn't
Quit" He’s one Gaulle, says Dinah
Shore, whom Hitler would like to
divide into three parts.
• • •
Nothing stumps Mayor LaGuardia
of New York. Now he addresses
200 housewives on how to cook and
run a home. "Never throw away a
soupbone." ne warns.
"It isn't
economy." "Cook a pie," advises
the mayor, "only when you have a
roast on. so that you will save
fuel.”
"Nonsense." cries Elmer
Twitchell, the great pastry lover.
"Never cook a roast unless you
have a pie on."
• • •
Nothing in years has made us feel
that our nati&na) safety is so in­
secure as the recent newspaper and
newsreel pictures of three pudgy,
middle-aged United States congress­
men on their knees, aiming army
rifles at cameras, and all under the
caption, "Study United States De­
fenses.”
• • •
PROOFS THAT IT’S A CRAZY
WORLD
Neville Chamberlain says he is not
for appeasement.
A Democrat has won the Repub­
lican nomination for the presidency.
Adolf Hitler is spending the sum­
mer in Paris.
The Brooklyn baseball club looks
like a pennant winner.
Henry Ford has said "Yes" to a
proposition from President Roose­
velt.
The Foch peace car is now in Ber­
lin.
I
<
;
jacket. The fastenings of gold but­
tons are especially significant, in
that they confirm the report that
gold jewelry and gadgets are to re­
turn this fall and winter. There’s
important news too, in the hat this
fashionably attired young lady is
wearing in that it is one of the dra­
matic profile shapes that’s the lat­
est, according to expert millinery
advice.
The suit to the left flashes impor­
tant highlights in more ways than
one. To begin with, the material
of which it is made is a finely ribbed
woolen and all the fashion notes will
tell you that ribbed weaves abound
in the fabric realm this fall. Again
this model gives accent to the long­
er jacket vogue. The slenderizing
narrow skirt is also made a feature
in this instance. It is one of the very
new side drape types. And now for
the most telling fashion stroke of all
which this mode registers—jet but­
tons fasten it!
The new tweeds for fall are gor­
geous. The challenge is going to be
whether to buy an all black suit
such as the new style program pro­
claims for fall or to go in for color­
ful tweed with all your might The
ideal course of action is to acquire
both, black for the more formal,
dignified moments, and a carefree
vividly colorful plaid contrasting a
monotone skirt for nonchalant go­
ing about. Make it an all-plaid suit
for that matter for the suit of plaid
looms up on fashion's horizon in no
uncertain way. The practical thing
to do is to buy a plaid suit also
a monotone skirt that picks up one of
the colors in the plaid. This will
give you welcome changes that tune
to time and event For the model
pictured a vivid plaid is selected
for the long-torso jacket the same
topping a narrow skirt done in mono­
tone.
(Released by Western Newspaper Union.)
Ladylike Fashions
Keynote for Fall
yOU can’t just wear any old slip
* and expect your small-waisted
frocks to have the smooth, suave,
round-bosomed line they should
have. Here’s a design (1892-B)
especially planned to do its part
toward figure-flattery, and to fit
as only a slip you make to your
measure can fit. The top has
bosom gathers to give you a little
extra fullness. The waistline is
dart-fitted so that it melts into
your middle just beautifully.
These are simple details, very
easy to do, but they make all the
difference in the fit of your slip,
and therefore in the fit of your
frocks.
There are seven easy
steps in your detailed sew chart.
Make yourself a whole wardrobe
of slips like this, light and dark,
of satin, lingerie crepe or taffeta,
and some batistes and linens for
your coming cottons.
Barbara Bell Pattern No. 1892-B
is designed for sizes 14, 16, 18,
20; 40 and 42. Corresponding bust
measurements 32, 34, 36, 38, 40 and
42. Size 16 (34) requires 2% yards
of 39-inch material without-nap for
built-up shoulders; 2Mi yards for
strap style; 11 yards of shirred
lace. Send order to;
SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT.
149 New Montsomery Ave.
San Francisco
Calif.
Enclose 15 cents in coins for
Pattern No..................... Size...................
Name ......................................................
Address ........................................................
Love of a Good Man
In the love of a brave and faith­
ful man there is always a strain
of maternal tenderness; he gives
out again those beams of protect­
ing fondness which were shed on
him as he lay on his mother’«
knee.—George Eliot.
The new autumn style program
place« the emphasis on dignity and
conservatism in dress. The major­
No Different
ity of frocks arriving are simply
Burglar (to heiress)—I don't want’
fashioned carrying their style mes­
your life but your money, miss.
sage through an entirely new sil­
Heiress—Go away, you're just like
houette that narrows skirts into easy
natural lines, modifies shoulders in j the rest of them.
bodice, blouse and jackets, length- i
ens sleeves to below elbow or to '
wrist.
The early call is for blacks and
browns and rich greens in suit or
ensembles. Hats are not freakish
ROLL DEVELOPED
and they are styled to fit snugly
and they are tuned to the type of
8 Prints & 2
hairdress you adopt.
5x7 Enlargements AO
Materials say quality at a glance.
The dresses in the new collections
MAIL TOUR FILM«
are designed along simple wearable
Fast Rellabla Servit»
lines, glorified with fetching details
that bespeak their newness.
Pacific Photo Service
F. O. BOX 3753X
And when all is said and done,
9OSTLAID ... OBBOOB
you are going to be charmed with
the new order of things in that
good taste is evidenced all the way
through heightened with dramatic
touches of color in jewelry and
gloves and other accessories that
add fascination to the entire scheme
of costume design for the coming
months.
Film Developing
!
In this picture below-the-elbow
sleeves and long gloves meet in just
the right spot to look fashion-cor­
rect. These American-made slip-
ons of velvety soft mocha make a
dramatic contrast to the natural
Russian lynx jacket. While the
gloves’ extra length and their ex­
quisite finish give them an extrava­
gant air, the fact that they are
American made means long wear
and washability, thus keeping them
in the practical class.
Military Headgear
From New Zealand
The picturesque headgear of the
Australian and New Zealand soldiers
la influencing much of the new mil­
linery shown by London hat design­
ers. These styles have high pinched
crowns and wide brims. Some of
the brims are simply flat and
straight, while others turn up at one
aide and fasten under the chin with
a military looking strap.
Jersey for Dress
The Coming Season
When you dress up this coming
season, you will probably put on
jersey, but you may not recognize
it as such, it will be so changed.
Afternoon dresses are being made
of uncut velvet jersey and dinner
gowns of ribbed crepe jersey. Eve­
ning gowns will be shown in thin
chiffon gauze jersey and a two-faced
iridescent jersey, each side a dif­
ferent color, while shiny white vel­
vet jersey will be seen in wedding
gowns.
largvil and bail locatod hotol
1000 ROOMS • 1000 BATHS
$4 ona parton, $4 two parvona
MANAGtMINT DAN L10ND0N
HOTEL ST. FRANCIS
ovarioohing
UNION SQUARI