Southern Oregon miner. (Ashland, Or.) 1935-1946, May 09, 1941, Page 3, Image 3

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

    Friday, May 9, 1941
SOUTHERN OREGON MINER
Page 3
f
Linen Assumes Important Rol<
As Fabric for Summer Wardrobes
PATTERNS
By CHERIE NICHOLAS
riì.Phi/Hpj-
W PiU «W’tf»
»f
1
{
i
1
i
!
i
|
N ASSEMBLING the new summer
I wardrobe, don't overlook the im­
portance of linen for all-occasion
wear. There really Is no material
that more faithfully holds its own
than handsome Irish linen.
With
women of discriminating taste, fine
linen Is a tradition, and now, be­
cause of scientific processing, the
new linens are rendered practically
non-wrinkable.
Aside from the practical view,
which ranks linen high because of
its complete washability, crease-
resistancy and adaptability to any
type of wearing apparel, style ex­
perts are suggesting linen because
of the beautiful colors in which it
may now be purchased.
A trend Oils season is the com­
bining of linen with another fabric.
You'll see many linen dresses with
wool coats, lined and collared to
match the dress. Linen also may be
combined with silk or rayon prints
very effectively. Often a monotone
linen coat is lined with the print of a
matching frock. In these instances,
the linen used is one of the heavier,
sturdier weaves, either plain or
with self-plaid woven into the fabric.
A fashion highlight this season is
the newly styled longer jackets of
solid colored linen, worn over bright
gingham checks or printed cottons.
The attractive ensemble centered in
the photograph illustrates the idea.
The jacket, of deep green linen, is
cut as expertly and fits as suavely
as any painstakingly tailored wool.
It tops a black, white and green
checked dress which follows careful­
ly the lines of a classic shirtwaist
frock.
The use of linen in two-toned com­
binations Is a this-acason theme that
stresses the popular contrast-color
Dramatic Bags
vogue. Two shades of Irish linen, a
rich tan and a deep green, combine
to dramatize the South American in­
fluence shown in the simulated bo­
lero of this good-looking dress. This
Is a fashion designed by Schlaparel-
li for gay young folk.
It’s three cheers for the red-
white-and-blue” when the classic
shirtwaist dress shown to the left in
the group marches along in the fash­
ion parade. The dress is of blue
The
wrinkle-resistant Irish linen,
double blue-and-white collar and
cuffs are edged with red rickrack,
and the chic crocheted belt also com­
bines the three colors.
A fashion that women will wel­
come Is the rcdlngote that is styled
of linen in handsome dark mono-
tones.
This is worn over print
frocks very effectively and over linen
dresses of a contrasting shade. A
practical as well as smart item tn
any wardrobe is the linen suit that is
fashioned with the longer jacket In
navy or dark green or toast brown
It invites many uses, for the jacket
may be worn over casual frocks
when not worn with Its matching
skirt
The young set glories this season
tn the new line middy blouse fash-
ions, As summer advances, dance
floors will boast linen dinner dresses.
On beaches, dressmaker bathing
suits In linen will take to the water
and many play suits and beach
dresses of Irish linen will be worn
by vacationers.
(Relsased by Western Newspaper Union.I
White-Ground Prints New
In Summer Fashion Picture
It Is the white-ground prints that
have the coveted "ni -r” look. The
black-on-white combination is espe­
cially smart Wear with these black-
and-whites one of the very voguish
large Milan hats, carry a patent bag
matched with pumps, splash a dash
of red or yellow in gloves and your
boutonniere—the sum total will be
“style.”
Blue on white is also new and the
prints that pattern red or yellow on
white are exceedingly chic.
Handknit Apparel Enjoys
Increase in Popularity
There is a large demand for hand­
knit apparel.
Even the machine
knits have been brought to such a
point of perfection that they have
the handknit look. Dresses are so
expertly fashioned that they do not
miss any of the styling details that
give distinction to fabric treat­
ments.
Sweaters and cardigans abound in
unique trimmings, such as wool
yarn fringe, dangling tassels, em­
broideries and knitted skirts are now
made with pleats or gores.
Low-Cut Necklines Call
For Bra to Match Dress
Dramatic bags, with swank shoes
of shiny perforated leather to match,
are smart as can be. In the under­
arm bag designed by Jenny which
the young modern pictured is carry­
ing, shiny black patent leather is
cleverly used to form wings of ruf­
fled and perforated patent. This bag
is roomy but compact and is styled
with all the "last word” improve­
ments. You will find it the perfect
complement for your new tailleur
and particularly chic carried with the
Bow-so-voguish black faille jacket
suits. By the way, the topknot that
surmounts the pretty head of the
young lady here posing is a very
new-fashion chapeau.
Newest wrist watches are square,
made of pink gold, set with dia­
monds and rubies and fastened with
a maroon wrist cord.
Necklines are on their way down
and down, almost to the waistline.
With this type of dress, comes a bra
to match. You can fasten the open
point high or low, as you wish. The
latest blouses have open-throat col­
lared necklines that may be adjusted
at will.
Brims Large, Small
LI KE AND ELMER ON
NA( ItlEICE
Luke—1 suppose you’ve heard the
President's warnings on the sacri­
fices every Arncricun man and wom­
an will huve to meet now that the
all-out aid program is in full swing.
Elmer—Yes, and no truer word
was ever spoken. But I doubt that
more than one American in a thou­
sand appreciates it.
Luke—I hope it don't come to a
point where I have to stay home
week-ends.
Elmer — There
you go! You’re a
typical case, You
are one of the
great army of
who
Americans
don't mind sacri­
ficing as long as
it don’t make ’em lay up the big
car, shorten up the pleasure trips
or cut down on the night club par-
ties.
Luke—Ain't a guy got a right to
his own idea of what a sacrifice
means?
Elmer—Not up to the point where
he thinks it’s strictly a baseball
term.
Luke—You don't expect people to
go around demanding a chance to
sacrifice, do you?
Elmer—Not yet. but 1 think it will
be strictly a routine impulse be­
fore the year is over. Mr. Roose­
velt gave a plain warning in strong
language, but the people still need
i to be stirred up to a full apprecia-
i tlon of what it all really means. This
country has been in an atmosphere
j of marathon
waltzing,
express
: speedways, de luxe settings, special
i upholstery and bottle feeding for so
¡many years that too many people
! *bll think it's a sacrifice to get up
,the. B1*rm goM.
I instead of waiting for the repeat
Luke—I guess maybe you're right
I know some fellers who would think
they was making the sacrifice of a
lifetime if they had to work twenty
minutes overtime in even a soft job
like judging a Miss America contest.
Elmer—And I could point out a
lot of ’em who could applaud every
I word the Presi­
dent said on sac-
I rifice and then
J set up a yelp if
on
their
way
downtown in an
imperial
limou­
sine they got held
! up three minutes
j by a defense parade.
•
•
ful skirt fullness. For this, choose
silk print, flat crepe, taffeta or
sheers.
• • •
When rooms are to be painted,
coat windows with a cleaning pow­
der. If paint splatters on the glass
it comes off easily when the pow­
der is wiped away.
•
•
Pattern No
la designed in even
sizes 12 to 20
Size 14, abort sleeves. 4
yarda »-Inch fabric; bracelet sleeves, 4,fc
yards. Send order to:
•
A teaspoonful of vinegar added
to any boiled frosting before
spreading will keep it from be­
coming brittle or breaking when it
is cut.
•
•
SEWING CIRCLE PATTERN DEPT.
I4S New Montgomery Ave.
Saa Francisco
Calif.
Enclose IS cents in coins tor
Pattern No......................... Size.
Name ..
a a a • •
Address
•
Shrinkage in woolens is usually
due to over-washing. In ordinary
circumstances, three minutes is
long enough for them.
•
•
TIPS t0 tu
Ljaraeners
•
To give shingles the appearance
fS
of being stained, use a paint with
low gloss, or a flat paint.
•
•
•
Many kitchens have a bare, un­
used wall space that could be
usefully and attractively trans­
formed into recessed shelves.
•
•
Before baking potatoes, let them
stand in hot water for 15 minutes.
Then rub with butter or lard and
put in oven. They will bake m
half the time and will not shrink.
•
•
•
If sugar is added to water when
making flavored ice cubes, the
cubes will not freeze clear or sol­
idly.
• • •
Two tablespoons chile sauce or
catsup poured over top meat loaf
when half-baked gives a good fla­
vor and rather crusty covering.
• • •
If kerosene is added to the wa­
ter with which linoleum is washed
it will loosen dirt and make wash­
ing much easier.
Unlikely Sentiments
I distrust those sentiments that
are too far removed from nature,
and whose sublimity is blended
with ridicule; which two are as
near one another as extreme wis-
dom and folly.—Deslaudes.
ANOTHER
The Question»
after the hero, what “boy stood on
the burning deck"?
7. What country is noted for its
consanguineous marriages?
8. How fast do the stalks of the
yucca flower grow?
LAVERY line and detail of this
•L-' charming basic is flattering to
slim figures—the sweetheart neck­
line, the soft bodice drapery, the
tiny corselet waistline and grace-
We understand Harold
Ickes
hadn't been at sea on t|ie President's
yacht an hour before he was ad­
vocating federal censorship of the
waves.
• • •
Hitler is the kind of man who not
only celebrates spring by shooting
the first robin but justifies it on the
ground it was planning to attack
him.
• • •
T'HERE have been changes in
recent years in garden prac­
tices that are worth reporting.
Gardeners formerly allowed vege­
tables to grow as large as possible.
This procedure gave a higher
yield in pounds, but very often it
lowered the quality of vegetables.
Some vegetables, of course, like
tomato, must be mature to be pal­
atable; but carrots, cucumbers,
beets, summer squash, turnips,
radishes, and others are more ten­
der and tasty when not much
more than half grown.
Gardeners are finding that it is
wise to plant oftener than once or
twice a year, to maintain a regu­
lar supply of proper-sized vege­
tables. Gardens prove more en­
joyable, and more profitable when
successive plantings of favorite
crops are made every two or thre«
weeks,
providing garden-fresh
vegetables for the table over ■
long season.
It is also true that few garden­
ers today save flower seeds. Fin«
flowers growing in the home gar­
den often are cross-pollinated by
others of the same species, mak­
ing flowers grown from their seed
inferior, and untrue.
A Quiz With Answers
Offering Information
on Various Subjects
Laws Gravitate
Laws and institutions are con­
stantly tending to gravitate. Like
clocks, they must be occasionally
3. The side opposite to that from cleansed, and wound up, and set
to true time.—H. W. Beecher.
which the wind is blowing.
4. Scientists say that two sounds
may be produced in such a man­
ner that they neutralize each oth­
may siact the Heart
er and the result is silence.
Oea tnppad In ta» auaatk or tullet mar art 1 lka a
hair trltsrr on too heart. Al the Brat alen of 41 arrant
5. Cortez.
amart man and woman daaead an Ball ana Tabiau M
aat tai trae No laiatlra bul nada or the fa float-
6. Casabianca.
art In a medlrlnea known tor arid initiate Ion. If the
TIB3T noes doaan t aroaa BeU-ana bailor, return
7. Egypt. Consanguineous mar- bottle to ua and roMtre DOUB1X Manar Book. Ms.
riages are those between half-
brothers and half-sisters.
Easing Relaxation
8. Yucca flower stalks in Cali-
Straining breaks the bow, and
fornia grow from 7 to 11 inches in relaxation relieves the mind.—
24 hours.
Syrus.
•
Can You Remember—
Away back when cigarettes were
said to stunt growth?
~
GARDENS OF QUALITY
•
Luke—I read where some guy
1. What is a solecism T
mn(je a squawk the other day be-
2.
Where is the measurement
cauJC a new defense aviation base
parsec used?
was so close to his golf course that
3. What is the lee side of a ship?
it made him nervous while putting.
4. May one sound be produced
Elmer—You can find plenty of
people who think a major sacrifice so as to neutralize another sound,
is involved if the government gives the result being silence?
priority to the shipment of bombers
5. Who was the Spanish con­
as against pool tables and electric queror of Mexico?
music boxes.
6. In the famous poem, named
THE PENCIL SHARPENER
You'll And this odd utensil
In every office joint:
It sharpens up your pencil—
And then breaks off the point!
—Merrill Chilcote.
SEWQNG CÖRCLE
To keep the inside of a gas
range in good condition, remove
rust that may have accumulated
with coarse sandpaper, then rub
over entire surface with olive oil.
The Answers
1. A grammatical error.
2. In astronomy (used for meas-
uring space between the stars)
Are Yoe Well Liked?
You can’t be when heartburn, “full­
ness” and acid stomach bother you all
evening! ADLA Tablets can relieve
you and give you a chance to “put
yourself over”! Get ADLA Tablets at
your drug store.
INDIGESTION
CLABBER
GIRL
BAKING POWDER
JOIN THE THRONG
BUY-A-CAN TODAY\
John Kieran’s new tome, “Nature
Notes,’’ has reached this depart­
Reciprocating
I it than to consume wealth without I
Study Reveals
ment John says that the dragon
We have no more right to con- producing it. — George Bernard
The more we study, we the mor«
fly of “darning needle” does not sew sume happiness without producing | Shaw.
| discover our ignorance.—Shelley.
up your ears as we were taught in
childhood, but is harmless, and, in
If your ear has
fact, beneficial,
been sewn up a dragon fly is so
kind and gentle it will take the
stitches out, we take it.
• • •
YOU’RE A ROOKIE DRAFTEE
WHEN—
1— You take reprimands from cor­
porals seriously.
2— You’re a low private but you
have the idea it is necessary to
yell at others when given a detail to
direct.
I 3—You demand three helpings of
chow but write home that the food
is lousy.
4—You always let the sergeant
know you finished a job quicker than
anybody else, thinking it gets you
ahead.
—A. B. Watac.
• • •
OUT OF THE RED
The New York board of educa­
tion has made membership in any
Communist, Fascist or Nazi group
sufficient grounds for dismissal of
any teacher in a city college. It got
around at last to the belief that the
big red professor should never su­
persede the little red schoolhouse.
• • •
It's a far cry from the tiny little
flower topknots milliners are pleased
to call hats
the wide, wider, wid­
est brims that are forecasted for
wear with summer frocks. A proper­
ly equipped wardrobe of headgear
should Include both. The cunning
flower hats have captured women’s
fancy to the extent that they will
epntinue in the picture for a long
time to come, but from now on they
A WIFE’S WORST FAULT
must share honors with the stunning All my protests do not faze her—
big pompadour brims, Mexican She cuts cloth still with my razor.
gaucho felts and the face-framing
—Merrill Chilcote.
‘‘covered wagon” types.
F LESS
NICOTINE
JN THE SMOKE!
CAMELS ARE
THE CIGARETTE
1 FORME
THE SMOKE OF SLOWER-BURNING CAMELS GIVES YOU
28^ Less Nicotine
than the average of the 4 other largest-selling cigarettes
tested — less than any of them — according to independent
scientific tests of ibt smoke itself
A ATTTT — THE CIGARETTE
K z/~\ IVI P I J OF COSTLIER TOBACCOS