Southern Oregon News Review, Thursday, August 4, 1949 NEEDLEWORK PATTERNS W O M A N 'S W O ULD Crochet a Pretty New Bedspread Filet for Chair Set or Buffet New Fashion Ideas Freshen Wardrobe By Ertta Haley N1 rE E I) »Hina apurkle for the wurdrube? A slight amount of remodeling, u bit of new trim m ing, or ■■ flush of color w ill rescue many clothes from their route to the buck end of the Clouet. Some women feel thut It Is sim­ ply not In their power to creute u pructiciilly new garment from un old one, even though they sew well. lt*s u mutter of Imagination, they suy, und leave It to those who obviously have some creative tul- ent. True, imagination Is a good thing to huve when renewing the ward­ robe, but It's dispensable with all the ulds we have on hund. You may need Just u quick look nt what the stores are showing, a glance ut some of the new styles und a session with a pattern book. A sense of what Is fitting, how­ ever, Is essential. It you do any sewing, you understand about Ut­ ting. Even if you alwuys buy Patio Costume be part of a dress or blouse pat­ tern which Intrigues you. Use only the yoke for the old dress. These yokes may also be made In sheers or contrasting solid col­ ors, if you prefer them to lace. Whatever fabric is chosen, It should be In keeping or good con­ trast to the dress material. Plain dresses can be given the scoop necklines with little alteration, and then be worn with some of the luxurious new costume Jewelry. For a softly feminine change to a plain dress, you m ight like to bare the neckline more, which would be In keeping with new fash­ ion trends. Then add a ruffle for trim m ing, and use some of it on the flup pockets at hips, or on the sleeves. Another idea for adding dash to a plain dress In the classic style would be to use plaid ruffling for a plunging type neckline, with sim i­ lar ruffling for the sleeve trim as well os the skirt ruffle, especially where extra length is needed. Many dresses can be made en­ tirely new looking with the addition of a bolero in u gay und contrasting shade when the original dress is dark. Going p laces via car, train or plane? Then you'll be In­ terested In the grow ing fashion Importance of the linen duster. Sketched here is one of the new­ er Ideas of this quaint revival, a raglan sle ev e , convertible collar com bination with Hap poc kets that repeat the line of the turn-hack cuffs, i t ’s esp e­ cially adapted to the heavier w eave of linen because of Its unusual tailoring d etails. You'll want to be sure the buttons are handsom e such a s large smoked pearl affairs that re­ peat the overtones of the pop­ ular natural colored linen. 935 KATHLEEN NORRIS Hustling cotton taffeta with a m oire finish m akes Its appear­ ance on the style horizon in a sophisticated costu m e for re­ sort w ear. Carolyn Schnurer de­ sign s a strap less bodice and a separate wrap-aroqnd s k i r t with fullness concentrated at the side. Over It she poses a triangular stole. The costum e also bids for future honors at hom e In the winter evening scen e as well as for sum m er. Change neekline with yoke . . . . clothes, you w ill understand fitting, so you see the m utter is quite simple. Dresses and blouses should have m oteriul in good enough condition to remodel for satisfying results. You may huve to invest in some new material, trim m ing, buttons or putterns, and It's not budget- wise to spend either money or time on m uterial thut isn't worth Change Plain Dresses remodeling, no m utter how much W ith Neckline or Color you've liked the garment in the Every once in a while we look past. nt a dress and wonder how we could ever have chosen something R e fittin g Saves so plain or severe. This is easily Many G arm ents Dresses und blouses which fit remedied. Lace yokes are being used ex­ well w ill rarely be delegated to the deep, durk corners of a closet. tensively on the new fashions and Doesn't it stund to reason that clothes should fit you well so that you’ll get the most out of them? Good fit simply means that you look pleasing In your garment. This should not be too loose so that you huve a sack-like effect, al­ though If some proportions of the body are large, it's best to have them fit loosely enough so there is no pulling or gaping, or tig h t­ ness to show each individual fold of flesh. If you are on the slender side, the garment should not hang too loosely so it looks as though it doesn't belong to you. You may, however, have soft gathers, full And skirt with a drape. sleeves, and draping which Is gen­ erous to ndd fullness to the figure. may be readily inserted on a plain Many garments may be fitted by dress which would give it the prop­ you, or a dressmaker if you do not er background. Patterns for yokes may be pur­ feel competent. This may be all chased either as such, or they may the dress needs to renew It. Avoid Boredom in Marriage the country w ith the speed of I A deadly bored with their m ar­ into fire-horses. Boredom was forgotten, ! riage, and Just about have decided to break it up. Nothing is specifi­ cally wrong, and everything Is wrong. "Alan Is a smart man,” writes Anne, “ and I ’m stupid; I know it. I'm a good cook, I keep my apart­ ment clean and comfortable, but I can't talk politics or business; when I try to, Alun Just looks at me patiently and looks back at his newspaper, without any comment. "We have two children; I know we both adore them, I know we'd both die for them. But living with a stubborn, spirited boy of 4 and a delicate g irl of 6 is something else. Alan and I are both nervous people, and the children naturally are nervous, too. There is a good deal of crying and diso­ bedience in a sort of nursery way; not scenes and beatings and l o u d v o i c e s , but d if­ ficulties in getting them to go oft to bed, or Alan asking 'What on earth is Shirley crying about now?’ "We try to control our nerves, but we don’ t seem to be talking the same language these days. Alan showers, dresses, goes off to busi­ ness; 1 don't see him again until six o'clock and then he hardly speaks. Then it's the newspaper, radio, dinner, and he is either 'dead tired' and goes to bed, or he is going 'over to Joe's for a m in­ ute.’ All wives, busy with dishes, homework, mending, know that ‘minute.’ Longs for Life, Vitality “ I long for life, vitality, interest, occupation,” Anne ends her letter. " I'm doing my Job as well as I can, but it's not enough for me. I t ’s not enough for Alan. These THE READER'S COURTROOM- Hold Temper in Court -By W ill Bernard, LL.B.- M ay a Person Lose His Tem per in a Courtroom? A carpenter and his neighbor had an argument about the ownership of a dog, and the dispute was finally taken to court. When the neighbor took the witness stand, he was asked whether he honestly believed the dog was his. He replied: “ Posi­ tively yes!” Enraged, the carpen­ A wooden chest, evidently lost from a passing ship, was washed up onto the seashore property of a retired captain. A beachcomber noticed the chest, liked it, and hauled It to his cottage. When the captain found out what had oc curved, he sued the beachcomber (or the value of the chest. The lai*er argued that neither of them really owned it—so the firs t finder could keep it. However, the court upheld the captain's claim. The Judge said that the owner of the seashore property has prior rights. • • • Is Shaving a "Necessity" In the Eyes of the Law? ter seized a stick and smacked his adversary across the cheek! The victim promptly filed a damage claim against the hot-headed car­ penter. The latter pleaded that the neighbor’s answer "made me mad.” but the court decided that wasn’t a very good excuse. Holding the carpenter liable, the judge said that such fiery displays of temper have no place in a court of justice. • • • A widow, In poor health, liked to take occasional rests by visiting her m arried daughter. These visits, which would occur about once a year, usually lasted several weeks. The daughter’s husband raised no objections, but quietly kept a w rit­ ten record of the cost of each stay. When the widow died, the husband put in a special claim against her estate for "services rendered.” However, the court rejected his claim, on the ground that such “ ser­ vices norm ally are presumed to be gratis," A certain town passed a “ Blue Law” which prohibited all labor on Sundays except for “ works of necessity.” One Saturday night, a man went to the barber shop for a shave. However, before his turn came he became ill and had to go home. The next morning, at his special request, the barber went to his shop and gave the man a shave. Someone reported the incident to the police, and the barber was arrested. He argued that, under the circumstances, the Sunday shave was a "necessity.” But the court couldn’t see it that way and found him guilty. The judge said the cus­ tomer wouldn't have been any worse off if he hadn't gotten his shave until Monday I . Then if t the newspaper . . . " five small rooms are ng modern, as well-equipped as any in the world, I suppose; we don’t like taxes and rising prices, but we aren't in debt. There should be a good many things for us to talk about, after nine years of marriage. But apparently there aren’t. "Now the questions I want to ask you are these: Do you often hear of a situation like this? Is it my fault or Alan’s? Would a psychoanalyst help us? I'm 30, Alan 34; we can’t go on for 40 years like this. Can you help us?” My answers to these questions are yes, I often hear of this situa­ tion, it arises in many marriages. No, I wouldn’t go to a psycho­ analyst. In your case that would be money thrown away. And yes, it is your fault and Alan's both, although it isn’ t an easy one to see. In the firs t place, Anne, you’re not stupid. No stupid woman ever wrote a letter like this. You're simply bogged down in a rut that has involved Alan and the children, too. Five city rooms, year out and year in, aren't too healthy an en­ vironment for two small children. Five city rooms doesn’t afford much scope for your imagination or activity, either. Five city rooms aren't restful when a man gets home from eight hours in a close office. Sandersons Solved Problem I ’ll tell you what the Sandersons did. They had three boys, and when a doctor told Jim , four years ago, that not one, but two of his sons was threatened with congestion of lungs. Jim and Margery moved out Stained-Glass Motif city luxuries were tossed aside. Jim ’s rooted com tempt for com- I spread with a stained-glass muters suffered a surprising jolt. ! They bought "Hideaway” for m otif in the center of the seven- $5,000. A tumbledown white cot­ inch square — solidly crocheted tage, an acre of apple trees, five j corner sections are combined to great oaks and a stream. Yes. and j c reate bedroom charm . it was at the end of a train and a j bus trip, for Jim, with half a m ile ' of country road at the end of that, | T o o b tain com plete cro c h etin g in s tru c ­ and there was a wood stove in the i tions fo r the C ro ch eted B ed spread (P a t ­ kitchen, dangling electric lights of , te rn N o . 5808) the 1900 period in the rooms, and j Send 20 cents In coin, yo u r nam e. ad dress and p a tte rn n u m b er. the bathtub was tin. B u t- Well, you ought to see it now. ’ Paint and glass and a floor furnace 1 have done wonders. The Sandersons eat their own tomatoes and corn and fru it all summer. Winter mud for the car and summer dust—well, of course. But there are three bard, noisy, . sunburned big boys on the place now, in the place of coughing little ! Avoiding Varnish Rubbles fellows from the city, and they ? To avoid surface bubbles when help. There are a man and a worn- y OU varnish, don’t shake the can; an there now, discussing changes s tir the contents gently with a and improvements a n d plans, c j ean stick living every moment. Make a change. Anne. Give the ! Mirror Streaks children country freedom and their ! If streaks on your m irror shew nerves and rebellions w ill disap- ( j m arked signs of stubbornness, pear like mist. Floral Design 'C*1LET is one of the easiest and loveliest form s of crocheting and works up quickly. This charm ing floral design m akes a nice chair set, or it can double as a dining room buffet set. • S E W IN G C IR C L E •ISO S o o th W e lls S t. • NEEDLEW ORK C h ic a g o 7. 111. Enclose 20 cents for pattern. No. --------------- N am e -------------------------------------------------- A ddress AROUND «he HOUSE; Stars' Children Take to Stage • P a tte rn N o. 5935 consists of m a te r ia re q u ire m e n ts , stitch illu s tra tio n s , filet- d ia g ra m s in ea sy-to -rea d dot and sq u are* and fin is h in g direc tio n s. Send 20 cents in coin, y o u r nam a ad dress an d p a tte rn nu m b er. ----------------------------------------------- Items of Interest to the Housewife too old. Cover the spot«! with kero­ sene for a couple of hours then wash the tile with soap and hot w ater. —• — To Brighten Rug F or a general brightening up of a cloth rug, sprinkle salt all over it, let stand an hour or two, then they can som etim es be persuaded take it up with the vacuum clean­ to go if you rub them with a little er. , oil-type furnish polish. Anchoring Rugs Sm all throw rugs th at have a tendency to slip along the floor I I can be anchored by attaching sev­ eral ja r rubbers to the under side, They Seek Careers or shellacking the reverse sides. —• — Like Their Parents For Shiny Faucets HOLLYWOOD.—School is out in When the nickel faucets in your Hollywood and the movie stars’ sink become stained, polish them sprigs are getting summer jobs, j by rubbing with a soft cloth As movie stars, of course. dipped in spirits of am m onia. Gloria Swanson's daughter is Wash them off afterw ard with hot talking about a screen test; w ater and soap, and polish with Charlie Chaplin’s son is starring a soft, dry cloth. in a play; John Barrym ore’ s boy —• — is sweating over his movie debut. Hint to Waxers Even Judy Garland's baby is a R egardless of w hat type wax movie veteran. you use, be sure you don’t apply To old-timers in Hollywood, this too m uch and th a t you give the looks like where they came in. a p plicatio n s u ffic ie n t buffing. Joan Bennett’s daughter is test- O therw ise yo u r flo o r w ill be quick ing for one of the biggest parts to show ru b b e r heel m a rk s and in her mother’ s new picture, pro- fu rn itu re scratches. duced by her stepfather. Harold _ Lloyd says Harold, Jr., w ill be in Rust Stains on Tile his next comedy. Rust stains on tile usually will "H is sisters think he's very yield to kerosene, if they’re not funny,” Lloyd said. "They never laugh at me. Oh, the trials of being a father.” John Barrymore, Jr., a 17-year- I old copy of the great profile, is earning $150 a week for the first acting he’ s ever done. “ The ham came out in me when J CHOOSE YOUR CAREER I was 15,” young Barrymore says. " I took a walk and looked at the IN A G R O W IN G stars a long time. A ll of a sudden I knew I had to be an actor.” fa PROFESSION! He’s trying to see all his famous father’s pictures now, he added. « — open lo g irl* tin der 3 3 , He'd previously seen only "The h ig h -tc h n o l graduates and Invisible Woman.” college girla. Sydney Chaplin, Charlie's 22- — m ore o p p o rtu n itira every year-old son, is a big hit in the year for the grad uate nurse. ‘Circle Players’ "Anna Lucasta.” — best preparation foe both career and He’ s been acting with them a cou­ m arriage. ple of years and says he’ll do his firs t movie when they make one. I — aak fo r m o te in fo rm a tio n at the hospital where you | "M y dad’s very pround of me,” w ould lik e to en ter nursing. he allowed. “ He never misses a show.” Fifteen-year-old Melinda M ar­ key has talked her stepfather, Walter Wanger, into testing her for the part of Rebecca tn "The Ballad and The Source,” which w ill star her mother. Miss Ben­ nett. " I ’ve always wanted to be an actress like m y mother,” she said. She was hoping to debut on the stage this summer, she added, un­ til the fam ily decided to take her j to Italy where the picture w ill be ! So good! So crisp they snapl made. crackle! pop! In milk! Gloria Swanson’s daughter, Mich- j America's favorite ready- ele Bridget Farm er, 17, has been , to-eat rice cereal. Rushed talking w i t h producers about , to you Kellogg-fresh! screen tests ever since her mother introduced her around. She hasn’t MOTHER KNOWS/t BEST I anything definite yet. High-School Graduates «J Wall Patching P la ste r of P a ris is good stuff with which to patch w alls; but un­ less you’re nimble, it m ay get dry and hard before the job is fin­ ished. To prevent that, m ix a tablespoonful of ordinary flour with every cup of plaster of Paris. s" Yodora checks perspiration odor THE WAY i Made with a Jace eream base. Yodora I is actually toothing to normal skins. 1 No harsh chemicals or irrita tin g ; salts. Won’t harm skin or clothing, i Stays soft and creamy, never gets ! grainy. Try gentle Yodora—/eel the wonderful : difference! Guaranteed £ 1 Housekeeping I * M w bbtna. It» « .. BrU lgepuiA . r o t f . OEUCIOUS 601VEH p o rsi eñj W em !