Southern Oregon miner. (Ashland, Or.) 1935-1946, August 18, 1949, Image 3

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    Southern Oregon News Review, Thursday, August 18, 1949
«
W O M A N 'S W ORLD
Bootee Styles for a Tiny Baby
Embroider This Lam b on Linens
Basic Face Type Governs Hair Style
By Ertta Haley
and must, therefore, have d istin ctly
different h a ir styles. You must
round out the face and do this w ith
short, broadening lines.
•pHE
T R E N D la a tlll toward abort
hair, but the exact length of your
own In dividual h a ir should be deter­
m ined by your own facial type.
Whether you do your own h a ir or
have It profeaalonally atyled, It’»
a wlae womun who knows at least
what ahould be done w ith the hair.
Another feature which enters the
h u lr style Is the type of h air which
you huvc. Even though you may
be round-faced, If the h a ir Is lu x­
u ria n t and has a tendency to curl
It m ig h t be on the short side.
Sometimes the Individual w ith a
long type face may have to have
slig h tly longer hair than her round-
faced sister, even though theo
re tlc u lly she Is the one to wear the
re a lly short h a ir styles. Why? Be­
cause her h u lr Is thin and silky and
absolutely straight.
H ulr styles as well as the way In
which they are treated w ill frequent
ly change the uppcurance of the
h a ir. G irls w ith heavy h ulr may
have theirs thinned and trim m ed
and use a sleek, groomed style.
Those w ith baby-fine h a ir can
weur theirs nicely curled and fluffed
to give the appearance of more
hair, lnsteud of skimpiness, espe
d a lly when the h a ir Is kept so Im
m nculotely clean that the oil does
not make the strands cling to­
gether.
Square-Fared Girls
Should Avoid Boxy Effect
A sligh tly unsym m etrical hair
dress w ill suit the square faces
best. This means parting the hair
L- .
I he ibajie of you? lace . . , .
-r
struig ht down the side or diagonal­
ly
Lcose D ully curls are good on the
top. These should not be done in
li o struight a line, however, but
should fa ll easily to the temples
to give a pleasing effect.
For the square-faced g irl, i t ’s not
w ise’ to cut the h air too short, since
this lim its the h a ir arrangem ent
considerably and m ay result in
giving the face a box-like effect
which is ju st what we’ re try in g to
avoid.
The sides should be dressed fla t
w ith soft curls at the ends.
F or the back, have the h a ir well-
tapered so that it falls in lovely,
long lines. A suggestion of wave in
the back, ending in soft end curls
w ill assure you of looking well at
the back of the head.
H a ir on the square-faced g irl
should not be too w ell-curled since
it w ill then m ake it d iffic u lt to
Bring out natural hair high­
lights with ft creme rinse which
removes all trace of soap used
for shampoo. This will give the
hair a gleaming, clean appear­
ance, as well as making the
hair softer to touch, easier to
manage without snarls or tang­
les that makes combing diffi­
cult. One of the outstanding
properties of the rinse Is its
ability to remove scalp odor,
thus giving the hair a new
freshness.
swish the hair g racefully into
elongated lines. I f the h air is heavy,
It’s Im portant to have it thinned
as well as cut In layers to achieve
the proper hair-dress.
D ress T op l l a i r H ig h
If Y o u 're R ou nd Faced
When the face is round, the effect
we try to achieve is elongated.
Avoid bangs since these w ill give a
wide effect to the face. The h air
should be piled high on top, and in
soft curls.
The h a ir m ay be parted In one of
two ways: on the side, or from the
tid e toward the center.
When the h a ir Is thin, avoid hav­
ing it cut too short, as the h air is
then unmanageable and w ill tend
to give the face a broad look. If
the h air is heavy, it should be con­
siderably thinned so the waves on
top w ill lie softly, and the sides
Determine! hair style.
and back w ill have a slight sug­
gestion of a wave, fa llin g into soft
end curls.
Fairly Short Style
Good for Long Face
Long faces arc ra d ica lly different
from the two types just discussed
THE READER'S COURTROOM-
Father's a Fight Fan
-By W ill Bernard, LL.B.-
May a Father be Held
Liable for Encouraging
His Sons to Fight?
Two brothers, hearing th e ir father
arguing w ith a neighbor, rushed up
and gave the neighbor a sound
thrashing. The father didn’t do any
actual fig htin g, but encouraged his
sons w ith such cries as “ Sock h im !”
“ K ill h im !" and “ Give it to h im !”
L a te r, the battered neighbor sued
A drunk walked into a hotel one
night and demanded a room. The
clerk refused, ordering the man out.
One word led to another and a fig h t
ensued. The clerk h u rt his w ris t
in the melee and la te r sought
workm en’ s compensation fo r the in ­
ju ry . The hotel owner opposed his
claim , saying that the cle rk had
not been hired to fig h t w ith eus
tomers. However, the court granted
the clerk an award anyhow. The
judge said the fig h t had occurred
in the course of his w ork as a
clerk, and the in ju ry was covered.
• • •
May You Throw
Aside Someone Who
Blocks your Path?
a ll three men for damages. The
sons adm itted th e ir g u ilt, but the
fa th er Insisted that he personally
h ad n't done anything wrong. How­
ever, the court held him equally
responsible fo r the attack. The
judge said: “ He did everything he
could to incite his sons’ anger.
Such conduct made him an active
p a rtic ip a n t in the assault and
equally liab le fo r the damage
done.”
While leaving a m an's house one
m orning, a doctor overheard his
patie nt threatening to punch his
w ife in the ja w ! A few weeks later,
the m an was arrested on a w ife­
beating charge, and the doctor was
summoned to the witness stand to
te ll w hat he had heard. The hus­
band's law yer objected that a doc­
to r cannot reveal anything said by
his patient, but the court disagreed
and allowed the doctor to te ll his
story. The judge said that a doc­
to r’ s lips are sealed only as to m a t­
ters confided professionally.
The landlord of an apartm ent
house got mad at the m ilkm a n one
day and told h im to stay out of the
building from then on. The next
m orning, the m ilkm an showed up
at his usual tim e to make deliveries
to several tenants who lived in the
basement. A n g rily, the landlord
clim bed on top of the basement
hatchway to block him from going
down the steps. But the m ilkm an
would not be halted. Seizing one of
the hatch doors he jerked it up­
w a rd -th ro w in g the landlord against
the railin g . The landlord was in ­
jured, and la te r sued the m ilkm an
fo r damages. However the court re ­
jected the landlord's claim , point­
ing out th a t the tenants' m ilkm a n
had ju s t as much rig h t to enter the
building as the tenants themselves.
“ H aving this rig h t," said the
judge, "the m ilk m a n also had the
rig h t to rem ove any o b s tru c tio n -
including the la n d lo rd !”
Start the p a rt near the center, or
near the center and slant it to the
side.
H a ir at the sides
should be
dressed in soft and flu ffy fashion to
make the head look round.
Soft, flu ffy curls m ay be worn on
the top, m elting Into crisp, outw ard­
going curls at the sides. Keep the
h air as short as possible fo r this
type of face. N atu ra lly h a ir m ust
be sligh tly longer if the h a ir is
thin, since more is needed to make
the essential curls.
Sleek hair-dos which so m any
long-faced g irls desire are out of
place, since curls are needed to
broaden the face and head. How­
ever, if you want to look neat, the
h a ir can be kept well-groomed and
thus achieve a sleek look w ithout
actually being too much that way.
Bangs are very good w ith this
type of face since they tend to
shorten the long lines d ra m a tica lly.
I t is a good idea to avoid straig ht
bangs, however, since softly curled
bangs give a softer, rounder look.
Newest and easily one of the
most beautiful
of summer
sheers Is organdy, now always
wonderfully
crisp.
Designs
make the most of the beauty of
the fabric, with special atten­
tion to the slip or under-dress
beneath. Among* the newest In­
terpretations are dark organ­
dies with white. At the left, the
slip has a white eyelet top, and
the motif Is cleverly repeated
with a charming Victorian col­
lar of the same fine white eye­
let embroidery. At the right,
the eyelet embroidery of the
slip Is repeated in white eye­
let bands in the skirt.
5981
KATHLEEN NORRIS
Pretty and Pert
pR IS K Y little lambs to decorate
* your linens—pretty and pert
for tea towels, a party apron; or
to use on a crib cover and cur­
tains for a nursery.
Tragedy of an Afflicted Mother
I H AVE a sister and a
* brother, but I don't know money. The b right, hopeful, loving
them .” the 14-year-old g ir l said eyes of the children have no appeal
here. Somebody tells M am a th a t
politely.
if Dad goes on acting that way,
"Y o u don’ t know th e m !”
"N o, m a’ am. You see when we she can get a divorce, and put the
were little we quarrelled so te rrib ly little boys at St. Peter’ s.
Mama tells the good managers
that Mam a couldn't stand it, so
she sent Joe to G randm a, and m y of St. Peter’s a p re tty convincing
story. She doesn’t hesitate to black­
Aunt Maggie took Lucile . . .’*
“ And how long since you've seen en the name of the man she loved
just a few years ago, the man who
them ?"
“ Since I was 4. and Joe 6 and is the children's father. He is a
skunk, and M am a is an abused
Lucile 9.”
The little g irl went on sucking angel, and the boys are herded
thoughtfully on a m am m oth lo lli­ like little sheep into the big bare
pop, and I sat thoughtfully looking anaesthetic-scented institution, and
a t the little g irl. We were both at promised letters, games, presents,
clothes, thoughts and love and
a company picnic.
prayers by Mama. They never get
Spineless Women
any of these, by the way. W ith the
Suppose m y m other had been the children out of sight, parents fo r­
weak spineless woman who was so get promises.
obviously this g ir l’ s m other, I
We can’ t have too m uch reg i­
mused. Suppose she had been so m entation in this free country of
lacking in character herself that ours. We can’t stop divorces, de­
she could take nursery ta ntru m s sertions, selfish dads, hot-tempered
seriously, and had made them her mamas, undisciplined natures that
excuse fo r robbing her g irls and break up homes at the fir s t test.
her boy of the priceless advantage The judges in our courts of do­
of being together? I thought of what m estic relations do what they can.
m y brothers and sisters m eant to The churches do what they can.
me, and of the wisdom and gentle­
W hat's the answer? I d o n 't know.
ness of the government of both m y But I know th a t i f business men
m other and father, and of the long and women broke th e ir promises,
years—alm ost h a lf a century—since dodged th e ir obligations and threw
they le ft th e ir half-dozen children over th e ir responsibilities as m any
orphaned, ric h only in a devotion parents do, there w ouldn't be any
that all the busy years have never country.
shaken, even fo r a day.
The love between sisters, the Broken Needle Taken
love between brothers, th e ir pride
and interest in each other—these From Heart of Child
are among the greatest privileges
LOS AN G E LE S.—A five-eights-
o f life. No friendships are deeper inch fragm ent of a broken needle
rooted, or more enduring or more has been rem oved from the heart
fru itfu l. To bear these children, of a five-m onth-old San Diego,
C alif., baby. C hildren’s hospital
surgeons disclosed.
Since the ra re operation the
youngster, R ichard Morse, has been
doing very well.
Doctors theorized the needle got
into his c rib accidentally and he
rolled over on it, breaking it.
For Carriage Trade
T^-.RLING l i t t l e
crocheted
U bootees for the carriage trade—
tiny rounded toe style for the very
young baby; open toed bootees for
six months or older. Both pairs
are easily and quickly made.
Pattern No. 5981 consists of 8 hot-iron
transfers each measuring about 5 by 4
Inches, color chart, stitch illustrations
and finishing directions.
Send 20 cents in coin, your name,
address and pattern number.
Pattern No. 5974 consists of complete
crocheting instructions, material require­
ments. sUtch Illustrations and finishing
directions.
Send 20 cents In coin, your name,
address and pattern number.
8EW IN O CIR C LE N EE D LE W O R K
5SO SsDtb W ells St.
C h lea g e 7. III.
Enclose 20 cents for pattern.
No. -----------------
Name
- - ■
Address ----
-
Crispness that speaks for itself!
Hear Rice Krlsples soap! crackle!
pop! In m ilk! Dee-llclous
energy food. America’s favorite
ready-to-eat rice cereal.
-
Floating Span
Pays for Self
. utter desolate loneliness . .
and then toss o ff any obligation
to tra in them, to develop their
characters,
to teach them the
rules of m ine and thine, and bear­
ing and fo rg ivin g , and sharing and
helping, is a crueler injustice to
them than if she had quietly put
out th e ir eyes.
There’s an ugly score building
up against A m erican mothers. It
isn’ t punishable by law, but its re­
sults are so frig h tfu l that there is
no juvenile court in the w orld that
is n 't staggered by them.
Not long ago I was looking into
the eager, w istfu l, puzzled faces of
about 100 boys, th e ir ages ranging
between 7 and 16. They were livin g
in an institution. I asked the fully-
orphaned boys to raise th e ir hands.
They numbered 16. Then I asked
fo r half-orphans. There were eight.
Seventy-six of them came from
"broken hom es."
Do th e ir mothers ever think, as
they so relieve dly sh ift o ff the
sm all helpless son to some other
woman’s care,—o r ra th e r to one-
hundredth p a rt of her care, what
that means to the child? What it
means to have no place at the
evening-table, no room in which
treasure m ay be stored, books read,
dream s dreamed? Do they ever
think of those hours of utter, deso­
late loneliness?
I don’ t believe they do. They
haven't done m uch th inking up to
this point, so why should they be­
gin now? They’ve taken th eir wed­
ding vow, as we a ll d id ; they’ve
promised to be fa ithful, for better
or worse, u n til the end.
Children are a care. Children keep
parents at home. Parents don’t
want to stay at home. Sitters cost
"Impossible" Bridge
Is 7,800 Feet Long
S E A T T LE ,
WASH. — A fte r 20
years of arguing, a year and a half
of building and nine years of to ll
collecting, the only floating bridge
in the U nited States has been paid
fo r—19 years ahead of schedule.
Seattle has one of the w orld ’ s
fo ur c iv ilia n pontoon bridges be­
cause an ira te young man missed
a fe rry in 1919. As he watched the
fe rry paddle across Lake Washing­
ton tow ard M ercer island, little
m ore than a m ile away, H om er M.
H adley, a young s tru c tu ra l engi­
neer, decided he had missed the
boat fo r the last tim e. He would
build a bridge.
He found th a t he had chosen the
w o rld ’ s w orst bridge site. A lake
depth of 150 to 200 feet underlaid
w ith 100 feet of mud made the cost
of a fixed bridge enormous. But
H adley continued to study the lake,
and a few months la te r he had the
bridge b u ilt—on paper.
The in itia l reaction to his flo a t­
ing bridge plan was d efinitely not
favorable. People said it would ham ­
per ship tra ffic and m ar the c ity ’ s
beauty.
H adley continued to show his
plans to various c ivic organiza­
tions. Im pressed by the logic and
economy of his suggestions, they
launched a “ b uild a bridge” cam ­
paign th a t eventually had the en­
tire state in an uproar.
To settle the dispute, a state toll
bridge a uth ority was created to
study a ll methods of bridging the
lake. A fte r months of research, the
board presented a solution incor­
p orating v irtu a lly all of H adley’s
ideas, and in 1939, construction of
the unique structure began.
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PR ji ^CE ALBERT
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MlLC> Mt> TAsrv-
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Top, crimp cut P-A- stays flavor-fresh 1
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