Newspapers / The Echo (Pisgah Forest, … / May 1, 1946, edition 1 / Page 10
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xnj!i jfiUMU May, Feminine News-Views SOCIALS - FASHIONS - SEWING AND COOKING HINTS By LUCILLE HEFFNER, At The Library QiiiiMiMiimiiiiMiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiimitiiiiiiiii Little Lines That Lead To Loveliness IT’S A SNAP! White collars! White cuffs! They’re spring’s freshest fashion note, but oh hew fresh and white they must be to be right! You can solve the problem in a snap by simply attaching your white col lars and cuffs with little snaps to your dress or suit. Makes it easy to remove and replace white cuffs and collars when they need laund ering. CLEAN HAIR IS COOL HAIR Hot and getting hotter? Hair limp? Damp, stringy strands dis tressing your neck? Why not try a new short hair-do minus bangs? Or if you love your long locks too much to shear them, snare them in an invisible net that will make long hair stay put, stay cooler. Coolest cue for any hair do is frequent washing during warm days with a conditioning liquid shampoo. Leaves your hair so de-. lightfully clean—and clean hair is always coolest! BURNT OFFERING! Take your sun in small doses— or run the risk of ending up by being a burnt offering! Easy^ does it. Short exposures snare an even tan — and remember to take ad vantage of the benefits of good sunburn ointments and lotions. MARRIED RECENTLY IN BREVARD PATTERS, PLEASE DON’T! “Patter” is right in place when it’s coming from a comedian, but a hair-patter is out of place all the time. Ladies who fuss and fix, push and pat their hair while talking, dining, dancing, look un lovely. Get yourself a hair-do you can depend upon to stay neat, ar range it just right, before you go out, then you can put your patting away for keeps. Your Guide To Daily Living Frem Washington BaK*'’ . DETROIT — CARS FOB ^ WOUNDED. By the end of year, automobile dealers will W kits of specially designed ^ parts to make driving safer for physically handicaPr They can be installed on old ^ too—back to 1938—and wiU ^ cheap, if not entirely veterans. State license being amended accordingly-^ the parts have been design^ , that any driver—not just the W capped—can operate the car they have been installed. PHILADELPHIA — THE f''* VOR OF FRESH APPLES can itij* I restored to the cooked fruit a distillation process discovei the Department of Agrico I regional research laboratory It takes only a few drops oi [ concentrated white liquid apple jelly, for example, tb® ,j,j of fresh fruit. It will be o” ^ market this fall. MeanwhilCi I is proceeding on other fr^'* tillations. WASHINGTON — EVEBYS®^ MUST CONSERVE FOOD- "(j, way to do it is to buy les® jjif foods which ship well ^ tribute most to relief ” jJ I These include: bread ,(1 wheat products, canned fish, canned milk, rice, drie“ and beans, cheese, fats Use seasonal substitutes wb® you can, such as: potatoes oi kinds, oatmeal and otbe^ wheat cereals, fresh mill^' ^ eggs, fresh fruits and vegc fresh meats and fish. MR. AND MRS, JAMES CLANNIE McGAHA, were married April 3, at the First Baptist parsonage in Brevard, with the minis ter, Rev. B. W. Thomason, officiating. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Roller, of Pisgah Forest. Mr. McGaiia is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Nathan McGaha, of Brevard. IT’S A LIFT The lifts on your shoes were meant to giv« you a lift, not let-down! Catch ’em before they start sloping. Run-down lifts give a lady a lop-sided look from the back and don’t forget it’s often that over-thB-shoulder-look from an admirer that decides whether you’re right from head to foot! Check the lifts on your shoes as regularly as you do the missing buttons or split seams on your clothes. See that lifts are repaired before that down-at-heel look ov ertakes you. TESTED RECIPES DUST REPELLENT [STERY. Some of the holstery promised for the will carry a slight negative i,)! I —not enough to shock I strong enough to repel dust- HOT WEATHER FEET? Pedal extremities is “fancy” for feet, and extremities of discom fort is what your feet are often in at the end of a long, hot day. Here’s a cooling trick. Give your tired feet a good scrubbbing in warm, soapy water. Dry them, then pull on white socks that hav« been soaked in witch hazel. Oh lovely! Feels like a new set of feet! the She sat on the bridge in moonlight And tickled his face with har toes. For she was a lovely mosquito, And the bridge was a part of his nose. TASTY SAUCES Repeatedly we hear “Save your used kitchen fats.”—In addition to being conservative for humane reasons, let’s develop our used fats (that can’t be shipped over seas) into delicious sauces. Always keep catsup, chili sauce, relishes, Worcestershire sauce, to basco, etc., on hand. But, in the meantime, try these ideas! Salisbury Steak Sauce Vi cup meat loaf drippings Vi cup chopped onion cup chopped green pepper % cup dic^ celery % cup grated carrots 1 cup tomato juice Vi cup cut string beans or peas Vz cup water % tsp. Worchestershire sauce 1 tsp. salt % tsp. pepper. Heat onion and pepper in meat drippings in a skillet over low heat for 10 minutes. Do not hrown. Add remaining ingredients. Cook slowly 3045 minutes. Thicken with 1 tb. flour before serving. Serve over meat loaf. SAN FRANCISCO — ED CREAM. Women in tb® ® of Oregon, Nevada and now trying out a new bottle- 1 Combine ingredients. Cook slow-1 It comes in a bo^ ly 30 minutes. Add water as need- evaporated ed, and thicken slightly with corn During the w ’ M starch before serving. Yield, VA Navy bought ' was made. It will be available as soon as enougb tli( cups. Sauce For Ham Or Pork ^ cup meat drippings 1 cup raisins Vt cup brown sugar Vi tsp. mustard V* cup vinegar. SaucQ For Roast Lamb Vi cup lamb roast drippings 1 cup water or broth 3 cups celery, chopped 1 tsp. salt 1 tb. lemon juice or vinegar 1 tb. cut onion V4 cup catsup or chili sauce Vi tsp. vegetable sauce I nrt>^ [machines, men and transpo* ^ space are available to nia*® ship it. ■vK AMONG THE NEW COVERINGS now on the or due soon— is a pre-pasted ^ treated with DDT and desi^ jijr use in storage and clothe* Combine all'ingredients. Cooki®*^- "liSW j slowly 45 minutes. Thicken with ^°™Panies will be sugg ■ tb. flour. I coat of liquid plastic for o* jo!- wallpaper to make it stain V SUPERFLUOUS . SCIENTISTS PREDICT Vet, to son: There, my son. You that will never need moWfAi have the story of your Dad and will grow to a decent beiS^ the great World War. Igtay there. Son: Yes, Daddy, but why did] js' they need all those other soldiers? I JUNE BRIDES will sti^ I trouble in assembling tbei^’.iyf GARDEN AND PORCH FUR- ware. Imports of Mexican ® NITURE will run to metals more are down, and manufacture’^jjv^ than wood this summer because of no longer use the Treasury the continuing lumber shortage reserves which were avails® and the great advance in aluminum them during the war. and tubular steel ideas. But no shower of plenty is predicted. A JET-PROPELLED ^ There will be little, if any, rattan WASHER is being inclu“®yiT furniture; most of our supply some of the low cost housiP* (If comes from the war-torn Phil- now ynder construction ^ ippmes. I west.
The Echo (Pisgah Forest, N.C.)
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May 1, 1946, edition 1
10
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