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6 Let's Eat Outdoors ^VTfK On these hot summer days when appetites sometimes lag eating outdoors can be fun anc relaxation for the whole fam ilv. We can't always afforc steak and we do get tired o1 hamburgers and hot dogs, sc try something a little different ?barbecued chicken or i Swiss steak meal in foil, in eluding carrot and potatc strips, quartered onions, chop ped celery, and green peppei rings. For the final touch have i churn of your favorite ict cream or serve the readymad< kind in an Ice Cream Sunda< Buffett: p I*PP7P on a r/viHo r-V? scoops of at least three flavors of ice cream. Serve in a large bowl surrounded by small bowls of your favorite sundae toppings and let each guest make his own delicious concoction! Leave The "Horse Some apparently think duties ? not for horses. Hon the dictionary says it is "cri tainly is nothing refined ab know the type of action that someone with a air hose, ui from behind and squeezing It is hard to understand sible people seem to think th ment, tease, or inflict their bi else when it is very doubt! tolerate it for a minute. There is no room for Ho ticularly in industry. Horsep cidents or deaths when least expect the unexpected everj time YOU engage in HORSE! one. It's that simple. Some se to carelessness, thoughtlessn< etc. How would you define II carelessness, needless exposu: How COlllH vni 1 ctart r?ff_ sensible in and around your around your home and fami who plays practical jokes on the kind of a guy who pulls t as he starts to sit down ? if ; more ? well, just stop and t Jl JL-mt) . 1mLv A The D. D. Fick Largest Family Att Good Ole I v Vi ^Ldfli [ School bells will soon be ringin graphed lhis week "having a ball' ; Nl'-zv Faces Mr. and Mrs. Anthony W. McGee of Lvdia Mills Card nij^ .lvcjjcji imciii aimuuiit'i* me 1 birth of a son on June 26, at ; Bailey Memorial Hospital. "There are two ways to acquire old furniture?buy it or raise a family." play" To The Horsos Horseplay is part of their daily seplav is difficult to explain, but ide, boisterous play." There cerout most Horseplay antics. You is called Horseplay . . . Goosing nexpectingly grabbing some one him real tight, etc. why normal and otherwise senat it is perfectly all right to tor rand of crude humor on someone ful that they themselves would rseplay in any gathering ? parlay has caused many serious acexpected. In Horseplay you can r time ? so it follows that any PLAY you expect to injure somerious injuries have been charged 2ss, needless exposure to danger, orseplay? Isn't it thoughtlessness, re to danger. the-job safety better than to act place of employment as you do ly. Of course, if you're the kind your wife or kids ? if you are he chair out from under someone /ou do any of these crude acts, or hink ? and don't do them. JLY 4th F m lins lending THE CLOTHMAKER Summertime JMI sM g for these happy youngsters photo' in the Clinton pool. THE WEAVER My life is but a weaving Between my Lord and me, I cannot choose the colors He worketh steadily. Oft times He weaveth sorrow. And I in foolish pride Forget He sees the upper And I the under side. Not till the loom is silent And the shuttles cease to fly Shall God unroll the canvas And explain the reason why. The dark threads are as needful il nr.. * ? in uiu weaver s SKined Hand As the threads of gold and silver In the pattern He has planned. ?Author Unknown Ten Tom nnnulinents 1. Never put off till tomorrow what you ean do today. 2. Never trouble another for what you can do yourself. 3. Never spend your money before you have earned it. 4. Never buy what you do not want because it is cheap. d. bride costs m o r e than hunger, thirst and cold. 6. We seldom report of having eaten too little. 7. Nothing i s troublesome that \vc do willingly. 8. How much pain evils have cost us that have never happened! 9. Take things always by the smooth handle. 10. When angrv. count ten before you speak; if very angry, count a hundred. ?Thomas Jefferson UN DAY Bottoms Up Ray McCall PAINTING wii You don't have to be a genius with a paintbrush to rrpafp hanrlcnmo - ? - .V?iiuu\/iuv JJlLlUlCd, says the National Cotton Council. An interesting new craft ? i and one that will satisfy your J creative talent ? is making I pictures with cotton fabrics. Just select an attractive 1 print, stitch around the de- 1 sign, quilt, mount and frame. The result: a distinctive threedimensional picture that looks for all the world like an oil painting. The hest lllann finrl suitable for your "painting" is in the home furnishings fabric department. Cotton drapery material lends itself well to this craft since it has an interesting texture and will "give" when stuffed. It also offers the widest range of rich colors and designs. For the traditionalist, there are scenic prints like a Grandma Moses or a Currier and Ives design. And for the modern art enthusiast even Picasso designs are now available in handsome decorator cottons. In selecting your fabric, look for a material with a design large enoueh to be cut for quilting without overlapping the repeated motif. Cut the desired picture from your fabric, lay it face _ down and cover with a thin layer of quilting cotton and a P piece of medium-weight tarla- P tan or crinoline cut to the same size. Pin or baste together and quilt on the right , side with your sewing machine. Stitch around objects c. in the picture using matching 'c thread. st . pi Then turn your picture over j and make smallslits in the icrinoline behind the stitched objects. Use a small pick to stuff additional cotton filler in these areas for a raised or three - dimensional effect. Larger objects in the picture *-ciii uu aiuiiea 10 siana out as much as one-half inch. U Now staple the quilted sj picture to a piece of corrugat- ia ed cardboard or building c) board and slip into a frame. Simple, wide frames are most C] effective and y o u r fabric 0| pictures will show to best ad- a! vantage when not under glass. jr Two other techniques can be used to create a slightly different art form. One is a 01 collage effect, made by com- P_ bining designs from several Ik AT POOL !<%J r Mil I Zm K )L, ' W^njr "v v ^ ** ^ -X - x -4;. ?1F^8 ... _t2L -- **5w - - . ..-V'V 's Wheelbarrow Rarp All Had Fun JULY. 1964 th FABRICS What An Accident Can Mean Slim purses Lots of nurses Frequent curses And some hearses. Sprains Strains Terrible pain Often followed And some hearses. Broken bones Buzzing phones Thoughts of loans Wails and moans. Nafinnol Qofnftf AiMvivuui k-JWXtWJ' V^UUlltl 1 tints into one interesting icture. For example, you light cut out animals, flow's, or a landscape scene from ifferent fabrics. Arrange lese cut-outs in an artistic o 1 1 a g e on a background ibric which can be either a did color or a coordinated lint. Follow the same quiltig and padding steps as outned above but be sure to use narrow satin stitch around ich cutout to prevent frayig Another technioue is to cut single large motif from a rint, applique it to a solid )lor fabric, and quilt. A lifeke floral print, a fruit degn, or an Alice in Wonderind pattern are possible loiccs. Whether your home is modn, traditional, or a little bit F both, you can find almost iv type of design you desire 1 today's extensive lines of )tton fabrics. And you can *eate colorful and decorative ictures for any room in the ause. s * JBijHgfl B^hj - v^?5E3HH^K