RAS oe» so that you can make the most of Have you ever suspected that the man next door or the neighbor across the street achieved just a little more of a professional result with his outdoor holiday decora- tions than you have? If so, maybe the answer lies in the fact that he planned his display on paper, not as you did, as you went along put- ting up your outdoor lights. One of the best ways I know to arrive at an effective display is to and indicate how you are going to decorate it. Then check your equip- ment to see if you have everything yon need and that what you do have is in good condition. Save Time-Energy There are many ways this plan on paper can help you. If your house has interesting architectural fea- tures, it will remind you to em- phasize them with lights. Once you've decided on your basic de- sign, you may find it helpful to in- stall ordinary brass cup hooks which can’t rust and hang your strings of hooks in year 'round to speed up next year’s lighting job. Remember too that the neater you string your wires, the more professional your results will be. Dangling wires de- eract from the design. Notice in the photograph above how lights can emphusize the inter- esting line of ‘a roof. Placing the lights close together can outline the roof in almost a continuous band of light. Although you can't see it in the black and white photograph, using only one or two colors will give your display a more unified ap- pearance. Lights Can Contrast For contrast, for instance, you can use cool colors to outline the house and warm colors around your door. Warm colors will give a feel- ing of welcome at entrances. In addition to your strings of out- door colored lights, plan your holi- day decorations so the whole ef- fect will present a pleasing picture. The home pictured above shows good use of ready-made, ready-to- variety to your exterior decorat- ing. Notice how a lighted star on one side ‘of the house is balanced with a lighted Santa mask on the opposite side of the house. The in- door tree in the picture window which is framed with strings of col- ored lights, becomes an important part of the overall holiday theme. For additional highlights, the front doorway which is hung with sprays of Christmas greens and shiny red bells, is spotlighted by a weatherproof projector spotlight concealed behind the shrubbery. Vassar, Hamilton Choir To Sing The Magnificat Graduates of Vassar and Hamil- ton Colleges who tune in to station WBAX Sunday afternoon at 4:30 will hear their combined college choirs singing the Magnificat, by Johan Sebastian Bach. This is a re-broadcasting from a tape record- ing made in the newly decorated chapel at Vassar on December 13. you're giving something that will be used and i appreciated day after day ...yow're giving gg Comfort and Convenience plus years of Eco- ¥ ha. ry $ vi d ond lan % oY —— i i So Make A Toy HERE'S HOW .. / Christmas toys will stay out of the way and be better kept if the child has an attractive, usable toy chest. The completed chest, A, is begun by constructing a sturdy frame, B, to which sides, ends and bottom are nailed to form a box. The back rest and arm rest rnit is built separately and mounted on 1x 8 rails, nailed from the bottom. Details are shown in A, C, and D. The Interior Frame For Christmas, and especially for after Christmas when the season's accumulation of toys clutters up the house, the answer to the question, “Where is my box of paints or my toy wagon?” is an attractive toy chest. A chest that serves also as seat does double duty. Since the chest will see hard usage, it should be built around a sturdy frame, Drawing B. Corner posts, 2x2’s, 11 inches high, provide for a seat 14 inches high in the finished chest—the right size for a small child. The top of the frame is of 11x2 material, 30 inches long. The frame has mitred corners. If the home craftsman has a mitre box, he will use the 45 degree an- gle; but without a mitre box, just measure back 2 inches on the inner sides and cut to the corner. If screws are used to fasten the mitred corners, the frame will be drawn tightly together. The frame is then nailed or screwed to the corner posts. The rest of the basic box is com- pleted by nailing the sides and ends to the frame, using ordinary butt joints, so that the frame is com- pletely enclosed. The bottom boards are nailed to the corner posts and Chest Bench completed unit is then screwed to the top of the original frame. A hinged seat, 15 by 28 inches, completes the chest and serves as a lid. The back rails, shown in D, add greater strength. S 3 * radii to the sides and ends. { The top, which will include a hinged seat, is made separately and later fastened to the box. The back rest is of 1x8 material, 30 inches long. Drawing C shows how to cut the back to fit the arm rest. The rounding may be ac- complished with dividers, or with | a pencil, a piece of string and a thumb tack. Use the thumb tack | as a pivot, the string as dividers,’ and the pencil to swing an arc at the end of the string. Now for cutting the curve: if you have al coping saw this is no trick at all; but if you haven't a series of straight cuts with a handsaw will soon produce a multi-sided corner that can easily be reduced to the | penciled arc with a wood rasp. The arm rest is then screwed or | nailed into the back rest. A 34-| inch rail of 1x3 material is nailed along the bottom of the back rest so that the back rest is flush with the back edge of the rail. Nailing is done from the bottom of thei rail. A similar rail, 15 inches long, is fastened from below to each ne rest. Now ‘the back rest, side arms, and rails are all one unit. This unit is lifted on to the box, the side! rails and back rail are fastened with screws to the frame. The hinged seat is'15 inches from front to rear, with a 1-inch over- hang in front ‘to make lifting easier. It is hinged to the back rail as shown in Drawing A. The hinges may be exposed, as shown, or in- side hinges may be used. For additional strength, two binding rails are added on the back of the chest, the upper one being most important since it supports the back rest. These are 1x3 ma- terial, 32 inches long. Added frills include a handhold on the side arms, made by boring a l-inch hole and cutting out the saw. Beveled edges are produced with a wood rasp and plane. 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Sale Price . .. $1.99 1 Please Enter our Christmas Lighting Display in the i 3 1 CHRISTMAS LIGHTING CONTEST ! Ba : 1 : : Name: 8 FL bd i SU Se Phone Jiu. olan I : 24 MAIN ST. ! Address .\. 0... Xs whl EC Ll Re A | LUZERNE 1 All entries will be judged between December 20 and December 25 1 Across From 1 between 6:30 and 11 P.M. All lights must be on. All entries must I . Luzerne 1 be postmarked on or before midnight December 19, 1953. | 1 MAIL ENTRIES TO: Jaycee Christmas Lighting Contest . Zita ! i Theatre : : ‘266 Miners Nat'l Bk. Bldg., Wilkes-Barre ! : : 1 § ) ey RH) . s LADICS® FELT In Wine or Blue Nite From Now Until Christmas § . - a