Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO-A
Mass Production Applied to Good Taste
By MARY MARGARET McBRIDE
NEA Service Staff Correspondent
NFW YORK-—And now comes a plan to
ensemble your living room, your bedroom
or even your entire house with less trouble
than it would be to rick out a fall frock
~and all accessories.
Eight months ago a group of bright
young designers started a plan to co-ordi
nate home furnishing, Their idea was to
design furniture of all kinds to be made
by diiferent manufacturers that would
save the furniture buyers from his own
bad judgment, .
There were to be no hang-over edges on
end tables; no wrong colors on additional
chairs; no huge or dinky mirrors out of
scale with the rest of the furniture. The
designers have carefully planned even the
colors so that the buyer simply can’t go
wrong. They are going to do rugs, lamps
and linens for the ensemble, too.
A lot of things have been thought of—
for instance, svecial lamp tables to go be
hind a snecial sofa, tables for books and
magazines, adapted to a special sofa or
chair. The mirrors have frames that har
monize with the rest of the room in shape
and size, as well as matericl The tables
and chairs and what not are made with
straight lines and no grooves, for the sake
of the duster. The sofas break into chair
units if you like and come round or square,
The artists haven’'t quite got around to
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Every piece of this bedroom suite—even the circular and rectan
gular mirrors—is designed to provide a harmoniously furnished room.
This suite is finished in two-tone lacquer.
Designers Offer a Dozen Ways to Suit Yourself
: By MARIAN YOUNG
NEA Service Staff Correspondent.
. NEW YORK.—Suits are more
varied than they've been for many
a season. This is to be an autumn
when you can use your imagina
tion and ingenuity to pick the
type that flatters your own figure
and personality. Courturiers’ rules
for suiting yourself are flexible
- You can go in for all black, or
something gay and colorful, a
straight, slim skirt, a gored one
or a box-pleated type that flares
in the schoolgirl manner. Any
one of these may he topped by a
ly tailored, niped-in-at-the-
MJacket or a hip length coat,|
plain or with fur, that blouses at
m waistline and makes the
shoulders seem broad, a swagger
or hip-length cape. |
Perhaps you'll like broadcloth, |
%{;"fiefluit and coat fabric of the{
wgnt. Perhaps = rough, halryi
woolens or rich, colorful tweeds
z%fil strike your fanecy. You may
want fur trimming or an all-fur
%:ket or coal over a ogg-piece}
dress or to wear with a skirt and
separate blouses. |
. For a young girl, nothing is
more attractive than a woolen
flress and swagger coat of inex
pensive fur, lined and sometimes
trimmed with the dress fabric.
Nice, too, for the young, and their
iothers as well, are black jersey
or rough woolen frocks with
§jwagger coats of Persian lamb, a
pooular fur this fall.
. The three-piece suit still is
good. Have it with neatly tail
ored short jacket, straight skirt
%nd reefer topcoat, or with flared
;aklrt. bloused jacket and swag
ger topcoat. Consider it in al
tweed or with monotone suit and
tweed coat. If your mode of life
Mfl for something not quite 'so
casual, look at dress and harmon
izing full-length topcoat ensem- .
&u. The dress may be a varia- |
;iffion of the shirtwaist theme. The
coat is likely to be trimmed with
large fur collar or a smaller one |
with matching bands of fur down
the front. |
A Military Mode |
Patou and Jenny sponsored |
dress and long coat outfits, with |
the coats exacuy matching tlm]}
frocks. Jodelie showed this type
of ensemble with coat in con
trast. |
. Suits that carry out ithe new .
‘military theme are sure to be
fashionable all fall and winter.
;i‘itted lines are their outstanding
‘eharacteristic as far as silhouette
is concerned. Brass buttons, tas
§;;fls. braid, including cords and
‘frogs, are the trimmings that
_give them a martial air,
Dresses and capes, and skirts
ind capes, are perfect for the
proman who looks best in semi-
Mine clothes. These come in the
senaissance greens, red and blues
putting all the equipment for each room in
el Tl o e . 8 TIONE DATEEL DTS RTR come, |
just as it Ras with houses.. |
Time was when one wanted a new house
; . P and there had to be a prelude of blue
B prints, architects and budgets that would-
Ly ‘ Jimi e ' | n’t stay within limits. Today it’s possible
;% o, Lo i , to order a home of nearly any size or price|
e : L = *. .| that will come, some ready to put right |
i % oa ' up, others to be built entirely on the prem
. o ” v g 5 _These houses have been built with con-
T o e sideration for the furniture, too. That'is,
i R é." “ : Y A the windows have been placed in the cor
-0 g g : § A i ners, all more or less together, wherever|
iR g i ? . e hossible. lAnd the doors are located in spots|
o e e i s ] / G 7 ' 4| where they will least break up the scenic|
e .. | effect. |
80 e U e It was natural, perhaps, that the two|
T el . : groups of designers—those doing fool-|
e '-u- 1 s T G R ,- proof houses and those making decorator |
e - : ~%." , interiors possible for all at no extra cost— |
s e , hould get together. And the upshot of it
¢ R B is, you may order your house ready to put!
- . e W up, with specially designed and scaled|
.. B . L furniture for it. |
: Et . = g Architects all over the country were re-|
F . gy e cently invited to work on model plans for |
B e N efficient, reascnable houses in a contest |
R R T e 7 These houses are now being built in differ-|
] : 1 " ent parts of the country—and the first one, |
: shown in the picture, is at Marblehead,!
Mass. !
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left) is wgrn over a fitted suit oxford gray tweed The two-piece outfit (right) includes a plain |
skirt of monotone tweed in a rich shade of rust and a matching reefer that can be worn over separate !
drestes and with ther skirts.
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The prize home at Marblehead, Mass., not only is a laboratory
for good taste in furnishings, but itself sets a standard available to
the average home owner. Its living room (above) has sofa and
chairs in blue curly material with white mole leather, and can be
combined with almost anything. The table is in walnut to harman
ize with wood on upholstered furniture. These suites are made also
in other color combinations.
‘ Combine Red and Blue
| Reds range from light, bright
J shades to rich, wine tones. Greens
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
| are more subtle than formerly |
land a good deal more becoming |
~to most women. Biues = are
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Available either in white lacquer with walnut‘, or in' two kinds o
wood, this dinette also is made in different sized pieces to meet
needs of specific rooms. The serving table pinch hits for a buffe
in small space.
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| This fall dress- f '
| maker ensembly /
|includes a button- ¥
l jown -the front
jdress of basket
| weave tweed in
fiubtle tones of purple and rough
| tweed coat of purple and beige in
| herirngbone effect, with lynx collar.
e e |
lbright. especially the jewel and.
}preclous stone colors. Violet and !
purple _ are==scatiered: here«and |
“there. Bruyere used plenty of
!gm_\' and Chanel showed it occa
sionally in a slate shade. Color
- combinations are worthy of men
ticn, especially such unusual con
trasts as Schiaparelli's rust-red
~and sky-blue, Rochas’ cornflower
blue and purple red, and Lanvin's
American beauty and Yale blue.
~ Rust is unexpectedly combined
‘wih various colors. Louise Bou
‘langer puts it with scarlet, Patou
‘uses it with wine, and ‘Dilkusha
likes it with lapis lazuli. -
Second Marriage Triumph‘
Of Hope Over Experience,
Novelist Believe
By MARY MARGARET McBRIDE |
. NEW YORK.—Dorothy W’al-‘
~worth Carman’s . first marriage
ended at Reno. Later she met |
' another man, who had also been !
married and divorced. The two%
ifell in love, were*married. That |
was several years ago.
; Dorothy now has written a‘
!nm’el about a man and woman |
~who had a similar matrimoniall
_experience. :
L “Have 1 put myself into ‘Rain
' bow At Noon'?” the pretty, brown—!
eved author repeated thoughtful- !
ly. “Of course 1 know that every-‘
body will think so—and I want to
be perfectly frank. But it is a
difficult thing to explain.
“l suppose I am there in the
way that a writer's dreams and'
hopes are always in his work, but
in a form so changed that ofteni
they are completely unlike the
original. What I mean is that my‘
own experience undoubtedly sug
gested to me the idea of writingi
a novel about two honest, well-'
meaning - people married to each |
other after each had been di-|
vorced. The situation seems to|
‘present an interesting - problem
that nobody had really touched
upon. ?
“Oh, we have heard a great
deal about any marriaged in the
Newport-Palm Beach set. But 1|
thought there was a story in two
simple people in ordinary circum
stances who had regretted their
first marriages and were desper
ately anxious to make the second
succeed. 1
“The more I thought of it, the
more I realized that such a novel
had never been written — and |
‘Rainbow At Noon' is my attempt
at writing it. The pecople are im
aginary-—or perhaps, better, they !
are composites., The incidents—!,
well, some of them were suggest-’l
ed by things that ,happened to;
me, but many were not.” |
Avoided Reminiscences {
For example, Dorothy and her
husband made a compact, as thel
two in the novel did, never to|
mention the names of their for-[
mer mates.
“But it was impossible,” thel
writer declares. “Before you |
knew it, you would be talking!
aleng about a summer ‘you'd spentf
in Timbuetoo and you would |
speak the forbidden name, to be'
reminded of what yvou had done{
by the other's = antagonized look.
“And trying so hard not to do it‘
only made everything worse .
America Will Ballot on Peace
As War Clouds Thicken Abroad
‘ NEW 7YORK-— When there is
[again a question of whether the
I[Ynited States is to go to war, the
people will speak. And they will
‘thunder an overwhelming “No!”
promises Mrs. Estelle Sternberger,
lexecutice director of World Peace
ways.
In the face of threatening ‘head
lines, World "Peaceways is busy
planning a plebiscite for fall which
will give all the people of the
{country a chance to ballot on
peace,
“One of the most militaristic
of our congressmen said about the
last war that if there had been a
plebiscite, not more than ten per
cent of the electorate would have
A veted to fight,” the optimistic Mrs.
Sternberger comments., “When they
vote thig time, I am convinced that
{ ten per cent will have strunk to
lpractically nothing. ’
Sces Masses Opposed
“Washington and congress think
the people do not understand. You
hear, ‘Oh, well, the masses can be
drawn into war by the appeal of
{ patriotism." I gay that is no long
ler true. The masses have learned
{ that patriotism may mean stay
ling at home. On every hand, I.
hear them voice that opinion. AJ
taxi driver the other day remarked
that the headlines looked like war
but added that if it comes, it won‘t}
get him. ;
I “‘Let them go ahead with thelri
| bands playing and their flags fly-|
ing,’ he said. “I'll be waving froml
the side lines. If those fellows;
over there want a piece of land, I
say let them buy it!’” |
Mrs. Sternberger's own organi
zation is one of the most effective |
in presenting the peace cause gra-'
phically—through great page ad
vertisements, splashing photographst
showing the horrors of war, and:
vehement speeches by veterans who
say ‘“‘never.again.” |
“We get help from many un-f
expected . sources,” she l'elates.f
“For instance, it is xnown to few!
[that Francis Lederer, the actor,l
| spends thousands of dollars annu-§
lally to suppert his own peace or-|.
igunization. He gladly gives up |
: yachts and limousines so dear to |
'other actors for the sake of the]
;cause in which he believes heart
iand soul. i
“In Holland, I know a business |
man who contributes five per centl:
’ot‘ his profits to the peaec move- ||
{ment. He has told me that he is
| willing to sacrifice all his profits |
{if necessary to keep his country .
’nut of war. He has had to stand|:
suspicion and misunderstanding | 1
I because of his attitude, but he will|
j never change. {3
| “The leader of World Peaceways | (
in Belgium is a war veteran who |1
lost a leg in the last war. Inst
}France, one of our successful work- | «
ers is-a veteran and business man !t
who swore during the lat war that f
if ever he got out alive, he would |
be a spokesman for peace the rest c
of his days. He is working among 't
the children, going from village to!t
village, pointing out the beauty otle
the countryside and asking the
boys and girls if they want to see|c
all that beauty torn up by b
“0 =2N ,;—J." g ,qf‘« 7*"‘ !
‘:“’f:\:w‘:}‘tz ISSENOL PN LHAURS SIS Wae
SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 1 1028
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T —— {
Dorothy Walworth Carman
Worst of all, though, is whep
your husband absent-mindedly
calls ycu by HER name.
The author thinks that a 20od
deal of fictional sympathy hag
been wasted upon the children of
divorce. Not but that she believeg
they often suffer. But never ag
much, she maintains, as the
grown-ups involved, since, being
yuong, they are adaptable and
happy-go~lucky.
“Second marriage is sometimeg
like taking a new apartment”
Miss Carman explains. “You want
to avoid the dark dining room
you had in the old apartment and
sometimes you just get a new sef
of inconveniences — a neighbor
with a noisy radio, for instance,
“Samuel Johnson said to Boge
well that second marriage was th
triumph of experience over hopg
but I think it is the triumph of
hope over experience. You've had
the experience but you hope—and
sometimes it comes out all right
But I for one don’t believe Id
ever try it .a third time. In fact
I found few repeaters in Reno.”
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EMRS, ESTELLE STERNBERGE
\
imost important internu;ional mov
‘at the moment toward peace is th
trend toward éstablishing a Min®
istry of Peace in England. She be
lieves ‘that England’s lead, if such
“an -appointment were made, woul
soon be followed by other coufs
tries.
" In the United States, she fid
encouraging our pesition on the
basis of the s@\'en-.\'u:n'-uld Kel
logg-Briand or Paris pact.
“Our government = has taken
stand in instances involving con
tracts that looked like munitions.”
she. points out. "It lls obvious,
though, that we must Jefinitely
forbid loans to nations at war We
must put a completesban o 0 the
shipment of contrabrand and muni
tions. We must not lay upon out
government the responsibility of i
belligerent. That means inevitabl¥
war to protect our ‘honor’.”
Mrs. Sternberger also hopes that
citizens in these ticklish times will
avoid causing irritaton (0 Japal
She deplores the recent parade e
Seattle and points to the grouP
just organized by Peaceways in
Japan whieh is expected 10 Jead 10
a more cordial ufidg”mndi“fi be
tween the two governments.
“The people es this country have
set the pace for other countries 1%
cleaning house of the m::ni(il?ns
racket,” Mrs. Sternberser main*
tains, Ineidentally, she and he
organization were definitely credi
ted with much of the responsiblith
for that house-cleaning.
“Kach year more and mOr®
countries will investigate the pra®
tices of the wac racketeers and 18¥
the foundation for laws needed b
~urb them,” she predicts.
“The people are at the pottom
of this and they will continae %
he. . dior groups like World pec:
vays will mobilize the ‘publie
ompel legialative bodies 1 %
DTSR I v e(T T