Newspaper Page Text
Impm, OCTOBER 27, 1935
OV ENam e
Pmart as a Fox Applies to Fur, Too
LUXURIOUS SILVER VARIETY
NOW IS WORN IN PROFUSION
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Silver fox fashions the smart hiplength even wrap.
allowe’en Spook Party Prevents
Even Ghost Of A Chance For Gloom
ECORATIONS ARE. -“\
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a three clever centerpieceg for the Hallowe'en party table—a gay goblin, a swashbuckling pirate
~ ofvest laden wheelbarrow. At right center are shown tasseled and fringed horns and favors.
: ¢ right, a modernistic jack-o-lantern mask (top) and funny crepe paper spider.
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! Even Special Plates Are Available
Hallowe'en paper table cloths
i :
! have witches, cats, owls and broom
| sticks scattered over them and nap
' kins to match. You can even, get
i paper cocktail napking done in the
! rlallowe’en - manner. Also paper
t \
! china, if .that’s the name for it,
made of a composition paper a“‘df‘
fmuch more stable and better look-:
i fng than ordinary paper dishes. ‘
| ¥Enormous pirates and pumpkin
, men made of shirred crepe paper
jare perfect for table center pieces.
| One pumpkin man of orange and
| red is three feet high and stuffed.
i A swath-buckling pirate wlith a’
gold dagger, wide orange breeches|
and. a snarl on his wicked face}
‘stands against @ treasure trunk
fwhicn is filled with favors. ‘
; Favors this year are more useful
| By MARIAN YOUNG l
i NEA Scrvice Staff Correspondent.i
' NEW YORK.—This year turs
| are used and styled like fabrics.
IC-la.morous evening wraps of lux
]ury furs have as much style inl
| every line as gowns over \vhich!
i they are worn and are made to
ot flatter your figure as well as tul
’keep you warm. .
Silver fox capes are the dar
lings of the hour. Every good
| fashion show includes at least
Itwcu. The splendor of theater
iopenings is enriched by fortunes
! in silver fox wraps. Scciety lead
| ers and fascinating visitors from!
lHollywcod at the better nightl
spots are wathed in this becom
| ing fur.
’ You can have a Short capelet
with pelts arranged horizontally
and wear it over a furless day- |
time coat as well as for evemng.l
On longer ones—hiplength and to’
the floor—skins generally are used
straight up and down.
| How to Pick Pelts '
|
Unless you know a good deal
about furs, better take an author
ity with you when you shop for
silver fox. First grade pelts are
coal black—never brownish. The
’lm- is thick, shimmering and
| gloasy. l
l The amount of silver has noth
‘ing to do with the quality of thel
'pelt. An all black one can be'
| right in the first grade class with
quarter, half, three-quarter andl
full-silvered ones. The color is a!
matter of individual choice. Right
]now. three-quarter silvers are
most popular, so you'll find these
’a' bit more expensive than pelts
that have lesser silver. ;
The light hairs in genuine sil- |
ver fox are black at the root and!
top. Silver in the middle. Imita-'
tion silver fox shews hairs thatg
!are dead white from root to tip.l
| Shake Fur Vigorously ’
!
! If you are lucky enough to get|
a silver fox wrap, for goodness§
sake learn to care for it correct-{
ly. The fur never should be|
| stroked with the hands or touch-!
ed with a brush. Instead, when !
you want to fluff it up and ro-!
‘move dust, shake it vigorously.:
Don’t treat furs gently. On foxi
lranchos where the little creatures
are bred and reared to enhan(:e{
| feminine beauty and in large fur|
]houses, fox pelts are heaten with’
ja stick to make them fluffier and
| more luxurious locking. Strong
men shake them as hard as they
can.
Speaking of lighter furs, even
ing wraps that combine white
caracul with white fox are stun
ning indeed. Ermine, of eourse,
always is smart. Incidentally, this
season fur-trimmed wraps aren't
recommended to the woeman who
takes her evening fashions seri
ously. A wrap should be all fur
or all fabrie.
MERRYMAKING AT HOME PROVIDES. MORE FUN THAN TRADITIONAL
DESTRUCTIVE OUTDOOR:PRANKS
!,hold candy at the table; a black
| spider that supportg a piratical nap
, kin ring, a candle holder of a hol
! lowed composition pumpkin.
| Pumpkins Wired Electrically
' Pumpkins, by the way. have gone
"mudernlstic. Some made into lan
.lterns have flat backs designed to
};fil‘dnd against the wall. These can
:E:c bought with electric wire incis
l;ions which do away with the fire
1 hazards from candles. You can buy
'decorated panels for rooms—cut
out jack o’ lanterns, ghosts, moons
lan‘:l witches. all ready to »put up.
| Even the ceiling may have ready
|made shedded paper decorations——‘_
}it you want them.
| Faper costumes all wrapped up
| complete in cellophafe can he
*bouht‘tor men, women and chil
for men, browni es 1 chalar 7‘,'_‘3*_:,} e
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A dramatic wrap of white caracul and white fox.
LADY BUG PIN IS NEW )
DECORATIVE VOGUE |
New in the jewelry world of|
fashion is the catalin lady bug toi
pin or clip on your dress, scarf 01‘|
‘hut bag. Designed by Sechiaparel
1, this decorative little insect hasl
- a bright body with legs and an
1 . PR AR LT
[ You can't heat the old-time Hal-i
‘lowe'en games—bobbing for apples, |
: pinning ‘the tail on the donkey,;
iflipping apple peels to fiind your,
l‘u‘ue love's initials, seeing the Inc’:l
jof your fate in the mirror at mld-;
| night. But some of the modern{
gtouches are not bad. |
i Chance |s Bewitching. t
i There is, for instance, a scrawny |
furange and black witch standing.
iover a paper roulette wheel with;
her finger pointing downward. A
lgm-st turns the wheel and must do|
| whatever the witch tells him~—that!
! being what is printed at the point|
! which the witch’s finger stops. Or |
Ithe finger may stop at a fortune. |
!Thm‘o is, too, a fortune telling caie|
{set with fifteen favors and fortcnes
|uttuched to fifteen candles to bP]
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!hurind in the cake batter,
i Valkiation of an old-favorite is
»ia cat cut-out set in the middle of
I the table in order to permit each/
13uest to try to ring hig tail with]
ja composition deughnut. In an-|{
other version of pinning on the
) tennae of simulated gold and
il)right eves of green stones. There
| are rhinestones across the back.
g,'l‘he lady bugs are¢ shown in tur
quoise, red, salmon; brown, forest
green and light blue. XEach one
| has green eyes and a head of
_black 'cam‘l’o ™ .
| donkey’s tafl a. scene showing the
loutline of w éat on a fence above
tan ash can, is set up. Each guest,
| 3 2 . >
I blind-folded. tries to pin a small
| cat in the -right place on the fence,
| : i s :
{Or it may bé "a grinning pumpkin
lon which are to be pinned rolling|
!
'green eyes, ‘
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MILITARY MOTIF IN FASHION!
SPREADS
The military trend in :::.~hinn>§
hecomes more important by the
minute. A good many little hats;
l!-m|\ like Russian, GCerman, Eng- |
lish and PFrench officers’ head
gear. The «Céssack influence is |
strong in suits and coats as well
as hats. Cavalry type gloves, wide
leather belts, decorated in martial |
motif, military capes and jacket|
with braided - details and frog|
fastenings are shown in preati- |
cally every coilection. {
LEMON ON SQUASH !
Try eooking ' your squash with |
| a little lemon juice, esepecially if!
| vou intend to bake it. The szmw{
‘ goes for sweet potatoes, mashed or
‘baked in casserole, TR 1
BT se B e
China and Glassware Set Design
for Table Linen Embroidery =
: ‘F/.A\BRICS ARE WOVEI:J :r(S SUIT NEW PATTERN*S i
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! The table runner at top followg the new trend in stamped embroidery, for the linen is especially wov
‘ en to accommodate the embroidery design, the flow:rs in the damask being repeated in the cross stitch
i embroidery. The style comes in table clothg of various sizes, scarves, napkins, and bridge table sets.
| The popular lazy daisy stitch is used on the fringed luncheon cloth in center. Guet, slass and face
| towels are given similar ensemble treatment,
!BY MARY MARGARET McBRIDEI
[ NEA Service Staff Correspondent,
I NEW YORK--Crandmother would
:hm‘e laughed at the idea that thel
{ pattern of your linen table cloth
[ should match or at least harmon
liz(- with the design on your china
land that both should be definitely
[n-lmod to the tracery on your crys
ltnl glasses. Yet the present vogue
! takes all that as a matter of course.
l Grandmoher rarely embriodered
lher own table cloths, but embrold-‘
lm-ing all her household linens isl
granddaughter’s fad of the mom-|
‘cnt. Her table cloths, by the wa,\‘,i
‘:u-v getting bigger. indicating, ac
Says Women Scatter Efforts
Too Much to Be President
LENA PHILLIPS HOLDS.TWELVE QUALIFY FOR JOB
!By MARY MARGARET McBRIDE
iNEA Service Staff Correspondent.
| NEW YORK.—There isn't much
use for American mothers to be
gin now to tell their little girls to
[l;e good and they’ll be President.:
Because such a thing as a wo
| man reaching the presidency
'won‘t happen for a long time yet.
That is the opinion of Lena
| Madesin Phillips, who during her
[l'ecent visit to France, reeled off
| without hesitation the names of
twelve women that she consid
ers fitted to hold the highest of
fice in this country.
. “"Fitted, yes, but ' let ,them try
to get it,” remarks Miss Phillips,
‘who has just come back from at
' tending a conference of Interna-
Etional Business and Professional
. Women abroad. “I could name
, that many more besides who are
Lalso equipped to be President, but
;lhere ism’t a chance in the world
| that. any of them will be. Nor
| their daughters. Nor even their
| granddaughters, probably.
| Attempt Too Much
| To Finish Anything
| *“And the principal reason is
| that women as a whole are con
ditioned not to expect success in
what they do as a group. They
start out on a project, or rather
on dozens®' of projects all at once,
- and make a noble gesture toward
what is supposed to be the end
' they have in view. Or rather the
lends. for that is the worst of it.
‘L’l‘hey’ undertake too much—peace,
erime prevention, smoke abate
ment, everything—and so noth
ing really gets finished. They
;dnn't even count on reaching their
- goal. !
| “Do you suppose for a minute
that if the ten million club wo—i
men of the country really. put
their minds and their energies to
it that they couldn’t, for instance,|
remedy one of our most glaring
evils—open up the schools that
were closed by the depression.
lOr elect a woman President? Or
that they couldn't see to it that‘
Ithere was no more war, for that
matter? Of course they could!” l
Has Spent 15 Years
Working With Women !
| Miss Phillips, who has just re- |
itired as president of the .\'ationall
iCouncil of Women, has been in |
. touch with women’s groups all'
over the country for more than |
fifteen years. In that time, she |
| has noted changes for the better |
;:lmung women, but they don’t!
tcom(- fast enough to suit her. ‘
| “What this country . really
' needs,” she contends, “is severall
good committees, each of about;
five intelligent women, to lay out|
plans and, from month to month.!
tell everybody what to do next. !
Women leaders get so exclted‘
about leading that too often theyl
lose sight of what leadership
means. We need to concentrate |
on one task at a time until we{
‘cord!ug to those who know, that!
entertaining in a big way is com- |
ing back.
' Women embroiderers are choos
"ing floral patterns for gay informal
table cloths with cross stitch or lazy
daisgy stitch and then matching
with china and fresh flowers. l
The very newest note for thell
woman who stitches her own is im-i
ported linen especially designed
'and woven to accommodate the em
‘broidei‘y pattern. Thus, a popular
‘mll cloth is woyven with a,dumask‘
jand fllet border and the design lis]
'stamped on a middle section, let‘tl
Ipluin. Giliest towels have a woven
b
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i Lena Madesin Phillips
One thing Miss Phillips has
found is that -women are grow
ing more and more tolerant, iuore
' able to see both sides of a ques
'tlon without getting apoplexy
about the other person's point of
'view. This, she says, is true of
- women abroad as well as in this
country. Indeed, she boasts, the}']
can now speak almost calmly of
subjects that used to make them
see red. '
Less Nationalistic :
- Than Men Are &
They also are less inclined Loi
be nationalistic than men at the
present time and that particular- ’
ly fits them to be peacemakers.
“Well, if it comes to that, wo- |
men are used to smoothing every
situation over,” added Miss Phl]-,
lips, who is a lawyer by profes
sion. “They've been the unruf- |
flers in the home for 10, these¥
many years, and so they under-}
take it naturally for the world.” |
Miss Phillips believes that the
world's great problem at the mo
ment is not war but jobs enough |
for everybody. ,She does ‘not feel, |
however, that the movement tor
send women back to their homes |
so that men may have the jobs ;
thus vacated will help much. {
“The advocates of m’afimi
(and there is more of it %’F‘t
ing_on than .we realize) don’t
seem . to, remember Jthat She ;Wi
PAGE THREE-A
| colored border in a theme repeated
iin the woman’s own work. The
tropical fish craze comes out in
towels stamped with guppies. Cut
work is done too, 52
Crosg stitch, however, is almost
[ the most popular needlework of the
lmoment ‘because the straight lines
{and uniformity lend themselves so
(well' to the modern motiff. It's a
| soothing kind of hobby to have—
embroidery—or at least, so the oc
cupational therapists declare. Any
| way, they've put it into hospitals,
Ebelievlng that rhythm induces a
ica]mness of mind for mental pa-
Yients. 5
all the things that she now pays
lthe butcher, the baker and the
candlestick maker to do for her,”
Miss Phillips points out.
Motor Car, Not Home,
| Relied on for Today’s
i .
Transport of Delight
i By HELEN WELSHIMER
| “The place in front of the gae
i rage.” That's home, according te
| Dr. Morris Fishbein. We ruefally
admit that the famous medical
man knows his dumicil_iury geoge
raphy.
There is no more likelihood of
anybody reading by the fireplace
in the house than that the autoe
moebile is recuperating from the
day's speed in the garage. Maids
have nights out but cars seldom
!huve nighs in. Only, in truthy
{ when they are laid up for suddem
!rvpah'x Such nights are hard omß.
| the family, too. They have to
!mmnnun a taxicab or take @
‘street car or bus to the movies
| or concert,
| Once upon a time every small
i boy adhered to the democratie
i belief that some day he might
111\*4- in a big white house with
{cclumns on Pennsylvania Aves
| nue. Failing that, he at least exe
| pected a two-story brick struce
| ture or a stucco bungalow. Now,
jus long as he has a godd motor
{in his car. any old roof is al}
| right to which to come back to.
4 Forever on the Go
' We are an age in transit. We
, can’t stay home. We drive 40
{ miles for dinner when the res=
Itauran[ around the corner has a
| better bill of fare, and our own
§ refrigerators, for that matter, hold
| delectable contributions. = We
ldri\'o to the next own to see a
movie when the same heroine
, SWweons in the same hero's arms
on the screen iu our local cine
lema. i
Home. which is the other build
ing on the lot that houses the
| garage, is a repair station in an
| astoundingly large number of
if:uuilies. - ~
| It is the woeful lack of selfs
{contentment and self-sufficiency
| within us, as a generation, that
| bas led ‘to this situation. Natur
| ally, the simplification’ of labor
| through machinery permitted
{ more time for diversity of inter
| ests, many of which led beyond
i 2 S
| the home. This is excellent. %
| coming of commercialized amuse
| ments centered play activities, .to
!a great extent. in an extra-w
!atmosphere. No one mMr«%
stands this. . 4 **M,
| Our fault comes in the Mflq%
jwe have not taoken these advan
tages in our stride. Instead of
| using them as agents which would
| develop us Intc richer, finer, more
| understanding human beings. we
| nove sttempted. 046 it 6 NENE
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