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Asbury Park Press from Asbury Park, New Jersey • Page 27

Publication:
Asbury Park Pressi
Location:
Asbury Park, New Jersey
Issue Date:
Page:
27
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Coats Say 4 Go' When Rain Replaces Snow ASBURY PARK EVENING PRESS, Wd.f Fb. 3, 1963 17 Simple Rules Aid Novice In Mixing of Furniture Mixing rather than matching is a practice much in favor with professional decorators today. Many an amateur hesitates to follow this lead because she wonders if it is possible to achieve success without resorting to the decorator's standby: pieces of old and unusual Fortunately, and surprisingly, department and furniture stores today are filled with a variety of excellent commercial adaptations of pieces derived from any number of periods and parts of the world and near-profession al results are possible. The suc cess of such a scheme was demonstrated recently in a mod el room which, was put together by one manufacturer using selections from four different collections: French, Spanish, Italian and English. Follow Simple Rules The trick of effectiveness is, of course, to know what goes with what.

By mastering a few of the simplest of rules, however, you can quickly master the techniques of blending, the beginning stick to the few specific suggestions made be low. Once you get courage (aft er seeing success) you mignt become more adventurous, go farther afield in your choices. Pick an area of the world. Most furniture from Mediterranean countries will go together. All share the same climate, terrain, customs, way of even if the language is different.

Or stick to the Iberian Peninsula. You will find certain cultural amenities between pieces of Portuguese and Spanish origin. The same goes for the several styles of Scandinavia. Although furniture from Denmark, Sweden and Norway bears certain national characteristics, all have a shared heritage that makes them go congenially together. Pick a period in time.

Home The living room here, planned for a young couple mixes furnishings inspired by four countries, all. made by! manufacturer. Included are French sofa, chair and desk, Spanish desk chair, English chest at end of sofa, Italian cocktail bench in front of sofa. k9A r-miiv -iufT 1 Spring rainwear follows the sun and chases rainy day blues. A born traveler, this fresh young jersey coat has an interesting double pocket detail, back yoke, and deep raglan sleeve (for slipping easily over suits).

A matching French beret comes with the coat. Raindrops on this windowpane check behave like water on the back of that notorious duckl The imported worsted and Fibranne coat has the look of menswear worsted and is water-repellent. Double breasted, with detachable martingale belt, it comes with a matching French beret. For snappy coverage, day or night, the coat maker creates a climate-controled wrap of Swiss moire. The slim lined coat, with convertible notched collar and spaghetti sash, copes chicly with all spring weather.

It comes with a matching French beret. SPECIALTY OF THE HOUSE ocal ftapbenm Basic Pastry Cuts 'Chores' HINTS FROM HELOISE Don't Spray on Hot Bulb Asbury Park Area George Chrysler, son of Mr. and Mrs. George L. Chrysler, 104 Summit Neptune City, is spending a two-week vacation in San Francisco and Los Angeles, Calif.

He will also visit Las Vegas, before returning home. William J. Mcses, gen of Police Sgt. and Mrs. Edward Moses, 1304 Bridge Asbury Park, has been named to the Dean's List at the University of Virginia, where he is a pre-law freshman.

New residents of Wayside, Ocean Township, are Mr. and Mrs. William Tobias and children, Robin, Karen, Lisa, and Steven, 15 Pal Drive, and Maj. and Mrs. Norman G.

Miller and children, Cheryl, Linda, and James, 7 Emma Drive. The Tobias family formerly lived in Wanamassa. Maj. Miller was formerly stationed in Taiwan, Formosa. He is now attached to Fort Monmouth.

W. Russell Johnston, 778 Wayside Neptune, is a surgical patient at Fitkin Hospital. Freehold Area Mrs. Marie Porth, New York, spent last week at the home of her son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.

Fred Porth, 36 Burlington Freehold Township. During her visit her grandson, Marc, celebrated his fourth birthday with a group of 1 1 Sam Kanner, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Davidofsky, Mrs. Lena O'Krind, furnishings of the mid-eight eenth century from every country in the Western world have common traits.

Conflict will occur only if you try to use rustic country pieces with highly sophisticated city furnishings. Avoid this one pitfall and if you limit yourself to a 40 year span it seems almost impossible to go wrong. The same applies to furniture made today in our own country or anywhere in Europe. thoroughly cleaned, turn off the light and let the globe cool. Then unscrew the light bulb and clean off the brown carbon.

This just might save not only your eyes but cuts on your hand from the shattering glass. Heloise P.S. I have had three light globes explode due to testing during the last six months. Letter of Laughter Dear Heloise: Please ask manufacturers not to use their best glue on labels. It's too good and takes too long to soak it off reusable containers.

Inferior grades are sometimes better. Alma Dear Heloise: Did you ever turn a pie around in the oven when the crispy crust was about half done, and have the hot pad or glove touch it and crumble the beautifully fluted edge? Or remove the finished pie with meringue standing inches high and have it come in contact with the pad and tear away-a-big chunk of meringue? I solved this by putting tne pie pan on a cookie sheet. It's simple mauer 10 turn me cookie sheet for even browning of the crust or for removing not only to combat cheats taking profits from them but also cheats who can bring a bad name to supermarket shopping. Meanwhile the customers can take steps on their own. We don't have to go to the extremes of those who, click pocket adding machines as they drop purchases into their shopping carts, then compare their totals with those of the clerks at the check-out i nil hi fe.

twT )nM Mr. and Mrs. I. J. Friedman, Stokes Freehold, were By HELOISE CRUSE Dear Folks: Stop, look and listen.

I mean just that. Once in a while wives do stupid things. I just did. I was testing an oven cleaner in a fizz can (and believe it, I had read all of Joe Blow's Instruc tions) and there was nothing on the can that said "Do not spray on the electric light in your oven. Mine just Thank coodness.

I am "hard of-seeing'r and had my glasses on. A caution that some manu facturers have forgotten to re mind is that nothing cold should be applied to a hot light bulb. Whatever method you use to clean your oven, never touch the lieht globe with a damp rag (this causes explosions, too. I just tried that.) or spray it directly with anything cold. This is why: Some directions on products tell us how to clean the oven, but evidently they have forgotten that most of us turn the light on when we clean the oven.

Some directions say to heat your oven to 200 degrees. This makes the light bulb extra hot. After your oven has been finance hosts at a family reunion Saturday. Attending were Mr. and Mrs Herbert Lopatin, Mr.

and Mrs. Lifshitz, Mr. and Mrs. Herman SHREWSBURY Mrs. Benjamin L.

Becker, 48 Shadow-brook has a basic pastry crust that she has found invaluable for home and company use. Mr. Becker is an account executive with a Newark advertising agency. He and Mrs. Becker lead a busy social life.

"We do so much entertaining that I have many opportunities to try different fillings," Mrs. Becker said. "I use it both as an I.ors d'oeuvre and as a dessert. Store in Freezer "The pie crust must be chilled before baking. After I have lined my tartlet nans with the crust, 1 store them in the freezer.

This way I have less preparation when planning to entertain. "Sometimes I fill the tartlets with a combination of chopped mushrooms and on-ons which I have sauteed in butter and thickened with flour and sour cream. Other times I fill them with minced ham and a Swiss cheese sauce. "As a dessert they are delicious as miniature pecan pies or macaroon pies. Sometimes I bake the shells first and fill them with sweetened whipped cream and a whole strawberry.

My guests always ask for the recipe." Adventurous Cook, Now Mrs. Becker worked on Wall Street prior to her marriage and never was interested in cooking. Now, with her husband and five children to spur her on, she has become an adventurous cook and has a large recipe file. The children are Donna, 15; LEAP YEAR PAST; PROMISES FADE PERUGIA, Italy Luigi Pieroni, 24, got engaged to 14 different girls during 1964 but has now called off all the proposed marriages. "During Leap Year, I didn't have the right to say no to these lonesome women," he explained.

"But now that it is 1965, a man can be a free man again." Hosting Work with the fingers until mixture resembles coarse bread crumbs. Drop whole egg in a measuring cup and add enough milk to make half-cup. Pour into flour mixture. Knead until it becomes a stiff paste. Chill in the refrigerator for a half hour before rolling.

Divide dough in half and roll thin on a floured board. Cut into rounds and fit into pans. Chill overnight or store in freezer. Makes about 60 tartlets. Alpine Cheese Teasers Fill tarts in the morning and refrigerate.

Bake, before serving. 4 oz. tin of minced ham 1 cup Swiss cheese, shredded 1 A I 1 Mrs. Benj omin L. Becker serves Alpine Cheese Teasers, hot hors d'oeuvres, which are favorites of her guests.

(Press Photo) Pick a specific country and you can range the centuries. Until the appearance of the so-called modern movement in the second decade of this century most furniture changes represented an evolution from period to period rather than a positive change. Pieces two centuries apart can quite happily share house room, and provide a more interesting setting than confining your choice to a single style consifltentlly executed. the pie from the the pie is sate. Mrs.

J. H. Baxter Dear Heloise: Here's my contribution and I hope it will help someone: I make doll clothes for my little girl. When making a bride's dress out of satin brocade, I thought the raveling of the material would drive me crazy. If you have ever.

made doll clothes for these tiny, 12-inch dolls, you know how small the seams have to be, and you. cannot really cut the pattern ex actly with' pinking shears. Anyway, pinked edges sometimes still ravel on satin or brocade. After much deliberation, I decided to try clear fingernail polish. This worked beautifully.

I just painted the polish on all of the unsewn edges (before starting any sewing) and let this dry thoroughly. I have not tried this method on regular garments, but it sure is wonderful for doll clothes. Also works on the ends of little girls' hair ribbons. Katy Raymond Dear Heloise: The plastic coffee can lids make nice wheels for shoe box wagons for little children. Grandma Watkins Checker First, arrange what you buy by groups meat, produce, grocery, dairy so that you can more readily watch the action at the check-out counter.

Second, don't allow yourself to be distracted as the tallies are rung up but keep your eve on what's happening on the register. Third, if the clerk is going too fast for you to keep watch, tell him to slow down. Send correspondence to Hel- Wed. ond Fri. to 9 P.M WORLD FASHIONS Resort Accessories ond fashions.

From Dainty Apparel's beautiful collection. 1 Dealer, Buyer on Debbie, 11; Wendy, Robert, 7, and Doug, 5. While lving in Oradell, prior to moving nere three years ago, Mrs. Becter won a prize in a cooking contest sponsored by a newspaper. Her entry was the pie crust cut in triangles and filled with chicken pate.

Basic Pastry Crust 3 cups sifted all purpose flour 1 tbsp. sugar 3i tsp. salt lh tsp. baking powder Mi cup butter Vt cup margarine 1 egg Milk Sift dry ingredients. Add fats which have been softened to room temperature.

2 tbsp. butter, melted Vi tsp. onion powder 2 eggs Vt cup grated Swiss cheese Cream Sauce Vt tsp. Monosodium gluta- mate 1 cup cream 1 tsp. Worcestershire sauce 'i tsp.

salt Vs tsp. nutmeg 1 tbsp. flour Put 1 teaspoon ham, then 1 tablespoon Swiss cheese in bottom of each tartlet. Next, make the cream sauce by adding seasonings to cream, blending four with a little cream, then adding to the cream. Add onion powder to melted butter.

Whip eggs and add cream sauce gradually, beating well. Add onion mixture and cook over low heat stirring constantly until thickened. Pour over the ham and cheese, filling no more than two-thirds full. Sprinkle with grated cheese and bake at 450 degrees until browned and filling is bubbly. Serve immediately.

cduXTYCLUR TO ELECT STAFF LONG BRANCH The Women's Democratic Club of Monmouth County will elect new officers at a meeting Saturday at Molly Pitcher Inn, Red Bank. Mrs. Rocco Bonforte, president, said Freeholder Eugene J. Bedell will be the installing officer. Saturday's meeting was rescheduled from Jan.

16. your family Eyes of By BETTY YARMON Women's News Service NEW YORK Are you being cheated at the check-out counter? According to recent reports, the supermarket check-out counter has come to be a focal point of cheating, with the supermarkets themselves Victims 35 I One big-city markets commiJ sioner has come up with 14 different ways in which check- parrH nut- 1-The same item is rung up I twice by a quick-fingered fhonifor wnere items are two or three for a special price, usual-; ly an odd ficure. the charee for a single one of them is; rung up at a higher price. 3 Regular prices are charged at the check-out counter even though specials have been listed in newspaper advertisements and on the windows of the supermarket. 4 An item such as a mop is casually left on the counter and its price is added to each customer's total.

If the checker is caught, he says blandly, "Oh, I thought this was yours." View Obscured 5 The view of the register's total is deliberately obscured from the customer by a display of razor blades, magazines, and small toilet articles. 6 The checker deliberately confuses such similar numbers as 27 and 29, 36 and 38, 13 and 18, always giving himself rather than the customer the benefit of the "mistake." 7 A premium price is charged for an inferior grade of Mr. and Mrs. Irving neisgold, Lois and Ronnie Vteisgold, Steven Friedman, and Dr. Lercy Goldfarb.

Paula Guarino, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Morris Guarino, Wynnewood Court, Freehold, was christened Sunday at St. Rose of Lima Roman Catholic Church. Godparents were Mr.

and Mrs. Vincent Guarino, Beverly. A family dinner followed at the Freehold residence. Mr. and Mrs.

James Mannix, Spring Freehold, have returned from a two-week vacation in Miami Beach, Fla. Miss Joan Silvert, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Silvert, 7 Edgewood Drive, Freehold, has been named to the Dean's List for the past semester at Temple University, Philadelphia. uldlelmvn 7 nvnsh i Mr.

and Mrs. Earl Main, S. Lake Drive, River Plaza, entertained at a farewell dinner Friday in honor of Mr. and Mrs. George Brons and family, S.

Lake Drive, who sailed for England Saturday to reside for a year. Also present were Mr. and Mrs. Edward Massell, S. Lake Drive.

Ronald Clark, Lake Shore Drive. Country Club Estates, left by plane Friday night to spend his semester vacation from Rutgers University as the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Fail-lace, Kansas City, Kan. Airman 2.C.

George Ulasewich, son of Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Ulasewick, Poricy Lane, Country Club Estates, will leave today for Labrador where he will begin a year's tour of duty. He is a recent graduate from the technical school at Sheppard Air Force Base, Tex. Dinner guests of Mr.

and Mrs. Ronald Clark, Lake Shore Drive, Country Club Estates Saturday were Mr. and Mrs. Moe Abramson, Long Branch; Mr. and Mrs.

William Carwile and son, Stephen and Jean Clark, Middletown Township. The occasion marked the birthday anniversaries of both Mrs. Carwile and Mrs. Abramson. A family dinner party was held Sunday at the home of Mr.

and Mrs. William Luhrs, Louis Circle, Riverside Heights. Guests included Mr. and Mrs. Frank Luhrs, Mr.

and Mrs. Edward Schrimpe Mt. Pleasant, and Robert Luhrs, home from Lehigh University, and Sharon Luhrs. Among the area students home for mid-semester college But here are a few precau-! oise, Readers' Service, Asbury tionary steps that can be Park Press, Press Plaza, As-easily taken: 'bury Park, N.J. a well-known product, such as grades of tuna.

8 Big advertised specials are unavailable, not only late in the day but even to the first customers in the store. 9 Where advertised items are not available, tihe clerk has higher-priced substitutes for sale. There's a variation on this' wnen nouse brands are substituted for name brands. Ilems Missing JAa Pahcke aF he; rt. 15 dellvered t0 cus" 11-Meat packages are so prepared that large portions of bone and fat are hidden under neath fine-looking cuts, and ui "umw u.j packaged without the livers ana sod at a niKn Pnce- 12 Mechanical errors are made in the register by manipulating its inner mechanism, errors that always work out to the disadvantage of the customer.

13 A subtotal is added to another customer's total. In this procedure, a small purchase is not cleared in the previous total but is added to the next customer without his knowing about it. 14 The printer of the register is disengaged so that one or more items are not marked on the tape but are counted in the total, the clerk pocketing the difference. Agents Employed The supermarkets themselves are fighting cheats within their organizations through field auditors, secret shoppers, and undercover agents. In seeking to ferret out the few bad apples that spoil their organizations, the supermarkets are trying Hours 9:30 to 5:30 AROUND THE $1 JH-r-Jfj if -AHj Yr IJJSSsSS I 1 1 I.

aftl fi wwwijiuNnnj iiumra gmwarn'r a 1 II vacation are Brad Bergh, Andrea Atkinson, Elaine Mathews, and Susan Main, University of Delaware; Jack Roman and Robert Ulasewich, Concord (W.Va.) College; David Skinner, Robert Luhrs, and Wayne Weseman, Lehigh University; Henry Wallace, Frank Hume, Stephen Carwile, James Jarvis, Ronald Clark, and William Zagorski, Rutgers University; Lesley Smith, Douglas and Barbara Evans, Lynn Martin, Patricia Goekmeyer, Howard Smith, and Victor Fox, Ursinus. Strathinore-dhMatauan Mr. and Mrs. James Healy, 128 Idolstone Lane, hosted 50 relatives and friends at their home Sunday following the christening of their infant son, James Patrick, at St. Benedict's Church, Hazlet.

Godparents were Michael Powers, Matawan, and Mrs. Leon Jarvis, Jersey City. Mr. and Mrs. Philip Windsberg, Union, were guests for several days of their son-in-law and daughter, Mr.

and Mrs. Daniel Gerlach, 9 Overlea Lane. Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Korf, 11 Donna PL, were hosts to 130 guests at their home following the confirmation of their son, Stanley.

Rabbi Morris L. Rubinstein of Temple Beth Ahm officiated at the ceremony. John L. Gollnick, son of Mr. and Mrs.

John F. Gollnick, 77 Fordham Drive, has left to spend the winter in Reseda, Calif. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hornstein, Teaneck, were weekend guests of Mr.

and Mrs. Howard Oestreich, 7 Andover Lane. Mr. and Mrs. Martin Steele and children, Steven and Scott, Brooklyn, were the recent guests of Mr.

and Mrs. Stanley Seaman, 33 Avalon Lane. 515 Cookman Avenue, Asbury Park TRAFFIC STOPPER Traffic on London's busy Dover Street slows down when British model Angela Pringle appears in a fabulous full-length broadtail and chinchilla evening coat worth about $45,000. The coat was designed by Bruno and Renee Sterns, the husband and wife team, of Renee Furs, London. Under the coat, Angela wears another eye-opening design-a two-piece white lace over pink creation by John Bates.

(UPI) M. mi tm mt it.t.

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Pages Available:
2,393,853
Years Available:
1887-2024