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Pittsburgh Post-Gazette from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania • Page 15

Location:
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Issue Date:
Page:
15
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PITTSBURGH FOST-GAZETTE: TUESDAY, JUNE 1, "1937. Girl Advised to Struggle Against Acquiring Occupational Look Fashion YLighlights'by Folly tule- Smiled tf' rcises Tenseness sV Harden Muscles -ance Diet Given For Women to Grow Heavier. Donnelly rt" Ill b3 vin? -UKMi3ddt 4- put-the and wearing that "occupational warn authority on health and ex gay that it i3 difficult to find a dnesa -wear tne occupational Prize Recipes Calcutta s. Steam prunes until tender and remove the stones. Use large prunes.

Mix 1 tablespoon of finely chopped gherkins with 1 tablespoon of cooked rice, 1 tablespoon chutney, pinch of salt and a pinch of paprika. Stuff prunes with this mixture, dip each into Worcestershire sauce and roll in a strip of bacon, fasten with toothpick and broil until bacon is crisp. The reeip for these delicious snacks wa submitted tn the Women's Page Editor of the Pot-Gazett. by Lillian Hoy, Division street, Ellwood City, Fa-, and to her goes today's dollar prize. hrr i i kb? JL Jill rr from j.

w- 'SH 4 5 a of tne voire, the posture, digestive ri ijt ani functions, all are affected by the fpw muscle tone." en lected for decoration rather than for utility. Thought of a living room, on the other hand, suggests a big log fire and a few deep easy chairs, each with a light behind it, a utility table beside it. Each big chair is perhaps not nearer than shouting distance to other chairs and large sofas are as comfortable to lie down on as to sit upon. In a drawing room every object is solely for ornament, and personal belongings are always carefully put away. In a living room traces of family occupation are characteristically evident.

The- top of the desk has papers iwigited down upon it, a book is hying on a sofa, the workbasket open on a table, music on the piano, which is open, and so on. Moreover, one thinka of a dog lying on the hearth or a cat on a chair cushion in the living room, but pets that might have muddy paws or get hairs on tha cushions have no place vhatever in the drawing room. Mrs. Post will answer etiquette queries only if self-addressed, (3c) stamped envelope accompanies request. 'rr', bk" tn to "Co up and start waking your father, Junior He has to be up in an hour!" It's certain! not too early to begin waking up to th fact that cotton, now glorying in fashion's spotlight, has gone in for intricate cut and seaming.

A slim and sculptured silhouette ia only thus attained though the? effect is. as it should be, simple. Th range of color and patterns is practically bewildering. We especially like this one a linen weave cotton with a white scroll pattern on a rust colored ground. Edyth Dieririch suggested a number of rhythmic exercises that every woman may safely try at home.

The first of these relaxes the nerve centers and provides absolute control of the muscles of the body. "Stand correctly in perfect poise, with the arms hanging naturally st the sides. Place the right foot immediately in front of the left r- 1 la. 1 1 ricn'K of f.jrnp ana 'XZ nf tn" neck muscles are relaxed, move in- the shoulders until the muscles are 1 reiaxed, and so on. Relax from inn nw iiitjyk Ltn iicmii liiii.ii jcint to joint, sink slowly to the floor.

You wui tie seated, at the end of the relaxation movement in Oriental fashion on the floor. The body should be thoroughly relaxed. Then stiffen the muscles and endeavor to rise to your feet. Do this exercise slowly and rhythmi- Most Drawing Rooms Are Formally Furnished Dog at Fireplace and Open Workbasket Out' Of Place in Stiff Surroundings. By Emily Post pew I urre fnt i cally, five times a day only.

15 tne open study Food Chemistry Pfp And Count Calories. -i hv iirp r.f th waist- ost-Gazette Photo. Peggy Schaber found the tangerine shade becoming to a blonde tchen she modeled the grrtvn in a. Pittsburgh store for the Post-Ga-zette. It may be ordered in white or a cool lime which are equally lovely for summertime parlies.

For further information call Polly, Atlantic 6100 or write her in care of the Post-Gazette, enclosing a stamped self -addressed envelope. Vivid colored chiffons are used for strict-ly formal goivns, and this one has its nun adorable evening cape entirely of ostrich feathers, matching exactly in color. In this case it is a deep tangerine shade. The goun is beautifully cut with yards of chiffon in the skirt that is molded over the hips and flares and fonts to the ground. It is cut in a deep front and hack, with two shining rhinestone clips catching the slender straps.

Pampered Chid Hard To Please Many Parents As Well As Grandparents To Blame By Gladys H. Be vans One of the hard problems to solve by the long distance correspondence method is the "difficult to please" child. Without the ample clues that would be supplied by personal interviews with both parents and the child, it often ia puzzling to find between the meager lines of a letter the reasons why the hard-to-manage child the child who is dissatisfied is that way. Barring ill health, low vitality, or convalescence, all of which may show themselves in this kind of fussiness and malcontent, there are two more usual reasons for this kind of temperament. One is too much attention, and the other too many playthings.

Let us take first the matter of too much attention. You often will find where grandparents or other relatives live with their children too much of this loving adoration. It may take the form of spoiling, too large doses of approval, op merely of constant attention. The child's natural tendency to be self-sufficient, or 1 f-entertaining, within certain limits of course, is thwarted, and the undue stimulation that comes from too much attention makes playing alone seem uninteresting and results in the child who is no longer in a contented frame of mind. We don't want the relatives to shoulder all this blame.

Many mothers and fathers, too, make the same mistake of not letting their children alone enough, of not letting them cultivate the ability to be by themselves happily. (And here, as usual, in order not to seem to make too sweeping generalizations, we must add that there is a need in all children for both solitude and companionship.) Often, as a result, we see the child who ha3 not been allowed to learn to be contented and happy by himself with his own playthings. Copyright. 1937. Sunglasses Match Beach Ensembles Fashion is demanding that sunglasses be in color harmony with the beach ensemble this season.

It's no trick at all to look at life through rose-colored specs if your costume requires it. On a popular beach the whole gamut of color combinations was noted recently, most of the glasses being framed in white crystal and catalin. Aquamarine, deep amber, Biscayne blue and rose glasses do double duty by being attractive to the eye of the wearer as well as the beholder. large club sheets. Blue, white, and ivory, some with borders, all with distinction and finish.

Better lay some away, even if you've sworn off letters for the summer. BANG UP CRACKERS. 5 Biff, bing, bang, and a couple of tigers to celebrate this newcomer to the "bing" family, which has just reared its tasty head! Bang up crackers, their progenitors were, with their roundness and crispnes3 and flavor, and now cheese has been added to give them biff, and they're still only 19 cents a box. A very nice idea, too, to have cheese crackers of the same consistency as all the other short crisp tidbits, which have revolutionized the biscuit industry these last few years. To lenm the names of thops where articles mentioned in thts column may he found, call Atlantic 6100 between the hours of 9 and 4 (Saturdays from 9 to and o.sfc for Polly.

Or send a stamped, addressed envelope. Toast Tomatoes To Remove Skin To remove skins from tomatoes, place the tomatoes on a fork and hold them over, a fire. Turn them constantly until the skin becomes slightly charred or bursts. (About two minutes will be long enough. The skin may be removed then with a sharp knife.

The amount of heat will not affect the firmness or flavor of the tomato. Thl. W.l 0It 0a AH lm Cboie Hair Style Tk Meat Parlect Machineless IS fSennlns 5 Eojmi Far Walt mr 6 nr mar tertar that It iff1rol to Wltk tbl A4 a With TM A OIL- SURE-CURL $2.50 AS rmtMtmu nt Camplrt ttkmmpflB. KtnitmrT A Trtm 7EGLEIVS 181 MA1KET IT. AT.

1191 Cot. ruu At. a I 'lliiy fcirairilii up Dear Mrs. Post: Will you explain the difference between a drawing room and a living room? A neighbor and I have had a discussion about these rooms and I don't believe either one of us was right. Answer: Although a drawing room is often used as a living room and livi ft groom is "even more often used as a draw Emily Post ing room, the difference is that a drawing room is intended essentially for company and a living room ia first of all intended for the family.

We think of a typical drawing room as formally and rather stiffly furnished with slender chairs and not too comfortable wooden framed sofas, a gentle fire burning on a small hearth; sofas and chairs arranged in conversational groups and the lights se- i SHOPPING WITH POLLY TRIPPING THE LIGHT FANTASTIC TOE is going to be fun, this year with evening frocks more fanciful than ever, fresher and frivolous and gay! Tripping over pecuniary hazards is practically no problem at all, if you go to this shop where the nicest flimflam of a feckless season is selling at a quarter of its price. It's the Jun bug in them! calories and study food chemistry, to follow balanced menus," she advise. Here is what she terms a balanced maintenance diet, which may be adapted to reducing purposes by cutting down the size of the butter pats, substituting reducing dressing for mayonnaise, snd so on. A sample menu for one day follows: Glass of hot water on rising, with juice of a half lemon in it. Breakfast (415 Calories.) 1-i grapefruit 1 poached egg on toast (whole wheat) pat butter 1 glass skimmed milk Coffee clear or tea clear Luncheon (410 Calories) Fresh fruit salad, made of one orange, grapefruit, banana, celery, lettuce, mayonnaise dressing 1 whole wheat muffin 3i pat butter Coffee clear or tea clear 1 glass skimmed milk, or buttermilk Dinner (600 Calories) Broiled steak, with one cup Stewed tomatoes Lettuce salad 23 cup strawberries, with 1 teaspoon sugar.

Coffee clear or tea clear (Total, 1,425 Calories) iOTHER OUT UKIF SHOPPING- SERVICE COURT 5010 Cf 'Cation -A i mil IN utaw Here TW It gets us all. NO BUYER'S PIPE DREAM. 1 It's an anniversary and the laudable desire to see you well dressed on your parties with $8.75 frou-frou selling for $5.75, and $10.95 to $12.95 formals at $8.75. They look it, too. None of your buyer's pipe dreams! Printed pique, with white doodads on a green, blue, or red ground, iced with white pique pleating3 about the neck, skirt, and whatnot, and white pique flowers on the boozum.

OF KITCHEN Blvd years, 1 -I 'im twill HMUlff' I MRS. MARY BROLLEY, of Glenshaw: 'If I remember correctly it was AUNT HASSAH'S Bread that discouraged mother from baking her own." This, too, at $5.75 and it'3 a shame to take so little money! ANOTHER BEAUTY OUTPOST. 2 A famous beauty house has just opened another outpost in one of our nicest shops serving everything from soup to nuts to make your beauty more glorious! Here it is, that you find some of the best of the sun creams (which we were talking about only yesterday) to season your face to taste for airy-fairy lillians, for nut-brown maidens, for girls with ideals inbetween. Not to grow too technical. For that alabaster effect (so smart and becoming to brunettes) there's a true anti-sunburn cream, in a convenient tube to carry in your bag, and priced only $1 complete (also with a new non-messy top which squeezes out just enough).

For red-gold effects (blondes, please notice) there's a $1 bottle of sun tonic which blesses without burning, and, there's sunburn oil (also $1) for the real deep brown tone. This is the house, also, which makes a Riviera tan makeup, so you can be a quick-change artist from morning till night, tan or white at will. And powder and lipstick and rouge to go with this (ask for Red Geranium or Chinese Red) and, contrariwise, a swell natural makeup lotion (with Red Velvet lipstick and rouge) for the lily-maid side of the fence. ine last-named we use as a foundation cream all year round and couldn't lie without it a bottle). GIRDLE ROUND YOUR MIDDLE.

3 We can put a girdle round your middle for only $1.49 today a regular $1.95 girdle just right for summer, and caught with the June madness, too. We can point out the place where these little two-way stretchers are doing their mark-down stuff a regular girdle with support for great and small, at- practically the price of a stepm! They come in Email, medium, and large sizes, each in 3 lengths, so you actually have 9 different sizes to choose from. They're finished with self edging and 4 flat garters, and should serve all ordinary (and extraordinary) purposes of the normal figure. QUIRED BY A FAMOUS HOUSE. 4 If you can hold a pen at all, you'll want some of this writing paper quired by a famous house and selling for only 28 cents a box.

Just 28 cents for 24 sheets and 24 envelopes, which are worth 50 cents at least, or 4 boxes for $1, for a quality which ought to be ashamed to be so cheap! Note the embarrassment of riches. Letter sizs paper. Note elzs and And then over this (all for $3.75) goes a printed pique jacket with crisp and flaring white revers and we defy you to tell it from the upper classes, except in the difference to your purse! Then there's waffle pique in those sunbaked prints which Mexico has wished on our lives trimmed with tricolor pipings to pick up the different shades, and boasting a matching jacket, too. And there's lace especially one beauty in petal pink with a blue sash, made like a shirtwaist dress with collar, puffed sleeves and all this likewise $8.75 and done in other colors, too. (Ah there, brides maids!) WITCHERY LIES HERE.

Writchery lies in the $5.75 direction as well, in the person of a dotted organza which practically floats on its own steam: yellow, blue, red, or green dots on white, with a collar and frill and twinkling rhinestone buttons. Also in dark dotted swiss, casually summer with a neck and white frills and a skirt which turn3 Spanish somewhere near the knees. Also embroidered net (more marching on to weddings) at $5.75, in candy colors, with ribbons to contrast and match your flowers. Also an eye-filling redingote in dotted organza (the dots are velvety, kind of) all white, or blue, green, or red on white grounds, swishing merrily over a slip. STYLISH PERMANENTS 50 with a m-p o.

Finger Wave and Trim. THERA1ETIC OIL WAVE A Lovely, Lasting Permanent A-uret a Well-Groomed Appearance. For All Types of Hair. VAPER MARCEL Machineles WAVE $5.00 JAMAL MACHINELESS WAVES. For exquisite lovelines.

Very comfortable process. THERMO OIL THERMIQUE WAVES $6.50 AUDANUS BEAUTY SALON 433 PERN AYE. AT. 1273 Open Ete. Except Wed.

A Sat. ioTVs CH ARLES KAY, grocer, Mt. Royal Glenshaw: "Vi been in business 14 but 1 remember AUNT HANNAH'S Bread being sold long before day Ihi wet i i ir vi ii fa i. 2. mi I SLICED in crul ARTIST MOD the all-in-one foundation with detach- I jrassierel All the advantages of an all-in-one garment plus the many more that only Artist Model can give.

For instance the de-t a liable brassiere is attached by four invisible tabs. Change it quickly, easily to meet the requir ements of your sports, daytime and evening fashions, Artist Model $8 to $12.50 Extra Enitlcrit r- $2 9 sa.so Sixth Floor VHAY, MODELED THE DU- I'i 1 7 "Ji fi-p i uiu-idsmonea gooa- HAN'-N'AHi -td-treat of lifetime! jour grocer todays hi 4 ft fc" T'rTi'r' UT A lOAf AT YOUR CROCtR'S GIVES "SAFE 1 6lGE3TEO i5 Kt? ENERGY FOR BUILDS 5-1 I FOR BOYS WEIGHT fe, STAMINA Ji i ttfca" -tf il Villi i. ---a-g. -n-fc-X. -ii.

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About Pittsburgh Post-Gazette Archive

Pages Available:
2,104,186
Years Available:
1834-2024