if 5 i + i { { PAGE SIX \ THE DALLAS POST, DALLAS, PA.. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1935 Frock That Puts Accent on Youth PATTERN 0343 Always a good beginning, this youthful tailored collar on the gim- ple yoke makes a demure foil for the dainty softness of the bodice. The prettiness of the chic frock is furthered with a graceful flare sleeve—or it may puff, if you prefer. The results are so satisfying, you'll find it real fun to run up this little dress in a dainty printed silk or cot- ton. A soft handkerchief linen would be stunning, too, and so easy to tub. Buttons and belt can pick up a color in the print and make 'a striking accent. Pattern 9343 maj be ordered only in sizes 14, 16, 18, 20, 32, 34, 36, 38, 40 and 42. Size 16 requires 3% yards 39-inch fabric. Complete, diagrammed sew chart included. SEND FIFTEEN CENTS in coins or stamps (coins preferred) for this pattern. Be sure to write plainly your NAME, ADDRESS, the STYLE NUM- BER and SIZE. Send your order to the Sewing Circle Pattern Department, 232 West Eighteenth Street, New York, N. Y. SELF-INVITED John—How’d you like to eat dinner with me tonight? Joan—TI’d love to. John—Okay, tell your mother I'll be there about six o’clock. Confidential “Much money in the new Crimson Gulch bank?’ asked the G man. “Not a dollar,” said Mesa Bill “We feel perfectly able to capture any outlaws who can be induced to visit our fair city. We need machine guns for our own use. That’ shaek labeled ‘bank’ is a decoy.” Friendly Arrangement ¥ “A girl who is engaged should never go out with another man,” gaid the aunt. “Oh, it’s all right! Bob’s engaged, too,” replied the modern maid. Skeptical % Dealer—Yes, we handle all kinds of milking machines. City Lady—But do you really think any of them make as good milk as a cow? RC outfits. the “look” of wool, are the last word in smart fabrics. Don’t overlook, espe- cially, the new spun silks which have a rustic-looking rough-surfaced texture. These noil silks, as they are some- times called, are practically crushless, and though they look like wool they are much ccoler for early fall days and steam-heated class rooms. They launder nicely, too, The girl seated in the little inset picture is off to class in a strictly tailored frock of plaid noil silk which, to look at, you would think was wool. The dress buttons down the back and has cuffs and Peter Pan collar.of pique. The shirtwaist dress is full of bright ideas this fall. Round yokes, jeweled or fancy metal buttons, fur Peter Pan collars glorify the new silk models. Skirts have silk pleats; box pleats placed just above the knee all around are new and girlish looking. The two-piece type of dress vies with one-piece styles. Perfect for campus wear is a two-piece frock as pictured to the left in the illustration. It is made of one of the chic tie-silks which are having such a pronounced vogue. This one is wine color with green dots. The blouse has flap pockets and the skirt buttons all the way down the front, Prom-trotting daughters can really let themselves “go” on the subject of clothes. They can be glamorous and exciting and sophisticated and glori- ously young, too, in satin, silk velvet or one of the new metal silks. This year’s evening frocks go in for molded bodices and waistlines, wide belts or sashes and fullness spreading By CHERIE NICHOLAS because that’s what they really are—“new.” some, practical, dependable-wearing silks which have Hand- gently from the waist. Bodices are tricky. Sometimes they are merely a straight band of the fabric held up by | camisole or “shoestring” straps. Again | they are built up te cover the front of the throat in elaborately twisted, | draped and winged treatments, with low-back decolletage. Girls adore black. Let your.daugh- ter wear black in gleaming slipper satin or black velvet and then tell her to have her beau send her flowers for her hair instead of her corsage if she wants to be swish. Daughter will be very grand in a black slipper prom frock as pictured. It has the high- in-front winglike effect above men- tioned, contrasting the low-cut decol- | letage at the back. The shiny belt is allover-stitched, wkich is the latest wrinkle for belts. If your young hopeful is going to a co-ed college, she will want a few soft dressmaker-type afternoon dresses. For tea dancing nothing could be more ideal than a black silk-satin ensemble. Don’t merely ask the salesman for “satin.” For satisfaction in wear and appearance specify silk satin and in- sist upon it. The dress should have a cowl neck—that means glittering clips to daughter, The jacket should be cut on the classic lines of her sports jack- et, with patch pockets and notched lapels. The skirt should come just be- low the break of the calf. Worn with onc of the new baby bonnets of black silk velvet with ostrich plume tips, daughter will be devastating to her “date.” © Western Newspaper Union. EVENING ENSEMBLE By CHERIE NICHOLAS Velvet for evening, velvet for day- time, velvet, velvet, velvet! All signs point to a velvet season. The evening ensemble pictured is of deep red stiff velyvet—a Chanel model. Luxurious marten collar and cuffs” add to the glory of this superb creation. Note the button fastening of the gown. Many of the Paris dresses show a down-the- front button closing. Often on sheer or lightweight materials dozens upon dozens of tiny buttons are placed as elose as possible and the effect is ut- terly feminine and charming. FASHION SIGNALS GREEN FOR AUTUMN Yellow, the sun’s own color, is usual- | ly a summer favorite. This year has | been no exception; yellow with brown, yellow with black and yellow with green is yellow still. ' This brings to mind that green is being wagered | on as the follow-up color. When utterly satiated with the idea | of current fashions it’s a relief to be | able to peer into the future. On a re- | cent peek behind the scenes the dis- | covery was made that green looked good tor many manufacturers whose | fall lines are in preparation. And! why not? It’s one of the Renaissance | colors and a change from the in- evitable browns, reds and rust. Fach | autumn brings a change also from the blues in which we have been | steeped all summer. There are a number of likely look- | ing green woolen dresses ready to! make their shop window debuts. Some of them are sure to win applause. It | won't be long now before shopping | throngs will flatten their noses against the plate glass front which shields | the cloth-clad mannequin from the | street. Green, White Jade Having Tremendous Vogue in Paris | Green and white jade is having a tremendous vogue of popularity in| Paris now. One-third of every jewelry shop window is devoted to fascinating | carved necklaces, pins, clips and ear- | rings, while fat rounded bracelets of | uncarved jade are matched by round jade rings. Knick-knacks of carved jade such as small, fat Buddhas on jet .stands, ugly little monkeys and | awkward elephants are made in green and white jade and vary in size from tiny miniatures to statuettes of 8 or | 10 inches in height. { Fall Fabrics Materials used by smart designers for evening clothes include velvet, | lame, metal fabrics, “cellophane” mize tures, brocades and lace. | come to the set early, to | blings. | have a career in pictures—if it weren't LOGICAL way to assemble the all important | “back-to-school” wardrobe is to divide it into two types—the “musts” which are absolutely neces- | sary, and the “would like to haves,” which make | clothes a thrill and a venture. In the “musts” smart shirtwaist frocks in the new | silk weaves should alternate with sweater and skirt We speak particularly of “new silk weaves” 3k Ak dk ok dk ok kk kok ok ok STAR DUST Movie « Radio *% By VIRGINIA VALE %%> 303035 X20 20 3 5 3 5 2 530 SE 5 UST at present the radio spot light is being thrown on Lan- ny Ross’ bride; people want to | know what she’s like and how she | looks and all that sort of thing. So here is some information for you. To begin with, as no doubt you know, it was revealed shortly after the announcement of their marriage was made that she’s not a bride at all; they were married three years ago. But that fact was kept secret; she was known as his manager, and that was all. Just her being his manager was | enough for Hollywood, when Lanny went out there to make a picture. Hollywood was accustomed to mothers | who managed their daughters, but was | quite unprepared for what it got from Mrs. Ross. She announced that all | communications must be made toghim | through her. You can imagine how the director loved that! She was to prepare things for him. And so on and on. From the movie center came rum- Ross was all right; he might for that manager of his! And present- ly Hollywood had had enough of the combination. As for what Mrs. Ross looks like, | | can tell only what was told to me. “The other night,” said my informant, “she wore a dress of amber velvet, that awfully heavy velvet, and it had ruffles on it! She wears such strange clothes! And she’s plain looking, and older than he is. And awfully jealous, evidently; he hardly dares look at an- other woman when he’s with her.” fe The radio people are a clannish lot. After a rehearsal or a broadcast they like to go out and eat together, and | have fun. The Show Boat troupe goes to a delightful oyster bar near the R. C. A. building, where folks can dance if they want to. Rudy Valley goes there, too, and frequently takes his dog along. The oyster bar is so attractive that it’s no wonder radio’ stars like it, and it’s an excellent place to go to see them just being themselves. —¥— Myrna Loy has made up her spat with | Metro, and here’s hoping she’ll soon be back at work again. It’s too long since | she made a picture. She hasn’t told yet just how much more money she’s to get each week, but when she took off in a plane for the coast she seemed to be happy, so no doubt it’s plenty. Speaking of -Metro, there’s thunder in the air. Irving Thalberg is said to have dashed to New York not merely for pleasure, but to form a new com- bine because he didn’t like the way he’d been treated on the old home lot. They say—it may be announced by the time you read this—that he’ll join with three other moguls and make | pictures for the new company. The set-up looks very, very nice. For the other three men are Winnie Sheehan, who ran Fox until Twen- tieth Century stepped in; Sol Wurt- zel, who has no peer in turning out | good, cheap program pictures and has done it for years for Fox, and Hunt Stromberg, who has been supervising and making pictures for Metro. Funny, but every so often there is one of these shake-ups in the movie business, and first thing you know you have a lot of new companies on hand. Darryl Zanuck started the present landslide when he left Warner Broth- ers and formed Twentieth Century. Meanwhile Mary Pickford has joined with Lasky and is at last going to pro- duce pictures. 4 fe Couple of new contracts were signed recently in Hollywood by Warner Brothers. Kay Francis has one for three years with an increase of $1,000 a week, and Pat O’Brien cashes in on his popularity by receiving $750 a week more than he’s been getting, and signing up for three years more. That's what your liking them has done for them. a Whatever you do, don’t miss the new Astaire-Ginger Rogers picture, “Top Hat.” Astaire has turned into a swell comedian, and audiences are be- ginning to laugh the moment he ap- pears. He has plenty of amusing sit- uations in the new picture, and dances as often—almost—as you want him | to. He's been built up quite a bit; | dances a good deal alone as well as with Ginger, who’s improved, but isn’t so pretty in “Top Hat” as she ought | to be, thanks to a bad hair-do. i ODDS AND ENDS . .. Norma Shearer and Helen Hayes lunched together the other day at one of New York's smart restaurants; just two talented girls, who | probably discussed their children instead of their careers . . . You'll hardly rec- ognize Merle Oberon when you see her in “The Dark Angel” . . . Just as Mar- | garet Lindsay arrived in Honolulu to va- cation with Janet Gaynor the studio sum- moned her to begin work on her next picture . . . Two policemen carried Mae Murray through the crowds at the open- ing of “Page Miss Glory,” whereupon somebody remarked; “She’s brought one lawsuit too many and she’s being ar- rested!”—Mae is one of those who seem to sue at the drop of a hat. © Western Newspaper Union. HITCH-HIKING FLY SPREADS DISEASE The common house fly is a hitch- hiker, However, the fly doesn’t both- er to jerk a thu.nb and ask a ride; it flies Into moving autos or even trains or airplanes without permis: sion and often travels hundreds of miles before leaving its chosen ve: hicle. This habit of flies traveling great distances on other power than their own has made local fly eradication campaigns less offective than the campaigners hoped. Cases have been found where a fly carried disease germs on its legs and body for miles and infected people in the community where it settled. No previous cases of the disease were in existence in the new community and health au- thorities could find no other source of infection than flies. Repeated warnings of physicians and health officials have apparently failed to instill a proper fear of the house fly in the average mind. How- ever, a more thorough knowledge of the habits of a fly would increase the respect for this tiny insect, ac- cording to authorities on the subject. Decent cleanliness in any home . requires protection against the men- ace of flies. Whether a fly is home- born or a hiteh-hiking visitor, he is a danger. Fortunately, an effective fly-killing program can be conducted in any home by the use of a reliable fly spray containing an ample quan- ‘tity of Pyrethrins, a product derived from Pyrethrum flowers, which ig death to’flies, when sprayed in a fine mist. Haste at the Wrong Time Often Fatal to Motorists A motor accident never occurs if it can be avoided. Drivers do not deliberately crash into each other, skid off the road, run into trains at grade crossings or swerve into trees. Traffic mishaps occur only after it is too late to prevent them. Re- duced to a fundamental, they are almost always the result of too much speed in the wrong place. Speed in itself is relative. A speed of three miles an hour is too much if it carries a load of people onto a grade crossing in front of an on- coming locomotive, A speed of 70 miles an hour, or even 80, under the proper conditions, with car mechani- cally perfect, brakes in good work- ing order, driver alert, road wide and smooth and the way ahead clear of traffic for half a mile, is safe enough. Rather than put all the blame on speed, perhaps it should be placed on haste, which is speed at the wrong time. The proper conditions for speed, of course, vary. Some- times the conditions demand un- usually slow driving. Sometimes they permit of unusually fast driv- ing. But drivers, if they will re- member that any speed which places them in danger or causes them to be dangerous to others is too much, can often avoid accidents before they are in the midst of them. Geyser Changes Time The famous geyser, the Minute Man of Yellowstone, instead of play- ing every minute or so as was its policy for years, now plays constant- ly for an hour and twenty minutes. It repeats this process about ten times daily, playing to 60 and 70 feet. BEAVER FARMS Beaver farms are to be estab- lished in Newfoundland as a colony- development project. Quick, Safe Relief For'Eyes Irritated By Exposure To.Sun, Wind" RETR Life Life will give you ‘what you ask of her if only you ask long enough and plainly.—E. 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