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TO CLEAN A LOOKING

GLASS

made of the smart. coats and ensembles in large checks. '

Feathers and pom poms in all sizes and colours adorned the crowns of hats worn by the womenfolk. The popularity of the halo shapes still lingers, but is a safe investment when, as on Saturday, they frame j young faces and short "curls. All the variations of the military and shovel shapes were seen, also the new soft felts of the masculine trend.' Not a few hats showed touches of cellophane trimming, a fore-whisper of spring.. . ■....

Is the long-awaited "brighter-clothes sense" being awakened in the sterner sex? There were some indications of it atTrentham on Saturday. Several tweed suits and velour hats of green Jones.Avere ;,worri, one-~young': man accenting the colour note with a green and white spotted scarf." He also carried, very carelessly, motoring rugs in two shades of green. Another, wearing navy blue, had tucked a scarlet feather into the band of his velour hat.

The president (Mr. Eric Riddiford) and Mrs. Riddiford (who was wearing a green flecked tweed suit, a matching felt hat, and a posy of violets) had issued luncheon' invitations to the following:—Sir Walter and Lady Carncross and Miss Carncross, the Hon. P. and' Mrs. Fraser, the Hon. D. G. and Mrs. Sullivan, the Hon. H. T. and Mrs. Armstrong, the: Hori. W. E. and Mrs. Parry, the Hon. P.' C. Webb, the Hon. F. and Mrs, Jones, the Hon. W. and Mrs. Lee Martin, the Hon. Mark Fagan, Major-General ' Sir S..'L. H! Sinclair-Burgess, Mr. J. Bull, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Duncan, Mr. and Mrs. O. S. Watkins, Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Me Leodj Dr. and Mrs. A. McGregor-Grant, Mr. R. S. Abraham, Mr. E. A. Weld, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Booth, Mr.: and Mrs. C. J. Bennett, Mr. F. O. Hamilton, Mr. Hanlon, Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Spence, Among those present were Lady Nolan, Lady Carriofossi Lady Elliott, Mrs. H. P. F. Blundell, Mrs. H. Moss, jun., Mrs. J. B. MacEwan, Mrs. Garcia' Webster, Mrs. B. B. Wood, Mrs. Stronach Paterson, Mrs. Alex Young, Mrs.' Millen Paulin, Mrs. Herbert Caselberg, Mrs. Alfred Caselberg, Mrs. G. A. Duncan, Mrs. Charles Richardson, Mrs. Reading, Mrs. Ken Guy, Mrs. Keith Stewart, Mrs. J. W. G. Brodie, Mrs. Wm. Watson, Mrs. Ham. Gilmer, jun., Mrs. Fulton, Mrs. Jimmy Crawford, Mrs. Andrew Todd, Mrs. Murray Litchfleld, Mrs. Rana Wagg; Mrs. Wheeler, Mrs. Pat Williams, Mrs. Barry Blundell, Mrs. E. Palliser, Mrs. John Kirkcaldie, Mrs. M. Luke, Mrs. Algar Williams, Madame Arhaud, Mrs.'lrwin, Mrs. Leckie; Mrs. Pats Mills, Mrs. Hayman, Mrs. F. Thompson, Mrs. Eskell, Mrs. Rodney Thomson, Mrs. Charlie Miles, Mrs. Orton (Wanganui), Mrs. Davis (Wanganui), Mrs. Chas. Russell, Mrs. R. Macalister, Mrs. J. Payne, Mrs. Morton, Mrs. Treahy, Mrs. T. C. A. Hislop, Mrs. P. Jackson, Mrs. C. Patrick, Mrs. Clifford-Moore, Mrs. E. Pocock, Mrs. J. Henderson, Mrs.C. J. B. Norwood, Mrs. J. Shelley, Lady Patricia Stanhope, Misses Sybil Nathan, Jessie Peacock, Barbara Blundell, E. Byrne, M. Byrne, M. Kennedy; Lorna Brodie, June Brodie, Betty Reading, Betty Herbert,' Jan Sloman, Sheila Todd, Nancy Trimnell, Isobel Young, Noel Paulin, Tiora Meadows, Neville Treahy, Jill Hayman, Betty Sharman (Auckland), D. Warry (Queensland), B; McGregor (Southland), Betty Ellis,: Thelma Fitzgerald, L. and P. Silverstone, Pat Gledhill, Jean Sutherland, Lloma Newall, Myr'a' Chilton, Irene Spidey, Phyllis FitzGerald, Barbara Silver, and the following Hawke's Bay . visitors: Mrs. G. D. Beatson, Mrs. W. Richmond, Mrs. Haldane, Mrs. P. Holden, Mrs Arthur Small, Mrs. J.Mcßae, Mrs. Gordon Nolan, Mrs. John Perry, Miss Margaret Speedy ,Miss Marjorie Curlett. TO CLEAN SUEDE BELTS To clean a suede belt or bag, rub the surface with a coarse flannel dipped in sawdust or bran; afterwards raise the nap with a piece of coarse emerypaper. Shake off whatever dust re|mains, and"the belt and bag will.look

like new.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19360713.2.176.6

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Issue 11, 13 July 1936, Page 15

Word Count
635

TO CLEAN A LOOKING Evening Post, Issue 11, 13 July 1936, Page 15

TO CLEAN A LOOKING Evening Post, Issue 11, 13 July 1936, Page 15