THE HONEYMOON
rTHEI going- away costume isn't going to be half such :1* a problem m summertime as it has been through i the wild winter months, when a bride had to choose between furs or a sou-wester and gum boots. ; Onoe the weather commences to listen to reason, We'll be able to look quite smart without spending the entire income; of our new husbands for years to come on the train-and-boat frock. Another of' the things which gives a small bride < wrinkles oyer her hose is the problem of where to change. Nowadays, -when the reception so often is held at cabaret or hall, it's exceedingly difficult for a guestsurrounded bride to extract herself from the paraphernalia of veil, silver shoes and posies which would give train- companions curiously to think. However, most of the latest reception-rooms are spending small portions of their huge profits on cubbyholes whereto a lady can disappear and return looking quite unbrldelike. Other brides solve the problem by taxi-ing to their hotels, crawling unobtrusively m byback entrances and emerging m the guise of respectable married .women. . _ ] The v lovely coat m the picture is of mountain-daisy blue satin : . and would be ideal 'if the weather were guaranteed not to. rain and th<s railways -hot to distribute smuts. ' But with ; 6ur New Zealand climate what it is — and railway- service what it isn't— it would be better to reserve such attire for a yachting honeymoon ,to the South Seas: '• • . • ' .
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZTR19281025.2.93
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NZ Truth, Issue 1195, 25 October 1928, Page 19
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244THE HONEYMOON NZ Truth, Issue 1195, 25 October 1928, Page 19
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