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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 23, 1958)
o 8 The NewRtitw, Roteburej, Ore. Thur. Oct. 23, 1958 Eased Look' Replacing Chemise In Fashion World ! ' - :J ;? v .'r--,,1! ; l';-., r'sn 4 tit rl V ' " v. it i ' I ' , f'- "v ' 1 ' 'j r W ' ; - ji : A J THIS SMART BLACK and white tweed, worn by Marcy Arndt, hos the accent on the up lifted line of the empire tropeze. The fobnc is a wool viscose and cotton tweed. MorcV's accessories include a bright red Garbo hat and trim chemise bag. The dress shows the line of the belt inside, directly under the bust line and on the upper portion of the back, which gives it comfort. RED THE RAGE of the season, is in its glory In this 'eased look' dress with a trim of cord along the chest and sleeves. So simple, yet beguiling, it is a young style which has proved popular. Judy Nordling's accesories include a small red purse in suede and a bright red bonnet in a style so old its new. The fabric; called "sheer wool" Is nearly as light and breezy as cotton. RED, YELLOW, ORANGE, rust and just about anything else you'd like to mention, ore com bined in this fetching little box-type suit with a vest jacket, worn by Charlee Packer. The shirt is the traditional straight style, but he vest gives it a whole new look. The style isn't really new, and it's possible it may be around for awhile yet. It it warm too, even with the lightweight wool. ... wc ..-4 ' f ' " " i V 'J A - "" i ' I 1.' Roseburg Women Accept Bright Colors, Casual Appearance In Clothing Choices By JAN MORTON Nws-Riviw Staff Writer with all this are the rope-beads, the extremely pointed-toed ho, ih rhrmise haa. or ometlun2 The chemise is practically the similar, "lost-word" in the world of fashion.! The fashion dictionary changes Chemise Cuts Seen each season, if not more often, and : Hair-dos range from short to now it seems the most popular: medium length and though they item selling in Koseburg is the : aren't the rage in Roseburg, "che "eased look," a loose form of the mise cuts" are being seen. Many sheath. women get the cut, but eliminate Darts extend from the bust to 1 the traditional headache band. The just a little below the waist, and j band is being used more by the don't fit the body, but tend more j younger set. to Slope wun u. as one saies Hats nave revenea dsck 10 ine clerk put it, "It is different from j 40s, and many go farther to delve HERE ARE TWO PLAIN colors, when com bined, provide on exciting, eye-catching mixture, and even more so with Pat Med ford's black hair. The satin fdbric is gather ed under at the base, to reveal the newest thing in hemlines, the balloon skirt. Notice the princess line waist, so slimming and figure flattering. The up and down stripes ore ideal for the short girl too. PLEADS INNOCENT PORTLAND (AP) Clayde C Crosby. Portland Teamsters Un ion official, pleaded innocent to tiny to a false swearing indictment stemming from the recent Port land vice investigation. Housewife Wins Battle To Teach Own Children GRANtiKVll.I.E. Idaho (AP) Mrs. George Wolfe, who says her children were not getting a good enough education in public schools, has annarentlv won her His attorney said he would be j battle for the right to teach them ready to go on trial on short notice. Arthur Higgs, assistant attorney general in charge of the prosecu tion, told Circuit Judge Charles Kedding he would notify the court when his office was ready to have the case go to trial. herself. Probate Judge Harvey Myrick said Monday a complaint charging Mrs. Wolfe with keeping her chil dren out of school will he dis missed. Ally. Gen. Craydon Smith and Pros. Atty. Wayne McGregor Jr. recommended the dismissal. As a result, Myrick said, the Roard of Idaho County School dis trict 211 decided there was little point in pressing the matter. Mrs. Wolfe moved to an old min ing ramp this fall, taking her sev en children. Six of the children are of school age. They are 80 miles from the nearest high school and 30 from the nearest grade school. The parents said they were dis- What do in the daily not on women want newspaper. . . but television? I " '5 ' 1 Llinnilui''ililfjfc i j ' I jftr - ' I I ' ( ' ,;. j f ;- jp4j-rr I til .:- 11 111 fin 7 satisfied with public school educ ation in Lewiston, where they lived before. Mrs. Wolfe attended the State Normal School in Lewis ton. She is teaching the children with the aid of correspondence courses. Couple Loses 4 Children In Less Than A Week WILMINGTON, N.C. UTi Mr. and Mrs. DeWitt Carroll have lost all their four children in less than a week. Mrs. Carroll gave birth to a still born babv last Wednesday. Her three other children were en route from their home in nearby Acme Sunday to take her home from a hospital here when their automo bile collided with a passenger train at a grade crossing. The two hoys, aged S and 16, and the girl, 12, were killed. The moil vrtottl cookinf vtemtl yarn can owitl Without th tuat handy Hull pan. Um th lntt m a mixing bowl and lf rfrigrotor trog. fail htotlng coppar banata. Claaming, aaiy-to-clooa italnlaM taal. ifiiida end ovH $1111 ANSWER: ADVERTISING." In a survey by Northwest cm University among house-wives, 92 per cent said they wanted newspnixrs u ith advertising. By comparison, 61 per cent said they would prefer television without adver tising. This receptive attitude toward the daily newspaper is one of the greatest asseU that an advertiser could ever want. And it is one of the big reasons why advertiser place more money in the daily newspaper than in radio, television, magazines and outdoor combined! VIS L: ..wa. 4 V Mi ' the chemise because you know where you are. Vests, with matching skirts and separates, are selling faster than they can be stocked in many of the stores. The brighter the'colors the better. Roseburg seems to hold a definite trend toward the casual type clothes, and the "peg" skirt with the outside blouse appeals to almost everyone (except men), but mainly to teen-agers and young women. The balloon hemline has reached Roseburg, but it is limited to cock tail or party dresses. It is simply a hemline, turned under and gath ered inside the dress. It is used in both full and fitted dresses and : is more noticeable in the latter. Sticking out all the way around, the hem may be six inches wide. That way the knees ca move around. Textures Varied Fabrics are varying from the dark cotton to the heavy, woolly type fiocco. Fiocco is a soft-appearing material with a shaggy or hairy look. It is used mostly in plaids. Flowered silks with the gayest of colors are favorites with the older set, while the young also like brightness, but in wools or cottons. Colors and prints all are bright. Blue, green and red are the tops, with a blue and green mixture be ing predominant. Roseburg has discovered, along with fashion, that gaudy colors, such as orange and pink, blue purple and green, or rust and red, can be worn if just the right shades are combined. If you happen to fit the blends, more power to you ! The fabric being used in the new trapeze is railed "pellon." Serv ing as a lining, it has the feel of paper, but can be washed, holds its sturdiness and gives the dress the correct shape. Also aiding the new form is the belt inside. It gives a gentle, but most definite curve to the bust, or depending upon the style, the back. This belt becomes quite hand; in the blouse-on (pronounc ed bloost-on) since it fits in front and "drapes" in back. It gives one the Impression that the blouse has its own waistline. Of course, worn into the Garbo days. The swagger brim is at its peak now. and the tarn, made in leather, has proved quite popular. Colors, naturally, are exotic, and are found in all hues of purple to flaming red. One style of hat which is being worn is the modified cloche, but appeara to be styled after the Salvation Army hat. Shoes are definitely here to stay pointed-toed ones, that is. They are selling more in black and brown, with some bright melon red. Quite popular recently were the shoes matching the print of the dress, which from a distanre. had people wondering where the dress ended and shoes began. Leather and suede are selling best, but patent leather is expected to rise from its summertime grave by Christmas. Now that patent can he purchased in colors, it should hit an all-time high. Handbags Growing Handbags are bigger than ever. The chemise may have departed from the dress styles, but' it has gained favor in purses. They are long and slim. They serve as a shopping bag and purse, all in one. But, never forget the "feed hag," the biggest of all handbags. Its style is here to stay, and it can be appropriately worn with jeans or the most extreme trapeze. It is wide and deep; handy for storing away necessary articles. Styles of today have been taken from the Twenties, Thirties and Forties. The styles for the future may be a reversion to the long hair, wide shoulders and ankle strap heels once popular. This will be proof enough that "progres sive" style is really a page from the past. Responsible for all these styles is France, the motherland of West ern fashion. It has led the fashion world for years, and its influence reaches into Roseburg, whether the men like it or not! Anyway, it's not all one sided. A man's scathing remarks about women's clothing can always be answered by a comment on the popularity of the button-down col lar and pointed-toed shoes in men's fashions. NIATrlapaata BOMBED Mrs. David Allen looks at the shattered win dows of her Boston apartment after a powerful bomb, placed on the lawn of a Jehovah's Witness meeting center, blew out windows In four nearby homes. Police say th bombing may have been the work of religious cranks. LINDA DAMON IS TRYING on this chic little beige, modified cloche hat with a swagger brim. This style is quite versatile and con be worn with many styles by any age group. It moy be cocked over one eye to give it "personality". (Paul Penkins photos) Ford Motor Co. Reports $16 Million Net Lost DETROIT (AP) Ford Motor Co. and its consolidated subsidiar I ies Tuesday reported net loss of ,$16,200,000 for the first nine months of 19S8 compared with net Regular Price $11.75 You $2.87 W awipla Baa af i HVIM WAN. Boy Mentally Disturbed, Hospital Reports State NKW YORK (AP) Melvin! The bov's parents. Dr. and Mrs Sinter, 8. w ho confessed and then I Melvin Nimer Sr., were stabbed to profits of S229.3O0.0O0 or S4.22 denied the fatal stabbing ot nis death in their Maten island nomei snare in tne line imi perioa parents, is suffering from an emotional disturbance," a Bcllevue Hospital report said today. It said there was some evidence that the disturbance "predated the tracic occurrence." tirri R Steinberg, the bov's attorney, who made the report j public, stressed that It Had no bearing on whether the boy had any culpability in the tragedy. Steinberg said the boy is a com pletely tree agent and that it was expected he would go to Salt Lake Cut in his native I tah for "con tinuing close psvchiatrie supervi sion." The boy'a grandparents live in Orem. I tah. This year's loss to date is cal culated at 30 cents per share of common stock. The drop in earnings resulted from a fharp sales decline and in creased labor and manufacturing costs. Ford said. An analysis of daily newspaper circulation over a three-year pe riod shows it to be constant. All monthly percentages were in the narrow range from 8 2 to 8 4 The absolute constant would be 8 33 per rent a month. Corner Oak A Jackson Dial OR 3 6628 DanmooreHotel 1217 S. W. MORRISON ST. Portland, Oregon ttttnttiMi to II Fm rt(KttJ M rrtmit MM amfai. AN twttitnf ftMft. All tfr wh wm, rvhim. Rtm ftot m ww. FrM Gr9. TV t mn4 ft4iM. Rt(WTttM Hr tieMKliMt t .it' tatriaj FvlltrtM 1ey laverefe CamaaM alj THE FINftST ORANGE SOFT DRINK EYBS MADE