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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 22, 1961)
S Sunday, January 33, 1MI BftBAL A.VD NEl4 Klamath Falls, Ore. PAGE t-R f ; TAvl Best Dressed (Coitinued from Page J-B) . ? . J i ' ' V- V ; r, a , , 5 w i - I' I MR. AND MRS. 'H. D. JACKSON announce the engagement of their daughter, Carol, to William Fargo -of Malin. A summer wedding is planned. Photo by Bob Anderson, Guderian Studio. int MAIUKt rAKtlN I I sSk& Children Feel The Danger Inherent In Your Hate Mrs. Muriel Lawrence Newspaper Enterprise Assn. The mother and child remained jdren, and to warn that children on the TV screen (or several can be deeply scarred by the sight moments. But several momentsiof hate were time enough. The little boy looked to be about 5 years old. His mother was one of a group their mothers' faces. of women bunched together along a New Orleans street to shriek insults at the small, carefully m gWWW I -umwrnm .it ... .him.i in. mi V "V v 1 I V ' I i. .'"- ' ' ' " 'J 1 I Ar . '--'y.' ALICE ELAINE MclNTYRE is the bride-elect of Robert Gary Ritchey, son of Mr. and Mrs. R. Curtis Ritchey of Forest Grove. Their engagement was told re cently, by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ray E. Mclntyra of Dorris. The future bride is a graduate of Butte Valley High School. Both she and her fiance attended Oregon Technical Institute. No data has been set for the wed ding. Photo by Miller-Williams. Now Is The Time To Plan Spring Foundation Planting By IRENE SEELY Planninrr the fnnnrlatinn nlant- Any mother who has seen her!, Ih mml ,mnnr,a, ilpm ..u:u l I t - ...u -u-,' s r screams at a neighbor's dog or blasts a tardy milkman will know that I tell the truth. The young know many things in the front area of your gar din. If it is successful, the rest This shnih will be planted on a diagonal line from the corner of the house so that it will form the pivotal position between the A' 1 s wtl , M Ml & ) i I'' :a3 : ' j I iwiAwriilf aiiirmiiOTnKiMl MR. AND MRS. ROY K. NELSON of Salem an nounce the engagement of their daughter, Karen, to Er nest Dennis, son of Mr. and Mrs. Everett Dennis of this city. Both younq people are employed in Klamath Falls. The wedding will take place May 20. Wide Style Range Seen In New York Showings By CAY PAl'LEY I Maurice Rentncr Designer Bill ' I'PI Women's Editor Blass liked the look of the co NEW YORK IL'PII Luis Es-ordinated costume for sprint;. tevez. a New York designer, said "res-s came witn Driel, easy at the beginning of his spring and summer fashion show that "I be lieve women should dress to look like women." It's a good thing he said worn jackets; dresses came with coats; THE ENGAGEMENT of Sandra Lee Haas, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Haas of Chiloquin, to Ronald Eugene Hoggarth, son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Hoggarth, Modoc Point, was announced New Year's Eve. The young couple are graduates of Chiloquin High School. The bride-elect is attending Santa Rosa Junior College and her fiance has recently completed basic training with the Marines. No date has been set for the wedding. PINK PREDOMINATES IN ITALIAN FASHIONS FLORENCE, Italy AP Itali-i Jole Veneziani showed impec an fashion designers are paintiiiglcably cut loose coats of double- factors involved which make me wonder whether the 1960 list ws hosen in the spirit of impartial, unbiased, scientific accuracy. For one thing, Mrs. Kennedy, who has patronized the best de signers for years had never been on the list before. What additions did she suddenly make to her wardrobe to place her at the top of the heap? For another thing, during murh of KWO Mrs. Kennedy was in what the gossip columnists describe as an "interesting condition" and rarely appeared in public. Maternity Clothes Count? That being the case, how did those 2 0oo fashion experts, par ticularly the ones in other coun Irics, get a line on her clothinf;? And were maternity druses con sidered in the competition? When one ponders these ques tions lor a moment, one is prompted to raise still more inquiries, which the couture group will perhaps be kind enough to answer. Supixisc that Mrs. Kennedy's husband hid lost the presidential election. Would she still have been the best-dressed woman? Or would that distinction have gone to Pat Nixon? I do not like to think that the fashion world would be influenced by the possibility that Mrs. Ken nedy's name might have a cer tain publicity value. So I hope someone will do something' to erase my nagging doubts. I would like to be reassured that the fashion world is still a bastion of integrity, despite the invention of falsies. or. the full length coat was worn pink. the capital of the Renaissance starched Negro girl walking her that we forget. Children know- way to the public school intolthat the hate we express toward which the law of this land per mits her entrance. As she passed with her escort of U.S. marshals, the mother of the small while boy shook him, yelling, "Go on, tell the little nigger! Tell her you'll never go to school with niggers! Go on, tell her, tell her . . . " The small white boy did not u-ith the front nlant .1 ill Li 'J ; " die nuiKiiiaii, uie neiiiuur 6 uug, the little Negro girl can also be expressed toward them. rrU.. 1. ....... Il...t I.-. ..nU violence exists in us. it can turn j"1 ? ,?pcr, u S us in a flash upon them. ,know the length, width and eave- ' , ( v tu i r ....hoip.ht of vour house, and Ihe iiiuy Miuw miai lire icti vi us , , . . ii j .: J . . mvift In! 1inn nf all finnrs Win. of the planting will be easier to;De pwnteo at least nail us own do. The sides and back of the w'o'lh from the building, and nev. hrinc will verv likelv nwat er under the drip of the eave. what you do along the front, so front and side plantings. It should S,"' ra,ner 'han ladies, because the . . . . IKulnvAT ovpninc tuvnmns nrp Estevez evening lashions are something less than prim. They're w ith matching skirt and contrast ing ovcrblouse. Marquise - Designer Philippic Tournaye featured the collarless look, and an almost sleeveless look sleeves ranged from elbow ilike that," said one fashion editor You are now ready to I ill in the we beam with the liont plant- remaining space, mere is no set "fis- !"'"' " ,ur QO,"B 5 so ,onBjas she watched a model parad inn ium sip in any miw ui " ' - r i Dlnnlina is the making of the;fr o'' set out lo do. It meant for the siren, the flirt, the length to above elbow shortness girl with men on her mind. or ' none at all. "You couldn't he good in a drossi Skirts included the straight, the have to rc-lcam the hard way: that hate is no respecter of crea tures, white or black, but, like obey. Instead he turned; and hid-lthe hungry tiger it is, will leap ing the sight of his mother s snarl ing face from his eyes, buried nnuu r.nr.lHnil rlvnce U'hi.-tl hnt-nrl may be that the foundation upon ' shm,,HlM. and B(m(iv .,...:., which your house rests is tool , ,h, m, . j, ,.rnm , prominent to please you and you,hink of .. she a M .. think it should be at least partial-l,,..ij., .. ,u, tf . ,,.,. dows. fiieplace chimneys or other!'' covcrea up. ur perhaps youj .. flared, the double-box pleated or gored full ones, and the culotle the runway wearing a slinky black which Tournaye called "stride skirt." Edward Abbott Designer Wilson Folmar produced a "wicked scis sors" group of cocktail dresse cut almost as daringly as those of Marucelli and Veneziani were the latest lo use a deluge of the color in the presentations of Itali an high fashions for spring and summer. In their showings Mon day night they poured on so much pink in gabardines, wools, olio mans, silks and chiffons that th whole Sala Bianca of the Pittijmnngo orange. Palace glowed with a rosy flush. Veneziani got more dramatic Marucelli also presented an ex-i"r evening and mado mad hats architectural features of your' ' his face in her skirt. I am not employed to comment on these parents' irresponsibility toward our country. But it is my job to rebuke house. When you have all of these ilnms in nlarp on vnnr nlan. then upon any passing prey. . I . ' , . on rtno so uiey ao noi icei saie ... ,- with hating mothers, For this reason. I sorrow more for the little white boy who could not bear the sight of his mother's snarling face than I do for the It is not a mailer of simply saving that a certain kind of, shrub is suitable to use in a foundation planting. The most im ..i j:..u.j: " i i ki,i, i, A,A ni W poitar.i ming is lo Know me ai f, i, . ,rii. .van,nl tn rhil-lm hide her rvp, imensions of Ihe space that you Jacqueline Kennedy Buys Colorful Finnish Dresses When Ine next First Lady(while caring for children, doing moves into the White House, like- housework or working in the gar lv as not she'll take along some ' den. Finnish dresses with primitive lines and thundering color. Mrs. John Kennedy bought nineinternalional prizewinning design- not long ago in a small rinnishier in glasswork and silver. merelv wish to soften the line where the building meets t h c ground. One thing you should wish to do is to keep the attention of! the ptisserhy fixed on your front door as the center of interest. You dcsiie to draw the eye to ward Ihe door and not away from it, and since the eye will more easily follow a simple uncompli-j cated line than any other pat tern, here is one way that it can be done. Curve the beds in toward the door from Ihe outside corners of the house. The width of that bed, due to the size of the pivotal shrub at the corner, will be at specialty shop in Cambridge. Mass. (Design Research, Inc.), the only place in the country han dling Marimekko fashions. By the time she's comfortably settled in brP new Pennsylvania Avenue residence, the dresses should be available in New York shops. They'll probably never replace her high fashion clothes for public appearances and entertaining. But for relaxing about the presidential mancinn tlip simnle. uncluttered sometimes tentlike dresses ms ' iv. k.,i !'sm. Vrtll t .to.. Up until now, Finland has been chieflv known to Americans for paying Its World War I debt (BOO million dollars) and for driving need to fill. Once you know that, you can go to any reputable nurs ery man and say, "I want a plant that will be so wide, and so high when it is fully grown. It must have this kind of foliage, and the flnu-prc mncl ha this rnlnr." ... iea';i one inira ot tne eave neight. The nursery man can probably D ,. . . . , .. , .'' ' ,j Pull the bens in tn Ihe door in a offer vou several kinds that would ,.r. . . .. , ,. , . . ., . . graceful, simple sweep so that fi vour demands, but it will be 7, . .. !, ... ' . Chief designer is Vuokko Esko-Easier for both of you if volll Y xacuy i.Ke a tunnel to Im.Vnrmn.nipmi u-hn nkr. ic am .1 u. .." J .:lu,te aiWUUOn lOWaTO inC lu. ..... .....0.. Miuw CArttUV lldl YUU IIVTU. 1IIC question now is what do you need? You begin at the outside cor ners of the house and work in the front door. Estevez. a Cuban who has had his own firm in New York for several years, is noted for cleav age in evening wear. At Mon day's show, he proved the usual Eslcvez. One group of black Croix's fea tured slits, pelal-shaped cutouts or great gashes of fabric removed to show skin. Estevez. But most of the sprin; collodion was feminine miller than daring, and used some of the most beautiful fabrics yet seen These were French-made silkl prints in floral pattcins of pink, turquoise and bright green. Branell Showed more of the coordinated costume than any oth er single garment lor .spring. Print Hrpvupc rvimn tl'ilh cnlit i-inLat Necklines on other short or long mwj in maU.li inL si1kJ prjnt dresses with divided skirts also were shown with their own jack ets. Branell included the tradi tional navy usually combined with while. Mrs. Ratia. a woman of charm and forceful expression, visited I New Yor k the olher day and her toward views of women and fashion are not to be passed over lightly. Woman: '' . . . tile same with Ihe rocks stern, dreaming, harsh maybe, but often greatly individ ual and capable of winning. . . . Ageless, proud, free modern woman at her best." Her Fashions: "Everyday dress es which look nothing and can be made very own-looking accord- the bearer's individual- , variety, the blooms should not Versatile Mrs. Ratia. who saysjbe so spectacular that they will he has "other products thanipull attention from the door. The shrub that you choose for the corner planting should be high enough lo reach within two thirds to full eave height. Its width should be at least equal to one third of the eave height. It should be dense enough in foliage so that it stops the eye and provides a background for the rest of the planting. It should be of a solid color, preferably of blue-green, in door. Next to Ihe pivolal corner shrub place another that is not quite as tall, nor quite as wide, nor quite as dense in lexlure. If you have chosen a conifer for the corner position, then this second shrub might very well have leaves of a large sic, of a coarse texture, and of a lighter color by way of contrast. The next vari ety that you choose should be still shorter, narrower, and finer in texlure than its neighbor, until at Ihe vicinity nf Ihe door the plantings even consist of ground covers alone. Again, there is no ready-to-wear always dropping from mv head." admits ' s h c hack the Russians tin 1918. 1939 'fi,ocs.n't., roall-v We fashion. And mil) Rut is fash on mav be-1""" "- Usually tne corner shrub is a conifer because it will fit the above specifications the best, but "Marimekko fashions IF cnmpthinri tn rpntnn ' with t.:i,L. iii, a. tho :. something to give the modern. sniratinn f Armi and Vilio Ra-I'ndependent. intellectual woman- tia. a hushand-and-wife whose 10- an unpretentious way of dressing vear-old firm in Helsinki. Mari.;lo forge Hresses because she has mekko Ov, makes textiles as well lntcres,s of children home, lothes books, music, career. Yet the col- Finnish 'fashions differ f r 0 m 'hundcr out of inspired nols U.S. styles on two counts: 'and Jars lo ' woman Color-They're brilliantly bold.;a '" " '"""".- in combinations seldom seen here, red, pink and orange: blue, pur ple and orange; brown, purple and blue. Silhouette They're pared down to the simplest form, completely unadorned, so that the amazing colors come through. Primitive honest, pure and gusty are words most often used in description. Some of the dresses are free form and straight - line. Othei-s fare a little, looking like paper doll dresses. There are also house coats, beachwear, children's dress es with matching bloomers. Many dresses have their own h i g h crowned hats and tnle bags. Fabric is mostly heavy canvas like cotton in silk-screened pat terns of irregular dots, stripes, chorloerboards. Mondrian like de sicns. The original Marimekko dress Imekhe Is the Finnish word for girl's dress) was a looe fitting coat, meant for women to wear m,Ia tUnt IU..I .......... t t- .. . . . rl i uic ii'ai aciva null cvciy mill nn fohage. If it is to be a flowering,. fnllnH,,i ,., tJ," You may even, if you wish, al low the lawn to come completely up to the foundations. . . By establishing a graduated se- ries of heights you have formed a line which will curve from the eave at Ihe coiner to the door; the curving line of the bed itself will lead to the same point; and tne transition of Ihe texlure of the foliage from the heavy, dense (Continued nn Page IS-B) I I here is no rule that says it has h a v e to be of that variety. The purpose of this particular shrub is to soft en, and perhaps hide, the vertical line at the corner of the house, to tie the house tn Ihe ground, and to broaden the baseline of the house to overcome any feel ing that the house might be top heavy. Any shrub which will fill Ihe bill is acceptable. COLUM&A PiCJuq.ES pmi FRED KPmiab pq.OOuCT.0M .: Si ifMMDfi -the key man i" he apartment is a fop -kick on... IN THE ARM?,, after-five dresses were scooped to Ihe waistline in back, and as low in front as a girl could dare. 'I believe women should dress lo look like women, not like men." said the designer to Ihe 250 visit ing fashion reporters in town for the New York couture group's semi-annual "National Press Week." Pauline Trigcrc, the French- born designer, brought hoops back into fashion not in skirts, but in the hems of sleeves to give their j what she called an "out-standing" look. The same hoops in hems of capes gave them a starched swinp away from the body. Miss Trigere also featured a group of multi-part and multi purpose costumes suitable for the woman who lives out of a suit case. These camp in four or five parts. A coat, for instance, peeled off to reveal a suit. A suit jack et peeled off to reveal a daytime dress in two parts. The top part, cut like a tunic, came off to show a cocktail dress. Harry Frechtel, the suit coat and costume manufacturer, called this season sensational for its bright anil splashy colors gold, green, blue, red and all shades of pink. A season where shoul ders were growing wider as col lars grew smaller or disappeared. Many nf his coats and dresses came with the cardigan, or col larless cut; others were manda rin type. Highlights of olher designer col lections shown Monday: MOLD OFF faced contrasting wools. Besides pinn, mere was red with navy facing, and taupe with oyster white. All the coats went over! well-shaiied chemise dresses. Veneziani also showed lots ol smooth gabardine coals, low-belted and patched with military pockets. They came in icy colors of sea green, pale yellow, and If you have cuts, scratches or any other scalp irritations, don't get a permanent until they've disappeared. The waving lotion may be absorbed by them into the skin. traordinary designing feat, un equalled for Intricate cutting. Heavy silk evening coats were shaped full with bias-cut insets. Usually "6n the bias" means flu id and flowing, hut these coats were puffed out, round and -stiff. Naturally there was a bright pink one, along with various li queur-colored ones. Underneath the coats were won dcrful halter-necked chiffon dance dresses in contrasting colors. Bias-cut wool coats went over candy-striped silk dresses. For evening Marucelli had some fun with sequins. She paved an entire black tulle, bias dress will) ;old sequins. On other dresses se quins are patterned into patch work quilts, art nouvcau flowers, abstract paintings, and cabbage roses. 1 of face-covering, boa-feathered brims to go with her hot-colored chiffon cocktail dresses. ' CORDUROY'S TIlK THING A plain corduroy bedspread and patterned corduroy curtains make a happy combination for decorat ing school quarters. Corduroy conies in beautiful colors, washes easily and needs no ironing. See Page 3-A and receive a real one! 2 CMEUASCOCE tut EAsmnE3 - M 1 I Winter clothes usually get on extra shore of wear between dry cleanings. Coll us first thing in the morning ond let us put new life in your winter-weary wardrobe. They will be cleoned to perfection, have that original lustrous look . . . and wear longer, too. GREEH STAMPS, TOO! Fashion Cleaners U I. 7th Phone TU 4-5S63 jl ' -f ' hi beautiful . 1 f if; ' jfj combination.! J y magnoja J anff ' y l cays an' Satilene ... the nylon tricot with the look and feel of satin, enhanced with scattered cut-out blos soms at the fitted bodice and hemline. Available in proportioned lengths, too. Average length (sixes 32-40) in White and Beige. 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