Sun., Feb., 26, 1961 Page 7-CC
New Jewelry
Brightens Clothes jjj
Spring fashions have a fresh, j
clean, calm look to them. Essen
tially, they are unadorned and
decorative detailing is absent.
Line is the clue, the 'Fashion
Coordination Institute reports.
Designers have concentrated on;
plain collarless necklines, fluid:
body lines, a wandering waistline
and sleeves that are more dra
matic by their absence. It is a sea
son of "calm" dress fashions that
inspire particular attention to ac
cessories. -
And this season women will
need and want jewelry as never
before. It is the touch that turns
the charming clothes into elegant
lasmon.
Spring jewels are newly elegant,
colorful and dimensional. There is
nothing carefree or casual about!
the new jewelry. Through the in-
tricacies of design and combina
tion of colors, floral pins in di
mensional life-like forms look fresh'
and new. They provide perfect1!
jewelry accents on collarless suits
and dresses.
Dimensional abstract pins look
smart and lend an additional note;
of interest when placed on giant
pockets or pinned far out on the
shoulder. Much of the pin impor-j
tance is due not only to the lovely
creations themselves but the im
aginative ways they are worn.
The trend toward longer neck
laces has placed new importance
on the pin worn squarely in the'
center of a single or multiple u
strand necklace.
The strong, clear, vivid colors
of spring jewelry help to turn
fashions into exciting dramatic!
costumes. Hot pinks, strong cop
als, yellow greens and bright tur
quoise are important colors for
early spring months. Strong color
combinations are often dramatic
ally combined for contrast within
one jewelry piece as with bright)
citron and sharp orange, deep tur-'a
quoise with strong rich blue and
green. 13
; Monochromatic color combina-j
'lions luse lone on lone ior a 5011
color accent. The fashion color
clue is not to match jewelry with
clothes but use it as an accent
and create an actively bold and
striking look for the total effect,
Trom this new point of view jew
elry has an important role as a
colorful accessory.
In keeping with the easy spring!
clo.lhes that move with the wear-l
or, spring jewelry has dropped to!
new swinging lengths in necklaces,
earrings and coin bracelets. Con-'J
18 to 22 inches while high fashion
styles drop to 45 inches. Most
women will find that the 29 to
30 inch necklaces adapt to their
taste and wardrobe. Longer neck
lace fashions have brought a
brand new piece of jewelry
fashion in the ''sautoir," an ele
gant pendant dropping from . the
base of the necklace.
rAW. LOOK AT TH'
POOR GUV-I FEEL
PER HIM
THAT MUST'Be
AWFUL TASTIW'
MEPICIME IDU'RE .
GIVIKf him;
WELL, LETTUWi HUM m -O. TIAMU
nu rm , twwC AMY.'
we mnTnwTaoawTo
rtw ijirt -irm vj uupet1 THI
' jiurr w TMfa CtJLV fE
IWW-MWl BP TO
ace irwi nt tofcrTS IT
6KABHIVW
Expert Looking
For Real Lincoln
NEW YORK Today, 96 years'!
after John Wilkes Booth shot
out to assassinate another Lin-jo I X'
coin a piaster sauii consirucieu 5
of rumor, gossip and fiction. Ac
cording to an article in a well
known magazine no other Ameri
can has been the object of so
much mythmaking. Experts are
now trying, by painstaking re
search, to kill the fictional Lin
coln and preserve the man be
neath the myth.
They have made substantial
progress. For instance, the well
known love story of Lincoln and
n..n-J 1 1 l-ln
Ann juiueuge lias uccn tuuipicic-i j 11 op,'
ly disproved. This myth says that .j
Lincoln, in 1833, was madly in,
lnvo with anpelir hpautv named. -.1
D : . !o-
Ann Rutledge, who died before he
could marry her. The tragedy sup
posedly marked Lincoln for life
making him forever melancholy.
The story first began when Wil
liam Herndon. Lincoln's onetime
law partner, told it in a lecture.
He neglected to mention that he
had gotten his information from
second and third-hand accounts
gathered from the residents of
New Salem, III., where the ro
mance supposedly occurred.
These accounts were fuzzed ovcr;2
by the passage of 31 years. Ho! J
lso neglected to mention that at Jj
least some of the people he inter-. k
viewed denied the story.
Years went by. Then in 1928
a packet of diaries and love let
ters that had reportedly passed
between Young Lincoln and Ann
Rutledge turned up. These letters
survived some pretty intense scru
tiny and seemed to confirm the
romance. It took Paul M. Angle,
secretary of the Lincol Centennial
Association, to discover discrep-
1:1.. tlta f iha Un,-A
(mills ilfcc 111c uav v., - ""'"llt-Jj-
"Kansas" 20 years before the'd'Jfei
name came into being. Today noia
reoutable Lincoln scholar believes 1 C
in the story.
However, the experts seem re
signed to Ann Rutledge's immor
tality. No matter how often the
love affair is deflated she man
ages to rise anew as Lincoln's
"one and only love."
Mil III 1 1 , , . , j ,- 1 - . . . I - ( RELA,MA'30R,IF you only ) 'Ijiju
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