The Key West Citizen Newspaper, March 24, 1949, Page 9

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pe re ese JOS MAKE SPRING NEWS | 1 In Paris---- : , They're Pretty Extreme By FLORENCE MILLS AP. Newsfeatures THURSDAY: MARCH 24, 1949 HATS AND HAIR They're Pretty As” The A Picture : brims and plenty of ribbon this ally favor the bowler shape. : «= “It's youthful to an extreme and will doubtless be most pular for summer.and fall hats,” says Jean Saxer, a New ‘ork buyer. ; "Petal shaped brims and the extensive use of ribbon are the other important features,” she says. “Popular colors will be pale chartreuse, caramel, mauve pinks and border rose.” | . American buyers are prospecting not so much for springwea: as for designs which can be adapted for fall hats which will go on the market in July. . They prefer small hats—the narrow brimmed bowler and er types and varieties of the cloche and beret. These hats call for short hair, dangling tresses don’t go very well with the new styles. Brims are from two to 12 inches wide. Some have five lay- ers with ribbon or feather trimming in between. There are petal shaped brims with the petals often overlapping or folded back. Many of the brims are notched or fluted and often turn up on one side and dip down nearly to shoulder level on the other. Nearly all hats are worn on the back of the head. ' Lacquered white pique and Panama and much silk peter- (rn an dhorsehair have been added this year.to the usual | MADE FOR EACHOTHER ... . Hat and hairdo form deperfect union here. John Hall designed the swirl hairdo,with side part, te gemplment Sally Vic- tor’s side-tilted cartwheel of green straw with red vélyet, ribbon, red roses and white flowers. ; By DOROTHY ROE * Associated Press Fashion Editor dium, whether it's curly or Straight, whether | is you're a glamor girl or the executive type, mil- | Beye rere ry for the “soft and natural liners are ready to make you look pretty as a the: r6Bing “alas picture this spring. logan : Pic F - : , you are mistaken, says New York. hair- Hats and hairdos have achieved a happy Avaseer (Onn Hall: marriage this year, as hairdressers and hat de- signers work hand in hand, all for the greater ne f ¢ r 1 glory of Miss and Mrs. U.S.A. , @ shorter trend, judging by the numbers of} rose-grey. Brims are different widths, most of them turned off e hats that will bloom in i women who visit its shop. Most of these wom-| the face. . ’ run of fine bakou, chip and paillason straws. ' ee Wicker-work hats are popular. Rose Valois shows a pud- | ding basin-shape that looks like a small cane shopping basket. : ; a ral She attaches a silk scarf to it, Foreign Legion fashion. She uses a spring. But if you think ‘this danework for a two tiered beret which looks like an ice- il be harbingers of a long! of raffia and trimmed with mountains of flowers and cherties. Fewer M | ico. pacn. This designer also shows bell shaped hats made entirely | Italians arry ‘ROME — () — Fewer Italians < ~ * - | were married and fewer “buried in 1948 compared with 1947, ‘the Central Institute of Statistics Las year, the ite reporte er,'376,529 marriages were celee PARIS—Spring hats will- have bowler crowns, unusual! brated, 50,518 less thar the pre- year, French designers gener- vious year, The number of marriages per 1,000 persons last year was. . Deaths last year totaled - , 054, down 34,450 from 1947. The Institute says Italy’s mortality rate in 1948 was 10.5 per 1000 inhabitants compared to 11.4 in 1947. ; A large ‘number of — Italian deaths, however, are not regular- ly recorded. The United States’ mortality rate in 1946, for “ex- ample, was 10 per 1,000 inhabi- tants—the best on record. = - TODAY IN HISTORY (Know America) 1638—Rhode Island (Aquid- neck) bought from the Indians b exiles from Massachusetts for 4 fathoms of white beads. j 1837—Abraham Lincoln licens- ed to practice law. 1847—U. S. army and navy make furious assault on. Vera Cruz, Mexico, in war with Mex- 1868—Founding of the Metro- politan Life Insurance Company, New York. ’ 1882—A landmark in the his- Claude St. Cyre exploits the flower pot shaped crown. She| tory of medicine—Dr. . Robert He predicts that spring is going to bring makes it in both felt and different straws in tones of tan and| Koch of Germany submits ‘his ephocal discovery of the tubercu- losis bacillus. rade are young and gay, yet with definitely a ladylike quality, in keeping with the season's feminine styles in suits and coats. them fit on the head without benefit of elastics, guy: wires or hat pins. Most popular will be small sculptured felt suit hats, usually un- trimmed, and the gay straws with restrained flower trimming. The old-fashioned straw skimmer is pres- ent in a number of versions, as are all varities of sailors. Flower trimming is likely to be different this season, the flowers often applied in flat applique or embroidered in raffia. You won't see so many outsize cabbage roses, but the millinery flower garden is still blooming, in a modest way. You'll see calico trim on some of the youth- ful straws, such as Sally Victor's calico?faced straw “Honeyhive” with matching ruffled cal- ico stole. You'll see black. patent leather sailors, ‘suicl-&s-that-introduced'by-Lily Dache. You'll find the hat you're looking for—the hati that’ will suit your hairdo, your personality and your mood.’ And this year it will bé easy. Polish Forestry 1 \ ushed Pushec | WARSAW, Poland—() — The Polish ministry of forestry an nounced approximately 260,000 acres of land would be re-forest- } ed this year. The tree-planting | program represents an increase of 38 per cent over 1948. TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS |; (Know America) j Lieut. Gen. Lauris Norstad, of : the Department of the Air Force, ' born in Minneapolis, 42 years! ago. Gov. Thomas E. Dewey of New York, born Owasso, Mich., 47 years ago. Prof. Peter Debye of Cornell, 1936 Nobel chemistry. prizewin- ner, born in Holland, 65 ago. Karl Arnstein of Akron, Ohio, | famous plane builder and de-! signer, born in Czechoslovakia, 62 years ago, | Christian von Schneidua, of} Los Angeles, artist, born in Swe- den, 56 years ago. i Prof. Frederick C. Mills of Co- lumbia_ University, economist, ° orn in Santa Rosa, Cal., 57 years | Ago. Sate Dorothy C. Stratton, wartime | Spars’ head, born Brookfield, Mo.,; ou years ago. j Dr. .Peter S: Maccaulay, pro-; vost of Johns Hopkins Univer-} sity, Baltimore, born in Novaj| Scotia, 48 years ago. : = 48). years | HAT-AND-HAIRDO HARMONY . | —Today gives a rather feminine | nature, and gives rise to mahy} Is conditions of people born on this a Express Schedule: day. There is a love of cheerful, Guaranteed (No Stops En Route) ! company, and easy manner, with} LEAVES KEY WEST DAILY (EX- an impulsive passion that would Pure CEPT SUNDAYS) at 6:00 P.M, Ar. indicate the need of careful re- : ; SS rire) at Miami at 12:00 o'clock Mid- i straint. There is great literary pr . ose dines ability. If it is allowed to de- LACK YOU 4 Kh ION ey ' L ES MIAMI XC velop, yet ease and fuxury are! PLACE YOUR REFRIGERATION ON A SUNDAYS) at 12:00 o'clock Mid- stronger factors than desire for} night and arrives at Key West at i wealth or renown. i ' Creomulsion relieves promptly because | the way it quickly allays the cough | for Coughs. Cnesreolds. Bronchitis the Easter pa- 1919—The Order of De’ Molay unded, in Kansas City, Mo. . 1934—The Philippine © ‘Inde- pendence Bill, giving freedom in 1945, signed by President. 1942—Bataan and Coregidor heavily bombed by Japs. , 1945—U, S. 9th Army «crosses the Rhine in boats. z , 1946—Soviet Russia announces her troops leaving Iran.” -' 1947—Long debate on ‘confir- mation of David E. Lilienthal «as chairman of Atomic Energy Com- mission begins in Senate. . . . 1948—Gerhart Eisler, « ealled Russia’s chief agent here,) sén- tenced one to three years for false information in visa applica- tion. ‘ en, now cutting theifhair, have been holdouts, - Cocktail numbers come in scull-caps of felt topped-with Qn | ¢5 e says. en “ organdy or horsehair pillbox studded with rosebuds. It all begins When they can’t find a hat:to Scullcaps for round-the-clock wear are shown by Suzanne Talbot.. She shows them in colored straw topped with life-size flatter their longer tresses, o: when they start blackbird s . hé Gi dt sgeadisiel alioethnias ieocess: “Que Gat when | PoC . aint or roses. Sometimes she gives them a corkscrew the hair looks particularly straggly they say, | Pecks . ; ‘ - se f tte combines a royal blue silk petersham crown with Oh, go ahead, ne ata good cut a natural colored: straw-brim, banded with cornflowers. She Mr. Hall wos ather see the hair worn | shows wide brims which dip to shoulder level and puffed berets fou ror five inc! length. He thinks’ the which are worn on the side of the head and reach the shoulder. Most of hairdresser couldhadeilly call his imagination into play and design coiffures befitting the fea-| | tures of the subject. But with this very short jj bob “it leaves him Tittle alternative.” No matter what you do with the very short bob it still will look close to the head. You will need to get that extra lift at the forehead here or that pouf qt the sides there, by wearing the right hat. , : The youthful f offthe-face roller can be I mae ts worn with the very short hairdo, says Mr. Hall. R U Pp T U R E 2 The extra-large straws, qlways.popular in’the}; é ’ ry spring, will be more Pp tecing to the girl with longer hair—unless of course the very short bob can be prettily arranged with hair back over the ears on the hat-side that tilts up. 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