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The Miami News from Miami, Florida • 14

Publication:
The Miami Newsi
Location:
Miami, Florida
Issue Date:
Page:
14
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

the Miami News Woman's World MA Wednesday, Sept. 18, 1963 VT YOUR GIRL'S TO BLAME FOR FAMILY SHAME 'V'' WRITE JANE DARE for- im i Vi 1 J- 'i km Jane Dare will be happy to receive your comments as w'H as your questions, If you have faced a situation similar to those discussed here tell Jana about your solution. She will pass it along to other readers. Send your letter to Jane Dare, c-o The Miami News, Miami, Fla. MODEST MAILLOT has glitter woven right into the suit of Lycra.

The squared-off neckline plunges deep at the back. It comes in a rainbow print dominated by of red. COLORFUL SILK scarves are transformed into this two-piecer with draped skirt. Over it Roes a kimonolike coat. All styles shown are by Mix of Miami and are available at Burdine's, Chi Chi and Schacfer's.

every night for to stay home two weeks. IN DESIGNS Swimming Fin Stylish DEAR JANE DARE: You probably don't get many questions from young bachelors, but I am the type of man who cares what my family thinks and I need some outside advice. The girl I am dating is a little older than I am. She is 22 and has been on her own since the age of 16, She doesn't have much education but' makes good money, has her own apartment and car and even helps support a younger sister. She is a wonderful person, but my mother finds fault with her clothes and makeup.

My father says he would be ashamed to introduce her to any of his friends. They are both put out because she came to a dinner party at our home once in capri pants and a low cut blouse, wearing gold stuff on her eyelids. That was an unfortunate evening because the poor girl also had too much to drink. But that was because my father deliberately loaded her martinis to make her look worse. (Later I learned that she dressed as she did to show her independence and not because of ignorance.) Should I try to get the girl to conform to my parsnts' old-fashioned ideas or be my real self and accept her as she is? Baffled Bachelor, Miami DEAR B.B: Allow me a few questions.

Would any wonderful person deliberately dress as described for any dinner party, embarrassing her hostess, merely' to prove her Independence? And independence from what, besides good manners? Also I would like to know how a martini ran be loaded. It would be wise to take an other look both at your real self and Miss Independence. I Feel Like Pumpkin DEAR JANE: Every time I have a date my parents insist I come home by 12:30, no matter where I'm going. My mother sets her alarm clock and if I don't make it on time, or within half an hour at the most, I have suit design-that junior- gotten to swim ers namely, always sized women aren't junior in age. Sometimes this embarrasses me a lot.

Other kids my age 15) are allowed to stay at parties on weekends until 1 o'clock, and if they are late their parents understand. I always have to leave when the fun starts. Isn't it possible that parebts can be too strict? Cinderella, Miami Beach. DEAR CINDERELLA: Those parents who understand why a 15-year-old should be allowed to stay at a party until 1 a.m. should have a little talk with someone who understands irresponsibility in parents.

If you are alone among friends who keep those hours, find yourself some new ones. SARONG SKIRT, slit to the knee, covers a brief two-piecer in blue and green floral print. The halter is cut and on the square at the neckline "buttons" down the front. luster to the costume with no hint of gaudiness. Others sprinkle pearls and sequins liberally on bodices and briefs for a party look.

And to go over both regular and junior-sized suits are long sarong skirts that steer clear of the midriff, kimono coats and silk shifts which match the suits. One two-piece suit by Alix, with draped skirt, is entirely composed of silk scarves, which proves suits are brief (but still modest). Two large- midriffs are fair game for exposure, Two-piecers lead the way, with maillots being cut out at the sides and often most of the front at the waistline, as well as the usual plunging back. Colors are deep, with aquamarines, plum or citron printed on white background. They go even further to give a peek-a-boo effect by adding embroidered lace over a nude-tinted foundation.

And something dress manufacturers were forced to realize seasons ago has finally By PAULA BREIBART Mlunl FaihloB Editor Fur-lined coats, muffling stoles, heavy boots the thought of these is enough to make the strongest woman feel faint from the heat. So for something more revealing and certainly cooler, consider swim suits. These pictured are styled for the cruise season yet to come after our brief brush with winter. And they hint of less suit for the future. Although bare bosomed swim togs are still far off, to sized scarves are used make the cover-up shift.

Alix of Miami is now making a size 5-15 line that suits women of all age. Similar to the ones shown on this page, these juniors for ages from the young to the not-so-junior include cottons, Helenca, Lycra and Antron in prints, sequined laces and glittery gold. Many suits have the glitter woven right into the material, giving a subtle cn less fabric manufacturers are making a bigger bid to change swimsuit silhouettes each season, so that women will be tempted to throw away last year's swim suit as readily as last year's dress. Despite the furor over the five per cent state tax recently put on swimwear which, incidentally, with the brief look in suits means more tax Advertisement z( ROLLENE SAAL CHARLIE RUSSELL'S COWBOY ART LIVES ON IN MONTANA A Beauty Hint Margaret Me rril advice i that it is quite timple for every woman to promote an F.ng-lii-h countryside complexion. Her hint to sain a peaches-and-rream lovelinean ii to dampen a cloth with cold water from your refrigerator and presi it over your face for a few minutet onre or twice a day.

Then to hold the good of the complexion beautifying cold water, smooth on a little tropical oil of olay. Thii oil ii rather irarce and expensive hut your drug store thould be able to get you a (mall tupply. t4" Please, TV Don't Turn To Preaching We hope that Agnes Ash, who commands the i It at- TV sl. 15.v-5. By JOHN K.

HUTCH ENS The XfW York Hcrtld Tribune GREAT FALLS, Mont. It's a bustling, beautiful place, this most populous (60,000) of Montana towns, 3,333 up in the plains that roll on north to Canada and built westeward into the Rocky Mountain majesty of Glacier Park. It's justly proud of its size and energy, its huge copper and zinc refineries, its Mal-strom Air Force missile base, a key one in the Strategic Air Command's Northwest system. But when all the proper salutes have been made to progres, Great Falls is still Charlie Russell's town, these 36 years after his death. Charles Marion Russell, that is, the greatest artist of the American Old West, painter and sculptor, cowboy and storyteller, who never had an art lesson in his life and who didn't have much use for any form of "progress" that altered the West he knew.

All around the town, you seem to sense his presence. At 12th St. and 4th Ave. are the Charles M. Russell Gallery and, adjoining it, his log cabin studio, easels still standing, the brushes lying about.

In the gallery are some, by no means all, of his finest pictures, and books by and about him. Downtown, on busy Central is the Mint Cafe, somewhat prettied up since the days when it was the Mint Saloon where Russell and his friends of the open range talked the nights away. Just the same, the Russell era is all over the Mint in the reproductions of his greatest pictures that line the walls, in the glass-encased Russell memorabilia, guns, spurs, lariats, photographs of Indian and plains life. And the greatest part of the Mint's clientele, too, would be familiar to him. Weather-beaten horse wranglers, with the rolling gait of men who have spent more hours in the saddle than out of it, mingle with half-breed Indians at the long bar.

At that bar. a drink of bourbon calculated to lift the hair on the head as effectively but more pleasantly than these Indians' forebears did, costs all of 40 cents. Not only the Russell era but Russell himself, in a manner of speaking, is almost visibly present. For if you hang around the Mint long enough, you will hear the Russell stories that the veterans like to dwell on. Some of them came to know him not so many years after he rode into the Judith Basin in 1880, the wiry 16-year-old from St.

Louis who soon became known as "Kid" Russell not the ablest cowboy on the range by a long shot, but a game, likable lad. THE STORY they tell oftenest, however, is of the terrible winter of 1886-'87 and the picture that made him famous overnight throughout the cattle country. To the ranch where "Kid" television screen around here, will forgive us while we accept the invitation of Channel 7. Each evening at the conclusion of their editorial, they invite comments from listeners. Until now we have held ourself in check.

For one thing we don't believe that television stations ought to editorialize. It's not like newspapers. We the people license the airways, which are ours, to these stations temporarily. Why then should they turn around and tell us how to think? It seems to me they have little enough time to keep up with the factual reporting of news. We also take exception to being preached at and lectured to in a highly pompous tone about the right and wrong of national and international issues.

Not only does the tone seem to us downright pontifical but the general handling of subject matter is ill considered and, to say the least, intemperate. One editorial for instance weighed the Tightness of the civil rights cause against the action of Governor Wallace. Wallace was complimented on his sincerity, dedication and we don't know what else. After some heavy soul-searching the station gallantly managed, to think that Governor Wallace was indeed mistaken. But it was a close thing there for a while.

Our comment to Channel 7 is in the form of a question. We're curious whether they are for or against: 1. Peace, 2. Human rights. 3.

Freedom 4. International understanding. 5. TV commercials? Russell was working, and an unprecedented blizzard had decimated the herd, came a message from the owner in Helena asking the foreman how the cattle were doing. "I'll make a sketch to go with your answer," said Russell, and dashed off a water-color, post-card size, of a starved cow collapsing while hungry wolves looked on and waited.

"The Last of 5,000," he called it. What the old-timers around the Mint chiefly recall, though, is his kindness. He wouldn't even go fishing. "A fish doesn't feel pain?" he would observe ironically. "That's why he jumps six feet out of the water when he gets the barb in his eyes." And somebody recalled that he didn't care for so-called "justice." If everybody got it that asked for it, he is quoted as saying, "they would think they were terribly abused and would find out they wanted a little mercy instead." It's still Charlie Russell's town, all right, and all the signs are that it will remain so.

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How to plan your investment portfolio. There is no charge for the course, but because of space limitations, reservations are necessary. They can be made by telephoning Burdine's at FRanklin 3-1111, Extension 502. mn MERRILL LYNCH, tzi: PIERCE, LLC fenner a SMITH INC Easy Way to Kill Ants and Roaches The only yes we're really sure of is the last one. WHAT'S COOKING "A neighbor gave me this recipe," remembers Mrs.

George T. Blaine, writing from her summer home in "B'ar Wallow Sapphire, North Carolina. "Follow the recipe exactly. FRUIT COBBLER Itrmh on Once Last for Montht 34 cup milk a stick butter or margarine 2 cups peaches, peeled and sliced Vi cups sugar 3 cup flour 2 teaspoons baking powder teaspoon salt JOHNSTON'S NO-ROACH: Simply brush Johnston's No-Roach on cabinets to control cockroaches, on sills to stop Our favorite contests are those in which all you have to do is sit back and let someone else pick a winner. That's exactly what's going to happen Friday night at the University of Miami's ojening football game.

All you have to do is bp there while Major High, blindfolded, will stick a pin into the seating plan. Whoever is sitting in that lucky seat will receive a six-day all-expense trip to London for two persons. It's compliments of The Miami News who is especially eager to encourage a full house at the newly refurbished Orange Bowl. ants. Colorless, odorless coating stays effective for months.

No need to moye dishes or breathe harmful sprays. Remember: No-Roach rreans no roaches. KWIK CI1EK FOOD STORES MEMBERS NEW YORK STOCK EXCHAMSI (NB OTHER PRINCIPAL STOCK h0 C0MM00ITI EXCHINCIS Sift one cup of the sugar with flour, baking powder and salt. Add milk and stir just enough to mix ingredients. Melt the or margarine in 8-inch baking pan and pour batter over the melted fat.

Do not stir. Now pour over this the peaches which have been thoroughly mixed with the remaining sugar. Bake in moderate oven (350 one hour. Serve hot," lukewarm or cold. 1st Nar'l Bank Bldg.

MIAMI 32 169 E. Flagler Sr. MIAMI 32.

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About The Miami News Archive

Pages Available:
1,386,195
Years Available:
1904-1988