Article clipped from Evening Journal

Doden structure pictured is open on the side facing into th^ wire enclosuresORMMsFashion Designer Has idea To Eliminater Williamresident of s who died light, were this after-: Christ at . N, with iating, Rix ced burial cemetery, ? Clarence Dave Car-t HaddockStaid Appearance Of Milady's ApparelUlster ofin lecturer lollege this he Lenten Episcopal nrsday.BY BARBARA BUNDSCHU . United Press Fashion Writeri NEW YORK, Feb. 25 fti.fi)—De-• signer Elizabeth Hawes was back in the dressmaking business today trying to take the brassieres off the women she liberated from girdles a decade ago.The tiny, brown-haired, brown eyed .designer figures women should dress with a double-barrelled purpose—for . comfort and for men. #Th«, Concrete. Mold '| fashion. Some women, she. concedes, will-still want to wear a bra under sweaters. But she warns them they’ll feel all strangled” when they do, 'Men like it, Miss Hawes said. “Any woman who isn’t 'dressing for them is in a bad way.”appeals to-conviction Mexican, amber for of Joseph le Patricia ounty, the •ted fromarsmmabout're-American learning,” :er, of the » Evange-ressed the iay at thethe city id of the it Texas nown ed-She was working on that principle in 1936 when she cut her eus-! tomers’ skirts full and easy fitting to wear without a girdle.She now pljns to get rid of the bra and its standardized, “cast in concrete” mold of womanhood.. Miss Hawes said she had to get back into the dressmaking business because her own and her customers clothes, made before 1941, were beginning to wear out.Miss Hawes said she was experimenting with dresses that didn’t need bras in 1941 before she quit dressmaking to spend eight years working on newspapers, laboring in a war plant and writing some books.“Of course no woman wants her chest to fall,to her waist,” Miss Hawes said. “But brassieres only started after World War I. Women got along without them for hundreds of years, It’s all in the head.”The New Fashion•Her substitute will be a dress lining something like the old-fashioned corset cover-—with fit but no bind.Easier, looser clothes, Miss Hawes believes, are the comingiCzechoslovakia(Continued From Page One)inet.His visit followed an exchange of letters during the night which seemed to presage. Benes’ acceptance of‘the Communist demands.The exchange was made public shortly before noon in. a special one-sheet edition of Mlada Fronta, youth newspaper, and they were read on the later broadcast of the government radio.The ‘ president’s letter said he still insisted upon parliamentary democracy lor Czechoslovakia. It blamed the crisis on the present international situation.. It added, however, that:“In the crisis itself the principle of the national front (the country’s seven-party coalition government) is not rejected.”The Communist answer insisted the party could not deal with the present leadership of three opposition parties, declared the president should accept the resignation of the 12 ministers and demanded that • Gottwald be allowed to pick his own cabinet.The letter promised that Gott-waid would name “democratic progressive” members of the1 three opposition parties,does not, ppses, tfc members Loyalty” Thursd Allister ’ Believe / are a pai series.Flood(Contiicausing tl North Ce: Temper per twent terday an with the. and the lc both 22 a The hij Presidio, ■ Laredo.Freezin, the Panha of ice spr Pampa a: forecast cram or.si tonight. Colder ’ all of Wes handle an the northv this afterr Slightly were seen South PlaWelfa Local1Exchan by John 1 rector, of Welfare, . Hotel Lul Warlick presided.W. E, .5 and T. L. departmei Eisenberg McNabb
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Evening Journal

Lubbock, Texas, US

Wed, Feb 25, 1948

Page 8

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