' TbNESDA' MAPR R22, 1$ t heI CI I I G A TNiD A IL Y New Spring Shirts Styled For Comfort As Well As For App haranee o, Floppy Collars Seen As The Trend Lighter Weight Materials Will Be A Feature, With Popular Mesh Weaves "Comfort" has become the battle- cry of a mild revolution in shirt styles for this spring. The well-dressed man need no' longer padlock himself into an iron-like neckband, for starched collars and trubenized cuffs will be as passe as button-up shoes. Comfort will be chic, predict the local haber- dashers. Collars will be soft and floppy in all colored shirts. The cavalier col- lar will become as important to the 30's as the turn-up neckband was to the Gay 90's. This style is almost sloppily soft in appearance, with points widely spread in order that the tie can have a loose, large knot. It has the long points of a button- down collar, but without the buttons, and will not curl up like the tusks of a saber-tooth tiger. Virtually all colored shirts will feature snug-fitting rolled collars. Oxford Cloth Collars Radnor collars, with rounded col- lar-points, will compete for style honors and will be made mostly in Oxford cloth for wear with tweeds and sport coats. The shirts themselves will be made of light porous materials, and mesh shirts are coming back. A new style of featherweight cloth will make the shirt seem to the wearer little more than a collar and cuffs. These styles will be worn on all ex- cept very formal occasions; for wear in the classroom, on trips home or on informal dates. They will replace the. starched ironclads for everyday use. In the sports field, of course, even greater comfort will be the keynote. There will be shirts with crew- or round-necks instead of collars, and ribbed cotton styles that will be hy- brids between shirts and sweatshirts. If comfort is the motif, then clothiers have found a thousand ways of ex- pressing it. Bali Prints Snappy Bali prints, which came into con- spicuous notice last summer, will re- turn more flamboyant than ever. Borrowed from the Hawaiian beach boys, these are walking billboards of interesting places. Hawaiian and Mexican scenes are still in demand, but new styles will show scenes of the New York and San Francisco fairs. As yet there has been no announce- I Howiijr A bout. Some A mericain Fashions For Us Armericans? (..________________________________________________________ Who Are These Britishers That They Can Dictate Our Fashion Trends?, By HERVIE IIAUFLER It comes to us by various and sun- dry ways that a new magazine for women's fashions, "Glamour," will shortly appear. It will try to do the unprecedented trick of looking here at home for styles instead of mimick- ing the latest nightmares from Paris. To editorialize a little, we heartily applaud the move. The ladies are putting the neutrality policy into a use that should finally bring tang- ible results. Esquire's UnAmerican That reminds us of the policies of "Esquire," men's style dictator. It takes no more than a cursory glance at Esquire's pages to reveal that the magazine's style experts have their fingers on the pulse of English fash- ions rather than American. In the pictures we see backgrounds of hea- ther and box-hedges and figures that exactly fit our stereotypes of Tommy Atkins. Why should this be? Are we so lacking in originality that we must kowtow to the British? Are we so sterile of ideas on how to dress that we must adopt the brain-children of our monocled god-fathers? Surely this condition must be abolished. Americans should dress American. After all, there is plenty of latent material begging to be used by Amer- ican designers. Just look around you. Down in the Kentucky mountains we have long ago rebelled against the distates of London. We have substi- tuted swanky, ragged-crowned straw sombreros for English bowlers and derbies. We make our clothes of blue denim instead of tweed. We have strings for suspenders, very chic, and jackets with specially constructed flask pockets. But probably the latest style deve- lopment that- has caught the moun- tain fancy are flour-sack trousers. 'These are skillfully woven of empty flour containers that' have been bleached. Of course, if they are not Cully bleached one has a brand on the hip that says, "Old Mill Flour-Se- lect Quality," but that is simply a mark of individuality. And what about the West? If American stylists cannot make use of such distinctive clothing contribu- tions as the ten-gallon hat, the flap- tiji~ bootthe hi it gnti hcLeleo r- 9-wmnie. J.Mst observe the lovely in- tricacy of the stitching on a boot and there you have a motif that should foster a whole style trend. Lots of native American original- ity is going to waste when we over- look the native redskin. What about buckskin-fringed trousers for a novel touch, or a beaded headband, with or without feather, to keep the hair out of the eyes? Seminoles Flashy Dressers Down in the Evergla'des of Florida are found spiffier dressers than Ep- som Downs ever saw. They are the Seminole Indians and what they can't do with a bolt of material isn't worth doing. They have the most flamboyantly original stripes and counter-stripes that a tailor ever visioned. And they blush unseen. We are reminded of a skit that Olsen and Johnson resurrect once in a while. It depicts Paul Revere riding up to a cottage and shouting, "The British are coming." A lovely crea- ture in a diaphanous negligee comes to the door and says, "Oh, but my husband won't be home for a long time." Paul turns around, shoots his horse and yells. "To hell with the British." Them's our sentiments exactly. New Spring BeIt s Are Designed To Give Relief To Male Torso Belts for spring wear this year have been designed with a view to give re- lief to the belt-worn male torso. The braided belt with a turned cylinder ecect at the sides is made especially for greater snugness and comfort. As an added feature, there is a buckle spring construction in a one-line and double spring hidden behind the buckle to make it more flexible. Two-tone belts, su(h as pigskin trimmed with brown calf, are ex- pected to be in great favor this spring and summer. For light-weight wear, belts of Palm Beach cloth, Bermuda cloth, Congo cloth and other tropical fabrics should be in vogue. Some of the novelty belts that have been designed are of woven Lastex in colorful club stripings, and leather or twine with colored inserts. Another model that is being shown mainly in the larger cities is a combination belt-pouch, serving the double func- tion of belt and pocketbook. ment of bank nights or double fea- tures. Gabardine and twill sports shirts will be in pastel hues in order to pro- vide a variety of clothing combina- tions. Saddle-stitching will be a new touch, and the shirts can be worn inside or outside the trousers-the so- called "in-or-outer" style. For warmer weather, the clothing connoiseur will have super-cool shirts of jute-rag or friar-cloth with short sleeves and crew necks. One of the eye-catchingest of the new bush-coats is a big, bulky, yet cool model. in suede cloth,, made of i BEAUTY IN BROAD BRIMS y spun rayon. It has an out-doorsy look about it, with heavy construc- tion, saddle-stitching and four big pockets with leather buttons. The most popular clothing colors on display seem to be lovat green, ivy green, cruise blue and, of course, camel's hair. ftao om WAIN co I= ag a ANOTHER Dobbs TRIUMPH 5.00 - 7.50 and 10.00 j\ *4yon the pok~etbokrs~,/ f~.1 It'll gie Yoe. nlew fo t e rthrill vvide . .. but not too wide to be graceful That's the Dobbs way of leading the current style-trend to broader brims. A mere fraction of an inch can make or mar the beauty of a brim.That's why better dressed ren are leav- rng 4 .0 hoJ la W _ U1 to D s experts! Van B oven, Inc. State Street on the Campus r i t 1 I Two People at Ease Mom with the World .. . He - because his clothes feel right. $he '- because Saf fell & Bush helped choose them. IT'S NO SECRET PROCESS -1no trick - but the power is in our hands because we are the only t store in town that has the famous STEIN BLOCH creations styled and patterned exclusively for us. Another pleasant surprise is FITTING - we specialize in this very important step in pro- ducing personal satisfaction for the man wearing Saffell & Bush clothing. GOOD CLOTHING like good men grow old gracefully - Saffell & Bush have the same com...... ....::' plete measure of excellence this Spring as they have had in the past. v9. r ..........................................................................................................Y'~~ c ji'. N ::. .r