Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 58, No. 190, Ed. 1 Sunday, April 9, 1972 Page: 16 of 20
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PACE FOUR-A—Sapulp* (Okla.) Herald, Sunday, April t, 1*7?
SHOWING A YOUNG model how to pose for the coming Camp Main. Parents of the girls are the George G. Whites, 1023 E
Fire Girls stvle show are Debbie White (left) and Cindy McLeod, Debbie's parents, Mr. and Mrs. J.T. Qualls, 1405 N. 8th,
Lawrence The young model is Carol Qualls The style show Carol's parents, and the Jack Lawrences, 701 S. Independence,
will be neld at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at OG&E club room, 19 N. parents of Cindy, i Herald Photo)
Head Of Firm Began As Child Model
NEW YORK (UPI >—When he
was eight years old Vincent
DePaul Draddy posed for
Normal Rockwell for Saturday
Evening Post covers for 40 cents
an hour. The price improved a
bit when he got older and m the
1920s he got $1.60 an hour posing
for those cleancut Arrow Collar
ads
A few decades later he has
become the only Irish multimil-
lionaire on New York’s Seventh
Avenue, president of David
Crystal, Inc., the longest running
women's clothing firm in the
land, and head of Izod, a men's
wear firm best known, perhaps,
for its famous "crocodile shirt.”
Draddy is still handsome,
affable, social and rich enough
to pop off to Palm Beach when
he feels like it and hobnob with
other millionaires, a relation-
ship which has given him great
respect for elegance, a factor
that has nibbed off into the Izod
line.
“The very rich dress very
simply and do not go in for ex-
tremes," Draddy said the other
day in New York, his face still
tanned from his most recent
foray into the expensive Florida
sunshine. “Their clothes aren't
really expensive —they leave
that to the nouveau riche—but
they are in good taste in an
unmistakeable way.
“The young kids are a big
more mod. with a little flair to
their trousers and wide belts
which the older men don't wear,
but they, too, are basically
conservative and they really
only let themselves go in their
wildly printed sports shirts."
The navy blue blazer is the
uniform of the day in Palm
Beach, both for the young men
and the older ones, and is worn
with white or gray pants and
most often with white shoes. The
splashy clothes and twotone
shoes are saved for the golf
course—and none of those red,
white and blue golf shoes—
“that's for Miami.”
Draddy said he saw a general
reversion to a conservative look,
with more elegance, and he held
up a display ad of one of his own
Izod blazers—a red doubleknit
with gold buttons and shown
with neat checked pants and a
muted sports shirt.
Higher Taste
Draddy said he also had found
a higher taste level at Hobe
Sound, which is an exclusive
area about 20 miles north of
Palm Beach, and he lamented
the fact that the closer you get to
Miami the more the taste level
drops— ”it’s pretty hard to
believe what you see around
Miami."
Draddy, an avid golfer, gets
out to Palm Springs, Calif.,
fairly often and says there he
found some clothes even wilder
than those seen in Miami, a
phenomenom he attributed to
the fact people dressed more
conservatively in the East and
more colorfully in the West.
He expressed belief that
knits would be the fashion leader
for some time to come,
especially on the golf course.
and that the big push today is
toward separates—shirts and
slacks which can mix and match
and which are (elegantly)
coordinated.
There were a lot of double
knits in his own line, including
one blazer in Dacron, white with
tic-tac-toe ebroidery in navy or
red, or navy with red and white
embroidery. Another jacket was
a striped seersucker in a
Dacron-cotton blend, color
combinations being predomi-
nantly wine and blue or green
and navy.
There was a plaid "blister
plaid" in a raised jacquard knit,
a patched Madras and in slacks
of the same basic DK there were
pinstripes, the same blister plaid
in three tones and some argyle
knits both in jackets and pants.
There was a new technique in
shirts—similar to offset printing
used in some newspapers—and
they were in all over prints,
some in large red blocks. There
were many classic patterns
including pindots and prints, and
some of the alligator LaCoste
shirts which can be worn with
ties—if you have to get into a
restaurant
TOURISTS WARM
TO ICELAND
NEW YORK i UPIl-A record
total of 60.719 tourists visited
Iceland in 1971 for an increase of
14.8 per cent over the previous
record of 52,908 in 1970, says
Icelandic Airlines.
Bill Dorsey — Steve Taylor — Bill Chilcoat — Jim Edwards
gospel AMBASSADORS sig
Presenting the Best In Inspirational Singing
GRACE
TABERNACLE
Everyone Welcome
523 S. Water
Rev. Bob Perry
Pastor
By United Press International
Used all over a room—on
woodwork, doors, furniture and
windows—wall coverings unify
broken-up space and cover
architectural irregularities.
A pastry blender is used to cut
shortening into flour for pie
crust or baking powder biscuits.
Two kitchen knives may also be
used to do this.
When vegetables, fruits, nuts,
and other foods need to be cut, it
is safer to use a cutting board
than to cut against your thumb.
The board should have a smooth
top.
A pancake turner also can be
used for turning and lifting foods
such as meat, eggs and fried
potatoes and for taking off
cookies from baking pans. Many
turners have slits in them to
dram foods as they are lifted out
of a pan.
Wall-mounted can openers are
safer than most handoperated
ones but they cost more.
Keep cutting knives sharp by
storing them in a knife holder or
in a sheath that fits over the
blade. Use knives for cutting
food—not for cutting paper,
string, or for sharpening pencils.
Do not let knives soak in water
but wash after using. Dry and
then put knives away.
A spatula is a handy tool with a
limber blade and dull, straight
edges. You can use it to pack
shortening into measuring cups
or spoons, level off ingredients
when measuring, spread sand-
wich fillings, frost cakes, and
loosen baked foods from pans.
GROUNDS FOR ENJOY-
MENT
NASSAU-PARADISE ISL-
AND, Bahamas lUPIi—The
seven terraced gardens that
stretch three-quarters of a mile
across Paradise Island, just
offshore from Nassau, serve as a
backdrop to highly-prized pieces
of sculpture brought to the
Bahamas by Huntington Hart-
ford. On view for visitors are
statues of Franklin D.
Roosevelt, Dr. Livingstone,
Napoleon's wife, Josephine, and
a 12th century life statue of
Hercules, among others.
Child care authorities say
nursery schools, which are part
day programs under varying
auspices, may be free or may
charge tuition.
&JY
;.v.\v.\v
FABRIC SHOPS
OPEN WEEKDAYS
9 to 9 SUNDAYS 12 to 7
ONE-OF-A-KIND
FASHIONS
Prices Good Sun., Mon. & Tues.
April 9, 10, & 11 at Both
Sapulpa T.G.&Y. Stores
905 E. Dewey • 621 S. Main
DOUBLE KNIT
58”-60” Wide
100% Polyester
Machine Wash
Tumble Dry
No Iron
m .
■ • -
A
POLYESTER KNITS
• Yarn Dyed
• 60” Wide
• 100% Fortrel
Polyester
• Machine Wash
SHOP OUR
COMPLETE LINE
Of
SIMPLICITY &
McCALL
PATTERNS'
t 1$ \ VL%
(*/% # t
DOUBLE KNIT
jr /
.t ■
SIMPLICITY
PATTERN 9764
• 100%
Polyester
• 58”*60” Wide
• Machine
Washable
• Assorted
Colors
JERSEY
PRINTS
• 45” Wide • 100% Arnel Triacetate
• For New Clinging Fashion
$
Yard
WHISPER PRINTS
TUSCANY
TWEED KNIT
• 100%Acrylic • 54” ■ 56” Wide
• Machine Wash • permanent Press
98
Yard
TUSCANY
TWEED
• 44”-45” Wide • 100% Acrylic
• Machine Wash • Permanent Press
$ 198
Yard
• 45" Wide
• 65% Arnel
Triacetate
• 35% Fortrel
Polyester
• Cool Carefree
Crepe
VICTORIAN PRINTS
CUTTING
BOARD
74” x 39 7/16” Size
45” Wide
50% Fortrel
Polyester
50% Avril
Rayon
Delicate Solids &
Printed Lenos
ANTARIES
PLAINS & FANCIES
• 55"-57" Wide (Plains)
•61"-63" Wide (Fancies)
•100 percent Acrilan Acrylic
$
SAYELLE
YARN
Skein
i
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Livermore, Edward K. Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 58, No. 190, Ed. 1 Sunday, April 9, 1972, newspaper, April 9, 1972; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1490494/m1/16/: accessed July 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.