Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 October 1946 — Page 23
23,1946
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WEDNESDAY, OCT. “Try Diamonds With Any ‘
.,
C ostume” Bl mn
By BARBARA BUNDSCHU United Press Staff Correspondent WW: YORK, Oct. 23.—A diamond ¢. is just as basic as -the dime’ store pearls with a sweater and skirt. That's what jeweler John Rubel SAYS. 2 A “simple” $50,000 creation is all the smart woman needs to brighten any costume from dawn to dusk (of course you can wear your diamonds to breakfast) if there's a little imagination to go with it. Rubel has nothing against. a necklace around the neck—it's certainly quite the thing with any number of gowns—but he has some other suggestions, too; for his fa-
13
oy
“sy
eT Inspiration
1048 —
Faas
vorite “basic” which comes complete with a 20-carat pear shaped] pendant. | +A La Cleopatra He anchors it under the arms, for| instance, on a black evening dress, | swings it'across the front to under- | line his model's bustline, and points the pendant up at center front. For an evening gown, Rubel sug-/ gests wrapping the necklace around the head, pendant center forehead a la Cleopatra—very fetching if the bobby pins are strong enough.
For a less budget-wise basic, Ru-
_bel suggests a $92,000 cHbker of al-
ternated round and square cut dia-) monds—extremely pretty, Take it apart, it's two bracelets. Anchor
nm vertically, it's shoulder straps, n evening dress. Or fancy it 1 with a clip and you have an)
epaulet Hat Tricks
The millinery trick can be done
with almost any necklace. The jeweled strand is secured at the hairline of an 'off-the-face hat,
eithér on or off the hat, on the milliner. If there isn't a necklace in sight, a series of ear clips have equal versatility and the bank account advantage that you needn't buy them all at once. Pinched onto a ribbon or a golden chain, the clips make a lovely and unusual necklace or choker. They are pretty spice for an oval neckline. Or they mpy be clipped to another ribbon ant tied around the
depending
chignon for another charming haw ‘do. If thevre big enough, one can g0 on the ear covering of a onesided hat, the other on the bared ear opposite, Diamonds, maintains Rubel, are © not only lovely, theyre versatile, Soak Dirty Cioths Dustcloths, floorcloths, and other ‘cleaning cloths can be cleaned with a minimum of eflort if they are put to soak immediately after use °
in hot soap suds.
‘
A Clarepotter original designed for evening wear in a shim-
mering Bur-Mil faille crepe comes.in gold or mink brown.
The
blouse of the two-piece gown is worked in self-fabric dressmaker quilting. The skirt of Polynesian inspiration has a becoming sarong
drape and is fastened with Ywo gold ceramic buttons.
Good Posture ‘Slims’ Waist
ALMOST ANY posture-lazy woman can haul in her waistline two inches by pulling up slack to shoulders and chest. Isn't that straighten up? Yes? '» In pulling up. the slack admit that vou have Tuck in your abdomen. hips in. Then, in standing side-view, lean, taut line thr
(Ayres’
| While shaping the hat,
squeeze play’ when you Then you can so easily routine of drawing in and rele muscles in a block-by
1s
an Incentive to frankly a chest Swing your vour mirror, examine the ough your mid-
Keeping a supply of clean, white accessory touches for basic dresses will eliminat danger of for a last minute date
on
riff.
foot Soap Drain
M dishes
nn ” ” TENING walst muscles, measureexercise
FOR TIGH which reduces ments, no better than squeezing in and holding them his and strengthens the contractible fibers
ther all of vour drainage will permit y in use.
there is ake thal have Thi
when not
sure holes our
hardens bottom
to, dry
at
)
A good time ‘to give muscles this
walk.
make a
{they'll look like
New est’ Coats | Play Games: With’ Figures
NEW YORK, Oct, 23 (U; P). — Parisian gowns, $0 - many: barrels, teddy, bears or telephone, poles in the same designers’ coats, depending largely on their shapes in the
indoors in
| first place,
That appears as the most premi= nent new trend in reports and imports of the latest French fashions {reaching New York. |* Dolman sleeves, wrap around | coats, loose to the hip-baud jackets show a silhouette return to ‘the { first. two decades of the century | which cannot bg ver looked despite
almost unanimous dressmaker adherence to a defined waistline in Qresses
Narrow Kneeline
Many hanging at hip
designers favor the loosecoat which is caught up or thigh length,
er's assistance,
Dropped shoulder lines and fre-|
quent exaggerated dolman sleeves accompany many of the coats. A similar line suits ‘waistline to hips. in his New York collection this season, too, but he and other American designers appear to prefer a long torso look with shape.) The Parisian designers appear to be following a return to the Tens and Twenties trend which was more prominent in New York's spring collections this year than in its more recent fall ones. The coat and suit have something for who come out like poles. Teddy bears,
Drying Knitted Hats Dry
crocheted or Kkniited hats a strainer of the proper size this allows to circulate for quick drying.
button’ snugly at
re
manifestations the slim of hip
beware.
over
an
\
asing |
-block game,
Han dy Accessories
Snowy
hand e the
“having nothing to wear” |
508p the
s0ap
Daily Store Hours— Monday Through
Saturday, 9:45 A.M. 5:15 P.M,
School's Out!
From Wasso
vou see all these wi 7. of
nels!
T HE IDLANAROLS I
Women may show off their figures but |
cupping | | them at the hem without the wear-|
is transferred to! in jackets which ignore the; the | (Mainbocher did one of those’
the . telephone
All you fellas and gals will say
. In the gayest of styles,
HE S
i
_* Meenach photo - Before her marriage Sept. 6, Mrs. Charles ' H. Fletcher was Miss Norma Welton. Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. John W, Welton, 1602 Cruft st.,, and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Fletcher of Brown county. The couple is at home here.
Porter photo Miss Mary “E. Sauer, Saughter of Mr. and Mrs, Joseph A
Sauer, 1510 Wade st., became the ‘bride of John E. Scott, son of Mr. and Mrs. J, K, Scott, 27 S. Mount st, in a ceremony read Sept. 2 in St. Catherine's Catholic church.
7 hree Become Brides in Recent Ceremonies
McConahay photo. An Oct, 5 ceremony united Miss Joan McMahon and Robert L. Stevason. The bride is the daughter of Mrs. Catherine McMahon, 2037 Ruckle st., and Mr. Stevason is the son of Mrs. Eleanore Stevason of 69 N. Holmes ave.
Hints— New Machine
By ALICIA HART NEA Staff Writer STOCKINGS are “Foing through a mild revolution, and we aren't citing nylon: queues, black market barter or new plastic wonders as cases in point, What our lovely ing through is a drastic change in. the old conception of how they should fit. the newer idea that fit be proportionate to the width - of “your foot and to fullness and length of your The promise is better fit longer wear. : Since . this idea has caught on,
Beauties’
*
sheers are go-
should and the leg and
Size
In its place comes *
Gauges the Right Stocking Size
TO TAKE THE burden of guess work off the customer and the saleswoman, some stocking count-
! ers are now equipped with meas-
many manufacturers are revamp-. |
fng structural many as three lengths are | available in any one given size.
designs,
leg
Time to Buy
ns Fifth Floor
“Super,”
nter wearables!
colors!
and as |
Store
when Slacks (stacks them) in tweeds, herringbones, gabardines, flane
And SPQRTSWEAR galore for the GIRLS!
uring devices which turn the job of fitting you over to an infallille maghine. The machine on which the customer stands in one stockinged foot, in order to obtain the fullest extension of its width and length under body weight, is not unlike & device. for determining the right shoe slze, : But the hosiery gauge goes a couple of steps farther in its insistent ques® to fit a stocking properly, On the theory that full-
ness of foot takes up length, the measurement of the width is considered length.
as important as the
Because the fullness of the calf is a contributing factor in deter= mining length, that is measured by a device that slips around the leg like a bicycle clip. The length of stocking required is then measured by a- pull-up tape which makes a point of contact with the customer's girdle. A short girdle cs Als 10 for a long stocking and vice versa.
|
Washing Gabardine {~ Plain gabardine is an important | material again this season, -and it can be washed just as easily ‘as {plain weave cottons. Suds in luke: | warm water; if part wool or rayon, walt until it is completely dry to! iron under a damp press cloth, | Cotton gabardine may be ironed! ‘while still damp.
3
Zippered
slimming, Cd
lastex ‘or
Girdle—for a Slim You
Fore or aft—you'll look wonderful under. the
girdle or panty girdle . . i» : to. wear
8.50 to. S15
trimming influence of your Archer light’ as air and easy wash, “id rayon satin
w Xe
‘iu. CHSY nylon,
to © Wasson's Girdles, lis STR Floor. 5.0 cL wa
Store Hours— Monda y Th rough
Saturday—
9: {SA 1033 5p. m,
American
-,
All 'round pleated SKIRT, 5.98 , , , Jacquard coat SWEATER, navy, red, brown, T to 14 sizes; 6.35
Waist measurements 26 to 36. 10.95 Group. Reindeer SWEATER sketched, 9.95 5
_ PAGE 3
The Chic Look Is Spoiled By Gewgaws
EVEN DURING a season when elaborate clothes are-the last cry - of fashion, a.woman with a repu~ tation for chic to defend, will be sparing in her choice of ‘detail and gewgaws on clothes and fancy work on gloves, shoes and bags, Under a load of fashionable gime micks a woman is apt to hide her personal distinctions, Besides it's hard for the most superb set of good looks ‘to compete with too many extra added attractions in dress, $n 8 SHOES MORE than anything else in a costume should fuse into the general picture, They make independent claims for attention when they are ‘too extravagantly bedecked. Bags may be colorful, sparkling or outres in’ design only when there is a quiet background to play them against. A hat may be more powerful than the costumé—this fall's flashiest whimsies are designed for the quiet little, black dress—but it should never be mightier than the face, . A woman should be sure that her face can compete with flocks of feathers, tufts of bright ribbon, yards of veiling and chunks of | glitter. before she pins such "an assemblage on her head,
U se.Jar for Ww ash
Keep a sponge and a widee {mouthed, covered jar in the bathe room. When washing delicate necke wear, place it. in the jar filled with suds and shake.. This saves wear lon fragile lace and fabric. It saves [soap, too, because of. the small * {amount of water—and also because | you Can re-use the suds. Just pour |some on the sponge to wipe finger {marks oft the wapdwork.
Protect Ironing
Placing a clean sheet on the floor under your {ironing board saves
|damp trailing pleces from picking lup floor dust.
Top to Bottom
and pleated SLACKS, 7.40-tow (8ketched) 7.40
woolen flannel SKIRT,
green or red. Sizes 10 to 16, 8.98... “Gay Blazer" flannel JACKET, red or green, 10 to 16 sizes, 13.98
