Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 15 November 1946 — Page 24

han’t Come To Dinner

Protocol Says They Can't Eat Together By DOROTHY WILLIAMS WASHINGTON, Nov, 15.—Capital _ hostesses, who mind their placecards and protocol, soon will learn the names of two men they can't have to dinner the same night. They'll be the Republicans chosen president pro tempore of the senate and speaker of the house of representatives, Political observers are betting that impressive Senator Arthur H. Vandenberg of Michigan’ will be honored with the top Senate job, while affable Rep. Joseph W. Martin Jr. of Massachusetts will get the No. 1 house post: Rules the Same No matter who's chosen, the social _ rules are the same. They can't eat dinner together. Socially, that is. Protocol forbids it, because no authortly on rank ever has been able to decide, between the two, whose placecard goes where. Hostesses who are in the white-tie-and-tails know, also will avoid inviting the house speaker to dine with the chief justice of the United States. Protocolists list the chief justiceship—now held by former Treasury Secretary Fred M. Vinson—one s0cial notch above the speakership. But it's still a ticklish question of rank. 3 Meantime, once the 80th congress gets going next Jan. 3, outgoing House Speaker. 8am Rayburn (D. Tex) can draw up a chair to the same dinner table with Vinson, Rayburn and Senator Kenneth McKellar (D, Tenn.), outgoing presi-

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san have a bite together, if they want,

Social Supplement i But the social consequences of the recent Republican congressional victory don't stop there, Mrs. Carolyn Hagner Shaw, publisher of “The Social List of Washington, D. C.” thinks she'll have to get out a spring supplement to the volume she published last month. Officials still will make her book automatically. But other newcomers must be approved by the unidentified four women and one man who make up her board of

governors. \ Merriam, fourth-'

4 Mrs. Wallach | © generation Washingtonian and the planner of most capital debutante parties, doesn’t think the switch from congressional control will have any effect on her guest lists. “We'll invite nice, attractive gentlemen whether they are Republicans or Democrats,” she said.

Insude and Out

No matter how old your refrigerator may be, if it is kept clean and bright it will continue to be an or- | nament to your kitchen. Wash the

UNI SU 5 0 BNC KO PAC HO

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ashions—

A Frock for the Junior Miss ‘Doubles Up' on Fashion Interest

dent pro tem. of the senate, also -

ocratic to Republican’ |

inside walls every time you defrost, §

This Mary Muffet dress; called "Reverie," doubles up on fashion interest. Nth Goble capped sleeves and dou

fullness comes by way of

unpressed pleats.

elf-covered buttons reach from neck to waist in back. In black, red, gray or lime rayon crepe, sizes 9 to 15,

(Wasson's.)

. but the outer walls need sudsing ' &

more frequently, especially if there are “little” fingerprint§ in your household, {

of styles.

style. Sizes 12% to Growing girls’ sizes

B. Brown Elk

Sizes 12% to 3 ....

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Children’s Shoes Have Good Fit if They're

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Wasson’s Shoe Center,

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Stripes and gold buttons give this brown and white dress (left) top rank in the fashion

corps. Marylee Harrell, who attends Noblesville high, likes the unpressed box pleats and her :brown leather belt and brown accessories. Marylee belongs to the Q. T.'s, Psi Chi and F. H. C. clubs. (Block's)

Beauties’ Hints—

Cropped Hair Easy to Handle

By ALICIA HART . NEA Staff Writer IF YOU HAVE to belabor your

hair to keep it up, why hang on to a lot of length? Usually the reason hair is an unmanageable heap is bécause it grows old and tired in its "5 to produce length.

a Persian kitten's by chopping off

permanent into brand new growth. | n * » | THE CHANGE is one from half- | hearted response—or none at all— {to surprising life, | snap, Another argument

|styles which are {short-cuts. - | Two vogues which are on their way in—the wind-blown bob, a revival of the 1920's, and the Regency dandy’s, which is short and rather ragged at the edges—both say “off with long locks.”

You can make it as seductive as

(tired, or lifeless ends and putting a |

in favor of cropping your hair is that the new coming in are

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The Shortage In Foundations Will Ease And Natural Rubber

Is to Return

By BARBARA BUNDSCHU United Press Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, Nov. 15.—There's a

bra for every bust line and a girdle for every bouncing figure in the corset shops today—and the store buyers who placed them there saw

|{them modeled in the real before [they bought, from falsies to size 56.

Despite the emphasis on .smoothing feminine lines, there was modest propriety at the foundation show before a ballroom of mixed company viewing Warner's complete line this week. The girdle may show, but otherwise the model was dressed for 4 tea party with hat and gloves. The bride, for instance, wore a white satin skirt with a bustle and a strapless white lace uplift brasslere that matched her veil. “Note the excellent division,” said the commentator. “Doesn't it fulfill that desire for romance and wedding bells?” The bridesmaid wore a dress over her bra, just to prove it works both

| ways.

First Post-War Show The manufacturer's first postwar grand showing stressed a group of bras, girdles and all-in-ones styled for every type of figure and for every hip, waist and length combination. There were girdles to give long and lean lines to the dumpy and to plump up a curve for the long and lean. There is an undergarment, they contend, to put the best into any dress on the market. They showed all they have and some that won't be along for a while. The youngsters in A-cup bras (that's small; sizes range through B, C, CC and D) appeared in black velvet slacks and jersey stocking caps. Dangling from each right hand was a pair of dinguses sold under the slogan “we fix flats.” Girdles for girls who barely need them were worn over skin-sized tights in startling colors. Larger sized girdles were worn over skirts—floor length froths of isatih, organdy or ruffled taffeta popping out from under the garter line. End of Shortage

Slit skirts were. worn to display pantie girdles, and a strip tease was {offered to show off the waistline.

| There was a new one for no stockings with a sta-down bottom to match the firm's famous sta-up top. There was a new all-in-one designed to prove once and for all that {a one-piece undergarment needn't

stamina and drag down the uplift. The bra, sep-

|arated for action, was demonstrated |in a discreet¥blue light. a Warner's promises no great immediate increase in supplies, but hopes for an end of foundation shortages sometime next year. Real crude rubber should be available in {six to nine months, the firm says. [But they're casting no aspersions on their present synthetics. They think they're good.

Daily Store Hours — Monday Through Saturday 8:45 A.M. lo.5:13 P. M.

Get It Now! Your Copy of The New Buster Brown

COMIC BOOK

A book of thrills, adventure and jokes. Come in for your copy now. Listen to SMILIN' ED'S RADIO SHOW, TOO! 10:30 A.. M. Saturday Morning—WIRE.

_._ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES HUNTING... By Marc G. Waggener

a BI ——

Hooster nimrods have until 4 elusive game birds, Quail may be

empty « handed. Rabbits again proved the mainstay of the hunters with a fair number of quail bagged along with a few pheasants. The opening of the season also brought a series of hunting accidents. Conservation officers in areas where the hunters were out in force on the opening day, marvelled that there were not more accidental shootings due to careless handling of guns. Some of the officers are convinced that hunters should be required to pass a test in safety before they are allowed out with a shotgun or rifle.

Trapping Season Opens

Today marks the opening of the trapping season in Indiana. From 12 o'clock noon today until noon on Jan, 15, 1047, it is legal to take raccoon, opossum, skunk, mink and muskrat in Indiana—providing you have a state license or permit, Trapping is a bigger business in Indiana than is generally recognized. The sale of pelts brings a return of approximately three-quar-ters of a million dollars to the men and boys engaged in this activity. Muskrats, trapped along rivers and streams, provide the major part of the fur crop in Indiana. There is no limit on the number of pelts a trapper can take, except a bag and possession limit of two raccoon. ¥ » »

Beavers Are Protected Trappers and hunters too, were reminded today by conservation officials that it is unlawful to take, kill or molest any beaver, to destroy a beaver dam, den or burrow, and to possess an untanned beaver hide. Beaver, once plentiful in Indiana, had been exterminated by unrestricted trapping and hunting. An experimental “planting” of beaver was made by the conservation department at the Kankakee state game preserve more than 10 years ago. Subsequently more beaver were liberated, chiefly in the northwestern part of the state but some in southern Indiana. Protected by law the beaver have increased in numbers and in some

WASSON'S

COAT SHOP

SECOND FLOOR

4

Conservation Officers Deplore.Ca Urge Safety Tests; Trapping Season Opens;

o'clock tomorrow afternoon to bring

down a cock pheasant before the close of the hunting season on these

taken up to and including Dec. 20

while the rabbit hunting season does not close until Jan, 10, 1047, Opening of the hunting season last Monday brought the usual reports. Some hunters had a big day, some did fair and some came home

areas their feeding on young trees and submerging croplands through the building of dams, have made them a nuisance, In such cases the offending beaver are trapped by the conservation department and moved to other areas. . » »

Anglers Getting: Fish While most sportsmen have been banging away at rabbits and game birds this week, a few persistent anglers have been enjoying some

Phillip Ward says that fishing has been on the upgrade in local streams and the Oaklandon reservoir this week. The fishing season is still open and a two-pound bass or a plate of bluegills tastes even better now than ‘during the summer. Fishing will take a spurt in northern Indiana later in the year, after the lakes are frozen over and the anglers can drop their lines through the ice.

Sad News for Scotch Drinkers

MONTREAL, Nov, 15 (U, P). —8cotch whisky will continue in short supply for at least five years, Sir Derek Gilbey said toy. The 32-year-old director of W. & A. Gilbey, Ltd., said Scotch distillers are short of grain, bottles, coal and labor, and have been unable to distill Scotch at all this year, He came here to inspect his company’s plant at New Toronto —which distills rye whisky.

TAKES NEW PASTORATE Times State Service GRENCASTLE, Ind, Nov. 15.— Rev. Raymond Skelton has accepted the pastorate of the Baptist church in Burnettsville, He has been filling the pulpit of the local First Baptist church for the past year, but resigned recently,

real sport. Conservation Officer

Raccoon at bay . . . Possibly part of fur coat next year.

Violators Get Caught

Sixty-three arrests for violations of the hunting and trapping laws were reported during the opening four days of the hunting season, conservation department officials said today. Offenses varied from hunting without a license to exceeding the

ROMANIAN PARTY ASKS OUTSIDE AID

BUCHAREST, Nov. 15 (U, P).— The Romanian elections scheduled for Nov. 19 will be a “sinister parody acted under signs of falsehood and terrorism,” according to Iuliu Manju, president of the oppo-

sitidn Peasant party. Correspondents attending Mr. Maniu’s press conference were handed “an appeal to the democracies of the world,” signed by the presidents of the Peasant, Liberal, and Independent Socialist opposition parties. The document called democracies of the world “to assert and impose human rights and liberties in ‘this part of Europe.” Mr. Maniu said his party could co-operate with Russia and that it was an enthusiastic supporter of the proposed confederation of European | states. .

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._ FRIDAY, NOV. 15, 1946

reless:Handling of Guns, Fishing Is Good

bag limit, shooting pheasants out of hours and trapping before the season opened. In a number of cases the guns of the offenders are being confiscated as provided by the fish and game laws. Confiscated guns are appraised and the owner given an opportunity to get his gun back by paying the appraised price. In the event that he does not reclaim the gun within a designated time, they ary placed on sale at the appraised price. As a rule violators of the hunte ing and fishing laws get little Syms pathy in Indiana courts and sige able fines and costs are meted ous, ” # »

Most Farms Posted Alarmed by the horde of hunters who have been in the fleld this week and angered by the ‘attitude of some hunters, farmers have plastered “No Hunting” signs around their property. It is estimated by Conservation Officer Ward that 78 per cent of the: farms in Marion county are “posted” today. Failure to ask permission to hung is one of the most common grieve ances of farmers in this county and throughout the state. Reckless shooting, damage to fences and other farm pfoperty and wanton shooting of - livestock and poultry are other charges brought by the farmers. Hf They realize that only & small percentage of the hunters are guilty of these charges, but post their farms against all hunting as their only protection against such hunte ers.

& & »

Re Parks Overcrowded = A warning that funds must be provided for state park expansion and development if Indiana is to continue to attract more than a million visitors annually, has been given by Director Robert Wirsching of the conservation department's state park division. “Preservation of outstanding scenic and historic areas and places, he said, has met widespread approve al but the visitation rate has oute grown existing facilities and will result in deterioration of the parks’ beauty and a decline in their pope ularity.” Park attendance this year exceed« ed a million although it failed to

equal the prewar record of 1,285,628 paid admissions.

Daily Store Hours

Monday through Saturday 9:45 A.M. t0 5:15 P. M.

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Ted;

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Sizes 10 to 20.

It's the coat that’s made of finest, warmest “Worumbo” wool!

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——— YR...

FRID!/

TIMES

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