T HE MICHIGAN DALY ,SDAY, NOV. 24, 1942 Christmas-1942 Style By CLAIRE SHERIMAN Hi, short stuff! Do you want to add inches to your appearance? You don't have to take vitamin pills or go on a diet, all you have to do is follow a few simple rules. They will all stand you in good stead until you go to work for Uncle Sam in the armed forces when you won't have any choice. The cardinal rule is to buy your suit with an eye to a long, unbroken line, for it is here that the greatest illusion of height may be achieved. Undoubtedly, vertical or diagonal stripes and herringbones are the best bet. However, care must be taken not to choose a stripe that is too wide, for such a stripe will tend to defeat its purpose. Plaid Is Bad For the same reasons, avoid splashy and large plaids and horizontal stripes. Any horizontal lines will make you look broader and shorter than you really are. In addition to the foregoing, the suit should have rolled or peaked la- pels and squared shoulders. With the new cuffless and narrow trousers, your suit will be complete. One button single breasted or two button double- breasted also serve to add height since they emphasize a long smoother line from shoulders to hips. Thick, fuzzy materials should be religiously avoid- ed in all suits because they give more the appearance of width than height. Straight and Narrow The same rules hold true for top- coats and overcoats as for suits. The shoulders should be squared and the lines straight. Knee lengths are the most satisfactory since three-quarter coats cause a break in the middle of an otherwise long line. Much attention must be paid to accessories to complete the desired effect. Buy shirts with wide-spread collars to help build up the shoulders. The shirts should also harmonize well with the suit so that the contrast is not too great. Taper Your Crown In selecting a hat, avoid those with low crowns and wide brims, since they will give a pushed-down effect. Ra-. ther, choose one with a tapered crown and medium brim. Do this, and you will be well on the road to scraping the wings of the B-24's. Iri Durdiasing shoes, you can use your own judgment. The most impor- tant thing to .remember here is that wide soles will not add any height, but they will not subtract any either. When it comes to choosing ties, pocket handkerchiefs and socks, any-. thing goes. Indulge to your heart's content in any whim you wish. They provide good opportunity to add a little dash, variety and originality to your outfit. Follow these hints and you will soon be laughing down on your taller friends. Pigskins Are for BDMOC's on This Yule Whip-Stitched Gloves, Wools with Leather Palms Are Favorites for Men's Hand-Wear Still by far the favorite men's glove on campus is the washable pigskin obtainable at all campus clothiers with stores reporting that they sell more pigskin gloves than any other type. , Styles in pigskins are as varied as the Ann Arbor weather, but the nat- ural light tan color is the one most frequently seen on the hands of a BDMOC. The hand and whip-stitched styles are perhaps the favorites of campus men with pecans, browns and oxfords following tan as the favorite available colors. A yarn glove with leather palms for warmth and durability is rising in popularity this year and should prove its worth in all around wearing opportunities. The wool backs and dis- tinctive leather palms make this glove look well on most any 'occasion. An ideal gift for sports and general wear when the weather becomes cold is the new glove and muffler set of- fered - in domestic and imported weaves. The imported Scotch make still in stock in some Ann Arbor stores is very popular. Olive drab, all wool gloves are just the thing for keeping your army man's hands warm without his having to hold those of another girl. With dress parties cut down for the duration, white gloves are not selling well in Ann Arbor, although dealers still have some nice styles in stock for those inclined to want them. Not so much for all around campus wear are the deerskin and chamois gloves carried in their smooth looking hand-stitched models. For real warmth we recommend the two-in-one glove. This combination consists of a top glove of leather, fastened at the wrist with a buckle, and an inside glove of wolo knit. Each pair can be worn separately, or the two can be combined for warmth, giv- ing the owner three pairs of gloves for the price of two. Grey dress, moacha gloves have fallen in rank on campus and are not seen as often as they were in previous years, but this is still a nice bit of hand wear for rather formal looking day wear. Summing it all up, the pigskin model seems to be the one which most college men all over the country will wear this fall and winter. The colors are being worn a great deal with black, and the single button and gauntlet plain leather glove are defi- nitely taking the fore-front. By DICK COLLINS They've broadcast it from Wash- ington and whispered it behind closed doors but it just isn't true-despite what all the wiseacres say, you're go- ing to be able to buy all the sporting equipment you need for this Christ- mas and possibly next. It's true that most of the sporting goods factories are busy producing necessities for the greatest game of all, but local sports stores and factory warehouses are crammed while sub- stitutes are being used for shortage materials formerly found in many articles. Next year's golf games, if you're lucky enough to live near a city course or can save your four weekly gallons of gasoline for the trip to the country club, will be played with re-covered balls, which because of the careful tests they undergo, won't cut more than a foot or two off those super- long drives of yours. Winter sports will be well taken care of by present stocks with skis being priced anywhere from two dol- lars up and toboggans remaining at the ceiling cost of two dollars per foot. Ice skates are no longer gushing in a steel stream from the factories but you won't have any trouble buy- ing them for quite a while. Recognizing the health aid morale- building properties of popular sports the government has allotted the sporting goods companies priorities on used rubber for tennis and hand- balls so you won't have to get your war-time exercise in a good, strenuous game of two-handed croquet. The rubber problem has been solved in the table tennis field by a new fabric cover for, paddles which is said to bestow a superior brand of reverse english on the bounding pellets while leather soles have been substituted for the familiar rubber understanding of tennis and basketball shoes. Though racket-making machinery and labor are now engaged in turning out surgical gut for military use, the stock-on-hand policy applies to ten- nis, squash, and badminton rackets. The feathers used to guide those agile little badminton birdies will come this year from American instead of foreign birds. Though some of the manufacturer.s of leather goods will be making hel- mets for Allied parachute troops, ii- stead of youthful gridiron stars, again there will be plenty of shoulder pads and baseball gloves for a long time to come. SUBSTITUTES SOLVE PROBLEM: Local Stores Predict Adequate Supply of Athletic Equipment TWO-TONE SHOES ON LAST LEGS: trouble should be encountered re- placing batteries. It operates on three batteries, two A and one B. Clever model is one of these "little jobs" with an ivory bakelite case. Enjoying much fame at this time is the radio-phonograph, which is al- so found in a great variety of sizes. For the times when the radio is un- cooperative and gives forth just scin- tillating advertisements, or when your favorite orchestra just won't play "your song," there is nothing like having the phonograph attach- ment. Intsizes they run from the con- venient size which you can keep on the table at the end of your desk to the large, deluxe model for the fra- ternity house. One of the popular features of many of the new radio- phonograph combinations is the per- manent needle which eliminates a lot of worry from the operation of the phonograph. * Along this line, too, a good gift idea for some one who already is the proud possessor of a radio-phono- graph is the record cabinet, which is a nice little article to have, espe- cially if he is an ardent record- collector. A helpful hint to all those who might be contemplating a portable radio as a gift to that someone: the most practical at the time due to shortage of batteries is the two-type radio which will operate on either battery or regular house current. OPA Decrees Solid Browns; Blacks or Whites Coming Style Give 1Mm Practical V GIFTS from Del Prete s Plan to shop for gifts at Del Prete's this Christmas. Our Michaels Stern Suits, Topcoats, and Overcoats are all wool and finely tailored. In addition, we have all selections in accessories for men! /.f...$29.50 Jason Shirts . . . . . . $2.25 up Wembley Noreast Ties. . $1.00 Hickok Belts . . . . . $1.00 up Hickok Suspenders . . $1.00 up Holeproof Hose . . . . 45c up Fine All Wool Wimbleton Shirts . . . . $3.95 SPORTS COATS Gaberdine $17.50 up Hall Hats.. , $4.50 Shop at Del Prete's bTiNCTiv. MLsM LM well-stocked store. 116 E. Liberty Unless you're walking on air and aren't interested in getting the last of the sharpie shoes, you'd better dash down to your favorite foot fitter and get those heavy brogues, smoked elks and saddle shoes while they last. If you don't you'll spend the dura- tion plodding around in "basic" col- ored boots. As soon as the present supply is exhausted, no more wing tips, brogues or two-tone shoes will be sold according to an OPA decree of September 12. The government tells us that from now on solid browns, blacks or whites are the style. But the boot builders have already shown that they don't propose to let our pedal extremities get bored in a another reminder in case saddle shoes or other two tone jobs are still your favorites - these and the heavier types of shoes are the big sellers now and the supply is limited, so get yours now. If you're one of those "Lounge Liz- ards" who likes to loaf in those luxur- ious sheepskin slippers, we have bad news for you too. The Army has taken over all available sheepskin for lining aviation suits and other cold weather equipment. All of which spells trouble for those wolves in sheep's clothing. drab setting. In fact they nave already aps Hosed Gals; come up with a new model that prom- It's Cotton Now ises to make Lil Abner's big city friends jealous. It's an all white cre- Socks will be worn this year by most ation with black felt soles. But just college students. Silk and nylon hose have gone the ular this year, mainly because they way of all flesh and most of the leg are the only kind of long hose that wear will be of cotton or rayon for the girls can buy for' dress wear. As they duration. Some coeds have taken to take a long time to dry, the coed's long knitted stockings. These are be- wardrobe must include many pairs. ing sold in a great variety of shades Men's socks generally become holey and have the special advantage of terrors after so much walking on cam- being warm. pus. Consequently they make excel- Rayon stockings are extremely pop- lent gifts for your boy friends. Take a hint from th Select his Christmas gi is abundant with discrin is the time to use our plete selection. Assure him of a warmv ter. The ever-popular wool ARGYLE sweater is. to bring a smile. Sleev pull-over, or coat styles from $3.95 Give him a ROBE he will en- joy from our stock of all a ' wool flannels. y at $8.95 p . . 4" Tr Vacation Time by Shopping Now[ Here are a few suggestions for the' "perfect gift".. . * Crusader and Beau Brummel Cravats * Swank Jewelry * Stetson and Champ Hats r Fine Leather Billfolds * Society Brand Suits, Topcoats and Overcoats * Glove and Muffler Sets * Windbreaker Jackets * Interwoven Socks - Jockey Underwear * Ritz and Nelson-Paige Shirts * Hickok Bar-H Belts and a complete line of Hickok goods 3e MEN... ft from his favorite store. Our shop iminating ideas for his pleasure. Now lay-away plan and benefit by a com- win- all sure eless, up - 1' GENUINE PIGSKIN GLOVES are certain to be a welcome 1= . i E additin ohiswardrobe.A