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Tulle-Mad Paris Wears Scarves,
Hats, Corsage Bouquets and
Muffs of This Fairy Fabric.
L ADY DUFF-GORDON t the famous “Lucile” of
London, and foremost creator of fashions in the
world, writes each week the fashion article fo{
this newspaper, presenting all that is newest and best in
styles for well-dressed women.
Lady Duff-Gordon’s Paris' establishment brings ner
into close touch with that centre of Lshion.
Lady Duff-Gordon’s American establishment is at
Nos. 37 and 39 West Fifty-seventh street. New York,
f : ..
trace the beginnings of these particular costumes.
Notice the lace tunic, for instance, combined with rose satin.
The tunic, edged with a very new chic flounce, is of black chantilly
lace. The shaping at the top of the bodice is most effective. Jew
elled bands hold this in place over the shoulders. The high-
waisted effect given by the crushed girdle is in keeping with the
design of the co3tume and with the figure of the wearer. I do like
the big satin rose that is tucked into the front of the girdle. This
is the new way to wear flowers and the only place that will be
permissible this Winter.
The light effect given by the tulle scarf is fascinating and it
also gives grace to the whole costume. A lace or chiffon scarf
worn instead would be too heavy and de
cidedly “out of the picture.”
Another' scarf that is most satisfac
torily in the picture is the hat worn with
the cerise charmeuse crepe and the net
lace. The mesh of this lace skirt, which,
by the way, is fulled over a cerise drop
skirt, is as fine as tulle. The bertha which
distinguishes the bodice is rapidly grow
ing in favor. The scarf worn here is a
delightful rose tulle affair.
mm
$38r I
Cerise Tulle Forms the Frame for This Dinner
Costume of Cerise Crepe and Lace.
W V,v
iHW® ",
This Chantilly Lace Tunic and Tulle Scarf Make This Costume
a Thing of Beauty.
LET US MARE YOU FAT
50-CENT BOX FREE I
We Want to Prove at Our Own Expense That It Is No Longer Necessary
to Be Thin, Scrawny and Undeveloped
WE INVITE EVERY THIN MAN AND WOMAN HERE,
Every Reader of This Magazine Who Is Run-Down, Nervous or Underweight,
To ~
Fat
A Modern Carmen in Flame and Canary Yellow
* Satin, With the Ever Present Tulle Bodioe.
“Cee ! Look at that pair of skinny scarecrow*! Why don’t they try Sargol ?’
Hiis is a generous offer to every thin man. or woman
reader of this paper. Wo positively guarantee to in
crease your weight to your own satisfaction, or no pay.
llunk this over. Think what it means. At our own
nak, we offer to put 10, 16, yee, 30 pounds of good,
■olid “stay there” flesh on your bones, to fill out hol
lows in checks, neck or bust, to get rid of tliat
*’peaked” look, to rejuvenate and revitalise your- whole
body until it tingles with vibrant energy ; to do this
without drastic ‘‘diet,’* '’tonics,” severe physical cul
ture ’’stunts,” detention from business or any irksome
requirements— if wo fail it cwts you nothing.
We particularly wish to hear from the excessively
thin, those who know the humiliation and embarrass
ment which only skinny people have to suffer in silence
We want to send a frit? 60-cent package of our new
discovery to the people who are called “slats” and
“bean poles," to bony women, whoa* dothes never look
anyhow,” no matter how expensively dressed, to the
skinny men who fail to gain social or business recogni
tion on aooocnt of their starved appearance. We care
not whether you have been thin from birth, whether
you have lost fle^h from sickness, how many flesh build
ers you have experimented with. We take the risk and
assume it cheerfully, if we can not put pounds and
pounds and pound* of healthy flesh on your frame we
don’t want your money.
How can we do this? We will tell you. We have
discovered a remarkable concentrated treatment for in-
creasing cell growth, the very substance of which our
bodies ana made-a treatment that users say makes in
digestion and other stomach troubles disajipear as if by
magic, and makes an oki dyspepsic or a sufferer from
weak nerves or lack of vitality feel like a 2-year-old.
inis new treatment which has proven a boon to thin
FW? “ «»U«d Sargol. TXnt forget t e name-
S-A-R-G-O-L.” Nothing like it has ever been
produced before. It is a revelation to women who have
never been able to appear stylish in anything they wear
because of their thinness. It is a godsend to every man
who is under weight or who is lacking in nerve force or
energy. If you want a beautiful and well-rounded figure
of symmetrical proportions, of which you can feel justly
proud—if you want a body lull of throbbing life and
energy, write The Sargol Company. 3T1-G Heiald Build
ing, Binghamton, IN. Y., to-day, and we will send you,
absolutely free, a 50c. box of Sargol to prove what
we cflaiok. Take one with every meal, and in five min
utes after you take the fir* concentrated tablet of this
precious product soe how it commences to unfold its
virtue:'. It has by nctiwl demonstration often increased
the weight at the rate of one pound a day. BuA yflu say
you want proof. Well, here you are. Hero is the riate-
ment of F. Gago-.i, who has tried Sargol, and is con
vinced of its wonderful value:
F. GAGNON wrlten
“Here is my report since taking the Sargol treatment.
I am a man G7 years of age, an I was all run down to
the very bottom. 1 had to quit work, as I was so
weak. Vow, thank* to Sargol. I look like a new man.
I mined 22 pounds with 26 days’ treatment. I cannot
ten you howr happy I feel.”
WHAT SARGOL HAS DONE FOR OTHERS
We bare hundreds of letters like this which we want
to eend yon. Here are gains in weight reported from
just a few: 0. B Crouner, 15 lbs. in thirty days:
Thomas Davis, 10 lbs. in 16 days; Lenore Patton, 16
lbs. in 30 days; Mrs. Seim, 13> lbs. iD 20 days; F. A.
Myrick, 20 H>s. in 30 days. Mrs. S. B. Murray, 30 lbs.
in 40 clays; Mary Bland, 18 lbs. in 40 days; W. W.
Allis, 36 lbs. in 50 days; WTn. Carmichael, 5 lbs. in
lO days; Arthur Stewart, f> lbs. in 12 days; Mrs C.
Craig. 13 lbs. in 30 days; Mrs. N. Gallagher, 18 lbs.
in 35 days.
Send to-day for our Free 50-cent package, and let
prove that.
SARGOL SHOULD DO THE SAME FOR YOU
The now treatment is used to increase the red cor
puscles in the blood, strengthen the nerve* and put the
digestive tract into such shape^t-hat your food is assimi
lated and turned into good, solid, healthy flesh, instead
of paff-ing through the system, undigested and unasmiot
latcdL It is a thoroughly scientific principle. This
Sargol, for building up the thin, weak and debilitated
without any nauseous doaing.
Send for the SO-cent box to-day. Convince us by
your prompt acceptance of this offer that you are writ
ing in good faith and real y desire to gain in weight.
We coiUd not publish this offer if we were not pre
pared to live up to it. It is only the astounding results
of our new method of treatment that make such an offer
and such a guarantee possible on our part. So cut off
the coupon to-day and mail it at once to The Sargol
Company, 371-H, Herald Building, Binghamton, N. Y..
and please incloee 10c. with your letter to help pay
distribution expanse*. Take our word, you'll never
regret it
FREE COUPON
COME EAT WITH US AT OUR EXPENSE
This coupon entitles any thin person to one 50c.
package of Sargol, the concentrated Flesh Builder
(provided you have never tried it, and that 10c. Is
enclosed to cover postage, packing, etc.) Read out
advertisement printed above, and then put 10c. in
stomps in letter to-day, with this coupon, and the
full 50c package will be sent to you by return of
post. Address 'Hie 8or$ol Company. 3I1-U. Herald
Building, Binghamton. N Y. Write your name and
address plainly, and
PIN THIS COUPON TO YOUR UTTER
D
By Lady Duff-Gordon (“Lucile”).
||T was Mollere, I think, who said that a woman's reputa
tion was as fragile as tulle and as easily damaged. He
might also have said that many women find it an ex
pensive matter to keep up their supply of both these
fragile commodities. I thought of this expression of the great
French dramatist the other day when I dropped in at a very pri
vate ‘‘opening,’’ an opening, by the way, from which the general
public was jealously barred.
As I glanced at these delightful creations my first thought was
that the well-dressed woman this Winter would be wearing noth
ing much more than a wisp of tulle and a frightened smile after
candles are lit.
“Oui,” said the artiste to whom I made this remark “Oui;
the lady of the Winter must wear tulle in some fashion—a scarf,
a corsage ornament or a drapery. What else she wears will not
matter, but the tulle she must have."
Before describing to you the fascinating costumes that I saw
1 must speak more of this delightful, misty fabric and its uses.
It Is not a cheap wear, In spite of the fact that it can be had for
twenty-five cents a yard in your money. Its expensiveness lies in
the fact that it must ever be ‘fresh and crisp. It can seldom be
worn the second time, and when used as a drapery or a scarf sev
eral yards are needed.
A hat of this delicate fairy-like material will have to be remade
nearly every time that it is worn. But 1 know only too well that
in spite of my warning nine out ten girls will be going tulle mad
this season.
There is nothing more delicious than a scarf of cobwebby
tulle draped carelessly across the shoulders. It Is fluffy, yet trans
parent. It frames the face and shrouds the shoulders most
plquantly. and just between ourselves such a scarf takes ten years
from a woman's appearance and creates a feeling of mystery
With the use of tulle there is a perfectly natural tendency to
continue the use of lace. These two fabrics—if lace can be called
a fabric—blend charmingly. Both are as light as air. and both
are never used to better advantage than when combined in an
evening costume.
Of tulle hats 1 have already written; therefore will say nothing
more of them this week. But there are signs that point to a re
vival of the lace hat, a perfectly logical outcome of the fragile
tulle hat, 1 think.
Whether you realize it or not, fashion is always logical, al
ways the outgrowth of something that went before.
~ Id these three costumes I am showing you here you can easily