Newspaper Page Text
6 D
By MME. HAUTE MONDE
*T" HE rage for tulle in all form*?
I increases. Tulle hats are to b 1
seen in all the best millinery
studios and on the heads of all the
notable leaders of society, and tulle
hats of a very elaborate order.
* • •
The Parisiennes are using pal“
heliotrope face powder in conjunc
tion with the new veils. The effect
good when very little powder is used,
but, of course, it is artificial. De rt p
yellow face powders have quite gone
out of favor; and ro wonder. A few
months ago it was an ordinary thing
to m<et a throng of beautifully
dressed women who all looked as
though they were suffering from
jaundice.
* • *
»'ut j*t earrings, when the design s
thin and graceful, are wonderfully be
coming They have the effect of mak
ing thin faces look round and fat
faces look thin. For morning wear
cut jet e rrings art* considered spe
cially correct, and they are worn in
conjunction with handsome Jet hat
pins and verv often with elaborate
ceinture buckle*
* • •
The woman who can sew or who
knows a capable and inexpensive
seamstress can have much Unin..' un
derwear at a reasonable price. Wide
shadow lace is now sold at prices
varying from 40 cents to $1. It is
edged on each side with hob s through
which ribbon is to he run. anil It is
designed for under bodices. One rib
bon is run through the lower edge, t >
gather it in about the waist. Another
is run through the top edge Tne
ends of the ribbons are tied In front
and ribbons are fastened across f h»
shoulders.
• • •
Patent leather shoes, alwavs a boon
to man or womankind, because th*->
are so easily kept clean and bright,
are made up with kid and cloth in
many styles One patent leather sho
has cloth uppers, in the form of at
tached spats /ith straps going und *
the arch of the foot where they are
fastened in the <ole. Thus* shoes are
made with spats of purple, tan. gray
and black.
A I
RS. HERBERT
(LA
RK, |
i\l
in the gown
that
she
says
is the most mod
est in
her
collet
•tion of filmy hn
hi lime
nts.
Her ‘Most Modest
Gown Slit to Knee’
Shirtwaist gowns made of whi'.e
wash* net are a novelty. The girdles
worn with these ®*owns are made of
or colored satin, and are worn
■ m il v ■ i-m ’Mi' 'I':
saih 1s ajKpong'..’ seen on the ultra-
modish costume.
Accordion pleated Indian muslin
and accordion pleated chiffon, these
are the favorite materials for this
sca^op’s afternoon dresses, ami these
in
fggent VrtwH&J Hie flounces
src \’i five sfcirt in grail
widths, someiimer the whole skirt is
pleated from whist to hem
• • •
< Hatpin* when used at all should be
unronimo|iaml beautiful or they
should be nHRh useful, just bail
headed pin* tnaflN* of jet. There is no
fexcuse for the pretentious pins which
many women wear in conspicuous
parts of their hats, imitation pearls
find imitation diamonds of the most
blatant description. A very charm
ing idea Is at present finding favor
This is a set which is composed of a
pair of jeweled hatpins and a veil
brooch to match.
• • •
The new idea in drapery on after
noon and .-evening gowns is a butterfly
bow at the back between the waist
and knees It is a part of the tunic
and is made by catching up the long
ends at the back and forming them
into a colossal butterfly which is flat
tened out against the surface of the
gown. Below this the skirt is draped
in its usual manner, with long bias
lines reaching from the front.
• • •
For little girls figured dimity para
sols are attractive They are inex
pensive and durable and really sim
pler and more childlike than those of
silk.
• • •
Ail silk blouses should he made
simply. It is now the fashion to omit
turks and pleats and make u deep
shoulder yoke which Is finished with
seam beading or a piping of the ma
terial. The lowered armhole with a
loose sleeve is by far the best for a
schoolgirl, because it is less likeh to
tear out; the length of the sleeve is
for her to decide; the wrist lengtli
is the prettier, but the elbow length
is more comfortable and economical
* . *
The one-piece frock is the bulwark
of the schoolgirls outfit to-day It
may be of heavy linen, cotton crash,
or eponge; or It may lie of thin serge]
woolen ratine or corduroy. The latter
is a lasting material and fits In with
school life. It always has been wort;
and it probably always will be
• • •
Plaids in silk and wool both prom
isc to be very much with us once tic
fall season opens. And with the
plaids comes a revival of Homan
stripes.
• * •
A particularly charming silk cos
tume is made in a soft, wine-colored
taffeta. The skirt is side pleated, and
pleats, it is promised, will become
more fashionable as the summer rolls
into fall. The bodice simulates a
jacket, being cut on the bolero lines,
and is edged with a niching of the
taffeta. It slopes into a point in the
back, and is open in the front to dis
play a lace vest and a wide sash of
f-ouple green taffeta arranged to fall
m the back in four loops finished with
deep fringe. A new touch is added by
the collar of black tulle with immense
wings at the sides.
• * •
There i« one exception to the high
trimming, and that is on the velvet
rat with the Tam o’ Shanter crown,
but her* *,he extreme tilt of the hat
Iencs the ffect of height.
Correctly speaking, the black velvet
coptumes and the jaunty little whip*
twt should be saved for the afternoon
!° should be worn In the morning.
Across the water, these white sat it:
nat* are being worn with white liner,
irocks and suits. They are smartest
English Actress Sorry She Did Not
Wear Her Best in Filmy
Frocks.
NEW YORK. Aug. 30. -It’s too bad
that Mrs. Herbert (.’lark, who arrived
on the Mauretania to play in '‘Oh, I
Say,” didn’t know that America is
much interested in slit and X-ray
skirts or she would have worn the
best instead of the most modes! gown
that she has in the filmy, diaphanous
line
She obligingly posed, however, in
“the modest” gown, which was slit to
the knee, while the ship’s news re
porters wondered what the one she
declared “stunned” those who looked
at it might be like.
There were plenty of other frocks
of tHe filmy variety on board, and the
wearers vied with each other to see
" ho could don the most startling cos
tume. Passengers whose berths were
on the moonshine side of the prome
nade deck lost much sleep peering
through their window's as the fair
hikers passed up and down the deck
between them and the moon.
when they are kept very simple. A
few have a touch of color intro
duc'd In the under facing of the felt
bfini. but the majority are all white.
• • •
While the yellow shades are not as
chic as during the summer, they are
considered smart, especially the til-
leul, which resembles an unripe lem
on more than any other color. Tne
canary and the sulphur tones are
also fashionable, particularly for
trimming and where merely a dash of
color is required. For instance, there
is a ver\ stunning new vesting in a
bright yellow tone with conventional
flowers in red, which has been or
dered by the knowing couturiers. Be
fore leaving yellow, the soft beige
ami biscuit shae a should be men-
| tioned, us they are very well liked In
| the lightweight cloths and in silks,
such as charmeuse and satin.
Blue has lost none of its prestige,
and some authorb.es say that the new
I blue ser'es should be given first place
| rather than the copper tli.t* Of the
j blues, the new blue a shade deeper
than peacock blue Is a great favorite,
and also the corbeau. The soft blues
j on the Nattier and Hutch order ht 1
very desirable, and the very dark blue!
shares the demand for somber color- i
; ings.
Tlie red shades vary widely. There
is a very bright red. an almost bar-
| baric red. that is very we.! liked oy '
j the couturiers who go in for vivid
I colorings, but the majority of rids
blend into the dregs of wine tints
and the soft brick colorings. For
evening wraps th* geranium red is n
art at demand. There is also a purpl**
with quantities of red in it, a shade
j whi h Nature has reproduced in the
fu* h*ia. As against this there is the
I '''dine, or very deep violet, with a I
J bluish tinge.
Tin browns must not be overlooked,
i for all of the couturiers have made
much of them, the tobacco and Ha
vana browns leading. A soft, pretty
rose tint was combined with brown
8ev * very effective costumes.
This r<*s. tint mus oe recorded be-
1 cause it has appeared in many of the
j duvetyn coats.
. For the street, the dark, rich shades,
the tete d«» negro. a deep taupe, and
a blue that is almost black are con
sidered the most fashionable. An
other new (olor is called heather, a
lovely soft grayish lavender, that is
particular^ ittranive in a silk\ tex
ture. Then is still a demand for or
ange. which the vogue for both veilow
j and red naturally would continue, but j
it is used almost exclusively for trim- *
; ming. And every w here there is sllv •«• ]
—quantifies of silver. Many of th-* '
J damask broches nr*> h- ivi’v **mbroni- |
► red in silver ihr- uls v v .:u* si!\e v
lace !s considered more chic -nan goij j
I !*Ce. |
TrEARKT’S SUNDAY AMERICAN,
ATLANTA, OA„ SUNDAY, AUGUST 31, 1013.
Fashion Born at French Watering
Places Attains Sudden Vogue
in English Capital.
Special Cable to The American.
LONDON, Aug. 30.—Home ravish
ing costumes in violet and white have
been alien at the smart French water
ing places, and I^ondon copied them
almost the next day, with the result
that brides-elect are choosing this
color eornbination for some of their
troussfau gowns.
Miss Glencoats, one of the great
English heiresses, who is marrying
Major Parsons next month, is having
a charming gown made for casino
use, and with it a very original hat
will be worn.
Something Like Jockey’s Cap.
To take the violet velvet hat first,
it is copied from the First Empire
snd bears some resemblance to a
jockey’s cap, but the up-to-date mil
liner has broadened the crown and
brim and turned back the latter in
order to show a circular pleating of
violet tulle.
A hand and embroidered buckle in
a similar velvet surround the waist,
and shoes of the same material are
worn over violet silk stockings.
Buttons and Scarf Worn.
The dress is in white linen, with
the lower part of the Jacket worked
In raised white cotton. Large motifs
of Irish point, outlined with narrow
cord, are incrusted in square Here.*
starting from each shoulder, and a a
insertion of Valenciennes heads thi
wide hem of the skirt beneath a dou*
hie row* of mother-of-pearl buttons.
A scarf in violet chiffon completes
this pretty dress.
There is a < raze at all the fashion
able resorts for oval white felt hats.
These are very simple and easily
packed.
Necklaces Used on Hats.
The hats can be made extremely
attractive with a trimming of black
velvet ribbon, tied plainly around,
with two short ends furnished with
white or silver tassels, but some
smart women have gone considerably
further, and now adorn these simple
hats with red, blue or green necklaces
in uncut stones.
Others, very young ones, trim the
hats with baby ribbon or garlands
of the tiniest flowers.
SKIRTS FOR MEN BATHERS,
NOT WOMEN, SAYS LEADER
MADISON, WIS., Auk, 30.—H. D.
McChesney, swimming instructor at
the University of Wisconsin. in
charge of the Brittlngham Park bath
ing beach during the summer, thinks
men should be censured in the mat
ter of bathing garb more than wiv
men.
“I think men should be compelled
to wear bathing suits with a short
skirt,” he said.
Riot of Exotic Tints Prevails in
Fall Offerings—Nothing Un
der $400 at Worth’s.
Special Cable to The American.
PARIS, Aug. 30.—Paris has gone
color mad if the general effect of the
first display of fall fashions may be
summed up in a single phrase. The
great makers of women’s costumes
are rejoicing at this development.
Goods in colors have never been so
heavily bought as at present, which
is regarded as a healthy sign of busi
ness.
The name of the Russian artist
Leon Bakst is heard on all sides.
Many goyms are named after e >8-
tum^rs which he has mounted, espe
cially at Callot Soeurs’. This house,
as usual, was the last to show its
styles, but when it did it outcolored
all the rest. The pisanelle, its most
gorgeous evening gown, which is
| named after D’Annunzio’s play, is a
dazzling arrangement or derangement
in green, with amethyst Jewels and
j silver brocade mysterieuse.
About $20 a yard wholesale is not
an-unusual price for the materials for
wraps, while $6 a yard for double
j width silk velvet is considered a mod-
j erate price. More ample draperies
I are being used, and this makes the
manufacturers happy. Skirts of satin
with knife pleats held in place all
around please them very much, as do
also the longer coats which Cherut
and Poiret are showing. Sorr? of these
reach to the ankles.
Paquin also nas long coats of Louis
XV style with gorgeous waistcoats.
ITemet’s wide girdles that pull down
over the hips with no break at the
waist line are much admired. Pre-
met’s show pieces with a wired pan
nier on one hip caused much com
ment.
Fallot Soeurs’ waist line is pulled
up in front higher than ever. They
retain the narrow 6kirts. Most of the
other houses show longer waists. The
skirts are given volume by quiltings
of ribbon. Flounces and laces are
not unusual. Entire lace tunics of
filmy draperies are other prevalent
features.
Shimmering metals brocaded on
brilliant colors promise a winter of
gorgeousness which has rarely been
surpassed. Added to this is the In
evitable fur trimming. All the known
furs and furs that one never heard
of before are used.
In Worth’s ?%*deeorated salons $400
has been made the minimum price for
any gown. Prices generally, how
ever, are thought to be somewhat less
exorbitant than heretofore.
England to Provide Silks, Ireland
Linen, Scotland Tweeds, and
Wales Corsets.
Special Cable to The American.
LONDON, Aug. 30.—The Duchess
of Fife is to have an “all-British”
trousseau for her marriage to Prince
Arthur of Connaught. Orders have
already been sent out.
England. Ireland, Scotland and
Wales are all receiving their share;
England is to provide the silks and
other costly textiles as well as gloves
and footwear, Ireland the linen and
lacc, while Scotland and Wales will
supply tweeds and woolens and cor
sets.
The young duchess will have eight
bridesmaids. Four will be princesses
—Princess Maud, her sister. Princess
Mary: Princess Patricia of Connaught
and Princess Mary of Teck. Prince
John and Prince Olaf of Norway will
carry* the bridal train.
A1 the royalties in England will be
present at the ceremony. By partic
ular request of the Duke of Con
naught one or two representatives of
the Dominion of Canada, of which he
is Governor General, will be included
in the invitations.
Real Trousers Worn
By Western Woman
Business Demands Dress as Severe
as Man’s, Says Employee
of Grocery.
STOCKTON, Aug. 30.—Something
new in feminine apparel has been
donned by Mrs. K. Faracias, employed
in the shipping department of a local
wholesale grocery, in the form of a
combination trouser and skirt suit.
”1 have worked for the company
for many years,” says Mrs. Faracias.
“In that time I have become con
vinced that the business woman
should adopt a mode of dress as
severely plain as that of man. I have
worked alongside men for so long
that I do not think I am far off the
track in this idea of mine.”
During working hours Mrs. Fara
cias wears the trousers and a soft
black and white boy’s shirt. When
she is on the street, a straight, two-
piece skirt is worn, buttoned onto the
waistband of the trousers and fasten
ed by tailored straps at the side, al
lowing access, however, to all six
trouser pockets.
Two Hundred Shoe Salesmen
Are Leaving LYNCHBURG
With 20 Car Loads of Shoe Samples
These 200 knights of the sample case will take with them from eight hundred to a
thousand trunks containing approximately two hundred thousand (200,000) shoe samples.
LYNCHBURG is “The South’s Shoe Center.” , It occupies the same relative
position in the South as a shoe distribution point that Boston occupies in the North—
and the supremacy of LYNCHBURG as “The South’s Shoe Center” is due to the su
premacy of LYNCHBURG Shoes.
t
II When You Buy LYNCHBURG Shoes
|j You Are Patronizing Southern Industry
11 From Which Every Southerner Must Eventually Benefit