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Show INTER-MOUNTAIN REPJBLICAN, SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1906 a5 aa nw THE The Plain Tailored -Men's Shirt Shirtings Clever Touches Examples Become Iextrayvagant-Fine Colored and Slips Cuffs of ture Vexed a Prominent | in Voruc- Noyelty-Dressy More Net and Neck back ter time, and with the short skirt that is worn for street purposes they da not show soil as early in their career as might be expected. The craze for jewels and jewelry Is om the increase. In Paris it is no | longer considered in bad taste, or at all reprehensible, to wear imitation Jewels. It must be conceded that the Parisians excel in the manufacture and mounting of those imitations, many of whie A are calculated to deecive any but an exper must not be imagined, ae ve r, that such pieces are ae or cheap looking. The settings are of gold or of platinum, and the mounting is done by skilled jewelers, lat, as far as the labor and skill are concerned, real jewels do not receive any better treatment 1 A fancy neckplece, a long chatn of pearls, four or even more rings on either hand and a couple of. bracelets is not considered any too great a display at present. a af if _ pane brooch or two be adde th orsage the wearer is still well wittnie the limits of present taste | Beautifully artistic designs are displayed in' those "simill'' pleces, AS they are termed abroad. A spray for the hair was_ ace in sm rall cut brilliants Thhe ; be eenter was a wild rose, and a spray of maidenhair fern extended for som six inches on either side of this. The setting was of platinum, the brilliants carefully eut and polished, and the mounting In every way above ecritielsm. And for this the sum ,000 franes (roughly estimated, $200) was asked ¢ Society Jeaders and residents of the j most fashionable parts of New York jmust be taking to quite a course of reading om household topics, if one is to Judge from the displays in the windows of leading book shops. Books upon domestic science, the several departments of housekeeping, . culinary hints ‘and wrinkles, furniture, home the like are persistand~ the' latest' au| thorities on all of the se and other kin'dred subjects are indicated. by small placards conspicuously placed. Gardening. too, seems to come In for a hare of attention; but there seems to be no room for anything else. If it were but one shop that made such L isplay, one might pass it without comment: but when some half a dozen, | well spaced, all seem actuated by the jsame Idea, it affords food for thought "Water without and within" was the je prescription of a fashionable physician: to a wealthy. patient who Peach to him with a Hst:of physical lilis and ailments of ominous length | She could not sleep, she had no appeltite, she was nervous and depressed, jand so on ad infinitum | ceneral thing, women do not lappres oF ite plain water as much as they |should do A sponge off In tepid- »}not cold-water when fatigued will lprove more refreshing than anything | else A glass of cold water, not too cold, taken the last thing at night and itnother the first thing in the morning | More | Blouses Beneath-Stul Are Matter is Much of With | Collars | = Again-The | Dressing-The Cein- | Question. =o | With the return of the severely plain | tailor-made for autumn wear the | equally pliin and severe tailored shirt | waist the smart dresser refer to it as a shirt. and have it made by a masculine shirtmaker-is thrusting itself quite Into the forefront of things is not so very different, this plain and severe shirtwaist, from what it] has been in the past. Pretty much. the same lines and the same materials appear although the search fo. some welcome little novelty to introduce by way of relief goes on unabated. One sees the perfectly plain cut, with no more fulness to it than a man's |} shirt, upen which it is modeled, presents.Others, again, equally "tailor- | made" in appearance, present a number of pleats as a relief, and yokes are | relied pon to break the monotony of| the sty Linen. is in high faver for such purposes, both the heavy German weave and the finer' round-thread linens of! rish manufacture, The old reliable standbys, the cotton cheviots-now | is Introduced a cotton serge as |} and the madras weaves fine ginghams and the usual imported| Seotch shirtings, are all on view AS| well as some of the daintiest damass« effects in elther white or delicate tints,| with a tiny ficure in a eontrasting color printed on ae surface at fat inter- | vals | These latter goods have = attracted the most favorat in spite of their price ome $2. a yard in the O-in Order have been given hirt maket he make 1 chief] but does not ( the patron }y\ in ens of these, in monogram of the in cotton threads | feminine {-dozand the wrought the Popularity flig- ure that ap For exarople Lt pale e. ina molre urface and at. far interval there Is a tiny fleur-de-lis, conventionalized, of course moa soft almond green, The monogram is worked on the Httle watch-pockel in a green cotton the ame tint as the tieur-de-lis, contrasting prettily with the delicate pink that makes the background, With) such shirts there are stocks and belts) made up to match, althous of white linen stocks and belts, em-}; broidered en suite, is ceountenanced b clever dressers for wear with the colored blouse thi are nnidoubtedly | giving the white waist 1 tussle for peut place in fashionable rank: | ing to the more elaborate style ot slae ‘ vyhere that much over-workcd word "lingerie" is used deseriptive- | ly, if not expre ively, it Is to we noted that reeent importatior in s ire invariably tashioned with a ge neg eth elaborats finish sler "i Al n ‘ that hang over the hand reaching knuckle it least On. this we a linging to the comfortabl if not always sightly, elbow sleeve, and manufacturers are g0ing on gaily putting in this abbreviated arm-covering in. a put the plainest of shirtwaist The moment that even a hint of lace or elaboration gets on a blouse the Jeeve rets chopped off hort. and it joins the procession of lingerie sts I due Tailored overwhelming | j Shirtwaist. popularity ( are bound di ippec lowl Will prove ilming. By the way, this same physician says that | water, when drank cold and quickly, acts as a eh ant on the heart and |nerves: when sipped slowly, it acts as a gentle timulant | A gallon of water daily, taken in half-pint ae i <lid to be absolutely necessary to' health in warm countries, and three quarts in the same period | the ‘preseription for. the latitud The stout woman must plan to do-her drinking between. meals, taking no fluids for: half an hour before or an hour after meals; and her iskinny sister may follow the same lrule, but take even more flulds. | tn washing the face with soap and water one is expected to rinse off in not less than four waters, making the last one as cold as possible and dashing it with both hands agalnst the | ‘eta Flannels After quite a period of neglect, the | shirtmaker is taking up those soft oot fine flannels once mor tecent importations show those goods in all oh the daintiest tints and patterns imagat all ja being from far so and {nable, productions | lat later heavy and thick well deserve to be fon flannels In many ‘ ot } be The ee illustrated it flannel blue pale very a in js a . tints and in sapphire printing flower pink showing a pale spray Deep pleats occupy the | | suflicient shoulder seams, affording underThe fronts. the across vidth curved toward | the ava the ‘the ¢o1 go Just at this writing, in the lull that) come between the close of one season and the opening of the other, one | the can find exquisite examples of. embroideries of all sorts wherewith to manufacture charming little blouses There are pattern waists, done on the finest of handkerchief linen, on both cotton and linen batiste and some of sheer nainsook. Technically they are known a French embroideries. but! the most of them are of Irish origit where the peasantry ,re skilled in needlework of more kinds than the tourist ever sees or the summer "trip-! per' discovers, Fine of waist belt the fullness at the beneath, so that there Js The clumsiness. or bulk ne of the face, | it, or least forestall, wrinkles by contrac ee the tiny pores on the -}surface and the rerves and muscles } underneath 1} eg in ee Favor.|' Geisha Den Waist. -+ter-inch tueks running both lengthwise and crosswise, forming a square plaid pattern, and prese nting the ap| pearance of a lattices The blouse and sleeve have the tucks run in groups -lof three, In a slanting direction, crossing to form a plaid, and a dainty little laca and embroidery medallion posed in the center of each. The cuft ‘te the short. elbow sleeve matches ‘ "ith i r profe sslonal or ama- sivoke and blouse is matched in the Cluny edge that trims the sleeve frills and edges the featherboned collar Loops of this same collarbone are used to support the sleeve at the shoulder seam and prevent the soft net from sagging flatly on the arm. Continued no sleeve | es on Page Six. |