| Show WOMAN OF FASHION She Does not Permit the Sun nor Wind to Kiss Her Cheeks I THE LATEST IN WAISTCOATS How to Bind a Skirt With LeatherLace sad Embroidery Flounces for Autumn Wear For THE SUNDAY HERALDCopyrlghted1 HE SUN GOD and his brothers g the winds are not permitted to kiss too boisterously r the fair cheeks of the women who account ac-count themselves N I dames of fashion It is the style jir i and the style always al-ways all the time T ways to wear a veil If lS you wish to be in w I the very height of 1 fashion get one i 1 that is all dotted with big white specks or is so figured that your countenance is hardly discernable beneath be-neath it Have the veil very large and then tie it on so as to make it appear oven more conspicuous than its size and pattern would naturally make it This is the fashionable fash-ionable veil for calling and driving For other expeditions such as shonmne afternoon walks and the like tho veil maybe may-be thinner but it is as large as the other and is put on in just such a conspicuous way wayAt At Lenox where the ladies go out to their meals scarcely a woman is seen without a veil over her face and as the guests at the hotels come streaminginto the dining room one cannot forbear an anxious thought as to how they are going to manage to eat their dinner But they do manage it and they manage it quite gracefully Once seated at the table they do not unfasten the veil on the back of the hat but they lift it up in the oldfashioned way and fasten it with a pin just over the top of the hat brim or course theso veils are much larger and fuller than the old fashion kind and it therefore requires both hands to lift them and quite a little dexterity and practice to properly fasten the roll of silk tulle so that it will look pretty upon the front of the hat and be becoming to the face The beautiful Miss Handy of Baltimore appeared at church in the lovely little Episcopal Epis-copal chapel of Lenox dressed in AX ACTCXIX 5C1T OF LILAC SILK with lilac flowers designed upon it Around the foot of the skirt there was a very deep flounce of black lace at the head of which was a pleating of lilac ribbon and the skirt of the basquo was likewise trimmed with lace and ribbon For a hat Miss Handy wore a large black straw trimmed wIth violets and with black strings fastened at the back and crossed under the chin and carried up again to tne back of the hair where they were fastened with a pin which had a violet with a diamond centre With this costume Miss Handy wore avery a-very large delicately printed lilactinted veil of silk tulle which was brought up to the back of the hat and fastened there and was then permitted to hang down in long ends which reached halfway to her waist in the most oldfashioned way imaginable For out door wear and mountain walks leather waistcoats are in fashion They are made exactly like a mans with double re veresand are double breastedwith a mans necktie above them Pigs skin which has a very highly p01 shed surface after it is dressed is the favorite material and pigs akin buttons are also used both on these vests and on cloth dresses I i II I d t art i l r TnE HUNTING GIRL All the outinthe country walking skirts are bound with leather The leather is usually placed on the outside then turned under to the depth of an inch or two but on others when it does not correspond with the general dress material it Is placed in sida Tho reefer jackets which are worn J J W rr1 t I with fhese skin vests are more often than not bound with leather and the hat which gOBs with them is trimmed with the same material Thus a getup is produced which la comfortable useful and stylish It is so much the fashion now to remain at some mountain resort until winter actually actu-ally comes on with its frost and snow that milliners cloakmakers and dressmakers find it to their proht to make trips to these I places and display their wares to the guests of the place Those salespeople generally jake j-ake a room in the best part of the most j fashionable hotel and then after sending around circulars to all the summer guests hey spread out what they have for s le and receive customers exactly as if they were in a store in New York Of course none but highpriced goods are taken away and it would surprise the average shopper of limited means to know the prices at which the simplest things are sold A SIMPLE LITTLE BONNET of plain felt bound with velvet and trimmed trim-med with ribbon and ornamented with long strings that had a touch of gold embroidery upon them was valued at2 This was the cneapest hat of tho lot Another which consisted of a few loops of green ribbon upon the back of a small green felt hat with a tiny gold aigrette and green and gold strings was 40 and so on until the figures were quite past ordinary belief The cheapest gown this was at Lenox you know cost 8150 and was nothing but a plain cloth gown which looked as if it might have cost not over f2 a yard in the raw material and which might have peen made by a good dressmaker for 1S or 20 Quite contrary to these outoftown exhibitions ex-hibitions are the exhibits made in the leading lead-ing New York dry goods stores Here it is really possible to buy a very good readymade ready-made dress at an advance of only one or two dollars over what the material would have cost the buyer Of course the profit comes in when one considers that the storekeeper store-keeper gets the goods very much cheaper than the shopper and therefore can afford to have the gown made and sold at what appears at first glance to bo a preposterously preposterous-ly small sum The woman of somewhat limited means yet who can afford to have her dresses made out of the house will do a ors r d r C j ly 1 tz x r l 1 I r n u C l i Itt ty 1 it P A WALKING COSTUME well to examine these store dresses before sending her goods to her dressmaker to be made up because she may succeed in saving enough thereby to purchase a hat to wear with nor suit or even to buy a jacket The boa will be more fashionable this winter than it was lastIf such a thing be j possible The fashionable fall boas are of I mink and are made as nearly round as can be constructed They are likewise long enough to be knotted in front and then thrown over the shoulder letting the opposite oppo-site ends come to the bottom of the skirt Very fashionable women will wear these boas with light fall dresses and even wIth cambric dresses and with light silks foulards and tho like It is not uncommon to see a light grey summer silk trimmed with white lace and accompanied by a long mink boa which is tied around the neck A FASHIONABLE SHADE Old blue is one of the most fashionable shades It is not a light blue and it is not a robins egg blue It is a shade of blue which can hardly be explained It is almost always seen combined with very pale shades of blue or grey and black laoe Skirts are still worn l long but they are made less apt to sou DV being supplied with heavy ruffling underneath of a material which looks like leather but which is in reality a kind of rubber When one walks this produces a pleasant sound as of a rIch rustling silk and tho froufrou of a womans skirts can be heard nearly half a block away For house dresses there is a pretty style of trimming the bodices with ribbon Lethe Le-the ribbon be black because this is sure to combine prettily with whatever colors maybe may-be in the skirt Begin by fastening the ribbon at the throat with as pretty a pin as you have in your collection of stick pins Carry the ends of the ribbon straight around the neckand cross them at the back where another pin this time one of the clasp variety should catch them together Bring down the ends of the ribbon under the arms and cross them again at the front of the waist Carry them back and tie them in large bow having four loons amends am-ends that will hang down almost to the bottom bot-tom of the skirt This gives a sash effect and likewise makes a very pretty finish for 1 the waist which has then something of the appearance of a Spanish jacket the ribbon giving Q that effect Lace may be put upon I a waist In exactly the same way That is it may be carrioa around the neck crossed et the back and shirred along under the arms to tho front of tile basque so as to give the same Spanish effect White lace I is generally preferred for a trimming oC this kind and not infrequently is it used is accompany the ribbon trimming just described de-scribed jackets or little round coats are mado to match all these fall gowns The great desideratum of a coat is that itI I fits well Have your coat well made a perfect per-fect fit a good color and of a style to suit you If you are troubled with embonpoint select a jacket that brings out the slenderness ness and tends to concoal tho superabundance superabund-ance of adipose tissue If you are blessed ii e with a figure that can carry anythingthere is nothing that looks as well asA as-A REEFER there is a jaunty fin de siecle air about it that will even redeem a shabby frock Here is a good way 10 make a jacket that is to match your gown Have B coat and a waistcoat the waistcoat of the same material ma-terial as your dress For the coat proper select Bedford cord or any heavy ribbed fabric have it of the color of the waistcoat but > of a darker shade These costumes look well made up in browngrey or blue o r 7 f fl a d err 0 r7 411 R TCH 6 t r U f Shoes to match the gown have ceased toe > to-e worn To be very swell you must have your shoes of gold and of silver and at least lone pair of immaculate white White is worn at all times and with anything Silver and gold must be selected to harmonize with the gown silver looks well with grey pink or blue gold with white yellow or green Within the sacred precincts of your bedroom or boudoir wear Japanese slippers to match your tea gown They are of leather leath-er come in all colors and are heavily embroidered broidered in gold and silver Tnese Ori ental shoes are heelless and have Ion pointed toes that turn up in a fashion to make the foot look small The fall hats as ono gets a glimpse of them are turban shaped and very much alIke in general style They are turned up at the sides and may be pointed in front or not according to the taste of the wearer I Hats of this description require very little trimming and are becoming to most faces They are worn set back a little upon the head and the hair is rather elaborately dressed |