OCR Text |
Show INKl.liMrtV The present style of ladies' hat.t in Paris is what it was one hundred and five years a w. A woman as black as the ace, of spades pays she was "born to blush unseen.'' M'lle ISoiY.achi id the new pet of the Paris ballet. She glides rather than dances. The latest intelligence from Paris reports re-ports waspish waists out and healthy shoulders in fashion. The Princess de . Mettcrnioh and Mine. Pourtales are said to be busy at home, cutting linen by very small nat-terns nat-terns and makiug it up. It is said that the Editor's Drawer in Harper x Magazine is made up by a woman. So are a great many Editors' Edi-tors' drawers. Terence, in one of his comedies, satirized sat-irized ti''ht lacing and the Grecian bend, and both customs have survived Terence nearly 2,000 years. A lady at Saratoga came ' to breakfast break-fast a few mornings ago dressed in a plain calico dress, with diamond earrings ear-rings and necklace. A Kentuckian has been driven, by lack of marriageable girls in his section, to wed the same woruau from who he was divorced 25 years ago. A Vermont husband-frustrated his wife's elopement by locking up her silk dress. She said she wouldn't be seen eloping in a shilling "kaliker." A well-known and lively lady novelist novel-ist of rank is said to be about to publish a fresh book, with the amusing and decidedly novel title, ".Naughty, Naughty, but So Nice." It is reported from Paris that fashionable fash-ionable girls have appeared upon the street this summer, wearing sandals of such form as to leave the rosy sides and white upper portion of the instep bare. .. . . Woman's right to the parasol is usurped more than ever this summer, the carrying of sun umbrellas being very general. White umbrellas are especially es-pecially affected, aud their appearance in number give the effect of a bed of mushrooms. . . |