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Show OCTOBER 27, 1907. THE INTER-MOUNTAIN REPUBLICAN, SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, SUNDAY, 2 7 The . Hips All Gone; the Waist-line Likewise as is Line from Skirt-hem to Arm-pit The Bust Straight as it ts Possible to Make it. 1s Also That is Pushed High Up, but Skirts Long Trailing Not Much In Evidence. Figure Drag the Pulled Tight Around Around the Feet. The Top of the Skirt Climbs Curves to the Arm-pils. Are a Thing of the Past. Almost Up i e ior pla ad i I ‘ it BS : & eS r ‘ SS ! i ‘ 1 ' of J ' G ( een e , "y / ! ft t ' Venlth | banl \ t A; { ~¢ ! se GREAT} THE AQUIN has spoken, the women a" WY any~ other jonable 4 spot in g New SZ widths. which, , a ZA Zama z { fs |) 4 Se a ‘Te A \ \ : Vy, : "A Z x\ ry IW\e { L , 4 Af, % vi Tt a | ani j i: r no. in recogniz-| will you She must will if you show no a discerning important ¢ } ' Hon, Ww not expire petticoats with ("on tre t ont é frills, to soften-the:o Wit h i ak % the ple ere Pe mar ‘ « ' t ou in : gee ae viata. "Ass Téa aah vine ru-7 mann © come -watt wking Galged pte with : short oe ws Wire 4 en ese one ne. wershted iIn fact, walking in them at all is FH i of one she weight-decreasing |-around must standing now take painfully two.|must for fif-| the go filling hips. And somewhere, out the waist is iy lub Sipahoae not millionaires, een Slotted There ar its eh LOK Man More Loyal Than the very sircong silk network Which Is perfeetls flexible, but enn not be stretehed Gut ef shape. tt is lehtls boned nad has searceIy nos bulk, so that it produces « remarkable efYeet of slender- flesh pushed V agaries the question of hymns of for | up, indeed? children has never been very seriously; Children considered by the churches. It is good, | SKeoPas however, to find that some sensible folk sutt, | The Jection of Risimolor the hips ix ccusstately otaartmoseweter: env A b Ap J sory of fiushlon. Ss SSS ; ‘Woman?! Poets. Why, ees makers have lavented nm new corset. pletured here, which fasteas in the hack, for use with the hiples« style of Scbuk' eHIC canoer SE ? It is difficult to make a sweepingyjto be truly loyal. She is a creature of assertion and to say that a man is|many moods, far too variable to ever more loyal than a woman, or vice|be depended upon. Her views and senversa, since every person has a sep-|timents resemble the weathercock arate individuality, and most touching | which obeys the predominating wind proofs of loyalty in both sexes arejof the moment-they' alter with the given daily. But there is little doubt] ever-changing whim and caprice of her that, taken as a whole, men are more] fickle little heart. loyal than women. Consequently. the) * But it would not be trye to say that isclated, sincere and loyal woman (for|all men are loyal or all women fickle such does exist) has to suffer for the| for women can be loval and men fickle general fickleness of her sex. But in love? Ah, then it is the woman Women are less loyal than men, be-| scores! What man is there who, upon cause they are more easily incited to|ftinding a flaw In his idol, doth not jealousy, more eager for admiration) straightway seek consolation elseand more capricious, where? is not at all unnsual to find a There are plenty of charming girls "David and Jonathan" friendship among | why break his heart over one who does men, though an extreme rarity among}! not come up to his expectations? members of the fair sex. A woman is When a woman gives her love-true capable of loyalty to a friend, so long] love-she is invariably loyal to the as she imagines that friend does not| core, sticking to the man through thick eclipse her; but should her innate jeal-| and thin, through good report and evil ousy be once arouked, her "dearest | absolutely regardless of his lallings or friend" becomes her bitterest foe. At the present day we hear a creat | But in thinking over the problem to deal about women's rights, women's} which must be awarded the paln for suffrage, and so on, but the women who] loyalty, one feels as Paris must have make so much disturbance about these| felt when confronted with the trio of matters do not, as a rule, do it out of | fair women, to one of whom he must a feeling of Joyalty Their idea ts to| assign the prize for beauty. If we are have a finger in every ple, to bring | rash enough to give a definite answer their names before the public, and to} it will, in all probability, be influenced be looked upon as inartyrs by a certain] by our own character ana prejudices class. { they were loyal to their‘ and impulses, and be therefore no real homes, their husbands and their sex, answer at all. We know that the averthey would be content to do their rightage man and woman we meet in everyful women's work, and to leave politics day life show to us only the outsides to their husbands and brothers of thelr natures, and we have no time Further, a woman is too capricious to penetrate deeper. Prohably tone rich ealthy men in more who are and ey are Puriaian The line. a that other wri(Mile lignan not even ome yey There are ealth under eee a being eye, alhave you what have if you But just at teen minutes after every me ways considered rather a beauty, somedown-| the time she most wanted to sit now support+her for) thing not to be intentionally concealed thirty. She must give up her/one lump|-a slender waist line-what then? It} of sugar in her te# a day dnd drink | refuses to be disguised, and there are] extra quantities of lemon juice. For | curves where, according to the new ‘ont of the jidea of form; no curves should be, to be stout is to be quite picture." Madame sighs and shakes her head. And this slenderness and general|"There must be pads." And she prostraight up and down-ness of outline-j|duces little silk-covered, scented, pin how Is it to be acquired? cushion-like affairs, with which she Is tnrust Implication changes| as it . a mis- Se took bath Instead Hs 4 some that there ts a whose wealth is his comment millionaire sen- -- she Turkish he remar! other kind hen the Washingtor mace Pecanieal th on back il in bene skirts roins in the present gi" mstant the ana i 1913 i no i e ae | os t ! topl , ave ' i Lu i yeert be adohi musi itement enator It make lof the te . } bordering : , tf has ul ironically they 5 | I l ea Globe it r Senators irough the failut Senato Facon Oo \ 1 ) vill lo $15.00 Senator iH 1894 a Yo! x ‘ o end chiffon, a n does ole i ‘ << WA WAY oor consult your cor- | show you a corset} have very « t : ce AEE ---- ---S-- - PA Ce ‘ é I ow as chon for _Innumerah ‘ ttle frills; this for daytime dre In the evening wil ti on this model ilk tleht iii} ' aA opi a frillot | 1 te of { ) i fortune_of Ing the novelty of outline. Hips are!/ from last year's models. It's very, very| gone; the waist line likewise. Long |longe, of course, with the boning nol} | the/]running quite to the lower edge tight around pulled trailing skirts, figure, drag in around the feet, making "Nothing very new aboul this," you | walking almost out of the queslion, dress. It has the recommendation of} The line from skirt hem to arm-pit | remark is as straight as it is possible to make "Ah, but madame must see it on the it. The bust is pushed high up, but] figure," is the reply that also Is not much in evidence. In And then the secret comes out, After fact, it is the day in which the lean/|all, it's not In the corset, but the way it | sister rejoices and the stout woman be-|is put on wails more than ever her "too, too Of course, it must be a very long corsolid flesh." sel, with no very decided curves. An¢ For, of course, the fat woman sufit jis fitted seated, so that It may be fers. If she has given anxious thought, pulled down to the farthest possible to the lessening of her avoirdupois be-|degree. Then it Is laced at the lower fore, she must be doubly careful now.|edge first and pulled tight-very tight Where } \ My c jst nh ey => ‘ no difficulty deep. 4 4 heel dis 1 ‘ | It ee ¢ 1 day? You may look In vain for them. The up-to-date woman resembles nothFirst, ing so much as cylinders-of varying | setfere. have im a J York at the luncheon | hour and see a the} abroad from returned lately women displaying their newly constructed fgures | Alas, where are the curves of yestor= | You'll fi, Zp " ultra-fash pip b ‘ I tied tin KMilf ? 3 Uy ind yj Wy 4 Ys two; continents are becom-} ing hipless! If you don't belleve it. go to Sherry's or; it G; i, | lo ind ol = pet | 11k abe SoMa : ( | - tle i I u , t nary i . oe ] i Y, A ' ' t ! ' : od ‘ ue i | What were the poor expected to think about- their little sister in the water or having a deal in home ralls? Sunday schools of this kingdom are beginning to protest against some| are, In some ways, very estimable, but of the absurdities contained in the|if the pupils took the tip conveyed in hymnals. ,One critic takes, as an ex-| this verse I expect they would have a ample, two verses which run thus | ve ry dull time. | others And To he tries to tempt and fl. ajl harm you resist And oe the the evil. good s , Such "would, nonsense if sent to to as any : did not deal in hymn-books, ly consigned to the waste et." Certainly the hymn jasks the meaning of it : says, WhO) jo Shepherd of the sheep High priest wo ajdet in be prompt-) paper bas-| x14 take of Things grace Thy him safely 2 to cone servant keep home. writers of Why go do I most it love So constant And lose Without attempting to give deftly "fills anatomy. an an-| my sports so of well ;} When the fair ploughed heaven and} Of the land by ruthless of Poland the hoof then ~ Was for |giving a neas. for lightly invader-and hell, And the up the reat a to pray" | your might. |! exible, use the with ‘boned, does which, not Here is explicitness for you jis made without f ae rere a ee while' under busk style hipless "give i ae i,yve ma- bas Of of eee eth Soar In slendernetting all pel UPS nad| the drs cee cae amine sais - 1 revolutionary these a skirt molded in ideas rather startling Which become accustomed has to an to 18) a it has kle gpeut wa jet en of T of Kirt eyY@)jnches seam directly up the center | sence inc lies ¢ all out TETSU a by of on 1. it. drag & Wee petticos reach to the ground to be and "held to up" We pts ‘ t ‘ But Noo x or It's But severta instead of flow-/ ee ae es ate quite graceful when it I foresee many hours before who are pier not ieee ete aa glasses for "handy" with medical avor on is of » fe < ‘ 4 their ea]. een raat. million- thelr profession any. ane a year, : ; more ed or. $45.000 Jae ae rooms in the puna: ena "uppiie 4 free to senators hicluda oe eS thing tne Save him expense rie Position of United State a aineicn 1e Usually those isi a job. desirable » ' By Z 4 ee wom, n enore 1 neyvér of in legislation, $7.500 ually chairman of some committee ce Ke o provided with a clerk * Provided with h: BC ya =! nished feet distortion by re ingle term Meanie: etary who receives $1.00 for the use of senators, and is sup ‘lied With an attendant. Th: list of arti ‘ley well done practice those involved affected 7 v 3 an in a wom low where the So with each step you must give a There are six or}ilttle forward kick. The kne iwiiitted 1 liitie wrinkles jand the toe is brought forward ate step js :¥ ken then the /ing downward; Inside on thé place re t Paquin| imself putting | ground, not on the center seam | an's hand. ‘ ) the Monsieur folds eight ¢ flow-|ing eee j and retched tightly !to be most difficult, particularly as they ire toward the back aS Lae =: built with an eye to being lifiilied so tight there } ec heir long lines ars uppasec . ng unticipated ome crosst and dress of broadcloth which to the figure with frankness nt ‘ dene : & model of a Paquin gown, which! just made its appearance on this! f the water, are all the features it has literally pertec if And now is the "hipless" effect com-~, of. the irtable?. ‘Youhesitate.. But, well, one | cround one es ast a o any » | as ut ihe stand, /A Nave :B4 remarkable effect of it is a kind of: silk jtakes up little room forget chinks" the quired the new figure The Parlalan corset-mak skillfully (Invented « new.-corset' iterial play, thought ‘ Then mention that dublous | yery loosely at the, top-you, not confined to hymna) 2°U0% all an. an: HOUr you. t Is: certainly at my the leas 7, TESEIVER 7 é past | everything, There was an effusion writ-|alone. Do we not recollect the Poet ten for children by the lafe Dr. Watts,| Bunn, who wrote the liberetto for "The which went this way-and a curious| 3ohemian Girl?' You know the Iines: to or } | | times-particularly those of the severe | swer, I would school-adopted a somber view of|composition is way | be i. wen ittia-tantunen: aon eeciee snug Soe WEG) ete eakaene. Bila' men. his efforts to get rict meen - rough jection to a rich nerinicg The: no a is that a senator's Wealth maz ae ae rte do. this," he publishers whose eae orks Nea aries dire. in: the: senate é pre-! fog-| gineas in hie inspirations. In fact, if } poetry be intelligible on the face of It,| } we frequently consider it not to be po-| j etry at all. The observer of the strange | | ways of hymns quotes this verse and But ye must not hear him, Though ‘tis hard for you To yet aid be a poet may A man serve & most alarming condition of | spirit you still, wicked a There's Watching round | have or they to be pried the People away from it or the court let go . ec tana Paris Union of Cripples is ara swimming ¢ ripplese - only, ; to be heldmatch, open ta in the Seine, |