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Show INTER-MOUNTAIN REPUBLICAN, SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1908. p rene * SBS ze rs THE 60 Have One's Chin ip a olind. Summer [T\uffs of /Naline 6wo-faeed Veil. (Natching Veils in Color. Shawl-Shaped Veils. trouble to bare one's or three times a day. BHIT.B the women of Turkey are beW ginning to discard veils, the women of America seek physlognomical protection tn thick wrappings of lace and of chiffon Fatima In tbe barem bas seen pictures of the Merry Widow millinery and perbaps Fatima will even boy u string of piv puffs stead of calm and one and nolcotine. The women of wealth in the Westero Hemisphere bave active temperaments and week digestious Now bereio Mes the reasop for the double velis worn at Newport In did During mallpe rouge pot [N\aline so Creates Illusions. one, she wears wilh anolber she rides ber timLigh silk bat, when toppers at a borse show. It 1s exactly ‘put ier ber mathers foud that go -thalr-wiiter-bére-hables~whee-thhy tra ddale Bat, nein inbe lation 210i. ow salt bee with roseI saw June flowerber around draped vells the: Walte xg' trimmed leghorn and also around her shouldere, as shown fp Illustration D. She sug op in marble bust done gested a valuable Miss Frances Summer gir! at re Pantand e bat stil! you must smile, and you can smile. Yor two or three boure this fa easy, but as netting Africa, for the Summer, or an explorer in who tries to make himself Insect- clam bakes sid all:eorta.of navel and nour ishing entertalnmenté)has: poetic {déeas in On proof. Older women now use malina for a trig vell, worn with a flower toque (and this toque, mind you, Is always appropriately scented). Only one thickness of the ma- ite clovds of maline, and Mre~ Clarence Mackay's white draperies. The latter once liad a yell that bung from the back of her hat Ilke a large lace teacloth attached to ail-day performance even a dlood {it and well breaking, vell-the plnk of cloude tn up herself father, maline. colored the champagne bubble fs in the ig ensy to dissembie. Well rouged be may beart your stimulated, the coverings. voluminous fs used these When mallne Mrs, in effect. evwatbings are etheresl weort before sebe Natalie Schenck Collins, Into mourning for Spotswood Schenck, ber just has into faco bave troublce Hes the head tiara Our American the evening tdip women are most at a ball. when diamond tbe which fron) ween taken senaltive no A Veil Train. over two two veils often, No one goes to Newport witbout a whito lace vell. Tho Bretton Jace vell that Is wusbable {3 most useful. Some women who delight to the voluminous loosely draped Smatt things even purchase by the yard all-over lace of the sort lotended for abirt waists and gowns. They go to tho laco counter, not to the rell counter, for thelr Fatima has a good digestion tx a temperament. Sbe ts always her cnief longinge are for nougat The crowned beads of socicty of toelr own. Often restless needs face mado With tbe woman of the Ogden Mills mettle falla With all the erlgs-cross Jove affalre in soclety (unlike the nice middle-class society, where each wngp ts in ove witb his respective and respected wife) oave made It difficult for @ woman always to maintain composare. Cupid nes been sbooting many poisoned tip ped effinity arrows where wealth abounds. Let's take a few eample situation A Women ¢jt9 with friends at the Newport Casino watching o tennis game. perbape the Woman. Even she who is eallow, sick sixty Bot Miss Mary Harriman, see her characteristle attitude im Illustration Into and would be speaking distance mamma's husbeod the ; embarrassment eltuations unveiled. but witb papa'e How great to meet with tio will ees Gnd she ofther versation. vells always when sparkle she maline was Summer, these vells, are equal to Mrs. Collins's rose- and besuty who Is likely to be ber husband's third wife ithey bave already discussed it wife They line ts used, and it ls surprising how it sMooths out all tha wrinkles. Mra, BD, Gi. Harriman wears little maline vells of this sort. Maline used in this way recalis its sweet old pame, "‘lilusion."" Yards and yards of rosy Illusion, such as Mrs. Collios wears, ehould be in the yell case of avery coolly), or who was bis tirst and former wife joins the g-oup Then often a young girl te brougbt veils Alexander (tho popular Bar Harbor, who has been Rat ae ereia par gies | met in ber Sbe bad effectual so ber, Jolly, eyes Just but there or Ip driven foreliead, IIttle her ber in A. this was This into into conhorses > over the stiff bonnet brim The bridal veil {s the most important veil in the Hfe-bistory of all women Re cently a new fashlon edict went forth that the bride be rellered of the beavy satin cr : train Lh) A Go 4) - ) oe aoe B os,' i & Y oe EL: yy a ¢ At St Pos sauna _- 1 mmee > = 3 f ‘ -=_> & to the ag sald, even bite ber As Cholly says, be "a Vell of Tears." often a vell = green. Toward Choily ts 0 clever Some of course. cqual to a cven atter courtroom jars) The white lace the second You js worn Brook style. o wear emblem sling one's of social and the tal- thie sort When may women | The be Grst chin in {n true eo a mr This, chif- t3 é Brook Meadow vell (sec ot toate Hoot ak even Pile uo fe It {lustration B) ike "th thick brown materia tuch A the old sewing elk rell, A-Veil of Tan-Colored Silk With Silk Covered Pendants. B-The Chin in a Sling. The Veil Worn at Newport and by the Hunting Set on Long Island. C-A Long White Veil With Lace Border Falling to a Point Below the Hips. D-Voluminous Draperies of Pink Maline. A Fad Introduced by Mrs. Nathalie chenck Collins. E-A Shawl Shaped Veil With Velvet Dots of Different Colors, fm @ clags at the Tuxedo Park Horse Show. Clutching ber heavy yell of opaque tan colored ap- petite and thia, followed by good digestion, iga wplendid antidote for too much tem who deeparately poF.aot we try worn elmply to and the reporters to work out thet Im- conclusion, "among those pregent The Meadow Brook woman has much ozonn Sho rides to hounds etrenuously. The Newport wowan also bus ozon bur Dot less exercise ozone, le ber outdoore. Champagne, favorite stimulant. Tho Newport lady wears ber chino to a ellng, but this beavy outdoor vell must be folded eyes must have protection. She fears snubs and {ngults, ‘How easy it Is. however, to ona's eyes. The mouth ere treacherous, quiver a bit when the corners of They are bound sugar-costed ef society are offered. Then, continual self composure, it the to insults too, besides is so much porpie, for crimson plus biue Wakes tho balls covered with a gathered silk keep a vell of this vort from flying. These pendants are recent Inventions.. Que wonders Woy winsome Miss Huriman, opce 60 ua royal color. At other times it shows a blue tone and also a rose tone, when the breeza tosses it und the sunlight catches it. A two-faced vell of dark bloc and light biue makes a disagreeable grayish tone. All sorts of combinations are used - But apropos of veils of disagreeable mindful of color, veils thia to carry of silk, she wulted ber her off to ber home. that very day the public sort. eye, Miss motor Two wears Katherine gauntlet, affair she but car heavy thick the Sen-Seo She the distinguishing of the beart. must ruo the often Leware of the donkey Elkins looked sallow and ead. has an {oternationa!l Everywhere she goes lorgnette for with her dots-tbe dots mark gray veil with that of the are veil called Itngsiun. In donkey gray, which tically the old "London smoke' vell of this sort, lyfug in a soft now {3 praccolor, .a mass ou a inouster pieture bats she wears oo vell at all. She's just as brave as Grandfather Davis, who has love troubles of his own. A two-faced veil bas aleo been designed. It le made of two large motor veils of chiffon of contrasting colors, stitched tegether at the wide hem. A rose-colored yell and 4 blue vell when wedded make a table or on a couuter, looks Ike a great cloud of dirty cobwebs, or a porUon cat out of a thick London fog. One of the vew veils is shawl-shaped (sve Ulustration B.) It falls to a point op the chest. Dots, squares aad devious devices, all sorte of little figures made of velvet decorate this vell. I have one with bileroglyphics of Alico blue, intermingled, yell of three colors, here and there, with « dot or two of apple over a yell of a thinner sort, for even ber 4 control are chief for the Of while net vells lately beee terest in number public horses of the At times jt is elmply tratl her while ouly long sween- off long satin for an I forgot (those In odd and train brides. let wedding blouse is It tralns, be and combined to tell you bave just who wed- regard satin wealtby their then, girls trouble the tbat so- returned that upon ig on responsible divorces hole the excessive and for iu- a matrimo- such sad reading caso of a domestic to horees if that disagreement due entirely bis and Vanderbilt Gwynne Alfred ef VanderMr. people know, As. most wife. of the fory the greater part bilt inberited. Vanlate Cornelius tune of his father, the his oldest partly disipherited who derbilt, tosisted on marson, Coruellus, because be VanAlfred rying the girl of bis cholce. derbilt's fortune amounted to about $60,most conspicuous 000,000, Drom bis earliest youth Mr. Vanderbilt sbowed more interest In horses than anything on earth. His marriage did oot change his tastes, but as time rolled on le became more and more absorbed fo his favorite pastime Hls wlhfe, who ts a yery bandsome and refined woman, did not fully share big absorbing enthusiasm for the horses. She liked them very well when she wanted to drive somewhere, but she oaly took a wild and distant interest one end and The dainty falling far Le Frances-she as "The Snow Queen" New York-wears a It at a ‘long she glances up through ber cage Often sbe hangs her head de- regard to She, geils child of Poultney you 3 the only know, Bigelow. daughterly devotion. ubroad with their who gives bim u voluronious veil the maline. the girl ts ase golden-hatred maline muff must be girls are a wide enormuous Unvelled a girl may go to the theatre, bul tbe muff (in reality the were brimmed "Merry Widow" callor of yellow straw that bas a band of Dresden silk, shé man) must pay for a seat of Its own It 1s too trail and too costly to be crushed. has a wide deep lace ruffle The otber mother On spangles. and copper-sbaded for veil and muff. Is worn by auburn bair White maline muff of the ror the vell and pestiing and fn debutante, Is a cluster of viiley lilles flounce on the that sbade*of bangs like a piuno @ lamp At a first-night play in performance London a great of a dramatic popular critic of The piano places it, stays W here oue lamp, however, but Mrs. Tilton's rushes around Insignificant an like looked stature small exclamation point, seated between two largo border of lace, is worn with a bat very wide with founce Summer-mulls Of brim. The veil, therefore, falls 8 distance from the body, hardly ut the bips. fasblon. On the little directoire often a lace ruffle that Mre. It and men lead Why : should the horse thelr sacred conjugal ob svonren to forget in himself a the horse Is not gations? ‘This animal? noble and decidedly innocent many bas exer ised the minds of protlem at to It has answer definite A persons. A Professor Jono by furnished last been He Iilinols. of the University of Wesener, Is due to an atpoints ou t that the trouble of the horee traction betw een the live cells cells existing io pone aod certain morbid eas unwholesome who lead an idle and themse " amusing to time their spend usefu some in than rather horses with work. The when after they much himself. dressed, time with lodged could bis Ideas in In the never spend to please horses When Mrs, Vanderbilt, all nicely was ready to sit down to thelr and ber busband, miss would she dinner, if sue took the trouble to look for bim sbe would dud bim as often ag not in the Stable, proudly contemplating his latest team of spanking bays or affectionately embraciog 2 uew pony. This sort of thing became more Gnd more frequent and the busband and wife drifted apart. In bis passionate attachment to the horso Mr. Vanderbilt bas naturally beeo led into close assoclation with men and Are Men H OW do when or men the his cxperience. Yell the man of be Wonen and women sentence 1s by the doctor? us fotelligence, face death pronounced type that and he is tells grealer facing death and be begins to tght, dewands a consultation, talks about golog to spevialists, and fights zrimly to the finisb. Tell a woman tbe satne facts and she lies back to awalt her fate, All women aro [utaliste. On tbe other band, tella man that he bas one chance In a thousand to recover if be will undergo an operation, and be will trust to bis own strength and enduranco rather than uvdergo the kolfe. The womun will choose the thousandth chance, and submit to the operation with eastounding from flaring calmness, The dying woman thinks first of ber chil dren aod her future. The dying man thinks first of bls wife and then of bis tn startlog bonnets thero is bangs downward edge the above of Aineong them is grapbed on the Madame brunette, box who bas a remarkably been photo- Mr of seat sae as js who Tuttle, Rasmussen Elleo Mra. well known In society In Chicago and New York, is a famous steeplechaser and also an eager ohe after the hounds She rides astride and looks perfectly bewltching !n breeches. Recently she won a horse race ip which the otber riders were professioual jockeys. Now she is suing for a divorce from her husband, Willlam 8. Tuttle, a rich broker, a trouble which ts naturally attributed to her exclusive interest lo horses. in Facing Teath? childrep. And, most remarkable of oll, bo matter bow destitute 2 man bas been, po matter bow untrue he may bave been to bis wife, in that supreme bour when be fuces death he seems desirous of rightiug every wrong be bas done her. She ts the object of bis colicitude, Hers is~tho lace be wants to look upon last. The man thinks always of the material welfare of bis family. He wants to make sure that his business, his insuraace papers, everything is prepared for their care und protection: The woman thinks less of the money or property she may have to leave her loved oves than of f their cure after she bus goue, fhe property, she thinks, can take care of itself, but who will keep her babies together, who will make a home for them . strength of character, and calmness, these are € ubdguestionable traits of nearly every man or woman face to fave death. Their last hours, whether seven or one, ure given over unreservedly to those they love. of thin veilllng When the sweet !llusion {s used so prodigally as this. allasion thereto fs not always om plimentary Mero man looks askance at the wuff of maling weaknesses. and Ruiz. coach and appears to be almost absorbed fo horses as be is. bilt's much made in Divorce tastes similar women attractive back from brim, stiff tbe Braver ‘A medical man higher esys, the Figured been Vanderbilt Mr. Now. bad at quite touching droll Have tm them stable. too such bas Tilton Newell tu pure with a Always pose of white net, in @ bride-Iike ber tong veil Horses forced at white yell like that in picture C. Frances bas big black eyes that spurkle with wis- Murely White, have chin-sling. ber not ber waist. wool sbawls : a thelr 0, perament, Her veli is thwart "the camera wan Is course, chapeau one- in fashion, for where else could ee Brooks have purcbased ber re . S prown worsted material? of ber low was who danced churity fete In about a nial calamities that make in the newspapers. good the are now snowdrifts for the autumn England "woolen i , pele Cqipes across the bridge of the nose. Now tho Meadow Brook woman, as the reeult mighty design astrological Shetland granny larce Thomas Hitcheock aud Mra. Thomas Hastings. Theo Mies Dorothy Whitney, with a Proper appreciation of her {tMportance, also wears ber chin {uy a sling. The yet) a Ip Y amerlean the usually the centre of the yelled group that fogludes Mrs. Herman B&. Duryeu, Mra, bus [ | ebing tp chocolate-brown tlings. Mre. Regay Brooks, ever since sister Nan wmatried Waldorf Astor, is always closely yelled So afraid of the vulgar public eye! She is sports, white large 7 shows em) often secs ‘on a Venter coach, lo barking spaces that surround the ring, the of ao When the iC tase group of four or Ove women, all witb stranuous border, look Ilke They mgs ready irl eS long ite Meadow ellng . pas Raia valdpion, of like ide a. ages Over drawn is it vells Beaty | there are, vell of beary fashion the appearance In the border, mingled with ficures«and the dots, there rosettes made of chenille, each balf of an inch In diameter. bare-faced compoyure exposure of conjugal vel! is the vell of the First Newport, eet the face and of the chart. Sen-Sen at Newport, he eald: one must swelter." women swell, velled saw "Well,the to be lips and custom will. from England) when they are enveloped fo maline, bat and saoulders, according to the fad Introduced tn this country by Mrs Collins, earry large Summer wmaffs often or maline made and watching their vells fn color Black muffs of maline often buve assumes may bride old is discarded. the suitable for dinners usual off Even And, gold both with fe mortified shoulders. mission An train Is The cut clety - wito tired old well, The use the materlal With lace. Ye ® tear or two may trickle through eum Grift'on'. ber cheeks. her {ta as lace is pathered Oren a panics yell gown cutting obviated > > from fulfill train of orange blossoms, and, covering the face, falls tn dapces. PS Pp re revived. When ding Fe ; be will Ing folds bebInd her. ‘There is no heavy satin train, only a train of ballroom length. f y will emet just l - - a cascade or tine Z é‘ fl Ssautreeen Le be epotless draperies up the alsle, but there wil be no train of heavy satin. The tace yell' will ripple far teblnd ber _ : eA f hangs vell will | be r w pf Sia 4 } Sh te *\ ' that The ip Pe es ond uarrowing at the sides. ruffle, no- doubt rene lenghtencd face-curtaln thatat can thrown baci back face-curt cat be ‘thrown aa Mrs. Cases. Sidney ao eorce Chicago of eround C. Love ber from devoted mau and cruel bas just obtatues a husband, borses, to very on rich the treatment. barbarous to borses was' the begiothat parted ulm hh eee ed Ding of [row ils wife, alllbough there were ouomer ous other allegatious agatost biw. is now consoling blmself with bis horses. Frederic McLaughlin, of Chicago, is one of the best polo players In the country, His wife, who was Miss Helen Wylle, of Baltimore, has left him and returoed to her home, because she considered hin a better polo player thao bosband. Mrs. Preston Gibson {s sulng ber bus band for divorce on the étound of cruelty. He ts a famous driver and horse owner and one of the -best known organizers of horse shows fn the country Mrs. Frances Work-Burke- Roche-Batonyi was brought op in an atmosphere of horses, for ber father, Frank Work, wae obe of the most prominent drivers ef tast horses in New. York. 'lShe sppears to fy all the abnormal cording oped iu ‘Thea she Aurel eyt&ptoms Sbe divorced ae became ber frst busband. suddenly -Batonyl, a infatuated horse-tralner, bim ond as suddenly parted Miss Glulla Morostot! long with which, to Professor Wesener, are develwomen by close 4ssoclation with the borse.. her father's coachman. with married from bin ago rap away John Schell- {ng, aod married nlm. Andrew niece, Mies Nancy Carnegie, mother's coachman, Jameg Hever. Mrs. Jamea Kernochan was James Forster, a stablewan of ow Broow Hunt Club. Mrs. Garth, widow of an linportant bank president, married Hubert who had charge of ber stables, engaged te the Mend. Granville New York Harrigan, |