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Show . , Coiffures Adapted to the Small Hat. ! I L I A A" e -'- V it , ? - V ; .v -s - - i il- r I 1 7 . I fft;M t 1 J$pT4 ! wSl , " lidos' T:iE small hat is launched upon one more season of popularity and hair dressing must be adapted to it. But the very simple coiffures which have prevailed during the past year have become too tiresomely popular to suit women of fashion, or women who Btrive for individuality in dress. They want something new. Therefore, those divinities that shape our ends (so far as the arrangement of hair is concerned) have developed some lovely love-ly new coiffures. These truly remarkable and beautiful beauti-ful styles accommodate the new hat shapes, and at the same tme answer the demand for more dignified and elaborate hair dressing than the passing pass-ing mode displayed. There are three different styles to be featured. One shows the hair dressed high on top of the head in another, it is coiled low on the crown, and in a third the regulation Psyche knot is worn. In several of the new styles a higher and slightly curled fringe appears across the forehead. In all the new styles the hair is not much waved, and in all of them the e;N-s are covered. In the majority ma-jority of coiffures three very short, tiny curls nestle somewhere, either at neck or peeping out from the knot, or displaying themselves resting on the hair just above the ear. They are just about the prettiest little finishing touches that can be imagined. Women call them "cunning" and perhaps they are; for these little curls appear to rivet the attention of the masculine mind with extraordinary force. By .the way, few people realize how much men admire pretty styles of hair dressing and good grooming in the women they know. JULIA BOTTOMLEY. |