Evening Star Newspaper, March 6, 1921, Page 46

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14 THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON. D. C, MARCH 6, 1921-PART 2 1o orten in black or 'k blue even in bathine sults undoubtedly AN EDITORIAL FAUX PAS. ’ have a smartness born of the fact[stockings still appearin m the London Passiug Show ason or 8o past. Moreover. it i5l Tha color pre-emi REOGRE s «© was furlous at t Ay the . never the woman who looks fl fOr ings for general wear, save for sports, U ¥ reported her wedding. 7] easy comfort and serviceability in her s . Thev are worn with gray)o s remark He— Why? clothes who sel the long. tightlor parti-gray shoe hich are in the | bert since . Y5 & ceve. It requires higher d»p:r;‘-' predominan or they mny be worn he—They stated that hushand SR sn an orchs P 3 S ormal line i ack and at the | ©f technique in dressing to wear the | with black shoes, and th 507" said Robert: “I notice a well knowa collector an- e Sonaia: b Jusiifcd I sending | in cariain rment 07 Sldca, Man wore the mechanical de- | sleeve that fits snugly about the Wrist | ighly’ favorid for cvening . about ihe same . more proportionawly in money and notice. Even| vices invented and worn to aid women | than the one that ‘termintes some”|daytime wear Intgrcstlng roCcKS OT|thought for spring and summer out- | the simpl hair does not stand | in keeping blo and skitt i per= |WhHErs above: _And. sol wo aRSoC S0 hus far there has bee door clothes than for those of winter|such harsh treatment. Sweaters that|fect allgnment under these trying | oo "%, o _’"l“ e igne. sloeve inc n \ ion_ to many more hours a day |open at the front have not this difficulty | conditlons. THh the losve StSME and this 8ives | StotianEs Tor bk e A New a‘ld Better Wa palm Beach an t outdoors in the warm |but they soon lose their shape if they | IF the very long waist becomes well | BTG PP REH R @ o PELEYRIBDE S amE: | most women do, in ssiy as would However, are ta in a meas- mean . - I t . 1, o, TDE Our Patented Hair Loop Foundations for . . fact, just the opposite. The high cost | be the eater is looked Bu whether ®women wear long A d 0 pa— - | 0f furs makes winter wWraps a very upon )W We put on siv or short sleeve seems | brig h: goods. .\ou will instantly realize the Miami Conven-|of firs makewiate s elloxt @ el SRSE superionty s I tanr Gdant (e F - E t. 1 ¢ | Moteover, an avpzopriate frock o | them on art lo o s discarding the heavy, injurious stems, cords, gence Essential " to]mt oxeuase mere v winter can fme, it ol e j : SIGNE lace or wires for our light, airy construction cldom b 'a simple Title alar that [out ans b beneatii, 2 5 .. 'DRESSMAKER & DESIGNER without them. Constructed from the finest tl‘le Outdoor Da}'—v her whereas there | With them times helr vers ¥ ) imported cut hair OR YOUR COMBINGS, nothin outdoor rehed time New Sweaters and a Word Regarding Separate Skirts. BY ANYVE RITTEVHOUS pare Anit u m i of money xpend on t are an i ctor in festation of the Americar A woman typical of thi interest centers daytime outdoor clothes i woman who spends " the months at her own cottage at lake or mountain resort. It is part o chiefly in summer aside, £ AT LEFT: BLOUSE 0O JERSEY WE her deliberate scheme of simplify the clothes pro ion much as possible. Though she may ave servants enough to relieve her of household anxities and though & may entertain rather extensively, dresses but twice a d A gingham or other simple wash frock or a separate skirt, with sport blouse, is probably her first choice. In any event it is something that may be worn outdoors. And when she dresses in a more elaborate outdoor custom for afternoon she has no in- tention of dressing again for dinner or the evening. . * % x % Late hours are not part of her sum- mer program, and sk young married wome quite content to din each other's cottages, to calls or to dunce in smirt and b ing afternoon frocks that pro as appropriate for tdoor evening wear There arc o many. many Amer women who, though they wear ing clothes steadfastly throug days of courtship and eng rather give up the habit after mar- riage, finding two or three real even- ing dresses sufficient for the very for- mal events of w whole vear It 1% not necessarily a matter of economy, nor always of indifference. More often it is that they have chosen the life panionship of a man who is too ab- Sorbed in business to care to keep up the formality of dressing for dinner. More and more the eal of warm- weather occupation is to be ¢ doors as much as possible, and as we that fdeal the indoor frock d into insignificance. We devote more time to the plann of th verandas and gardens of our or than we do to the inte nd even the woman who = he warm months in the city to make a rd things knows are asionaily at | hang tries Dress — The|: the Young married | GAY PRINT ason tha | frocks and wraps of th good repu |as in other = thing that 1ke for th though not so em asons. and this is som many women can zay silk blouses 1l De in combination with separate skirts that need no outside wrap for wear in the country or at the seashore f may H S |on warm days and, made of exprnsive not present r the wa rountab 10 has a clever dro ur titude toward the great doors in spring and summer has much to do in directing and modifying the ltrend of present- shions. We do ST NRYRNN \; D S1 R, W K, WIT D WHITE not look upon the region that lies thout four walls as did a woman of faxhion of the last century—just a disagreeab fon that had to be 4 through in getting from one - to another. = eno ous vardingale of Queen Elizabeth’s time or the trailing rol of the middle ages could not hav come into favor in a time when wom- en spent their king hours in warm weather more largely outdoors than in. Such fashions would be as in- compatible with the motor car as with walking. Bear in mind, too. that the summer clothes of the woman of fashion now- -days ple in arrange- ment t put on and off | the sometimes| a country-club bathhouse of a of n a quarters Tou n Elizabeth or any of of her long and ruff and bit in the Kroom to v time that pared! tials of the sum- mer clothes of the woman of today. They must be suited for outdoors There must be no trailing skirts to be dragged in the dust, no enormous bouffancy that would ‘make the close quarters of a well filled motor car uncomfortable, nothing too delicate or too fragile to withstand sun and a modicum of dampness. * % x % the thing Undoubtedly | farthest to that went ke women abandon having their elothes had hefore | | | starched frocks and blouses a garden spot in the old-time back y where she can nd her hours of \Jeisure. Hote] manugers know that way to attract for the summer h and tea hour is to camoufl rt into the semblauce of & Jap- gerie, while 21l very well for indoor {existence, were not well adapted to outdoor life The wind biew the starch out or the dampness of the mougtain or seashore made starched garments limp and humid. ‘While the sweater has returned with chance for a good recaption an-! i, it may ho longer be | P wlies | caunot 1 produced me by the clever necdlewoman. The knitted sweut woolen o bon sweater is stili | Many of t - | contrasting s and cufls wool mate al heavy border of ish one silk sw lor Al the wrists of the il the edge of thy tween knees and waist. 0 a certain extent the little loose coats of silk have taken the place of aters. They may be put on and off hat m Iy ang are frequent- wi i blouse beneath. Usu the are selected g0 wit ight skirt of some contrasting ma- vk, neuais B is of i 1 whil s not in the frock kes on scially fons when it worn be- long-bloused madel so that the s of the plaits does not begin to flaze until the line of the hips. Plaits that spring right from the beit N A N === CREPE SKIRT. OF CUT YAR AT RIGHT: of a normal waistline are not in gnnul favor. The side plaits are most in de- mand, while the box plait is apparently almost out of the running. * ok ok ok yarn is used to fin- | | | | There is no further question as to the great importance of the separate sKirt in the spring and summer ward- robe of the American woman. She will like it especially because she can vary her costumes by wearing it with different blouses or jackets. For the woman who can afford its upkeep, white flannel and homespun in white he fi are perhap: u grea . There is Here and See a separate | rkirt th ts a circular cut, but | this is mething of a venture. The woman is playving safer when she selects the straight, fairly seuant skirt, not too short, but not long enough to suggest dowdincss. What will ultimately become of the separate sKirt is a question that is more interesting as it becomes ap- parent that with very few excep- tions the big dressmakers of Paris have favored a waistiine placed even lower than it has been, It is all very well to have one's frock skirt begin midway hetween one's normal waistline and one's knees, and it Is possible, though not enti y_easy, 10 place a sash at that angle. But the separate skirt posed at this line would be out of the ques- " tion. th the separate wkirt the long-waisted effect is produced now, of course, by wearing the skirt fast- ened at a low normal waistiine, with the breadth of the hips to keep it in place, the blouse or jacket being worn on top, producing u lower walst- line and concealing the skirt beneath. Some twenty years ago women man- cd the lowered waistline in con- nection with scparate skirts and blouses. But then the line dyongad down merely in front. It was bu. manty possible, though by no means eawy. tn wear a skirt cut down in fronl because it could be secured at icable in a sneer blouse One of th | a Steaming Process—Ileaving n beautifu puld be more urly than e says that xoft wave that ix indestructible by salt a Ainas ot tiis ot Eeatli the hiouke vous tempesonent always T or waxhing. Men Operntors. GGt the nve » = vem whon iy can pulling Ladies’ Straw Hats 4 3 & ~ . sciously when- [ oo ana n and shaped fn lates * x x 2 - an oppor y arises. And m.»ri i oL ' Marcel Waving—Facial Treatments—Shampoo- " feun women wre, or huve the || Wocclalinsing 1n Dyecime, Cleaning ink — Manteuring — Children's Hair Cntting, N e e wephs and Pressing indies and genties || Ete, by Expert Operators—Expert (hiropodiat scen in the new clothes, . is|lose and nervous In the world. That || and, Pressing in . I eir excuse 1 woing Ve 1 no more tendency to uniformity in |y bo their excuse f ingiE | All Work Guaranteed B 2 1115 G Street this matter at the resorts where wom- | ) Soben i Mflfi SPECIALISTS IN HAIR GOODS en are wearing the new clothes than | SR ey N O % Kandel’s Hat Factory, S there is in the shops, The Tong, closs= | thin sort of wool hosiery. | 1828 14TH ST. N.W. | On Ground Floor. fittine | Claudia R. Whaley ‘ 1414 Q St. N.W. Plore North 3478. s tstl ' have fourai City—W Phone Nor Atlant PERMANENT WAVING The Borden Permanent Waving The price of Jelke GOOD LUCK Margarine has been voluntarily reduced as fast as prices of rich milk and other ingredients have dropped. Today our price is 35%lower than the high war point. JELKE GOOD LUCK MARGARINE The Finest Spread for Bread is a real money saver for you. When food prices were high GOOD LUCK was an economical treat, and today, with this great reduction it is still more so. GOOD LUCK is made from rich milk and whole- some meat fats. It is churned with absolute clean- liness and scientific care, conforming to all pure food laws, both National and State. \ Come and visit our modern churnery—see for your- self the superior quality of the materials used—see with your own eyes how scrupulously clean it is— and our tireless inspection of every operation of churning and packing. The Fine Taste Satisfies—The Low Price Gratifies Ask Your Grocer For GOOD LUCK Today crernediy JOHN F. JELKE "go.cchqo New York Philadelphia Pittsbu Cleveland % Distributed By POTOMAC BUTTER CO. 307 13th St. N.W.

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