The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, February 16, 1902, Page 2

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2 THE SUNDAY CALL, r.. alternate strips of ribbon and lace com- ing into a band with a lace ruffle at the N wrist. At the bust there is a big bow of ~ / albatross with long ends all trimmed with lace. . 1 Q 2 A Negligee Is Economical. g <X * The possession of a negligee is some- thing that should be coveted by every = woman. Few there be who do not own a [ loose robe of some sort, if no more than the old tashioned wrapper, but this ls not enoug., for there should be the carefully planned, highly artistic negligee; and there may well be two or three. The negligee, besides being so very be- coming—and who can afford to slight such N rtobon, S,Somsideration as this—is really an oco- ymerous enough to june 16 - sho! lers upon a on, nomical investfnent. t saves one’s hand- oD “““:_,“m",,' fire, &nd descend the five: butus FRAYE. Bt cately whits P phlch s run through an openwork of some and more cxpensive gowns and pre- fer. _ Bihe need ‘:Qg:céugfgrrfiet{or‘?fie ‘The cut Is straight, with & paflog colias, I can ke tiled ks DN dxitne € ey v A CTmas fuw which 7 eed nof ] n} I - e Y looks as though she were merely indulg- ’rrnhthet .l;lelh“i‘;,sth: fi‘:fi’: gnn?l cuffs of sires, or tied loosely, so that it is very A woman of much taste in ?drsss con- lnwin the: luxisy of o fire dtlly 1 be e tralght e D o thers low in_the neck. . This article is put on fided to & friend that she could wear & ready in case of emergency. Her negligee mnkt ggi! seen in the trimming, which over the head and there is mmownh’:‘ m“";:";d ,uu_"}:me lnme, x“- long al,\ her 13 Somplete. On the other Ban e siceps cxtends around the sleeve above ke = A e e rafie as fancy as may be house ¥ take It off - maid she “and mev e other extreme, 15 rou 2 " J wide band of insertion, 18] fth s P e T Y ieate. o mention which 1o run sibbon of two-inch width, deslred lttle white lawn iis place, resh from My best dréseer, 41 Ammos when ohe s dosctibing underwear, The same ribbon extends around the i Moty ahemyl This: comes 10 Scumiel asd. Deautifally tnmed i) B iy Do e not o eertain Wash: shoulders, outlining & yoke, thougls thers; Jucket, slsc Nery aemy e e S S S o Regiigee—an siagan: R hich is is really no yoke. s f the kimona jackets. affair it is—and with ‘this on I feel that BEME Zenad & nanemp ® “The front ls straignt up ST dowils wits B o e eatening n front and the I can face the world until it is time to inserticn along each edge, down W] neck has a sailor collar, usually of lace. dress for dinner. O While Slrale: hen there are lace cuffs. This covers The life of a handsome little house made O ) ! G ligee, is practically unlim- and supplies warmth to the throat and gown, or negligee, { i 5 across at the front and are held In place In this one is surely ited, for it can be worn again and again, Will Give Any Woman a Feel g by a pearl button on the end of each Z’éiv’:i‘i’l;'u,f‘éféfieind O e i tod: fox 1t o be wom again and agatn g2 . B T o . / 1 strap. t such a bad _ Those who enjoy going to bed attired o there Is not a rag of it left. Predictions for the week . £ J 1 2 8 L B e ‘wsed 50 it. It that, In case of emergency, they can Have you ever tried experiment of by a professional astrologer ; +- —— The Lovely Negligees and Night Robes That Are to Be a Part of Every Well-Ordered Spring Wardrobe—Miss Hay’s Poetic Roses, With Petals of Embroidered Linen—How to Cut One’s Underskirt and Just How Wide All Leglettes o Should Be—Underwear So Ex- quisitely Appointed That It emerge without feeling as though they tubbing, actually tubbing, your nice room | ) is in_two pleces and is really very becom- COTED T linelr every day- conven~ gowns. Do try it, even though they be showing lucky and unlucky g 4 s ! T i‘;fif:':;‘""l‘;gk"‘{',{’f&(‘a"n:: Hlonalities will admire the nightgowns not recognized as wash goods. days for business, love and v e Prac 5 2 r- 3 e Airet garment one puts on is a fhat are cut i;‘;’:‘np"#:em;’&ofa ot Tubbing Your Gowns. marriage, giving birthday 2 g . 3 3 < f D2 chemire. all perfectly white, and made of /s SO0 10 UntP hese delicate tints _ Get your druggist to recommend & soap, ke im- read carefully the directions upon it and are trimmed with lace and make plunge in. When you have dried your htdresses. e ) d e O e N Sahionable New York gown it will look wotully crumpled to you woman whose nightrobes are in black but if you will begin with an iron you sheer goods, finer than any web, and Will be surprised to see how the wrinkes de ap. oh, 8o delicately with colored will disappear and freshness come forth o s aud with white. One’s repugnance There are very narrow little irons for this to Dlack vanishes when one sees these purpose, and ome can penstrate ribbon Jovely night robes, spread out side by side loops and lacy flounces with this imple- in her dresser and ‘piled atop each other— ment. You will be agreeably surprised to one a dream in appliqued wash cambric find how many of your xoods are wash- roses. able. edvice and life forecasts of infants born during the next seven days. HE more athletic she becomes the more esthetic she grows. The home woman of the olden type may have subsisted, lived and moved and bad her being clad in , THE NEWEST cor = SScRET . T once had a Norwegian ma!d servant, AL related a waman in a woman's ciub, “who B orenley . h: or washing th to sea how man ht unwashable RGBT ousenold - es—came out of her han@ls washed The plain white nightgown is to be and bright again. found and in such a glorified state that “‘Turkish daraperies, = silker hangings one fs irresistibly moved to call it the mantle lambrequins of all ecolors, piano . prettiest of all the pretty things offered. covers and even the rugs upon the floor t is very long, though not longer in the went through a mysterlous process o back than in the front and is finished with Soap and water and were returnod to sherr hand embroldery. The ' uncomfortable places like new, with not one shade of foot ruffle is largely done away with and color gone. There must be a cial art, the plainness of the hem is relieved by or Knack, br talent, in doing t A HOUSE GOWN ... .- it, has a set of under- broidered in wash .silks. One walst is rtistic merit t it Is powdered with white silk French knots, w { such ] A : success. s ce that the vorg of art and, in a way, tiny and beautiful, upon a background of embroidered roges, sprays of valley lilies “fully, and, judging from the sbanren —centur will do 1 Sabilc i It is called the Mariha white wash silk, pretty enough surely for and'- by: (e Ordakii bordery, §ll éfther ‘remo e ance of our household be- t year it is one that is worth 1 feature an evening bodice. AL M ora Fat Ribbon Roses. ala Of & rose, but _ The other articles of underwear are sned to the front trimmed to match. -A little set of six fnclude a corset Ppieces, including the very short knee pet- ; ctand ticoat, was trimmed with lace and ribbon, Jods. In the latter disposed in the form of fat ut(i - s Simu. tle roselike choux, These .were place are bent inward to s~ ypon the outside of each leg, where they e gots, ia white S 1ooped an immensely wide ruffle until it hnine. Roses grad- WAas very high, and upon the bust of the Ay e - corset cover. ward the bust, Ul- “'nhe night robe was trimmed with these fat little ribbon roses all the way down the front from the chin to the floor, and o the little unde: 2 M wonder ruffie, looped at short intervals with of Ribbon. roses'the size of a dime, all in Hibbon. The new “covers” are made all in one Those garments which the e glr .”"r po 2 .es, and without sleeves of c&lled “my panties” were made very wide hen done she prevs sl ngee i “arms ang At the knee. The garment is nicely fitted quarter” cover kind. Ribbons go over the arms and 5t ‘Gt §iTC o 1d° 0N the leg, but just e on top of the shoulder. With dinner apove the knee a flounce 18 set on It Is these ribbons are very not applied in_ the straight round-and- nd its spec worked by hand or cunningly applied, anu ki the material cut away underneath as ¢ though the fingers had done the whole N et o The Tavias. <amm deed, whereas it may be mostly machine brics, nainsooks and Tndia muslins, are made. : not so desirable for negligees, for the rea- The girl who sleeps In pajamas will son that they “show through”’ and one make them, not of nainsook, nor fine must wear a display garment underneath linen, but of cotton. There is a pretty But if one fancies that sort of a robe one pink and blue cheviot that s good for this can wear a handsome corset cover and & uge. beautiful petticoat arranged to be For summer the square negk Is very seen thr: This ts correct comfortable. The neck is cut out in a as far as g » is concerned deep square, front and back, and bordered - Of be a word with needlewcrk. Lace is not very good said. n such profusion for this purpose, as it does not hold its in the shops tt need only go in a shape so weil. name one’s price in order to be suf But there are handsome kinds of needle- One can, for a silk petticoat, &o work that are just the thing. Do not about $5 or a little less, perhaps. up to have the holes tco large or the needlework 3100, with a very good compromiss at will look v:ofln;‘e‘; The sleevt‘sdn( sumx{-ner about $8, nightgowns should be made perfect 5 " Japanese sleeves, enormous in girth and Making a Petticoat. a little shorter on the outside than on the _One can make one’s own petticoat, too. inside. They are very pretty to look at But does it really pay? By the time you to buy she takes & tion of money for 1e-gown wear and she spends 1g not so many but tight-fitting cor- edge or so, and insertion, which are now for- -in-one- nd ha and are selected to wear unde -1 1 ones, the wom, buys at the namental, for there IS round fashion, but it {s shaped, growing and more than comfortable to sleep In. have bought your taffeta or your satin mity _end happens to peep wider at the outside. This calls for 3 The Negligee Proper. and yeur lace and your ribbons and hired hows while distressing vision of & culiar cut to the leg The negligees proper. those that are to YOUr kn plaiting dome at the plaiters mu shoulder strap is one that has on very full. Two yards wide each were : v 2 ighttul, and got your skirt cut out at y Iress- the lovely dawned upon all who attend dress func- the flounces applied to the legs of a love- B gt an S Ut NGRS SPw: Shigintut . 200 1S YOR5 S 260 Shat ¥ o h Aisc - 1 vi Kk A They are fine enough to Fe worn down to , he you pent as much as she will_disc i ly nainsook set, looped with pink liberty JEWELED Thawah Yoo Boushe (A Tt e 8- that there is an aggravating one piece covers are literally a mass gatin roses, on the outside of the leg. SNARE one’s breakfast table and many of them gh 'y 5 e skirt outright k rib running through the Lace of h variety is Straight flounces are put on; but the leg DECORATES are really nice enough for the home lun- _ There is, however, something that can nd that the corset coy n all the Way js curved upward on the outside, so that MANY A . cheon. ‘There are saclety women who De done at home, and that is the making = s r the cover becomc en comes lace of an- there Is a pagoda effect, the outside being SHAPEL ., wear them as tea gowns, but never into Of the petticqat that is silk half way up. underwaist, and as ny, Valenciennes, fine much shorter than the inside, thus expos- LEC the drawing-room, of course, only in their The upper part of this is of colored lawn own little lounging-rooms, dens or bou- and the lower part consists of a silk ruf- dors. fle. The latter is buttoned on at the top. For mid-seasons, albatross is so silky A pink lawn top can have a pink silk and nice that it is to be recommended. flounce very deep and easily renewed Mrs. George Gould, tall. brunette and when it is worn out. In this manner one beautiful, has one in rcse pink albatrass is always sure of a sfik petticoat without with lacy panels set in at the sides from having it cost $8 each time, the yoke downward. There are a dozen There are silk substitutes, too, of these going all the way around. moreers, and now there is a stout m Then there comes a sort of a flounce ar- that is being made up into petticoats and rangement which is really not a flounce at which wears forever. The poplin petti- all. It consists of a band of pink ribbon, coat, with a silk ruffle, is lovely and It then a strip of white lace insertiony then a a use for the poplin gown which band of ribbon. then more lace insertion, hangs in every wardrobe and which re- and so on until the floor is reached and fuses to wear out. though it is the heroine there have been six rows «# ribbon and of many a season. uch it is pret oul L nd half a dozen others ing the garter. This is a stylish cut and , sometimes as many as four dif- will be liked by those who enjoy being ferent kinds in one cover. Then at the stylish in all things. The pagodas have mes with waist there is a ribbon to tiel very wide flounces, rather deep, and set and some- If the cover be cut off at the waist line on in the fashion described. n the ribbon is wider and is flattened out Then there are the umbrellas, which - ¥ around the figure, just above the belt this year are differently shaped. The legs too full, it line, and hooked in front so as to do away are wide, extremely wide, and on the @ great deal with the bowknot. Other covers that are lower edge is set a very wide ruffle of almost removed. cut off above the waist are fastened with ribbon run with lace. Embroidered ruf- 4imost univer- such narrow baby ribbons that there 1S fles are coming in with a monogram set which i put in no bulk at all in the knot, even though it above the ruffie on the outside of the log. in a special insertion is tied directly in front. Oh, such lovely things these are, a temp- the purp or it is rin Chapters and chapters might be written tatiqn surely to the needle-loving woman— en strip which can also be upon these covers, for they are a neces- and to the money-spending one! ed for the purpose of threading rib- art of woman's dress and of her 3 Soft liberty ribbon ties readily. does nent and are of that varlety of un- The Pretty Negligee. com ¥ kes up little space, but ar known as both useful and orna- It is tmpossible now, at a casual glance, Eiecp: there will ba four misre ows tn the shing. BAl o A" mire, and (he new Dety or the laundry, for mr\x.;.x_j_ Lidih and even at a searching one, to discover back than in the front, with a box plait- excellent investment from the standpoint ss Helen Hay, whose beautiful trous- rom & schoof Sirl Triend wi be s triost S hedierence betweon a nightgown and 0o slecves of this pown Mt Vil o s e e e i Exi s THE AR of e S ouy. From & webooly iy L £ e A e wo«n:'_;'; Drettiness embodled in sprigged lawn. The the sheerest lawn. It is low In the neck The sleeves of this gown are draped will go down into the camphor trunks B . of - two. D ¢ it ek 3 3 eakt, - “Dyaterial Is very fine, with ‘a cream and the accepted pattern is one that calls with lace at the shoulder, but at the el- the latter part of 1950 and come up witi o a are brought monogram and trimmed with flowers em. of fine underclothing can rise in the night, ground.” Scattered upon it are little ar- for a perfectly straight roke. rathered bow they become very baggy and are of them as good as new

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