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14 THE. SUN e Ty e e soft hats are carried out in & va~ | riety of ways and in all the dainty colors | that are suited to baby faces, but none & Co. | are more popular than the large round i i | leghorn shape: flufty lining and the B L T long strings that flap in the breeze and <+ get tangled up with everything. Did you happen to know that little Miss Modish’s frocks are lined and interlined? Well, they are. One designed for dancing school is made of organdy. The skirtand waist are tucked round and without a particle of lace. The sleeves are short are made of white pique. There is a tiny and the neck is round, giving it an alr Stiff collar and the dress hooks directly Of e ng dress. A ruffie of the material down the front, which is unusual in lit- forms a bertha and a tiny edge af Valen~ tle people’s clothes. The only thing that ciennes is all the trimming there fs. But breaks the monotony are two little ex- the underskirt is more elaborate than the tensions of the pique that hold large outside one. It is & mass of tucks and is pearl buttons. About the shoulders is a finished with a knife pleating edged with collar edged with deep embroidery and lace. The pleating stands eut jauntily, e 3 ; it the finishing touch is added by a white arnd when the short skirt files locks as Sy . 8 i s b 8 v | leather belt that is held in place with a though the gown Ead been really and o L gold buckle. It is one of the most com- truly finished. plete of all frocks and looks well under Some of these under Iinings sre made all circumstances. of silk and are plenty pretty emough to When worn with a large hat nothing wear on the cutside. In fact a hest of could be sweller. Such a hat, for youngsters would be delighted to have = stance, as this: A cartwheel of soft split Sunday-go-to-meeting gown half as straw. the under rim has three rows of pretty. But what Dame Fashion demands Suits from Davis, Schonwasser for these little yokes, as it were, cover a multitude of sins. There are gowns so very much like coats that only a person well versed in children’s clothes would know that they really were not intended as such. They SAILOR SUIT 0%/ 2wy [} riorAIR A TUCKED /, ORSAMDIE wiTH VALENCIENNES Dame Wealth buys and is glad te have ad any cost. The time has passed when yeu could make over your own summaer clethes for the children and pass them down from one generation to the next. There are a score of manufacturers whe devote all their time to little people’s needs, and they have as many frocks for this, that and the other thing as you have. If your purse string is ruthlessly drawn apart, console yourself by feasting your eyes upon the ruler of the home—the baby. DIVORCES IN GERMANY N Germany it ha: til recently been the custom of divorced w r or discard their former hus- ames, as suited them best. the subject has, however, just gone into effect. Under its provisions divorced ma er late hus- ess and until he makes a s nothing, to the s from her the FROCK OF \ \'.bo---v.r:v Lawwn \ il blouse w e revere collar opens ove oke; at the bottom it has ; louble lace-edged ruffle, the upper one white Valenclennes gathered fully and each row is headed with a plece of nar- row black velvet ribbon. On the crown h three tucks 1ged to fit zht to be Of course, this declara~ = : there is s right to , bl it i is absolutely nothing but a bunch g5 b foly 3o Gid B S % ke i dorna ) B sleevi, fee of sprawly marguerites tied with their roachable. If there s SEOE It te the oM !“v— own stems. Falling here and there are wer les, the lady can b ts et R several stray ones that look as though call irname she possessed they had slipped their bounds and were ge. - a large picture hat of Bkl oo g el prying into their neighbor’s business. It recently beem de- . : has just come to visit us is one of the sweetest hats that has been B i K s oo : e " Bage 1 Vorced from her husband because she hac as Ay oo, 4o i B8 turned out for a child this year, and if \iicee) W e e vou wanted to buy it would probably make you play a sweet tune. as to the identity of certain White 1s supposed to be the popular Another natty hat is made of chiffon people. Her former lord when divorced color for small girls. But do not buy a in a pale blue. It is fashioned after the forbade her to sign or otherwise use his white cloak nor a white hat. Anything French bonnet, only it is much larger. It Deme any longer, whereupon she reas- else will be chic, but black moire is the fits closely about the head and ears and Sumed her maiden name and informed the only thing that is considered swell; and ties under the chin with an immense bow [cSIStTar of her decision. This official «n- that is well, simply howling swell. of blue. There are rows and rows of rately she was ahens o Lately she was about to These coats are made just long enough pleated chiffon that puffs about the face m! d to mpd.my.-. :h‘ n l:n;d:o:;c-?:f to cover the knees, and are supposed to prettily, and a band of ribbon held in vorced” broke spell of love. The entirely cover the dress. They are double piace with a few steel buckles adds a !2dy took an action against the registrar, breasted and frequently have a V-shaped swagger finish. A spidery bow of the Of the ground that in her maiden name plece of tucked taffeta that fits closely blue fs all that ormasgents the crown, ShC had not been divorced and that her about the throat. Instead of & wide col- and, in fact, is all that could be placed Loam moh g s Ot that of a divorced lar of the moire, a heavy ecru lace one is there, as it is very small. objection, a :Ol:;:"x‘-» » "”rr‘rh».“‘: ;nm;':e ely correct more often seen, as it takes away the The same idea is carried out in piak pelied to m o e Children really lcok better if ribbon is somber look. These little V-shaped pleces chiffon, but not exactly in the Frencn “WIill not tha used instead of silk. A soft satin ribbon PO, iS quite as smart an. 15 much more well and good., If your fancy dictates that are more often worn than not are shape. This one is a hat and does not Was asked It n about six inches wide is about as nobby able. That generally means some- - the side it is quite as proper. The great mage of black and white. sometimes the tie under the chin: it does mot even boast L the Wou nything else. Taffeta is glossy and thing to everybody, for the chief beauty MAJOTity Of children's frocks-thal - be twq come with the coat., They are either of atet i et thing but the fact that her kes a nifty bow, but it crushes too O©f & sash lies in its freshness. ing unpacked in Schonw’fl'ssers hme‘l-(']k:: IR BN e o e g of strings. large bow o it ¢* mal@en name is or was X. He must find happy medium. quickly and hangs Itke a wilted flower. = And another thing. e the bow where Lo et anth oo ey (o s down. comes in to great advantage when:the |oror. o Jauntlly on the crown and out the other facts for himself: A Prus- smart ‘little thing is The soft satin, particularly the wash rib, you please. If you like it fn the back: o1 e an e ends al : ' A matches the black moire cloak to a sian registrar is not a matrimoniai : , all ward, slip does not correspond with the coat, nicety. agent.” i while in that state made divers grievous ming slip is fashioned of The deep-tucked blouse ruffe bordered’ with embroi- aded with a cluster > is a mass of tucks is ¢ with a lace st is finished with a sash, hat could be prettier? hes, by it really is not so, Re- is lawn, and it does mot seem so es as dain y, are all the vogu( makes no difference other wore it; how it is; what its color le of, so long as it rves the name of sash it is abso- been for everybody moha whether your hd > or how narro: , ‘or what it is n is quit wo backward Other and fancies that we ched the