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her a number at nsodsh sad he II tinst4ly'
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it half: wonderful hanging you for garments and the shunt section 0 and all .33 srtielu of wearing sppsroL In {net ‘t seemed to be perfect for her ro- quirenntu-
"'HoV>-1128!: is this one?‘ she ukod. ~12. is $55.00."
"I had no ides.it7hst I would have
Sold IA: coupon bdosolcr Ioldonlo-'
grfitgg Lossgwsuiskflut-lass Cushiovfop Wciipbo Till-Ea Ct wurioaa Jinan from Vuuo, A , _ .
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snneh (or s trunk." she
The salesman knew the nine or! that trunk sod his snawsr wss:
"-Hsdsras, you are goin to Call- for-nls.« it’: s lou trip. {)1 will be eorryin wearing srol worth $500 oz-ion my more. our do you think 1 of this ssnonnt is too much to psy (or the trunk to. carry clothes worth that much non 1 And xnsrk W. ‘this umauur murriumn
UNI will be your travelling corn- bsnlon on many a future Journey. Lt‘; s trunk that you will always be proud of sad one with which Jon will I17!!! sppssr to sdvsntsgs.
-“When you put it that way I guess it isn't too much to pay for s trunk I-fist Ill, and I better take it," she
“When You Travel, People
Judge You By Your Luggage"
anufsctiirinq Co.. 9! Tbronto.I.Jmuad
BONUS CHEQUES
of our repretsrihtlvu for our {our Canadian ll
sdilll Homes 8 Gordon and Th Ch t is — ii in [assure when the! \u the mount olutaluig boniu eh:q'u.,'2'Mge
vb s sItI0'“9‘“"h7 "°‘ “W “' ‘ 1"" "7 ¢°¢|‘IDlot.s dstslls. Addrsss _ r - nunhuvu‘ Dcpt, KLKCLEAN PUBLISHING COMPANY LTD ~~ Toronto 2. o..¢. ' '
uinu-MseLssn's.
J Aflsnsoors dms
nnd ‘kg,-L, wcighlfd down with pleats.
There is nothing new in eveninx KOWM 1-hc dmopnm hemlinc persists with a slight em,“ 10 mm!“ drmp from the middle back to the side. i ve an idea that by .pr{ng¢|m4_-_ the back drop wili_have entirely dignppgflfed. it has become far too popular. gqgjcu are slinky, close fitting. with the fronts of them plain and the backs embel- lished." Some of.’ the "new Worth cvcninli gov/ns'are embroidered in the‘ back with dmmonds, big showy motifs, while there is only a thin line of them. around the neck in'front. Shouldervstraps are no longer mere strings. At least one of them must he heavilyjewelled with ends that fall to the waist either backor front—or both. And one am still wear a flower or a bow under one’: ear or in the region dfone‘s hip.
There is literally much more in evening frocks than there used to be, Chanel‘: wispy rag has gone the way of all raga, but one isn't allowed any added girth. One must be slim as the willow wand to carry off the added‘ layers of chiffon. and you simply cannot look right in the new"hippy"dn.-sses unless you are hipless! Lace and chilfon are supreme: soft velvet a a little but there are fewer f’Igured‘vflvets. and taffetas scarcely at all. if anything. there are more colon worn than heretofore: as much black as ever, but less white.
THE most delightful features of the mid-season and southern milections are the fasdnating little coats that_go with evening frocks. much shorter than those shown in the summer. more like little flouncy boleros. For instance. with a chiffon dress. stark black, will be worn a scrap of a coat like a web of fine silver thread with dia- monds taught in it. The summer models had sleeves. These new ones are sleeveless. Oh. and l was almost forgettlngthe small prim shawl which Worth recently folded over a lace dinru frock!
Evening coats may be in velvet or'lamé or what you will, but they must be gorgeous. And they must be big; big—sleeyed, big- oollared, big enough to make the woman and the frock inside {rail by comparison
Sad. but there seem to be no new hats about. One does get so tired of forever
s'mIaryNuun'ns- nud will black I!!! hold.
Paris Patter
Conlirmedlrom pan ID
The Chatelaine, ‘February, row I‘
Frock in black en/>4 will: ialiilr up a! nut, llollt 1} I (class /10»: Dutoll-Hut.
seeing those skimpy little skull caps. ‘Hunk haven. though. they say there'll be brim: and bigger ones than ever for spring. chopped away on one side. drooped on the other like the models they started out with this summer. it is late to be telling you of the Reboux cloche which showed a fringe of twiriod-up hair behind. it was slightly arnuxlng but more dowdy than entertaining, i thought. I've yet to see it on a smart head abroad. All the little miiliners jumped at the idai. all In prism modum who perch near the chimney pots up twisty back streets—and that. of course, was its death knell in the chic world.
At Biarritz, wide brimmed straw hats were about at the "right"piaces. meaning when: smart women lighted for a moment. These were in worse weaves dyed to match the frock underneath. More than ever it would seem hats must match. it is no longer con- side-redsrnarttowearblacitatopscoior. even Chanei's raspberry red. You can imagine the near-tragedies at the mliiiners when the dyer fails to get the color of the couturier's sample.
The most amusing hats of all. without doubt. are those Mary Nowitsky has de- signed for Palm Beach and the Riviera. They are in bright colored strsw. flopping in the brim. tied like a poke bonnet under the chin. or rolled like a dunce's ap. They are supposed to be worn on the beaches with full, high-waisted uouoers buttoned at the sides with part buttons. s sleeveless shirt and s dumpy jacket rounded off in front. it sounds s bit like a chorus get-up. but more extravagant things than that happen on the Lido.
Nobody has thought up any new shoes so thateverybody willgoon wu.ri.n(theusu.sl kind—whJte trimmed with brown, or blad-
or all white.
Legs, arms and faces are still worn matched till sundown but i notice that the tan seems somehow to dinppcnr giving way tossoftpollorwhenthelampsurltghud. Theresrefewer Lwqueredhendsshtxit the-e d.|yI. Noonehsstslientoweutnghslrtus hnhofaulgbuttherohsdecfilaisoltnns sbout the new coifmrv.-s that is nsuairu to most fsoes.
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