V flTB OMATIA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, 'ATOIL 8, 100G. WONDERS IN SHIRT WAISTS Season Brings Creation! that Onlj Woman Can Understand. SOFTEST OF FABRICS AND FILMIEST OF LACE Favsfcloas Art fr the Daintiest Sweetheart, with Prices Kanalna (roam 3 t as Utah as SOS (or a Oamcat. t Black with his Easter load on Y I Our Easter -Exhibit Excels In every par ticular. It passes from extreme to ex treme. That Is. It offers exquisite, dainty, modest, lit tle bits of elegance in gift articles that appeal with equal force by their sim plicity with the gem - studded, superb, rich articles that might be deemed extravagant were it not for their Intrinsic values, for such goods could be called an invest ment. Waist Tin Sets Large or Hniall Brooches Necklaces Crosses and Chains Charms Combs . Pins Rings, Etc. Easier Elegance In Class Our line presents unusual attraction now in handsome Cut Glass for table uso and decoration. Bee the Easter Lily Vases In New and Odd Shapes. INSPECTION IN" V1TED FROM ALL. Frandsen & Andersen t09 South 16th St. Talking of anaSSSSaBMSSaBBSiaaSaSMaSaSSSSSSa jf Easter Togs: Don't bs like.the chicken J in the Irishman's Remember the tale about the chicken In the egg the chicken that chirped as . the eeK slid down Pat's throat? 'Sliure. an' ye spoke too late!" chuckled PaU ' . . ' ... '. Don't speak too late. . Cot in your order for that " Easter Frock Suit that Easter Sack Suit NOW! Get it in here now and we'll get It out there In time, for K after wearing. Easter Sack Suits to measure $25 to (GO Easter Frock Bults to measure.. $45, SuS, 970 MacCarihy- Wilson TAILORING CO.. Phone Douglas 1808. S04-30S 8. 16th St. ' Next door to Wabash Ticket Office. Suits to Order f 28 to f 45. High class tailoring at popular prices IVMOaOHAIIAI Made the title page, design of this? - jM'per. ulo the tunjorlty of the best advertising designs and illustra tions throughout this issue. t THAT a r First, and abovs , everythlnf else, this year's shirtwaist is elaborate. Secondly, It Is white and thirdly, It buttons In the back, and upon these three principles Is constructed a moat bewildering- assortment of finery. As a matter of fact. It is only out of respect to the origin of the garment that the term "shirt" waist Is permissible this year. "LlnKerle" is the word, and It Is none too Indefinite to cover all the varia tions and extremes of this truly remark able creation. Never before have such prices been paid for waists, not even for the fancy silk and lace waists of seasons past. The J26 model Is by no means un common, although orders are taken for models costing as high as 196. It may be added that these are iiot wash waists. Happily, the great bulk of the assortment Is much less expensive and reasonably sub stantial. They will launder nicely, are In perfectly good taste for everyday wear, and some of the smartest models cost as low as 2. Some that Are Popular. Among the waists thut are supposed to launder the body If they can be said to have a body so elaborately are they trimmed Is of French mull, French batiste, Persian lawn, handkerchief linen and swiss. The allover embroidered Swisses and the hand embroidered linens are among the very smartest. They are exquisitely Bheer and usually less Intricately made. Switzer land and Belfast. Ireland, furnish most of these and they are obtained at fancy prices. China and radium silks. In white are only moderately popular. They are usually much trimmed with German val or em. broldered nets. French snd German Valenciennes insert ing anu edgings, baby Irish, Inserted bands of fine tucking, hand or fine machine made embroidery and medallions of embroidered Swiss, batiste, mull or princess lace, are used In trimming, not Infrequently the lace, embroidery medallions and applique being combined In a single waist. The combination of the Inset lace with em broidered fronts la very good, the eyelet. shadow and over and over embroidery being much used. All manner of effects are used In the application of trimmings, yokes, boleros, full or plain fronts being equally In evidence. The blouse Is still used, though In a much modified detrree. The sleeves are smaller, though Indications are that the later models will be somewhat fuller. The dressy waist has short or three-quarter sleeves. The long sleeves In variably, have deep cults reaching to the elbow and above. They are rr.ade of tuck ing, embroidery, lace, or whatever the trimming happens to be. i ' CnS sad Collars. The cuff is one of; the '.most effective characteristics of the short sleeve. " Pre ferably, It Is from three to three and one half Inches deep, with a frill of lace ex tending around the edge and up the back If It Is sn open cuflk These cuffs are tnade of lace Inserting trr bands of -embroidery, corresponding with the waist trimming. Inset between rows of Valenciennes lace or baby Irish or. rows of tucking. They are unltned and -loose. The Louis culT Is seen on some of the sleeves, especially where the cuff fits around the elbow. . The. collars . are, all attacheij They are oft and unllned and from one and one-half to two Inches high, and finished with the frill of lace.- Like the cuffs, they are made of the1 lace, embroidery, or whatever band trimming chances to be used on the walat. The Dutch neck promises to be the popular thing for midsummer wear, and those models that are In are cut square or round, exposing the base of the neck. Yoke effects are much used In these waists. One of the plainer models shows a thread tucked yoke, with square cut neck, outlined with a band of val, edged with narrow val lace. Oac of the Fancy Models. A . .more fancy model has a yoke effect formed of tucked extensions of the blouse run up to the neck, between strips of em broidered batiste Inset and outlined In me dallion effect by scant frills of narrow lace. Medallions, and where the waist is hand embroidered, sprays of the' embroidery are used on the sleeves. Clusters of tucks are used chiefly as trimming for the backs of waists, and' they are narrow tucks, too. And then there Is the plain "tailored' waist. It Is made of lawn or linen and chiefly trimmed with tucks. It, too, fastens In the back and has the soft low collar. The sleeves are long and have deep tucked cuffs that are shapad and usually button on the under side with little pearl buttons nd loops. These range In price from $1 to 13. Of fancy waists there Is no end. All- over baby Irish, built over net and soft white China silk, embroider .-ed nets and all manner of lace and emtu-uldery combina tions never dreamed of before this season make up a bewildering assortment at be wildering, prices. Delicate Shades la Colors. The nearest approach to the colored shirtwaist Is in most delicate shades of novelty fabrics for which every shop seems to have a different name, and that one would think twice before constgnliptf to the laundry. These are chiefly In plaids and trimmed with pleats or tucks. Some of the handsomot waists that will be worn this summer are being sol patterns. These are hand embroidered Bwiss and mull and are made In Swltser land. They cost as hlifh as 13 a pattern Some wonderfully sheer hami-embruldered waist patterns from Ireland cost from S3. SO up to 1S. The shadow embroidery which Is so popular has to be stamped and worked and made on the mulls, Persian lawna and handkerchief linens, Is one of the daintiest embroideries that will be used this year. 1 , 'l- t.A'i I '' ' " - M ... n I V SHIRT WAIST. SUIT AND HAT. trimming the Jacket and these are supple mented with turned-back cuffs of embroid ered linen, baby Irish, Valenciennes lace and nets that give a very dressy effect. The pony jacket has long or three-quarter sleeves and Is a smart little short waisted effect coat that is seml-fltted back and front. It buttons well over and has a decided tailored effect. It comes with and Ithout the collar. The fitted tailored Jacket, with Its long sleeve and turnover collar, Is also good and is shown In some of the highest-priced suits. Gray is easily the leading shade, coming In plain color and shadow broken and the pronounced plaids and In large and small checks. Everything Is light-colored. In the plain color the old rose, the new shades of green and blue and champagne are very ressy. In the mohairs, serges and pan- mas the white and cream, plain and with thread stripes, are especially good for wear later In the season. Some of these, espe cially In the pony coats, are bound with white or black braid - that gives a very smart finish. Panama cloth and wool taf feta, which Is a finer quality of panarha. Is the most used material, although a great many voiles and mohairs will be used. The silk suit comes In the same colors as the Kton and much the same models, but they will not be generally worn until later In the spring. MARK Is on advertising designs for vari ous local advertisers In the follow ing twenty-eight cities throughout the United States. Nashville. Tenn. KnoxvUle, Teun. Uetroit, MUh. Oram) Kaplds, Mich. Huunlun, Tex. Bio us Kails. 3. D. lMtm Moines, la. fciloux City. Ia, IJncoln. Neb. 8t Paul, Minn. Tacoma, Wash. Coio. Borings. Colo. Deaver, Colo. Oklahoma City OkL Atlanta, Ca. Augusta, Uav. HarrUburg, Pa. Ht. Louts. Hi). Pensacola, Fla. "t. Wayne. UuL Columbus, O. Cincinnati. O. Schenectady. N. 1 Portland, Ore. Milwaukee, Wis. Louisville. Ky. Sprtmcfleid iu. Nurfulk. Vs. WHEAT ON Artist for Advertisers IN THE B EC BUILOING TL, DoBfUs 096 NEW SUITS FOR SPRING ONLY Colors Are Veroal aad Material Vs. rlea Tbroaah Loaf List uf Staff. The economical woman who would select her spring suit with a view to having It serve next fail as well has a sorely per plexing problem on her hands, for the new suits are distinctively springlike In colors. cut and material. This la one of the rea sons they have been tardy In making their appearance on the streets these bright early spring days. The Eton Jacket, with the princess skirt or the circular skirt and girdle. Is the favorite model and tlw pony Jacket suit Is next The little Eton suit Is smart snd trim and admits of an amazing amount of aecoraiion wnnoui looaing overdone or seeming very elaborate. The elbow or three-quarter sleeve Is one of Its char acteristics and It has no collar. The front U partly fitted, giving It seml-tallored effect, and may be hooked up I or worn open. The skirts differ little any, from the odd skirts, being chiefly I trimmed with folds or straps of the same material or with braids. Braids, folds of I alia, velvets and plain cloth are used in ARTY DRESSES FOR SIMMER Combinations of Dlaphanoos Texture and Soft Colors Make Ex quisite Fftects. The acme of daintiness Is reached In the summer party or dressy gown. The sheer est and finest fabrics are combined with lace-trimmed frills. Insertions and tucklngs In ravishing effects. Organdies, Swisses, dotted and embroidered. Imported lawns In shadowy flower designs, mulls and many other diaphanous things are used In these creations. The skirts are mode mostly with deep flounces, with rows and rows of tucks and Inserting and lace, and the top Is also Inset with lace. The yoke effects are much used In the waists, snd these yokes are often finished with ruffles much tucked and lace trimmed. The bodices are full and fre quently Inset with lace or tucked. One of the pretty finished is a soft silk girdle of delicate shade corresponding with the shades In the drees if It is figured. These are boned to shape and fastened In a va riety of ways. Some of the handsomest summer gowns will be made from the robe patterns that all the shops are showing. The majority of these are partly made up, the skirts being all ready for hanging. Where the waists are of Intricate pattern, these, too, are partially cut and planned. The trim ming Is by the yard or by the piece, accord ing to its use as planned, and It corresponds with the trimming on the skirt. Some handsome linens, nainsook, Swisses and ba tlstes have skirts with a flounce from eighteen to twenty-one Inches deep, made of the embroidery and set onto the gored top. The deep hemstitched hem Is another effective finish for these flounces and on the waist. These may be edged with lace A few of these robes are being shown In the delicate shades of pink, blue, lavender, green and biscuit colors. These patterns cost from til up to fiS. ranged to carry out the effect of a coro net. Juliet caps, which have- furnished the keynote for so many of the pretty llttlo theater hatu so popular In Paris, have nf fected veil styles a little. There Is one charming veil draped upon the same found ation upon which those famous little caps are made. Of course. It Is radically dif ferent, the very inevitable ness of the long flowing lines makes that apparent at the first glance, but the veil version of the idea Is becoming to almost every type of face. . 'Most veils are draped upon a foundation made up, almost like a little bonnet, the .tulle sewed securely to the foundation and only the part that covers the veil made separate. An occasional one Is laid in folds and fastened by means of Invisible white hairpins directly to the coiffure, the orange blossoms put on as the moment determines. The foundation Is usually an ordinary willow bandeau wrapped with maline, the tulle draped on to It, pinned into place and adjusted upon the head of the bride-to-be carefully, every line studied. Then the edge is' cut to follow the Bhape of the train, the veil coming to the very edge of the hem. No attempt at hemming is made th cut edges are better liked. That little front piece Is made Just halt the width of the tulle, and is gathered onto a bit of white ribbon, fastening Into place with two white bone hairpins, in stead of with the pins which are the dread of the maid of honor. Some brides are dispensing with orange blossoms, substituting instead lilies of the .alley, or any wee white flower, or dls penslng with any flowers at all in the veil. An occasional bride copies a pretty Eng lish fashion of wearing a classic wreath of myrtle or white heather. VEIL FOR THE EASTER BRIDE Tall the Material for the Utsg Flowlasr Arranaement for the Head. Tulle In true weddlrg-veil width two yards and a half wide makes the dla phanous head drapery for almost every bride. Lace veils are the rare exceptions and are practically only worn by some lucky mortal who Is blessed with an heir loom In the shape of a veil of exqulslt priceless laoe. Stnoe the old days, . when veils were laid on In the most trying ways Imaginable, plain as a pipe-stem, perhaps made even more trying by the addition of the Inevitable wreath, or half-wreath, of orange blossoms, the draping of the wed ding veil has come to be recognised as one of the most important points about the wedding costume. There is the widest latitude as to the rrangement of the folds upon the head. Whatever Is most becoming Is In good taste, the arrangement of the orange blos soms being subject to as many variations as the tulle Itself. Coronets of orange blossoms are still worn, and some of the prettiest ideas of all are adaptations of that Idea. Some times a heavy braid of hair Is brought around the bead to simulate a coronet. the tulle draped on, and, with the orange blossoms, made to follow the same grace ful line. Or the tulle Is draped upon a foundation fulled oot with the orange blossoms ar- GLOVES IN VARIETY OF SHADES Armlets the Novelty, bat Fashion Calls for the Pall Length Still. The armlet or glove top Is the newest thing shown at the glove departments. It comes In kid and silk, and chiefly In black and white. It looks like the top of a long glove cut off Just below the top button. Instead of a button, however, It fastens at the wrist with a clasp and the tops are In the same lengths as the long gloves. These are worn with the short sleeves. Until the weather gets warmer the mocha and glace kids will be the correct, thing for street wear, but before long th silk and lisles In lace and plain will be In order. Practically all the gloves are long, ranging from eight to twenty buttons, although the twelve and slxteen-button lengths are most in de mand. Of course these gloves are not actually buttoned, that term being used merely In Indicating lengths. There are a few buttons at the wrist to hold the glove close, and these are round, bead shaped and of pearl. The pure white suede Is the smartest thing in the street glove for dress, but It Is - scarcely cractlcal. and black and the shades to match the costume will undoubtedly be most worn. There Is a gratifying variety of colors, Niles, reseda, bluetts, corals, pearl, biscuit, violet and gray shades being shown. The gray glove Is the seller, hower, chiefly be cause of the popularity of that color In suits this year. In novelties, a short kid glove has a tinted band at the wrlt and this is embroidered In colored silk, the same shades occuring In the stitching down the back. The automobile glove, Is Inflinitely more practical than beautiful. It Is of soft leather with the top flaring In a soft gaui.tlet that is lined with soft leather. It is held to place by means of .an elastic set In at the under side of the wrist. The regulation gauntlet Is still la favor for riding glove. ' An Easter Woola. Minna Irvine In Lealla'a wiriu "It Is Plaster tomorrow," she sorrowfully sighed, Pr but a beautiful maid. 'And I've nothing to wear but a locket threadbare. And a bonnet m11 rmmnlul miA ...-. ,. But she went to the garret, and under the eaves. Where a snider wna v,nvin. - ... ti Great-grandmother's best she unearthed irorn a chest Th sail" DW when the Mayflower set The daintiest figure that ever stepped forth From a miniature studded with pearls Was a slender young- maid -In ih t-.t'o parade. With a "coal-scuttle" hat on her curls." For the deep Tuscan brim, with Its lmina of pink. Was a frame to a face like a rose. And the sllver-brocuded silk gown, though twas faded, Gave a glimpse of a breast Uke the snows. man who was handsome and wealthy aad proud, And crowned with the laurels of fame Beheld her arrayed In the ancient brocade Like a picture stepped out of a frame. "Oh. there Is a girl with a soul above clothes. Who would shine In her beauty amid The queeua In their crowns and their sr-mlne-ilned gownsl I will mas. am tuy wife." and he did, E53S5S33 XVMl XI HATTY BLACK HAS JAGS OF EASTER BUNNETS FOR MEN THE VALUE KIND AT THE $2.50 PRICE. ALL THE NEW SHAPES, STYLES AND COLORS IN EASTER NECKWEAR and other Easter trimttiius. NEW LINE RAIN COATS, $10.00 and $15.00 n nx stw? 1 "o) Oj 107 South 16th St., Omaha. "s miuamisnMiiiiiiii imi.i winiiisiiiis .iitiiaMi,i tun rasj7J.lJ,iii .iiilil. i ill n mini n. "WP m in. nWl ami nwi,wniwsiiii.isnpnjiii.i .i.i, n jm 7 a sa Those Long iRoomy'Suits; that you like so well are made by M M ony, m(E. Just Tailors, That's All Suits to Order. ... . $25.00 and up Trousers to Order $6.00 and $12.00 320 South 1'Sth Street SKI 2 THE GIFT STORE "When the Violets Gome" $100 IN A DUnOND BEAT5 $1,000 IN A BANK is a little Easter folder we will give or send you if you wish. We have Easter Gifts galore we wish you to see. Snappy, good looking things for little money that you will like to see if you don't buy. And we want you to keep your eyes open for our Silver Easter Fern Dish and Fern at a very low price. Will be in our window. We care for and repair Eyes, Watches, Clocks and Jewelry. T. L. EvuBS & CIFT STORE JEWELERS 1520DOUGLAS STREET 1520 i. 'J M