Mm Mims iFm the jmm vjmMi Sb i . ...... ;.--.y j ! P J$tyk wttf ' : ?,? H ' ; ' ' ' i i '. '.' A l!i .) ; r ' :v A : ! I w ? i 1 I i i - V ; I of Dotted. SVr-i'5S Vzmmf in Vicrl kQLjenciejnrzes Xa.ce Insert xtz& 17SCK illninesa and tha straight up anil , down attests rufe in fashion, all llnrl this Hfitison 1a designed with tha Idaa of eliminating; ' all possible flufDnaas. Ls use has been found for the starched white muslin petticoats this year than for many aeasons back. .The narrow, smart skirt that does not flare an Inch from the hem Is responsible, for the shelving; of petti coats. As there must not be the allajhtest evidence of petti coats, the lightest materials possible are chosen: voile, nlnon, marquisette, and chiffon are used In ahort walking; length for wear with street dresses said for evening gowns.- But the woman who wants a soft, clinging petticoat for general or morning wear cannot afford these One materials. Instead, this season she is using pongee stot the coarse grained kind for gowns, but a soft 1 pongee that comes In white and all colors, wears well, and washes well. The skirts are usually extremely narrow, as - care fully fitted as the outside skirt, and trimmed with a cant circular ruffle or wide tucks. They are out an "Inch shorter than the outside skirt. Draw strings are not uaed. Instead, the skirt Is carefully fitted about the waist Una, to eliminate the slightest bulklnesa of material there. Most of the petticoats, too, are made to open up the front or the side, and are usually glove clamped. 4 . China silk and messaltne are also favored materials for these slinky petticoats. These light, soft silks are admirable petticoat materials, and when not adorned with sheerest of flounces, are trimmed In many ways. One extremely expensive Imported petticoat was of the softest, lightest white sMln which had consider able body despite Its softness. A deep, scant flounce was act on the aklrt at the bottom, and over It fell a uperb white fringe.. In a number of the models the flounces are aet on with Inserts of lace, or with cleverly grouped tiny tuck. Combination garments are everywhere favored. Ttaey are shown made of the finest batiste, cambric, r muslin, and enriched by scant ruffles of lace or flat embroidery bands. In nearly all of these gar ments the seamless shoulder Is shown, as It Is In night dresses, corset covers, and chemises. These garments are nearly all made ' along the straight princess lines. The combination of corset cover, drawers, and short gklrt leads. While there are a number of corset covers ebown with fullness, many are closely fitted by darts, as the combination la generally worn with tha idea of giving one greater slenderness. Tha new drawers how wide skirt portions, which are trimmed with Aeep 'but scant flounces having practically flat lace dges. The flounces are usually opened their entire length , at the outer side, and the facing corners so formed are elaborate with Inserts of Valenciennes or Cluny lace. At the top of thle allt In the flounce la . usually a large bow of soft ribbon. Some, but not all, are cut with circular tops that ts. two half circular ones, which, though fitting abso lutely over the hlpe, flare quite a bit at the knees. All the pantaloon akirts are made In thta way, and ome of the more noticeable are finished at the top with a three lneh band which shapes around the form tike a shallow yoke, though really rising Into a belt form. s Full length gowns for boudoir wear are nearly all made In the classic princess form, with wide effect at the waist, but with few, if any, gathers at the top. These and the tea-gowns of the year are usually In thin silk, or crtpe or in any of the clinging materials, enriched by pretty undersllps of sufficiently strong tone to show through the materials, snd with floes em sroldrrie. In delicate, effective designs. Borne of tlie quaint trimmings of the year are com bined in the tea gowns. Shell plaits or those ruched plaits which ar being revived from the fashions of the fifties, often border at the foot and the front of the gown. They are made in the old fashioned way, f tWTeta, sometimes fringed at each side, snd some times hemmed. Fringes of the long thin sort are being utilised In the trimmings of these boudoir frocks. Thoy usually edge berthas or fichus of silk. Irish lace, especially the Carrickmarroaa variety, is used freoly about the coreege portions of the more elaborate boudoir gowns, and small round collars of this and the heavy Boulogne lace are seen with the majority of the gowns having Dutch necks. Apropos of theta. ihe wearing of ribbon ties Is not permissible with them. Quaint brooches, set with cameoee or miniatures, or with some unpolished stones, are the appropriate pins to use. or in lieu of these a rosette of silk, or lace, er velvet Is worn. Ajtother Important polat in these boudoir gowaa la S -" ', :".,' f " AlBrll iiA . I If r-3ertinSinTor-chii.Orn? o the Silk 3--n&L Pr-i inces-s. jdtc-. lara their inside treatment. They are all unllned and faced at the foot, no matter how thin the outer roatorial, with fine cloth to weigh them softly. The top of the cloth is usually herringbone stitched Instead of be ing 'hemmed. This method of finishing Is flatter than the hern with the turned In edge and therefore much better for a thin material. The cloth must match the outer material in color as nearly aa possible, so that It i will not be noticeable. One of the moat pleasing of the boudoir gowns shown was of simple Japanese form, modified and rather scant and was hand embroidered about the edge, and also over the bust and shoulders. It was made of the sheerest batiste and was to be worn over a similar garment of Chinese silk in some pale tone. ' No boudoir outfit would be complete this aeaeon with out several caps breakfast caps, boudoir and curl caps. The latter consists of a cap with a coiffure built , in it. A cap I recently saw was made of the whitest, crlspeet muslin. It waa so white K waa blue, and It was slightly transparent to show arrangement of the was slightly transparent 10 snow arrangement or me hair underneath. I afterward Earned that the coiffure la built right in the cap and that the cap is pinned on, hair and all. when you dress for breakfast or for early callers. However It is managed, it is certainly a success. Through the sheer cap I counted puffs, curls, and a coronet braid. The all silk morning cap la an Improvement on all the others, and as It is tha newest thing of all you may want to know about It It la a morning cap, and ,t m enu,.,!, of oft glossy silk. It is lined with satin of the same color and It Is slightly padded to make it keep Its ehapev It is called the Virginia cap, though why Virginia t don't know, aa no southern woman ever went to such deception. The secret In the Virginia cap. Ilea In building It of silk that exactly matches the hair. ' If hair is a deep brown, the cap must bs of the same shade of brown. If the hair shades a little, one Is compelled to get shot silk shading a little into red. When the cap Is pinned on the head at breakfaat time it looks more ltke the real hair than the hair itself, and what a comfort these caps are. I have a blond friend who has a cap of yellow silk as deep as gold. The cap ! made In soft fashion to lis upon the head In little folds. When she gets it un you would never guess that it hid hair that had not been dressed. There is another new cap In the feminine wardrobe. It is made like the dunce hats that come In paper mottoes. It, too, must be of silk or satin of the color of the hair, and is to be worn when you haven't donned the switch and pempadour. The whole art of putting on these caps lies la placing becomingly. Put on In the wrong wsy, they are grotesque. A cap worn at bridge parties Is made of fur. It might almost be called a toque except that a toque le a hat, and you nmr see these fur caps in the street or anywhere exoopt at bridge parties. They are of aofteet fur and apparently ahapeleea. . The top is laid in artless fold v. s plnuad to the head in a thorough fashion, which lr;i ) It down almost to the ears and eyebrows. At one silo there is a long and picturesque willow plume. This saay sound odd, but to any one who has seen a bridge cap of this kind worn at a card party where hats are nermlaViible It conveys much that Is pretty. One trouble with the up U that most women da THE OMAHA' SUNDAY HEK: NOVEMBER j Asm . . : f r ' V ' Ml 7 Fin.xsh.edi in Front wittx. L&z&s CVa.va--. Sho2rtr Sleeves Opcxx on. -f -L, &UnrJl-1fi to -ow- Tfi'rthAmAm f3- ? "T A?Wi?r Sl&mqoYm. 3i Liinen. TxxTii7xt&i xt. 'Vxleradennfs. not know how to n.ake up for it. They wer it badly. I have seen caps put over a head of balr that was dull and glosuless. The hair must be kept clear and lively and the cap must be merely regarded as a trimming. Caps would be more successful If women better understood their own color scneme. If your cap is trimmed with pink ribbon It means that your cheeks must be pink. Few women past their first prime have pink cheeks, and for that reason they should avoid the vivid pink touch In their caps. The rose colored shades will be found much kinder. . In night gowns the slip over models are most favored, but any number of attractive models are shown fastening down the front. In many Instances there Is a tiny plaited frill of narrow width applied to both aides of the front plait. A fancy collar made of the material, tucked, edged with Valenciennes lace, usually extends in two points, both back and front. Narrow tucked cuffs, edged with a frill to match the front trimming, finish the aleeves at three-quarter length. A novelty shown is the princess night gown. It Is semi-fitted to the high empire waist line, and faatens in the back with small pearl buttons. Fullness is supplied by a circular cut of tbs bottom section, elab orated by inserting and lace. A great many of the night gowna shown this season have tha embroidered Initial on them. The close fit ting waist line in the empire effect Is obtained in some modele by the use of ribbons run through head ings and Insertions, with bows and long ends as finish; but the straight cut, loose model, with no suggestion of waist line, but falling In soft, straight folds. Is the sty Is most in favor. Ad Improvement noted during the last year is the long, unboned coreet skirt, wtiich It Is predioted has come to stay. This long casing improve the contour of every flgurev whether the body Is slender or etout. 13. 1010. but, of course, the latter receive the greater benefit, as it accomplishes the desired hip reduction. The newest models are designed In a manner to give excellent service, as the tendency of the cloth to tear or to pull out when in a sitting position has been con sidered and the corsets are constructed on lines which eliminate this fault. In some cases there is a cut out section In front and a band of webbing so cleverly in serted that it acts as an abdominal support for figures that are really slender, as well as holding the flesh firmly In place for the stouter woman. Another use of the rubber gusset is made In the bust and It too has been found a practical improvement, aa the sitting posture la more comfortable for the stout woman If the bust Is allowed to settle well into the corset. The use of these elastic webbings on tha corsets is becoming more and more common. The chief objection to them is that the elastic has a tendency to loee Its elasticity. The new webbing, however, appears to be much more durable, less susceptible to changes of tem perature and capable of remaining firm and strong aa long as the corset lasts. To glvs the correct figure line, straight boned goring Is used instead of the transverse, and for slender figures it is not as close together as In former models. There are many novelties shown in corset material In embroidered and brocaded effects, but fabrics for corset making In which the average woman Is In terested are the weaves which are soft and fine, but strong enough to give good service. Batiste a&d Im ported and domestlo coutlls are staple fabrics, always in demand. In trimming there la. a tendency to get away from the full ruffles and laces, embroideries, silks and rib bon are used in scant proporttona A new finish which Is perfectly - flat. Is a fitted piece of cotton net which follows the top edge of the coreet and extends In a pointed finish on either side of the front. A flat cotton braid Is used to work out an ef fective braided pattern, and makes an attractive finish. Although the rumor has gone forth Hint the next corset models will show a smaller waist line and de cided curve of the hips, the fashionable woman and the fashionable shops still cling tightly to the straight, uncorseted figure effect the return of the short waist line being partly renponsible for this, The new corsets are longer from the wniat line. Fortunately the new figure lines conform more to those with which nature has endowed most of us than has been the case for some seasons. The shorter length of the upper portions of the new corsets allows . plenty of freedom for the lungs. But the fact that the corsets are so much lower at the top makes It almost absolutely necessary for a woman of medium or stout figure to wear the brassier, or bust sup porter, in order to preserve the smooth figure line and to obtain the trim, natty appearance. Thers Is another type of figure which requires the bust supporter for an entirely different purpose than that of reducing or confining the superfluous shape to the prescribed lines. This form usually haa a low. bust so low that between the swell of the bust and the shoulders are deep hollows, plainly visible, not only on an evening dress, but on any dress that la not padded. This defect was partly remedied by the high bust corset when that was in good vogue. With the low corset the bust supporter must force tha flesh into these hollows so naturally that a low neck dress will show only a perfectly smooth surface.. This is best accomplished by the supporters which lace in front and extend to n a the wulst line. The lacing, being adjusted from the bottom, will push the flesh up to exactly the position desired and hold It there without the rigidity of the high bust corset. This type of figure must not be confounded with the angular type that require padding, but la usually fleshy and well rounded everywhere else. The only line that needs correcting is the one from the top of the shoulders to the waist line. An entirely new design in brassiere is made of net, lightly boned, and adjusted by draw strings. This garment is shapely and wears satisfactorily. The net is of a coarse mesh variety, sufficiently elastio to adapt Itself to the natural lines of the figure, but stayed In such a manner that the form Is kept in per fect shape. ' Borne of the beat styles In brassiere are made and trimmed like corset covers, so that there Is no neces sity for an extra garment. The fronts are so boned that they can easily be slipped out before they are sent to the laundry, and they can Just as readily be replaced. A further desirable Innovation ts the re inforcement shield that is sewed to the under arm Just where the friction of the under arm Is likely to rub the material tbln. so by this simple addition the garment will wear much longer. In buying a corset or a brassier don't buy a slse toe small for you, under the impression that you can lace yourself into it. Every piece of both garments Is cut in proportion to the slse, and If you choose a slse smaller than the correct one you simply throw every line of the corset or the brassier out of Its place, and the consequence is a poor fitting corset; and your gown, no matter how well made, will show the effect of the poor corset. A good fitting corset will make Itself evident even under an old fashioned garment. The manufactured corset Is usually more satisfac tory to the wearer than a custom made corset, for the latter Is usually made to fit the Imperfections of the figure, while the manufactured article Is cut te hide the defects. A final word: Do not Invest In a number of corsets at one time. Have two corsets, one for common and the other for dress up wear. It Is the same with uuderweer; a large supply of underwear is only an anxiety. If not looked after, they frequently grow yellow, or a vagrant, disrespectful mouse eats large pieces out of them. Styles, too, alter frequently In corsets and underwear, as they do In outer garments; also the human figure alters from time to time, and . the garments are hopeless. Have a comfortable supply of lingerie, but do net accumulate. t