THE I SUNDAY OREGONTA! PORTLAinJ; - MATf v 1923
10
LOVELY LINGERIE FOR TROUSSEAU EASILY
. MADE IF ONE BEGINS IN PLENTY OF, TIME
Finest Sflk Crepes, Georgette and Wash Satin Used for Night Dresses, Combinations, or Two-Piece Suits,
and These Are Decorated With Wonderful Embroidery and Laces.
m rest ymm
MAHY lovely garments can be
mads for one's trousseau If one
rtarts long enough before to
make them; and a great saving will be
effected, besides having the real
pleasure there should be in fashioning
the dainty garments. -
Tha finest silk tcrepes, georgette and
Wash satin are all used for night
dresses, combinations, or little two
piece cults, and these are decorated
With the most wonderful embroidery,
lace Insets, etc. One gown recently
seen was made of a pale blue satin
striped georgette. This gown had a
yoke of filet lace, straight across
under the arms, and filet straps going
ever the shoulders. There were four
mall diamond-shaped pieces of the
georgette set In the yoke at each side
of the front and back. The georgette
was. gathered Into the bottom on the
yoke, and the lower edge of the gown
was cut In scallops, , these being
bound with the self material. One
small pocket, pointed at the bottom
and lace trimmed across the top, was
set on the skirt.
There is but little work about these
fragile garments that should be done
on the machine. The sewing and cut
ting cannot be too beautifully done
for carelessness would show plainly.
A third gown was made of this
same peach-colored crepe, cut straight
across under the arms and finished
with an outside, shaped facing, which
formed a yoke. This facing was in
deep violet shade. Over the shoulders,
in place of the usual strap, there were
four half-Inch double folds of the
violet, feet on just as the straps are.
These were a half inch apart, and
there were four on each shoulder. In
the front, on the shaped facing, there
were little flowers embroidered In
white. . -
A second gown -was made of the
finest crepe in a peach shade. It was
cut witnout sleeves, and the deep arm-
hole was finished with a bias binding
in lavender. The bottom was hound
the Same way, and the bateau shaped
neck had the same finish. Across the
front and back below the neck there
were six groups of embroidery. These
were violets, embroidered to form
rings, and there were three of these
groups across the front and three
across the back. In cutting this
gown, fullness was allowed at each
under arm, and this was shirred In
place in finishing.
There were drawers and a short
chemise to match this gown, the
chemise almost a duplicate of. the
gown, except in the length. The full
ness at the sides was held in place by
smocking. The lower edges of the
draweis had the same shaped right
side facing and a little embroidery.
A casing through which an elastio
was run finished these step-ins at
the Waist line.
EVEN MOST BEAUTIFUL GIRL
HAS TROUBLE WITH HER HAIR
Fins Texture Requires More Attention Because, of Silkiness Katherine
MacDonald's Tresses Not of Great Length. '
4,
f ' t ' '' " - f
f BT ANTOINETTE DONNELLY,
' ARTICLE NO. 3. ' , -- "
LOS ANGELES. (Special' corre
spondence.) How does the most
. beautiful woman . in the world
care for her lovely locks? How does
she dress her hair? Is it naturally
curly? Does she henna it? Bleach
It? Or leave it au naturel?
I suppose you are most Interested
to know; if being so beautiful exempts
one from the ordinary brushings and
shampoos and marcels and the other
Incidentals of care attached to the
calp and the hair.
Yes, the charming Miss Katherine
MacDonald, voted by artist and lay
man the most beautiful girl in the
world, has her own little bair trou
bles, even as you and I.
To begin with, her hair I of that
' extremely fine texture that requires
Snore attention hy reason of its silki
ness. IX is not of great length, com
ing a little below the shoulder blades,
but growing quite abundantly from
out K8T scalp. ' It Is quite without
natural curl, much to the beauty's
great sorrow, for therein lies most
of her troubles el coiffure. She has
to have it marcelled frequently, as
the curl remains not so long as if
the hair were a bit more wiry or
coarse.
Her picture work naturally calls
for a well-coiffed head whether she
happens to be suspended from a col
lapsing bridge or playing hostess at
aa afternoon tea. Consequently, more
irequent application of the iron is
SAoessary than were another voca
Cbii chosen by her. And this. Miss
SlacDonald appreciates, has to be off
set with more brushings and more
critical general care. -
. Another, item of hair discomfort
the motion-picture actress encounters
is the intense heat untter-which- -the
studio pictures are taken. I was
amazed at its strength as I stood-not
nearly as close to the machine as
the players must, and every one of
the girls , complained to me of the
drying effect this continuous heat
has on the scalp and hair.
' But Miss MacDonald puts a power
ful lot of faith in the hair brush as
a- come-back for the damaging effects
of the iron and light. She brushes
It morning and night, and if she has
to comb her hair a-.second or third
time during the day she gives It an
additional brushing before it goes up.
Shampoo Every " Friday.
Every Friday ' morning for ' years
she has had the hairdresser come to
her home and give her a shampoo.
Until she was a full-grown young
woman she washed her hair at home.
She claims the only shampoos and
marcels given her away from home
were on the few occasions she was
forced to do so when traveling.
Her Friday-morning ceremony be
gins with a thorough brushing by the
visiting hairdresser.. -Thenher head
is immersed in a bowl of warm water
not hot. A lather is produced by
reducing a white soap to liquid, pour
ing it over the hair and into the
scalp, and rubbing. Three different
lathers and rinsings are indulged
then a spraying with lukewarm water
is given, and a final rinse in a weak
solution of white vinegar. This, she
believes, provides flufflness and
luster.
The final rinse kvith every fourth
shampoo is of a different nature. Miss
MacDonald's hairdresser, buys henna
leaves in wholesale quantity, a hand
ful of which she adds to a big pail of
water, steeps it so that the liquid
has no red or brown cast to it, but an
Ivory color which does not affect the
color, of.'the hair. Respecting her
hairdresser's claim, Miss MacDonald
believes it preserves the natural tone
of her hair, and is healthy. Henna,
when bought wisely in leaves contain
ing no mineral dyes, is healthful, but
would better be left to the use of an
expert, for If there are too many
leaves added to the water it is apt to
entirely change the color of the hair.
Hair Rnbbed Dry.
The frequent brushing and sham
pooes leave Miss MacDonalds scalp
free from dandruff trouble, except in
the normal amount which the average
healthy head may be subjected to now
ana- then.
"I never did have and never will
hat e a machine to dry my hair," said
Miss MacDnnalfl. As rna,,,
it actuallv taken. lnne-pT tr i.- ..v...
hair than to wash it, because I insist
upon its being rubbed dry after
Dreliminarv DrocerinrA nf awath;n-
,u uui luweis. xnacs wnere my girl
gets in her most erc.ell
my hair. She massages my Bcalp until
me nair is pertectly dry, which 1
edUlVaiOnt CO one nnmn eta or,rt nAn
sistent'.j regular scalp massage every
wecK. lK. .
VWhiPn WA hflVA an nnnn.titn;tu
let the sun help, we betake ourselves
10- me yara lor tne massage.
'I am-Awfullv narHr-iitop ohm,, .
celling," continued Miss MacDonald,
"Because it has tn ha rlnnA an fre
quently the iron cannot be too hot,
else I would havA a vnrH ,
The same woman does It every time
ana one Knows now the exact degree
of mildness of heat In the iron I Insist
upon. And I want a larire. loose WA.VA.
.,"1 don't .like a head that , looks
waved," she said, emphatically.; "Take
a,15-year-ald girl with a shop window
marcel, and. vou havA 95iraai.ni,i
suddenly- confronting you. : The same
,-uie :ui uimension applies with
older girl. It adds years that
viously marcelled and dressed head
hansi' - -
Miss MacDonald uses the finest
tooth comb she can hn v on anmm, nt
the quality" of her hair. The' coarse
ones leave me track or the comb,
says. ' i
1 Coif fare Is Becoming.
The lovely contour of her head is
due in part to the studied Una of in
coming coiffure. This is how she does
it. She begin j by making a part from
the center of her head straight down
the middle of the back, separating it
in two distinct parts and leaving the
front hair all free. She takes the left
side of the back and pins that pretty
well toward the middle of the back
head. Then she makes what she calls
a two-inch part on the left front,
leaving the right front to be taken
care of later. From the two-Inch part
she weaves the left hair into becom
ing lines, pinning it here and there
as she draws it back over the left-ear
and tucking the ends in with the left
back. Then the front right is taken
and arranged down on the forehead
first, then drawn back over ears and
over the back hair to complete the
French swirl. After this has all been
pinned down she takes a fine comb, )
puua nit, imii uvcr me luieaeaa, and
fluffs it out on the front par); of the
head until it assumes just the right
degree of height and line before the
net is put over it. It may sound much
more complicated than the procedure
really is, and the success of It is In
practtc'nr until you get the lines that
suit your face.
jiP n : x ou
Hptni'- v,Splendid
Offering
Choice of 100
in the Very Newest Designs
at the Sensational Price of
v . r , - i i t
jgr .ror one weeK oniy,- Deginmng tomorrow morning, we re going to present a saie oi iioor
r ryl lamoa that will outdo any we have ever 'offered; from a standpoint of price and va-
' riety of designs. . - . . . ..... '.. . .' . ,
These floor lamps come in a variety of styles in both shades and, standards, and while the Dlustrations do not picture the
actual designs, they are so familiar that you may know what- to expect. , ' ' :
The standards are finished mahogany, fitted with silk cord, .double socket and invincible chain pulls. The shades are of the
very newest designs' and -colors ; and come in two and three-tone , effect all are lined-with silk or satin and finished with
silk chenille fringe. In every in stance these lamp3-are priced far below regular, so ctfme early and get best choice. . . ;
One Dollar Down Delivers Any Lamp You May Select . ; See Them in the Windows .Today
Floor; Lamps - j i lllflli
S10Cash,$2.50Week
Buys This No. 210
. Bnmswick;-
It is equipped with the all-record Ultona,'.
the molded wood horn, and all the ex
clusive features which, have, made the
Brunswick . so popular.! ".The-., price : is
$150 and the credit terms are so very
low that anyone can afford this popular
model. . The new Brunswig records for
June now on sale. - ; . , ,
"No Interest"
Period
Chiffoniers
In Ivory Enamel
Extra Special
$23,75
If you require additional ; storage
space in your chamber j' these pret-' '
ty period chiffoniers at. this very
special price will fill every; want.'
They are fitted with ' large-plate
mirror, decorated with pretty mo-"'
tifs and fitted with, six drawers.".
The price is very unusual. .
"Herrick" Refrigerators ;
' 9 ? ; The Best That Are Built I
The main object of any refrigerator is the preservation of foods. The fefrigera
tor that will keep foods in perfect condition longest is naturally the refrigerator
you want providing it doesn't increase your ice bills. .
' Herrick Five-Point Insulation
No refrigerator is better than its insulation. And in no part of refrigerators is
there greater difference than in the kinds of insulation used and the way it is
used, ', Defective insulation wastes ice and interferes with the efficiency of your
refrigerator just as ; much as defective cylinders waste gasoline and prevent
perfect operation of your automobile. Herrick Five-Point Insulation" off ers you
; five important advantages. It is positively air-tight and weather-proof makes
foods, and ice last longer. It is the most successful non-conductor of heat or
colds keeps warm air out and cold air in. It neither admits nor allows animal
' life to exist -v it sanitary clear through. It cannot decay, mildew or become
affected by age does not lose its effectiveness. It is the best refrigerator built.
Easy Terms .'. '
A Sale of Sample
Reed Carriages
Sample carriages of which, there are
but one of a kind are tm sale this week
atiSpecial prices- A few numbers are
listed below to give you an idea of the
saving.
$39.50 reed carriage, an ex
ceptionally good number at
.$28.00 reed top, reed body
sulky for ' only . . . ......
$42.00 small size reed, car
riage in ivory for
$48.50 ivory wood side car
riage with reed hood for . . .
$40.50 reed carriage with ;
reversible gear at
$33.50
S20.00
S32.75
S37.75
S42.75
$98.00' Overstuffed $79 Cft
Tapestry Davenports P I OU
Think of being able to buy a really good davenport in a splendid tapestry cover for so
low a price. These davenports are all full length with loose spring filled cushions,
spring base, roll arms and high comfortable: three-section backs. We have sold scores
of them at the regular price of $98.00 but an overstock at this time demands the im
mediate selling of some thirty pieces, hence the price. If you .are interested in a
new davenport for-your living room,' you 'will surely be here this week. Other daven- .
ports from $110 to $350 with every price between. '
Rustic;
Hickory Porch
Chairs
in a Sale
$5.75
Just at the opening of the summer
season, we" offer rustic hickory
porch chairs at a decidedly special
price. These chairs have woven
splint seats and splint backs, are
strongly, made " and suitable for
porch or lawn use. , As. the quan-
. tity is limited, we suggest early
choosing.
The Finest Rug Creations Made in America
Bengal
Oriental Rugs
Bengal American-Made Oriental Rugs are the world's most cele
brated reproductions of oriental floor coverings. They are cre
ated in America to fit present day needs. These rugs are woven
. entirely in one piece and can be washed and treated the same as
. the imported oriental. Every . Bengal oriental rug is an exact
counterpart of a carefully selected oriental subject, not only in
pattern detail but the arrangement of colors is reproduced with
the utmost care. Every rug is guaranteed both for color and
wear. Prices are as follows:
2- 5x4-6 Bengals at $ 25.00
3- 2x5-5 Bengals at $ 37.50
4x7 Bengals at 57.50
6x9 Bengals at $125.00
8x10 Bengals at.. $159.50
9x12 Bengals at.. $175.00
9x15 Bengals at.. $250.00
11x15 Bengals at. .$325.00
Bed, Spring, Mattress
the Complete Outfit
$27.50
This outfit consists of a continuous post bed, a
high riser spring and a good quality felt mattress
put up in art tick. The bed and spring are of the
widely known Simmons quality, the mattress one
that we can recommend.:
$46.50 Period
Ivory Chifferettes
$31.50
These chifferettes are built with two large draw
ers and two sliding trays concealed back of double
doors. They are prettily decorated and trimmed
with metal pulls. Large roomy pieces that are
really exceptional at the price.