THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL. PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 28, 1915. WHAT WELL DRESSED WOMEN WILL WAR Return of the Small Waist Is Threatened Tkis Spring Fashion Decrees Mannish Suspenders for Women That Are Attached to the Skirt s J i " By Anne Rittenhouse. (OtfijTisht. 1UH. Ii.v the Uc-.lur Newnpuppr w HEN the leading tailors of fered cloth KBits that had sus penders attached to the skirts, women thought it was a ca price of the moment, probably invented as a thing to tide over toe ilull PMHon. Hut it seems as though the fashion was to be incorporated .into the spring styles. Kvery woman cannot wear it. The fashion demand.- a certain figure and the semblance vi youth. If not vouth itself. The rounded hack and the sloping shoulders are not the type that goes suitably with sus penders, or bretelles. as we call I hern When the wearer is a woman. The present ones am usually made of the sfcjrt material. I hey are sutt jected to the fanciful cutting that or nament.ed them in other davs when the designers thought it was attractive to run a xepnrate band across the hack between the shoulders and two bre telles over f-ach shoulder to join with a fancy buckle above the bust. The creed of simplicity that will dominate the fashions this season ex tends to the nci-i-KKones of dress as well as to its foundation stones. The bretelles urn jnannl.sh In snape and are attached to the rather high-walsted skirt with larg-. bone buttons run through exaggeratedly lure button holes. Thev mav cross In the back or run straight down the nisurc. I hat de ponds upon ones inclination. And it one docs not wish them to bt. made of the dress material tin-re is a. cnancc to play up a color scheme by using a bj-laht lone of silk or even velvet. The atlih'iiu woman, or rather the one who affects the straight out sim plicity ot a man s attire tor the open air is apt to choose suspenders made of tne. fabric of which the skirt and coat is cut. the woman who invariably turns to the gi:W gaivs of dress, wlio cannot or will not wear plain effects, will choose ih ornamental kind. Worii" Under Sport Coats. 1 lie oeiiiaiKl i r that s'cies of out door garments tti.it. v. have learned to all sport clotnes. has brought out. fhose stioemler.i on t p coats, as parts of sweaters, as brilliant adpinels to white linen skirts worn with white wash wa.sfs. At the last races held in Paris the smart women were wearing tho loos est kind ot coats, almost like cape-", 'thrown well awav li'im the trout ot the gown and held on bv means 01 two straps that crossed in front arm dis appeared in tlie back. J his fashion prch.i-bl y was responsible lor the bre telles we have with us now. there is little doubt, that women will acepl then.' with pleasure, for tnev prowl. a pood wav ot U'oiug without a jacket ! and yet reta miliar some Iihk between the. skirt and blouse. The line between the two is not so wtronglv marked when the skirt labrn goes over the shoulders, aril through-1 out tne entire Kamut or the spring i fashions there is ;m im-imaMon shown I to observe this metlmd. The new while senre suits lor tin south have hretellcs of light blue taf feta, and the short I a ket Is touched llj with colic r and cults to match. The sailor hat that is sold tor such suits is of white straw and satin with a blue i Dunn anout the crown Corduroy in Favor. It is sin prising that there are not more white erge suits: these were looked lor as soon as the southern ex odus began, but cordurov m several shades of tan, such as sand, twine, puttv, clay, and beige were lavjshlv offered. These immediately found favor. I Re spite their neutrality of tone, thev proved acceptable. Women round tneiTi an aiimiraole cnoice lor lu tvv , en the seasons, and. if brightening was : needed, It would bo supplied In a hat Women may nave turned their minds to ecoimmv in this vear id dras tic readjustment and looked, therefore. With suspicion on the white suit that r BROCADE COAT Thls coat, which is worn "The Show Shopi Is made of gold - and black brocade from one Cheruit designed lor herself. jii'lt , needs constant cleaning, or, it may be that these neutral colors, because of their fashion and their serviceability have made a strong appeal. Against white serge there has always existed the argument that it was rarely be coming, and vet one can argue nlong that lirn- concerning the various neu tral tones that all the manufacturers have found so beguiling. The usual bright coloring in the complexion of the average American woman helps her to sartorial ly digest many shades of dull tones that the pate woman cannot wear. Whatever the pros and-cons of it, however, the main fact Is that we are to wear more sand tones than ever before. 1 he have ousted the much heralded covert cloth which was such a close imita tion of the military khatu and there fore sentimentally exploited. Corduroy Suit Like Uniforms The dominating feature of many of I the spring suits in heavily ribbed cor duroy is the pointed fronts which the American tailors exploited early in the winter and put into their first lightweight coats. Added to these was the slightly tiighwaiste.J belt of the soldier ooing iield duty, and later, the cartridge belt in cloth was added. The latter, as vou probably know, is a strip of material m the width and outline ol an ordinary belt with round pleats standing awav from the sur face in an unbroken line; into each of these openings goes a cartridge when the soldier has the belt, but the line is for ornamentation pure and simple when the American woman wears it. it is a rather attractive idea when U is not overdone. An entire line of these, pleats extending across the chest is not altogether satisfactory, but a few such pleats placed directly acro.su the bust on either side of the front fastening, is quite fetching on a slim fig ure. It can lie nse in this fashion on a short jacket that has no helt, but the complete cartridge belt must no only with a coat that carries a belt at the. waistline, and it looks as though we should have verv tew coats, indeed, that did nor boast this ticcessorv. The Normal Waist. J nere is no eon t in ua t ion of the Jloven-age d m the belts ot spring, and, not even a suggestion that the wide girdle placed between hips and knees will bo welcomed. Whenever there is a helt, it outlines the normal waist, or ruses above it, but we have done fur a time, at least, with the or ientalizing ot the waist. In the irn menatc future, and no prophet can yo further than the adjective ' immedi .ite. we are. going to cultivate the hue ahtnit our bonies where for sev eral decades before this one we n ai'Kcd out a stronglv dividing line to separate the lower and toe imper parts of the figure. It has been neglei led. along with many other more serious mental and moral dividing lines, and the world has t way of swinging back IlKe a pendu- lnjn to -trainf- me ot its sell-imposed re 'I Ins .moral swing is one ot the most absorbing studies in the his tory ot fashion, for it is uicjoiibtedlv allied to moral movements. Restraint is to he the Keynote, the watchword, of this new decade into which we entered last August and the vai th. lever that pushed Un moral force m a new direction, or rather reversed it back Ml years. It is not possible tor tile clothes ot women to so on reflecting an age of license when an age of restraint has set in Every .feature of our modern life must necessarily come under the influence of the sfiirit that prevails already over this planet. (.one are the ilavs of un bridled opulence. Gone is the epoch of licentious expenditures. (iOiic is tli decade of contemptuous careless ness. W e tire a wiser, sunder, saner but a much better people. io me is hob) fast lived in vain. We to the s u ore me a 'oni- plishments of tins riotous past- we have laid hold of tremendous truths and blazed the wav tor a great era The terror oi .the magnitude of tilings we have swept awav and those we have established has entered our souls, and we have set our feet in soberer paths W e hitched our wagon to the stars and have traveled far. and we now face a new epoch in calmer air What has this to do with the resnr lection ot the normal waistline vo'i ask? Much. It is a straw In the new current of our lives, and straws have ever been signs Will Waist Decmma in Riz? I The absorbing, practical question of the moment, lar awav from anv his toric connection between clothes and moral development, is whether the small waist is to be expected. No on seems to be able to answer this, ques tion with anything like assurance, speculation is rife, Hud the experts think that by June we will be pull'ng in the corset strings, and the moralist will at once ask how that condition can be looked upon with approval a savoring of improvement. It is un healthy, ungraceful, and belongs to a phase of dress that represented the acme of artificiality Possibjy it is too much to expect of women and fashions that thev hold to improvement all along the line- it i not human to be evenly good- Original sin must break through somewhere, arid it seems impossible to depart from the license of Orientalism into the prudery of Victorianism without add ing error to reform. The pendulum has a way of swinging too far back. For several months the corsetieres have been pinching the corsets at the sides of the waistline with a fore sight born of an intimate knowledge of the drift of fashions. Then they added an inch or so to the bushline and began to support the back muscles by inserts of elastics, necessary to hold in the" accumulated flesh from the wearing of low corsets. Now they are undoubtedly pinching in the fronts of the corsets and the underarm pieces are becoming more rigid. What does this signify? Are they forerunners of a small waist, or a compromise in order that they may fit the new fashion, if it comes upon us quickly? Straight Girdle Fancied. The sketches that have been sent over from Paris as forerunners of the spring and summer styles show, a marked tendency to straight girdles passed around the figure directly at the line where the old waist used to be before we allowed the natural large ness of the figure to have Its fullest development there. These belts could not be worn with the frock, or skirt and separate blouse that shows a small decrease of size between the bust and the hips. White w light muslin frocks have - " t - ' a belt of three-inch black velvet rib bon which is a decided return to the days when small waists were in fash ion. The Empire line is also accentu ated in evening frocks and short Jack eta, but one des not yet see it on dav frocks; the individualist may try It out, but the average dressmaker is content to work out the return to the normal waist, which no slight prob lem in itself. You may think that the problem of trie women who must get a small waist is the more difficult one. as flesh has a way of remaining where it has gained a strong hold, hut. after all. the corsetiere faces the worst of the work. Unless she knows how to skillfully handle the shaping of a cor set and can contrive to give it a flex ible appearance at the normal waist line, the work of the dressmaker is in vain and the task of the woman who w nt a small waist is almost lmpos- ?iujt --iKaio iiH. a. oou.y uio w oeen aean the woman who is stout. The large waistline was her hope to'be fashion able, and if it is taken away, what will she do to be rightly dressed? Low Collars Tolerated. There is little insistence upon the fashion for the high collar. Some of the best dressed women are returning to the rolling low one, and in Paris they are wearing a collar that is high at the back and cut awav in front. There is no return to the shape that shows the entire back, of the neck, but evidently women have thrust aside the enveloping band under the chin. That dire promise of an increased double chin worked wonders in gaining a re fusal for an uncomfortable fashion. New blouses have height at the back of the neck always, but thev roll down to the bust in the accepted wav of last slimmer. The straight surplice is also accepted with its outline of white silk net or fine muslin. There is little disposition on the part of any of the new collars to lift at the side. They press flatly to the sides of the Mouse, or are placed be neath the fabric, showing as a soften ing piping. ADVENT OF PEACE i By Louisa A'hmuty Nash. Our ears are deafened by the dull thun der of the guns. Our eves are blinded by the weapons' sizz and flame i- iash-treaks from bursting slieris en veloped in black smoke; Our tongues are parched and dry can speatc not e en a name. Our thoughts take flight, thev know not where. What tlnn of broken hearts, all lying shattered on the pyre? And devils warfare bursting hellish walls through earth? Ave, seizing doJ s blue firmament for b;ittle-niHi-ge. W lnie sanctuaries divine and human are made ruined dearth '1 hrough wanton cannonade and fire! Oead bodies lie in heaps, their souls flown up to Heaven. W hile loved ones weep and mourn in living death I heir home-stay gone, while they must starve ;nd weep! Thank iod there are many here with ( hrist-like breath W ho Angel-aid have given. How long. O Lord, how long must this ! weird misery last I his fiendish, fearful holocaust I by servants pray that Thou Thy legions forth will send An i save our thousands ere they're lost rJ by Angel-legions of the past! On the mountain-slopes let Thy An gels glide Down 1 rom Thv thrones snow crowned, past crevasse and rock, Hrmgirig tlie air of Heaven and God lnspiring words. Iet them these closed heart-path-wavs, these self t-lastnesses un lock. And usher in the Blessed Peace! Mutiny Reported at Ghent. I'liris, J?eb. -7. A report is current here, but not confirmed, that a mutinv occurred at (ihent early this month in which about SuoO men, including 30 of ficers, were involved. According to this report, the mutineers were bound two and twoind sent in the direction of Brussels, Alalines. Antwerp and Naiimr. NEW TEA GOWN Tea gown of yellow chiffon and silver lace with girdle of purple satin. j On the left is a frock of white linen lawn with sleeveless jacket is? of white voile with collar and jacket embroidered in blue the jacket and in front shows a black velvet girdle. NEWEST TREND IN STYLES FROM THE MARCH BOOKS h.ach month the fashion books con tain surprises, and net'- are .some from the March bookfe: Have vou noticed the skirts with lit tle pockets on the belts? They are very attractive. I,rather belts with little pockets attached have appeared in the shops, and these, too, are inter esting. But the fashion books now show patterns for skirt with attached cloth belts, and hanging from the belts the flap of the pockets overlapping the belt, and two pockets, stitched to the skirt. Tney are made envelope-wise, raid the" flaps button down. They are decidedly suitaole for sport skirts. Scalloped hems are much in vogue. They are especially desirable with a full, circular hem, for every one who remembers circular skirts when they were in fashion before knows that it iu difficult to make a wide, circular skirt hang even and straight at the hem. The patt-jrn for a scalloped, circular skirt can now be purchased. You can buy a pattern now for the new long sleeve. It comes with sev eral patterns in one for a mousque taire, bishop and several other vari eties in several lengths. A pattern can be had foV a tea nap- Child Culture Hints for Mothers. Most mothers, and rightly, love their babies a great deal. This does not mean because they love them they should let their children go untrained altogether, or even until they outgrow babyhood. As a physician told a mother when she asked him what was the right age to begin to train her in fant, "Right now, madam, but you should have begun this work before your Infant was born." To be sure, an Infant is a tiny bun dle of instincts, but unless you are a great student of child nature you have no idea bow rapidly these instincts, aided by the nerves and brain Impres sions, become good or bad habits. These habits are more readily formed than broken. . . If the bad habits are to be destroyed the work must be done In infancy. Some parents boast because their chil dren have the same weaknesses they enjoy. Is It not bad enough that the . ...'.- 'i-"'.'s ' ; r ;. :'. : kin to be embroidered in satin and eye let stitch, and with this pattern six transfers come for 15 cents anybody could maka a charming set of tea nap kins, quite rivalling the real madeira work. One of the pretty patterns shows a bolero jacket, a detail of fashion that has been a feature of some of the ne-v French models. It is sleeveless, and maJde of silk, to wear over a lace blouse; it. is especially pretty. There are new designs for embroid ering nigntgowns and corset covers or combinations. A nightgown with a high empire waistline, embroidered in satin and eyelet stitch, would make a charming gift tor a spring bride. Have you one of those charming round, flat cushions for your boudoir'. If you haven t. why not make one? A pattern for embroidering one of thehe cushions is sold in an effectt-ve design of cherries. Patch pockets are much in fashion. A young girl's coat of especially goo 1 design is shown in one pattern with patch pocket j on both sides of the full gathered skirt portion. parents cannot eradicate their own weaknesses without boasting of those same faults in their offspring? This is especially true of manners. Good man ners are the easiest thing in the world to learn, if taught when young, but faultless manners cannot be cultivated after one is grown. After you have taught your baby to pick up the things he drops, give him the pleasure of doing the same thing for' you, for his nurse, or for any guest who happens to drop some thing. The child will look upon this as a privilege instead of a burden. If you want your child to be a pleas ure to you, and to others, teach him that he has certain rights, but he must respect those of others. A happy child is better than sunshine, but a noisy child is a nuisance. Therefore teach your infant that he can laugh and prattle to his heart's content in the nursery and. when the family is alone. It is far better to teach a child in dividuality thotrgh his work and play than to allow him to amuse himself at all times, and under all circum stances without considering the com forts of those around. Most children are irritable and dis satisfied because they are overs tiro-1 of embroidered green linen and a and a blue girdle. The gown on ulated by thought and attention. Chil dren follow their primal instincts, es pecially where physical activity is concerned. Do not be too anxious about your baby's walking and talk ing. Many a baby cultivates an ugly disposition and is even injured for life because some devoted mother thinks her baby will be considered backward if he does not walk at a certain age. If your child is a normal child he will walk when the right time comes. Much injury is done to the feet, ankles and the nervous system by encouraging children to walk too soonv Passport for Each Is RuJe. Washington, Feb. 27. German mil itary authorities now require that each person entering Germany be provided with an individual passport. A wife or minor child cannot enter upon a pass port held by husband or parent. This government has been so advised. NEW TOP COAT Top coat of brown satin with black 'I vet collar and cuffs, . wide band of the same finishing the skirt. The gown in the center the right is of white batiste with lace jacket, short in front. Through, , WHAT WOMEN ARE DOING IN HOME and FOREIGN FIELDS Paris Running a city "without men" is the novel etpcrienct- of Paris today. The woman are managing the railways, hospitals and hotels; move baggage, serve as conductor, chiuffeura and can drivers; and even clean streets, do car penter work and handle the pick ami shovel. London Mrs. J. C. Jenkins, an Amer ican woman from Minneapolis, aided by a coterie of American women here, has opened a factory where the unem ployed are given work. It is a knitting mill, and gloves and socks are being turned out for the soldiers. Ioulsville, Ky. Mrs. W. B. l)ixon, known to every child in Louisville aa the "story lady," has talked to over 6000 school children in and near Louis ville. Kindness to animals is her theme, and her work is being supple mented in other parts of the state by the Women's Auxiliary of the Kentucky Humane society Boston -One of the most int-jrt-stlng of the European women who lit.ve come to America in the interests of the suf ferers in the war zone is Countess Du mas. Althought she '.n American born, she has lived since childhood In Paris. Her husbi-id irf the sreat-grat-grand-son of Count Dumas, who was a friend of Lafayjtte and the aide of Co.mt Ro chamoeau in the Bevolutionary War. She is pleading the cause of war suf ferers in France. Atlantic City, N. J. That 100.009 babies hava been saved in the United States throuzh a riation-wlde cajnpalun of education of mothers, was one of the important reports submitted to tlu National Mothers' congtess. New fork - Arrangement are al ready being made for the biennial con ventions of the Federation of Women'i clubs, to be held here in May, 1916. The 1915 council will be held at Port land, Or., in June. New York Mrs. Arcnibald Alexan der, of Hoboken, friend and associate of Miss Anne Morgan in her civic up lift work, is to marry again. The biitlsrooni wyi be H. Otto Wittpenn, now a naval officer, and formerly mayor of Jersey City. The romance is said to be a direct result of association in welfare work. San l'rantlaco, Cal. Miss Greta Jo hanson, 14 vears eld, who won th world's championship for grace In high diving at the Olymphs gajnes In 1912, haa been appointed a member of the part men t oC - physical education in j L'nivwikiu ,uf cuxernia. he will teach the co-eds the art of swimming. The opening conference of American women working for peace in Kurope, and for the abolition of war among all civilised nations will be held here July 4- It is hoped to make Independence day more notable by the steps for peace to be taken at tnajt tlm. ht. I,oul, Mo. .A fashion show for the women of the south, west and southwest will open her on March It. Although her father opposed, Mlss Marjorie Pept-r Hell, known as the "million-dollar princess," will wed next June. Hh is only 17. She will bo the bride of Klchard Hlnrlchs, of WU Lout: Kprlngfleld, III. On of the most " 'sensational statements tn reaard to' eugonlcs is that which accompanies the bill for the adoption of a eugvnics lavr in Illinois. Kecorda of examinations at the Coulter iSettleinent, in Chicago, showed that 66 to 70 per cent ot opera- tions on women are for diseases that' would cause marriage licenses to be withheld. The Wisconsin law Is caus ing a decrease in weddings, and the Oregon law is being dodged by resi dents who go to neighboring states to wed. The Indiana senate recently passed a eugenics bill, and other states are tackling he problem. t Wellington, New Zealand An lc tion joke was recently perpetrated on the politician by the brown-akinned Maori women, who put up their own candidate and elected him over-seven candidates of the tegular "politicians. The women frankly admit that tt Was because their favorite- was young and handsemi that they thrust- groatnesa upon him. ' '-r' . Wanblngtop A . statu of r William Pitt, the great English statesman and friend of America during revolutionary days, will be unveiled here next Octo ber. It is the gift at American women living In England, ' , " Minneapolis, Minn. One of the most touching appeals from the war zone is that of Mrs. E. W. Siyirtleff. formerly t of Minneapolis. She Is devoting her self to caring fur the blind who have been driven from the fighting area in France. Dr. Cyrua Northrop, 1 of the University of Minnesota, is heading the list of subscribers to a fund to aid her work. Wants His Actresses Pressed. " Boston, Feb. 27. Mayor Curley says he cracks two birds with one stone in, his latest edict -calling upon "female of the stage' to wear more clothes. He savea Boston's morale, and the 'fe males' . from pneumonia. -