Image provided by: Ashland School District #5; Ashland, OR
About Ashland daily tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1919-1970 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 28, 1921)
M onday, Novem ber 28, 1921 MORE CALLS ARE MADE FOR SUITS Women Have Adopted Outfit for Their Uniform— Can Never Die, Maker Says. ASHLAND DAILY TIDINGS that they can. keep the straight, long lines for any figure. They are totally without fullness, to be sure, but they have a miraculous way of keeping staight In spite of everything. Every thing about them Is seemingly tightly fitted. The sleeves are, indeed, skin tight and the armholes are rounded and fitted to a nicety. Sometimes there is a belt set at a low waistline and tied into place, the exact placing of the waistline being in accordance with the individual proportions of the figure. Then, some of these three- PAGB THREW JEAN DE RESZKE, CARUSO’S PREDECESSOR AT THE METROPOLITAN OPERA HOUSE, ANO MISS MAY PETERSON, AMERICAN SOPRANO F IL M a .B I e s THE WOLF AND THE CRANE »ven MANY WITH VERY LONG GOATS Three-Quarter Lengths Permit Only Fraction of Skirt to Show—Keep the Straight and Long Lines. It Is hard to pry the American woman loose from her friend, tTTf^nilored suit. It is one of her most becoming assets. She likes it, she feels well dressed when she wears it, and hers is the figure that displays it to the very best advantage. And, observes a fashion authority, when the calendar says that autumn is here, the sd* bcomes the first noticeable change in dress expres sion. A prominent maker of suits—a man who has devoted the whole of his life to the study of this one by-path in women’s wear—said that he 'had had just as many, if not more, calls for suits this season as he had had any seasou in the past. This statement was made in the face of the fact that the general impression seems to be, in fashion circles, that the suit is losing some of its popularity. Now this tailor believes that the suit can never die. He says he knows that wom en have adopted it for their uniform, Just as the men need the suit for theirs. He realizes the fact that wom en diverge from the suit in many and varied manners, but he says that this costume as the foundation of a ward- robe is just as staple a thing as is the coffee they drink for their break fasts. You ask him: “Does the style of the suit change?” and he witheringly answers that it does most decidedly. Then, if you look at it with an un tutored eye. it is hard to see just where the changes come in. They are subtle, and they are slow, but, he assures you, they are changes, and the last minute of fashion standard demands that they shall be made. The encouraging side of all this slowness and subtlety is that it is‘not greatly noticeable—that the old suit, if it is designed along conservative enough lines, will last on indefinitely. And, combined with fhp « p art hat and the proper accompaniment of fHr. it APPS P ^ud in the ìu tjejìIng I « « « A A « V IR G IN IA M 3- A wolf for help was heard to groan For in his throat was stuck a bone. j A crane removed it with bis bill i Then asked for payment for his skill. • 4 « « • •< « r . « t ■ The wolf said, “Where’d you get that stuff! 1 I ell you its reward enough ! When in my jaws your head has been That you should get it out again!” The moral is—well Tm not able To see a moral to this fable. £»op, Jr. CHiCHESTER S PILLS _ T I I E D IA M O N I» E D A N D . e , Tlie three greatest cigarette tobaccos, blending MILDNESS- mellowness - arom a o n e -e le v e n cigarettes 2 O fo r . A ' 1 .Ils in I n d and G o ld m rtajlic\^A > W1'.h Blue R j b U n . \ ^ / . . a k o V ° •<*»«•• B u r o f y o u r v ¡'r u < e l» t- A k ( r d U C l l j S -T E H B .V I A II O N D B R A N D P I E L S . f r“ ’ years known as BcsLSafest, Always Reliabl SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE " ?l . I COMPLETE KITCHEN OUTFITS Suit of Brown Em broidered Duvetyn. Jean de Reszke, once the leading operatic tenor of the world and now its most famous singing teacher, doesn’t like cameramen. He hasn't faced quarter tailored coats are slit at the one before for eight years. But May Peterson, favorite concert star, sides from tlje bottom, so that the ends known as ‘‘the golden girl of the Metropolitan,” seems to have diverted have a trifle of “give” to them, not be his attention sufficiently for a photographer to slip in and capture Mr. ing keyed to the line of the figure so De Reszke in an informal pose with the American prima donna. Miss unrelentingly. A tailored suit of this Peterson spent the entire summer with Mr. De Reszke receding sug variety was made with bindings of its gestions and preparing her concert programs for the coming season. This own material, which material was picture "tvas made at Mr. De Reszke’s summer home at Royat in thi broadcloth, by the way, and these mountains of France. were cut almost an inch in width. These were laid on as flatly as could be around every conceivable edge and stitched closely on either side. The color of the suit was a dusty taupe at,d the stitched edgings made a good-looking finish. Have Low-Cut Rever«. Most of these strictly tailored suit« ’ have low-cut revers, so that the clos ings Of the coat come just above the throng. waistlines. liieii, .opening leaves Length of Skirts. room for the whitest and daintiv?! of The lengths of the skirts in the French blouses, the latter being the -MBS. - ; •’v suits, it is nice to he able to say, have touch without width the suit remains ¡ not changed so materially that the as nothing worthy of notice. change is quick to catch the eye. They As for materials in the tailored suits, seem to be about the same, although well, there are twills and serges that I they are really longer than those ex forever will be eminently satisfactory treme knee-length ones of the su»q- in this connection, and there are some mer. It behooves us to stop ;<1(, think koft. fine duvetyns and wool velours, j however, that c - .rn,n ffiembprs pf Suits with more or less of triinming I t£°niLiunity attempted these ultra- come to us from the French designers, ' short affairs, “o** that most Of the and, with a certain type of woman, iiVé generally appreciated and worn in i. this country. Most of these, this sea son, are made with the lodger waists and with slightly bloused effects at the waistlines. Then the embroidery is used for a wide or a narrow band around the bottom of the peplum, for ¡ the cuffs, for the collar, and some times for a band to run along the line tr where the closing of the coat is effect- al. One of these from Paris was made in that darkest of brown shades, which the French are pushing this season. It was then trimmed with masses of silk embroidery in a slight ly lighter shade of the same color, and the triinming was concentrated over the hips in large triangular sections f-'® * ¿4$ grouped of smaller triangular figures. j-, .7- 1’hls was all the trimming there was about the suit, for the cuffs of the rather loose sleeves were left plain, as was also the collar, which but- II oned tightly around the throat. The Russian influence pushes its way into the suit category more success R o th H id e . C a p ta in a n d Coa h of th e Vassar Ho-.key T e a m , w ho i- fully than It manages to do in oth E a r n ir g " e r 5100 pledged to th e V assar E n d o w m e n t F u n d er types ->f costumes. The long-waist- i t 3 KILL centipedes,” a Vassar point of honor to earn the hundred ed blouse, the thick girdle, tlw? straight I <nt.h-n.ore was heard to re- dollars each .hat they have pledged to bands of fur and the brilliant colors , , , , the Fund. Many of them started dur- lend themselves to the designing of m:;rk grave y to one of t ie ¡n„ ,1^ summer and ran tea shops or the suit with admirable facility. professors. For the Endowment soj j lemonade at the turn of the road. Peacock Green Duvetyn. Fui-d." she explained. Three Poughkeepsie girls set all the 1; -ec.us that vines grow over the Vassal women of the neighborhood to A Russian blouse suit was made of : waits of Lathrop Hall that centipedes vork making candy, which they sold peacock green duvetyn with a very h t in. the vines, and that the students ery profitably. Two students taught thick and heavy surface. The bloused b te to crush them, but will shuddei -wimming and others ran autom o section of the coat was long enough to ’ ail evening for fear of having the big biles. completely cover the hips, and under "Off campus” meals are not the one on the wall drop down. The ........ „ ......... j capitalized _______ her vogue now, but the girls relieve the neath that was a straight sort of pep sophomore merely lum of the width of only about five ■ courage, and will answer emergency monotony of college menus with food or six Inches. There was a twisted i calls from any part o f ‘the dormitory, sold for the Fund. I he 'eat and grow charging a fee for her services. thin” tray run by three seniors in the Tailored Suit Along the Newer Lines. girdle of heavy silk threads with the . One other girl has offered her cour- candy kitchen is particularly enticing longest imaginable tassels ending it. age for sale. She extracts mice from Every evening at nine-thirty girls gc suit skirts, in particular, remained a And there were collars and wide cuffs ■ traps at ten cents apiece. “You see, through the corridors, with trays distance of from ten to twelve inches of krimmer in a very dark gray shade. ; there are over four hundred people slung by ribbons round their necks from the floor. And that is what Another suit of this same character ' here in Main," she explained, "and it’s and sell the favorite fall refreshment! they are today—preferably ten, but and general line of cut In a deep rust a very old building, The first of the —cider and doughnuts. . year the freshmen don’t understand Then there are the vendors of han rising to twelve where the figure is shade had for trimming an arrange that they have to keep crackers and nets, soap and powder, “canned heat, tall and slim enough to demand that ment of heavy, loose knots of dark candy in tins, so the mice wax fat cocoa and condensed milk—all essen- eoncesssion to its own. proportions. gray wool that were massed together and multiply. My trade will die down tials for the college girl. There is the -sport suit, for which quite evenly until they took on a sur as the freshmen learn better.” The profits on these popular articles America and Americans have become prising look of krimmer or some other 1 Vassar students have made it a are promptly turned into the Fund. so famous; there is the medium suit lamb’s wool fur. for every octaslon, and there is the Fur. indeed, is used for trimming The rings of Saturn consist of a i The British harvest mouse is the dressy suit which, this season, has many of the winter suits, but the fact dissolved Itself into the costume dress. of the matter is that in most cases swarm of meteors, which travel a ts m a lle s t known rodent, weighing on- But each is as popular and as neces it is very sparingly used. There different speeds around the planet ly half an ounce when full grown. sary as the other in its own way, and are straight, choker collars and the according to their distance from the each one of them is destined to hold smallest of cuffs, and only seldom Is latter. The innerm ost particles per The num ber of m atches used in a place in the season’s fashions. there a band of fur seen around the form th eir revolution in about five the world each day figures out Among the tailored suits there are bottom of the peplum. And the furs many with coats that are very long. are mostly of the short-haired vari hours, while the outerm ost require about th ree for every man, woman and child. That is, they may safely be called ety, for the rule seems to be that, 137 hours. when one wants fox or sable, then three-quarter length, for there Is only Certain m inute Crustacea some Experim enters in South Africa are a fraction of a skirt left showing be the animal itself must be brought into neath the ending of the coat. Then, the limelight and fetiched as the piece times gives sea w ater a blood-red trying to produce rain by dropping these suits are cut in such a manner de resistance of the street costume color. dust on clouds from airplanes. Courage! This Girl Kills Mice to Karn V assar Money you can obtain at this store— everything the model cook or housekeeper could desico in pots, pans and pieserving k et tles. A little journey through our establishm ent will give you many .suggestions as to things you should have. SIMPSON’S HARDWARE A Business Service Station Wc lik e to think o f thi*. 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