Evening Republican, Volume 16, Number 107, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 3 May 1912 — IN VOCUE [ARTICLE+ILLUSTRATION]

IN VOCUE

HERE IS KIMONO WRAP BIDS FAIR TO BE EXTREMELY POPULAR FOR OUTDOOR WEAR. Id*ea Comes From Paris, and Has Been Taken Up by Leaders of Fashion in America—Shown in Tan Eponge.

The Kimond wrap is the latest edict for outdoor wear, made by the Parisian fashion arbiters. It has already been taken up by the fashionable New York establishments and bids fair to be a popular spring and fall garment. The model shown is of tan epon&e, cut kimono style, and caught by one button on the left side. Around the sleeves are three rows of drawn work, an Inch wide and about three inches apart, headed by a narrow tuck. Four rows of the same work are used on the

Photo, Copyright, by Underwood A Underwood, N. T. skirt of the wrap, at knee length. The sleeves and bottom of the garment are finished with a narrow hem beneath which is used a foot deep frieze of soft twisted rope cord, the ends knotted to form tassels. A narrow collar and triangular revers of embroidery in varicolored oriental designs and above are narrow revers of black satin. The hat is black milan, faced with black velvet and with low trimming of white gull’s feathers across the back. Dresses of checked taffetas are sometimes veiled with gray marquisette.