Evening Republican, Volume 19, Number 72, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 26 March 1915 — What They Will Wear for Easter [ARTICLE+ILLUSTRATION]

What They Will Wear for Easter

THERE is such a diversity of styleß offered in the realm of millinery that no one will be unable to find a hat to suit her face and her type. For once the individual may set forth in quest of Easter headwear with the expectation of finding a real expression in millinery of her own *ideas of fitness and beauty. It is to be hoped that the coldrless personality will conceal that fact with a hat that will lend her tone. For this is not a season of meager ideas. Hats are shapely, they are intricately made, they are gay in themselves, bright with flowers and small fruit, ribbons, and all sorts of odd and ingenious trimmings. They seem all to be designed for women with ideas. They are full of feminine allure, and made for people who wear clothes instead of merely carrying them about. Here are three, in a group which embraces the simpler designs in good examples. There is the turban at the center, the pretty and picturesque shepherdess shape at the left, and the flaring-brimmed sailor at the right. These are types to be found in every collection of new millinery, and they are rather more plain and less trimmed than the mode demands. The small turban, of soft hemp braid, has a plain crown Bet in of .crepe Georgette. A crepe-covered cord extends about the coronet, and a wreath of bright cherries set in their leaves hangs enticingly over the braid. The body of the hat is a linen color. The shepherdess shape shows the same combination of braid brim and crepe crown. A band of velvet ribbon extends about the crown, with hanging streamers tied in a long loop and

ends at the back. At the front is a rather tight cluster of Bmall fruit and a 4arge pink rose and foliage. The sailor at the right is a pressed shape faced smoothly with silk. A ribbon band about the crown, a smart rosette of plaited ribbon with a long, stiff' quill thrust through it, trim it most appropriately.