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DODD-IDLE DODPDDPPODIDHANID DODIOMIPHIIOOA DEIOHF 3 How to Avoid Bad Breaks When in the Best Society She Thinks They Are Enance Dear Mra Are! I secelved lady yestery fine ether with I think they are method to tell me. thing for me to do? Woe a letter to the congratulating p fortune, and one ato 4 lady wishing her « Apt A Very Insolent ¥: Dear Mrs. Ayer: Tam a young girl seve age, A Indy friend and home from work with two gen friends. The other ov lady friend with whom they quainted took a stroll wit we went up on one side there was a crowd of younr other side, among whom : the young men we come home wit also two gentlemen we went out several times. We did not notter @s ft was dark and could ; tinguish them at first. two ecards from a youns ery tia). ANNIOU was ITF invitations stiver and sho may be ad hav turned this gentleman who comes home marriage lott with me called out our names in cor “ihieaniversarytinioppoalte : nection with the gentlemen we went Out) povitadons of th: ‘ : with several times, and then he Aivcakmentawiienels < tioned all the names of the younk of the car ha who were there and also the n. the other gentleman who comes tome! ji) white and with us, teliing me he was there. Mut! you can get he was not. This gentleman ts very At) gat will look tentive to me, but I do not care aoa artenilverwltt him, My friend and I did not 1 avid twlil snot herext them, Will you kindly let me itikwareintyant whether we did right? ‘They range {FM | in white, with et nineteen to twenty-three years of ag} ery, and wear st ETHEL LAWTON. | namenta HE young man was extrem Vy It will do perfectly | rude. You und your friend be-| buffet supper, and this haved properly In Ignoring him. choose to ry simple and 4s most impertinent and offensive havior on the part of a man to make aterer will girl or a group of giris conspicuous, yourallicarerand . and no well-bred young man !s ever ing Wiches eH Cet ant ayate guilty of such discourtesy to women, poly mene si a a Call Them Father and Mother. If Choose to serve creame A Dear Mrs. Ayer: tere te Mt will be I was married about half a year ago. | elaborat toa simple coll int Ihave known his parents for about a| good form, \ year. They come to sce us quite often, If you are going to serve wt lar but 1 cannot call them “father? and | punch would be proper, or a ely “mother,’ and neither does he. Please | punch. Tce'c) and cake alo advise me what I should call them be quite enough tf you feel incuned Vo % refresher THINK it ts always better for both mw the Questia ] bride and bridegroom to adire#s| 1. Ayer the new parents as “father” and| you think It would be approprin § “mother.” A man and wife are always |to wear silk inttts or gloves with elbors |mleeves In the © | proper time to wi pains; ar th mupposed to be one, and it ts gratifying 1» the mothers and fathers and p! themto-be addressed by the endearing LOVES are more names, G mitts, although \Of course, it is hard for the bride or I been re-Introduced during ¢ reason and will undoubtedly find some favor. » for the bridegroom, but it is only the first effort that really costs. By all THE EVENING WORLD’ LETTERS FROM THE PEOPLE. How to Measure a T: ‘To the Editor of The Brening World In answer to the problem by Arthur there are a good many how much harm the are in the helght of who do not ¢ do as tong as they tyle; but Payne Balstone, where he asks how @ cautlon you thus tall pole may be measured, I would say: laces and trains and To find the height of the yrle no inches above the grour knowiedge of arithmetic ts ' LOUIS A Drive the cane In the «ro A Little enough to make tt stand per ahd when the shadow the the same length as the shadow of the pole will length to the pole, In feet. ground near the poly must @s to bring the shadow at + with the pol H.C, The Sent sver can only write monty ten wat stings Howover, t love Gral To the ive The meat «? to-day. He w gon River truln. the rack over Jarge valise on He scatea hime posited some mor him tn the fourth The Har To the valtor I think if the two much money Sere to try they ployment poor horses on the specdways. LOVER OF ‘The ‘Tra To the Editor of The ve There must be some against women wearing the lon Ang skirte they are n weart ean there be uny wonder expres. #0 much disease {gs present in New Yor) City? It is, a sclentifile fact wire ne can guinsay that e: covered with tiny mic teria, These are to and everywhere, gerous when “face, But the dry up and to fy about ‘Then, when the women walk oy what 1s to provent the bacteria 2 > being curried to the homes of 11) *ferent women and transmit woveral members of tl Talk about style MA Deiv Jaw prov LITERAL. t Tv in. No und write handred times Teache laughing His TIME FOR 5 E white man say de w hot— De Sun, he treat me wron: it when de Sun ehine tn my {i = Taleeps de whole day long. » Dey never acex me sow or r Sun, he put me right tor # white man hunt de oak tree‘ i, of Bay,)"'Dis ain't’ no fun!” “sci one | pusson ain't 4 DOLOOOEDFOOM SOO VOLUME 42. Published py th No. 53 to € Press Publ now, Company, w York. PA recast for a Mabelle ¢ than n’s und tout Miss Dre yven! er jaw in pl ONE WAY. 1 horse lim plete Wh Ty shoot Trane HALF BAKED. e lrveed - AN AE IRESS WITH AN ACCENT. : * , Miss Anna Robinson, in“ nt," is giving Londoners an educational course in American girl- : 1 a euppears asa lo American heiress in frocks from the Rue de la Paix, who addresses everybody as ts2" 2 vy Phen ys “Tallow you Hritishers Kriow how to have a good time some better than we do out thar, by Jinks,"} Vee, whem she ¢ sand la every other w olomn English person's preconceived idea of the typical American heiress. $ youd Rate oe * rhy t Mis fault. Mr. Carton, the author of the play, has his own {deas on the subject of {nian wears her? oh {American het sand 1 n't suppose the actress had much to say about the dialect, which {s a compound of } horseshoe scarf- AAR OR nys outhern, Yau and Hoosier, On the score of beauty, Miss Robinson is equal to the most exacting require-}P! 9n¢ her wi ; oN bone hair orna. start }ments ment."—Tit-Bits, THIS LODGER H fous Lodger—Hullo! Th me alongside a hard Suspi ve put 3, Reddy the Robber—Now I'll see what de gent ts good for. Gee! He ain’t got nuthin!” NO. 14,665. ° Entered at the Post-OMce at New York as Second-Class Mail Matter, {Reneral business manager. a) ference with the Messrs, Sire the com mittee granted girls’ demand, et understanding that Sta: r Lawrence should get the ext k In fines Up in the comfor forty supposed like Afte> a con f the girls victory a hen c sated until invention, n't miss this elegant pal- ¢ sald cute Bertha Lovelace, Mattland, who ts in the Lane hing a girl in pink tights about chorus. }the walst, whirled away tn a waltz, shi x strike!” echoed Flor | win ith a quartet of farewell ing the way down tol iexs spa | the drewsine here it was formally | At this point Stage Manager Lawrence voted to demand an extra #1 y thrust bis head through te. to Broadway ¢ the | The ultimatum was put toa nous oie the | te nsisting of S Carpenter Montauk, « ningham, Advan Agent Tommy ace/the road show, and Gus Barnes, the It nak 1 bud How tt rite Poet—Oh. somebody's {rg rubbish where! some> Ani moved, if the mus ne poet was not by BADNESS. “Oh, m erted “Wlle's pissy He's boy to do said mamma, Yes, Tommy, pulling tall!” and ut pata 1 ADVICE. Higgins (with his ungest rms)—The Meth ¥ y do ooks Ike Wig gine 1 wou what i the est way notice a Z AD A GREAT HEAD. 4, Suspicious Lodger—And thero’s nothing like being cautious, but nle ble ballet-room. the THE NUN’S KISS. Aerie By ROBERT BRACO. (Copyright, 1901, by Daily Story Pub, Co.) rays of sunshine seemed to revive him. bs ISTER FILOMENA entered the Hut this ts a great misfortune!” crie@ the contessor. “What do you mean, father?" confessional, She n to open her soul In humble, almost whis- pering tones. “If you have kissed a living man om “I will confess all, dear father.| his mouth, who continues to lve." ard midnight on Af “Am [ such a great sinner, father?® artment 5, where I “Unworthy to wear the nun’s gate to take the place of Si ments young man who was dying If iv Is such last sacrament. Th: 1 sorry. clared there was no hope for the young IT cannot grant absolution to-days” man, Let us walt. Who knows but the sick- ‘The dying man whispered softly:| ness of the young man may take @ “Help me to dle in peace. Sister It mena, have pity, for a dying wretch. Ive me-a kiss! Can you not ece, Sister turn for the worse, by his condition further to-day." We will be guided I will not hear your? Filomena,’ he sald, ‘that my ralvation oe aat eee leis depends on this? Will you suffer the] A few days later Sister Fllomens pangs of remorse for refusing such a] ‘'6aln entered the confessional, small eervice? I must not leave this| ‘Well, how ts No, 77" asked. the world without one token of love from | Priest. humanity. WIL sou have me perish?’ ” “He ts convalescent.” “And you—and you?" asked the con-| “You see, now, there ts no hope for fessor. you, daughte “Father, my soul wae Miled with fear T told the patient that I am doomed on his a 1 be unt, and that if Thad known t he would live 1 would never have Kissed him. at his words, thought he might doomed forever If he were permitted to dle without a token of unselfish af- fection, I dreaded the remorse that The new complications worrled the | might come to my soul, I looked around {father for a tong time, Finally -he me dreading to cause offense, then Ij! with deep scrutiny Into the face * Mf Lis fair charge, Sister Filomena, I absolve you, but urther than that I will obtain a spe= cial dispensation to release you of your | vow, You love the young man? “L do, father.” bent over him and kissed him Where did you kles him?” asked the father confessor In anxious excitement, | “It was quite dark, father, but I be- Neve It was on the mouth.” The confessor absolved her. death until morning. The first !solved, there is hope for you." THE JAPANESE WOMAN AT HOME. life and n girls are brought up to sew. space for four ez fiye dishes, each mease | and attend to the homes, for|uring four or five inches across, Each ven the women of the highest class |fttle bowl and dish has {ts spectal place, ~ have household duties to perform, | the soup always being in the middle and Japanese ladies never so to market—/the rice to the left. The appetite Is market comes to them—that ts, the! reckoned by the number of bowls of rice NJ cook, t 3 bring round thelr wares f le eaten. A mail is at hand with a lasge t thelr customers’ hous | vow! of rice to replenish the small ones, monger brings his st | Directly one empties a bowl she ree Ix bought he pr sit, but should one leave even Most Japane make th grains she will understand that clothes, and the wealthins one has hud sutticient brofder thelr own garments, Thy | Great cure and much artistic care are thrifty Htttle dressmakers, and de much employed preparing dinner. ‘The | careful plinning and cutting, as well) vianls are always served ini the daine | s patnstaking 5 ation of worn cloths | ties: fas ind when guegts are. prese | ays Home Notes, jent the meal becomes quite a ceremoe | all year round, y dinner hour, ore dusk, A miniaty square and oly 1 before each 1 a_tncauered tr kill shown: by, the le. For inet in tue form of ° fish is shredded nicken Is dune. a is plac Is placed WHERE THE : RUBIES COME FROM. Th awing, 1175 carats, That of the ion, | King of Visapour sold in 1653’ for high, thts ms growing scarcer. f beautiful come from Ce; and China. The mines of|n y $15,000, The one possessed by irly exhausted or bat tte Gustavus Adolphus was as large aa & worked to-day, lone where they Small egg and of the most beautifull was are situated ar vis of approach; ter. It was presented to the Czarina om beside the St Grand Me occasion of Gustavus Adolphus'a sit to St. Petersburg in iste: gul the ex Jen until d exhinitet “| sry ns m0 ee une "2" MICROBES IN JEWELS. uished by tts dee or, somes O the bactertol as to the sapper, mibling Uh says the Lady's Pictorial, nothing ts whic nts at sacred, In hls positive greed for at \ prop were int lew scare he will ransack the secret ‘They served. It was 8d, | rcesses of my lady's wardrobe, attack | t to ats or GMS") err Haby's feeding bottle, ruthlessly, + sight had be i ute a panic In the pantry and even ore them constantiy, betn stroy one’s falth In sealed vessels, : laid them down only | Casting about to find some fresh lafr of for eating and drinking. as evel lis beloved bacillus, he would now fling claimed that rbuncle emitted NEC) ovor the headgear of beauty herself @ in dirkness and that the thickest cloth-| nicropic shadow, #0 to say. He would J not stop its rays, Without all nave us believe that the ubiquitous Berns, ich legen "1 iingers in the material of whichsour long time that rubles | dainty sare compored, and, further= juninous rays. The truth !s/ more, that the very jewelled hatping) have double refraction and] wherewith we secure them to our olf } out the red rays with unequalled | fures become coated with tiny organe Haney. Traversed Ina vacoum SY Tisms, which thus get conveyed te Ups n electric current, they are Hluminat with a red fire of extreme intensity. The greatest heat does not change their form and throats, It ts surely a rather ridice ulous suggestion, which the hat manu- facturers treat with contempt. Really, if we were as microbe-ridden as all this. Hfe would not be worth living. na with other precious stones, hange for thelr peltries, and w forms to-day one of the rarest ornaments of the Imperial Court of Russia. The one of which Chardin speaks In admiration was of splendid color and bore engraved the name of Sof | OR HOME DRESSMAKERS. The Evening World's Daily i the Shelk Lephy, That of the Shah of Persia, of which Travernier made o Fashion Hint. 1b abOGIGTDO0FO8G40000E05009] 5 cut ents sult for a boy eight yeare , OLD PHRASE. 2|:fa8 28 yarte of material 4 inéine ' * | wide, or 1 3-4 yards St Inches wide v @ 3 ‘ 2 © e “Going through his head.” IN KANSAS. be required, with 1-2 yard of vning: feck back of yeat. ‘The pattern (No, 3,951, sizes 6, 8/1 (pm 12 years) will be sent for 10 centay: Send money to “Cashier, The Pulitzer Building, New Yorks Gig’). Farmer Shucks—Billy, step outs an’ see if that feller’ passin’ b; kin. spsre me a pipeful of terbacke | a great sin, I must | £ “But, father, he 4s alive,” she sald. “Tell bim to cone and see me here | | “He Is alive? as soon as he can walk. He needs abe “Yes, the poor fellow hovered between} solution mor than you. Both ab=