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OW 10_DRESS WELL. By Mme. Louise. The Evening World places at the disposal of its feminine readers the services of a very competent dress- maker who will assist and advise them in planning new dresses and making over old ones. Address all Ustters on this topic to “Mme. Louise, Evening World Home Dressmaking Department.” Dear Mme. Lou's Will you kindly tell me how to make an even fing dresa that will be suitable for wear at re fons, &c.7 MY gools are p Yelling. I do not wear low neck, er some Bimy goods ir plexion. with much col wather alender. Very truly, my, As Kis new, keep your dress all white you can add a touch of color another JAQMIE —¥ ‘pi: Vj white nun’ay lace THE WORLD: NING, NOVEMBER 19, 1908: IE {JARRIET HUBBARD AYER \ How to Be Beautiful. A Few Blemiahes, Dear Mrs Ayer T have pimples and a tow freckles What ca tdor rEF PachnAR ili j y remove Nght kle | n sweet almond jo grams; soulphur, pre ated extract, % gram. Place the first in the mortar a Httle ata is formed: violet extract and zinc the almon a smooth oline and remain on u morning. Wash navay with water and a pure hygiente soap You should be careful of your diet abstaining from all greasy and spt try. Take plenty of exe ein the open alr and sleep in a well ventilated room. Pimples are always a sign of inward disturb: at Deplintory. Dear M: Kindly bor depilatery: Sulph Chalk -10) grains é 2 grains Make Inte a thin paste with water and apply to the halry part. Let it remain for a few minutes and then scrape It off with a dull-edged biade—a paper-knife, for exam; fect of thin deplla- tory ts to destroy the hair, which comes off when sc To drate of eoda ‘len Shade. te a golden brown, but something has made it a dark brown tke to know of some simple emt str aarti leas remedy to lighten tt at EROXIDE of — hydrogen slmplest and the least method of procuring tn harmeul the golden the shade. Shampoo your hatr well at frst and let it dry very carefully and thoroughly, nust be bone dry t chemically pure » mix half and t and apply to the roots 01 a clean toothbrush, very gradual Re “ly for Catarrh, Dear Mra. Ayer Vlease publish a remedy for nasal catars! roxide of hy- If with water the hair with will The change CORES of Evening World have written me they have been ef catarrh by the use of glycmozone treatment edies are Used all the can be ob! is column or advertinements or ldresses, put an exception tsa se because of the pecal It over, Make|Cummrances, pepe flounce, Mftecn yards wide, the skirt] farther information, and refer to th where the flounce Joins it not over three | subiect Of your letter, and)a half. Have your flounce quite = deep in the back. Finish the skirt Ir) where the flounces jolu it with shirred LET TERS FROM~-+ narrow satin ribbon. put on as in sketch; fill in design with white embroidery «ilk. and in heavy Finish the the flounce with tiny ruching of itxelf above the vottom of -—-~— NHB PEOPLE. areal ec aieliseercanu sional ttenel lier | muentonttimenmtortalte; ety. gether with Mexican or feather stlteh ze, the et " inembroldery sitk. ‘Tle ia done by em York . basting the strips material on heavy wrapping paper half au inch apart: then | work the stitch in thls space. When it ty at are broken Mhen call for bridges, de. over the sidewalks, Whe ae Upper | out Princital streets are not torn up f Tid. wand | they are torn uy for tunneta, Our & fils at thi a pretty: J are crowed 4 bio trimmed with ribbon and knots, Have oat cromtet, @ yoke of shirred chiffon, and finish |o™ : i : around the with white chiffon, | Mfreaeat. B BE ISS BIER Be draped gracef Saught up at the|are the compensating Jaya of eltize eide front uster of chiffon GLOUF roses. Have the Liberty OUVISE, satin ribbon OR HOME DRESSMAKERS. ——— The. Evening World's Daily Fashion Hint. To'cut this waist in m rdg 21 inches wide. % J yards 32 inches HWoinches wide will whic requi i yards Stovtrim, ag Hlustrated. ‘To cu fiye-gored akirt In medium size 8 1- Sheinchés wide. 6 1-4 ® inches wid Rie. 3896, sizes 32 cent: ittern (No, 3038, mizes 22 ti iw Xork City,’ <2, | soy . 11-8 yards of of stitened yards 44 nay for 10 cents, Both pat-| > "to “Cashier, The World, of Ment. For a Sanday to buying re Bunday buy ld Wage-Earner Ue ¥ Tae tvealue V ae Balrest Woment i ‘i ar The Professor—Ha, ha! ‘O Who-hi-ho! Yonder I see grass—vegetation, water. | DE PVOLOP G9 CG94-CE PE DOSE OY EYES SI OTOD HOSE DH LED HET HD OOD GHGS BEHOGHOHSH PDO HHS 800656568 ‘ ie a VOLUME 42. TUESDAY EVE ed py the Press Publishing Company, 7 SHE S y LY iti 9 3 Che GBA Oorid. $3 to (2 PARK ROW, New York, IEC SIDE LIGHTS ON THE Mrs. Rorer, the cooking expert, says that the 1 from my wife, and I never had to show how it American breakfast is “barbarously bountacul, Was invested, either” And Mayor Mulvihill and should be curtailed, ‘This ts the theory | says he hasn't the diplomacy to deal with the } that th men act on when they attack Amer- otfiee-seekers who beset him! can soldiers in the Philippine | —— SERCH Me eles | According to the Ka he ruler who Z. => 0) French boy Among thos who are coming most rarely seen by his subjects is the one who over to learn how we make locome and | is the most respected by them.” It depends. Six build bridges and) tnstall trieal plants it is | months of seclusion at Wantage worked just the to be he 1 Unat one at to will be a barefoot other w teh brogue and a canny eye for This kind of pupil usually along with the theory, to make donations of millions Jad with a + the main chance the 7 which is the sible in later n New J iz you are living oniy acquires ae ed on’y with a sn precipitous ascent in th’ fa y the most galling fire 1 iver knew or heard iy.” This is not Gov. Van Sandt, of Minnesota, charging up the Hill of the Northern Securities Company, but the hero of San Juan in his act of prowess, as re- lated by Mr. Dooley. Well, the odds against David when he tackled Goliath even grea 32 Telmbed that ti nts? dis In women's + ost of her time st sida boys with well-equipped club-houses at their disposal officered by millionares ready to start the ung clubmen in Wall str Ife have not many favors to ask of the little broth- ers of the rich in other parts of the city, Mr. Care ie’s argument is that it Is better for the ‘orld that most boys should be born poor. In were > Miss Wilkins said she would not marry till her book was out, there being more serious pursuits in Ife for women even than matrimony, Weil. some quarters of the east side [t is certainly the book is out, and with it is published better for the boys. Announcement of the gossips that the weddin > has taken place. None of the quaint spin LY CCEA I) WN SLs er Sah in Miss Wilkins’ stories ever took more inte I ways heard tt had quite a bracing iding than the public has taken in hers. Her “Portion of LaBor" being done, the time : come for the relaxation of a bridal trip. es canMour horse £07" one if in a wi > nis Mulvihill, the “stoker Mayor of Bridge- workingmen to give all their es to their wives, “That's just what I did,” he says. “If 1 wanted $5 for a night out I got it uivises } necessary.” <1. : NO. 14,700, Entered at the Post-OfMfice at New York as Second-Class Mall Matter. NEWS. Number three of the “six reasons’ given by Knut Nordeman, of Minneapolis, to justify his own and his mother's suicide read: “We cannot live in this world because we are met by a heart- lessness from our fc.low-beings which tells us that our existence ts at an end.’ What a pity he could not have read a little more Dickens and a little leas Ibsen and gained enough cheerful- ness to tide over the dark days! Another boy of twenty named Knut, who went to Minneapolis as much “a stranger among men of the present Keneration” as Nordeman says he was ip reason No. 1, lived to be Governor and United States Senator. —_ you given up coffee for Sunday preak find its apt to give me ingemaia during ~ sermon.” - The Gathmann gun Is clearly not destined to an “American peril’ for foreign nations. Perhaps the gelatin in the cartridge did not jell right ete A Rhode: Island turkey and a Virginfa ham are ready for the President's table for Thanks- giving Day. To avoid sectional discrimination an Alabama ‘coon and the loin of a mountain Hon should flank the board, - “What did the ‘vet! say when you asked him } vorses ought to be driven before ‘He said they ought to be driven the same THEY OoreT MAKE FULL BACKS LIKE THEY DID WHEN. (=~ TTI TT COs se nt Order ot F LANDED—BU mpt Football Play — Old Swell Muscle—Yes, 14 teed for a private a young. feller, Now, if you stay four rounds with me Ell gt you the job, “Now, take care, goin’ to ma , boy, ‘cause [I'm you see” , { First Po! re de Mont Look here, Jumbo, f ne if you allow old Rhinoceros to carry the ball on his } tramp, ~~ Oreo nH. WORSE SUGGE Brace up, my faithful servant, ‘The Professor—Quick! make haste! Where there {s vegetation there must be the breeze! sat the Stale Crutehtow ' NOT THE JOB. ONLY NATURAL. » Bug—What's the matter, Willie? Second Potato Bug—I always feel tired at the end of a long THAN A’ MIRAGE. STION BY F. M. HOWARTH. I see the grass waving in n short horses would be driven u the same circumstances.” } Tris LAs TLE On mv MEAD: Game & xF2 “Get out! T'll have no thugs around my place! You was only in front of me one round, any- way!" 4 wt at “Hard Hons on us!” 1 shrine hear that midnight Ite * reminiscent In Uttle Johnny when he gazes on t souvenir string of myagne corks over the m! se One hundred and forty odd trical compantes h disbanded 4 this Hut the actors will not do much ‘They aren’t built that wasn't one, two, three bi compared with gulne followers of Thes- season worrying. Mark Tap! the cheer those sunny: pis Here Is a ste not generally known of Goodwin's luck at cards. A cw years ago, while playing an en- gagement in Louls- ville, Goodwin went Into a game of draw with a party of men, Including W. C. Owerfs, who had Just defented — Breckin- tidge at the little game of poilt Mr. Owens was said to be the best poker er in the United . They played for thirty-six hours without interrup- tlon, and when the time came for to Ko to the theatrs on Monday night, he was $3,000 loser. A friend took his place, however, and won back $1.59 dur- ing the evening, Nat then resumed the game and left the table $1,6% winner. “There 1s something about grease by Jove, that seems to take away 8 brains!” ‘This Is what Stage ctor Ben Teal shouted at the “merry, merry" the other day, when he was pul- ting It through its paces for one of the Klaw & Erlanger productions. ty. | Willam Gillette once said worth sing in this world, he whe If he s “rhe self at all 1 of himself, If he speaks fl of y belleves him.” Patt, the incomparable, fights es with a mixture of glycerine putton tallow—equal par! this ation « her Ife, e, Mt just possidle that Pattl adds some agreeable scent If so she doesn’t tell us to the tallow, I met Helen Windsor on Broadway not long ago beautifully gowned and look- ing radiant. Miss Windsor was formet- ly a member of the Lyceum company, but left the » makin, ge and took up dress- h business she has made © keeps fifty women em- Py hen in town one Moor of’ the pretty house on Thirt. ixth street. Joseph Jefferson, the dean of the stage, Isa Hberal man, But there's on tning he almost never gives. That ts his autograph. Autograph fiends will save Ume and postage by making a note of this. They will also ayold getting themselves much disliked by the great actor. perl | . Francis Wilson 19 the richest com- fe-optra_ comedian on the stage. He has never ed his substance In riotous living or hie vital forces in barrooma, Mr. W1l- 6 son {is a biblo-~ I, maniac, an art if tonnnolsseur and the best amateur fencer In thls coun- try. In his beaut! fully appotn.e home at New Ro- chelle is rare a collection of books and print Mr. WN- son is a student, and his leisure ts passed in serious pursuits. JANE GORDON FRANK JAW AcTon. Frank James ts to take a hand in the great and noble work of elevating Ge stage, perhaps to atone for the way he demoralized the stage in hia early} days.—Chicago News. THE FLATTENER, “Lad aid Meandering Mike, “have you any coffee or mince ple or’— “Haven't you been here twice before?” “Lady, I have. I'm too good a judge of cookin’ to let such pe“formances 26 yours go witout an encore.""—Washing- ton Star. MIS ONLY CHANCE, Wifte—What did you mean by daring to dictate to me in front of Mrs. Welgh- ton? There was once a Woman who wore High-heeled Shoes and a Tight Corset. Both These are Highly Enjurious and Inartistic to the Last Degree. One Day she Went out to the Links with a Sen- sible Friend who wore a Sweater and Man-fashloned Shoes, There they Met two Men pl K Golf. “I Fear I shall only Be tn your Way,” said the Woman who was Not Ath “1 Can Not Play the Game at all. Not Know a Caddy from a Bunker, nor a Foursome from a Tee.” Not at all. We will Describe the Game to You,” said the Men. "Oh, Tank you, but One will be Quite Enough,” she replied, and she Selected the Best-looking, and the Other Went out after the Sensible Friend, “May I Carry your Parasol?" said he when they had Started, , “If you will Be so Good,” she ai swered, “It ls very Foolish, I know, but my Skin !s so Absurdly Thin, and the Sun Bilsters !t so." Husband—Well, my dear, you know I Garo not when we are alone,—London King. NEARLY DID IT. Miss James—How did you Folly, Mr. Seymour? like Mise Don’t you think she is awfully plain? Mr. Seymour—' yes, I do. She is awfully nice, but without exception the plainest girl I've ever met; present com- ba of course, ex—ex—I mean—she's very plain.—The London King. Sporting Term, Drawn DOoeed The Sensible Friend came up just Be- hind, and, Mopping her Face, she said: “You are too Ridiculous. A Rose-col- ored Parasol on the Links! You are keeping Him from playing, too. He will get Out of Practice.” “Oh, I hope not,” sald the Woman who was Not Athletic, “Do not be Alarmed," said the man, It ‘is All Right.” “Moreover, I saw him Help you Over a Fence," sald the Sensible Friend, as she Waded through a Muddy Brook. “That Game ts Out of Date.” The Woman who was Not Athletio looked Pensively and for Some Time at the Man, 1am Spoiling Everythin; she sald, , softly, “Let me Go Home, and thea You can Play.” “But then You could Not Learn the Gam said he, Sitting down under a Kind of Artificial Watershed and watching the Rose-colored Retlection of her Parasol, “Is this a Bunker?" y he replied; she asked, ‘Its Purpose is to ple Who wish to be Alone ation,” 1 she, “Then what ts a “Well,” he replied.” This Is sometimes: called a Hazard, too, because There ts a Chance that Some one may Come By POA! sald she. Then over That Wall Behing that Biz Rock Ix one of the Beat Bunkers on the Links, Isn't (2 “Et is, Indeed,” “You Pek Come over ‘ou are so Good," she said, as ho her Over the ‘Wall. ‘ot at All,” he replied, Politely. Some Time Afi the Sensible Friend, who was dein Wallow- rush and Fall. ren of her Ball,- onthe Return Course, Seated against. the mewhat Unoriginai She was surprised, This teaches us that You need Not Teach an Old Dog: New, Tricks.—Josephi- pre moose Baskam’s “Fables fog . simone va ables ai a