The evening world. Newspaper, November 25, 1901, Page 10

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. them in planning new dresses and 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 making over old ones. Address all letters on this topic to “Mme, Louise, Evening World Home Dressmaking Department.” Dear Mme. Louise: Kindly tet me ‘a child four years olf. 1 how I can make a coat for goods L have ty not heavy. I have pale blue quilted satir Intend ta use for lining WH! you kindly me how to and what 1+ trimming? 1 als pale flannel for a dress for the ox a how to TWALD. | girl's co, sreawiod MW Make your little back and i buttoned with four larse buttons. Have 4 stitched a shade darker thon the ime inches wide, held in plice velvet straps of the material, Mow the belt ‘ ier eh | te drop quite low in front asd cline ne | eee es Set! hacen ta Visittoas Muve rene, | ver the shoulters; :hix may wai ee araerlmettt ho either velvet 1k belt 1 i ‘ 1 t ote whe f =H eOzing of in 4 ewer f iteman'm afstto «ita fe tes latest motels in chiliren iy | ” a a a Make the bl ie Wk Ear het ah with a full skir b threeetnoh |! ie » Onished with rows ef whit 4 , OENTLEMANS ry | brald, Have the yoke tucked wand iciwase: | hae Fleces at the f Lone mt be cut tke Paine RETO RITHRES TTA Pleces cut out and ‘ with blie velvet ri ‘ to for a Pesptien, flounce with brait cuff on full sleeve to ma MME. 1UISH Dear Mine . T have a royal gue athe mated t utd trim it? 1 have hat on it, but vurdreied wha: to put ' mokize a baat of navy blu (eile dou tind have take it? Ab Ing the tocky trimmed int woull end om. out | band where the tuc a Mtile diamond enough ty caver the Vittle of tay ia speak of applique between these diamonds would be ¥ pretty, A oshirt waist of silver white towith a 1 with the ide Have pretty Pere Hh wHth aller 1 band of this m and finish in point over the ve, Ma your sleeve with a cluster of tucks Ike the front down th in ut the waist with a pretty Persian collar to mate This shirt waist 2 black a well aw with your) MM upper sleeve, curt ¢ be worn with te skit LOUISE Do%. Oy OR HOME DRESSMAKERS. World's Hint. The Evening Daily Fashion ‘To cut this cap and muff for a child years of age, 11-4 yards 20 inches de, 6-8'-yard 44 or % Inches wide be required, with 1 6-8 yards of fur sing and 1 yard of silk for lining. “pat (No. 3,900, sizes 1, 2. 4, 6 ) will'he pent for 10 cents. Rd ‘money, to “‘Cashler The World, “TTARRET HUBBARD. AYER Points on Etiquette. [is prope arty, by AM Means. A voginl of nearly niven have been Invited to quite a number of parties during the last few months, se that 1 feet Thay something | retuen, Would | Lady v4 the young litien your tlemen jto attend the ret er and afterward t su “ 1 hite what way should t the room? ITHER white E would be prop mrt oft ste as enters the Usual! eremony Ix per form room, elther in the frant rat) back, Whe walks t 1 jive + but we ELSE form a celightful entirely pt andl way uf ree ating «you have recelved to tin y 1 attemd the theatre r roto ave some ight yo either Hl restaurant a party, you rhould mtx at least to nie tin perminsitie top Initiiis of the giver, w a bouquet toa Thespht hin « thls is incorrect. An whieh by cor will er us c I |" 1 card bare semity f are 4 tyou trl is necessar “LETTERS FROM —|: -THE PEOPLE. | No. | Tr Vttor ot wort i played aM reading, Now, t The Kvening W f . ye party 4 etek from peat Thuretay? AR uterts Wal Frening World Tobott 9 To the Mattor of The Thad th get thar 24h, to errange iny business an Nut, much to amy surmetes, last ontent tomas told that the §45 pane | thle for me to vat way that we can} Te thle fairy To the HAitor of The px World Was Terry McGovern defeated during the siz months, and by whom? MoD A OPIny ful” Story. To the Editor of T ening World ben Molden" put an palr of “Blue Jeans’ and went to "'Qualtty Street," do." where he met "The Little “When ialgnthont Wes In Auctloneer'* saya that ‘The Literty Welles? are “A Hoval Rival" to. "The Sew Yorkers’? When Eben h The Messenger | JBoy"* with "A.M "to Miran of the Matcony,"* got It apt ald, "Are You a Mason? vit 1 4 "Tye Dancing Gi sould mand," but asf can't, + and make you * you can go ' at tomn ts naay_ once Caratal" by there's many era Skies."* you have * Florodoi "A Royal Family’ "Under South Mt. 0, 8, Staten Inland, The S RTT “THE WORLD: VOLUME 42. Cosy Publiahed by the Press Publishing Company, No, 53 to @ PARK ROW New York, it} ‘I close ‘em up peaceably If possible, but tf ry Tl club their heads off first and send ways Acting Captaln strict. Apparently necess em to J wit Churehill p Red Light di we are ¢ to hear again from Churchill Some day “fair fame will pen his name” higher the reil of the Ulnstrious in police pre- t—if his qualities of |g Iship prove to his aptness for phrase-mgking. which rthy ofan Admiral preparing to d— up on ferme is w tor sand ahead. Churchill's utteran sounds jike one of Grant's army sentiments translated into the vernacular of Mulberry street, one w York was ever in those days it must have con- tained a# many as three wise men." = Senator Allison says he anticipates “no free ny country” and does not believe al reciprocity The Senator's exelusiveness in tariff legislation has made him great mandarin that he is in Republican party councils to run counter to the President’s expres: trade with Chinese the tment for reciprocity would not endanger his peacock feather, So what he says Is to be taken with considerable credit. -_ + funder Over that grand lary And when it reaches sis petit Innveny O00) tts a financial — = jor hh had recourse to the A college pro! magazines to defend football as a benefie of university. training, and nowad will galnsay him where twenty his article would hi in the faculty of his own colleg general public. A boy who sound physique and a head in critical situations nee y abou the eulture he has lost in’ acquiring al quaintanee— passing. at best—with sanserit ora working knowledge paleonte It ts he and not th le student who In later Hfe will ys mong the witha ping his Che NO. 14,706. Entered at the Post-OMce at New York as Second-Class Mall Matter. SIDE LIGHTS ON THE sit In horse show boxes and figure as the main guy of “communities of interes area ae Please observe that Capt. Crozier, who has heen jumped over the heads of four colonels, atx Heutenant-colonels, twelve majors and five captains, 1s an Ohio man, The President ts re- ligiously carrying out his predecessor's policy. “Do we ship many turkeys to Europe this ance positively so many 4s usual, refuses to stand for Turk The Liverpool bookkeeper who stole $850,000 outdid our own celebrated eley. When they adopt an “American idea” in ingland they sometimes {mprove on it. ene 5, Jane Addams, the Chicago social reformer, ys that women fre better than men because they have not the same chance to be bad. “Women, we are fond of saying, never corrupted Legislatures or accepted bribes from railroads. ‘They haven't had the chanc This interesting theory Is submitted for the consideration of the “wives who are seeing Low to get places for thetr husbands.” The ladies are undoubtedly justified In belleving that in the distribution of the spoils they should have their share as a re- for zealous work In the antl-red light eru- sade. They are taking what may prove to be a costly first step In practical politics, and Miss Addams’s warning !s recommended as a “fact for mothers” for serious consideration. = “T hear the captain of our last years f team has gotten a Job ax cook in a hotel robably he got the Job because he was auch xpert In hot work on the gridiron,” oe Mr. Low's 4,000 letters a day justify him in applying for a sub-station for his own personal use, His mall fs almost as voluminous as that of a financier advertising to let the confiding public In on the ground tloor of a gilt-edged 30 per cent. a month investment. wa an NEWS. At the new Woman's University Club, in East Twenty-fourth street, they have a select little dining-room with the walls done in dark green and with inviting tables of black Flemish oak, but appareatiy there {s no grill room. Tits latter at most men's college clubs fs the inner sanctuary of conviviality. It Is there that the ns are and there that the cannikin clinks. A club without it needs “powerful counter attrac- | tions," as Mr. Whitney calls them, to com- pensate for the deflelency. Perhaps the occa- sional presence of men, to whom, as one of the club ladies expresses it, th “are planning to be very good,” will supply the omission. => Thanksgiving “At the feast all personal i. G. Wells, who looks Into the future a long way and writes with a robust imagination about the possibilities of twentieth-century develop- ment, has a rival in foresight in President ! Coogan, of the borough o: Manhattan. Mr. Coogan concelves the approaching necessity of an enormous viaduct from the Battery to Spuy- ten Duyvil, wide and deep enough for crowded mile-a-minute trains at all hours of the da In this he sees the only relief feasible for the cer- tain congestion of traffic on the still unbuilt subway and the antiquated “ Some persons scoff at this confldence in metropolitan expan- sion, but not more than they scoffed at enthusi- astic Hammersteins when they bought up rocky ledges where goats were perching in Harlem. a It was a bit rude of Harvard to “rub it in” so strenuously even before the echoes of Yale's Jubilee Jollification had died away. ‘This year, at any rate, “Harvard fs a foe worthy of Yale's steel," as Capt. Gould said. ‘The Crimzon won a victory Saturday deserving to be commemorated by a tablet in Memorial Hall and an annual dis- play of-ved lights around John Harvard's statue. es “Did you read about the man out West who his will? t of helrs, didn't-he?" THE | ] \ ened TOTHE f LOIDEE OF THE ‘OUSE GASTRONOMIC Mr. Pickel- & Drowsy — Duggan — Well, well! Dat dog won't go in do “py water and bring back de $ stick fer dat pretty lady! PLEASURES WHICH ARE BECOMING POLLY AND Now I've got the hole bored all right, Polly, and I'll have some fun with mother-in-law. ae show her I'm gal- lant if 1am a hobo"—— BURGLAR AS BY R. B, MORRISON. AN EPICURE. May THE SKIN OFA GOOsEBERRY cover ALL YOR TROUBLES. Mother-in-Law—Pretty Poll, you say something? ’ MORE TROUBLE FOR HIM. Va “An' she'll show her grat- itude""—— A FEATURE OF CRAC MAMMA. IN-LAW. “I wonder what she's hol- lerin’ ‘Crazy man!’ for?” ok “Me head Is atill swimmin’, but now I kin understand de % dog was wise.” o e@ . Archie Boyd hea forsaken the “Old country the Bancrofta have sometimes Homestead" {a chureh altar which of= theaaryears, ele artistle In every tne un 10; is Kind they have bufit: a White Horse woaltar and nied {t to the church ern.” There ts some | During a rh in Switzerland some comfort, how in| a and his lady built mbering how] a the pleturesque! feck Archie Is) little towns they visited. ind ta be amid! . . such frivolous our-| There i no such person as “The Une roundings. He say| welcome Mrs, Hutch.’ Don't belleve t iimself, “A straight! Mrs, Hateh, ver she may Yankee 1s good tev have done, will be goods.” when she comes to the Mane oe hattan on Monday night. After ‘Ml Actors are the most sanguine neople | on earth. They always see a bright side to everything. They will follow: any will-o'-tne-wisp indetinitely; but if a fact were to stand up on tts hind legs and stai m aut of counte! hey wouldn't see it, dear, Irresponsible, hopeful children that they are! 1 ct uctor will fa f his ing years. An old and) well known pla sald to me: “Why, I'd get up middle of the ni time to play Armand Duval! This man w rly seventy years old, his neck was ropey. his voice feeble, his knees woboly. But he would have cheerfully undertaken to y Armand to the youngest that coughs. enthusiaastte Conce exclaimed a rater from the north Whon Miss Elliott heard sald: “L can't vouch but the nerth I'm from Main pumpkin ples cor admirer of Maxtne Jove! she's st corner!” of this she for the ‘rattter’, Mt corner ts all right * from.” you know, where the} randa ‘of the Balcony” “Mrs. Hateh!* }may count on the glad hand. man in “The Way of valet. Henry was a relatt of the late Edward Stokes, has his with him at (he theatre for every performance, Query: If it takes Stokes for a will it take to antic hero? man to dress youn uffeur, how many me thim inte gear for a row ed Mr. on ch Dodson's Those who with performance of Warriner in ‘Miranda jof the Balcony’ 1 now understand what actors mean when they kK of a play, or * jeans 1 walking Hing in sight 4 | Mr Dodson did not appear act, but his masterly performance of a most unsympathette part almost saved Ithe play. Almost! Even Dodson cannot perform miracles Phillips Small is a member of Mrs. Fixke’s co: thin season, Is 2% son of George W. Smalley, the newse [paper correspond, London. ‘This is Mr ey's frst sea> moa the stage. He was educated for Sir George and Lady Bancroft, erst- vining lights of the Engits: flaw in this citys Mr. wlley have usually s the summer! o take kK Lew PFO les, In wandering about that IRDON, ar, and { several years has prace THE Is the book she read!—Ah me, ¢ the piges she Ungered o'er; f turned down to be Stratghtened by her, no more! Her Here she sat, in this cozy nook, Against this cushion she leaned her head: With her soft, white toucned the book, Here Is the last dear page she read. fingers she Ah. does she think of me, sitting here lonely among the treasures she left? Here on this leaf Is the trace of wt ‘These are the pages her hairpins cleft. Still the days and the weeks go on, And the people must turn and look I smi She that gave me her all har gono To South Dakota to board awhile, ~—Chieago Record-Herald, A DANK SECRET. “Did yo heah, Aunt Lou, dat Clemmle Johnsing had de St. Vitus dance?” » ‘long, no! Yo bettah not tell Par- nm Brown; he's mighty opposed to dunelit.—Hrookign Tite, eee TOO BAD OF HIM. “Now, mum, look as pleasant as you can—think of ‘Im,"* “Oh, sir! ‘Ow can you arst me, and me only been a widow six month: The King. PROOF POSITIVE. One church in Loulsville Is noted for ts wretched choir, No salary Is paid lthe singers, and they flounder ulong the ‘ways of melody In a style which Is try- ing to those who love good music, and to whom a false note ts agony. One {good man of wealth has always attend- ed this church, and when he died his funeral was held there. The cholr sank leven worse than usual, and it was a source of wonder to those who knew ily that he should have been buried from that place of worship. Speaking of the fact later on, a daugh- ter of the man remarked to a friend: “Pa was very fond of this church. He always attended services there, and he particularly admired the choir." “Oh, my dear,’ exclaimed the friend, “I alwayn did say your father was a Feal Chriatian suffering for the Lord, and now I know it.""—Louisville Times. THE PHILOSOPHER. A cold sermon spoils many a warm Sunday dinner. Never lend a gun to a man who leads an almlesss existence. ‘An old bachelor sa: quickly sobers a man who Ix Intoxicated with love.—Chicago News. NOT MERELY PRETTY. “You say he has the face of one who nets thera? I don't see anything about it to admire.” “Neither do I. But you must admit that it's a regular automobile face."— POET HEP HOGS OLED SOLOS DOSEN ET IEDOTOT0T 99 O8.486008 000009900 900 9000058 000046 0000 504-000000F-00008 [Chicago: Record-Herald, the wealth of the deceased and his fam- | that marriage | aw hens! nan who had age Je habit of going ‘There was Onc quired the Re through her husband's Pockets when that good Man was Asleep, and tracting all the loose Change sho rrfluous Money ro A while the nd neglected her About that time tn her huse find, This su pened was Comp but after he tied lod Kets atd: f find, Any, but if You would stop (jing about and Attending’ rum and bargain Fights, and take Some interest in Your home, jt mish wwionally tind some Change {in my Pockets.” “What do you ; Woman, anxiously Shoes for fear he had Spot Game. 1 Mean that asked the ying in her dd her Uttie if You would stay at home, Attend to My clothes and keep my Pockets mended there might be a chances getting some Money You wanted tt all the Ch) I have B Aw it Happens slips out and te “Then If I sew up thi money: in your Pocket “I Hone so." suid Peculla Moral—A word to the Wise is Suffle clent.—Chicago Record-Herald, ————— THINGS THAT WENT WRONG, Holes tt will Be the Man with @ The Marketwoman and the Hoode Jam. | Tho rude boy stood on the edge of thes: sidewalk and made faces at the markete woman, who was exceedingly angry. Directly behind the rude boy stood @ man in a brand new Prince Albert sult and plug hat. Ls He was much amused at the scene, Suddenly the marketwoman, enraged beyond the power of words to expresdy selzed a soft tomato and threw tt witht all her might at the boy, Tt hit the boy squarely on the mouth, ‘ | Johhny and His Tooth. Johnny's tooth ching dreadfully, Me started for the dentist's office. When he came to the stairway leading [up to the office he didn't hesitate am j instant. His tooth was aching worse than ever, and he went upstairs and had {t exe tracted. i This, It is believed, never happeng® bofore, In Just this way. Singuln. Case of a i Belng prevented by a sudden and malicious rainstorm from going home to dinner the othet evening, Mr, Briggs went to a hote As he entered the dtning room he left his hat, a fine new derby, slze 71-8, on the rack at the entrance H¢ was hungry, and ate a long time, When he left the table and went out he was the last man and there wag only one hat on the rack. it was bis.—Chicago Tribune jus

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