The evening world. Newspaper, November 27, 1901, Page 6

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is ee a tay Wael WOhlbos Weis UaAd BVEINGNC, COV biisin.. 27, 10, acs <7 cements > TTT, ATTOW 10 DRESS: WELL By Mme. Louise. RET EE 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 letters on this topic to Mme. Louise, Evening World Home Dressmaking Department.” me Deer Mme. Louise: Kindly advine me bow I conid trim or alter the appearance of a light biue, corded silk ahirt waist. It !s made on a fitted IIntny Beek, blouse front and tight-Arting sleeves, ‘collar, box-pleat down the front and fare at t Gleeve are of plain silk. Kindly tell me a pret way to make up a black cloth shirt walet with @ Iitele trimming. 1 am tail and lender. Mra WISh Places. You will have four tabe; turn alik or panne velvet, tacking every other one back on the sloeve with a steel Dutton and allowing the others to fall over a pretty puff of white mousseline de sole covered with fine black neg with Pretty Uttle black lace medallion ap- Piequed frreguiarty on tt. Make & yoke and collar to match, and with the silk you out out under the yoke, back and front, cut a small circular collar, Trim this with black velvet ribbon and put witht black ribbon velvet, and a touch Diue at the top of the collar, will tran: Gress waist. In selecting your silk try to get those pretty shades of green and red, &c., used so much in the Persian trimming. This is an effec trimming. Dear Mme Louise: WH! you Kindly Inform me of the addreme of the “competent dreeamaker’’ who would anslet @ yours lady In planning aot inaking over? u and MME. Inexpensive LOUISE, Through this column 1 will be pl ed t to give yo: ean, but it by is quite f: ™ you a personally. LOUISE. iq OR HOME = - 8° DRESSMAKERS. scoot The Evening World’s Daily) fh Fashion Hint. 4K yards 15 inches wide, Toho wide or 11-2 yards 44 Inches wide ot ng, 1 /fUll front and puffs and one plece o ribbon to trim ‘as illustrated. A this five-gorod skirt in medium size yardn | fu ™ tcches wide AA inches wide will be required. 3,004, sizes 32 to wide, 10 1 8 yards 21 Inch: iches wide, 0 3. f pattern (No, ent for 10 cents. pattern: (No, 2881, siz basentfor 10 cents. Both Take the fare cuff off your sleeve and | ‘ slazh the sleeve up three inches in four | these In points and face them with black | ‘ ft on just at the foot of the yoko. AJ ‘ pretty gauntlet cuff of the blue trimmed | | form your shirt waist into a very etylish | ( Make your black cloth waist like the © eut, the collar, cuffs, straps and shaped | + [collar of black taffeta stitched solidly | ‘ fF __with oolored silks, no two rows the same. Yard of taffeta for yoke, revers and | , yards of mousseline ARRIET HUBBARD AYER. How to Be Beautiful. Vaucaire’s Developing Treatment. Dear Stee Ayer Tougere one of Dr. Vaneair : erearine the bust. WIL you bindly lve one for eolnreine tt? AKA |"T itis ts the treatment to which you 1] reter: Dr, Vaucaire's Treatment for Develop- ing the Bust—Liquid extract of Galega (goatarue), 10 grammen; lacto of phos- phate of Ime, 10 grammes; tincture of fennel, 10 grammes; simple syrup, 400 grammes. ‘The dose !s two aoupspoonfuls with water before each meal. Dr. Vaucaire also advises the drinking of malt ex- tract during meatn. An Old-Fashioned Remedy. Dear Mra. Ayer: Kindly let me know bew to make 0 crepera- tion of molasses and salphur for dloed purifica- [ton Ales, ktndiy_inetract me hew to take eae (when and how many times a day), and the quantity of each dove THOMAS. I118 te the mixture you refer to: | Get five centy worth of sulphur precipitate. Put two teaspoonfuls In the bottom of a glass. See that there fare no lump tn it, Pour atx teaspoon- fula of syrup or molnases on the aul- phur. Stir. Take one teaspoonful of the mixture before breakfast and one Just before going to bed for three da: Omit for th: day». Repeat ad omit for three days until you have taken the | preparation for nine days. NOLUME 43. Published by the Press Publishing Company, No, (3 to & PARK ROW. New York. > oe NO. 14,708. Entered at the Post-Ofice at New York as Becond-Class Mail Matter. Mr. Pain, In his fireworks factory, has most of the materials for producing a good working imitation of the Central American revolution. Perhaps Manhattan Beach visitors will see one next summer, with a bona fide General on hand to lend an “atmosphere of reality’ to the show. ate SRA “If you keep company with a youne man that drinks remember that to be a so-called old maid {s not the worst evil by any means that can befall a woman," says the Rev. Mr. Gunton. “It 1s poor business marrying a man to weform him. Be well assured, reformers are unpop- ular." The reverend gentleman's reasoning will stand the test of expertence. A young wife dealing with a bibulous husband has a harder problem to solve than a Mayor-elect with an excise law on his hands. ——— “I hear the cannibal chief cooked American missionary in a frying pan" “He probably wanted a view of the Pan American.” the “We necd an open church ablaze with Ught within and without to counteract the saloon; the church that thinks only of the salvation of souls and nothing of the health of the body, will speedily have no souls to save,” said a pul- pit orator Iast Sunday. The lights are a move !n the right direction; the warm slow of a saloon window on a wintry night has strong drawing powers. But in the saloon the visitor is not called on for creden- tials, No questions are asked that he would not care to answer, and his clothes pass muster, however old they may be. There ts a demo- eracy about the “poor man’s club" unattained in any other rendezvous of men. Some recogni- tlon of the need of unbending 1s being made SIDE LIGHTS ON TH by the less conservative churches. At a Chris- tian Sclence church {t has been possible to see a negro, a needy stranger, a millionaire widow, and the daughter of a Cabinet officer, all in the samo pew. —— The thankful consumption of Thu:sazy's dinner #iil be tempered by the reflection, on the housekeeper’s part, that !t has cost her at ‘east twenty per cent. more than her last year's ‘Thanksgiving dinner. She may well give thanks if her allowance ‘has been increased to corres- pond, but {n the usual course of events it takes more than a year for any portion of the profit a dealer makes from bis higher prices to filter down into a housekeeper’s purse. The hus- band's bid for a raise of salary, the first neces- sary step to such a result, usually undergoes the experience of an ultimatum in Turkey. ‘But grandmamma, it Isn't my fault that men try to flirt with me in the street. “I'm sure you do something to attract their attention, They never try to flirt with me.” A grizzled guide in the North Michigan woods, &@ seasoned veteran of sixty-five years, won tne love of a romantic young city girl, a grand- daughter of Horatio Seymour, and they were married at Marquette the other day. A guide {s an ornamental and picturesque figure on his nave heath, particularly at Wwe interesting mo- ment when, as in Cooper. the “last rays of the dying sun throw a ruddy glow” on him to help the MMusfon. As an article of furniture for a lady's boudolr in town he would probably be less conspicuously ornamental, a fact that his youthful bride, It {s to be feared, will some day discover. en “I put him there and expect him to do his E NEWS. dutz,"” gays Commissioner Murphy of Acting Capt. Churohill. Mr. Murphy's usefulness {n- creases as the day of lis departure approaches. Sena Eee Sawing wood has become a recognized fea- ture of the training of pugilists. McGovern Is 25 hard at {t as others were before him. If they only sawed wood and sald nothing! —_— “Old Mr. Dodderer hag just fame funny story for the third tf hour, He must be In his dotage. “Oh, no. Only his anecdotage.” told me the ein half an ee Juan Hawthorne says that “boys would rather go to Yale than to Brown because Yale can beat Brown at football.” Next year they will choose Harvard. The financial side of a football game has become one of its Important features. In addition to the $50,000 of gate re- ceipts, the game at Cambridge Saturday prob- ably turned enough wavering schoolboy minds to Harvard to endow a new professorship. Why shouldn't discerning trustees look with favor on college athletics? a Nordica {s singing coon songs in Chicago. This may lead May Irwin to reconsider her motion to retire. To leave a formidable rival for her laurels was not in her original plan. eS “Will you love me when I am old and ugly?’ “Why, I love you now, dear.” gene A little while ago there were only two birds prominent in the nows of the day—Asa Bird Gardiner and Bird S. Coler. Now we have Col. Partridge slated for the Police Commissioner- ship and, In Brooklyn, Dr. Woodcock and Mr. Peacock figuring as the principals in the scan- dal at All Saints’ Church. With turkey aue to- morrow ft Is quite an ornithologicai =-2son. Once upon a time I ventured to re- monstrate with a prodizal actor of my = acquaintance. “You draw a larg salary," I sald, “yet you are al- ways negotiating a loan. Why do you throw away money The actor, a thoroughly as you do?" good fellow, whom 2 sad fate has since overtaken, replied: “Well, it's this way: the country, as we poor peripatetics do, Dashing about we are lable to go through a bridge, or «et smashed up in a collision any ume. the use of a bank account Perhaps all actors take much the same. view of the case, and this may explain why they usualy buy everything they fancy, from a milk punch to a Siberian bloodhound. Joseph Jefferson 1s sald to support twenty-five persons and to give a great deal to the poor. Mr. Jefferson's chief pleasures are painting landscapes and exchanging fish stories with his friend, Grover Cleveland. er It 1s doubtful if a prettier woman could be seen in a day's Journey than Annie Irish, of Mrs. Fisk's company. & & as i | ILETTERS FROM— |THE PEOPLE. here and Wenk Eyes. or of The Byening World «ant « * fein them for a long thm ir faces melthout any pratecth What ts tet To the Elitor of | ¢ 0 ever tried. Mra, Tall or Short? ‘To the Editor of The Evening World: mea? 1 mean, ¢ would 3 woman ui 8 tall man rything else being equi Ukely to fall in C94-69-54-b 81 74G2984D OOP HONS 9 Mr. and Mrs. Puttonstyle try to break into society. ing with the clerk for apartments at the Highballedof-Castoria. They are somewhat amazed at the actions of J. W. Grates,| Mr. Grates evidently disturbs. 1am Jed by a recent letter to ask women reads sat. | ef this question; Which do women preter, tail or | ‘ mort mea? DDD DDD H:3DDP00DH14-D9D9DDT9DE-24-D3-9 9 D8999-4-0-9-0-0-8-0.9-9-2-8-9 99D $99-00609 5309460 rors # SOCIAL EXPERIENCES OF MR. AND MRS. PUTTONSTYLE. HAPPY’ HOME !For jer hear © goat word spoken | « Why do Husky Hu mince, but 8—-Go. the hot 3 “My, that’s a thrilling fire story! smell {t! “I didn't expect to have to— “So vivid I can almost By T. E. POWERS. ON ROLLERS. “Shoot the chutes.” A SENSITIVE MAN. “I wonder if there could be anything really burning! Fire? PVG COTTE VOD “Thera must be! " 1 They|the Chicago millionaire spendthrift, who bets a million dollars | the dogs and the parrot will have to go. leave their happy little home and are seen in the picture negotiat-| every minute, much to the annoyance of a group of financiers who| 2x4 sky parlor on the roof. are busy putting all the railroads of the world into one, and whom | five-cent tip. Papa Puttonstyle stands out in the hall so Mamma Pa Puttonstsle is all right, but |Puttonstyle can turn around to view the furniture. s P9494 -9-G-8-3+ ba e Policeman—Aha! Stealin’ de % woodpile, are ye? Now, I'll take you to a woodpile that you can ‘Y steel wid a saw. 3 2 o s 2 $ e Fire! “Ab, I knew it! My 2 eenses are always alert and > my perceptions keen.” ‘ SODDOS OSLO OHES OE OES OPI OVOOOOON PO SO EDEDDDDEDIVIODSEOFOOROOOOOE: & & oe o & 2 2 : Thoy are taken to their Mamma Puttonstyle gives the boy a HER DREAM. She leaned back in her chair with a weary though contented sigh. This had deen such a busy day, she thought. In the morning she had had a protracted alege with her dressmaker over a crea- tion In pale blue satin, that was to Bladden the cyes of all observers at the largest ball of the season. After a dainty luncheon at Delmonico’s she had gone with Jack to look at the new span he thought of buying, and had agreed with him as to the perfect match of the glossy brown steeds, Then Jack and she had driven downtown, and she had dropped him at his club while she went to take her fencing loswon. After that she had made a call or two, and then hurried home to dress for the dinner the family was giving that evening. Everything had gone off perfectly—the new cook was very satis- factory—and later she had looked in on the last act of "L'Aiglon.” How mag | dent replied. Miss Irish {s a flesh and blood actress with no nonsense about her. She is clever, but it wouldn’t matter If she “couldn't act @ little bit’ Just to look at her would be good enough. eo 8 Mra, Sol Smith, the dear dumpling of Qn elderly lady, who, with her knitting, was such a cosy feature of “Sag Harbor* last season, has e cold cream of her own making on the market, which brings her a snug income. Mrs. Bmith could retire from the stage and live at ease on the proceeds of her cream alone. But as yet she has no Idea of forsaking the profession which she loves and in which her life has been passed. Wilitam Gillette comes of a fine ol@ Connecticut family. His father was United States Senator and a contem- porary of Daniel Webster. You would never know this from Mr. Gillette, how= ever, who rests his claim to distinction on his abilities as author and actor. He does not wave the family tree at the public, although some of its roots and branches are calculated to tickle snob- dom mightily. ‘4 Anna Marble, the clever press repre- sentative of “The Way of the World,” was formerly on the staff of the Brook- lyn Eagle, and 1s now New York corm respondent of the Philadelphia In- quirer. She is young and pretty and is doing some good work for the play which she represents. ee There ts no more beautiful speaking voice In the dramatic profession than that of Eleanor Moret. It is of a quailty which haunts you for hours after you have Ilstened to It. Mise Mo- rett! is now appearing as the second “Mrs, Hatch” at the Manhattan Thea- tre. Her reading {s natural, and her enunciation perfect. On or off the stage there is never the slightest tinge of affectation about Eleanor Moretti, JANE GORDON, KEEPING RIGHT AT IT. “What Is your husband going to do, Mrs. Bunker, now that {t ts getting too far along in the season to perform on the link: : “Oh, he's had pockets put tn his billiard table and {s learning to play golf pool."—Chicago Record-Herald. THE SCIENTIST AND THE CROWD, ‘The great scientist had come all the why across the sea to lecture on other worlds than ours. He had handles on both ends of his name and whiskers that might have looked better trimmed, His forehead was high and broad, and he stood upon the platform waiting to begin telling what he knew about as- tronomy. It was at the great university, where more than three thousand students were enrolled. His fame had preceded him: he was sure of an honored place in the ‘history of the world, and he carried a horse chestnut in his pocket to keop off rheumatism. ‘The working of his features would have shown that he was becoming im- patient, even if he had not twiddled his thumbs and stood first on one foot and then on the other. He looked anxiously toward the doors, and several times he took his watoh from his pocket, holding it to his ear. Finally he leaned forward and, address- ing the thin, pale, hollow-chested stu- dent who was walting patiently for him to begin, asked: “Do you know whether there has been any misunderstanding about my lecture or not? Perhaps there has been a mls take in announcing the time at which it was to begin.”” no mistake,” the stu- “Don't you hear the yell- nificently Bernhardt played! And after {1ng? There's a football game going on that she had gone on to the Stuyvesant | outalde. ball and had danced until hor cheeks were as pink as the roses she carried. And now she was altting before her Jarge mirror, wrapped !n a wonderful fluffy robe of softest white, und In o moment the maid would— “Mary Jane! Mary Jane! Come right here hia minute and set the table for supper: ¢ girl roze and @lanced down at her blue-checked calico 5 “¥en, aa she t Bot, ""—Chicago Record-Herald, A SURE BULL'S EYE, “Maw, Paw wants the gun'" “What fer?” “Blinks's boys in the orchard eatin’ them green Crawfords.” “You tell yer Paw not to worry "bout no gun. He ain't much of a shooter, ‘n Ike's not he wouldn't hit the Blinks boys anyhow. Them peaches can's miss ‘em."'—Brooklyn Life, ve | en

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