The evening world. Newspaper, November 28, 1901, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

ares sy SRR Py ALOR # ow DRESS. WELL. By Mme. Louise. The Evening World places at the disposal of its feminine readers the |! maker who will assist and advise. them in planning new dresses and making over old ones. Address ail) letters on this topic to “Mme. Louise, Evening World Home Dressmaking Department.” Dear Mme. Loulse 1 have a bromo material for a jacket euggest? My = messurements Amehes; walst, 25 Incde would Uke it for ® an inner ining? What would Low What would you do yoa think of you use as lining What! s You do not say how you have made your skirt, so tt ts hard for me to design @ Jacket to correspond. I would suggest that you make your Jacket like the cut and if you bave trimmed your skirt with straps or bands you can add the same to the Jacket to correspond. Inter- Une your coat with tallor’s canvas and over this put a layer of cotton such as is made for this purpose. This will make it very warm, !f you cannot af- ford @ good satin ining I would advise a allk serge; !t wears well, looks well and costs only twenty-five cents per yard. MME. LOUISE. Dear Mme. Louise: 1 am @ girl aizteen years olf, and weer my skirts to my sboetops, I have cltre-green material for a skirt. Kindly tell me bow to Bave it mage and bow trimzied. M188 FRANCES. Cut your skirt Mve-gored, with two circular ruMes three Inches deep in front and five inches in the back. Edge the flounces with two rows of black mill- tary braid, one three-quartors of an inch wide, the other narrower. Fintsh where the top Mounce joins the skin with braid, turned tn, with a small diamond every eight inches. Put the wider one on first and put the narrow one on along the e@ame lino as the other; on the straight part put just the upper edge when you come to the diamond. Black trimming on green would look better than any- thing else. MME. LOUISE. ow to repatr @ drese of bi cashmere that has been torn in the front pea: the waist. Could an Invisible patch be Inserted? ‘What shail I do with anothe too abort as a result of ¢. ? ‘A patch could be invisible. Match the weave of cash: mere and press well when finished. You will have to rip your matertal from the Ining at the bottom of the ekirt: the lining having cotton in {t has sbrunk more ean You ca: I the lait. tng and finish the outside skirt with hem or facing sewed ioeaelye MME. LOUISE. So% OR AOME eS DRESSMAKERS. The Evening World's Fashion Hint. Daily THE WORLD: ARRIET HUBBARD Tm Hints to the Housewife. Lobater a Im Newburg. | yet y publist a recipe for making er a la Newburg.” LEILA. < all the meat from the shells two good ulzed freshly bolted ut into one-inch ufter a Wine add reduce ck, the werye n peur Truttes into a ho! may: be wercd Pears, Dear Mrs Witt Ayer kind enough to rved gin you be a most del! to serve with 1s of a fruit e juice from five ne cup of water, reven pounds and half a pound of ginger ed and cut into thin slices. Tet the sugar dissolve before adding fruit. Cat the lemon tn long thin add to the fruit, Let it cook y for an hour uncovered and bottle hot. Vor elght pou: Into a kettle VOLUME 42. Published by the Press Publish NO. 14,709. Post-OMce at New York as ‘lass Mail Matter, No, 83 to 63 PARK ROW, With a brand new baby and a dlamond worth $250,000, young Mrs. Vanderbilt will be richer in Jewels than the celebrated Cornelia. In the entful career of the Hope diamond since it s stolen from a luckless Hindoo Rajah there have been some very unseemly episodes. It has inspired unworthy deeds and adorned ignoble heads. But if there is “no odor to gold,” even when it comes from polluted hands, thero is urely none to diamonds—red Nght captains ex- cepted—and a happy American wife and mother need have no scruples about receiving it from a wanton’s bosom, Capt. Diamond may give thanks that it 1s no worse. According to the current quotations of blackmail in the Red Light District, $1,000 rep- resents only five assessments on one disorderly house, ——. ‘phere ja no habit that can't be broken without injury to the system “How abi the cating and breathing habits?” — Dr. Pitcher, late Assistant Surgeon U. 5S. A., ‘6 that when he was ordered to the island of Negros, in the Philippines, he found that the death rate there from small-pox was 136 a day. He vaccinated most of the 14,000 inhabitants, and within three weeks had the disease entirely stamped out. So he appears to have saved more lives with his vaccine points than the American soldiers have destroyed with their rifles. There is thus a balance to Uncle Sam’s credit as a benefactor of the Filipinos, though few persons would have suspected It. >-— A Boston epicure passes Judgment on the turkey as “an absurdly overrated bird, whether {t be served In slavish obedienco to tradition on the Thanksgiving table or after months in a “SIDE LIGHTS ON THE NEWS. _ storage sepulchre.” Much depends on the art of the cook and the carver. If the stuffing Ss right, the Pope's noge crisply browned and the basting properly done, a little expert work in dissection will render a bird palatable which in transit to the kitchen seemed most unprom- Ising. A cold-storage turkey served in soft weather has as few admirers as a candled cgg or a Christmas watermelon. — Society will be inclined to regard Mr. Mor- gan's purchase of an old psalter for $25,000 as an extravagance even for a man of many mill- fons, For the same amount of money he might have given two Bradley Martin balls and a din- ner for fifty at $100 a plate. What will the divino think of it who charged him with prodi- gality In drinking Johannuisberger at $23 a bot- tle? ——— “LT spend most of my income on that fresh son of mine." contribute largely ont to the fresh helr fund, ent Secretary Wilson devotes a part of his report to the question of diet, recommending an appro- priation for experiments to discover tho rela- tive nutritive value of different foods and to settle various vexed dictary questions. Uncle Sam has always been a hearty eater of nearly everything that came to his table. When he begins to meditate between mouthfuls on the nutritive value of what he eats, dyspepsia will soon claim him for her own. Official recogni- tion of thelr theorles will be a great card for the diet reformers, however, —_+__ Women have often shown thelr aptitude for writing dramas, but ft has remained for Mrs. Lottie Blair Parker, with her “four plays hold- ing the New York boards" at the same time, to become the Clyde Fitch of women draniatists. She began her literary werk early, for she {s on record as the author of alove story at tho age of eight, and she seems to have avoided tho pit- falls of collaboration, as a result of which authors have recourse to the courts to prove their claims against the aspersions of Belascos and oiner male advisers. It is interesting to know that Mrs. Parker is an actress, because in Paris the committee of actors that for years passed upon the merits of plays for presentation at the subsi- dized theatres has been abolished by the Gov- ernment as incapable of judging a play cor- rectly. With women novelists and dramatists ruled out there would be a Icrge deficit in the year’s output of the publishers. —— "Why did you say that this venerable, mys- terlous hash with which our landlady served us to-day would be of great use in a close- quarter combat a’ the I can think of to ‘repel boarders. — If the Isthmian eruption could have happened a few months earlier a life-like representation of it would have made a drawing feature of the Pan-American midway at Buffalo. A revolution while you waited, with an hourly bombardment and a view of a conquering Central American general in red fire would have been well worth the price of admission. ————— Francls Galton, the scientist, advocates the “granting of diplomas to a select class of young men” is most eligible for founders of a raco nearer physical perfecticn than the present. ‘The fathers of the beefy six-footers who com- posed Harvard's rush line might think them- selves deserving of such diplomas. KEENE— TAKE HIM OUT ON YouR YACHT ano For Castoria, Seated in the Grand Ca the sts and the LETTERS FROM— THE PEOPLE. Wednesday, itor of the Lrentag en Tread ta American against cruelty to horses, but it avers to have Little effect, The miau nombere so popular outrageous cases, rivers of tortu to make them undery but no answer or a very rude a erally the reault, Besides the ehec! are the Dilnkers which are Inctrui ture to the poor animals, T to look forward, whl look aun rather will, and reflect this of the check-rein ts} They get burning hot tn the heat tne When the hurse ts in quick they produce a most disagreeable dr: the ey¢. CLATA ALCHOFE Thomas, Jr. World: Ww. w. AL SMITH, ¢ MORGAN~ ISNT THERE SOME Way, (% STop THAT MAN GRATES? RESERVED GRATES its eyea are made to) « 1 a me of the name of the Amy | —Tyean Minister to Nornay? BOOREE DDE DOR THE THANKSGIVING DINNER OF MR. AND MRS. PUTTONSTYLE. HP LODPEDOEDE By T. E. POWERS. J.W GRATES- BRING ME A BIG PLATE OF HEADCHEESE AND TEN BOTTLES OF WINE -I'M RESERVED FOR GRATES Mrs. Perlines a “The slot di- rectory schere {s a good one, but——- “Hang tt, I've pencil an¢d—— — open— and ocher personages of | buzz the waiter about him when he comes back. ve got dropped my hold the book reach for it. See CETTE ONES EOEIESEE TES OTOLONES EE Puttonstyle eyes him intently. IMPATIENT MAN AND THE SLOT MACHINE. to "While “Confound it! closed— on—— AT_THE SOCIETY CIRCUS. ae | d When the Ana The thing has nickel is wasted PHYS COGOHLG EL EHESTES VOTES OHIGIDEEE EOE SEOET ETI E4NOEOD She will | laugh merrily. my aA rank Bf Bang! swindle.” “Whoop! Help! Police!” ¢ YBE-DPDSP-DEOPOOESI SP O9E-5H Tho Puttonstyles take their first meal at the Highballed-|high standing in society, they begin their moderate repast. | waiter returns with the check it is itemized as follows: é Seated opposite to them is J. W. Grates, The Metallic Spaghetti * It’s a little expensive ut the start, but after a week or so they | King, or The Famous Barb-Wire Merchant, vf Chicago. will get it down to a inore economical basis. e, among the Bubbets, the Ivorys,| has Jack Astorbilt blood coursing through his veins. One glass of milk, two pieces of pie—$5.80. Mr. Puttonstyle falls off his chair and is carried to his sky She is sure that he| parlor near the roof, while the hand-shakers This is one on the Puttonstyles. oe HERE are plenty of people in town T Who find no occasion at all for giv- ing thanks. To them the holiday is only a mockery, Instead of eating turkey and stuffing themselves with mince ple they will keep under cover and tell thelr hard-luck stories to all who will listen, says the Chicago Tri- bdune. Take the pathetic case of young “Chariey" Williamson, for instance. Williamson has deen living in Chicago only a few months. His salary is smali, but he has nobody depending on him for support. lle payday Is Monday, und the attractions of a great city are he woke he found that R. E. Morse was with him. and under the latter's tnflu- nce he determined to turn over a new eaf. Ho would at least go out and buy 4 meal tloket. so that in the matter of ‘ood he would be all right. With the slow of a virtuous resolve upon him he went to a downtown restaurant and Dald five of his s'z remaining dollars for a plece of pastedoard good for twenty- one meals. He ato breakfast with the feeling shat he was already a potential millionaire. He had got a block or two from the restaurant when a hose wager ruzled by him, its shrill! gong sounding. Close behind lumbcred a couple of engines. Williamson was s0 recently from the so Over powering that, as a rule, he {s “broke” beforn Saturday nigat comes round. For- tunately the boys in the office are odliging in the matter of sman loans, so that Willlamson does not miss more than ole or two meals in a week on the average. Recently his friends have been urging him to disptay moro thrift and worldly wisdom in the handling of his finances, and he has received a number of letters from home giving him the same good ad- vice. Last Monday evening he went out with “the boys” and epent all but $ of his modest stipend. Tuesday morning when DPPDIGDO: 2 9-2-9208 2 2 POOPED ben 0b O DO “¢ Power? oe in the rotunda A farmer's Dog which had been watch- ing his Master's flock of Holiday Fowls noticed a fine turkey Gobbler that Ate an if {t were Starved, although it was Already overflowing with fat. “What A fool of a Bird!” remarked tne Dog. “Here it's coming Thanks- giving and You do nofhing bat stuff yourself a1; Oats and Corn. You are just helping make yourself Fit far the Headman’s block." ’ | serx Was borrowed from the ton country that a fire had not yet lost its fascination, and, as ho had a few min- utes to spare. he turned back and fol- lowed tho engines. Half a block away he saw them stop in front of the res- ‘aurant at which he had just bought his neal Ucket. Then came a tremendous crash and a huge cloud of smoke poured out of the broken windows of the eating Place. More engines came up, flre mar- shals shouted, the street cars stopped, @ crowd gathered. and before Williamson knew it the bullding was entirely gutted and he was half an hour late for work. As for the restaurant St has not yet opened, and as nearly as Willlamson can find out there Js no Mkelihood that it ever will. Consider also what befel Thorndyke. For nearly a year Thorndyke has been desperately {n love with Edith Whipple. Uls sult has progressed well so far as the young woman herself is concerned, but old Mr. Whipple, the fair Edith's Papa, has not becn so easily handled. Mr. Whipple has money and a strong suspicion of the motives of the young men who seck the hand of his only child in marriage. The other day Thorndyke tnvited Edith tw go to the theatre with him the next evening, The morning before he ordered a dozen roses sent to her house. Ho also got a letter from a frlend in the country asking him to look up and buy for a rural friend a cross of the Legion of Honor if it were & Possible to find one, Thorndyke found one In tho window [i of a pawnshop ant & went In to buy It. He got it for a few dollars, and walked out the “private and conte I" entrance only to run into the arms of old Mr. Whipple, who sniffed scornfully and hurried on. ‘That afternoon Turndyke got a note from E¢ith. It announced that her papa Mad seen him coming out of a pawnshop and had ordered her to send back the roses, which had evidently been pald for with what ho got “on his Watch,” She also regretted that she Would not be able to go to the theatre that eventing, The chief trouble ‘with llarlow was he lacked Heatness. IE tos trousers frequent. ly bagged at the kuee and ova stonvily his shoes needed polishing. A few werks 420 Harlow and two of his friends wera Invited to ushers at ding in a northern suburb. 7 ding party was to go up on Ing of the day of the weddin ceremony was ty be solemni: pretty ttle church at 7 0 3 evenings before the wedding Harlow's friends came round to his quarters tensibly to have a talk and a smoke, but really to find out whether he had had his evening clothes pressed. They dis- covered that he had never thought of It, and were properly horritied. Karl ae- clared he would send his own tailor over in the morning tu get them. with tie atructiony to deliver them tne samo day. The tailor came. got the bundle, and Gelivered it promptiy. Harlow put the Deautifully pressed garments into his sult case and went up to the country the next morning with the other men feeling that for once they could find no fault with him. They spent a pleassnt day at the country house, and at 5.0) etal: 0 dress. Just ret time to start for the chur loud shouts from Harlow’s room. Fushed in to seo what waa the matter. jarlow. 2 nd a fool 01 “You see,” sald the angry “your fool’ tallor has sent. me ome Uttle sawed-off runt’s trousers. What a to do now? Tinally « Dale of ancient bla Ke, ios atticed butler of the house, and thus Harlow went to the wedding. “Why not?’ answered the Gobbler, “Ten't that tho End for which I was Created? Why Should I kick against auch Manifest destiny? I much prefer to Offer. myself as a Choerful sacrifice than to be Dragged in by the Heels to make a Thanksgiving roast. I have thought It All out and Am trying to Make my Inst days the happiest of my Lite." “Oh, you are Posing as a Hero? sneered the Dog, “that Is your phi- losophy. Mine is to run Away, and Live to be eaten S'mother day.’ “You? clucked tho Turkey. “*It will be a cold Thanksgiving Day when any- body Eats you! What a rare Tidbit You would make for an Epicure. Hat ha! Now I will Be the central Object of interest at tho Festive board, while You will Not even be one of the invited Guestst"’ “Console yourself, My dear friend, 1 shall at least Hayo the pleasure of Picking your Bones." “Alas, No," responded the Gobbler, with Genuine feeling, “It Is @ Cult of the household to Have voup mado of Our bones on the Second day, So highly are We esteemed. You aro Not in it with Us at this Season. Ta, ta.” | Recard-Marsia. a

Other pages from this issue: