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fo ee ee ee ee wri ee LN Gwo Spring Dresses . Ghat _Are _Attractive. NN, NOVEL dress for spring wear is of sare blue ailk with a blouse bodice Ns tucked in clusters and trimmed eth bands of coarse white linen canvas @mbroidored tn blue. ‘The three caps of the very odd sleeves are ontlined with bands of embroidered linen, which also form the large fanci- fol turnover cuffs and the collar. Tho skirt is built with a yoke of blue wk outlined in white li From this the ¢ulness falls in a double box-plait in front and 1s shirred from the sides in a fashion which will be very henerally worn next spring. Another gown of binck foulard with a | @ large white polka dot has a novel yoke of the allk outlned in white and cut in a small in front to reveal the collar and vest of shirred white silk. The blouse has a b ut at the meet (Copyright, 1902, by Dally Btory Pub. Co) LL unconscious of his presence she | came toward him through the | fragrant dusk of the flowery old | warden. Albove the filmy black lace ef her gown her shoulders and face shone like alabaster. | The man rose eagerly. ‘Claral"’ Ghe dtopped before him and held out) @ hand that was not quite steady. “Are you glad to see me, Clara?" tone was Ilke a caress, “Yes, I am glad.” thrill in her voice, mastered, gbing on steadily; "I have (Mrs. St, Clair; she told me that you 44 come home with her." “Yes. It was a matter of business that brought us from the West, and a man that T wanted to see is out here. Did Alice tell you that I sai! for Europe to- His ‘There was a little which she quickly Ho leaned back against the “I was too bashful to tell you. ‘And I was young and poor and there was—Oliver, it is a terrible thing to be—what I was and to hold the destinies of @ man and a women in helpless bands, But I have always belleved that you knew how I loved you "You were wrong,’ sho sald very Gravely. “I never knew. And now— mow it can't make any difference—it doesn't matter.” “Clara, you love me! #yen now, when—when you feel that it is wrong!’ His handsome face was Padlant, his voice thrilled her. “Vou are forgetting, Larry. Shall we 0 back now?’ Her voice sounded cool nq thin, “You haye never loved Oliver, have you, Clara” he asked jealously, “Ob, no. How could you think of Mhatt’ whe sald faintly. “Why, but no matt You love me Then nobody @ needs us, Clara, don't think; let me have my way-—let me be wholly re- smponatble. Won't you come Jn a travel- AeMng dress to the Uttle gate in the morn- oing at Won't you, Clara? if you fove me, if you don't want me to be t a A f. + Op the ball room, 4 graceful, the most miserable of men, say that you OUR DAILY ROMANCE. THE WAY IT WAS. | By ELLEN F. { ing in front, starting from a tie of dotted white silk, which also forms the crush belt. ‘The sleeves are narrow till they reach the elbow, where they broaden Into & huge mandolin puff, end- ing in large turnover cuffe edged narrow silk ruche, The skirt has a double box platt i front and is built in narrower plaits at the sidos. ‘These novel designs for spring gowns, are reproduced from Le Costume Royal by permission of the Royal Pattern WYCKOFF. gird in the gray Nght He stopped, leaning on the gate, In the sand et his |teet were the prints of her tiny feet. | And there were some scattered jasniine flowers, crushed and soiled, He watched the garden path with sombre eyes that | lighted now and then with a gleam of | hope ‘Then he saw pinned to the jasmine @ folded sheet of creamy paper. He caught his breath eharply, and his: face Whitened as he unfolded the sheet and read: “I cannot, God bless you. Good-by.” That was all. For an instant egme- thing Ike a holy light beamed in his face. Then he broke a spray of jas- mine, folded it in the note and put it carefully in his pocket. From his note book he tore a Jeat and in a straggling ine wrote: “I was a cowan; forgive me.” Pin- ning the leaf to a ewaying branch he pulled hjs hat over his eyes and went slowly down to the beach and on to the station, Oliiver met him and slapped him on the ehouller, ‘%p glad to see you, Bt. Clair, Won't you do me a favor? It's like this; Mra, Oller has taken st Into her pretty head to go over to town at this unearthly hour to do some shopping 1n the cool of the day. An engagement keeps me here till a later train. I em looking for some one who will take charge of the little woman, She was a girl friend of yours, and— are you ill, old mant’ “No, I-Mrs, Olliver——" “Why, Here ehe 1s. went whi my dear, here's Mr. St. Clair going and— A fat, motherly little woman held out her hand, “This is Mr, St, Clair, Susie. My wife, Larry. Say, aren't you til? Bt. Clair leaned again: convenient 1a st. He stamme only that—th I was mistaken, Il came near being he stammered, Clara was on the piazza when he her {ace was very white and there was a far-away look in her eyes and a bit of white paper in her hand. Bho turned @ ‘horrified look upon him. Her lips whitened, mill, You'll come, daring?” Jow, futt®Fing yes" was her newer. Even as it’ passed her lps whe sprang frightened away and ran wittly acrous the beach and along the Dridge and through the shadowy garden: Tt was an hour later that he saw her beautiful woman, with shining eyes and a fair ‘ushed face. His jasmines shone in her dark hair, 6 morning came and the man went iy down the walk to the itttle gate the vines. “Clara, why didn't you tell me? Don't look like Aren't you going to forsive me 44 There A od * or of humble pleading in voice. an he held out bla ar to her vital Y wite,”” She whlepered, her lips waite, He donnbly sovously. “We have been id, (oe tal Alloe eee oe heard, Friga” Sete an wn i Mrs. | Soon. however, :| nad tasted long enough. THE WORLD: MONDAY EVENING, JANUARY 26, 1903. ® THE = aan ® HIGHER e UP. SO PL ARE BEGINNING TO HATE IT, HE SAYS MONEY PEOPLE WONDER how J Morgan felt when he was drawing that $22,500,000 check to pay for the control of the Reading Rail- road?” queried The Cigar-Store Man. “He felt about like you do when Is “6 Pierpont sponded The Man Higher Up. ‘They say It was the biggest check ever drawn, but $22,500,000 ts no more to J. Pierpont Morgan than a piker's bank-roll is to the Metropolitan Turf Association, “Money {s so plentiful now, among people who have it, that they are be- ginning to hate it. There never was a time when money was so easy to get and 80 easy to get rid of. It is true that the most of us would die of shock if we woke up some morn- ing and found that somebody had left us a small bank account. Nevertfieless, you can’t take a peep around without having the fact sunk into your thought works that @he kirtish is Prevalent to an unprecedented degree. Money breeds. When it comes to @ proposition of increasing and multiplying money has got Belgian hares skinned to a fare-you~well. “I read so much about the mazuma dropsy that Js affiloting the country that I've quit canrying around the pawn-ticket for my watch. Here was a human deposit vault who left a thousand dollar bill on the ledge of thd coal enough to keep New York warm you are paying your gas Dill,” re-| Princess Theatre box-office the other night and waited for three days be-, fore he wert ‘back for ‘his change; down fn Baltimore so much money was dumped ito the Sub-Treasury last week that the clerks used bills for rugs and they had to close the doors on deposits to keep the long green. afrom bulging the walls ont. “These were a couple of minor instances ff copped out of the columns of | the newspapers, ont if it comes to a show-down there is no place like little old New York in which to observe the obesity of the money supply. The buildings that are being put up, the stores that are being opened, the crowds in the stores and in the theatres, the gowns end gig-lamps of the women, the hundreds and thousands of private carriages and automobiles—all show that the needful fs here by the wagon load. “Walk up Broadway any night between 10.30 and 11 o'clock and im the district between Twenty-seventh and Forty-second streets you will see more money reprerented ‘than in any similar district Uy the world: The diamonds | undertaker’ 8 ye cece and peng rest are boarding in hospitals ® wNTIFUL NOW and furs worn by the women alone would pay that Venezuelan debt and give every inhabitant of the country enough to come to New York on. The theatre receipts for a night would buy for a year. The dough passed out in the lobster emporiums for suppers after the show would put up a new Post-Office building and go some dis- tance toward paying for the plumb- ing. “Where does it all come from? You can search me. It isn't 6o many years ago that a man with $10,000,000 was regarded as first cousin to the spirit of opulence. Nowadays they won't let a man with $10,000,000 buy checks and sit in the financial game. He don't cut any more ice in New York than a German trombone player in an Ttallan orchestra. “But a man who has got $10,000,000 is supplied with a brain au gratin) if he can't double it in a short time under existing conditions. After he gets It doubled it is so easy for him to cean up a million that he herdly takes the trouble to do It. New powers are appearing in the financial world ‘every day. Those that have got it are getting more of It, and those that know how to get it are having the graft of their lives. “In the mean time the man who fs piddling away on a salary is getting | just about the same as he did when he started in, and paying just about } twice as much for what he ‘wears and eats and the place where he eats and | sleeps. John D. Rockefeller gives away $10,000,000 and raises the price of of] so high that he gets it all back in a few months. Andrew Carnegie |glves eway a fow millions, and more comes in than goes out from the next |Steel Trust dividend. A big jan in finance takes a kid with the thinking lability of a hard boiled egg and makes a millionaire out of him, while other young men of real ability are compelled ito so bury themselves in work that they get paralysis of the ambition. People with bales of money throw it away, and other people with bales of money are always on hand to pick it up. The poor but deserving man is generally around the corner.” “We all have a chai at it,” remarked The Cigar-Store Man. “So did the women have a chance to get out of that cigar factory fire in Crosby street,” replied The Man Higher Up. “Some of them went to the ‘T need not surprise anybody if news | comes that the Empress. of China; bitter hater as shes of ‘the foreign devils,” is wearing a pair of Juggle 82 American shoes. Mrs, Wu Ting Fang, wife of the popu- lar Chinese Minister just’ recalled to China, nas had her bandaged feet re- leased and is now wearing shoes made In this country. Instead of having to carried or helped around, as high-ca: Chinese women with small, deformed | feet have to be, Mrs, Wu can now get around like American women and te very happy over the change. She will have a surprise for her al- | mond-eyed sisters when she reaches | China, which may inaugurate a reform | in the land where diminutive fect are | regarded as a mark of feminine beauty. | With the experience of six years in| America as the wife of the Chinese | Minister. little Mrs. Wu has expanded | in her ideas with the @ue spirit of | American advancement. but this expan-| sion has not been Hmited to her mental | faculties alone, The most important change from the Chinese woman's stand-| point will be found in the little lady's) feet, Mme. Wu's feet ate no longer | bound by Chiense conventlonality and tight bandages, They are at least ono inch longer than when she landed America. Six years ago, when Wu Ting- fang took his wife to Washington, her| feet were tightly bound after the cus- | tom of the Chinese woman of high-ciste. the Minister's wife be- | gan to comprehend American customs, | She desired to use her zeet as did the) women of thie country. She saw the wisdom of allowing the feet to grow tn the way nature intended them, and she resolved that she would follow the mannets of her American sisters ‘As @ popular member of Washing- ton diplomatic society, where her win- some manner and high intelligence en- deared her to the Washington women, she. was a guest at many dances and entertainments. Mrs. Wu speaks Ene- lish, and soon #he begun to discuss ‘a means of allowing her feet to ae sume the freedom of her American sisters, She finally determined to un- ergo the painful process of regaining the use of her feet. When in the bandaged state the Chi- nese woman's foot is frightfully dis- torted; the toes are turned under and| pressed agninst the ball of the foot Gradually the bandages about the Chi nese Minister's wife's fect were Joosened and the stunted toes were allowed to re- qme their natural position, Aloohol Wu's Tiny Chinese Feet Have Been Enlarged and She Now Goes Round in ag American Shoes. MRS. WU TING-FANG. Wife of the ex-Chinese Minister, and herbs were rubbed upon the suf- tering members, the releasing and re- Prominent New Vorkers. BY C. DE FORNAROQ, - I-—PRINCE TROUBETZKOY, CEYLO TEA BLACK or GREE storing process belng extremely pain- ful. Every day treatment was nye nm until at last the little Chinese could be laid out fiat. Serenetentnn ot the ankles was the next step, Mra. Wu was able to cast off the a porting bandages. ‘The little Chinese lady. natvety stated, before sailing for China Tuesday, that | she was not In eympathy with the small- foot custom In her native land “My feet are quite big now,” she safd, “but I do not care, for T have gained a great deal. The custom of binding the feet Is unnatural and really robs a wom- an of much that is beautiful—grace and freedom of movement. In additton to this, it hampers a woman to such an extent that she is greatly dependent, I am glad that my feet are now in better proportion to my height, and if they were even larger I would like ft better, for I'am always an object of curiosity when I walk to my carriage.” When Mrs. Wu {s at home she wears the Chinese slippers, but when out shop- jplng or in public she wears Amertcan | shoes, She says she has no idea what \slze, according to American standards, she wears, for she has them made to | oniter. | She is in sympathy with many Amer- jean custome, though she thinks young | Women have too much freedom. She ad- {mires the Amertoan girl for her broad- | mindedness and Mevrvaence Pat | thinks her unconventlonallty in Ia |Ing and Joking with wentiemen tp a litte (00 progressive. | — nae BRAIN TWISTERS, How many pounds of woo! worth, re- spectively, 90, 3 and 40 cents a pound, {can be mixed with forty pounds worth |45 cents to make a mixture worth 39 cents @ pound? A polo standing in « river reashes seven foot out of water; tt falls, and its [top point je submerged fAtty-two feet | from whore It stood. How deep ts the iver? The difference betveen the aquares of two numbers {# 9,876,648,219. Find the numbers by the shortest method you know. Two numbers are 6 and 4. Find a number equal to the difference of their cubes without oubing the numberg. Any two numbers coming together, such as 5 and 4 or 8 and 9, multiply the one number by the other, then by 8, adding 1, will give the required answer without cubing the numbers. Answer for these numbers ts 61 and 217 + REQUESTED TO “BLOW away."| Amusements, Amusements ‘A young lady organist in @ Montreal, church was very anxious to make @ good impression, by her playing, on & visit- ing clergyman one Sunday, says Youth. ‘The organ was pumped by an obstrep erous old sexton, who would often stop thought the organ voluntary when he thou! an volun tl Don't Worry About Coa Gua | for cooking, use Ma; agei Bouil- lon, # A better and superior Soup can be made in a few minutes with hot water and #* organiet Ww nxious that all should, sethantes " ice was about to go well, and as the serv begin she wrote @ note, intended solely Maggi Bouillon | | for the eexton's eye. He took it, and in : spite of her anxious beckoninge carried it wtraight to the preacher, What was that Jeman's astonishment when he read: ‘Oblige me this morning by blow- ing away till I give you the signal to stop—Miae Alle CASTORIA | For Infants and Children, os | The Kind You Have Alw ys Bough! Amusements. Me Aer i= “in is than by hours over the range in the ordinary way: #& vt vt Maggi Bouillon has a deli- cious flavor, comes in bottles, and is entirely devoid of the tinny taste so often found in soups #* w All grocers and druggists. # Ft tt ot Is perfect in its purity, faultless in its quality, 4|delicious in its flavor, and greatest in its economy. If you a particular about your tea, as you should be, you will try it. merit will win you. Uniformly Excellent. yl ROSE CEYLON TEA Half Pound, 30c. All Grocers, Solid Gold Eye Glasses $1.00 a Pair. Thess are the same kind of Glasses as are sold generally at $5.00 @ pair, but FOR THIS WEEK I will give you the chance to buy them atl 0) a pair, and you can get them at any solutely correct or money retui LZ. 106 E.23d st.,New York,nréthav 541 Fulton st., Blyn,nr. DeKalb ay. 192 Fultonst.,Blyn, nr. Orange st. BAPIRET HEATRE, Evenings § 2) Lexington ave. er STAR iss ong. sOcCEES teres Wen 7 Keogh Mar . - tren B15, Mate Mon, Wed. at, 215 @AKRICK THEATRE nr. Bway, PRIOMS 15, 2.50 AND TE Byenings 816, Ma Bat. 2.16. ANNIE RUSSELL in MICE AND MBN, M. W. Taylor's Big Production TO-NIGHT [MOBY ANON, THEATRE INS Ba 1d HY JOR Ber ween ‘The Girl With the Green EYES, s:coocoon eal OMEN SiN CRITERION THEATRE, | way and ¢in rm Last 3 Weeds. B'ves mets | PAu. neconDs BROKEN B: D REPAIR W 3. . | jenry JULIA, MARLOWE: 4H. || MALLAGK', ocaz e er, Caupenzumaznn, foosuden ss Ret fe SULTAN OF SULU, Tee vations Securd SOTHERN 1d wae and Joe Welch “ ” MADISON SY. TRBATRE, Mth at..or, Bway. | _ a0 to an 00. | The Peddler, BLZABETH TYREE In GRETNA GREY, | MOU atts £2 |THE BIRD in “K KNICKERBOCKER THEA Bway & 9500 84 | _ SourDe irrowa * | THE CAGE, Eee ait’ Wet & Gates ot 9 - ~ Kine & ep "WR. BLUE BEARD, AMERICAN #3,"1.0°33. "A Colones MAT. FOR HOMB AND HONOR, at Week—NRVADA DAILY (xe't Mon.) Bie a, ae ANS ALsattoh ee Fuss ris Te Bran, 615. Male. Wed. & al | WEST END, ‘The 2in ofr at et pe i ee eae Amusements ~ HUBER’S MUSEUM, LAST WEEK Moth Miller, Gol8Toothed Horse 4 ¢ KOREAN TWINS. Thi ACADEMY OF asi, & Int special Stupen FLO Pxcellin # RODORA| OOF eine ay. i Prices, 25.60.71 dime Sat 2 DALY'S "342: sth anh & Erlanger vaaaite’* The BILLIONSRE, se: WAJBSTIC ONAND GPSEE, Bray 4,00 ot Wed. & Sat WIZARD OF OZ. w NEW GROUPS EDEN °"2inBRAroge MUSED. [De Keita, the Wiaard, Toaighi ae Bua" | A Thoroughbred ‘Tramp, star. To-Day, | & DDOPOUBRD 8.16. \ re] Furniture, Carpetings and Mods Its|TRY PROGTOR’S._¥8 | Your Credit Is Good, No matter how small your income may be, you ean furnish your home comfort ably here at the lowest pose sible cost, and pay for the same a little at a time, to boat! your convenience, Jordan, Moriarty 80. 165,167 & 169 B 23D ST, 2 Doors West of 3d Ave, te ern Housefurnishings. Amusements. TO-DAY, Tonite mas, ftudeylie. ) catia JA tad of man, Wm. 23 OID VB ssa mall NSLS (semen, ae, 5tn Sl. | Rett, iieriorrn Keim, (Favorites, Nasaerile “ | HERALD sete: Sat tiie bei ‘DE WOLF HOPPER wp. PicwicK, Pat otis WAN the Gongulsaee gs MRLOUIS MAN CASINO scst'aa:, #3. A CHINESE HONEYMOON i ta Jaa. Ne METROPOLITAN OPBRA-HOU: ORAND OPERA SEASON 190: ¥ nder the Dicsetion of He MAU oer Jan. jap Ba Sat! Bre, a PASTOR’ S =) Ly Ke 8b si OSes 1s 8T., xe ‘RR GOLDEN, AND 30 CENTS. BY MABEL'S ‘ON MOWERS 8 DIXON, SRL & Patra Attraction—PITZG13 BON-M OOF, Lex.ay. 442d et 8, 25¢. Bbc. b year iV eH Lek C ‘. wis ATHER. eee Mutince| Kem To-Day.| Ailea, WEBER & FIBLDS » MUSIC areainay A RE: Mats. Tues, Y-WHIRLY eee TO-DAY, GAY MORNING GLORIES, 2—BURLRQUES—2._V. iat E 14th st Manhatian SOA ee MRS. FISKE | Bibb. BELASCO THEATRE 2: sha DAVID BELASCO presents ALANCHE BATE Vie ‘ Bivay & Tay. esi ao 14th St. Theatre, |v» WEEKS—The way, 45th #t. | WHEN JOHNNY BRsT_ SHOW IN W—GREAY A | PRICRS abe.