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Pw Ol S ’ @a rk, Oiue WA L’sh Lace RIUMPHS in open work, veritable in hol {gowns Jrudent ‘will be worn, East year these are the new spring and eummer ich have just arrived in New York, nd dre already being purchased in large numbers either by the favored daughters af Fashion who flit South et this season of the year or by the young woman who plans her summer Wardrobe months ahead of the sultry day when gowns were of linen, trimmed tacé, The coming season will show them of VAN NESS’S HONEYMOON. HINT mi aaa ak i i i | Mi ‘i | symphonies inspection of the dation. secs alll holiday By Ada May Krecker. (Copyright, 1908, by the Dally Story Pub. Co.) hf T* boys had sent for Ashhee to help them. “She's the sort of girl a fellow ever forgets,” Dalbiac had written. “Sweeps everything before her without anybody boing able to impress her. We fellows are not at swords’ points; I'd godspeed any lucky chap who won her. ] You're a pretty clever one and my your heart's of marble, so you'd better ome over and vindicate us.” After. that Ashbee had rather looked for something supenb, and during his : first fw moments beside Miss Rozelle's hammock was perhaps at some loss to understand the potency of allurements which radiated from so nondescript a face and figure and certain boyish attt- tudes that flavored of a boarding-house fhoyden out for fun. The apple of a score of glowing masculine eyes and the sole inspiration of half as many appeal- ingly Ailigent tongues, the little lady in the middle of the evening ouddenly leaped out of her hammock to scamper acnogs to @ cluster of wall-flowerw, A number of men trailed after her, Ash- ee A ee bee; whtose conversation with her had eparided, turned ¢retfully to Dalblac with: ber blasted indifference that you donkeys mad, Why don't oe @ rival game? I see there ere that are worth while,”’ eVening when the desola- veranda had been p the empty chairs were ghosts ‘the earlier mirth, Rozelle came fut- back efter @ book she hed left in kk Mt seomed a full half hour at last observed: believe you care especially woclety, do you?’ Ingenuousness melted to @ long and de- As the two parted that they go for a end when she cried @ thousand times , the the i i al | i ; i PR etter epother, by letle and lit the miracles that ° wrought by Ashbee’s hands, To be eure Uho men did not stand by ‘Ashbee as Dalbinc had guaranteed, nor 41d the aforesaid gentleman wish him “Comfort yourself with the reflection that the substnoe thet affects marble Is '" Ven Ness laughed in rejoinder. of all the men had been im- ta tho effects of yors in the way of promenades. Stl!l, he had never made further headway and seemed contented with whatever gifts the petite goddess provided him, al- ways good-naturedly laughing over the fuming of others, assuring them that the game was not worth thelr agonies. At about the end of Ashbee's second week, however, !t appeured for the moment that the young woman nad re turned to the 0! love. She aros ‘her customary abruptness from cle of trousers, remarking that perhaps Van Ness would fancy an airing. He sprang up hurrledly to take advantage of this wonderful suggestion with every mark of delight. But they were not away long. Soon Ashbee, with a susp!- clon of vain-gloriousness, asserted an unimpaired power over the belle by drawing her away for a walk of his own, thus summarily repudiating and avenging his slights, In the secret places of his heart, how- ever, there was the most penetrating ‘humility. Its marbleness was merely & shrine for very penttential prayers. Ash- bee had flirted and gayly deceived her ever #ince he had first donned the in- signia of his sex's dress or even before, but he till bewalled every gentle heart he had affilcted. He felt now that it would not do to have thls one more girl imagine he was serious when—well, when everything was a joke. Rozelle ‘Must be warned even if it was going to be very hard and very awkward. 60 when they came out among the walnuts where Qe had always waxed most sen- timentah he began aoftly and slowly with: “Miss Rozelle, I wonder whether you can undeystand a really frivolous man, @ regular chump, you know, that goes and does all sorts of things he ought ‘not to, plays with fire when he knows it's going to hurt somebody at a very vulnerable place—and all for hie own amusement?” Rozelle yaid nothing, {'Rozelly, girl, you hurt me when you @re so quiet, and I've got to tell you, I'm just that kind of @ villain, There, 4t's mighty tough to say It, But don't you know, I've ected the simple since I've met you, I don't—" His tnterlooutor continued ominously suppressed. He blundered thy more. “But there are lots of nice ¢ellows who would roll over in the mud if they thought tt would plewse you, I’ve been thinking and hoping that perhaps you cared for Van Ness « trifle! Now, he's 4 fine fellow, that boy, He's worth your while. I’m not; I'm— Then the lady spoke: "top It, Mr, Ashbee, Never mind, It's all right, I’m a yillain, too, My, Van (ess has told me all about it from ‘the beginning. You see, I have known thet he's worth while. I-I’m married to him. We're on our honeymoon; thought we'd do eomething out of ordinasy, you know, and it's been | of fun. But, between you and mo, we're @ving wack to the common honeymoon Green fhen with Jorchon , lace, trimmed with linen. frocks Bros, for The Evening World it is easy to see that they show a8 many square inches of embroidery. whether Russian, Irish or Torghon, as they do of the linen or pongee ostensibly forming the foun- All white linen frocks will be the rage. simple, short-skirted, shirt-walsted affairs that ane n the feminine tennis player of the New- port Casino and the shopgirl, taking her two weeks’ THE WORLD: FRIDAY EVENING, JANUARY 30, 1903. == HOME == & ye i | i 4 i Hh From the most casual photographed at Saks |can hardly AAT i AA Il I Hi MT TUT HAE il Hal i thi c. fh incrusted marvels, trimmed so elaborately that one realize they aro of plain linen. Very lovely is a gown of white linen, hand-embroi- | duced into the dered in Frenon knots, alternating with bands of filet | lace, and as nvvel as It is lovely {8 the blouse waist, with 1s odd shaped bolero of linen, with flaring but- “ terfly points for sleeves, and undersleeves of the finest Not the mbroldered, lace- w simmons horn every minute. French nainsook and the coarse lace. This dress, as well a long, sloping shouldered effect which will be very much cultivated next season by the girl who wants to be in the fashion. THE &« MAN w HIGHER w UP. Oe THIS IS THE YOUNG MAN'S AGE—BUT 8s the others {llustrated, gives OLD MEN A a br big prize-fighters seem to be getting into public view again,” sald the Cigar Store “They are always in public view,” replied the Man Higher Up. “The hot- air they emit scorches the United States of America, The most en- couraging sign I observe in the re- cent resurrection of the big prize- fighter as an object of interest is,the spasm of activity that has seized upon the freckled frame of our old friend Bob Fitzsimmons. “Nobody knows how old Fitzsim- mons is, Everybody they send over to Cornwall to investigate the records of his birth digs up the books to the extent of finding a new Robert. Evi- » dently in Cornwall there was a Fitz- Along comes this bald head with a propost- tion to take a fall out of Tommy Ryan. “I'm more or less of a bug myself on the usefulness of old men. T can't see any reason why when @ man gathers up the years until they number fifty or more he should send out his wife or his relatives to throw up the spongo for him. Because a man has white hair or an absence of hair ts no reason, to my mind, why he should want to take a transfer from the line of activity to the crosetown road of innocuous desuetude. “I havo tried to fresco onto your intellect the fact that a man 1s as old as he feels—not as old as he looks, & bunch of wrinkles on lis visage and a birth record dated back of the |Lroken heart because they wouldn't let him work any longer. civil war should throw his cards into the discard and refuse to bet on any | disposition nowadays to assume that the old-timer ds a has-been. more hands I'll eat all tho cigars in “Ot course, this is the age of the papers and in the ads, of the correspondence schools, Charley fchwab, the head of the Steel Trust. If you can tell me why a person with your shop. young man, You read {t in the news- They point out, Who {6 behind Charley | Another white I!nen gown is given an unusual touch | scant eloow siceves. | of smartness by seasional threads of black intro- Russian lace with which it ts trimined. Very pretty are its loose, transparent sleeves of the lace, with thelr narrow under-arm pleces of the plain Hen, and the wide collar which passes the shoulder line, extending to below the bust Startling in ite vivid contrast of color ts a leas dress has the wide colar, effect, and rather .emall with a lace cuff, with wide vertical bands of white Torchon, which also used tavishly on the blouse waist, on the coliar, and the novel inlet pleces which give fulness tothe] nearly to the elbow. Ws RE STILL, IN THE RING. | from getting rotten. “Whenever a young man makes a conspicuous success you don’t read anything else in the newspapers.and the magazines. Exceptionally foxy young men have made their mark in the history of the world from time immemorial, From the best we can figure out Adam was onlya few months old when he got dispossessed from the Garden of Eden and saddled the burden of work on his descend- ants. Come down through the ages and you will find the young men making good, from Joseph to Alex- ander and from Alexander to Nepo- leon and from Napoleon to Roosevelt, but a skimming glance and little thought will convince you that there were numerous gray beards mixed in with the bureh ‘ “Vhat Is why I say that Fitzsimmons {8 an encouraging sign. To be a successful prize fignter a man has ‘9 keep himself in good physical condi- tion. I've seen old man Fitzsimmons go Into the ring against a human whale like Jeffries or a human fire engine like Sharkey, being more than one-third older in years than elther of them, and hold his own. He believes that he 1s a young man; Russell Sage believes that he ts a young man. If you can get two more diversified types I'll eat all the cigar-boxes in your shop, but they are both making good, | “I read the other day of an anclent guy In Philadelphia who died of a There {is a The | trouble is that the old-timers are beginning to take it as a fact. Let them look up to Poh Fitzsimmons, the aged prize fighter, who has many a good |punch left in him yet, and take heart, Instead of turning the affairs of the world over to the immature we are teaching the good men to live longer, Schwab? Who made him posstble? Andrew Carnegie, who could make |and the longer we keep doing It the longer we will live and the more good Santa Claus think he was looking at his own reflection, created the place for | we will do.” Schwab. J. Pierpont Morgan, who went to school up !n Connecticut before | most of the shrimps of finance of these days became material for the clerk Man. who handled their birth certificates, helped to put Schwab where he is and “Do you think Fitzsinimons can beat Ryan?” asked the Cigar-Store ven if he don't,” replied the Man Higher Up, “there won't be a man {s keeping him there, after he has broken down in health from the strain | around the ring Willing to take @ chance with him half an hour after the of trying to keep the watered stock of the United States Steel Corporation | decision ts rendered,” CASTORIA For Infants and Children, The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Gagngiare Amusements. THEATRE, Gist mt: & Biver. BROAD WA Every mitath Wed sat ee | = Siver Slipper, MATINEE THURS. FEE Mill Thea, Lea ny dae Mortay 41 Thea, te Amusements. AGADRAY, OF ruaic. Lis St. & irvine Place, IN BEFORE, of gooing bridal couples to-morrow ‘way up in the Matinee To-Morrow, | ate se ae 00 atts Welch a aS he Peddler’ COMES ARCHING Amusements i WEBER & FIELDS 8 9%°)Qe00yey « 20, measteel TWIRLY=WHIRLY T E GRADUATE jan Burlesque, THE STICKINESS OF GMLATINE, Adm he YS: YALE 2 Imineion, {) cents MAJESTIC 9x48 cine Bomar & 09m ob D. LY’ S Ee aia A iat. Wad. STH GAT warn The BILLIONAIRE, Jerome sries WIZARD OF OZ, Kiaw & Erlanger AMERICAN#),"\ We BLANCHE BAT KEITH Sri Lo (Bxe't Mon.) ‘Ted Marke’ Big Cuncert Manhatian © ‘ |B. FISKE Sab ‘OF ALA: 7 with TMussre Equally smart Is a street costume of green linen, ornamented with circular banda of white lace, through which narrow bands of green linen ere run. While the mandolin sleeve in its varied forms will elaborate street gown of dark blue linen trimmed | be seen on a majority of-next season's gowns, a novel Is|feature of the new varicty, js the prolongation of the {nner portion of the cuffs in a wide strip, reaching telinen_ Len Filec~ Jacked Bnges ie A beautiful gown of pongee had a skirt ornamet, about the top with clusters of pin tucks, bottom with applications of cream-col lace in grape-like design, formed by the ¢ crochet rings of white, picked out with black knots. This very effective treatment is continued oni very full blouse waist where the applications o the shoulders and bust. There 1s a collar formed by ‘cross bara black velvet, unlined, as are all the colli |five very beautiful gowns. m Ln This giving the long-shouldered mandolin sleeves, finished THE OLD RELIABLE TRY PROCTOR'S Tet, a5 28t §, se ees ee SiN AVE, {estas Obl 8) Sera IDBINSL #33 BEAT STOCK HERALD sue hes a DE WOLE HOPPER wr. picKwmcs Poti ih de Dafa 5k A NESE ON Absolutely Pare e THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE Powten,, Wileon, Bet Favoriten, ont G Sree CoM. Maggi Bouillon is the keynote of goed soups, It has a delicious flavor pecu- liarly its own, is absolutely Ae CASINO sett ait pure, aod is dainty, appetiz- ing, strengthening, # wt wt ene ma i SUCCESS. "—aterete. GARRICK THEATRE Var Evenlngs, fed, ANAK RUSSELL In ICE AND Ml NeW SAVOY THEATRE, dah tah pred TESS Mate: Wed Bay ict the Gi Win te Green | yeR, 00 | SRITERION THEATRE, » «eens Last 3 Weeks. ves. 515. % | JULIA MARLOWE ca ttlianst Mat, To-day at 3—""THE I It can be. prepared in the most simple manner, with hot water —any one can do it. # ot No useless simmering over the hot range. o # A bottle costs 45c., and will last along time. Try it. # It will give savor to anything in culinary art. & Awarded many prize medals. All grocers and druggists. ee Amusements METROPOLITAN OPERA-HOUSE, GRAND OVERA SEASON 1902-1903, Under the Direction of TUR. MAURICE GRAU. | TO-NIGHT, DOUBLE Bt LA Pika bu Rea iNT r KERDOCKER THEA. heyy at 8 sharp, Mats. weelan Seti ft) reduction GRAND "The Priga 0 SUNDAY NIGHT PASTOR’ Seve GEO. PULLER GOLDRN, 8M Ui DIXON. NOWERS & Di XON Extra FITZG BRON WALLAGK'S, oai2. Siu ‘Uk SULU,)~ 2.45. Sat yawn iA CLERMONT A! SkATiNg CHAMPION: CKRS BNE Nasion Se. Web i4th St. Theai La He BLUD ‘iso, og. Oth Ay 90, ad