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POURRA. UCR TT NTT PPT ETT ash LR STEEP ae IG ot WORLD'S w HOME »# MAGAZINE »# Why Do Women Marry the Wrong Men? se se Sa samen Rair Readers of The Evening World g Be Given Prizes for Answers to Three Questioné ©O0SO00H930000OHO 6: OOOD9O9: position, a good business ability’and'ts aifie to pror iQ EVENING WORLD offers three prizes of | IN MEN THEY CONDEMN IN THEIR OWN SEX? vide for @ family, whether large or small 1 r omen, intoxicants,» tolaedd, $10 each for the best answers to the fol- A $10 prize to the best answer to each ques- aigha, atanaee boul be scoommuding, eles a lowing questions: tion. loving at aji times, and I think nite anand BEST DESCRIPTION OF THE IDEAL HUS- Letters must be written on one side of the these qualities would be an ideal ma: pe, a BAND. paves only and must not be over 150 words for any woman: 4, WHY WOMEN MARRY THE WRONG MEN? long. — Send letters to Mrs. Harriet Hubbard He Must Consider His Hanae seattle BEF Aver. Evening Wor i WHY DO WOMEN CONDONE THE FAULTS York city ™& Worl, Pulitzer, Building, New family. Ono who has a kind and forgiving disposition, a to Be His. Earthly Heavea, Ae gentleman Woman may seo and even know her| Dear Mrs. Ayer: SODOOOLDODDOLOEF4O9O119 9099 $66650F00009000-29 | ideal, but cannot ask him to marry, so she does the ¥ eal is a man whom we can lookup to.of Goes best ‘she may with some dire and painful results. It family and morals who lives within prerneei is fate and nothing more, No master, no mistress, affectionate, unselfish, a good Corian, woe but one heart, one thought for the Welfare and com-|erous to a fault (“for the best of us are meuitied ‘fort of both. Sweethearts from first to last, confl-|of faults’), kind, gentle and appreciative donce in each other, and then I think there would be|the society of his wife above ail othe! fewer purtings. i M. A. B, |considers ia hame his earthly heaven,-Sueh @ In This Case Her Ideal Clie adele SS lie tanaa ce avecnunetins Gomre Yeading to the of over! “tite, 9° Man Is Her Father. 7 sar ser Here Is a Noble K ici lere Is a Noble Knight sceuae, 2 for a Nobie hat HE young man that és dutiful to bis parents chotoe of his company, temperate, religious industrious, ever upright and honest, has the essentials of the noble knight for noble iady.).. i, There Are No Wrong Marriages Whea Husband and Wife Are Right-I1 Dear Mra, Ayer: 4: HH ideal husband must have the ideal -wite, > dOOS in @ tainted atmosphere of divorces and scandals. HIS SISTER, She wt) See Her Ideal, but n't Ask Him to Marry Her. HIS {s my {Mleal: One who has complete conf: denes in his wife, whose habits are not repul- salve and whose thoughts centre on home and all know that oustom ana usage are not always Kov- erned by reason. cT M $ Half the Women Vo Not - Know Their Own Minds iF 3 Dear Mra. Aver: HY do women marry the wrong man? in my estimation, it is for this simple reason: Be- cause half of them do not know their own minds. Some women when they meet a good, hon- est, trustworthy man (one who may not be s0.awell in dress) don’t know how to appreciate him. They cast him aside for another, one of these chapples, as they call them, and who may be of glib tongue in all he has to say, and seems to be #o well edu- cated. But there comes a time when they find out he is nothing but an educated fool. They wish then that they had put more confidence én their old ac- quaintances, but when the knot is tied for life it is hard to put asunder. If women would try to think more of men's habits and ways, I am sure there would be less broken hearts and more happy mar- riages. Women, remember ‘tis not always the clothes that make the man. FROM A GREAT JUDGE. She Thanks Her Mother ' for Helping Her Choose. By Harriet Hubbard Ayer. I hope all The Dvening World girl readers as well as their mothers and fathers will care- fully read the extremely sensible letter from “One Who Knows” concerning the Ideal Husband. “One Who Knows" weil sums up the desirable qualities that make the husband an ideal com- panion, and ehe gives me the im- pression that she herself is the good wife who has done her important work im the “Baking of a home paradise. + In sharp contrast is the letter “From a Great Judge," who certainly is not a jurist entirely without ‘Prejudice and evidently has no leaning toward “chap- “As for the “educated fools'* who come in for Yep from this writer's virile pen I must say personally, if I am to be in the society of fools at all 4 vastly fer them educated, The great point és in know:ng) to discriminate. Neither clothes nor accomplish- ents can take the place of the sterling qualities man should look for in a husband, but inasmuch as clothes and a fine education added to tne vital tributes make the man more attractive and a more able companion they are by no means to be Dear Mra. Ayer: Y description of an ideal husband is taken M from that of a father, One who was good, kind, affoctionate and thoughtful of wife aad children and home; uprigtt, faithful and honest to his employers; never disagreeing on subject of re- Ngion; always advising those of different belief to never neglect thelr duty; a well-wisher for all man- kind, thus gaining respect and a good word from all who knew him when it was God's will to call him, M. 8. D, In Many Cases Girls Mistake a First Fancy for Real Love. Dear Mra. Ayer: HY do women marry the wrong men? For the simple reason they do not stop to consider the step they are taking, think not of the future, but simply es her youth dictates accepts the first man she has a slight affection for, mistaking it for love. A majority of girls nowadays marry for a home, to get out of work, or the possibilty of being an old matd, It cannot fail but be wrong. But where love is the foundation of marriage, it is from the depths of a man's heart to Jove, cherish and protect; Ike- wise that love compels a woman to “love, honor and obey.” EDITH B. PDWARDS. A Husband Who Is Fit for Any Woman. Dear Mrs. Ayert THINK an {deal husband should be, firgt of all, a true, honest and upright man in every respect, He should always treat his wife as a sweetheart, for after a man is once married the dearest one on earth to him should be his wife, and the dearest spot on earth to him should be his home. His whole heart ‘and soul should be only in his family and business, and the only pleasures he should seek are those that his family can enjoy. He sould possess a good dis- Dear Mrs. Aver: T° my mind the ideal husband must be unselfish, M.” dn her clever letter says, and now many, ee times have we women thought the same words loving, considerate, always {nterested in his home, which with a, good wife should be a Paradise; one who will always endeavor to look on the bright side, capable of earning a good living, in- dustfious and a Christian, not a saint, as we are I faulty creatures. ‘Yo such a man I was happily wedded somo years ago, and by endeavoring to live up to the same standard myself our home is what {t should be, a happy one. Thanks to a good mother who previously made énquiries as to his character, life, é&e., and found it most satisfactory. If women would only look more carefully into the character and habits of the man they Intend tq marry, there ‘would be fewer divorces. Do not ity the Uttle faults a good husband may have; overlook them as you expect him to yours. ONE WHO KNOWS. New Rochelle, N. ¥. A Line Drawing of the Ideal Husband. Dean Mrs. Ayer: The {deal husband ts he who loves his wife first, last and always. JANE RICHARDS. A Breath of Violets in an Atmosphere Tainted with Divorces. Dear Mrs, Ayer: KNOW Intimately a man who I think can be cailed ideal. He is a widower, whose wedded life was so perfect that his sweet young wife's fare- @ have not spoken them: “If women are of the feaker sex why are they so mercilessly pumshed for @ommitting the faults condoned in men?” ‘his 1s one @f the prize questions and apparently an extremely fen one to answer. “C. T, M.'s" letter ts mter- ; Dut it leaves the question unanswered unless are willing to admit that In 80 very important a ‘we are as a sex governed by 4 custom or usage ¥ opposed to reason and fairness. Ee Is the «Weaker Sex’? Whose Faults Should Be Condoned. Mrs. Aver: © my mind there {s no reason why women should condone faults in men which they would condemn in women. On the contrary, should reverse the order; for, are we not being tinually reminded by members of the other sex at we are of the “weaker sex,” and not nearly ‘Ythe equal of man in so many respects? Naturally, ‘\@hen, the men, being stronger and more discriminat- fg, should be better able to withstand temptations; » pnd, again, how can we look up with respect and \ Mimiration to a man for whom we must ‘ake al- (on no plea whatever), which ‘weak? {roman may not expect? I repeat, there is no rea- son why men may, with impunity, commit faults Nd will mot be tolerated in women. Custom and The Ideal Husband Must Never Cease to Be a THE IDEAL AND THE REAL HUSBAND—ONE SHE HAS; THE OTHER SHE DREAMS OF. separation from him, and when the | dark-robed angel parted him from both mother and wife ne bore his troubles herolcally, trusting all to God. He {s to-day a noble man, unselfish in his efforts to ‘well words on earth stand as a Iffe-long evidence. Ghe died in his anms, murmuring: “Death {s only hardiin parting with thee.” His whole goodness can be summed up in the fact that he never forgot his mother! never was too big to stop and caress fer,|make others happy. He may have trivial foulte— and he made extraordinary sacrifices in his married|no man Js perfect—but the knowledge that he made life, so that his mother might be spared the pang of |a mother and wite ‘happy comes as breath of violets The Home Dressmaker. < ‘< ‘ew re re re By Mme. Judice. illustration, made with or without the) make it flare more like the present style | best. Please tell me what kind of goods have fixed this condition of affairs, and we! Doris. The Story of a Loweless Marriage by The Kind You Have Always Bo HIS is the caution applied to the has been manufactured under “ ” ‘ The Duchess. If you wish advice concerning} | capes,’ and a five-gored or a circular| and make it over. bree aeghctansy black | and about how many yards, I am stout, | | ba Permission of Geo. Munro’s Sons, new gowns or the making-over of § |sktrt is best for corduroy or any heavy | lining? I am in slight mourning. I do|forty-two bust, thirty-two walst, and material having a figure or welt to it.|not wish to spend much money on the|forty-one ekirt length. But I am only old ones, if you wish advice concern- ing home dressmaking, write to pen little ones in the past years need no URBYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS, (Then he leans leans toward her, =<"fou know A narrow Oriental band trimming with| alteration. Could I piece {t at the sides| eighteen years old. Do you think long Costello has martied Lord Ponat| of my oath!” he says, hdarsety. He] \> ,, plenty of yejlow and red and a touch of | and put some not very fanciful or expen- | coats are becoming to stout pecmley ms, bu! (i Wet Ree eucrely. tort money, | They grow, | warned.” ‘Tatoo pity ‘on yourselt While ‘Mme. Judice, Evening World, Pulit-3 | goid thread in it would give quite a|sive passementerte trimming over the @. rae grate egattee or eaten call tae atten son Gnconsciousiy, (2, love, cach Othgr..,DUES| yet thero 1s time. Give up ails mad| }zer Bullding, New York. City,” and} | dressy appearance tf applied to the col-| patches inserted? CORDELIA. | Long ooats or the three~ aietthe ast i to bp cpratid had Chace bo ate hor ‘so madly ‘that he swears she sliall scheme of yours.” % she will give it to you in this column. | lar and cbffs and stole effect on the aped pieces of peau de sole in-|jengths are not as becoming to stoht}; jous ely hw ena wp and an. | She becomes! About Sir Watkynt* ; nnnnnnnnnnnneg | front of the coat. Flat dull-gilt buttons \serted in each ore alee the Knees will | figures ae a 22-inch length or the '&on'| ghould more pro} ith her In] “Yes, You shall never marry him.’ ‘Brown Corduroy Coat in odd designs will also add’ a pretty | Sutline with e fancy binck|esian. Either of these will be a good Canes for ade, hk wees eyo ‘No?” lightly. ‘But, indeed I shall.” uroy Coat- touch, silk braid (About 71-2 cents a yard) andl pattern for a sibeline, broadclotti or the mother to Dear Mme. Judice LEASE “give me an idea of how to'A Flaring Skirt. have a costume made of brown Dear Mme. Judico: corduroy. Do you think the color HAVE a beautiful, fine black Henrt- becoming? I am about 6 feet 4 inches in | etta cloth skirt in fiue condition. It height, and slim, with dark eyes and ~ 8 made with five gores, but not flar- hair, Am thirty years of age. About how ing, as worn at present. Could you ad- trim the spaces This is very new and very pretty, and the entire expense would not be over couple of dollars. A Made-Over Suit. Dear Mme. Judice: Setwoen running an velveteen, and any of the new greens, hat for thereat Leases ibs tans or plumbs, if these shades are be-/ the mother’s Wi to you. I should recommend a eee ee rote poresca ia anaice| ones Castoria always Scieas tga fores, flaring below the knee. If you) make your sult a walking length, gored and Eton jacket, it will require ; With such painful rapidity ts his breath coming and going. ‘What is this old man to you, that you should risk— What is it you hope to gain by such a. URKD is the frst to speak as they reach the fountain, “You promised to marry me in & kissed me and told | "be sald; “you you loved no one but me, @ot thet the truth?” was “Why must you esk me that “you money has always had {ts charm marriage? Money?’ “Well,” she says, shrugging her shoulders, “I will not disguise it trom stlo grimas @ pult. I'd like to\have a coat three-quarter length and a: walking length ekirt, I am going ¢o wear it for many yards of goods do I need? I was vise me how to improve St without pieo- thinking of having @ long jacket. jing {t at the bottom? Could I insert G. B, L. ‘pieces of silk to widen the bottom to ‘The shade of golden brown corduroy Koa give me an idea how to make skirt about seven yards of broadchoth or sibe- line (both of these materials must be out one way of the goods), and twelve yards of velveteen, as it ts about half Amusement: Syl 6 ; I; H PROCTOR’S Foti} oe eee Soe JOHN DREW ‘@ften?” me. Like charity, it comers ie: reali “Because the asking 19 80 sweet, only! O52 ‘of ains, “For. sin you have selected is becoming to almost | 9 pl pau heb j SONTIN, ANP aan ee Hankin de unde lnm amect than the anawer 00 tht loa! ne Glatt tui ite May [llanton’s Hints. sere oe ‘DaASL ppl: Ae tomar «Sur eat SOT a For Evening Wear. oaill give. In a year—a little year—you, \#/ fwill be my wife? Is that not so? Speakl! rion as he ts, certainly, but ran, 22 “fo hear you say it will give me cour-j enough surely moment she hesitat “What! Ist! fo you?” he exclaims, with a peculiar! “gmile. “I should not have ‘that. Come, say the ‘yes,’ if only to (please a poor wretch so soon to be) pe east adrift upon ean unknown world.’ “Unknown!” she shrinks from him, @ ewift change in eome vague disturbance. rou going?" Pon, who cgn be sure of that!" re- jturns he, with a Hght laugh that has ‘go mirth in it, “And now give me my @nswer; when I return, I shall find you saying of it #0 difficult! her, and looking eae ih’ haggas ‘as thought! SVS8 “But ] am ot a for ‘pa needa dig pay what my mi be?" returns she, lt; sf 4 Coming closer to “Tell me,” ho ‘ea, eyes into | hers, “did you ever mean to marry me? there ever a moment in all’ these bitterly sweet mom when you sald’ to yourself that it was even barely Possible you might some day be. my ive, trend es she says, with a frown and an tpl goes Will you mnt Is all thet I een cae a telat Te with soft enw! a words and aot at ks since frst we yt “Fy! what an ugly word that is!" she says, smiling. Gh Bere de no, I we not Usten to it Think of. other before you ask me the question a Autumn Costume. Dear Mme. Judice: HAVE ten yards of goods like sample which I would like to make into an evening dress, and also to wear oext summer. I want to make a yoke that droops over the shoulders. Could T have tt of white lace and outline the design with black or silver spangles? I can take them off for the summer. What ahall I wear around the waist? I am 5 feet 2 inches tall, have 2% waist measure and 83 bust. Mrs, E. H. Combine your pink-lace striped cham- brey with all-over white lace and make a yoke and cap on top of the sleeve of the lace. This is the easiest method of having a drop-shouldered yoke. I hardly think you would like spangles on SBI le Rhee ae gar 2th. WALLACK'S, grax, ge ‘ "Bright nga Cal hy Bong.” DEGgT m ae MADISONOLD.GUARD FAIR!# etre TO-NIGHT! {uN aul Alo; Ault a t, ra (Oiiicr Stock Favorites, Big Vai Bae HEATRE. a SAVOY “hen 816 = Wes. pices oe naps. a rings trae “Genuine & honest entertatnment,""—By Page CAN as, a US Mie GARDEN THEAt Sispben hen Phillipe’ i i) Fe a “ahall never. ask You question DALY'S be a “4 ape sf seeseies then “Yes,” sho] Aine he a eer tron Sreteast Ceetesne: Se aneiccowrs von tel Cf RDEN. Army: and Navy Night. 3 LITTLE Rimes a, telling her lie with a soft smile, iraying bim with a glance as open, “as innocent, as a child's, “Phen ali at once he removes his eyes ‘ t hand | face and smiles, and, ag though [sm rs RNS RIED: i cphgleneng ‘otilt Keeping it there, | im to do his. worst, wings ey’ wild=| every one, but the wide welt of the ma~ crush girdle or a long @owing sash of sok MA > gal i aaah pee th Sptmined) | vertal will necessitate the very plainest white satin rivoon will make you cy to oe looks back at her again, always holding her hand, and says, in a calm, “Apar voice: “sand eo—you think you are going to Werty that old man?" Wo surprised exclamation escapes her ‘dps, but she grows very white, and a @eam of defiance Ughts her eyes. marry him!" “Oh, yes, I shall,’* by thea) @ low laugh. SH teed oan prevent me?’ "T can At this she looks qeliberately, into his a Garin lightly {2 and fro efore hin in mocking scorn of his ability Pio chen or sway her, 3 she thus stands smiling de- nantly. at him, ‘in tie wilful Insolence nd pride. of ‘her beautiful he draws his hand—so long concealed—from his breast. There 1s a sharp faint cloud Epon | she oles ter ak. rand then—with till SKIRTED ETON BLOUSE CoAT, DESIGNED FOR G. E. L. treatment in making. The three-quarter coat design you desire would’ be good only by edding a skirt with a belt to an Bton blouse, as the necessary seams to Git @ long-lined coat would give ocerzueeete coveneenet A eont UES lower edge of the sleeve cap,,much new- er and more éffective. Three lace- trimméd ruffles on the foot of the skirt and full sleeves, with a white satin dress suitable for evening now and sum- mer wear without changing trimming. For Four-Year-Old Child. Dear M: Judice: HAT kind of cloth and what shade W is most fashionable for a little girl four years old? And how could I make it in the latest style, to be worn GARDEN Adm. and Rea'd Seats. LYRIC 3% a St, 484 Bt ay CASINO meine PRINCESS fins shure dattraag? £20: THE EARL OF PAWTUCKET. NEXT WEEK Si 3 aa fit GRACE GRORGE In “PRETTY PEGGY’ ‘seis Hi SHORTY weee: Ss BELASCO igi David Belasco announ: BLANCHE BATES Ba Or THE comes | THEATRE, JOH 41st RCA Nes Sou neve heard! You know!”| upon her lipe--she falls is forward without ene says, in a low tone, “And yet you|%,,s10an, & struggle, into his arme— Some of the Best oe tt ia st HON a RRS a OL AT ey AL signa wile preiy for nie eta ACADEMY OF MUSIC EDP GE Whee | Stet Tit oe Courageous in tage tedhen arene fins distorted: her form a gentle anude jokes of the Day. pepiendiier rare ae arent nwo ‘@ "To compel you? An easy task,” re- ‘nrns he, with a bitter sneer. ee *Well, now you know the worst,” says Afera, recklessly; “and, after all, I am swilad of it.” fe"T swore to you once," saya Burke, ‘quietly, “that if eyer you decided on s@arrying any man but me I should kill ju. You remember?" ger. 0 ttle convulaive ‘twitching hada, that ras alt tnd’ ngw ete lies Mt Gently—very ee lays her down Lahey? SOS, poeeine, pon the swa: IN A DOUBLE SENSE, “There is a child out in Indiana with & mouth so large that the other day it accidentally swallowed a toy drum." ‘Well, that's hard to beat.”—Cleveland Plain Dealer. Ady puff aleeves, to be worn with a separate yoke and sleeves of white tucked or lace-trimmed linen lawn, Gather waist and skirt into a narrow band and have deep bem in the skint. If you do this, and make the waist @ little bloused, it will permit her to weer it next season. Select the color to blend with her eyes CHAS, WARNER ™ DRINK MAJESTIC 7g es Pleat Time, B ‘, Mae cs WT 1.90 BRATS Wi [PEN Twat: Manhattan Bs Sf 5. | AST. MRS, FISKE Toeen's nuit. *Tues.,Oot.18, MARTA OP THE LOWLA! KNICKERBOCKER fy) S39 THE ROGERS BROS. IN’ CLON Boe Last 5 Weeks Mutines Saturdar/@! nia Matinee ‘To-Dayss ’ > weDuatinctly, but, you see, you can't LITTLE BROTHER. and hair, Pale blue, gray or violet WEBER & FIELDS’ mane) DEWEY | Ma Grown me to-night; the fountain isn’t Rn it eters, oerendy Galion Tous alstee ae iokp tise max, tints, if ahe is a blonde, and rose-pink,| Wy way, got » “WHOOP. DEE. DO0"| E, TH BT, Knie’ serbocker Burlésqubiv Gecp enough,” says Vera, sauclly. Al with lightest touch—es thoustt he tears |ing her appearance, Johnny, 4 tan or red if of the brunette type. Pere) Tete eat _Sundai sean ae aoe tonger dlocgneerted. or diac |saneies of her curly: haf tHe yellow Johnny—Yes; she's got to make it, of { gen leperetiers Aue She Sveninine at & Mats, Wed & Sat. 7IRCLE = Raa eppeae Loni) full of Hite ahe eeoms, (HOM falr tt was, that ay golden hair! |course, ‘fore comes down.—Chicago is Sar ese SEL ae os if MARID DRESSLEN, Dy qmayed, Go gay, #0 fu she seoms, | ""'hear litte head.’ he save with ten- | Tribune, ae RG Lew Sully, Ernest Hogan peetty is her defiance, that for the] der rapture: then Very sadly. “and now CURRENCY PREFERRED.’ 4 NEW YORK’S PAY-ROLL. - Hal Stephens, © Tosace he feels something akin to sor- | how it Hes! ©, love! why would ” ber of loyees in the Ne arcane AB BN TLL 7 you have It 902" “So tar as I am concerned,” observed ' ee aetna ar canvice’ aad oreasheu iA MURRAY HELE TPA Ay wom, for her. mye. ; “Not!” Here she lsughs showing al! her pretty white teeth, “That is nothing; sand people's hearts fon't break, except ‘Qanoot even fear touch you?" he. her, athe a bpbaak Jo} Delf ad athe) he regards . en with loving fingers closes her poor eves Upon 'e World me cones longer see, He folds her arms across her bosom. and so arranges her that she now lies picturesquesly beautiful, as a little statue might—cold and still, Bpendah}, “I don't care whether we have an elastic currency or not; but, by George, I'd like to nave a little more adhesive!""—Chicago Tribune, PREPARED. 45,29, of whom 12,000 are teachers and | | 10,000 members of the police York and fire departments, 2D MARKS CONCERT. ay & Tth Av. late. THE FISHER WaibEN HARRIGAN t= gn ae Eva, &Sat Mat 25c,to$1,50. Wa. Mut: Dostacdinpy 5. Mats. Wed. © METROPOLIS RACHEL GOLDSTE! ck—THE CHILD WIFE. j wn the but without blot or blemish, a: HIS long coat in Russian style makes part of a costume and ix made of PBomething in Burke's face cocks her. | nS intl alk? ,€0 ook rotty when Rate nian fey ypaspected Deven T aibeline th the new shade known as Lombardy plum and stitched with black r | ‘von’ $ Sane Tanta ane NES, END oe bn Ns oo remainder of bur sentence dles|sndiy as fondly; there is No etiet i | stowick- exactly. I've got no used to silk, and conslsts'of blouse and skirt portions, both of which are made with Grand °& Montag Widow Dooley’s @way on her ps. That he has Goaned | the eyes he bends upon her, no contri- tt that. I always expect it now.—Phila-| @Pplied plats that form continuous Hnes from the shoulders to the edge of the Shwe to itis to her ts apparent, He is} tion, but always a love, deep, unutter- | OMe bubtic Ledger. é -) skirt, ‘The blouse ts gathered at the <ront to pouch sligtly over the belt, and the] PERFECT oe looking perfectly ghastly, and his large |""A shudder runs through his frame. He| | THIRTY AT LEAST. back of the skirt fs laid Ja Inverted plats. ‘Tho closing is made invisibly beneath | iy STAR taxa & ark cyes, it by a brilliant fre trom | recoils, vet ae fase, a8 08 fascinated. See Sauiia gta via auNary oti a young | {h® Dialt at the left front. ‘Tho skint is cut in five gores that are shaped to fit | Tooth Powder iw Next V vend aS abate stds pclae cblboge Bbg dosd che hand he bio sp nenins. tigate tt Mel ¥ Sood young} s;ugly about the hips and to flare freely about the fect. ‘The quantity of material | | Binay (DEST ROW ord iden stoppage of her voice recalla him arly, upon the youne Kroon | mp] She-I guess that's what accounts for] wige; for #kint, 6 1-4 yards 27, 2 $-1 yards 44 or 3 1-4 yards 62 inches wide, when | Used by people of refinement Sh Vara! for git, material has figure or nap; 6 1-4 yards 27, 8 yards 41 or 2 3-4 yards 52 inches wide, | for over a quarter of a eentury | ‘eo himself, at I'am coming, 10. "vault he Gries, woman, anyway, required for the medium size {s, for coat, 6 1-2 yards 27 or 4 yards 44 or 62 inches eA ty t? “Ho-accounts for wha either figure nor nap, The coat pattern (4.49%), for a 32, 4, PREPARED BY KEILH'S uith'st| Liat . | MINER’S iid me! i “Of what are you thinking?" aske Monnereaty, Bhe—She says she, has been in thin} Whon material has Sth av, Se A5un at. were, wuddonly, and ener urls Then, is pend to his monta:| world only awonty-three years, I sup-| 3), 88 and 40 inch bust measure, will be mailed for 100. The skirt pattern (4.49%, for # 3 Re hi eld there in ‘opd sharp. report. He gave been | By, 26, 28, 28, 90 and $f moh walst measure, will'be mailed for 10c, Send monay | LD 4 aBOS New York City. eh at cee ck ate ore oh Taide i ota RE dhl sbi ss (SE ot AOD 98