The evening world. Newspaper, November 26, 1904, Page 7

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Are Really Capes —Some Have Shoulder Capes or Cape Sleeves. , ‘Quaint and Oriental Effects in These Garments. VER much fitted and de- H== Mines may appear in tal- ored street sults or dress waists, only the loosest of loose fits will an- wer in the evening wrap, We use the term “fit” advisedly, for there i» a ‘very clever method in thelr looseness. and thelr full and graceful ines are really the triumph of the cutters’ and Attors’ art, Materials in atl of these evening ‘wraps are of the richest, and this fact ds the secret of tho eminent success of so many comparatively plain styles, One of the latest revivals 1s @ shirred “elroular,” long and extremely full, the fulness gavged about the shoulders and ending tn a narrow yoke which is @oncentd beneath bittle overmpping collars, each edged with a plaiting of the cloth and a rich scallop embrold- ,ery. A flounce of the cloth fully elgh- teen inches deep finishes the bottom of this cape, A yacht or cornflower biuo faced cloth is the fabric chosen for ‘this, the lining @ glossy satin of @ tone Ughter, Even the garb of the clergy is being @rawn on to furnish ideas for the even- ing coat, A strikingly effective wrap is eut on the Mnes of a chasuble, Lt is seamless, and apparently shaped by cut- fing a circle in a wide piece of cloth, ekoping tt over the head, slashing it own the front and fastening under the fms with buttons or straps, Suoh a Wrap a3 this admits of, nay invites, the richest of trimming. Nothing could be More appropriate tor it than builto: embroideries, with @ dash of vivid color- tng. The very Intest of the evening coats) te shaped with @ full blouse and a long @kirt reaching quite to the feet, a very marrow Une, The richest of turs is none toa Qne for vhs. A heavy satin brocaded with raised flowers én black velvet, with touches of| | Green and rose, was also fashioned on these lines, lined with @ rose satin and bout the inner edges plaitings of green) chiffon Mid over others of back, these| @howtng an inch or two below the edges of the coat all round. ‘There are many less elaborate and More practical garments tn wooitex| cor — Many of the New Rie! R Strikingly gfe | veni raps The Redingote in Quite naturally the @ashions of the: = ote a fit to draw inspiration. And modiste, she who holds her ast. utation higher than the sale of # net, te caretul to ove that tee Sam not only becoming to the face and ure, but algo « harmonious and tive note in the ensemble-of witloh to be a part. Some Novelties OR ae RIDESCENT pearl buckles are ta vogue this season and ere employed on velvet girdles, These } in color with the material. Zrmine oo consisting of muff and short cart are the favorites. Automobile shoes are elmilar te carriage shoe; they are lined and * slip easily over the other shoe, ‘A pretty calendar for the new Led | ia in the form of a lamp. Plaid silks are being used for vail the shirtwaist and shirtwaiet eulte, Rob Roy plaids are particularly popular for: MUZESRIN GRAY END PERSIAN EMBROUDDRY. models, that most women will find best) otherwise can drive them from the| to thelr wants. The sleeves of these ple and loose—a of the outer wraps since dress siee themselves sucti Bell-shaped sleeves walste, Women's shoes and hose to math in color the garment with which they are worn. Beautiful Loula XV. fitted coat made of pompadour alll, Collars and cuff sets with plisse rut> fling. The stiff part around the neck ‘and finish the cufts and the plisse ruf+ filng at the bottom, A novel fabrio belt ts in man’s vest effect. It is mada of moire and the | front 1s ornamented with covered but- tons. They also have the small véet pocket plain crushed order. Now that the holidays are close at hand the stores are opening up their | toy departments and are showing hand+ | some dolls dressed in the latest style 4 e tafe te na" pa, wogelating Fy plate dovlies, fingor+ bow! dishes and @ centre ple) are bee ing shown for Christmas Chines, chiffona and, back. These are seen in both the fur 4nd cloth models, and an honest right to the favor they are enjoying, since they are so generally | They are irresistibly smart , and are cer-| | color. Crepe de the materials usually seen in the dressy waists. . velveteens and val- vets and Sicfilennes are those of more utilitarian purpose. Perhaps nine out of ten of the street or walking suits one se have the long-fitted or semi-fittedooat But this does not mean the demise of nis charming and chart- table little shape ts seen in many of th always am have certainly | essary fisture separate waist ls now most often arranged over a laudable tashton, * It preserves the he garment to the end. oration is the order of the day ueeqy ehtrrings, on the slender, tainly charitable to pitied woman who possesses an “ust | back and hip line Women are giving closer attention to the harmony of line and idea of hat and coat this winter than ever before. fact that the Parisienne of weakh and taste this season frequently chooses to make herself the exact reproduction of some old painting, every detail of coa- tume being carried out, {s having its! Influence on less favored mortals whose | means or opportunities will not permit bh belt marking the waist-| And anent this cuff, form may prove a wonder to the unin- , but an investigation proves ft to be held so by a iittle hoop cf feath- {| dainty hand embroideries and even real laces aro thought accompanied by a high girdle, either of like material or in some handsome con- This is bullt high in the back, where it is stayed with feathorbones, and drops down to a rather deep point wirdle ts its natural acs many cases the girdle and bolero be- | ing butlt on one Mning, this being the followed by Paris ompaniment, in ‘Two garments oft threatened with Woman's wardrobe—the separate walat bolero The first ts so eml- , the second 99 unl. that no amount of jnmnation fron artisce barrel OF White or cream tints are still best Uked for elaborate blouses, while those re most often seen in The distinctive note tn dhe boleros this ecasun is the postilion or tabbed| of such lavish costuming, of simpler lines The Confession. “ie (Copyright, 1880, by Harper & Brothers.) ARGUE THERE was dying. h but : fix, she seemed Iike seve @t least Her eldost sister, Suzanne, six years plier, xobved ont bed. A little table drawn close to the | ouch of teh dying woman, and covered | being 1 metas exper funtion, which ould be the last, The story of the two sisters was very fouching. It was auoted far and wide; & had made many eves to weep, Suzanne, the elder, had once been Madly in love with a young man, who hed alsd be n love with her, They fwere ongaged, and were only wa the day fixed the contract, wih Wenry de Lamplerre suddenly died. The despair of the voung «irl was @readful, and she vowed that she would hever marry Sook off. Then her Guerite, who was o came ¢ ning to thro rseif into the arms of the elder, and said: “Big Sister, 1 do not want thee vw be un- ster, her little sister Mar- y twelve years bid, teppy, I do not want thee to ery all 7, shy life. I will never leave thee, never, ever! II, too, shall never marry Suzanne, touched by the devogton of ad child, kissed het, t reaties of tions of the elder, She was pretty, fused many a young to love her sruly, : r more, Now she was to be the first to die Bince yesterday she was no longer Able to sneak. She had only sald at the first glimmer of day-dawn: “Go fetch M. le Cure! The moment bas come.” Her sister, torn by sorrow, wept wildly, her fUrehead resting on the edge she never marri very pretty man who Not, the bed, and kept repeating: wot, my poor Margot, my little had alw: One,” just (is the younger had always @alled her “Big Sister, Steps were Leard on the sta @oor opened. A. cholr-boy appea followed by an old priest In a surplic The Abbe Simon approached, took her ‘s called her, “Little hand, Kiseed her brow, and with a soft | ‘Voice: “God pardon thee, my child; have|d grees. the moment is now Come, | "Phen Marguerite, shivering frem head | fo foot, shaking her whole couch with | Mryous Movements stammered “sit down, Bie Sister—listen.”” ‘The priest bent down toward Suzanne, sho was stil! Mung upon the bed’s foot. He talsed her, placed her in an arm- chair, and taking a hand of each of the sister's in one of his own, he pro- noun : dtrength. cast Thy mercy uoon them.” And Mareverite beean to speak. The words issued from her throat one by ont, raucous, with sharp pauses, as though very feeble. “Pardon. vardo give! If thou kn Big Sister: oh, tor. how 1 hat | Margaret Hubbard Ayer On Beauty. Guy De Maupassant’s Best Stories # How the Pair Sex Can Improve Their Personal Charms, re] a # This Series Will Include Six Stories by This Author ,dut decrease the growth of hair, This | ts also intended for Mrs. C. G. For Gray Halr, A. ei see For Falling Hair. Dear Mise Ayeri { hair has fallen out for se yeara and ts getting thin, would you suggest? C. NORWALK, Passalo, N, J. Bealp massage will stop the halr from falling quicker than anything elas. Try the formula whieh J give you, which has proved very beneficial in hundreds of rams; tinoture of wiven all to me ite e0 © what art an angel ite imerrupted ber And at, the nour ot | uch Twill tell ber all * Ther d ever since, I have alwe that moment when 1 should tell thee Now tt Is come, *% © Bie Slater! it have always thought, sneeeeeeeseeeee, ML w:| To-Day’s Fashion Pictures. ite he New High Hat. form of the ts shown In this These hacs demand a special form of decoration, while elaborate, , thelr crowns are banded with flutings or quillings of satin or velvet ribbons, thus preserving the height perfect outline of the crown and yet ming to most This hat is shown tn a deep + @ cluster of full ostrich Ups and algrettes shading throug! ® trembled and looked at vounger continued , to understand, : 3 g FH is TEF What agony! knees beside the |I was ow lam afraid \ “49 of the front opening _| broldery showing the gray shades with & brilliant green finishes the front and ax vomica, 11-2 grams; tincture of red einchona, 8% grams; tharides, 2 grams; sweet almond oll, the hair with a@ Tam going to see him eth 4, resaaraperets when I am dead. See him again tincture of can- cologne, 120 grams; pore two lighted candies, | me that he came he h marks the collar, He got down | te give extreme unction and the com- | horse at the ereat steps, and he bexged pardon for his costume, but he came to bring some news to papa, ‘Thoy remem +} lt not a0? Don't speak —! him | was com; T found him so ver: 1 femained standing in a cor. nou! I shall not dare am going to die * ¢ | to forgive me. not #9 off to meet him w tell her to forgive me, M. Htell her # ¢* J implore you to do Mt I cannot die . nished boots. Again into the « I wantit * * Vines that‘ the Average Woman finds most satisfactory.) sPONse once or twice a day. The Shirred Cape Again, NEB of the most must be clean. |Blackhead Scars. Dear Mise Ayer? HAVE deep pittings on my from blackh I bave also a tlon Is especially good for very dry nt, and remained panting itching the sheet with simple yet novel stylos la shown Superfluous Hair. Dear Miss Ayer: INDLY publish @ harmless remedy to remove a father thick down Also let me know if the use of the face brush tends to In- crease the growth of down on the sito, Children are str gs a ad hidden her face in her in this garment in a bc -flower blue shade ts chosen dre amed of all that 1 Wek 4 at him whh thinking of him whom sane Nhat a mood life they should have lived tee t from the akin. and the little quillir the shoulders and ending MARGARET HUBBARD AYER. About the crown aro its sole adorning. * {Deep Cape Epauletic. IN who are not yet re to the return of the cape pure and simple, even as dn evening pox. What would make my sicin emooth and take those pittings away? oP ad very, mu h more remain on the hair) e kept her word, She |“ put on widow's weeds, which she never | 1 A plaster stick will remove the domi | ‘Try the following for the scara: lew [but if tt were bleached you would not Take pure peroxide | event Gnd put ft on @ bit of absorbent cotton, | are bleached . m the hairs will| oline, 2 drame; of mercury, 1 dram, Rub in well ones not Increase! a day. y raid that he was going to) mere Ser tc, ¢ Was @ ROPTOW orrow * * a sorrow! righta without slee mind {ts presence, tually be of smamonie the face brush will lustrous satin A with ‘strong vibrant volee, mises In the loose coats with shoulder capes or capelike epaulettes. cular wooltex ganment cape epaulette fi {shoulder, reach{ng almost to ive thee, Little} 7 your sister ts dying.” and soft pink roses Coat Without a Seam, unique coat is shapea wing hersalt tee her sister with butter an milk. |? The Housekeeper’s Cyclopedia, aoe Information Worth Having in the Home, ail etay' with thee always, always, | "y Tforaive thee, I for: The Necklac>,’ de Maupassant, appeared in The l'vening World of Thursday, Noy. 24; ‘On the Journey,” Nov. 26; Monday, “The The fulness is disposed in a box- -plalt tn ithe back, with similar plaits in either Mrs. Nage and Mr. “There is a new family moved in next door and they have fiv feel sure one of th 1 because Its ears sti them vet if ry y brald showin, nd 4 pping ot trown velvet is che did’ 'mot' bes then he drank 9 glad of Mee ’ by Guy {ts If lamp chimneys are held over steam for a few minutes, then polished with |@ dry cloth, they will not break #0 easily as when washed. When storing blankets cut up @ bar ntwhieh|of vellow soap and place the pleces | among the folds, This will keep away ' moths. An olf bookcase set on the kitches table. back to the wall. makes a very respectable imitation of wa kitchen cabl- net and saves many steps, Peach Foam, O™ cup peach pulp, or tiny dite of m about gently so they nd be sure they do not | cause them to be- Sweet-Clover Pillows. YMEARATIVELY few know "T wan fealous, thy marriage two weeks more. T ald to myself marry Suzanne. one also kept her word, | Moleski ber wear oleskin ‘Coat. OLPSKIN cloth in moleskin gray is simply but effectively devel- straps of the cloth ana "He @hall not 1 will not have it! Tt ts T whom he will marry when I am T rhall never fi sweet clover that grows ays and byways—makes de filling for pillows. tka should de cll and Iald in a dry By Roy \L. McCardell. her ak wee eee cen enn eee nee ne leather color and the brown velvet pi reated in the same reaches about ten days befor est a walk wit chateau by moonlight shady place for a a: * © ® and there under the great | 26 * Kissed hie two arms ang. Thou. rememberest, was probe bly he Kissed thee oo thou camest n, have moved in "T had seen you two; the shrubbery. T should have ki 1 was angry! e money and did and you had not want to awaken you, He shall not marry I should be to i began to hate him what I am talking about. Mapleside, who lived near ua in Brook . hud ears that s same) way, and he was an adopted chi you do with what do you do with it? aad your halr cut, Don’t you think you arg rather extray- ng your hair cut? liver fork for thirty . dost thou know whht I id? ¢ out just the I had seen the ing little balla to pounded up a bo th ywdtred glass in ange dogs, He agant about # get my hair cut minds me, my hair is falling out some- I think it's from worry. | but he never cause he was too fast. that knew all about it running with He afterward grow up to be one of the fastest stenographers in Wall street, ald hold a position be People told m tool a, Hitle medicine bottle) that thing terrible. | Worry will do it, Kitchen Pointers, ‘The next day. ¢ | had made the tittle cakes "Lord, my God! Endue them with |them with a knife and He ate three o1 spoon of soda in the milk to foam, tame spoonful of melted butter. a Mitte ealt, fright will do that, 4 Say it costs you cents to get your] Bedford avenue set, and won a prize in nitaing contest at Coney Island. jo you ace he was a boy to be prow! There was a terrible fight over the prise being awarded to him struck some one with a beer glass. you see-l know what | am talking about when cell you that the tallest namelled beds t treated in put {n the glass, them, * @ ¢ eee | threw mther six into the rord. The two swans died three dayr atter @ay nothing * . | alone dd noe “Ate, But, I ee eters jt aS gol ne ry ha pair of ordi: | pinety shears and Now under cold water, fore using a clothes line boll K weil, } will keep It from atretehing and | of tar’ day to the very stable with Wille ang haye your hair cut. Fifty conta a day every day would mean over a hundred and fifty dollars a year, and think how much money that is, and you waste it, waste it getting your hair out! then we will ——— Listen, Heten. | suNDAY \ WORLD WANTS WORK | The MONDAY MORNING WONDERS. make it last-an extra lone tine . there again, you are not any attention to me; interest in my plane to save money) you have no festive Wrap on 7 the Lines of a” Priest’s Chasuble —Evening Coats with Full Blouse. ——r Expensive Furs and Heavy Cloths. 4 —.— Seen in the Shops | In the back the belt is on the | HRM ieee bell Feeeki as one would have after the JENNIB W, ointment of bin-lodine | tender peactes, elther the fresh t 1it or home-preserved, in whiah cit the sugar; half cup of paw> sugar; white of an org 0 large bow! ond beat with inutes, It should y smooth, v2 {s a good oldsfashtoned for *: Two eggs one cup of milk, one tea ana don't forget to add @

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