The evening world. Newspaper, January 7, 1905, Page 7

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Margaret Hubbard Ayer "Wants 34-Inch Bust, {Dear Mies Ayer: wy AM seventeen years old, 6 cect 6 ‘) 7] inohes tall, with 25-inch waist meas ‘ure, very smell hips and #8 dust, I | Would ilke to reduce the bust to about M4 or 3% inches, J. M, 61, ‘The bust ehould be rubbed every night, with Vaucaire’s astringent ointment, ‘Arietol, 2 gtwms; white vaseline, 9 | games; eszence of peppermint, 10 drops. + "Phen cover with linen cloths ‘wet with / this totion: Alum, 2 grame; aostate of | lend, 90 grams; distilled water, 40 { @tmms. Cover the wet clothe with olled + ail, and keep them on for twelve hours, | ho treatment will not stow results for @everal weoks, but should be continued ‘Re long as necessary, A Blood Remedy. ee * Deer Mice Avert t LEASE give me the recipe for a ‘ P blood remedy you once published. . It was sulphur and molasses, vi DELLA T. Here is the remedy, Keep fest dry while taking this: Get five cents’ worth ‘of sulphur precipitate, Put two tea- "poonfuls in the bottom of a glass, Bee ory that there are no humps fa It. Pour six teaspoonfuls of syrup or molames on the sulphur. Stir, Take one teaspoon- ful of the mixture before breakfast and ‘one just before golng to bed for three days, Omit for three days, Repeat and omit for threo days until you have ‘ taken the preparation for nine days, Two Halr Queries. < Doar Mss Ayer ; AM nineteen, and have faitly light I hair, but it Is slowly turning dark, Is there any way I can keep it from turning, or make ft Nehter? Tr there any way I can make my hair row without changing its coor? |Wide Sleeves Make Big Hats Desirable, AJHS. | ‘Tho rule that T ive you wil he to] Hut Wearers Are Permitted a Wide ; @hat end, If you do not care for the ' ’ ' meddieh tint, leave out the coohineal, Range of Choice, and Smal! Hats Are , Powdered blcarvonate of , borate , ig at won (al pomsered) 4 ounee ot] S- Stylish as the Large Ones. it each; eau de cologne, 1 fluid ounce; ‘alcohol, 2 fluld ounces; tincture of i . | eoohineal, 1-8 fluld ounce; distited HEM never was a time when} To be corretly dressed, one must 8 ou tf Faghion permitted such latitude! have one's hats in aecord with the , Water, 16 ounces, Mix and agitate unti] | eolution 1s complete, Rub daily inte in the matter of shapes in head-| gown or suit; very simple ttollor hats the hair. avenr; no limit is cet to the size. Wel with the cloth or volet walking suit; may have hats as large as we jlease,| something more dressy for the after- Think Hair Too Thick, ‘and again there are the closest of tur-| noon promenade, and more elaborate Dear Miss Aver: Dans and toques, plain or decorative as! for evening wear, OW can a person make his or her}czcanion requires, But the happy, me-| Fur hats cost a-good deal, but aro hair thinner? L, MacM, [dium will always be the most in de-| extremely elgant; and, af course, it To this most unusua: request I] mand in hats as well as other things, | goes without saying they must match can onlvesay “don't,” The scalp muy] ‘The ‘Direotoire’’ hat, which at first] the boa and muff which are In constant became impoverished any time and the} wag tooked on with doubt, has steadily | evidence during the cold weather, These process of thinning be easily accom-| gaineg jn popularity all seagon, this|fur toques and turbans are simply plished. heing duo to the new coiffures and the|Arimmed with a few gfrdenias, camel- styles of costumes that have a sugges-| las or iNet or a potnpon of ostrich tion of that period. ‘This 1s a period of | OF marabout tips, Marry, Bachelors, “period’’ tolleta, and every detall should a seoraaiaat) hat has made tor tt 7 harmonize, 'e1f a place all its own, and Is altogether or Else Pay Up. The wide sleeves necessitate large|* Ae By Ae aa fudged ot hats, but a short Woman In a very large} White, cream, or dainty Mght-colored Nols Wests LS ical a hat {s, as an artist would say, “out of| materials, these being so various that i Tratone Legislature mecta at| drawing;” still, by having the brim tiit-|fancy has fullest play, But although Indianapolis in January st will be asked | ed at a good angle, helght is given to the hat may be of ace, velvet and i a3 @ Dill Introduced by a Gibson the wearer and also correct lines, feathers, or tulle, fur and flowers, it is {0 pars ember levying a tax of ten| 0 hat tow presses down (he col'Ture, [held In somewhat neutral effect that it conts on every $100 salary earned by gn] not even the turned-down hats; ban-/may prove suitable and harmonious able-bodied bachelor of more than thir. | deaux lift up the brims and save the| With various evening frocks and waists, ty-five who recelves more than $1,000 prettily dressed hair from being crushed,| A hat with deeply turned up sailor annually, It 1s proposed to apply 10 per The way to pin on @ hat nowadays is| brim was covered plain with blue shot- cent of this revenus to the school fund through the bandeau and avross the|silk gauze—one of the novelties of the ‘and 9 per cent. to the maintenance of| back, which almost Invariably 18 close}moment—the edge bound with panne the various orphans’ homes in the State, | to the head, With very upturned brims/ velvet to match; and where the brim Indiana is not a State in which bach-| the hair should be worn waved and full;|was bent Into a Weep wave on one side elors are unduly numerous, By the last} euch a hat on a smooth, closely dressed) a cluster of delicate pihk rosebuds was - census there were 0,46) uninarried men] head looks as if It had alighted there by | posed, A big pompon of white and gray in Indiana between the ages of 45 and} accident, hence the maid or matron of] marabout feathers almost hid the dom» 65, 4.319 between 0 und 65, and 2{46) scant locks would well visit her colffeur] crown, Which was swatched around with @bove 65, a total of 16,28, exclusive of] pefore adopting this style, blue tulle, This was a Carlier model, 21,536 bachelors between 95 and 45 WhO) mmm ae are rie 2 EM 9 fare to fall within the provisions of the f Dill, though generally bachelors between 8 and 45 are not deemed totally incor- e rigible and hopeless, e ar n How many of the 87,000 bachelors In e Oo 1 e ) Indiana earn more than $1,000 a year and how many of them are able-bodied are erick Asjcome there w: ies 3 offhand, But that many of them, per- what we're tryin’ to do In the matter M / Hapa as many as A A yo SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING UHAPTE S: 4] 0° saving yer wife's reason ye try to 10 Abeta Now ) | probable, and the school fund of the| induced by ner aamiy wo inary Price Cal] break in upon her the first Instant- Dy the ndontion of thle Br EP ater: Plage on tne wae fromthe church and through a silly jealousy worthy o' a ably’ enriched. ce cel¥o an tnyury to the Ursin, (Sho le take child, Ye try, furthermore, to kil a a em ore her reasol il nem gallant gentleman who's givin’ bis time ef eT te ae ened i: Nos| tO your service en’ hers an’ who spares FOR YOU—JUST YOU. Fodnia by an, Impending revolution. your Mee, 8 by heaven I'd_ never Hy 4 Hoty, a youn done, Then lastly, full o' the same allly The dawn Alapela the solemn night, | | Sitter Se tortunee ts Induceh, by MeKendis| Jeniousy, no doulit, yo make yer way *! land by the Prince's alde, Col, Von Altdorf,| into my house an’ blurt out the whole ’ Unyelis the canopy of blue, To tmtperaonute the Prince In’ several Inter’ leryth like an eediot, eansloss o! whether And floods the world with golden | | yews with Eleanor, Denis tnd ff yer wife can bear the shock or no, Be- Nght by stealth to Paria, learns pe tne i wis fore God, sir, 't Is all I can do not to Vor you—Just you, ally risters the Prinee tm the combat, bot] !94,NANGs UPON ye ia ralsed his lew with Bh hent head and tried to square his hud- The rove revenls ite heart of gold aa tnerviey with anor] bent head and And sparkles with the morning o heen a viettm, He then goed] —) give you my word" eatd he, “that dew. ee: ANE Re and the) this morning 1 had no, thought of at ; y t tempting to. see the Princess, It fvith fove tn every erimmon fold BertIne a, aan tht BIO at For you-just you, CHAPTER 6. ing Ee iat Soul nee Be cen ley, « e T tell you ave walte en e ’ sracked, T have been put off day by Ar Ane Poa HeRa 8D ov me A Lie Detected. aay with peomlies of the eae, future 5 deen myself no nearer The argent stars come peeping RINCE KARL, of Novodnia, eame| than when 1 came to Patle, another 4 | through P Into the room with a certain line| Man, taltlng my piace, | WintMe me ! Whero dusky darkness calmly gering hesitation, and glanced up| Nite to vyou'no blame! I do not ques aweeps, at our faces one by one, furtively under} tion your honor or rah aad calcd 1 "4 n ! For you—Juat you, his brows, “ it ho feared what hts re-| Rot, misuy Rash T may be, gentlemen, 4 # ception might be, headstrong and careless, too PReorOUs SOB HY TS ERR: BONY Indeed ho met no frendly glance nor| thoughtful of the harm I may do, but ‘The roses hide the bitter rue, cgi se guea| T love my wite, and iny love has wree The sites with love are all aglow, | | Welooming eve. Col, von Altdort’s face! (i™iny ‘udement. If I have brought e slics ere are all aglow, was sot and hurd, Mackenzle lowered] grief to 1 must be an equal sufferer, 6 L . Only Denls rose at once and spoke with you nothing but condemnation for rn cael ad courtesy as if nothing had sir, plty, pity” erfed Denis BC 7 ng and going over to him. Off the Wagon. “pray sit down, alr,” said he, “sir, Sante ‘Athers of us satin sullen Gavin has just been telling us that you! ellene be “Pity. =r MNGCrA LE GIOR nr, | vlow RET re Is no one o yho can swe have had an interview with the Prince ners ie gould have done otherwise. Ii «4 Eleanor, Our task then, I take it, your place." nearly at an end,” “By my, faith In God, Dents," nald I, ‘The Prince dropped into a chalr and) (Noure the lives na ond You t hia oyos wandered dully about the room, | khan ie alle Tan hia. taco. ant avoiding our faces, turned my eves away. We two walked i af dow, apant from the res "L (hought It time to end this decop. | to,,tie,window, apart fram tile net tion.” he #ald, “So I went to my wife! ania tT. after a pauae, Tt thovert ¢ and tokl her the whole truth, whe misht he a ray of comfort to him. {i shane here! his darkness, t Folnteili atid 7 oun here, “sho must!” pe erled, "God help ut \ Nu one answered, Tho Prince glanczd/hoth! She muat! It's her only hope a uround uneasily, CTs She'll turn fo nin in hei ny, ‘ ah J utter disgust of mo, turn to him. for , “You show small approval of What | ghelter—- What do T matter If onty y I've done, sir,’ sald he to Mackenzie. |she's happy, Ted? That's. all tha vipeatonge NY / ( THE WORLD: SATURDAY EVENING, JANUAKY 7, 1900, w The Hats of Fashion Do Not Velvet and lace, especially the new Nghter make of Irish point, are very effective for dressy hats. Fur bands or entire crowns are used in these hats, the fur matching any that !s worn In the costume, The use of furs as a trimming has in no wise abated, and ft 4s surprising how many of the winter hats show a greater or loss touch of ft, The envelope hat has seized the popu- lar fancy, and from one comer fold- ing over the crown, we now see fur, with long “shake” plume showing within the opening. A wond as to the small hate, Juet as Rejane is credited with popularizing ' Afascinalin ig Touch Poke. - |the Louls coats, 0 has she convinced | us of the chic to the small hat, get go- quottishly on a beatiful colfture, One sees charming little toques of really no special shape, covered with fold tiseue. encrusted with vearis, or draped over with lattice work of tulle In Knotted strands: a few opifich tins or pompon of marabout enhancing the richness of the effect, Little hats in “Napoleon” form are of white silky beaver, the only trims ming a lone chuster of uelivate ox goms, quite often of gold or silver gauze, are set close Into a deep curve! fi above the hair, Young women are again leaning toward’ the small toque, The Hats in the Picture A Bridesmaid’s Hat. T enciroles the djéwn is shaded from pink to pale blue, in A Fascinating Poke, HB pretty quaintnesa of this style of hat is gaining in favor as the season advances, and It certainly adapta itself delightfully to the low colffure, This charmingly simpl@ model js of stiff white felt, the rather high, well-fitting jeressive bow of the same posed on the Narrow homa carrying fine wire are stitched along the edges of the loops and ends. The ties of soft wide ribbon are secured on each side of the nar- tow back brim with tiny crushed rosettes, A, crescent-shaped bandeau crosnes the crown swathed with soft silk, loft front, large front and Ifte the hat becomingly, A Quaint Poke Bonnet, > cequettishly under the left car, Black Velvet Picture Hat. T white chiffon, hat, lifting # clear off the hair and tilting It well up on ( ' The veil {s always an important ac- cessory to the hat, and vell modes chango even more often than hats. ‘The correct vell just now with the tailor hats, iaeaning the simple toques, tur- bans and Amarones worn with the short-skirted talor sults, ls of a fine’ gured lace the color of the sult, or of gome special trimming on the hat, These, veils are finished, as indeed are ail, For dressy women} the Hair. C ‘HIS beautiful Empire model has the flat upper brim covered with white panne satin, the medium high crowd plain on top, and tho satin latd in folds around) dhe sides. ‘The under brim is faced, with puffings of pate hydrangea pink moupseline do sole, one long end of chiffon to match coming from under the short hawk brim ito be draped at will around the throat, The long “snake” plume that the hydrangea Unts, IMPLICITY In picturesque expression is the den of thisifascinating creation. ‘The chapeau is composed of deep wine-red velvet, the brim lined with fine moire in palest pink, ‘The crown fs just a big, flat puff, plaited in to the head and tied around with a rope of tulle matching tho moire; full pink roses are} are prone to do whon & tucked against the sides, where tho brim te cut away to leave only a little frill| eral are together: hee from the crown over the hair at the back, The tulle ends In a chic bow tled! Yon start the thing going HIS charming modol is of black velvet with black Ince inserted half way] without ling mot 4 round the brim. The top of the crown {# of lace, the aide encircled by a, ciate ne ae “collar” of fluted ribbon velvet, which ends in a flat bow on the left. A twisted drapery of yelve: onoircles the base of the crown, ‘holding the long tles of Five black Egyptian ostrich tips are posed around Es en ea front, thelr stems hidien ty the gracefir forward droop. A bandeau encircles the he crown the left, on threo sides, and when gathered may safely turn the whola at the back fall in a short bie Ki id i thats the fin neta, dotted with a few or velvet spots, Seely eae) and fine gaieen wit! ace Insets are also worn jby smart Women} but the long auomebig vell gan out, Ai js not worn except for real prot oa trom the cold and wind. bk cha hyped yi ale, are corredt, an angry lon, the sully figure in the chalr—"'approval, gay you? Princess Bleanor {s alive to-day! The Scoteman turned upon him Iie “Approval?’' he-erivd, towering above ‘Tis no thanks to you that Pore done all ye could to make my treatment on’ the efforts of all there of no aval, Firat ye i musth’ counts—Just ‘that she may de hanny Ah, ve |in_time, ead, while she liven, Tan! that's something, “Ag T'll love he sald he, very low, taring out Into the garden tha Paradise no dy, that's sometht a= » "Why, SP “It won't be, true n i 1 i 1 i 8 ‘i t ho'll come to love the Prince— you'll love her—and t AY aN Don't try to comfort a chap, Teddy, I shall get on—somehow,” And behind us, in the room, I heard the three others talking, old MacKenzie in a moderated volce, the Prince very. wearily, as if he saw his dream shat tered forever; Von Altdorf anxlously, did Urging HIS master to return to No- yodnia, where the need for him was #0 desperate, Fate had played one of her trumps but only one. AY this plcturo on a hard, smooth L surface that will offer a good base for cutting, A piece of glaes is best, but smooth hard wood will do very well, Sharpen your penknifo, par- will be keen enough to cut paper with. oud leaving the least bit of ragwedness, ‘hen, with an eyen, smooth movement, t out all the dlack parts of {he dfaw- oval, Dg CUT OUT THE BLACK PAL tloularly around the point, so that ft sea Nestle \Y-<4 3 ventured Into the old garden—the gar den that had once been Paradige, but that now ‘he sigmatized as a Garden of Lies. Ho walked, head down, upon the ground before him, hands clasped behind his back, fo that he came slowly into the little olircle of shrubbery that surrounds the fountain, and whore stands the cracked old stone bench, without Cae ahead, Then Hi Felts his eyes and fell a | Venture that Bleamor was out driving, eyes | fixed TS OF INSID™ OF THE OVAL, Great pains to cut each as true to the line as possible, Everything depends on the minuteness with which his Is done. Then cut out the irregular oval itself, Now hold the completed paper perpen- dloularly between a bight light of a lamp or candle and a perfectly smooth, dark wall, At once the cut-out por- tons will throw a wonderful ploture o: By Justus Miles Forman Je mot looking at hey, ‘I--won't intrude upon you,” “Just a moment, rlease!" begged the Princess Eleanor. "I do not know, air, what has been told you relative to—to what occurred on the oy before yes- terday, or to my sentinents toward you at Pr ent—and for all time in the fu- ture She spoke as if in question, and paused @ moment, iv { think T have heard {t all," sald Denis, quietly, “or at least quite enough to understand; quite, Of course, I'm not surprised,” he went on, “at you feeling about It all—I—expected to be- despised, and—all that, for you can't Know, probably never will Know, how déaperately necessary it was to take some immediate action, and how we were forced to le to you, to Impose upon you for your own sake, Ah, I'm not crying for your meroy! I'm not n trying to apologize for what we However we hated the task, Mi knew it was the only thing, and wes do It again. 1 eh the same prob vero offered US. ver Mee understand, sir,” sald the Princess, “how sir Gavin Mackengle and these other gentlemen-even my | Counsin Joa, might uge a deception to save my health, ‘There Is nothing ters rible In that. “But that you should oar on day after day, soe! ne it, tae have seen, what It was coming to—seelng that I must grow to care for you, letting me care more and more, aye, making be eare! Ul you had me heart. and soul, In your hands, Ah, t ‘a WwW the awfulness of les! To think that a man cot base, so conterptible, so in- princess!” The hate you, des) despise and T can bear no "You breast 0! day, Tt mhen you cams ever since. or day," 1|. He be 80 famous! Mallory raised | back. white and quivering face, His voice shook when he spoke. “And —you though i that I was—plaving the lover as well the hushand? You thought | went ba eald he £0, tr in a tn Fea vou ‘ie lo my. rooms daily to laugh at you | i,t | Bleano ‘ou sear my very soul! ah!—As God lives and loves His world I've loved you and Jove {must love you UN T die heart and nd body t | “woul ta And now vt fs mine. famy f 1] rey fed and blackguard, Princess eat Garden of Lies! "But one thing more, done." said he, ‘one very little thing.” |i into his waistcoat breast pocket and drew out a iittle knot of narvow pink ribbons, ‘ore this." afd he, “upon the your white gown that He put his hand were not picked it up end Kent {t. T have hat it Tt has never left me night FIN nena pulled aride the whtte cur tnins and looked down Into the gar den “I—heg your--pardon!" said he, very ing, “And now before I go, low, and In a queer, breathless volce,| let me make an appedl Ea Bh iy “I didn't—Know there was any one—]but walt! The reer 19 not for my- here. I-—thought I should be alone, self, I ask for nothing, nothing. I “And J," gald the Princess Mleanor|only that you permit that greatest o from the old stone bench, "Hise 1} healers, Time, to teach you that thona should not have come,” are good and true men atill in the “Vil go away at once,” sald Mallory, | World and that not every ono is a—tiar T bey air,” 8) se you, as T hate a loathe myself and more of this,’ and Tha unfastened and looking, and held out the Iittle knot of ribs |hon toward her, but the Princess shrank "T coud not touch It, alr,” sald pha, "Tf T have vour permission, pagames ws hs T shall not intrude upon you now very Inw yolce, again.” Wieancr, up fin hi " enld she, in a low, tired ‘now T bave hue vou aa’ mich nm have hurt me, nas much as you made mo Now T've ma Maree ‘chenille | table, and the top of Bheer | the paper so firmly Madame, Prince Karl of Novodnia, is an honest gentleman who loves you ,well, nay too well, for he has left his ‘realm in diroat perit to come to you—alas too late! hen you have a Iittle re this—thia shook, you will Tt Js evident that at one time yor willing to glye your life to {f no mreat measure of love, him, Princess, and take tho hie! in Novodnia that waits for you, who are queen among Women, must be a princess before the world, never have been wo regal or #o kind a staring at und and her breathing tame a iH We will not speak of th replied, "I know only that you matte me love you with ydur lying words of honor and tenderness, with your lyl eyes and Iving smile, and that now we thot govere from Uston to him, n to h place You, There will this Haye you done?—for first fell Housetorfe’s oven as for @ souffle, Home-Made Boxes, French cottons is the fancy the day, ‘Thome are used for much Ingenuity Js shown In th smooth surfaced box Is bought factory and covered with stil Blue, Some people prefer a to any other method, The woman hay anywhere from # twelve of these in her living § They hold everything, veil bons, visiting cards, invit teur photographs and mantoure , J ments {Baked Bacon, 1 ei you find tried badon obect I and Iniiégestible, try thls ways thin atrips of bacon, after ‘the rind, on a broiler, Put le: above @ pan 80 that the ‘ot touch the bacon, and put it ot oven; turn the broiler one, \Wuld be hot enough to cook ‘minutes, The bacon’ ts then 90 ®) greaselegs that It can be the finge i ‘A Good Trick Withdrawing ‘the Gan ERE ts a very aimple way H &) boaster or ; “showing off,” a8 that’ you do not believe any present can Iift a glase full and carry it five feet in perform the featyand the {n) FI tumbler with’ wal pletely cover the top with @ ato of writthe paper. By p g firmly against the top of elde down,” or invert i h} the glass that not a drop o per, as shown in the plotu water is atilt kept in the time by the table top alone, | one tries to lift the glans At once come out, and you good your statement at the all those wo olatmed the ¢ the glasy, he “ nd ve T Ver do Jiner, sin?’ she "Have | suffer, and von'll hate me as Tang T= dore? Would you in itil | hate vou, for no man ean ever forelve Jyour pretense of love? ‘Love!’ As If) what T have anid to vou, the tnenits you, knew what that word means! T've heaped tipon vou, ‘Mhev'll hurn vou Why did you come out In the gars! ey long as vou lve, Tanis—Mania? T jen tosday Adame |suddenty, Inobing Into her eyes, jala y ben | Phe Prine burnished ha “Why-why was fine, catse the what te it “Why. s flushed from neck to}, came because the day. she murmured, “Be- tined me. I came sir, why I elt in my you demand my I tient Your, Hs w with belaaswanl p ' alt house YI he demand d | jike your new name, Carlo. it's Irish, jen't It?s the come to sit upon the old ston®| nde to me must 1 aneeches you" 0 Continued.) I puicaenet bien alwave; as, God nity me, the lave T hear vou muat burn in my shamed heart Ul T alet® orled the Princess Mleanor, and fell to sob- bing most bitterly, (To Bi va

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