The evening world. Newspaper, March 16, 1905, Page 3

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) i . y IDEAL WOMAN AS SEEN BY CLUBWOMEN _— ‘Pedant Members of New York Organ- izations Take Their Text from Address’ Given by Mrs. Lucia Gale Barber ‘ in Mothers’ Convention. ' TMs ddeal reat woman (2 she whose exterior 42 in harmony with the beautlful ‘fags of earth; her countenance 49 open and serene; her eyes clear; her voice finn end sweet; her step and movementa free and Hight; her drete and appointments, Rowever, simple, decorative and befitting her station and work; she radiaiw health and vigor, and 49 good to look upon; she is an ornament, Intertorly the reat woman's mind is furmahed with oalm judgment, deoiston, émagination, and her soul with love, faith, hope and a clear consctouences of good, Bho moves along the earth, carrying help and healing in the sympathy and ten- dernese which she pours out in unatinted meaaure; she inoreases the joy of human Teind by her own joy in Uving; her clear courage puts strength into the diecow. aged soul. She is a Ughs illuminating the ways of her going.—MRS, LUCIA “GALE BARBER. ‘The addres given by Mrs, Lucia Gale ‘Warber, of Boston, before the Mothers’ Convention at Washington hee brought | n, forth a number of interesting opinions from prominent club'women, Mra, Bar- ber spoke on The Real Woman,” who | ts, she says, the Ideal woman, ‘When eaked by a reporter for alt Evening World ‘her opinion of the Boston woman's definition of the ‘Ideal ‘Woman,” Miss May Riley Smith, the poetess and membor of the exclusive Meridian Club, said: “The (Geal ts the perfect, so I should way that the ideal woman would be an angel woman, She | does not exist, eee renee may do so in time Would Be but our an Angel. are always ahead of us, It ts @ different thing to describe an {deal ‘woman, for the very description would have limitations. “As Qear as she could be described rom my standpoint would be: the har- (monious blending of tne true wife, ithe be pereonality must fy| be Reed tive, But it will be di It to hold to this etatement, ‘for there are many fwhose faults do not reflect thelr souls fwhese external end internal oharaoter- totics Go not agree, “At twenty it le not the woman’ fault Af her face does not reflect an ideal; at | eel forty ft in bee eed her character at that | 2% use her countenance. The bole d wore d_be chi ng with mth Bho he pout he har- gato in. ial her He jase oe 1 think, of ean she should ae [ Mass Of pleasing exterlor—she must yes fv and keen intelll- jas these characteristios awe will mn In her face, fealth ¥ Celi for an ideal can be really Bernat in mind na and body who is not Consideration fr) others, tempered sound common Ante! a great oe rcnothetty heart an trath, ne should - condemn ered Clean!i- teriatic. ‘Tho ideal woul ‘whould sites tage a a ‘dle no matter nove Peta deepest moral, Cody and humane motives to serve dearest to her—to wien s ohe has ben Ws uc Nye SM as Lad fellows to greatest advantage, ve id oat pba nih js one ne who can rwaser the most on unt that’ the fe faith oy th oka ler @ 1 Corlation develops highest obaraster ih Tegards Mrs, Barber's estimate of external Ydoaiity,. I way ‘Fiddlesticks!’ Some women oan be absolutely homely and yet be fascinating and ate Every woman should t) te ag: thine to do, hor bevt, but it ‘not! the ideal, Ail tl ‘mines ng ‘equal, pre as h the stand- ard ae the, {deal should however, al- be AER all rece @ judicious heart bentimental, The rain, “Good health ts n to the Soa! woman. No humanelng can attain the Adee BE il pe average to devel dale ally i Ny i onan 6 elop ole al y dn ona intel- lectually aa far as health, “False halr and Poul Quinze heels take all the sense to ‘balance the body. The {deal woman woars her ‘clothes ey will never be orit- Aifferent t) man tty Beat wor, I don't ba eart should rule th o Te R Pho be Ha aford, are of ord, | rede Prete Club, ea; Character Counte for Boerythiny, ‘4 jel fi iflment es she comes, E * Socotra ft te is & 8 “Chee Te denoting n,' aa ing pu purely Toving 10 lived up to the. Hachines of th | big, has intelli ‘Bhe fhe era a fet ideality flee ta he Cyt sepeerance has nothin: to to" with eality, Chamacter Counts Judgment and heart; these are | for it all, The moat ideal woman ever Hirtotes of the “deat woman, I would | known ‘was phya! ay @eformed, but to meet her,” her |deal womanhood made you for. Ellen Miles, of the is. teal fers with Mrs, Bai ree with Mrs, ‘Bai or at lescription ja very flat, tian or face have nothing to do with Ideality, If Mrs, Barber's Kea! is where is sho going to find her? ye geen ideal women at the wash- » and thelr exteriors were any- but aesthetto, question is-What 1s the idea of the ideal? It is a wu isons Her Tt ls too ab- Sound, Common | rect pat would te- Bonse and spect would not be ‘ Intelligence, in another, We all way our own moth- ers are our Keals. ‘When we talk about the ideal we talk perfection, We have had no ideu! ‘It I were bestowing rise upon wenan I mould give her ro: fc but ots ot eall ., jut it not the ideal, Bhe should have good, | ject et it, ‘There are @o many different kinds of {deal women that it is hard to merge the idea Into one," Miss Alice Brown, Seoretary of the Professional EOE League, says: at ideal wo- man Js my mother,g¢¢-————_—_— and agree on must Niet i belleve shen afin‘ apie ot light remark t0 the contrary, "Bxtemal signa are not _necessary— Were birth and environment interfere ere | doos arses. Rica should not trloted ‘by # hinge, a} I belleve the. “deal woman should Crane! dos Rathavosto be. tntal ui oes nol ve to be intellec- tual ‘but whe must be intelligent Sect BROKE SISTER'S HUSBAND'S HEAD Boy of Seventeen Struck Young Spouse, Who He Alteges Was Attacking Bride—Skull May Be Fractured, Because he protected his sister from the alleged abuse of her husband, John Howell, a boy of seventeen, who lives at No, 608 Hast Sixteenth street, was @rralgned in Yorkville Court to-day ‘oharged with assault, assault is sald to have been com- and says New York City Is ter- tibly overcrowded—so “SHE” 4s, but you will have no trouble finding suitable Furnished Rooms, Houses and Apart- ments If you consult the Morning World’s “To Let” Directory. ' 2,372 Y tO LET ADS, LAST WEEK, eta ali a) Si aa a i RMP cs an mitted on August Friest, a youth of twenty, who lives in the house with Howell and who two months ago mar- ried Howell's alster, According tq the atatement made by Howell to the police, Friest went home early to-day In a qarrelsome mood and began to abuse ‘his bride, “You mustn't abuse” my alster,"’ Howell said he told Friest, Friest {hap became more ahusive, and Howell declares that he had to inter- fere to prevent Friest attacking his wife, “Then he turned on me," aald Howell, "and to protect myself I hit him on the head with a bottle, He fell une conscious, and the police arrested me,’ Friest. wag ‘taken to Belleyue Hi pital, It ls feared that his’ geull fractured, —— ‘The Delineator for April, April being an Important month In the fashion world, the April Deiineator Is primarily a fashion number, containing @n elaborate portrayal of the spring styles and the latest fashion news, In the literary portion of the magazine the 1 ar st instalment of a new serial story by Albert Bigelow Palne jy an Item of note, oky-Piete, a Story and promises well apters, In 'Dhe a new serial fea- j, Dr. Grace P. Mur- ray ‘will diseu ry phase of the care | of children, ‘The first paper, on he Coming of the Chil contains Informa- tion that has nevet before been pre. sented In popular form and will be of ‘i istance t other series, ' t ts called “The Rights of th ture, it 18 announe e' lator to | bo known to fame as tho actors. in the | Play, Amateur collectors wi.l able to 4ain much usefal information | from an-article on lnutre ware by N. Hidson Moore, and Gustav Kobbe cai tributes a very Interesting paper, stril- ingly {lustrated, on. "The Stage and the Sevond Self.” Short stories by PANY W, Cloud and Elmore ke. are ng re healthy and vi, The pub- foo wbstract to dlectss,” | 2 R, ther features, In Radition se Seats Sha tales for children. by Lie Bran Baum, Grace MacGowan Re others. The domestic column: cular interess and, bart ably, @fited, 6 \ NEW WOMAN “8” SHAPE They Must Be Built Along Its| te Sinuous Lines if They Would Meet Conditions Enforced by Miss Elizabeth White. ' ‘8"' Is for shape—the brand-new shape of 1908, which, according to Mies Wlisa- beth A, C, White, President of the Dressmakers’ Protective Asgoctation, in seselon at Masonic Tomple, must be bullt along the lines of that sinuous lebter, Btarting at the top, the first ourve of the "8" desoribes the bust Ine, the second ourve what might be called the profile hip line, If you have both of these you spell the perfeot shape, If you haven't them, Mins White has, and this is the way she did It, as told to an Evening World re- Dorter, while to an Evening World arust ahe LL akvhag the "new" figure, "An I have told the dressmakers al- ready,'’ sald Mise Whito, ‘the chief feature of the new figure Ix the ellmnina- lon of the diaphragm, You remomber Jaat year what a terrible diaphragm I Wad? Well, it's all gone, For years we have been bullding up the dlaphream with the straight-front corset, But onoe you've got it, you've got It forever, “You see, we worked the fat up from the hips to the diaphragm, and now wo work it oft the Waphragm, ‘Mhnt gives us the high bust effect, which {# In- creasod by the tight-fitting bodice which has ‘superseded the blouse—the only blouse now ts the diaphragm Itaelt. “Nhe way to work the fat off the daphragm and the neck is to sleep on Ut stomach with your head back thia wa “he chest is the most prominent feature of the new figure, You see, I do everything with my cheat, I even | walk with It, But don't throw back the | shoulders, Hold them in a natural posl- tlon--and keep your Knees stiff. ‘This will make you seom tatler and throw | your. bust out, "We still koep the kangaroo back, but Feeding the Birds, (From the Boston Tranecript.) A litle Brookline girl each year pre- pares a tree for the birds by ut(izing a handsome spruce tree that stands adja- vent to her home, tree aro hung with pieces of toothsome suet, bread, marrow bones and little boxes containing varieties of seeds, with here ani there a shining red apple to ve piquancy to the oftering. The tree Bherally patronized by the apprecia- ve birds, and is an object of much in- terest 2 neighbors val The example I ere g ‘nut m| lated by edi bird hassers by Eanlght wel be a WORLD: THMRSD THURSDAY EVENT EVENING, M | | The boughs of the | MARCH: 16, 1905 ‘RUN DOWN BY CAR; Manhattan . Avenue—Motor- Mrs. Carolin Ordman, eighty-two yours eld, of No, #4 Woet One Hundred end Fourteenth street, wes inocked down by a trolley car at Manhattan avenue and One Hundred and Thit- teenth street to-day, and mo badly In- LOST MEMORY, AFTER FALL. ' | Mrs, Mary json Could Only Ro- member Name and Street Address Atte Tumbling Down Steps. Mra, Mary Wilson, who lives in Gum- ner avenue, Brooklyn, fainted on the Park Row gallery of the Brooklyn Bridge to-day, and before any one could reach ‘her foiled down two flights of stairs, Policeman @ohilp picked her up and carried her into the women's dresaing-room, where a doctor #ald she was euffering from concussion of the brain, Upon opening her eyes half an hour be gdb vir ‘Maw, Wilson sone veggie only ohe abe t her ib wane ooopee, but oth st el where he a or the. bulsber Of Net Rouse. the ‘was taken to the Hudson Btreet Hospital, \ MAY GET' TWENTY YEARS FOR KIDNAPPING GIRL. |event Negre Cook Held Without Ball fer Waring Away Sixteen-Tear- 014 Bessie Bench, John Cooper, the negro cook who lured Bessie Beach, a young white girl, away from her home in Hllsabeth, N, J., with promises to place her in a good white family here, was held without bail for requisition papers from New Jersey hee arraigned to-day in the West Bide Detective Murphy, of pusabet aliita Eyoot” peu tie erlg Ie sails Ma: the eur was only sixteen care Lat et in whit r fs a Leble i peat peace gona jsonmen| , “fonelian Xosintant tae an County, was preva for Ni ei ¥4 Beach a was lured to iw Hed epee ea ns Bie pinced the wiet in R Beach of a Mrs, Tompldns, colored, | Forty HapEES, atreet, In spite of thrgats the new figure must have the pigh buat to Kill her the gle escaped an weem so by tak! a the ed oft 0 tonne arrested @t the Pennsy! vans fured ghe wil) die, A crowd which gathered became #0 threatening that the motorman and conductor jumped on their car and putting on full power es- caped, although dhuaed for two blocks, ‘The ootice learned, however, that the qudtormann was Michael Clook, of No, 160 West Bnd avenue, and the conductor ef No, Sib Wert Forty- TWILLINER SAYS WOMAN PASSED BOGUS CHECKS. is —_—— Caroline Maroy Accused of Dupiag “Trades People on the Upper ‘Went side. Changed with péaging epurtous checks, Mies ‘Cardine Mundy, of No, 52/Weet Ninety-second street, was arrested to- day at @ talloring evtmblishment at No, @81 Amoterdam avenue just as ahe had | oun received back % change en @ check for $5. Bhe was arraigned before Magis ‘trate Comell in the Weet Side Court ag Freee a Bung or) Chane orig ff oho arrested Miss laying down another check fess tk establishment HIS SALARY HELD UP, Must Pay Alimony. Club, V, Young, of five of John W. Masury & paint house, Because he is in Maine, Mr, Hummel asked for the appointment of @ receiver of any property he may have in thie Btate, and an tnjunction forbidding him ko draw or John W. Masury to pay his full salary, his ordering that $115 be theld out for hig wife each month, Mra, Young appointed receiver, HOW TO GET RID OF DOUBLE CHIN AT HOME, (By ‘T. B. Powers) Sleep on your chin with your tootsle wootsies touching the dashboard of the bed. Do not sleep in this oH hd cami position too long, or you will get wrinkles in your neck. Don’t snore, The vibration of your snore against Lavan aa gti as ges sae ad oro up bile have only a Se suman ——- i Ae Nee K on KOW Te MAKE YouR SELF BEAUTIFUL SEE EXHi8T B AWAY WITH THt SAUCY DIAPHRAGM, LACC, AND WALK On THE Min BALL, of YOUR Foot ER CHINS $0 SHE ROLLS.ON @ BOARD Mra, Ordman an Fatally Injured on} Bridegroom, Hero of shale oe man and Conduotor Fie from) Mob, but Are Arrested, return. Bhe gald the woman represented herself to be, matron of the Jefferson Market prison, pee eatlet ae William W. Young, Non-Resident, Justice Clark, of the Gupreme Court, set up a new rule to-day applicable to non-teskient members of the Alimony Tt was in the separation sult of Anna of Brooklyn, againat William 14| W. Young, the $10.00 @ year Fepresenta- Bons, the t Justice Clark's decision 1s in favor of John C. Coleman was i LAS F PORTRAYED IN NEWS AND. ‘AND VIEWS terete Young, Woman Berpondent ses Bhe Learned of Her M i A FINE 0 OF S10 Death I Mary \Jacober, ea iaiticond it @ mald employed In the hoi Leon 8. Mabon he wealthy real po dealer living at el Clerk | street, committed suicide) to-day by Smashing Episode, Figure of Interesting Brook: lyn Dolice Court Trial. Frank William Primrgse, the’ y! man whose marriage preceded the ao- cldental death by gas of hig movher-in~ law only a few houre and who ray to register his wife at the Bt, Geo: Hotel, Brooklyn, where they went & ‘ow hours after thelr marriage last Sun- day morning, was the central figure in @ wpirited legal argument, He was also the prisoner, changed by Claude Quick, clerk o tthe Gt. George Hotel, with as- enult, last onlled Mr, Primrose's attention to the ¢act that he had neglected to regis- ter his brite, The bridegroom resented Mr, Quick's interference and to use his own janguage smashed the clerk in the face, Mr. Quick resented thie and called rested, “Mysteries” on the © canctnowd that’ they ‘comprorsive von ota ind Wanted Off the Job, . and held fore hearing Inter, | «(Dera waslcalled beck, Wh wid nore ts Ss Maron ® rm, Sh exclaimed. hotly! ‘milliner, of No, O41 Columbus avenue | |" i, gaat uy now and Mise Maroy tag deen duping many mil-/°SR,s Ortooner became nolbed wt) this Uners and dreeemakers on the upper funsture cpt ‘out to hip lawyer: weet alte, passing epurious checks and), Tet sf ply gi vat Getting expensive clotivy and change 10} we jay ¥ \- iii, ne an AEH. I acy Sot Cy ihe wee waa fae Diasierdans WAYWARD GIRL . moss. by Jerome in Alleged ; “Onder” . Johanna Neubert, seventeen 01d, charged by her father and thother, in an alleged ‘cadet’ case, ney consented, ‘was ten years old. For more years, she sald, the girl asked by the trate obe man- |B heard all day, you surely i Sly si ther me all, ‘the| fread my litle talk” money Jf heed, ener Joes tat rant me lH and 1 have noticed « great. badly. they. treat me there, Ly iene the sceptics shake thelr father ‘to prison than go wi mother, ff pe nied || See if your Collaris 4 PLY, aLIQN BRAND’) COLLARS ARE 4 PLY TRADE MARK, |INSTANTO KILLS PAIN INSTANTLY, aa ently tee a, OK: bata \ | lle ‘Tone tout i{ 100, wha Central | ietter trom Sweden yorterdny, announce ing the death of the youl ung | To-day the other servants misn the Adams Street Court to-day during | Take Warmers Séfo Cure, the Mr, Qulok had on Sunday morning | i# 36 Bast Bighty-third turning on the gas in her, bedroom, A, ‘woman’ mother, is shedight to ha wee, aot reading the letter the girl, whe and, smelling gas, forced age her room and found her dead in ped, HEALTH = WOMEN Kidney and Liver Cure, Regain Your Health. erred women They ‘atag. Rivas ‘ny oy Growing worse, @ polloeman, The bnidegroom was ar- Georze Gru, who appeared’ before Magistrate Furlong as counsel for the HELD IN $500 BONDS, Johanna Neubert Wanted an Wit- years Mr,\and Mrs) John M, Neubert, with f Deing a wayward girl, ‘wis held tn, $000 bonds for mood behavior for ane month torday in Jefferaon Market Court, Mag- letrate Steinert decked to hold’ the @irt ‘when he tearned that she was wanted # a witness by Distrot-Attorney Jer- hen the girl announced that she had friends who would ¢urnish ball for her Magistrate Steinert eaid he would not wocept eeourty until the Distriot-Attor- (Mrs, Neubert told the Court that Jo- hanne had been a bad child since she two to stay at home, #he wanted! her reve) gent to an Institutton, nea ohJanne was Wan’s = Cure performs re tor autlering women, urifies the Be bloses ‘antoren ths Manors ladder and liver to @ healthful condition, and causes the Bhs tere organs to do work naturally, makes the A. the pHoronh clear and the SAFE peanenee Meowrery or id “Bale © or Youle foils tae Bellevers and Sceptleg i Judging from the rem front of our bpjseritt “Great values! por ferent story Lae ee Either they have no sizes priced.” ‘There's the Tub, a great deal of truth in mur,” but it, 1s a di \ " { roe here,» The Hope Com) winding w ey he i Spective of cost,’ bi Suits that are Haas at $7.00 will cause ‘on the part of the ies bay morrow pase Patrick's will be a continuous wine IMPORTANT: All suits, no matter how, priced, that are broken ane arranged as follows: ae Coats and Vests will be ‘j at 83,50, i, The Trousers will co/at § Of course this Goss (ioe startling, but you'll be | the values if you'll come: ‘down to-morrow, You see, gentlemen, » this Company (while the rete Secretary are young men, stil are conservative and a sort of! ness farmers) believes in plo the ground, raking it and putting | seeds, They are willing and divi par to wait for results until yi 1 ecome acquainted with their “| ods, The Taylor stocks that now closing out dally are used as the seeds, and mighty’ good seeds they will be, too; Duites enough talk for to-day, If you Leia are time, come and see us to-mp) and you'll remember St, Packed Day of 1905 as a day of great in vestment for yourself and family, | lh \

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