The evening world. Newspaper, August 21, 1905, Page 11

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Worlid’s Homo Sdn Mandl ce 8 Pore Al McCardell, “will néver speak to her? sald) Gortic. “1 am going to bo a typewriter Being a, typewriter 18 fo etylish Yo ON'T you speak to Celis: Ryan t” aeked Hattie sil vertior# 28 +tho| wear @ shirt walat without any | ae youhty “Yady— in| aprdn over it, Iko Cella Ryan he ee “ 2 | / Guédtion “paseed.| wear im thé cleamtto factory, and 19) A ere, whone| bose always cally vou ‘Miss Srermaty | | pretty ode had) oF ‘Miss Biiberatetn’ not ‘Mame’ re ‘Maggio,’ Uke Leute Perlmann docs toy been tilted at an angle of forty-ige o syenker und an- i degrees. Tooke at th wee Tor why?” asked Misa Sliver. + berg, who was naturally of an inqulsi- tive di¢positfon. Yon and she was all ‘the tiie playing jacks on the: steps She's wearing long dresses now, thinks she’s grown up,” sald Ge: “Mie Wdnly “@ year Oiler than. me: Mthe girls Wheto Celia Ryan works, becauss he is foreman ahd gels ‘Docs he get so mush ‘money’ Hattie with hef oye’ open wide. bo he Jost brags, My father he works by «@ plotiire frame place and he gets, Sut $15, and he Io a smarter man than Louie Perimann.”. | “q will be stylish’ I will not speak to) ella Ryan or anybody when I am a) May- t¥pewriter,” continued Gertie, "I will get $10 a week and always carry @ love| story to read in the cars when f am} coming from the store where I work.” “You will speak to ime, won't you, Gertie?" asked Hattie wistfully. Gertle looked out of the corner of her eye aud beheld the enemy. approaching. “{ fill alwdys speak vith you, and 1 will learn you to be a stylish typewriter, too, if you make a face at Cella Ryan. ‘ghe sooked Mike as if ste bad ho mean féblinge for you,” #ald Hattie, who was! of a peacefur dlsyosition. “Gus Schaffer | ridea around in her biz brother's ex- ptess wagon, but she comes home from els academy with my ‘cousin at"do Y care’ about her. or Gus Behaffer?” replica Gertfe; “my mother don't allow me to have deaus or wear ‘ong drekses."" “Then Why are you mad by Celia?” seke@ thé ‘persistent Hattie; “so soon as yotit mothor lets you have a feller ahd weur dng dfesses you won't pay jack# on the step# any mora, will yao?" Here shé comés to the delicatessen store now," sald Gertie. And, stich is the force of a superior mind, that while Gertie held her head aloft with patri¢ian dignity. the faith. | mou promised Daisy a Mttle patt for next fens sald the Girt from MKaneas, “Tn the oor? — Of tours hott Sho's one of the elght Nttle Pansies Who misport the prin. donna all ber ble tite, You sav ¢ just the sime ns the chorus T guess not. Why, whe to speak. Of course all the girls speak thom at the sanie time, but then it eles Yates het above the ranks of the com: cohort, Awd eatery ‘Anyway,’ the 16 “ys Datev’n elevating the staee.” stage manager! has! acannon, ‘Thas's the oid and. Vou tev? ‘Well, I wonder. ‘He's’ promised every girl in’ the ehorts the same thing, but when Dalty spoke to him about it be sald, perfectly, lovely: ‘Yes, I know, my dear, T have promised? them All something, but I really mean ft, when T tell it to you,’ “The girl who stads next to Daley said he told het she was too nice @ girl to be on the stage. I wish ‘you could It does seem a pity to tear from home. os San tired ‘but ‘got a big pull somewhere, so of course Violette couldn't be pushed away from the footlights. “The girl who stands on the. ottier side's been in the chorys for twelve years, She was a bright little thing, she eays, when she first went on, but she’s got an awful strained, nervous exprevsion on her free sow. She nays it's all come from looking for that lit- tle part the stage manager promised to “{ don't @ver initend to have a fellgs,” | ful Hattie noc only *made a face,” but * ie{ snee cried "Yan! " sald Gertie; “they are tbo fresh. Tat | free tate ra tke Kent Oar ca ase w when I am sixteen I will wear long dresses, ana then I won't play Jacks | ore, because young ledies only play the plano, and I'm mad with Ceila | Ryan because. she called me a snip and laughed at me for dancing a two-step | with you when the sireet plano was| playing yi’ It wasn't none of her busine : { “She's awful proud because she gets four doliera a week tn the clgaretie| factory, and she gets home earlier than my siater what 1y working in Mr. Gold- stein's pearl button: shop," said Hattie, all the feminine instinct to criticise her sex precociously coming to the surface. |. (The Moon. - The moon rode higtr within the sky, ‘The little starts atteaded, | And theldtheir breath a8 though 4 death At ‘her procession eplendid. the Ine of cedars fine @fd maiden viewed her, Atfd eyes grew soft as there aloft ‘The spoontul eyes pursued her! ‘The tnfuende was syre Inménse, Their altitude did show it; He murmured: “How enchrnting now!" She: “What's your fay'rite poet?” —New Orleans Titties-Democrat., up the en¥ted long skirt. / \ give her when she first joined the pro- feasion. STOP REMEMBER, HES MAMMAS Boy. | MECHANICAL MASSA | —— A \ ‘An Easy and’ Practical Method for Cleansing the Pores and.Remov- ing the Debilitated Tis- sue That Causes Wrin- kles, GE 10 KEEP THE FACE YOUTHFUL. By Margaret Hubbard Ayer, VERY THING we bave to do in this time ‘and labor-saving age; must i be -made gasy, ensler, casieat. [Walt hee te the very latest, very Simplest and very easiest massage in- it Jooks for all the a To “a ioe world i ‘Sema bicycle pump, with a suction cup attached. We all know that the suction cup is most benefiolal for bringing the blood to the surface ig the primary cause of wrinkles, Tt ts an instrument which every | woman’ Mise by herself. She should on the slctn ~b: the skin Is Inclined to be very witukly, tha-amount ot dust. that accumu- { Uetle of the following ovér the oe the little cup aaiji passes aver ei wiaet hel cleaned 4 3 | at r ne age tie sien rosy | ora Aw erwArd the face should | (LOM, a and dried, If! four tir jin grem tincture. o uuncew of orange Nower water, ife’'s Exchange. t i n tier nw |Grape Juice, Dear ers { ¥, bth tnform me how to wood grape juice, make L, T. Steam your grapes and put ‘six 5 ee ce aie come to & |, then a! . ‘Juice on the fiw and boll agala, scalding hot pour into botties While’ t “ave and seal Hghtly. Smoking Keeps Men Amiable. Dear Betty: Tere is a young man I am tn- terested In, I have asked him not te yMoke, Do you think that |too personal? ANN, Yes, I do. Bmoking soothes a man's |Merves an@ makes him more amiable: {1€ you expect to marry him don't fiir- nish him ammunttion for a quarrel at the start, A Strange Fiancee. Dear Retty; l AM engaged to a young lady, but she has taken @ dislike to ime, Would 1 better break the engage- ment or try to win back her love? IP. I would ask her to explain the reason of her dislike. Possibly yeu only imag- ine she dislikes you. If she saya she Gored Umbrella, Okirt-—Patsern or 6 yards 44 inches, , when yards 4 Inches wide when ft fine not, “ew hat ‘a0 th totiea pack think? ‘Well, Coutity ought to see ‘Waubunsee Storm,’ &¢., spread all over the first ap of Evening Bazoo. a ‘Wouldn't make you shivér If @ wourd aver - drop in the midst Pig Beer Fe 0 e's one the profession. girls told Datsy that the ords Kit berine to” R thy attention. the pilina donne takes her stand in the back Tow. 89, you! ey haw to be careful not to ay uly féetings of envy, Yes, the ait - ~ “ for herd. - “On, yes, Datky Mises the stare. She says it’s lots different from playing in the \home talent’ productions in the ° play @ part, Dalsy ays, hard work to trait with all bunch. “fave any of the, people stage? hi nO; | pel. Taeyive only oh the : excuse that the pi ‘pepe jue you can’t. 7 for she'll - car It will be different, £0 =n A iittle manager sai ee He'd Like to Try. ~ Jim Johnson madé a licky strike e About. year or two aso. | He was a man I used to lke | Before his head expanded 80. q It's sizes larger than hie nat, - 4h # ‘And now the holds it pretty hishy 1 don’t think I would act lke that. But then I've had no chance'to try, ‘Tom Smithérs's wealthy uncle died And Tominy got the whole estate, That fellow wasn't satisfied To spend it at rete, He ttirew the dohare left and right— He burned ‘em, 1 don't, think that & . And ‘yet, I'm sure my ateriing sense) Tts influences would dety. 1 use it with, intelligence, Betty's Balm for Lovers. ; |'May Manton’s T'd tke to have chance to try, ‘Chicago News. # fo longer loves you ask he? to break _ the engagement change her minds He Seed od A Desperate Young Man. Dear Betty: AM seventeen, A young man is con. ] stantly following me and asking me 1 to go with him. 1 do not care for him, and have told him so more than once. He now tells me if I do not go Pitt zm he will tll lensele. \1_ would Nas like .to get rid " : | without fie harmite nimecle. a Ge ‘ Don't worry. Ho will not kill bimeelf, ‘Tell hin again r ing tO do. with you Wish to oh eat austen’ Baye 3 ala That ote : to titm. se ke Be Queries for this department abg: be md@ressead to “Retty, gr ‘x World, P. 0, Box 1,834 New York City.” Daily Fashions, fesk i-ff i fz out in atere for n 22, H, 8, 3 and % inc ‘The quantity of material required for thy medium ize le M11

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