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ne THE WOKLD: WEDN MEN WILL WEAR] . F422 S7¥LES iN pwELLiNcs. CORSETS, SAYS ae DRESSMAKER ‘Woman Expert at Convention 4 ~ ., Declares They Would Feel 1, More Comfortable. Wh HOW TO DON THE STAYS. BDAY EVENING, Shr'Tim Osun. 13, 1905 as “at the side,” y puts It, remod- mat wround the flesh until ye more It BOtOntEy a into gu Nmanafey dro Store Closes at 5:30 P. M. Wr thre. real figures are VENTILATION wouron’s 1 VAR ‘Yous 15 A STRONG IF you FLED FROM AN EARTHQUAKE IN ITALY ANO CAME OVER HERE TO FIND YouR House TOPPLE OVER IF You SNEEZED 2 produced, Like Like a Life Preserver. 4 —_ , i 7 o\" ¢ ni own has a al a ee .The Whole World a i POINT IN THESE NEW 4 Houses. + | Wants WINTER 'SHOES lots for air nir js for the saci Who Wants to Save a Third Pe MM ae To a Half of the Cost? :: 3: fondly’ displaying a pair of boat forma, “when a lady, puts one of th CB bes td EN Ue TOMORROW begins the Wanamaker September Shoe Sale—Thousands of fine new, maker, Pallas ia rather wearer of specially made shors are presented, together with other thousands taken from our own Peete ohare) ee make my 1) stocks and radically reduced in price. Shoes for Men, for Women, for Boys, for Girls, for Little Children—all good-wearing, LOAD OF PLUM, PIE SINKS good-looking, reliable sorts; the larger part ot them in flll assortments of sizes, and all EDITOR HARRY WHITTLE. |}] of them away below what equal shoes cost elsewhere, . oa Wie ais Big factories, working through the dull Summer days, have provided most of the hat . ee special-priced lots of fine new Winter Shoes ready tomorrow for all who wish to save money on shoes they may be proud of Details follow: ee Coe tea tis mead’ pone |}| Men's Shoes and Oxfords that were $3, $3.90 and $5, now at $1.90 4 Pair R. T. Forbes. of New Rochelle, went) ‘Tan, russet and black. The best styles and the best shoes we ever had at this price, mot ‘Missen, Bather kad Nanoy Bare Women’s Shoes that were $3, now at $1.50 a Pair nar, college girls of Mvanston, Il., who Kid, calf and enamel leather, in wolghts suitable fof Autumn wear, cae tae Te aewaya aiaviiee pin Women’s Oxfords that Were $2 to $4, now at $1.50 a Pair § Gooo MORNING! HAS TOUR House A TRUNKS SrRap MAY Come int HANDY TO KEEP IT Mme. Wade Gives Practical Demonstration for Benefit y ; ae ae APSR of Stout Women. macs eal a ON Seay 55 . AMAZES RURAL MODISTES. She Shows How to Correct the ‘ ‘ “Nip” In Walete and Give Spring to Hips. “strayeht front.” Lute; THe New AN 5 re cute? KY=LINE . neh basket. ‘I always aid like pi —Sogs of the Corsetiere. said Whittle. + He two pleces, Buitable for street or house wear. Many different styles in the lot. In tan and black. j Toh 2 — ——— = ‘Then he and Misa Esther Bar , srclig sh “Aly Tne THEE Vie! lataat |p ealas neue mis igreesreeea be walel ie ae |eney are not allowed to apread out tne | Meet, Fomboat walle Forbes) Children’s Shoes and Oxfords that were $1.25 to $3, now at 75c to $1 a Pair bi 0. bs hi =] -of-1 |- waste) |, were ey ‘e nol ipread out a fi cl wi g . 7 bulletin from the front—stralght ana |! the - objectionable - stomach-Aisappear 7 Ay. = = der the arms. yards tron “shore Whittle capsized the ‘The last of the Summer stock; mostly tan, some black; but the best grades of fine and durable leather, i ere’ Ci ho National | Dress: | business.” hance aresicesOy ee erpulgiy they ere. tat so bony ae inet | oman ner tines MubeERoT Welite Boys’ Oxford Shoes that were $2 to $3, now at $1.50 a Pair | makers’ Co! om in Mnsohio Temple.| Mme. Wade, who advocates the cor a oat. ou see, this year the bust| was doubled up with cramps, Realising Mostly black patent leather, but many jun and brown. High-grade shoes, that will give splendid ser ‘Men would be a great deal better off | seta for men, did not ptate just how | According, to Mme. Wade, and itt t 80 afr down. Of course, T| that he was about to drown he beman lay, ~Sises up to 5% % , if they wore sorsets. Inside of ten ew system would be inaugurated, |YOMMA be wall for all men to take mean once corre fat, Setect: calling for hi Miss Esther shouted vice for school or play. iD \ year: es! 1 y " 3 notl | lve a at er 1 in the ist | also, years corse's will be worn by men."'| but she did give the address of a New oe also, the proper way to put on | sng” give a spring at tho hips, A| Forbes thought at first that they MEN'S SHOES. WOMEN’S SHOES This {s what Mme. Linda Ross Wade | York corsetlene who would be delighted |® Corset is to piace it around your |woman wearing a twenty-two corset | were fooling. He yelled to Whittle, . eald, as she played carelessly with a|to supply hubby with a aice comforta- ebony hook’ & from the bottom up, | really looks Uke ahe wore 8 nineteen “You shouldn't heVe eaten #0 mucli A Third and More Under-Price. All Worth a Third toa Half More few rolls of superfluous flesh which whe | ble pair of corsets, warranted to make fe eight yanis of lacing drawn in on account 0: new ines brought | ple.” o r— Patent leather, box calf and black Than the Present Prices, Into a semblance | him Jpok Ifke @ perfect gentleman. at the mifdie, after you have raised | nt looked impressed. Foe, wit, Dar perce hehe der ata mentee Hay het wal dressed’ men coloct; Holes of At 92:60 w pati =siaek di A a Paik three Peach All Men Barred Out. yoursel¢ in the corset and pulled} “I don’t ki it moans to have |ried to the rescue. They found Whittle || cuk-tanned leather, Goodyear welted; all sizes, Aoxible gakt-tanked solo Teather, welted ang stitched, dying to have a fig- % way down in front. This ia to get|more mip in the wats @ pon-| unconscious, Miss Barnard was holding At $1.90 a pair—xia and calf lace Shoes, with welted | modish styles: hoth button and lace. Vi ger like yours, Mme, Wade.” Whether @ new lino of corsets wil! | you ready, ladies only, of course, for | Cores Party Pm sure T don't | tle nea toe re ee onthe ||| soles; full round-toe last; all sises. At $2.60 a pair—Patent kidskin—tte softest of the Mme, Wade's announcement caused|be shown for men at the next con-|the reign of the Princess dress, which |" Wore are a few of the etyles of figure Gout’ Bhe was dearly exhausted The At $1.50 @ palr—Bieck kia Jace Shoes; stout soles, | shiny leathers; lace; welted soles, Cuban heels. Kast intenso excitement for a few moments, | vention was a matter of secrecy, At|is to be supreme this season, made over whiel yqu wait rescue was witnessed by hundreds of |#! sewed by ‘ay machine} serviceable and good-looking. + and the dressmakers from the prov-|any rate, mere man was not allowed | Don't think the most important thing| Flat back, large hips; remedy, hips excited bathe: At $1.80 a pair— Black kia Blucher Oxfords; full round Pend sro @ palr—Biack kid and calfskin, in nearly a inces, notebook and pencil tn hand, be-} {nside of the! temple of form and fe-| this year is raising the bust; the great- — —~ _ toes, welted oak-tanned soles; very comfortable shoes, With wade OF ehoee Uline he ve om pa tes gan to write furiously. shion/ to-day, which was a cause of |¢st point is in training the hips to be nar Att mn ro the stapenest] : , Soles are all Goodyear stitched, GIRLS! and SMALL BOYS’ SHOES | S2's,tre al Goodyear stltonea, Lasts are the shapes 20 a palr— kid, with patent leather| At $1.50 a pair-—Black kidskin lace and butt. At 90cto $1 OA ea ine tnols. bizse ¢ to & at foc a| made oh modern lasts, with flexible sewed onlethoned izes 11 to 2, at $1.20. | #0les; all sizes and three widthe, Bor school wear or tty Kidskine Leoo | CTUMAFY use they are eplendid values. “Why shouldnt Weer chem? in-| extreme annoyance to a number of|nicse and round. quired Mme, Wade. "They certainly | anxious “genta” on tho outsglde, for| A large. lady,_ who_oov'dn’y be. kept : need them. ‘or one am disgusted with Off th latform, and who insisted Ss th b ehis belt and suspender effect. It ta | me Wate. coe Meeies lovely | forcibly qmet she’ wanted to look like ave (3 apies. fhorrid to see a man continually hiteh-| ‘O° Anything, gave her lecture on A®/each successive model who wes fitted 5 §) te 10%, at $1 @ pal At $1 to $1.40 9 palr— Better ing up his trousers. Think how | Practical method. That ts to say, she |to corsets, was finally used es a sample. NFANT MORTALITY is something frightful. We can hardly realize that “ah ize. Geater he could Keep hls ghiit in sum. | as dressed herself in a new form |, 504 Ses, the Way to do with. thie of all the children born, in civilized countries, twenty-two per cent., | end button, #. ee oe begets wee ait BOYS’ SHOES : 4 ” vi t r - ty T ro ‘4 3 * Fa bs } mer. baby blue corset, with all t! arm: | "ia to push the flesh sround in the or nearly one-quarter, die before coe: resol cue veer 3 aera ane ats eR bau bor oes ob ate WuSter| At $1.80 and $1.50 « palr—sturay lace shoes; It Would Do the Men Good, ing whgerle that makes the corset |back, Use it like putty; push ena pull | per cent., or more than one-third, before they are five, and one-] ore A et nee hat knock out shoes side leather, firm and durable; heavy’ sewed moles. ied 4 ‘would you advise the same pys-|4emonstration such a popilar funvtton. | Gong, Phere 1s no exouse for a wo- | ey are fifteen { | £ $1,508 palr—Bmatl boys’ lace shoes, made Inke «| t2 % at $1.20: sizes 215 to 5, at $1 tom?" anxiously {nquired a puling fet| AM the dressmakera—and the hall/man having a figure like this.” We do not hesitate to say that a timely use of Castoria would save a At ioe cor kid and calf, with wtrong sewed soleu;| At $2 a pair—icta, calf and patent leather lace Sh lads, as tho demonstrator with a|¥as crowled—agresd that it they could How to Wear the Bust. mal orliy (ot any ip caeired ahead crepe pve pee to say that many |¥| fire 9 to 13% wits extra solid oak-tanned soles, welted end stutahed} g le ‘ " oe I 86! jeath: i . P = all sizes, 12 to 54%, in widths to fit all normal feet.. Sh mighty pull hauled the corset atrings /l0ok like Madame Wade they wodid| put 1 patd $9 for these carmets pro; Drape tuchaves and Meothince corace eald for ouilionis tome lenin cee S150) oii palr—-ia Bhose for girls, made from | that will aive excellent service for echool or dress wean, taut on a model. ‘There was a gleeful |try any now torture In the way OP|temted the sldetly Digs, | aerenca | more 07 less opium or gnorphine, ‘They are, in considerable quantities, |f|| iis'tastened ny the Goodyear welt process, Bien 84 15 Women’s and Girls’ Shoe, Main Soor, Fourth evenus, Rook of; aptclpation jas Mme Wadovens| comer | Roivatmant, sald Mme. Wade, “You don't know how | deadly poisons. In any quantity, they stupefy, retard circulation and lpad [| 19's, $1.39: size 11 to 2, $1.00; sizes 234 to 6, $2 @ pair. Men's and Boye Shoes, Basement of New South Butlding. Spered In the affirmative. ‘The possibilities of corsets for men |ty put your oordets only. SAS %o con ions, sickness, death, Gastoria. ‘operates exactly the pad = - 5, “Oh, wouldnt I just lke to get John |were not gone into In di by Mme. |Wear a Princess dress with that figure. esti 2 reverse) ou Broadway, fourth Cg NOUD ET TaHE ik te a Wale, but the suggestions for. the | Busts ust be worn “in front. an: | YOU must see that it bears the signature of Chas, H. Fletcher. Castoria formerly OH WANAM AKE R ‘ys ° “Yes,” announced a Staten Island | straight front for high livers, with the | “yIur isn't that t ‘i ave. . Sth aad 10th sts, causes the blood to circulate properly, opens the in Re eenaancad i | { alleres onthe vekinrand!alikve:terarc Qa A.T. Stewart & Co. . lo a lot of these | rotund @bdomens, special hip-~eiving cor- | inquired a ourious \ men with big stomachs good. Let them wets for ascetic clergymen, nice roomy |nawken. | Genuine Castoria always bears the signatare of — try this put-your-hand-in-the-inside-of- elastic consota for Broadway eptcures, |yinwe Wado, He ther the ne ee a your-corset-pull-up-the-abdomen-giving- |girdle effects for slender youthe, and ring the busts forward and. tienes, CESAR IESE AN Pr aSe tae DOWNTOWN; Chatham Square ,793 to 205 Park Row HARLEM:, rarst St. & 3d Ave. } 2226 to 2234 3d Ave. ~ k —_- eS ae Dee Harlem Store: Corner 121st Street and 3d Avenue Fashionable Bureaux nara Enamelled Beds at Small Prices. |. | Downtown Store: Park Row, Near'Chatham Square | Reduced from $5 to $3.75 wie ve From’ Sbinbone Alley to the Present Day | , no bff sons in furniture as it hay tn milli- AER LD GREENWICH VILLAGE, of which Chatham Squa: he centre in 1807, when Cowperthwalt & Sons’ store made tts fi re was the centre in 1807, when c appearance south Witam Adele) ml e inown ns "Dirt Lane,” but the iM about carpeted with Clean! ) was Known.as “ } all al were Re , My Bo Tong before it knew the Stock furniture of the type of this fistfront bureau, ;The fashionable woman which {3 offered at a dise Street, then.known as “Ple Woman's Lane,” Jed down toward Bowling Green, and Broad Street, wants: $mart, fashionable Exchange, lorled !n the appellation’ “Smell Street.” ‘ eos tabadiy ere ois bone Alley” was a celebrated thor © when the traditions of New York were ripening, that being the name by-which Washing. Four drawers, 22x42 B ton Place was known from University Place to Fifth Avenue, 2 inch top, shaped plate [ir Housewifery flourished in an atmosphere of cleantiness, pouting ne untidifiess suggested by some ofthese names, It mantfested NTE, cera dnc, {self in sanded kitchen floors, beautifully polished furniture, the cleanest of bedding, . . , Ga caer dainty brad s It was to mh house that Aigo of 1807 had to cater, ane the habit then formed has always continued, |] icuT Ant graceful in every line, yet sturdy garving upon top of the i Carpets came more wit nthe reach, of the Average household as the qa rolled by, and Cowperthwalt & Sons began to supply them, eneves be nae sultan Fes fram bo! ig the bevelled , What a development! Tey Ge Carpet Department of this house fs one of the fargest In tha world—a fit companton-to @ furniture bus!- ing cent y angle fron, brace S and easy roll- Renu $25 and 927. * Rees who nence {s famiflar to all, Is the history of these two stores, The scroll work at the top of the head and foot ona Ato Onk, f y WO Pea on pn, | HOards, topped with brass knobs, gives the bed a trim ple, 981.60, * | appearance which {s pleasant to the eye. 4 . and 4 | ft. 6 Inch sizes, | Smart Mahogany Server $2250 HIS rich mahogany Server, with its shaped French mirror, 38x42 inches, its lined silver » drawer and its exquis- 7 wip {tely contrived crystal fj Mm cabinet, Is an excep- tomy handsome I Sis: Dooce _ The Cowperthwait Sanitary Bedding ie: ix abil Flat Front Chif he ‘onier LEANLINESS iene on itles are the health festarep of the cto te trical A powperthyatt poatiress te ao, tec - gree a the pine lattresses are here made in , HB chiffonier in one in f uth American halr, hen this hou Si American hair mattress {t ls jerward \ T sense be termed a closet to be gto te flaw of pure lot oe an ption that has been Tnown in the sttrons trede,, Pillows ars mad ‘of extra aclected flve geese " < ind cured hoy un method, ing ts madé rade, It ls made only for the who would have strictly san| and absolutely clean mattresses A sition Ing, Into which the sunlight always ay ie devoted entirely to the manufacture of the Cowperthwait andled by claen workmen, and there ls noth ing that enters ¢ mattress or the pillow that 1s unclomn or unsanitary in the Parlor Table, $1.25 | Everything for Househeeping| OR a corner in the parlor or a fas rere KES dl that a lengthy tele i Pes asec ae, shirt ribbons, gloves, hostery and miler eae tly Rich Axminster Carpets ler, = = Poke Regular $1.95 Quality for $1.47 gece ea! ate pA a, be _ Including Making, Lining and Laying the modern dining. room, Its very presen ees] fl 3 z 2 Oak or ma- HIS trite expression—old as tN@ house of @owper- | tive of SS 1 Kk, We have purchased the enilre stock made for} hogany fin- T thwait & Sons—came into use in 1807, when the ment. eV Lzelen t ed M1 meh , _ this season’s business of a large carpet mill ished, ; Business was founded, pinay The proportions are \ I Las 1 " ce then, ‘Ol intervening years, “Every- = sgt PO} ner for whi site famous fopdts high-grade Axminster carpets, ‘This Tharouguty | ena for Housekeeping” hae Deen the basis principle goes graceful and pleasing, ; that furniture is 60 mill Is retiring trom the carpet butiness and going well made in | erning the action of the stores In thelr dealings with the being intensified — 3, every partic- people of New York and surrounding towns, Whether it be a pressed lane set for the kitchen table, a mirror for the hall, a sideboard for the dining-room, a suite of furniture io the parlor, or a carpet for the whole house, it may be had in the Cowperthwalt & Sons’ stores the charmingly mark- ed wood, which pos- sesses that rich, indg- sctibable red whieh | larly 623 end \ into rug making, Reduced ite Aig chear~[ The purchase enables “ to offer! thi rapes. wiltch ce without Fegard to cost as have always been sold at 81,95 a yard, able » including follows: the making, lining and laying, 4 ie Se Mogae] | lane nc hi tae uty Yah io bso tg ee eee enn need | Saye 2 Piet fo ihe over oF One oe: Ficrasataaae y ‘ A meen em eh cp dibot Ona | Cowperthwait Sons a ‘ais-duat dae... 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