The evening world. Newspaper, November 30, 1905, Page 9

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The Evening WorVa™ f -—— -— ‘ fh ' MRS. NAGG'S THANKSGIVING. By Roy L. McCardell, | ‘ Too Weil She Has Nothing to Be Thankful For, buteShe: Will Not | Home Magazine, \ Repine: Tooener DAY, Mr, Nagg? Thankegiving | " : Day, you say? What have I to be thankful fort vat el ali right for you men {0 close your stores and I HA | is SAD AT MOST MARY CR More and sit at your ease and eat a good dinner and . 7 2 ty A moke @ fine cigar and cau it Thankwgiving Day! But what doos « woman got out of it? Where does HER Thanksgiving come in? You may close your store r your office, but can a woman close her Mouse and may, Vell, T have a day off, thank goodness!” No! A holl-| Joy means the stores closed and no place for a woman go unlede to @ tiwitre—somo place where ti ovata | womey. fo sho etays home with her husband, who ts sttting | round the house, meselng things up, Ricking the rugs | being in tho way all day, unless he 1 one af thase arthes wretches who goca off hunting and fishing or coing ls frk i] y and leaves his devoted ife at home a and neglected A man stayy home, He has # fine dinner. Who cooks that dinner? Fis wife! Or if she docsr ook it she superintends the enoking of tt and hag more work and worry making a servant girl do tt correctly than if ehe did tt honself! | After dinner @ man lolls around smoking a clgnr, Has a man any eight ito gnoke a cigar tn the house? No, he has not! He events the tace curtains and me's e's ong egomme eeareet| JIMMY JOHNNYPANT and the carpets, and he bume holes dn the sofa cover, because hevwillunstat In | Using the cory corner as if St wero a place to Joll around dn! OOH= CATS HEAD 15 GETTIN BIG ener TNS ONLY WHEN HE MESSHIS THE TURKEY HAS A ROAST, > Whero aro some men who Ko vt of the hovse ito smoke, tut thet te. onty an excuse, ‘Those are the men who leave home on the happiest days of the year, or days that should be the happiest, prevending they are going out for a smoko, just because thelr wives object to thelr smokwig tn the houge— } and what they really do Is to go Into a saloon and drink wit other men thet should be home with thelr wives and famlles, who do everytning to make them comfortable, but who will not permit of cigars or liquor in the home) Tt [ were a women of that kind perhaps you would appreciate mo moro! LBut Iam not, You impose on me all you want to, You can amoke up my 7 “Ys curtains, get ashes on the rugs and mus up the cozy corner, all because i Jenow I want you to do just ao you like in the haupe, and I em only happy \ when you are enjoying yourself, although (t worries me @ick wm eee you doing those things, and you know it! You are just Ifke all other men, You ave mean and eelfish, Men only anoke nfust because it 1s @ selfish pleasure which thelr wives cannot simre; and junt for spite they pay ten cents apiece for clmure eltmply becnuse thoy lke to waste the money, when I can get cigars In the dry goods stores for fiftysnine cente-® box, T think {: would be for Women to smoke Men sem to get #0 wich comfort out of smoking! Lapras 4 i We all ougbt ty emoke, and I don't eee why wo Go not, except that it makes us deathly sick. I know it did me once when, as @ child, I tried to smoke papa's pipe ‘And, besides, I think it looks bold tor women to smoke. We eaked Mra Firleigh to resign from the Emanctpated Women's Ghib because she emoled a cigarette, and that's why I say that Thankegiving Day ds ef right forthe men, Dut what have women to be thankful for? AR nntacnenrncncnenta | Luncheon Talks with the Boss. _ By Mark Madigan, ONT begafracd to keep ooming back with Meas, iy: My) 4 il i eaenieneetittt i GEE IT WONT HOLD Stu {a IF 1 CAN GRAB ‘KONG ENOUGH So -— HIM AROUND TH’ LEGS AN Nuiliiae et ” If the head of your department doesn't eeem to be ak enti | uppreciative {t may be that he ts working out ome prob- ae ™, lem thet prohibits the use of your suggestion at the Xing ume : “It the head of your department doesn't show hosp!- tality to your susmestigul may be that he is one of those m: a 46 of any suggestion but hip own, in which case his fnigh fe sure to come sooner or later, e.¢ you will bave the satisfaction of saying: T jy tata you wo.’ | “The man, who {s not brainy enough to get some eredit for beth vow end| Rimself out of tuming over your sugg 8 will never be very big; and eome day you may have him working for you. “Don't think you always have an {dex Your suggestion may be co-! j Felative to fifty moro the head of the department has had on the same e@ubject, fend he may nai have timo to stop and about it. “When John D. Rocke with Ideas by giving them }@ultod for the work feller waa t rpe of tho we 0 & success he rewarded men tito ont of the ¢dea If they stemed “Ono day a young man complained to him that he-had handed m ideas that had not been appreciated a a "Mr. R cller told him there nwt be some mistake, because by @ path Bhs managers on all sugxe made since and during the the the youn haa handed in his #ike . the only ey had found was rewar 4 sending the who had made It to F to work ft out “A year later the young man wes called befora Mr. Rooketoller, who told iim he wa; nd he lad pot grown discouraged because ihe suggestion he had , Just mado was one that they had decided to sond him to Wom Virginia to work out and they would give him a raise of pay to live up to the part. The same fan ts now the president of a Rockefeller bank, “If you want to stand out from che ranks of the flo-what-they-have-to'e you must consider the houso as a partnor with you and suggest things for ite ad- Yancement aside from what reward you may get out of it yourself. The really ;HELP MA-MAR! weifish man is never a leader In t tment or an instite “Don't lot your efforte go at thinking. ‘The heads of departments ere padd for Al | / that. Bnthusiastic work wil gometimes get greatér reward than an {dea, because \OH HELP f a i all movt as rare as ideas Uve, intelligent workers 6 The real, successful man isn't a Moker. He, “But above all remember this 1s too busy trying to get there.” —————_—_——_— ‘ Pacis <n Wo When Jealous, Be Indifferent. By Nixola Greeley-Smith, you will tone! va him, He ts not any dit-| All perplexed young people can ob-| | ferent from other men, only more un ‘ UDSDAY'S papers contained the remarkable story of| [tain expert advice on thelr tangled] |), e Ha scar te IA T who, on learning of her husband's tove for a young yay rg Wy Palas J Wied “ito | eat ey tn oe ante Ack For Rough, Red Hands, | girl, promptly Invited the latter 4o her home and ex-| | parry, Post-Onice oe nite New| | other. % hile Pues | plained to the preas that sho wanted to give her husband | | York. | ay. on eat every chance 40 got over his infatuation. The young girl She Is but a Month Younger. | Miss peck ta Sue in the case declared that she loved the man passionately Deny Betty: | hands, It th ft and that his being married made no difference, ‘The man, Hugged and Kissed Another. \ "ist's boy exxtoon years ot age, Ttn!-| ou like ahown BO fan, I know wevera! girls among! them an Itafan, @ German and an) results, try = this serenely fatuous as he usually ts in these affairs, sald thao paste, apread tnsid HAVE b to youn nun both women wore good and pure and loved him devotedly, bev gp aierghsatir ed ond for about threa months The other | what could he do? ciehh & called Bi & frlane’é: house American, My parents desire vory lan old pate of It sounds ko @ Bernas’ Shaw play, doesn’t it? But and found him ‘iusgitg and kissing wloves; Myrrh, 1 1 really happened one of my gitl chums, Now I love him | honey, 4) Though my eympathies are not so invariably with the | very muoh, but on seeing this act got yellow wax, injured lady as perhi they ought to be, I most ror | real angry and gave him back his ring ounces; . Tose foundly admire tho witeSn thie itie complication, aud l'on to impulse of the momenk. Tho next ter, 6 ounces, hope her extremely modern methods will win back her husband {f sho persisié !” night he called to apologine, byt _T laine wad th at thor- myrrh (powdered) w ly tom worth while, Her attitude t# very fine, Ip faot, I know ot but one finer, ‘They tella story of the wife of Dantet Webster, who on coming down to Dreakfagt one morning, discovered the statesman Kissing ohe new housemald. Mrs, Webster said novhing, but In the afternoon the maid came to her and considering him ter, then Bt sand. sutl o make Mo gloves at mteht much my going with the Italian, but thay say thet a8 sho ts only one ny juntor I should go with a girl a WE MORTALS ALWAYS LEARN T°°LATE He Ate Too Much Turkey @ 2 2 2 2 o And This Is What Ie Saw. rat i ER-R | THOUGHT I(T’ WAS TH’ CAT HEALTH AND BEAUTY. By Margaret Hubbard Ayer. — Thursday Evening, November w By L, A. Searl, | OW~ OH ITS GETTIN Vicious ITS GOIN’ To ATTACK ME iN mh | | | | | —e ATE Too MUCH For SUPPER AGAIN BH?, t Eoireo oy Nioxa Gxt ONITH SD Older the flesh will be more eventy 4!s- tributed and your five feet and five Inches {9 not an exaggerated belght at | al. Y¥ long conts, stripes running down ard up, tall hats, &0,, make the Arure look longer, Avold them !f you wish ¢ Vk shorter, Depilatories, () S.—You need not be o 10d at * the market the few blemishes you have to sly use th | sont with, A good depilatory bo had w soon relieve fou can find good ones| If the halrs. grow tweezers, }for greater Is his prophet, tae | voiced Idol, last season he se Jhimeelf Into something like @ figure 89. 190 “The Pr Kate Condon as Dolores, OOR Petor—he didnt Pan! But Mr, Dailey te to be blamed more in sonmow than In ortticlsm, P ‘The fault Jay with “Mhe Press Agent’ | rather than with the misguided ster, who tried vainly to shine at Melds's ‘Theatre Inst night. The preas agent who paowls Park Row by afternoon never perpetrated anytting 80 painfl ay Mr, Mark Swan's unimaginative, tiresome, noisy disturbance of Vorty-@eoond street ‘Thankegiving ve, Only the mong dlaques from the highways and byways of the thankegtving. Theft ummelodious prod- uets found “cues” on almost every tongue fn the cast, and broke out with the frequency of revolutions in @outh Amertoa that served as the setting for the second act of “The Pres Jeent's | adventures, Mx Swan mast have geen! jie, of the piece tightened abut 'The Dictator’ leat @eason and then cone home and wrffered author's night- mare, But where does Dalley come int you ack, ‘That was the question everytoty was asking jest night, Cle didn't come in to stay long at any time, Ho wan- | dered through tho piece lke a lost aox! | b He | desperately to be cheerful i green ault and whito flannels in the first and seoond stages of trying sé of “L But how Herr Opera Great {s Caruso, the tenor, Direktor of the Metropolitan House! Who but the genius that har squeezed another row of seats into the orchestra floor by outting down the knee space of the old subseribers could have re- vived, as Mr. Conrled did last night, Donizetti's archalo, mechentoal, wnin- aspired “La Favorite,” and packed the house from top to bottom with rapt Nateners eager to applaud At every op portunity’? Gast any other tenor in Mr, Conred's company for the leading part, and = figure out for how much orchestra seats would be selling on the sidewalk, Tt was a great aleht for the standees behind t rail, lined up many rows deep, who shouted and screamed opraval’ and "Bis!" at every tunity And really, they had meh provocation! for ther golaen- who was Fernaado in the east, gave them of his vocal best, Since me to have banted that savers of romance, etl though he A Cheap Cure for Obesity. Il R—-Diet and exercise will ’ stoutness and = wt About Gray Halr. nothing, N M, B.I do not rveall the advice | . given to the “Red Shade” lady, not affect gray hair nor wou cure gave “notice.” ts jh “Why, Mary!" exclaimed her mistrem, "What's the matter? Arentyou sat- at yeanm my Junior, I love her the Seventeen and Too Tall. fefed with your place?” mobt, but I Uke the others, Wha shall “Oh, yes, ma'am," ‘replied the abawhed damsel, “but 1 kine fiir you'd paid ne forgive Mm, Please a Find 1 to? RHN lL, F.—You are still too young to want ‘ ' ‘ big rad | J. | Go with the girl you Itke best, of attempt to reduce your height ‘me to stay here aftor this morning, If you love the young man 1 suppo: course, | 9 ooh hush. atten Vou HAGA WOW “Lord, child,” replied Mrs, Webster, laughing, Bo back to the xttohen. If the cook and I aren't enough for Mr, Webster you'd far better remaint* <ov A would rathor have been the author of chat remark than to have written all ‘Ot Shaw's plays. Tam not preaching a doctrine of indifference to wives for the wrongs they aytter. ‘There is not a normal woman In the word to whom jealousy does not peveal a deeper Inferno than any Dante ever penetrated, "But J do urge upon them the utier futility of teara and threats of vengeance or self-destruction, Men are only moved by teara when they dont “how to get away from them, To @ husband they merely suggest the qmnorteat cut to the front door, ‘pe for threats of suicide, they exe the mos: exquitstte unction to man's pride, perens, smiling indifference ts the only thing the: gets under the aitn, that they may come {0 disregard, » \ HINTS FOR THE HOME, | 8 ni with Sardines, for quenaljes), Curefwlly remove the : pa 4k daljeioise with enediveds bones, leaving « smal portion of the ¢ re and oook spinach In the a way, Pound It up with @ maMines to a pint and @ half of drumstick in each, Mix half a pound of suumge meat with finely cooked the cookid spinach, ‘This acts a » Aprange it on a dish In a chopped chopped parsley and one omg. With this fill the boned chiok- ig in Mices of hard 1008, ot J ot rd & ‘Thanksgiv — ing Kids ee 4 @n logs, Cover each well witty ite slcin, ami sew wp néatly with thin twine, Braise them on @ bed of vegetables and @ litle stock, When done, take up and lot cool, Remove the biring, egg and orumb them carefully, and fry in hot fat to a polden color. "Di on a Z 11:3 xin you chi Use the legs of @ small (the remainder can be ‘® @aute oF friconses, oF ' brown i but as a matter of fact, {t would except a regular dye. By Walter Wellman still is in bis poses, and he has gained much In the direction of distin , May Manton's 1H eireular skirt | is @ pronounced and notable fawor- fta of the season for young girls ae well as ox tho «grown folk, and it fe exosedingly gniceful and become jing int er styles. | phis one io & yong the i becomes to plald, | etriped and plain ma terials equally well, | snaamuch as i can be mode either with or without the seam at the centre front, tn \ddition to being one of the most tambion { ali motels, It o merit of belng | xcowdingty eeonom!- leal and requires Jrather leas material than any other sort, | The quanuty of ma- Jrerial required for the } medium alae (4 yeare) fe 41-4 yards 97, 284 i, or 21-4 yants ses’ C Mis: ttern S207 ts 2 it — row t ' FASHION BUREA TO y Send ten cents in Yo: Obtals These Patyers ways specify size want Dailey Suffers at the Hands of tum-tee-tum ' had cause for! Caruso Excuse for a Revival oppore | wl eo ess Agent,” «Peter Daley, as Benton Scoops, Dancing the “Vota.” |and once he put on @ cook's cay and Apron, wut dt was all as flat as a fried ere. Meanwhile there was a lot of nolee, encouraged by the orchestra leader, compared with which the bursting of | bomb at the ed of the first act was Wke the cooing of @ turtle dove, Mo bo laboriously just, there svas @ | hammock song, written by that most: geen of first-nighters, Mr, Jackson Gour- | aud, that did go with a swing: ana a cowboy carol that throw a iarist over tho head of the house, mainly for the Teaaon that a tadl-end chorus girl dis-: ported herself with the wild freedom of | the prairie. [eat there the “its” ended with the {dull thud of fatlure, Mr. Dailey, in seltzer his flannels and werh a bortle of to sustain lilm, attenpled A conversa- tional song dealing with the obsolete \"simple Life," after the tf: jon set by | Raymond Hitchoock In "The Yankeo Consul,” but dt was sadder than the sel zer itself, Now and then when Mr, | Dailey fovavt Mr. #wan and remem- pared himaeit ue was funny in the off. +| hand way vat made him a favorite aty Waber & Fiel4x's, Put when the deadl lneok he wae about as happy a6 the! hendiiner at @ hanging, He was hand- bad as The \esppad by associates Press Agent,” many, on Ua whol Jeatow'ated to make tie traditions | “water-tank” het unfiltered tears. The gentle mpiril of Thankagiving restrains mo from mentioning names. Me. Dailay may not be a comedian, ut he is ‘tho best “good fellow” that the stage knows, Even he, however, cannot tM a “good fellaw” and “The Press Agent’ ai the samo, thm CHARLES DARNTON, a Favorita.”” gulsod bearing, which he eadly lacked. To hia artistle credit be it sald he rofused to respoo’ to @ most exuberant and vooiferous demand for @ repetition of his aria in the last cet, Bince it was spectficaily a Caruso night, all that need be added {9 that Edyth Walker, 8 Leonora, won how laurels, and that Scott! as tho and Plaucon, as the Priest, were ing as eve A wont of recogni. thon jv also due to the purple, pink and red ballet. ——_EE—————— A French Bread Basket, OVEL and pretty is a Freach bread basket. The foundation | an ordi. N nary- oblong, rather flat wicker basket, decorated on its four sides with a ruffle of fino white linen emt roldered 1 bunches of grapes as a border, then | buttonholed om ihe edge in shallow scal- lops. ‘This {# done with white thread, the grapes {n ratural coloring This ruffle Is sewed to a ilnen hand out into elite and buttonheled perhaps two inches \apart, and then threaded with mauve | rivbon, which fs tle into Jaunty bows |at the four corners. A fow atitches ae- cures this ruffle, which 1s, of course, | eas!!y removable Daily Fashions, No. 5207. ircular Skirt-Pattern ¢ Hand 16 yours of ‘all or send by mail to THE EVENING WORLD MAY MAN} U, No. 2h West Twenty-third street, Ne coin of stamps for each pattern order IMPORTANT —Wrtto ypue name and address plainly, and ale

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