The evening world. Newspaper, December 2, 1905, Page 10

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EVENING: WORLDS NTASIIONS AFTERNOON GOWN, CREPE DE CHINE AND LACE, (Patterns Nos. 6297—H14: Nos, Afternoon gowns made after on a revels one Cee y oa moat nodel ~] Pad, ‘one are adapted alike to tadibnal coagerrale for fe oooh materials Bnd are ex-|of semi. ad ar fin smart... Material re-| tractive combined with te: for walt, dre/l for eatin 27, or 24 yarns 2h yard 18 inches yanis 2 all ve foe a ektrt, | BROADCLOTH AND VELVET. @atterns Nos, 6101-4806.) (Patte: 8 Nos. 5203-5200,) Broadcloth trimmed with veovet makes| ‘The shirt wast in surptice style tis ao one of the smartest combinations of pray of the season and an at- tive one. In the Wiuslration it Ja the season, MMaterial required for mo-) combined with one of the newest skirts dium alse is: for coat 4 yards 21, 2 yards) and 4s made of henrietta, Materia ro- 44, or 1% yarda & inohes wide, % yard | quired for modium sise: for walet By for vest, 1 yard of rare for skirt) yards 27 or 2% yards 44 inches wide, without bs] 8 yarda £7, MS pens 4,/% yard 18 inches wide for chemisette; or ‘ Inches Rly ‘oat pat-| for Yate, $ yards 27, 44 yards 44 inches ret cut tn sizes from 82 to 40) wide, Waist pattern 5203 ts out th sizes faces bust; oe tern 48% ig out fran 8! to 40 inches bust; the skirt in sizes from 2 to $ inches walst, | patterm 6200 from 22 to 90 inches waist, IN SURPLICE STYLE, FOR WINTER COMFORT. (Pattern No, 6228,) Such a mmple but tasteful Hite wiap- per a3 this one is sure to be needed every amah gil, It can be slipped*ton oye her ni own and worn on the to the bath, and can be made to ror @ the general purpose of the wrap- per and also makes an excellent model for the seeping gowp itself, Material require’ for six year’ siae is 4 yards 27 Inches wide/or 3 yarde 36 inches wide. The pattern 5228 la cut in siaes for Sirls from 2 to 8 years, @ (Pati No. 3801,) ¥ ‘Active’ boys are apt to require mlesp- ing garments that can be trusted to re- main in place in epfte of much move ment. The pajame Ulustrated are ad- mirabie for the pui and are adapted alike to gheviot, Madras and to the many ble flannels of the colder 4 weather, while they are simple tn_ the extreme, Material requited for medium ng 6 years) is ‘an yards 27 inches or yards 82 inches wide, ‘The pattern is"cut in nats for boys from #20 M4 years of age. HOW TO OBTAIN THESE PATTERNS. cul le of watt % Kee “ a fg dee, shk bpit. 2 yards of lace for at for skirt, 12 yards 21, 9% yards 2f, or yards 4 inches wile, Waist pat S209 Is cut in sizes from 2 to 40 inhee bust; skirt pattern S124 ts cut in sizes from, 2 to % inches waint, ' cn) eed anal to the ars La pat ordered, -SGTERS AEENED _|SEEING CHINATOWN SIGHTS ON A “RUBBER-NECK” COACH AS TEACHERS HERE _ Archbishop Orders All Mem- “bers of Mt. St. Vincent Or- der Back to Diocese. \ Because of the rapid growth of the ) Parochial schools in this diocese there fa & woarcity of teachers and Amchbishop Parley has ordered ‘the return to New Work of all sisters of the Order of Mt St. Vinownt, the mother house of whieh fa under his jurisdiction, This order will draw from parochial echools of weVeral States in the Bast hundreds of Maters who have been sent, out from Gt, St. Vingert from time to Ume as teachers. Possibly no community is so deeply {affected by the orter as ie Jersey City, ‘The Sisters of Mt Bt. Vincent took barge of the parochial oot nol of Bt. Mary's parisn in Jo ity in, 1864, Tt was the first parochial sdsool in New Jersey. Tn the little band of pioneers were 1 Pwo not yet out of the: teens, Sister Avsisium and sister Nichola The former ts now the Biter Superior of Bt. Mary's School, ard Sstor Nicholas ‘yjie still @ teacher Both are vigorous ‘and energetic women, and have played po small part in the development of jow Jersey scholars. Some of the most wminept men in the State received fer early instruction from these Sis fers. Sister Assium has taught t generations of many Jersey City tam- ilies. Thousands of her former pupiis contemplate 2 movement to have Assistum ‘and Sister Nicholas exo from the order that would @o rover the thes they have been half entury in forging. a SUICIDE FROM CITY FERRY, | Man Leaps from Boat Manhattan on Way to Staten Ixtand. Amar leaped trom ‘he Staten Island D ferry-beet Manhattan, of the Weipa) tine, pair way betwe w mu. but the man bout was stopped, not be found. {5 Your Mind Undecided a EB the cost, kind and location HOUSE, FLAT, hy APARTMENT VE Bin whieh } celebrate HOLIDAY FESTIVITIES? on can seitle tie question easily — Ickly-—satic "ator! ODgthtliig Tenderos sy Wet “Toa i, | nQl classes when he or she meets them jat home on @ rubberneck hack, Her uM WOuld like to lve and || the | whtexers tn one piece on wer ‘BANKER: SUED BY SON'S WIDOW LOSES. Mrs, Benaict Gels Gets 12.000 Verdict Against Father- in-Law. Tame Murderers and Very Exciting Idol the Chief Game Found. WHAT CHINATOWN “RUBBER-NECKS” THINK THEY SEE, AND THE REALITY. By Staff Artist Mortimer. ‘4 : OPIUM DEN A MISFIT, Even the Theatre Jarred on Nerves, Orchestra Was Shiver a victory to-day. in 9 ids y her father-in-law, EB. Frost. retired millionaire $10,825, the value of stock alleged her husband had gi before his death, but wht had retained in his possession, The jury ‘awarded her a $1143.75, which included ed sr * for and the costs uf the trial, / the partles to the action were reek court when the jury {te vers ¢ 1 dict to Judge Thomas in the United States Clroult Court, Brooklyn, Gen, Benjamin I. Tracy, By Irvin 8, Cobb, There was a goodly company of us riding into Chinatown last night on the) dorsal fin of a “rubber-nedk’’ hack—« couple of up-State bankers, @ pretty, -halred English woman, whose broad "were so broad that she chewed them like chewing-gum} a younger sie ter to the Pilgrim Fathers from New Pngland, with a siern and rockbound face, and a lady novelist, I think the lady novelist was from Cohoes. There was something about the way her tatlor sult didn fit her in the back that sug: gested Cohoes, These were the princi- pal performers, sit‘ing up front with the driver and the megwphone solotet. The rest of us sat In the back seate, ‘ ih extra Allowance. Judge reply to the requests “I am afraid, General, the only 4 allowance that you will be prance this court will conslvt of the of being here.” vel tc ye erent al ved for & new trial, Son ed. ‘The peated a The Englishwoman went because she dent had visited the slums of every great Judgment tar aay a city in Asta and Europe, and didp’t ve counsel for Mr, propase to overlook York. RUDBERNECKS LOOKING In “THE Winpows, The New B cause she woud see vice in a great clty and then go home and tell her clase al] about our wicked ways, Vice for the Virtuous. You can buy anything in this great ofty, where will you find vice made for the virtuous—excep: in So ghe New England in went there. On the way d right by the ticket speculators Along Brofdway—pansed without @ seo- ond glance at them—-which only goes to show that the average visitor to our growing town doesn't know the erimi- Before we tad gone a block we could all see that the wind Instrumentalist on the fromt seat alongside the driver was wot to give us the worth of our $2. As a performer on the megaphone. whether Improvising or playing by note, he hasn't his equal in this part of the State. Here's the way he began: Megaphone Solo Fine, “To your right, Jadien and gents, you behold the Flatiron: Building, the most pecooliar bullding in earth, and located on the windiest, corner, but notwith- | standin’ of which there ls more purty women passing ‘every hour than any other corner in New York, And now, directin’ your attention to the red bulld. in’ on the left’ ‘The megaphone man had only one im- pediment in his speech. Every little whilg he had to stop mnd take a fresh breath, but the rost of the time he was Being Uke « dollar wateh. His was not exactly whet you might call « restful Presence; he would not have done well a8 8 nuree to a patient euffering trom Nervous prostration, wut ae the vooal Gepartment of & yap-wagon he couldn't be beaten. arrival created only @ faint ripple of extitement in Chinatown, The thing had been done so often before that even the professional wicked porsons who drow salaries ftom rubberneck hack. people for filing in the ploture almost odin and] forgot thelr cues, ¢) and commenting frapily upon ths habits of such of the residents as we discovered within. One of the nicest thinge “bout a slumming trip is that} you ilon't have to consider the feclings Of the slummee at all. Firat thing étier we had Yitched our flery stead by its clagtic head we went into P, Myllins’s place, The moga- phone man halted us at the door, 7 very careful hows you behave here, ladies and gente," was Me warn- ing. “You are about to enter into one of the most dangerous places in the world. Tf any shooting should begin trust all tome I will save you.’ Dangers All Tame. We entered, trembling visibly, A languid professor with bis hair roached high picked with one finger, 1) bone viotim, at the plano ke: Hie . that mani “plackamoor calnetrer’ ihe ‘ng lishwom- an cated him+<danced on che sanded floor. Dopey Lyons, who would has Won @ prize-figiot once If Pd Kea | f low hadn't insisted on Seine. back, ‘ol doved in & coiled hemp beh suey stove, Three tired and six renag weary gontlereee e. prouns, acoking ‘ate | clewretiog Ant tough, Chuck Connors Jooked dn, Tooked ‘us We ver, and went oe barkeoper proushe ue some all boerg, | $2 Nohody off yoo ‘to aroot ‘anv bod y though the pre i undowdtedly served the ow i *Deayite The Sivos, peril’) white | aie pered the Indy "Tt in the Big Road © lady novelist was looking for atmosphere” for a book. She told us, before she had gone two dlocks, that she was goltg to «write a novel mbout New York, In which the extremes of j riches and poverty, would be ngly contrasted. She had made wey- trips up and down Fifth avenue in ch, getting local calor on the plu- ‘ats, and now she wes going to work the other end of it. Ghe was speedily neck would have dond Mr, Goodyear proud, Not #0 with the baikers. They got jfo interested talking loans and Inter. eats and first mortguges that they al- Mort forgot to ese tne sights. Thera fet such a heap of difference after all between the country banker and the clty banker, except that one wears bis pit rattan lM ep Mls een narnia

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