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Wb nob Bin Bi hat 0. Good Man Should Buy Clothes Unless His Wife Is With Him to See He Something Sensible and Becoming and Doesn't Pay Too Much for It. ts sch ' arg dia you. wet that hat Jerr? asked Mrs. Jacr, regarding her hudvend’s new fat crown gray hat with marked disdain. q ‘Well, my straw bat was « aight, and straw hats are out of date.” said Air unoselly | You know len't becoming to you!” remarked Mra | Tarr, “and anyway, that's a boy's hat. A sight you ok tavch as thos: ge boys woar that are always getting in Sehts and expelie »r being freahmen- re not men, but they are very fr the idea, 6t par buying such @ hat!" We wearng this hat, you or me?" ventufed Mr Jerr, “I'm not a grandfather, am I? (All the men my age are wearing thie kind of a hat! black one and Ine to see what a donkey I wiwpted to get a the salesman laughed at me course he Jaughed at you. He couldn't help Iaugh- you looked tr a it IMd I say donkey, I meant monkey,” added Mrs, Jarr with a sneer. 1m you ean monkey. You certainly try to make a monkey out of me all your days!” exclaimed Mr. Jarr, But you mind your own bosiness end let my Do I criticise what you wearT’ “You have no ¢ “" gaild Mre Jarr acidity. “T've nothing to wear, T haven't had a nr this summer. All the money that comes tn this house fe spent by you! "1 know that T wouldn't be seen on the street with you tfyou wea: ae rid ss hat Hke that.” You cen do es you plense.* caid Mr, Jarr, “bat that's the hat I'm going to wear.” “The nest ¢ you buy onything tn the why of clothes,” eald Mrs. Jarr, “take me a! RP PHT HHH RP NAAPS. “TY slouldn't forget &. you remind me and | twit me enough i But it ma wil ke me alone with you when you buy yonr clothes and | hats 1 wil! tle at you’ will not be made a fool of by belng sold things that do not t 1e you AS ~~ UT ERT fer whet be thinks he weate takes @ falosmans advice, who gets paid extra when he disposes of unsalable Then the man rushes ovt bis purchage and expects te wife fo be e¢en with meric and him looking like as ff he had just estaped from a back- woods lunatic asylum!* Tf you do op snarling and quarreling at me I'll be put in an aeytum. and not a backwoods asylum replied Mr. Jarr. “IT won't want to ercape. either It will be too pleasant In there after what I have gone throuch with.” “Please, please.” said Mrs. Jarr, changing her of attack. “Please do hot let us pusr el for one day at least! Anyone that knows you knows mt | Tbave ne my in what you buy or wear. So if you want to look ally, wear that soicolloy'’s bat and be astisfe . “Oh, pataw!” sald Mr Jarr, “you take all the pleasure out of coming home. Wr font want to wear the hat. T'll throw tt away {f you are so dea eet Against It. Get me a hati Where's my brown derby?’ “I gave it to the woiaherwoman eaid Mre. Jarrr “the poor thing t a widow and 's ro crateful ff you give her amything, Besides, the children had been playing with {t and (t was all dsnted and broken “Well, Il wear my Wik hat then, i¢ we're goltr oat.” waif Mr. Jarr “With a negiiges ehirt and a short coat?’ exclakned Mrs. Jarr. “You'd look like a cheap actor, but I suppose it would please you to go out that way with me and have people Inughing at me for being in the company of a freab!” “Well, what shall I wear? 1 told the man to throw away my etraw hat.” excinimed the now thoroughly @xasperated Mr. Jarr. “Oh, I suppose, you can wear tiat hat, seeing as you ate eo anxtous to,” eaid Mere Jerr, “and hurry it wo are going out!™ In the Subwny they eat in the Sret car An the exprees dashed out of the @tation, a Awift current of alr through the open front doar whisked the of- fending bat off Mr. Jart’s head and tt was gone They found a small hat store open. “Gimne « plain black bat for a man of my age.” demanded Mr, Jarr. . “He looks like an old man tn that!” exciatmed Mra Jar to the olerk. “Get Thien one of those low crown gray hate out of the window Ike the one he lost Tonever saw dim wearing @ mare becom!ng one!” “Ah,” sald the clerk, “a man ought to alwayy have his wife along when he's buying » het Bhe knows what he looks beat (nt Mr. Jorr raid nothing, } What would have been the use? Betty Vincent's ian w « Advice to Lovers. venom # 0% to the kind of present I whould make vail! perplexed roung people cat ¢ her, Lam desirous of epending trum ey eg Mig #0 to $5. Will you Kindly advine ime g i otters sfor_ he on be what would be appropriate? f have Mf Word, Poat-Ottics pox idea | | beet thinking of sending a loving cup w York } Pm A en a ee ” PR now wowens, or candy are the only hings ‘that from A strictly gonven- She Wants to Elope. | toned —etemd point it te proper fo send his | to & wir] you mee not engaged to. Why Dear Betty don't you send her a allver fern dish AM & stenographer and bookkeeper and have been employed In one office for two years. A year ago I met my loyer’s son, who had just returned yw abroad, and for the two monthe we have keoplag company stocked with ferns for the dinner table? That would be far more acceptable than a loving cup, for wh Wave tie use A Fickle Girl Dear ti and he says (hat he loves me very mu HILE T waa up tn the country e} My par euTA obieet to ageing et Wek BES Toret pone em ert hie, ae be Ia wealthy afd [am only a eligtieen. We wen to the vit | Mtenggrapher, end say that he would jiage for kh dance While there we met hot marry me. His patents art alm a few other people trom the sane pamplaining, as they {end to have him place we were. On our way home. marty #ome wealthy girl, He asked me © elope with bim, aod I told him I wos perfectly willing to do so, but 1 trat write tar your advice, MARGARET fh 8 I certainly would not slope with him, if Il were you. Marry him If you win but do ¥0 openly. Do not decelve your parents and his, For Her Birthday. Dear Betty About 10 o'clock, we met s young fel- low alto from the ime place we were | staying, and be ssked this girl to go | tack to the pavilion with bim. ‘This de did, and left me to go home with the few people we bad met 1 feit very tadly over ft, end vowed that 1 Wold hake nothing more to do with Dey, | ey came vack about an hour ister [and abe excused sero. for leaving | ma. D now, do you YOUNG lady who haw given me! while golng with, dO, do you think ane A food deal of conwideration, and 4 woing Witn me to get all she can aldo has, wecetved’ much of Out ot me SERIOUS oeet é of MY The itl was guy of extreme rude Aittension. Ja about to become elahionn|meag tt fonting vou Mie It Rol wort, years of tse. feel greatly "puraled | w in my opinion. The Seven-in-Six Puzzles. First Series—Peter Pan. Hidden Picture No. 4.--Find the Pig. | M® EVENING WORLD here prints a hidden-picture puzele It wilt print one every day. Bach picture in complete jn iteelf, but if you T ple pan of a hat Mke that! | he would | *r fo, and being content to read About greatness, And, oh, I tel I think of such things as hat, and see the A worthlessnesa of this! fie that men ¢ fe," it seemed to me no} anger heedieas at easthrtty aad Bendlan cetme § think she tw worth tee Evening World's Daily Magazin THE ‘JOLLY’ GIRLS—THEY Wi AND YOUR MAKE AN DLE i AS PAN 1S gust (¥R WARRGAN,) Ie CERTAINLY f/ HANDLE | PETE | mermoeecig WY HE WAS SURELY BORN 70 BE A r——~\ JUGGLER} " cs 1 DION’ THINK FT was | POSSIBLE FoR ANN BODY TO Do THAT! O10 You EVER IN THE WORLD SEE TOO SWEET ‘ FOR ANY THING | \ — A ? c - e, ue PETE me MOTHER AS iM | DESTIN DE BUSINESS HEAVEN MAyE Thurs day, ni! By George McManus Li SHOW YOU AFEW WAT MAY SURPRISE You! YOU DON'T OO ALL THE TRICKS YOU! KNOW BEFORE THE AUDIENCE , 00.You? HERE'S ONE DAT NO WGGLER EVER DARED TO 00 9 NOU BEEN DOING ‘OW MAB ite ? JUST SHOWN’ KING MIDAS. Printed Exclusively | in The Evening World. | (Copyrighted, 1001, by Upton Binetatr.) PRECEDING CRAPTRNA SYNOPMM OF Helen Davia te loved by ber foater brotner at | whone pacenioge te unknown. be rejects bie love. Bbs fore to 6 fuse party at her Aunts, Dre. Roberts, And | aged to Mr, Marriqa, | rhe thar arthur tn despre: | Ted to New. York, bat taxa Teer and ber whole #7) and at a tum io the road | fe he wumRwetA. | go Unrovgh Iiktown snd she see ing, come owt of a low ealoon. Bho | (Continued) | DO not know that," anewered Howard, | “1 nor @> 1 care, It te enough to know | oust emery day men are called upon to tage the whuddeting malty of existence In some ouch form aa-<hat, Ami the question which it brought to my heart fe: If it came to me aa terrible as that, and es sudden and tmplac- able, wouvt-I-ehewmyaalf the man or the dastard? And that filled me with « fearful awe and humillty, | and a guilty wonder whether somewhere tn tho) world there might not be a wall from whiob I should | « throwing myself, instead of nuraing my Minesg as! no that one © sob to know of It And, Wiliam, te more I real ined it, the more unbeatable It seemed to me that thin glorious girl with her God-given beauty should be plunging herse’f into A stream #0 foul felt ae ff ft were cowardice of ‘mine that I aid not take her by the hand and try to inake her #ee what madness she was doing." “Why do you not?” asked the Ueutenant. “] think T should have, In my more Quixotle day replied the other, «ads; “and perhaps aay | may find myself In a kind Of bigh lfe whlre rova! sincerity j4 understood. But In this world even an idealist han to keep a sense of frumor, Union be happens tq be dowered with an Inatat’s rage.” Howard paused for » moment and laughed Ps then, however, he went on more earnestly “Yet, an T think of ft, I know that I eould frighten, 1 think that if 1 should tel her of some of the apd nights that I have wpent in tossing upon a Led of fire, she might find the cup of her aeifishness lems pleasant to drink I saw that the first time this girl puw ane she turned pals, and «he would not come anywhert pear ma.’ An the tooaker pauesd again Tteut. Maynard sid, very quietly: “1 should think the would be a hard oroms to bear, Dayt her; ao “No! aid Mr. Howard, with a slight amtle, had not that thought in my mind. I have seen too) much of /the reality of tit to trouble myself or the vanity of that very crude kind: I can) workd with sometimes Imagine myself Pelng proud of wy") serenity. but that fe one stop beyond at any rate. | A man who liven In hla soul very seldom thinks of | himecif in an external way; when 7 look in the | clas it Is generally to think how strange i t# that his form of mine should be that which represents | her fearful baxeness, es Ss & te to men, and I cannot find gnything they might fesily learn about me, except the one physical faat ot wutfering.’’ “They can certainly not fail to learn that,” eald the other. “Yes,” replied Mr, Howard sadly, "I @now, tf any man does, what it fe to eary one's Mte ty suffering and labor. That is why I have so mastering @ sane of Ufo's preciourness, and why T cannot reconcile myself to thin dreadful fact of wealth. It l the thing, too, that makes me feel #o kwenty about thie girl and her beauty, and loepe her in my thoughts. T don't think I could ¢ell you how the nt of her affected me, unless you knew how f have Uved wll thewe lonely years, Por I have hat ho friends and no strength for any of the world's work, and all my battle has been with my own eoul, to be brave and to keep my selfcommand through all my trials. I think my {liness bas acted as a kind of nervous atinmulue upon me, an if tt were only by iaboring to dwell upon the hetghts .of my bein night and day that k could have strength to stand Against Gexpatr. The réault ts that I have Mved for days in a kind of frenay of effort, with all my taeul thes at white heat, and Kt has always been the artist’s life, It has always been beauty thet browght me the joy that I needed, and given me the atrength to go on, Beauty Ww the wun of victory, and the prine of It, tn this hearts’ battle; the core T have nutfered and lhbored, the more keenly I have come ‘To Tet that: -until-the oomimanest flower has a sons for me, And, William, the time T saw this girl she wore a rose tn her hatr, but she waa so per fect that Y scarcely saw the flower; there ts that in @ man's heart whidh, makes ft that to }im fairest and moat were’ of God's creatures must Always be the maiden. When I wan young t walked about the earth half drunk with a dream of love And even now. when Tam twice as old ax my yeors aml burnt out and dying, 1 could not but start wie mew thie-wirl, For I fancted thet she mut carry about fn that matden's heart of hers some high notion of what he meant In the world, and what wae due to her, When a man gata upon beauty wuh ms here @here te a feeling that comes to him that t quite unutterable, @ feoling born of all the weelkness and failure and win of his Hfotime. For every true man’s Hfe te a failure; and this i the vikion that he sought with #o much pain, the thing that might have been had he kept the faith with his own genius, It ts so that beauty ts» the eon- sclenee of the artist, and that there must always De something painful end terrible about mah per. fection It was that way that T felt when 1 2aw thie girl's tance, and -¥ dreamt my olf dream of the sweetness and glory of a malden's heart nema; and I tel! you, William, tf 1 had found tt thus I could have beer content to worvhip and not even awk that the girl look at me. For a man, when he has Itved as I have ived, can feel toward anything more perfect than hlmeclf a quite wonderful kind of Yumility; 1 know that all the trouble with my helpless struggling ts that I must be everything to myself, and cannot find anything to-love, and ao be That was the way I folt when 1 saw this at peace Miss Davis, all that agitation and all that yearn ings and wes It not enough to make a man mock at hitneeif, to learn the real truth? Tf was «iad that it did not happen to me when I was young and do Pendent upon things about me; is it pot « to imagine how # young man might make auch a woman the dream of his Nfe. how he might lay all nis at her teet, and how, when hw learned of te might make of Rim @ mock- ink ertine for the rest of hin day prayer ~ Josh Billings Airs His Vues Abowt Marridge ° Sum marry for love without a cent tn. and tt ie & g00d Joke. ARIMAGE Ja a fair transaction on the Tace ov It M But thare Is quite too often put up Joba tn it Tt it an old Inatitushan, older than the pyramids, and av phull ov hyrogliph leks that nobody kan parse, History holds ite tounge who the pair Wis who Turt put on the allken harness and promised tow work kind th & thru thick and thin, up bill and dawn, and on the level, fain or jt wrvive or poriah, sink or awk, drown or flote, rhage; But thore fum marry louver ane it, sum carey fm marry nee and Aroy out, irate ord grip Wy mare | Atborwardm it im the mortar that holds the |eownull brickw together. ain't who put thelr money tn matrimony who id set down and giv ® good writter Yin Whi on arth ghey cum to did tt tele mistake; this is lucky, Sum marty for six months and then very sensibly |oum tow the doncluaion that pedigree out and save the six pictures of each series and put them! sit, whoever they war, they myumt bay atn't no better than wkinwnilk, of the week you Will be Surprived to find mode. a, Mood thing out ov tt oF ao ‘ mMenny OV thelr powkerlty would not hav Bnd are surprined tow learn that their rolashuie dou't care & cums hor a friend pedigree their pocket hor & dra: desperate, ame but dam tew pholkes be hen ‘matrimony is a ded Sum marry min will bo wkatse next tow wonder how the crop Bum marry tow @lt rid wad dinkover that the wat two could play ata Sum marry for bmty, and never die for monwy, and—dan't tor pMigree and ftoel big Author of tt le the efenath ov the! If marrying for love ain't » suckoews, | bekauee they think wim- Kame was one yu Win yu win a pile 4 neither win. the eeckond time 40 ett By Vpton Sinclarr, “THE JUNGLE.” “You think it basenessT’ asked Lieut, Maynard. “I tried to persuade myvelf at first that it must be only blindnose; 1 wondered to mynelft, ‘Can whe not see the difference between the life of these People @bout her and the music and portry bér aunt tells me she loves?’ I never waste any of my worry upon the old and bardened of thew vulemr and Worldly people; tt ts enough for me to know why the wore: are dull and full of gossip, and to know how much depth there is in the pride and in the | wisdom of the men. But it was very hard for we to give up my dream of the girl's purity; I remem- ber I thought of Heine's ‘Thou art as a flower, and my heart wae full of prayer. I wondered tf ft might not be posible to tell her that ohe cannot combine muste and # soctal career, and qhat one cannot really buy happiness with siny I thought that pa whe thight™he grateful for the warning that tn outting herself off from the great deepening experiance of woman she was conatghing herself to atagnation and wratchedness from which no money could ever purchase her ransom: I thought that poslbly whe did not woo that this man knew nothing of her prectousness. and had no high thoughts about ‘her Deauty, ‘That wae the way 1 Argued with myself about her Innocence, and you may fancy the kind of laughter that came over me at the truth. Jt is & ghastly thing, Wiliam, the utter hariness, the |gntm and determined worldiiness, of this qirl. For | she knew very well what abe wos doing, and all the {qnorance Wee on my part, She had no care about anything in the work! Wiut thar -man-ceme tt, ond the short half hour that I watched them was enough |to- tell her that her Mfe's happiness wen won. But only think of her, Willlam, with ol! her God-given roauty, allowing herself to be Kissed by him! Try to fancy what new kind of flendishness must le tn her heart! I remember that abe ts to marry him decause be paye cher milMone, and the word prosti- set ger nyo gg RROD pon ara define it 1 find that tha millions do not ster it tn the least. That ie @ very cruel thought—« thought that drives away everything bat the prayer, and I ait and wonder what fearful puntwhment the hand of Fate will deal out for euch « thing as that—what hatefulness tt will stamp upon ber for « sign to tren. And then beomuse the perfect face still tauntw my | memory It have @ very Christ-Mke feeling tdeed— that I could truly die fo save that girl trom such & horror.” There was another Jong silence, and then @ad- | denly Mr, Howard rose from hi saat, “Wiltlam.” jhe sald Ina different voice, “It t¥ ell useless, ao why |should we talk sot The girt has to live her own | life and learn these things for herself, And in the T thought | Moan time, perhaps, T am letting myself be too much | of ttm epotiessness and of its royal scorn of bane-| moved by her beauty, for there are many people in| who suffer the world who are not beautiful, but | things they do not deserve to miffer, and who really | dewerve our sympathy and help.” | “I fancy you'd not be much thanked for it tn this * ald the other, with a dry laugh. Howard @tood tor some moments in menses, " fear,” be wald, “that T have kept you more than | have any right to. Let ue go back to the house; It lis mot wery polite ta our hostess to stay wo lone.” | t must be nearly time for my train, anyhow.” | sald the offcer, and ” moment tater the two had | passed ott of the summer-house and up the path, | Léeut. Maynart carrying Mr. Howard's violin-cage In his hand. | The two did mot weo Helen aa they passed her the reason was that Hilen waa stretched out ron the ground by the aide vf the hidge (To Re Continued.) | | Mr. | and then turned away to @nd the conversation, Sum marry tn te and then wet down and think & careful over. Bum think over careful fuat, and ] then set down and marry, Both wayw are right, if they bit the tn the world This lovke beet mark If enny boddy asks yu wh! yu got year, and liv wacried (iC tt needs be), tell nim yu Jon’ t teooolekt. Marriage 18 @ aafe way to wamnble—tt and if yu lowe yu don't loa enny thing the priv Hége ov lying diemally alone and soak holde# out. ov themaeite, | Wow pheno thelr retamtuna,| even, ind fod It a gambing game-the | ing yure own feet more. they: put down the jess they! Thare 44 but one good exouse for a tr thom) take up. marriage late in life, and that lea enc ae a Abeta every beddy mite marpled,| oud marin, id 9 | | view of | for a} September 13, T may have have been woman to Ing the thin act of "Tha Kreutzer ‘last night and totter out of the Lyrio tn a condition bordering on | apse, If there to witness the Incidant he might | to the had written a “moving play | In any event there is something #0 | have come “strong” about “The Kreutser Sonata” | that ft makes ona long for the open air, It tant wo brutal ee tt wae at the Mantatian You can’t winmron, At you grateful & Kempe ae odious as one which is wasn't a suggestion of “atmorphere” at the Manhattan, where Miss Blanche | “os ‘Walsh wae ae forsign to her role as the name of lander, The actors from the tower enst aide who have come to the Lyric have brought their In the case of some of them you coul¢ with « knife—preferebly « cut it cheene-knife. |has fone his share, though his “stmes- phere” seems snowstorm rages extravagantly through ® northwest window. while @ southern exposure shows nary «@ finke, Quite aside from the tory of the warring sisters, with their’ wncanven- fent children, din hep wean the tHe of and this ls brought out more atrongiy at the Lyrie atten. The erowing children grow away from thelr | in a new work, Henry. Kalker maken you teel any deep | wormpathy for Frieimnder, who at his | parents Dom, ta ithe ance Reduces Fat Quickly. JS3 1 M.—Vibrasnqge performed bY [sun tg pomeible; tise tt wh: © Ritu opeentor will reduce) ween your dele ARG pow wil be tone the cheeks «sooner than 80M | 1o keep & light. Other mean ’ Eleotricity Complexion Brush, . pie ONDELIA.—t wou ot eve | FT camem, a uh a mae pering personally with any @lrc- 4tvical.applianca for the removai of superfiuoue halr, It might result most doualy. To Make Hair Light. ESSIR C. chamomtio Bert seo this hideous version, and to Man- | ager Fiske for a much better produc tion than that offered by Wagenhals Its more than Llkely that up- cow audiences feel @ secret eatiafac- HEALTH AND BEAUTY. 1900. With More Atmosphere and Mme, Kalich. been the heat, or tt may | the play, that caused a etrumgio to ber feet dur Jocod Gordin had been | concluaton that he | | Tt 1 every bit as ugty. | white throwch green the «ume time a second unpleasant play makes to Mr. Langdon Mitchell Thie comparison may be) the play Itself, yet it ts | bound to be made. "There tion in seeing his Rusetan rod of ifen broken by American independence. ‘The garrulous musician-phtiosopber, Ephroym Keandar,\ le more adaptable, After rafling at the fact that George M. Cohan should write the nation’s wongs, he te quite content. with con- ditions when prosperity comes his way Fs and pote « plog net on bia head. Mr. “= Ingo> Kateman plays tty ami ve yea SY Ti gre ume a: artim Yiddish “turn” on the vaudeville stage. Mies Jenmie Relffarth i more than ample ea the old fiddlers wife. Never | email, she has grown out of all pro- portion to her former size. Wetec: Kasch Osh RoW MEEret | three roles before her American public | Fedora, Mopna Vaona and Mirtam Friedlander, There can be no question | thet thts jest de by far the best of her’ ) 998i ‘achievements, The crude realism of F “The Kreuteer Sonata" must have ~~” been ber daily bread im her Yiddiah years, and there ls, as ® result, more “Hattie” to Fried- | | dialect, but it is quite In keeping with the character. She hes toned down, ‘and one of her finest moments is whea whe ends the story of her dead lover’ with the simple, heart-broken. utter- | ance; “He shot himself.” This, tn fact, is the only thme thet she really touches | the heart, = - Bhe falle to bulla up t toward which the play reason for this, perhaps, Adele Block, as the sister Mr, Giorgio Majeront, as the lardly Gregor, mewlect to to the crime with muntticlen reaches the tragedy too he uses all her old stage tricks there. ‘There seetha to be no part reason why « heroine shouldn't & villain with her hair up, but Madame Kalich evidently belleves tm letting 1 down the hatr when murders ¢o be Gene, She caste hairpin to the wind, jand on more than an old mule | po Magee b quooting atar OHARLES DARNTON, “atmosphere” with them. ‘The ataze manager, too. a trifle eccentric when « tage! itt? f 8 eo the fact that Mr, Gor- ® common axpariencs in oO Raphael Friedlander, i enE? than was @t the Man- trutty tA borne home thet | i No thet | By Margaret Hubbard Ayer, mile and Jet rernain « few moments, ny, | see that the root are wet; any in the « Ddorna User a wood hyslenic soap and soap the brush aa you would far your hands. Scrub the thos thorough- | ly, taking core of the places moat dit- | Moult to reseh. Rinse the taee after */ the| Acrubbing with cooler clean water, and that there is no soap left in the” it you ouitivate take the flowers! se¢ anh make alateong tee, and after| Pores. Dry thorgughty and apply any a having thoroughly washed and rinaed| good cold cream that agrees with your Ly your tals, dip We Ralr in the shanio-[ ekin. ri ve rare! He SRE 4 ¢ ’ : * May Manton's Daily Fashions ae Ha blouse eutt 2 - T faverttie tor boys up to * Wand 12 veers of Boys’ Sallor Sult, 4 to 12. Yeare.—No. 5460, “#™ jst Call of wend by wall @ THE EVENING WORLD MAY Mow \° | TON VASHION BUREAU, No, 2 Woat Twenty-third wirwet, Mow York, Bend ton ownts in oot oF stampe for ehoh pattern endered. Pavverne IMPORTANT-Write your mame end adrens piatnty, and twelve years of age, Thia one ts made with & wide box om plait at the front oy’ of the douse and le | appropriate for serge, funnel and (the lightweight materials (Phe fact it that tt i shade with an underwplst faced — 4/! 7 | to form phe shield And to Arhioh the Kntokerbockers are atte means that i absolutely comforte ve. In thie instaroe ® pretty ray leght wool fabric is trimmed with bands of black braid, the shield belng white, which brightens the whole, The quantity of material required for the medium seo (olght years) We 6 yarde 3, S84 yarda M6, or 8 yardy 4 Inohoe wide with 1-3 yard 98 incher wide for the under rwaiet end 13 yard for the @hield when ‘The pattern No, 4M, w out in wines tor bore of 4 & %