The evening world. Newspaper, September 17, 1906, Page 11

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

, A ‘The Evening World's Sometimes, bot Not Often, Family Financial Ar- rangements Cause Some Discussion, but Never to Amecunt to Anything Unpleasant, 6f Course. : ba) | MADE vome extra money this week,’ danding over a yollaw back to his wife. You can put it en ank | What @ood will that do?" askea Mre Jarr alwoye tailing of putting money ip bank. You never try t & cent yourself, but If I have an extra dollar or tro | yOu ask me to pot {t awny #0 you cen Come and take It ow to lend to some of your friends or something’ eaid Mfrs. clutebing the Sf) tightly and conjuring up the buying Urs of the money? | Yow, for goodnebe sake! don't be alway wc « orank \ @pend ft if you think you dnesa replied Mr, Jagr. | “It I think I need it? echoed Mrs, Jarr, “MI think I need ft? Do T ever have « cent I can call my own? 1) haven't bad a new dreas this summer except the Ittie blue halile ahd the raspberry pink volle that 1 got simply be sing Gn the street. I know you never Iiced It, although | Fangle told ane ft was toe most becoming Uttle dress | eause I had to ee, womet You didn't sty sa but Ofrs I ever bad!” | “I don’t care What you Go with the money, gosh blame {t!" snarled Mr. Jerr. | “1 1 don't give you money you raise a row! I thought you would bs pleased | when 1 murpfived You with it. and jum because 1 sugwested you mave tt" legested i save !t!" interjected Mra. Jarr. “You are always suggesting 1 pave it! I notice you never try to save, I don't know how much money you @ake or what you do with It “I con guess, Gough that there hae been many @ @fty-dollar bill you bh: rade extra and eplurged. and poor, silly me scrimping and saving and hav @e wool pulled over my eyes ‘Having the wool pulled over-your eyes doesn't prevent your cottoning on to! that money sneered Mr. Jarr. “I'll leave it to anybody that knows me that | beng every cent I make That's 0 and tts all 1 have. You are welcome'to it. Give me $2 for lunch | and fare an he rest as you please!’ oars for carta claimed Mre. Jarr. ‘Why, it's only 10 cents fo carfare! What do you give me a few dollars for if you are going to take ft atl! away from me again? | I might Gave known you didn't intend me to have ft, You can take your old | money So saying Mra, Jerr held on to {t ali the tighter | TO AS i” eae te. em chine tal Ie Dead foe ch “hut tt tn gist on my taking (t back '— Mra. Jase Qurst into tears‘ won't quarrel wit you sbout mgner. Keep the Tf won't have ff You handle the Money ater imine you guy tre Willa and household expenses and see where you come out! I don't want to! ever touch another cent of yours!” Ry thin time Mrs, Jarr had the money in her pocketboot, into which she also Cropped 9 “Welt appreciate that money Goesn't grow on trees, and that I worked extra and very tard to make thet money. I come ome and hand it over to You and all you do ts to weep and peream and jaw at me! “Oh. dowt try to excuse yourself by blaming me!" eeplied Mts. Jarr. “T ‘would seone= Me = Hemwar in the streets than to have al) the riches in the world and unbappiness with tt!" “It's your 6Wa temper thet makes you unhappy!" snapped Mr. Jarr. “Oh, tke your money. Never come to me and say, Gere is some money for yourself’ sotbed Mra, Jerr, putting the money in the burt and locking the drawer, “apd then enate tt from me and rus, out and qquander ft, leaving me penniless to meet the bills and the tradesmen’s dui TARO ta that exchetmed Me Jerr—"t only maked you for $2 1 haven't « eeht. “Let me have Sand you keep the rest and de what you please with it.’ “No, I won't!) ehid Mrs, Jerr firmly. “You keep the money, keep all the money, You only quarrel with me and accuse me of being emtravagant!’ “I @on't care Woat you do with tt!" sald Mr. Jarr. “Gimme & and Call it etiiace” . “Hete'e & conte.” ald Mire. Jerr, going to the Grawer and uniooleime tt. “Ts ait T have to apare sna it pleity, I go down town shopping and even wo with- fut & cup of tea when Dm ntstly tiumieked, Tou should try t be @ little asring, toot” “Oh, atl right,” eld Mtr, Petr” | thinking how keltgh hye Ake mot to Hawn changed the ill and held out ten, “Oh, alt rigtt!” “ana I think TV Gawe enough to fray a shape, and by wate seme O14 tips 1 Here, after gortin, ‘hem teouried,”* eal Mra, Jerr do Drs. Rangla later, “then VR Bawe w bet toy deh “Not that Mr vhrr wouldn't Day me « new one We never have a word w¥out money!” HEALTH AND BEAUTY. By Margaret Hubbard Ayer | the herhe three quarte of boiling water, A Natural Tan erenne paint the | DIRtrmbly wots Het simener until the eolor_of ta If you with, aud when z ue label Aa a at k peeing the fire and leave for twen- pl sth pola | four hour: atrein aod Sowe for wee. To Brighten Hair. can, in |The will #tain he piowe waiter be- fore retiring it becomes pertectly dry: AIRY.~Atter you have Leconaear| Slaophng Position. punaniyx our bal wee tt with B.~—When an Individual ta in per- toeie wat halt peroxide and fectly normal condition, and if tne fan dM dry It wil) brighten the dull) (Je stomach ts not too full, Meepii on Wapect the back 1a oe ber hartetul. th 4 , Tight aide Pio ee weecer - To Darken Hair. | ping im healthy sumer." oP OD AxThe recipe 1 give you tor | fake ton wil make fyour hair | 2 darker tf you winh It wo de ao. | Bago Tea Tonle: Alcohol, two ounces:,} rect te two unos; green fame. | A Spry endl a i with two ounces; put in an tron pat winch | Capea, tme Morning end. tf one te ex. Wan’ be closely covernd and peur neh | poaea wi tatu. To Wash the Fave. A. U.—Troroughly eer — with brush, soap and wernt water at May Manton’s Daily Fashions ‘HB fancy Dibuee iMetration mor crepe 4 Chine with taffeta bee ana haulete, cure and Yoke triremned with 9 pretty ati bending and pitas °F of almom any. ‘hing that may be iiked, white every Mbria that ta got enowh to drape with wucotes can be wellined tor Shame. the The be- coming resin to | the ahoulders ‘The Vary MO. GIRLS | 1 CAN" <NE You A CENT! BOUGHT D ANDO FOR ARISE AND OLO Jonny W BATES HAS BEEN SELLing 1T DOWN , Vo EVER Saver! YOU SEE WERE Just Tye POOR ORPHANS AND Ay TH Hee atl AND IF THAT ORS DOWN mycH =—=—=_ 40 Oy UY D.ANd%! 'S1T 96 NGw? THATS GOOD * Ny 2006 “ope! sas Mme Hi pe UY 30000 HENS TF aR } i To 150! "il p f fa 1 tH | I, wa — TF KING MIDAS. Printed Exclusively in The Evening World. (Copyrighted, 3901, hy Upton Pineisir) STNOMUS OF PRECKDING CHAPTERA, Helen Davie ie, wrod whom Ca a Hit hr Re A AE] revel Ry.) Bt Radha , SRNL mors Mast ett reute Poke i. Mend Maynard, tH of Peotin, ding br ‘nature oe party, that a ndeattend “Rie love tor eae Ta companion. ee ereell, write eeate Ce inal tal SB eterks’ tee Feten Enka Mr, Howard to ative over to Hittiown with ter, They start, docile ave CHAPTER X. (Correia ued.) MLE man hesitated a moment, anf then he en- ewered: “I anid many Cogs tet 1 had ne right so WAY bo you. we wot &” aif Helen amply, “Did you Th soy anything that was noe true?” Agkih Mr, Howard pewerd: “A am gum mine that I aid,” bo wami "at last, “Mowt of what I aad I feel to have deen untrue ames I hewe oon how # “ee Te Re WO “aatNRST wa halen. And then some of the thoughts that gpoesessed her forowd thelr way out, aad he bureied om émpetu- ously: “That was the frat ting I wanted to tat ite 34 te ehehiyy Arne the FOR Were won, for 1 ae not hart-hearted at all. It waa something thes Dy that people were making te Wo, and all the time I wae wretelwed. if was dreadiul, I know fut I was tempted, beenuse 1 do love beautiful things. And it wie wll Ho mudkibn, and I could mot roadize it, and I had moboty Co adviae me, for none of the people I meet would thigk At owas wrong anked: You mmunt talk to me and belp me, because I've got to be very etrong; my aunt will De emery, and when I get back perhaps Mr, Marriwon will be thera and 1 wbal hawe to teil him,” ‘Then the git stonped, out of breath and trem- Ving with exbitement; Mr, Howard turned ab ruptly and fixed his dark #yes upon her. OTe biarthe-wald. ‘Dell tim whet Tt “Theat I abell not manry tim, of course,” an- fWered Helen, ‘Nhe other wave wm start, but she was ohe Gul hot even notice M, “I coud "Er it wea ao very not loas a teinute,” sha and dreadful, you know," “And you really the other, "Mean stt' eohoed the girl, opening ner wide, “Why, how in the ato pis bee pose"—~ And then whe stoppwd abort, emd laughed nervoumy. “Of course," she eald, “I fongot: you might suppose anything. But, oh, if 7 aowld tor you how I have autfered, Mr. Howard, you~ would understand that 1 auld never have euch a thought again in the world. Please do understand ms, tor if T tad realty been so net Rete 3 should not come to mean not to marny him? BETTY VINCENT’S ADVICE TO LOVERS. ePArating several times, Magazine, st SF you as I do after what I heard. I cannot tell you how droadtully 1 suffered witie I wan letening, but after I bad tied ao much about tt, 1 felt better, nd {1 neerned to ame that It was the beet thing that could have happened to me, Juet th hee my eotione an thoy weAmad to some one wlee—40 Aome One whe wea good. I ww all at once the truth ef what | was dolng, and tt wae agony t me to koaw that you thought so of me, That was winy I conld mot rest tet mMeht unt! I had told you that J waa really unhappy; for st waa something that I was unhappy, waen't It, Mr, Howardt’ “Yow,” #ald the other, “It wee tery mnch fe Grea.” “Ans oh, X Want you to know the truth,” Helen went om @wiftly, ‘“Werhape tt la jum egotiam on my part, and T heve really no right to tell you all about myectt to this way; and perhaps you will #corn am when you came to know the whole truth, Bur 1 cannot Help telling you about It, so that pou muy advise me what to do; T mae ail helplews and low, and What you #ald came feat night Like a wonderful Nght. Awd 1 dom't care what You think about me 1¢ you will only te me the real truth, in just the wame way that you 44; for I nimlised afterward] that it wee thet which had helped me ao. It wae the firm thie in my fife that it bad ever happened to me; when ypu ies people in the world, they only my thingw that they know will please you, ste that dows you no good. I never walled before how a person might go through the world and really never meet with another heart in atl bia lite; and that one can te fearfully jonely, ¢ven in ®& parlor fll bt people Did gou ever think of that, Mr Howarat’ Mr. Howard had fixed hie keen eyew upon the ein Be ale went breathiaamly On; whe was very pale, and the -worros through whieh ae bad ganged bad left | quite a new béauty upon her fice. “Yos,” he nad, “L have thought of that.” “Tt te foclinh for me to Ask you,” Helen conunued, “bat I have just discovered it for myself, and tt weomn very wrong. I wanted to ark you if you would not @awayy Weck the truth to me, Just an you did last nigtt; 1f 1 could not Doar it, it would be be cause I wee till wrong. J got very much excited ue I thought of that, becauee I recatlected what yoo watt about wishing to help me if T would only appreciate it, I wanted to to you that I woul, or try to, I think you Were Wrong tn Mot telling mo before, becaune these prople who live @o very selfishly must ao ft! Just becwune they never tralian it, I really want you to advise me, and tell me how I oan wet my lite, right; I cannot help feeling thet I might some day become the Kind of woman that I qught to be, ta deserve the beauty that God baa given me. And when I to you that I meeded strength, I smeant really for what, and not bramwe I temred t might | on In my KreMt wrong: for M really makes me gr Srendtully, even to think of that—that marriage, Helen stopped, snd there was « minute of silanor, he once nervously at the man, whose even! jin were stil! Mixed upon her countenance: and then «he went on, staring atralght shead of her,’ her: Upw trembling. “Mr, Howard.” abe aald. “you cannot fmagine how @hrd (1 in tor me, after 7 teve suffered ao to know what you think of me, to theve te tell you more Monday, ‘THE ‘JOLLY’ GIRLS—ZHEY Win! ty Author of |-rhe teat hunker that wwe onor the source of his| George McManus | (wets. WELL, WELL PDRON'T FeMow Fr WAS ‘SO stRious | | - | JUsy THINK YA nw You'd Fre, 4 | WF YOUR DAUGHTERS AND JUST THINK! Mh | a = BATES ASKED STON TALLY tT! HO PARTY 7 =Splenmser | thet: | whether ne ts right ie mn and CO of tho Thea i a ordinary ete ty choos the Bnweey nd fame, but. thon Bilvoa ts not an ordinary A ‘ 1 hope to make wh be 14 Minn Musou, at t that wih win me & p Broadway one of these days. | words. { hope to do what Mme Ka has done No, winx on Broadway wouldn't mean everything te me. One success would mean nothing at all, fo: the auccems of one weason is often the failure of the next. Hroadway soon forgets You may grow out of ite af as quickly as grow into But Hroadway ts necessary to Success throughout the country be | known far and wide, you must first be known tn New York There’ lies the real and jasting value of e#o-ciled ‘Broadway success” Althourh Mine Killscu may rend |name in blessing ters these nights. | she dosen't believe in ue "One olectric sign doesn't make a ater.” was her way of putting “at merely helps to attract attention, Just as big type on the billboards, and the Programmer does. We become fainiilar with certain names because they are forever being thrust before our «yes. ‘This, In some cases, ie the power of ad- vertising more than the power of per- sonality and We see big namen grow from smal reputations. Hu a the Kalich Theatre a mame must be made of something more than big letters be fore tt ts accepted. I walked on at the firat performarce of ‘Marta’ with fear and trombiing 1 was afraid they-would hiss me, Mme, Kalich had herj way Into the affections of the people people with very strong affections—and 1 wae flied with a dread that thay Wold resent seeing @ stranger in he Thiele eisetions are «x Wrong ef affections, nut ther demand shat their emotiona be played upon with & “trong touch. Technique alone could never save an actor In the epee of an east wide audience In fact te unknown here, Acting technique fmm matter come on and go off the stage. and that ‘se a he knows. The rest is left to him, and he must learn from the audi- ence, and not from the stage manager. Long experien: tm this echeol haa made him very quick to learn.” By Upton Sinctarr, “THE JVNGLE." think T heve bean 60 cold and wicked, that you will scorn me ir “1 GO fnot Mihi Chit te pomaible,” weld her sote~ panto, gumtty, as by maw the girl choking beck « toh, then,” Melon bewan: but then she . “De you wish me to tell yout’ she asked. “Do you care amything about it at all, or Bows It ween” —~ “IT dare very much about tt, Indeed,” the other answered. “However dreadtel i may acon,” ald Helga, “oh, phage kngw that while T have been dotag it ” hae mw utterly wretehed, amd that T am #0 tla htenad Mat 1 can marcely talk to you; and thet tf there ja anything that 1 cen doch, absoiitely anything-t wil do iti’ Then the gtr dit her lips together end went om with @aaperate haste, “It's what you said about what would hap pen if there were seme one elas to love me, and to nen how very Bad 1 way’ “There ts wore auch person tT a low voles, "Yee," mal athe. “Tt te nome one 1 bave known an lone an T oan remember, And 04 leven me very mach indeed, T think; end while I wan letting my, relf be tempted in thie way he wee very sick, and becmnag I kriew I war wo bad I did fot dare go pear hyn; and yosterday when he Reard 2 wae going | rry this man it aliust hailed him, and I do not know what fo fear now.” Then, puntabing hewelt very bravely and ewallow- ing oll ber Bitter atane, Melon went on to roll Mx, Howard of Arthur, ant of her Cieudehip with hin, and of how Jong ha had walted gon her; Whe nertethd in a fww worde how te hat left Ker, sod then she bad seen him wion the road. Afterward stopped and mat very attil, trembling, awd with hor even lowered, quite farpetting that she wae driving. “Melon Tari,” aaid the otha, gently, acelng how he oun nuftering. “it you with my adviee @bout asked the may, tn tis, | abodld fot Worry Wivett tes meets te te better, I find fn my own sodt’y Iife, to save moat of the time tht ome epeids upoa temoree, and de vote tt to action,” “Te notion?” waked Halen “Too, cald the other. “You tmve been very thonghtion, but you may hope that nothing trrev- ooable haw happened; and when you have sean your friend and to'A him the truth just-as you have told it to the, 2 taney KX will bring him foy enough to compensate hint for what he hes @ufered.”* ‘Mise Biieou has iearned’ from her own experience that everything comes to her who watts. ‘Y never got anything by going after 1" galt che, “Sitteogh | tried herd mough many times. It was always the me etory.-"We may have eamething of impulse, At rehearm the actor I not_told how to play a part. He In| left to find ‘out for himself how to Diay The part He knows that he must | ently, that 1 could play nothing see” After dccuraging experteness. T would wo home and have a goed ery, w fo to Melotore dnd Heath and haw Theme were my only © end | decided that the wes to Walt’ until e@waye been eent panager to dend for me moon, 1 waa gay ax . eit a terribly frtght- trightoned whan Mr Prahman asked ome fo give - f - # * of ‘Lin’ @ ; whieh of had won the ibe inl, offered as a prise to pupils of the Sargent school, I shall never forget that performance, There in the darkened there eat Gye gud enee—Mr. Frobman—more terrifying t me than thouwands of peaple would a elif, sad T don't know how [ ever managed to get through the performanse, Everything went wrong. The #tage hands kept up an awfel racket, and just as I was in the middle of the best scene my Tead- ing man atumbled over a chair and pect me compietety, But with ell the bad tosk, Mr Frohman engaged me for The Liste Minister, and tittle by Little I learned a fow things, The one Ming T have learned thoroughly, perbepe In yeart’ oxpertence. & to walt.” Spee RIRD d= the only werd thet de W thes the performance of the | poor, unwilling camel that ie prodded through ite paces st the Hippe- by Mile, Allaety, She comes og in on & “whip of the desert” that looks like one of the Creator's un- | nucceseful jokes, and Immediately de- gins to make lite miserable fer ye ¥! | hewpy x my essen beast atr and it isn’t beautiful, even as camemc en bt anphe 4+ SbF it = ecutfes with rage, and the “ Knewe ove mbdig oar of tant Bias expression on ite face. Defiance from tte hot, sullen eyes, yet the pine sclle never tote up until It hae ormed. every in tte Fepeviory. soc this haughty monstrosity kneel. pose and whirl Is the strangest sight ever witnessed on the Mtppodrome’s jatage. 1: showing ite regpect for Mile, To |Alarty, the poor chmel liees ali ree apect for itself, That's what hurte *, bee OW thathclothes have Deen made: N into @ play, it's curlous to see tw many plays nave deen made Into clothes, The shops ere full of them, Ite the same with hate. The | up-to-date milliner In aon sounds Hike ja theatrical dir [ior hariging ¢heatriont nai |clothesline: “Probably due to “Bertha, the Sewing Meching Girl.” r puurnerate Indtgnantiy tor you tater.’ or ‘Call alain next Gentiva that his tall down thirty ‘week.’ The trouble weenred to be that feet of stairs war « joke on the Managers eaWociated me with m cer | Here Conried. tain Kind of part aril believed. sd CHARLES DARNTON, a vahinsbebecthii The Well Sweep. OME August, clerky ware having erie tui arith ohe of their number ‘Thuriday morning, beowuse of bit lack of Khowledwe oi one of the appli- ancey which miyht be anid to be asco tated with thé ident sliuple life Ac conting (6 the story which the other told, the young man went into thw country tw yes a quiet the Lew.ston Journal, One Wt thoae farms where thvere js weil! in use an eld-faadloned well swery, holiday sarn) The plate at which he stopped wan) course, the young man bad sen = @elt ewerp before be did not know how th | opepaie one tn the courne of the day te bad ob | cawion to mo to the well afte sone water, tut lnntend of going Mw tha welb and pulling down on the poly which ‘wan suspended from the sweep, ha went | over to’ tho end of the sweep which rested on the ground and wae pallasted with rock. and iaying hold of ft, tried to lft It no that the other and would fo down. ‘Two or three attempte were made but the supcosa attained wie not a gilt ‘Thin to & new EVENING WORLD apartment, totend- 4 mot only for thone who know how to Kalt, but for thees-alec who would Ike to learn the art. Novelties in band-lenit gartnente will be made @ wpectaity here aod pictured for knitters—such as the #owe And shapely akirt Muntrated to-dar. permive of here which I sball cheertully give tree ‘That was what T meant to @o,” the gir! want on, “But X)teve been terrified Wy mil sorte of fancies, and when 1 remember how svach pain I caused pith, T seantely dere think of apenking to him, When T saw hin by’ the roadside, Mr. How ard, he heamed to mw te lookt emnetly tee you. there was such dreadful suffering written in hin tere.” “Aman wht live as you hawe toll me your friend haw Divert." eald the offer, “tus uaually « verr erie power of fiftering: auch @ man biahds for himself an ideal which g@fves him all hiv } and bie power, and makes iy Life & very glorious thing: but when atything beppens to destroy his 1 to kwep bite from, eeeking tt, he enftwre the wame intensity that he rejoloed before, / with power only toate Dim to places then, as steam wirenks| & broken engine. things yet. But, bh, I bave done them, and 1 oan not ever be set right unt T have told you; but always jechioken of chicken malnd raw | werent wee Hien We eve Wied " Onder lobeter or lobwtes amlad, aeiea Chath rindi situa al ald A x ple: 2 have nowehd eee een hae “W's very @reedtel.” Helen soit “How thought- lowe I was all Along! T omly bnéw that he loved me very much, and Onat It eam A wexmtion to me. Ce | He Continued ) merece, or a faretl\ |down very often Kinee we got seattaint- am e Abwotntaly | mi | singe Rhee Bore ER RTT | anette come togetnor nyuin, It te im- [If yOu Ike any kind of fancy led. Please tell me how to find out pe love etter partie ~ ary trea toe eliher of us to leave the | mated. whether si loves me or not H.C. L Quanth: § Te kein Oh an jelty, aad no amount of persuasion on T «irl must think something of you vokterial fas Evening World, Pont aie. ee jour parts would change our parente | Have Neber Been Introdaced. | sr Kho Would not have met without for the medium nige| gen. York Tyopinioa, Can you mdviny uy what to! [FLAVA been in tore with » bAMAAOM® a» introduetian, Wiky don't you find eut » if rante 2, 814 an | do? MBARTBROKEN, ye lady for About thie mer ae wena Gum Wie beeen bar Gnd Sty. to verde 27 rare i ‘ Dn ch Of religion dows ao’ t- do not know yet whether DST noe bay om ® mure homorable togtin 4 inches mies 4 Difference of Religion, ye oe Ps yogi soar perapty | lore ma or not. J have tokt hae ‘. ap } Li-teryanda of “gir, | Dane Reus views, and the afl Ww over twenty-one | loved dar, aud also axket whether #ne «| She Dearly Loves Him. score ¢ yards of mare an is went s atleman cali| or selt-supporting, tarry anyway. weve mio. bur" meer recelved am Om! inne meine 2 Boosie | » it nome for the past two years ewer, DBARL! oe ut I have hot Yards of ce D med y tm and #oRmtines tire times a The Ajter-Vhi a re Supper. We ave never been introduces Ww yet spoken to tim. J have passed | week, “during Which time we have! Doar jeter: each other, although wince We wot ae-| on, the treet quite a twa! q@rown 10 love one Another dearly, Wel 1M engaged to a gentioman who takes! quainted mi are Very good friends | tunes and he dean’ wean Yo notice | ‘ew would ike to marry buh there te « me Qoeatren Cwiey & week. after) Oboe “i maked ber ber name, but soe] me Wold you be wo kind oh to ad-| pation ordered. erent difference in reliwion, which, of whies We go 1 wupper, The croutde | would 1,01 tell me! I alao offered her %| view me ty thin matter, oourae, caunes witong parental objec-| jy cat I really don't know what to] eda, but whe rafunes ali the time. 1 ANXIOUS. tian bor akdew, Khe only Objection, | order, which makes me fee) very email. | work in « place of amusenrent in the) You wit here co walt fl he sews 4 our mesrying would cafe » DM. Jreventhas, where there are a lot of pee fan tatratuctiqn to you If he returne she comm your Vaherort he with owrteiny do tt on tpplivation to, me by ral. ‘acetal dipping Uneto the front and to thd Lop of the akirt haw been made ti requirements are entirely art, AY to mive width wherh needed, and about the fwet fh inaction, just as bang is & Recond band of plain kwyitting for Us BVENING WORLD readere who may write to “Laura La Rua, Knitting } came intg belng, Add although, ot} that darned thing, cae e a ' « DAILY KNITTING CHATS, By Laura La Rue. | e oe Designed with down 4 Yarna. A Wattied sitet. keep t firing and shapely, When wt * changed @t ones, ter Here the the knee ts & band in plat Manttting: t the spreadin falling eee BA acoordusnn- plistts Law of alt interested eT md ditor Eve ) WORLD. The camel lent etage ~ <a

Other pages from this issue: