The evening world. Newspaper, March 16, 1907, Page 9

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Pr > The Evening World’s | Daily Magazine, Sat Pere epee meee cen, urday, Ma rch 10, { seecsessceassses eseecodeseoscence ObSSSESEteeessoee seeeeoe eset eseeee Se ee ener gee Sheeeeseceseseses eteececesreceeess, eenseceseceseoes ry DSA “Character” Talk with ROSE STAHL‘ By Charl ELLG, there!” called Miss Rose Patricia Stahl-O’Brien from the fron landing ferninst her dressing-room at the Hackett tre, ing sertous, I hi hoped 80, too. ered, f @esire to douse the glim. ia"Why not keep.in the character?" ck tothe vernacular?” “No hand-embrolilered language.” “On the Ice with Miat. -Say, listen: : “You and “The Ghorus- Lady" hay: ? oftrenting a fia “What brings you out this sloppy weather? ope.” . Miss Stahl, as no ‘doubt you've discov- as bright, as a calctum light, and I certainly had no * Teuggested. We'll do a sketch. What's the plot?” e-been-in-town long: enough to think How do you lke the nefghbors?"" ay a word. Aw influential friend has promised to introduce me toa prominent janitor, and I’ve been pricing \cangTy, birds and oll stoves. When I came to town 1 was afratd I'd nh tent. !_seeond ‘week. Talk aboiit (Take that chalr in the corner and | pass.) vets or ready-made breakfast food. “What do you say to F “Fine! Me and: Mansfield, different kinds of B wondering how it would be for-me, night—ime to:prance into his theatre and for bunch ‘of Ibsen highbrows, % leks ts, Lady’ = foreheads. Ww get lots ofi'em, but regular crowd: that In case: they While they may f way of doing {t frternally, what the if ) heart s-the-footlights?” strong grip. No a tt “With a good, Fence hotps, lots-of-it;-in-order-te-make-good. yin frost, 1 TAL Edison, ple: ase write.” ; Y S eyes into a toying tho play and shaking hands wit = there’s the woman with the hysterical and drowns out ter high notes: big laugh that comes when the whol (Busine “Ealso like thei | of couree. i unusually sympathe wo matiiee last week. ape When I asked Well, y anything fora “and nobody could 5 (Copytight, 1963, 190, 3 OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS. ily boards B Mrs tue Mas te and Marcarey have bo ferry’ "i {tached to tals bea Water cannot rec ho receives er i tt at Utterly Gent a getn tha gf.) 4) £i!od.teo fart tre ih twelve tn fifop. dollars nino’ d % Sita be allite ways 4 4 Tar Farbam, who admits 2 herse Ways he tries to pt so of action } ge CHAPTER XIi. Christmas Despair. (Continued) § it turned cut, he fared very well A In the matter of gifts, and for: some days much of his time was epent In reading notes of profuse thanks, which wero yet vaguely apologetic. The Craya and Mrs, Dan had remembered Dim with an agreeable lack of ostenta-, tion, and some of the “Little Sons of tho second street?” What? audiences that. goto the show shops. And I've been ne actors working overtime to give a good performance. whole house {s ‘on’ and everybody {s laughing and happy! phouy is yet to bo written that can beat the music of it all!" that note from Crawford without paying, and paying dearly?’ a dear old lady { 4n the front row, who had been all wrought up by the scene, sald right al aye) New York.” made a mistake by’not bringing along I had ft all doped out that I would fold myself up and miove on the cold feet—mino were 30 degrees below zero! lean your head against the looking I thought the town folks would think I,was selling ingrowing cor- jut stop the car, Where do I get off?” That starts me thinking about and Mansficjd to swap places’ some and-tet-toose Patricia's slag on that him to come to the Hackett without Not that we don’t get any of, the tall they're blended In so: well with the don’t thaw out We can't fee) the chill. enjoy the play as much as the rest of the bunch, they have and you know that external appreciation is lor needs to cheer’ him on his way, rs and good emotional w Show me a theatreful of eepers, and I'll show you a bunch of ctor can do his best unl. audi. We on-our side of the footlights have to have magnetism, and , The more-highly tempered the metal out » more {t attracts us and the better magnets we become, omas “Whats your one-best bet—laughter or tears?” “{'m strong for the hearty laughers,” tragic, Sarah Bernhardt express{on, sald Miss Stahl, parrowing her “Talways teel_like-stop- h the big fat man on the aisle who \ somehow manages to laugh the loudest. Perhaps he 1s able to beat. the other fellows because he has more room In which to let loose. And then lnugh who always sees the joke first and who bas the Iaugh all to herself until the big man on the alsle sees it Then they are both swallowed up tn the And, oh, when the Well, the sym- e@ house {s ‘on.’ It ‘becomes terribly interested and ‘says things.’ Sometimes an son talks right ont In meetin’, “This happened at Norah, ‘Do you think you could get reulty-human laughers aid wéepers | it: Bestdes the hearty laughers and the people: who talk to us, there are the emotional weepers. Women art better weepers than men. Men are 80 afraid to be caught crying that they cough or blow their noses so. hard in an effort to hide thelr emotion that they almost Interrupt the action of the play. J dove to play matt- nees’ best of all, because the audl- ence ls made up mostly of women, and they cry so beautifully, ‘The star| weeper of them all is the comfortable, middle-aged woman who has a good | hashand, »- large family-and-a happy home. She never has any trouble of her’own, and when she meets It at the theatre she welcomes it with open arms and a large, gind sob. (Last Thursday afternoon there were five women in the proscenium box to My right who wept so copiously that I didn’t dare get under that box for fear of getting wet. Honest! I'm thinking of;playing matinees with an umbrella hereafter.” ‘When I had ‘dried my eyes J spoke tremulously of the chorus girl in The Land of the Midnight Cab, while, And even though the Incident |_ @id get us a laugh in the wrong place, I didn't mind, for I knew that the She prides herself on Ther slang, and dear, sweet old lady was carricd away for-the moment, and I loved her for using up their meal tickets’? at Mon- Were only too generously graterat Miss Drow had forgottea him, and when they met after the holiday her recok- lon was of the coldest. He nad Nevcould send Wer “a gift of value, but the botiutiful pearle with which he -ask- 1 for m recoaciilation were seturmed with “Miss Drew's thanks," — Iie loved Barbara sincerely, and it cut Peggy Gray_was taken into his Seater ae an for her to advise him to try again, but | dat happiness was a thing she had Sita beastly unfair, Peegy,’’ he’ #ald. “I've really been white to her, I helicve TN chuck the “Whole business and leav “You're going away? and there was dustva suggestion of a catch in' her FREE: “fin gong ta charter a yacht and sall ery fren ore place for threé or four months. zal aaped, “What do aoa mia oF sane ne waded, mone ing the oF ae and Ineredulity in the poor-house, eyes. oy hink you'll end 1 methine ter, ‘ste sald, with Montewmery Brews: atavgh, CHAPTER XIII. [tie tause and econapse came on} hought that. under the circumstances, , {know how to handle money, Io heard] ‘Let us slang.’ fatled difd Mis balance of over $100,000 ; was wiped out. Mismanagement was Friday, the thirteenth day of the} month, Needless to say, it’ destroyed) avery —tentige—of— the superstition het may have had regarding Friday and tho| number thirteen. Brewater had money deposited in five banks, a transaction inspired by the Wild hope that one of them might some day ‘suspend operations and thereby prove & legitimate bene to him. There Beeméd no prospect that the bank could Tesunie operations, and if the depositors tn tho end realtred twenty ‘cetits oi the dollar they~ would be “Tortunute, ~Not= withstanding the—fact-that evern?vdy had considered the Institution substan- tlal, there were not a few wiscacres who called Brewster a fool and were #0 unreasonable as to say that he did not that rew, in particular, bit- terly barcastic in referring to his wtu- pidtty, This fallure caused a tremendous flurry In banieng circles, Jt was but HGLUfal that “questions concerning whe stability of other: Danks should be asked, and it was not long before many wild, disquieting “Treporta “were afloat Anxious depositors rushed Into the big banking institutlons and then rushed out again, partially assured that there ‘A Friend in ‘Need. T was while Brewster was in the depths of despair that hts finanolal Rich”! who, had kept one evening a tnight open for, Wie purpose: of affairs had-a.windfall. One of the banks in which his money was deposited oe The Engagement Ring. “Dear Betty: — AM a young | young man of twenty-four. 4o be engaged to him In a fow weeks, Bhould I thank him when [ receive an engagement ring, a3 a lady frend of faine sa{d o girl should ever thank a yyoume man for an engagement ring, a9 it te pot proper. rns 6. ian fa entirely wrong, an pe Niet ie raleulous, Thank tim Sweetly a5 You know how, and tell ‘him ow pretty tho ring fs. / Was He ‘‘Jollying’" Her, ba ti Betty: COUPLE, of weeks ago, at an affair, 1’ was introduced to a very toe #irt of eighteen. Iam! keeping steady) company with 8! (9 coms, but a» yet he hae not” Do you I am|thihk he was jollying me? Betty Vincent's ow 2 Advice to ‘Lovers. 1 onal for the first time, as he narrated his business to mi ‘When it was, time to-go-home, I inyited bim to. my house and he sald be would be pleased AC It\looks as if he might have! been “Jollying’ you. Leave him alone and he may call. Do not pursue him. | Question of Kissing Games. Dear Betty: 8 Iam a girl of elghteen, I would like to know if ft fa groper to be Kdesed ot a party. Invas at a ‘one of the was no danger. The newspapers sought The Chore, Ss Sd wo Se AASCHE EiersE “The . chorus! girl,” “sald — Miss: Stahl, with an air of authority, “Is a New York Institution. When a manager goes out on Broadway and shakes a tree everything that falls off is put in ‘the chorus. The chorus girl grows here. That, perhaps, is why New York understands ‘The Chorus Lady’ so well." “And slang?" I queried. “New York,” she answered, “is tha home of slang. New Yorkers don't merely like !t—they eat it. A few years ago the average mother was shocked to hear her young daughter use slang. She would raise her eye- _{brows_and -excliim, ‘How dreadful!’ Now, unless daughterts-quick-to-get+ \dience will imagine that I think I’m great. think that I think her {mitation {s bad.’ hardly dare go to a show these days for fear I'll seo an {mitation of my- the Intest, mother will spring {t on her first. But the modern young wom- an seldcm iets anything get past. She Ue stant Mgnsfiel”, 2 | coine of ‘conditions. tain thought so well as that word. slang that is all her own. You kn girls." HOW does the real ‘Chorus Lad TL asked. | © _ “You, know what Nat Goodwin self—'One of us must be rotten.’ B: me? I'vo never seen myself. But didn't know whether to applaud or ‘The hewapapers and the music halls catch up a word and make it sd well known that after a little nothing else represents a cer- The real chorus girl has a choice line ot iow there are real and imitation ¢ y’ ike the imitation of her at Weber's?” sald when he saw an imitation of him- ut, no; I don‘t mean that. Miss Loftus {ga wonderful artist. But how can I tell whether her {mitation 1s like I'll confess she made me feel creepy. I not.__‘If I do.’ I _aald to myself, ‘the au- And !£ 1 don't, Miss Loftus will I didn’t! know what to do, I {x-so—quick-and-claver-that hemo relf—They-tell-me-that-six-or-eight Hose-Stahia-come-trooping-out-at the. take spaghetti with her piano Jersons, the motto of the hiome has become =BREWSTER’S eee -By Geo. B. McCutcheon. by Herbert S. Stone & Co.) to allay the fears of the people, but there were many to whom fear ®ecame panic. Thore.were chort, wild runs on tomo of the smraiter banks, but all were in a fair way to restore confidence when Ott came the rumor that the Bank -of Manhattan Island was tn trouble. Col. Prentiss Drow, raflroad megnate, was the president of this bank. ‘When the bank opened: for business onthe -Tuesday—foliawing the failure, |— thera was a ‘stampede of frightened depositirs, Before 1 o'clock the run, had assumed ugly proportions and no Amount of argument ccula stay the “onslaught. Col, Drew and the directora, at rat milly distresked, and then see ing that the affair-had—become-serious, stew more alarmed than they ‘could a! ford to let-tho public see, The loans of all of the banks wero unusually large. Inctplent runs on some had put all of them in an attitude of caution ural reluctance to expose their own interesta ta jeop- ray by: coming to. a 2. na. rellet of the Ban lonty Browstor Hed somethin: Nik s200.000in Gan Drew's vane mie ike not. peut rs FRR AGO regretted -on the collapsetor this. InatRutlon, hat he Feallzed what It moant to the hundreds of other’ depositors, and for the first dime he appreciated what hts. money could accomplish, ‘Thinking —that— his Presence snl vo confidence: to the other depositors and stop the-run he Went over to the bank with Harrison d Bragion, The tellérs were handing Out thousands of dollars to the eager Casino, We invent slang for the rest of the world. Slang Js the out-! trying to look like my lithograph till my face aches. Can you {magine how I would fee) if-I saw six of me? Help! As It is, I go to the theatre—sometimes they put me in a box—and ait there It's awful to be a —— 999999999999999899959999999009899399999999998T89999 3999999999999 297 I9FORORIOSISIIODD 99999999 9I9I9IFFTITFIFRIFIFIIIFIID FIFO FING IVD9S9IING III ISIFIOIFIVIVD D9F9I9IOTISII9IVG 2II9I9S es Darnton. ‘star,’ I-— sometimes —long- for—those swering letters. The other day I got lost her programme. Would [ please 1907. good old happy days whei could go Into one of those instantaneous food places and order a plata of hot cakes out of the window without wondering what people might say. J haven't a thing I can call my own now—not even hurry-up cakes.” She slghed—joyously. “All morning,” she went on, “I sit at my little two-by-twice desk, an- one from a woman, saying she had . send her one—and would I mind in- closing & couple of stats? Can you beat it? And then there’s the daily parade of almost-authors. You'd bo surprised to know how many people aro suffering from authoritis In this town. ‘}known ‘cure {s to lock the patient in some pencils and let the disease run I've written a play called “The Answe “What's ‘The Answer?’ ” “It’s no joke—honest tt Isn't. over-the-place kind, you know, but th ‘Good-night, nurse,’ when the worst in play newspaper men that I-like. Th to make them. What? this: “Wait’ — “You can’t wait? Well, mind the doorkeeper. Ho has a wife and seven don’t see you again before I get my new spring bonnet, Mi ‘ It's'a three-act come: fears and a few spoonsful of love interest. Se It's an awful disease. The only & room with a bunch of paper and {ts course, I know, for I've had {t: 2 with a a dash of. Not the rippifg, tearing, all- ¢ kind which leaves you able to say over. I've made all the men in the jey've mado me, end now I'm golug My~next! effusion will be ‘The Rubalyat of a } Lemon Pin gotng-to- write it with « Jemon-squeezer. It will start uke { —tuat ie last step, and don’ ‘t' wake the stag children and he n Int eeds the rest. If { erry. Euater Eggs!” Health and Beauty. By, Margaret Hubbard Ayer. .|Lotion to Whiten Hands. B.—Hore ts the formula you « Wieh for whit- ening the hands, but for hands that fire hardened from rk one can find nothing more satiefactory than | ‘pure glycerine, Af- tar -serubbing your bands well with almond meal or. crubbing br yah, while they -are’ etill wet rub on a few drops of glycerine, Do this whenever you wet your hands, |, and you wili be su noftt and smooth the skin becomes, Whenever it { possible, while you are working, wear old kid gloves three or Cour ‘alzes too large, or Teather gloves ° which can be bought for the purpose. Hore ts the formula {ar whitentrig the hands: Lanoline, 100 «rams; paramfne (iquid), 2 grams; extract of vanitln, 10 Grovs; off of roses, 1 drop, Mix and apply when necessary, Tooth Powder Formula.. Here is « formula for a tootn Precipitated cnalK, pulverized borax, 3 dunces; powdered myrrh, 1 ounce; pul- Verized orris, 1 ounce. Mix and sift rough tine bolting cloth. To Whiten the Hands. R —figive-you here-a very good for = mula to whiten the hands: Lane cline, 102 grams; paramine drops; ofl of roses, 1 drop, piy when necessary, Mix and ap- HINTS FOR Steamed Steak, AKE about two pounds of round steak and cover with a dressing @s for a chicken, then roll the steak up and tie it with a good string. Put It Jn & lard pall and cover tightly. iSeeataae matictes eanettepteemmnat one ebout—three--hours. Fake}; from pall, and thicken very iittle the gravy in botiom of p=tl Coffee Cakes (German). AKE_one_qurt_of flour, one-half (quid), % grams; extract of vanilla, 10 © THE HOME. = 4 thick. Sprinkle on the dough one- Uiind of @ cup of sugar, mixed with one teaspoonful of cinnamon, and roll like & Jelly roll. Cut off the careful not to oguther in. the fans. These are very nice to eat with coffee in place ot doughnuts. Potato Cheese Cakes.— ARE one pound of masted potatoes, one-quarter pound of ¢urrania, i, sugar and butter, and four esse Beat tho eggs well and mix smoothin with the rest of the Ingredients placed coup of butter, one oup of sumar, ‘one clip of sweet milk, Badd of cream tartar, ono peat red ‘of soda, Mix and roll one inch ++ — sr depositors. strongly late,“but Monty was obdurate. ¢et it down to hip desire to. hel a's father and mdmined hist His friends advised The: but inwardly perturbed, Anally sa DBrawstar- aml 015 - compantons; Monty come to the president's privat Office at once, etled | Hregdon. tah up. t out every dollar of it, arid-don't-tyeste 2 minute: It's "a smaal ag sure as fate,” urged Harrison, h expression In his | eyes, y're mnadcuttarly mad impress you with the security of th: bank. You ought to know t however. and Iwill tell -you-in conf dence that another check Hike Austin's, 450, 1d cause us serious, though tempo which we paid afew minutes embarrassment. him | not thought of withdraw! to withdraw before It wis too Its trom this bank. Colonel Bar- Col. Drew, outwardly calm end serene, | his face as white-as di 1a 360TH A mesenger aver with the request that ants to help you to save your in low tones. | Monty, he truth came to assure you that I hav feed a yl have nounersiness | The door opened suddenly and one the ofticluls of the bani Bolted ari jen Ww ¥ Brew: to speak before he Git isthe despairing What int, Mrestoore?" aa oq Drom 8) ae calmly ag ‘possible. ‘“Don'timind Mr, “Oxiethorp wants to draw $230,000,"" Moore in strained tones. Avalte he can, have “ft, can't het” [asked the Golonel, quietty.. ators Jook- ht ed—helotensty- preaklent of the | bank, and:tis fience apoke more y Wan words. admitted to the Col-| “«prewater, it looks bad." sald the Ones’ OW whe alone f and was Vyacing the Moor Tike « caR ed | COR aE oe ake arevatrad of ot un a such “Sit_down. Brewster, and don't imind! ? a tre cantt tout On haves ped ie J) neem nervous i Gt course we can| A huve, tetuned, Now, hold ou but t js terrible—terrible. r rey They, think we are trying to rob thee, eee ee oe eee Tarantiyou:e0 ing out your deposit, but I want y help us in this crucial moment.’ The ria” never seaw: anything Ike It, Co}: Are Colonel Idoked twenty years older an: tie “demands surg Zou fan meet all ite voice whook perceptt iy. Brows oughly exe Per, Went one to hime tree Rast FAVS can hold’ out -Unleas some of our| “hac. cnn ‘ol. Dre heaviest depositors «et the fever and| cried. “I'll, not take my money outs uw ‘dOWH Upon Uk: -T eppracTate Phat -I—don't know-how 1 can be. af your feelings th an affair of this kind, | further 3 Ansistance to you. Comman: coming #0. swiftly upon tho hee me, 8 Sen ae eq hed ante Bite pe ny jeans can reaices absolute ‘gumAdence. peraonal-akaurance that tie money you! Monty...my_ dear boy, by Increasing have hero is safe. I called vou jn to| Four deposite in cur bank” said the Tolonel, slowly, and as If dreading the ate of the. auageation. ou mean, slr, that I can save the bank by drawing my money from other 8 banks and putting it here?’ asked Monty, slowly. He was thinking harder and faster than he had ever ‘¢ olin hls ‘ite, Could he afford to risk ns f—The Lo ade of cars, work,” cold. a street car. down town?" long-faced girl a lesson. get up at 1 o'clock of the customers for breakfast. ‘B-rrnr!" I shuddered. “Borrer-eynt rae about all she would say. Tt was very Presently 8 follytacads bor commie driving @ bakery wagon;down.the street, and Mhaited“tim “a8 though he were “We're late," I sald, [ABOUT GIRLS. 2 ng-Faced Girl. 1U know the long-faced girl! : I met her the other morning. There was a block- and sho andi I were walking down to “and cold. Will you give us a litt ‘Spire thing,” sald the boy, grinning widely. \ The long-faced git] wouldn't climb up Into the wagon, Barra 20 1 drove off alona with my new friend: $ gayly.along towanl my office wo told each other the story of our Ives, The last chapter of the baker boy's Ife would have taught the As wo rattled winter morning,” he sutd, ‘to get fresh rolls to all “Aren't you most troten?” He beat one stiff hand against his kneo and clutked heartily to his mare. rmer,”* he sald with 'o laugh, * ML chuck this job ax oon en I National Or, I comet" faced boy was smiling bis way Into a Looking for trouble” and women, Girls are often taught that meekness under oppression, Mf-tortured martyrs and nurse a tro! face and begin to help themselves to t should carry only thelr fair share of If working girls have epirit enough conditions by “looking pleasant.” The composite amile in almost Irresiatible. People will pay for cheerfulness, in| and’ pocket his tips! When we are really civilized we must elther bear It or better !t. eIf I! BY GERTRUDE BARNUM, “borrowing trouble’ deprivation and suffering, bérne cheerfully; but generally trouble may be lightened. Lat the long-faced girl tramp alone v!h her rasyance if she will, As for a ganizer of the Woman’s Trade Union League. While the long-faced girl was glumly trampling through the cold the broad- “warm corn: are common failings with the chief virtue of womanhood is patient They often develop into uble to: keep it alive. What working girls Need more than anything else {3 a hearty bellef in their right to life, lberty and the pursuit-of-happiness,—‘They-should-cease-benring- thelr: d-lot't-with «long of life and cheer up. They They should expect as he Kood thigh domentic burdens, good-terms of fndustrial work as men, they can help to change even thelr work- A group of smiling girls can win conces- larger the group, of course, the better—the They may not realize that they are being hypnotized,/but Just watch the colored porter of the Pullman car show his teeth will provide asylums and tock up all tho fang of tnce. They are more dangerous ‘to socléty thin ordinary thugs; they knock the stiffness’ but of our backbones, If {ll-fortune overtakes us there Ja just one of two things to be done: We it hag got to be borne, It may as well.be _PSap 90 6 T oe clone nave a Nees rh an ete, tt manna a -office-opened-and—a -clerk-exeltediy mo-| Jonas of his entire fortun of this bank? What would Swearengon Sonen say If he deliberately deposite:| vast amount of money In a tottering: institution like the Bank of Manhattan Island? It would be the maddest folly on his part {if the bank went down. There could be no rating circum- stancea in the eyes of elther aooee or toxahgr mn a pudding basli. Hav ready. sone Poe te ce the Dal Remov feoenl ther oyen, all with, “the mixture and robake until a delicate brown, on the fate como when he must help or deny them. Ake a Nash the situation was clear to him and his duty was plain, Ta remembered that the Bank of hattan Island held every dollar that Mrs, Gray and Pegi their meagre fortunes iid been Intrusted to the care of Prentiss Drew Le his_aaec- clates,-and {t was In dange: the world, if he swamped al a) ed will, do ell T can: Colonel "eal “I beg of you, Monty, help, that teri ccn anh nae ait) Colonel's pride wes gone. “Barbara must’ never know of this.” ‘we close our tours even for -that_only. years_can remoye. You can restote con- Adence by a dosen au kes of your pen, and you. can le wi Barbara's ‘father, a The: prowd old man was before him aa pliant. no tooger the cold. man of the world Bis Hrewatere came thought, of his quarrel with Barbara and-of-her-heartlessness, “A-ecratth of Tre oe etone cway vor, the ‘cihers could change the life of Barbara Drew. ‘The two bankers stood by scarcely breath: ing. From outs!de came thé shuffle of many feet and the muffled roll yolcea. Again the door to the privat tioned for Mr. Mooro to hurry to the front of the bank. Moore paused itres- olutely, hin eyea on. Brewstor’a face. The young man knew the time jad that-she -ahadl- hurd fred come to te eaten the syee tured. out to de. eae money won the day for the. Bank 0: ‘Manhattan When the prosident and directors offered to “pay him an astonishingly high rete of inter ene the use of the money he proud! “Drew fi nO aEy, Brewster was not asked to att The Colonel's gasp of astonishment was mntmaed.—- Promina oUt Bhort as Monty co never know, “IT don't underatand, but de tt te ‘your wish I promise,"* Inside of half an hours time eoveral eat nerctatrarnca eS ouriou: rama Island, (ApeY The next day Mise tations for a Cotton, ‘Mr, Mot (To Be Continued.) May Manton’s Daily Fashions HE skirt made with gathered fiounce ts always a graceful one, and is just dow ‘greatly In style, while it aults all the . fasttonanle soft materials per- fectly well. Here one that ts gored at the: upper portion and that shows two flounces joined one W the other, whioh give a distinctly novel ef tect. In the Iilubtra- tlon the material is one of the pretty new foularda in shades of Prown and woite, put every seasonanle material ts appro- priate, the modcl bey {ng equally well wult- ed to washable 'ma‘ terials and to those of ailk, wool and te various mixtures, ‘The quantity of ma- torial required for Pattern No. 6617 {s cut In sizes for a How to Obtain ‘Theee IMPORTANT—-Write yo rays mpecity alse wanted, Patterns Call or send by mall te THE BVWNING WORLD MAY MAN- TON VASHION BUREAU, Nv. 21 West Tweaty-third street, Now York. Gend ten cents tn coin or stamps for each pattern ordered, Flye-Gored Skirt—Pattern No. 5617 the medium size is 9 yards 31, 61-2 yards 36 or 6 zaroe 44 tncbes wide, 22, 44, 2, 28 and $0 inch walst measuje, ur name ad qddress plainty, and }- fm

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