The evening world. Newspaper, May 16, 1908, Page 7

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AGAZINE + STORY SECTION. _ CONS 19 9OCS LOOKING OUT OF CAR WINDOWS. Dees She Lounge Slouchily? Does She B.ock Up Doozways? Does She Spread Her Paper? Does She Slink in Her Seat? Does She Step on Men’s T-es? Does She Peer Qver S2oulders? is She Awkward and Ill-pred? Or as Bad as Pictured ? By Margaret Hubbard Ayer, TTR VERY distinguished gner ng this city has ip criticised the New York woman, finding fault— often justly—-with her manners and actions, es- ially in pubdlie places One of the latest, M. Alexandre Ular, foreign editor { the Petit Journal of Paris, aid she was awkward and d-and could not begin io compare in social er foreign cousins for the New York woman. she is the against herself that her tra find ew ne of transportation, arelessness of altitude and action draws attention to her tn every She mor: femblage of wh ni her sins are the unforgivable ones—for a woman—ot forgetting the dignity and graces of her sex, onsible for this? Has contact with the business world demoralized the manners of the American girl? Is she trying to have as bad manners as the men? Is getting to view the public conveyances as general lounging roo tas they do? As the Satirists See It. 88 unfavorable showing for herself in every ag. h she is a part. the Amer The best way to matter ‘sto ) AN char) Gi The. Reduction Ef- een (nee eee in|) aeceediby, Margaret pr ncurateaat you vil | Hubbard Ayer’s ERP eh one, PORN | Teatment of a 225. *| Pound Working thoughtlessness, selfisiness, us In the women - | Woman. e of fect on the other Called by that obs are quite as oby Look at t Fide of the ENTY pounds have melted tions ; with ym Poke Marth : Sor on Kk since she began treatment one month ago. She wetghea at that time ids. To-day she weighs 205 Yhe knees flun, ® support for a book paper @ woman happens to be reading. Could any one be graceful wi ‘were in positions Hke those tllustrated? | Her watst Yet one of the first demands fc manners in public is that a man ora! Her hip measure has decreased five woman #t f awkward and e4, bust measure two inches. unconventional positions when trave Ung in public con. eyances. © chins. over which ft Selfishness to Blame. was Impossible to wear a collar, {s now ~ A form of selfishness that ts fre-|encased in a boned collar, for the nis when two women insist | greater part of the double chin has dls- it of a window of a closed | appes car, thereby taking up more than their! qj) of Mre. Martin's skirts are too allotted amount of space and depriving jong, necause of her loss in walst meas some one ¢ seat urement, All of her clo! Bho hi ) imitated the man who $8! jose and she does not in a violent hurry to get off the car, appearance of helpless bulk which sh. ot | Pow good | Ine aes on Aprit neck, which was ex- nd really nothing but and so never & further than the aq) 0. She Is still a ve door when he enters, In order to be the m3 woman, but she intend first te get out. fact that she to keep up the treatment which has Blocks the doorway it most peen described in The Evening World AiMcult to enter or 1 p car, 18 A until she reduces another ten pounds at question of no importance in compari- teast. son to her own very mistaken ideas of Mrs. Martin has worked every day haste. |since she began her treatment and she Adolphus Vane Tempest, the English| has ngt starved herself, She has lived writer, says very rightly that {t te/on a simple and nourishing diet from berry that {s killing our manners, and,! which all fat-bullding food was-elim- tlantic ac. | ' ichness seems to be tn evidence’ on every | | | { “ Circulation Books Open to All.’’ NEW YORK, DW LTI9 sie 9@ [e010 w/e1e) a) 010) 4 0/4 wfelelayeleieie aa \eieleleieiie o eee ele (eielelais leieieleieie eeteieielein oe eleiela/erereis) ay Foreigners Accuse the New York Girl of fuel Miss Ayer Iiolds the Mirror ee to Her ; Ze yn SATURDAY, MAY ASsTuey, 2%eto¢r(er Man LaA Predicament tres on the fact that a The etiquette books, while of course) lay great yord or look at stress upon the fact that] woman should an should offer his seat to al give evide n no other seat 1s avallatile, | to retin: | “}IRS- Magy MARTIN. ieee She has abstained trom stimn-| faithfully do lants, has not saten and has gone without Which she was inclined to indulge for- merly, those exercises both night the waist measure en and hips reduce She says sho feels beiter than for? years and when she does sleep it ts d not the fitful -doz- ing while came @ habit with her. Peaicelleant w ny nmended asa nder the chit fat Mrs, Martin's w ses have been done y her to ve on her bo mopped over wit nd at night she was t or wor s one made of 2 grams aluminium, 2% grams of aunonds and 1) for any ki s hav perform y and giving her weary very stout woman's too tired, for nile of ad much | One of the in stoppered bottl isu Wale i too smail io bear her weight. a datly hot bath to the pores o Ma t correspondents have) tho sin free and open : | written me > sple@lid results ob If any of the responden t lertake the Martin went eat tained by { nave b ful with Mrs tin, and any woman can reduce ier waist) measure from ul to four | tnches if she will systematically and in a pers id haye no ning her record serfbe the treatmer Character in Women’s Hais. a_JHEN it comes to devermining the s.ze of a hai, Ms widt ere 1s n consideration which ix ge ¥ ignored the figy that ir ve entire lengt oulders, You need a quite different t without your bulk. > make your igh, and the brim A proportion. meagre. This is @ woman wi hat should be fair tess broad, the crown of tolerably broad a rbalanee the under this same hat would look decide ly of what | mean, but if you bear it 1h. mind it will keep wearing on your head an object which while be- coming (o your red wit sour general size dwindles to absuraly small dimensions, oF conti utsmaggee? eGualiy common errors.—Harper’s Bazar, Se ee Seer |“ Circulation Books Open to All” 16, TAGAZINE*” STORY SECTION 1908. [S000 0000000} im - Public. s She Is im the Cars. I9SDOGOGS 6 Feet of the feminine ornament or & the street cars. y to open a big again conven- F ually it sprawls le or over the knees of the ng next them, and when the wet umbrella o A handson dre ns it wide endangers the seated man, while kind who looks and is sufficiently pros ther pegple's and hats, n his toes porous to take a cabohud pald a call When She Reads. ck rd and r dt strap over ho 1 {t Is a feeling of comrade- woman a ikes the business g.rl peer feel a ige man’s shoulder to look © WiSlat what he ts reading and tn a way keep tabs on hilin, But » strained ex- pression on the girl's face who ts trying the back sheet of a newspaper sands of the man across the of the sights pecullar to York pub conveyances, these different women are types our public conveyances, n are beautiful, none of them are charming. They are neither \gractous nor graceful. Manners they and deportment ls an empty were judged only by the women ne'll irs ‘our’ foreign erities would can hang to «polite | be ing that we are the Doses, but a curt thanks inered mace in the world. rat am, I right or am IT wrong, men? ntly mumbles » thanks at all, isn't tt 30, girls? lif Faris Sheath Gowns Make Folks Gasp, | How About This Rameses Dress Lonaon Likes9 © ‘izing the courtesy ) w are r word What would the writers of the eti- thanks In ack |ouerte books say if they should = of a seat, h to tak d_experien following low their them Irs, one me posi-/ 18 an excee veate his seat as avoiding her. r girl told me that the ont f er got ear was by | clothes, part hat, whenever not anticipate gett! ible. |Lack ot Courtesy. Women's lack of co: seat in a crow qu faint man, “this car 4s ¢ uing the conv s-question ace. esses | how to sile i nad taken f thanks 1 troubled | this reas | tq have nc word If way and {t Is & as long as s A woman frequ ® All Ht in i ‘i Hi A DRESS MODELLED ON THE WAR COSTUME OF Breathe an exiifbition of the Dress De- oduced from London Sketeh, It sheaths’ LINGING dresses of the Dtrectoire ( were written of am sheath dresscs—appear to have some advocates eal every curve and sinuosity of the nine form will be ad signers’ Society in London the most original thing shown was the costume } Is modelled on the war costume of Ramesas II., the Pharaoh who was drowned in the Red Sea. If the Parts | had anything on this costume they must have been pretty unblushing. The Rameses garment looks like a pelgmelr ‘ with @ top dressing of bolero, My bi

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