The evening world. Newspaper, August 1, 1908, Page 6

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AGAZINE*” STORY | SECTION. When a .Woman =: -:- Buys a New Hat Ge Mrs. Dobley’s “Half-Season Affair.” : Mrs. Dodley allowed her eyes to reat admiringly on him i By Kate Masterson. “But you always choose such pretty an RS. DOBLEY a M started hats for me!’ she pleaded. ‘ou know f slightly and Mil about colors and lines, You have looked at the shways criticized them just es thgugh | clock as the door- thay vere etchings or water solora| | A ceil rang. Mr, |. “There have been Turners tn the cole Dobley, who was lection,” murmurred Dobley, remin eating, noticed her |Cently; ‘misty distances and atmo- | agitation. spheric effects. They have always been “"T thought I full of suggestions, Were I a poet, wrould eurprise you | I should te sonnets to birds and this morning,” eaid | Towers, but to women’s hats.” | Mrs. Dobley, ‘1; “What a delight dea," bubbled | ESO CELA Lia) ae) EO? 20 OAs Chali ved teide | tadIe and perched on the arm of h Soe a chatr, “Ha—ha—ha! What would you have to Joke about were tt not for my | bi | ein her flufty ning | Be, ‘You are,” said he, with an in. | Mra, Dobley's arm haf stolen round tonation of tenderness, “a treasure!” | her husband's neck and ahe absent: ‘Again the bell rang, and this time | mlndedly caressed his ear. “Perhaps you | Mrs. Dobley almost started from her | Are right, Jc 56 ghia, C708 ele chair, “Surely {t could not be"—she | ally el about such things!" Just then) Bhs toasted mon toward DOE, WHO | popr, gy tne ald came Mo mth | a t cretonns pattern. “May I ask,” said he, as he netpea | Ma? " Gaal Mrs. is Dley, | Dimselt to more grape frutt, “why this |. lin ® the ‘unusual perturbation?” \""you must see It i he : “T thought {t might he @ little hat | care to have tt unless you thought | that I ordered yesterday,” sald Mrs. pico! Dobdley, with a vivid smile. “Do have! 44 Dodtoy @ome of these kidneys, dear, while they panihed tt are hot!” the gle “Byen then, 4 Mr. Dobley, as he Pulled the brim a“triffe rakt followed her suggestion, “a new hat is her left eye eo tha the not such an unusual occurrence with Tested on her brown hatr, you. In fact, one might almost y |danced with unhol vercoat, she 1 looked tn tel, ‘Then she Pa that you had th T can dis: tinctly recall elght in the last ix weeks, There was that st | vning amoke-colored turban you got last Turs- day—a W ler effect in gray v and a squirrel. Has it s0 soon lost Its charm?" “My dear.” sald Mrs, Dobley, as she) ‘ vet am Is waitng.” sat ays it's C.0. D. Herve | Preparei the watercresses for her band, “that was for a funeral. I could puckered pathetle- scarce! proffered | things. | “The e faltered, hat.” said De e fact \s a It 8 morning, | tempts me tot opens prise to F - “How aweet ¢ lim Mrs. 1 1 suppo my poor litt seen it!" “You wrong me," said Dobl hats are to me at ti you thay are always b Mrs Dobley tinile Mid pas It ig 80 elmt Of course, with a@ and crushed roses with Irish crochet “1 can 8 Y wne of those glisten fs intonded w 7 hair, as t Perched On the Arm of His Chair, would have heen! r ' A @ fe s I ha Ww tg. yod-t Oa inwo the clear morning ale, “Bthel Lloyd Patterson | ed Chairman of the Democratic Na- | {table will, and behind the color of | ble of paradoxical blankness and ex- back. | of "SATURDAY, AUGUST Ji 1908. OODDDOHS Ethel wie Patterson, of ihe Evening World, Dasenbes The Gentle Blue-Eyed Manager of Bryan’s Campaign. -- She Says NOR MAN E. MACK Is Quiet, Strong, Artistic, Intelli- gent and Has a Wonderful Will, and He Says Nice Things About Bryan, the Fair Sex and Honest Poli- tics---Mrs. Mack Is “Eager” for Life, Fond of Dress and a Great Admirer of Mrs. Bryan. By sam) ND a gentle, blue-eyed man @ We) shall lead = them—these| r Democratic campalguers of rial} 1405 j That is what I travelled all the | é ‘e 2, 4 oa way to Buffalo to see—a very gentle, | very blue-eyed man, recently appoint-| Mr, Mack in His Office, Surrounded by His Works of Art, in Which He Tak. s | Great Interest. tional Committee, Of course, Norman E. Mack !s other things besides geutle and has/ toward Mr. Mack's residence, Mra Sack confided to she nad been vay with the dressmaker all morning. | Other features on his face besides his T do iat eyes. Beneath his gentieness, to be afrald sure, {s latent force and an indoin- ey see , re my younger 4 that. Som L just have to have It, Paris we missed three walted for then t me. It was a > hand-sewn green spangies, shading from dark at the waist to light at the hem." With the terminating of thts daseri |tion our ride terminated, too, and I imes his eyes are kindliness, k® pness and @ natural directness that is yet capa-| clusiveness without evasion. All of the stubbornness and most of the determination of which Mr. Mack {s amply capable have settled in his chin. jfound myself walking up a straight, 1 would not care to get at “logger-| paved path toward @ shady home-like heads’ with that chin. It is like a/ looking red house, whose exterior did ee fi | not entirely prepare me for the elabor- very decided and not to be ignored | ate luxury of its Jp In spite of period at the end of a sentence, e@ summer heat the y silk His nose {s shrewd, lght-nostrilled ings in both drawing room and di room had not been taken down, 80 the daylight was from these apartm ever, with fis wind , hard wood {and the bed-rooms upon the second floor to which they lead, were garbed in their summer draperies, Mrs, Frances Tag- gard, Mrs. Mack's mother, practica us ' runs the establishment, leaving Mrs. The Striking Resemblance wack tree to interest herself intimately Eetween Mr. Mack and '" her husband's career During lu: His Dans hier Norma eon {t became apparent that, if her hus nd is a eas with a certain finality that left Bzvans. Mrs me sure that further tnsistence would be fruttless; "besides," and here sir AL Word for Mrs. Bryan. Mack's cheortnoss was markedly on the “There 1s one thing that has “I ace Mrs. Mack coming annoyed me in connection with the hough tho outer offlee and 1 want newspaper articles written about Mrs you to meat her.” Bryan and the published Interviews T wanted to meet her, too, when I and uarrow-bridged; dowbtless tt} Baye him jin bis art selections, A “noso for news"—why not for art, | indeed? Hig mustache {s heavy and alto- gether superfluous, for it certainly conceals nothing that Is disagreeable. On contrary, quiet humor and hu ity lurk beneath {t. forehead rises, a straight front undentable Intelligeace, above | brows that are “shaggy” and yet fail) how of nature's Intention to Ve rike terror to the heart, | A Wholesome Life. ghiv, ono would Judge Me, Mack |&m@ honos Mack disposed tuward Mrs, Bryan is no less loyally Yin y nay SA aN " commenced Mr, Mack, In ie be b Fy orty. | answer to my question, ‘ihe ‘4 7 her,” Mrs, Mack remarked with andi torty i peee cue “Does honesty appeal to women, then "2 ioe Wholesome and “out-doory" | some little “Why, will you ex- mil oeat hough hints 1H Gat naan apes : ; plain to me, do they always write her and clear {ng a wholesome lif Mrs, Mack must have been before her uz trom the standpoint of the farm? wit itdoor alr in hia lung n ge eople usually call “a As a matter of tact, Mra Bryan te a ! ion OP great % Mte thing," although now highly cultured woman, and no one has ga? | she has developed a proper matrot had better opportunities for meeting tly controlled tal vigor, v and directly, slow and ra 4 that ner dignity. She has pecwle of note andl tingling wit! them a @iriicn vivactty Mrs, Bryan may be quiet, she does not ot keeping with her advertise hergelt, but she !s never at stature and small mould. @ lose for an tant in any situation prove Mr OU aus y 8 Ryan a bet 8 that becomes more|than you ere, He ly that | ed res ee eyes CHO ithe? Why | do you Hew and 2 re Mrs. Jnottceabla when he uses the telephone, |{t ta not necesss ntruthtul in stim the charm of her face, not Maok's indignation became Intense, "I to Women, wiusially large or full, but expreastve, have heard people wonder audibly what Da Mack's one outlet a | saying pl t } ant people r aud! lin the f alecinaw iairousicua|iiverd womenillvine shes her ettrective (aw ed Irish eyes, an origin ftw. Bryan would do in the Wi lux Paes lAalifentethimicvay, ‘eublinee denon ich thelr owner ta proud, | Howse! Do, indeed would do 3 nha vith STATE Mik Mek toato a CAlReneSa it y leyaatly what any other woman of oul ng with noy fit ts scarcely aleehood Ms. Mack Is Eager,’’ ro and refinement who had enjoyed artist's skill, but (t le strewn | tel her of them rather than of her de shi ‘i ht almoat aay “oluttered'—with | fects, Mr. Bryan le blessed, too, wi Ii T were asked to tell Mra, Mack's superior advantages would do tn hor ' ATKy le eae {pal characteristio I weutd way glace.” , on second thought, pte- | # trem 4 momory for faces and the she was “eager’—eager of life, After luncheon on the front piazza " br be termed lux- | mines Jr owners. This 's @ op ed, es are x taal i of itt that pleases people, every inch of her living right down | the conve ation drifted toward tho edu- ¥ 8 the word particntarly women, in a rather aubtile (0 the tipa of her ttle brown siede cation of the two children, Norma Hilly | The w aikpecduavad INRAHRST AIENSH EH EIEN ITOaualete Tat hows, Mack, ¢ourteen years old, and Harriet " ¢@ more mo- 1 se hal laleapalialal salle jie mete the impression somehow thar ‘Tagwan Mack, eleven years old. Norma 1 4 © hie wite-it! tion. Then, teo, he has en Infinite fie fe standing on tipto appy who iw surprisingly Wke her father, ! her ty the lady ae a sure! fund of admirable stories, that he tally '% and so eagerly Inaatiable for sttil features are any indloation, while Emtly ‘ 4 upot HaSravand tae Oniy MaSEIVEN CATE in, and | More happiness (is more vivacious and volutiie, like her 1 ler neck witvess rian eit sbanerenitd ti eke She ‘e unaffectedly proud of her hus | mother. : Ir. Mack's hankering for|o¢ every woman to # Jubilant over big auccess thus tur, | (ar giey vious etones, | nitration fur @ clever raco and ware in Hes heart lies * “it Not So Far Wrong, “Tt te diy detraction of your nex; on before he terminates his ae re i “His Fr endship for Bryan, UMD OC A RAY S teavioy Ms audy, wala to world Knows of the clogs per-| that most women are affected by a| Peepite the fact that the older of her ete Rae BeGsk IPA peeigel sonal frie. existing for years be-|man's a noe, Here In my)!" giters i tourtesn vearw of ake poy g dlend of ls, talking (0 Jennings Bryan ard) gpinton, Mr. Bryan is eafe, for his pres was net hard for me to guess that Gane ‘ fter asking Mr, ence ia undeniably commanding, walle |Mre Mack wes stil @ bit of a ap ERE ada na wayine (espoue Dione Was, In his opinion, | the magneriem of hie personality je ac- | Gi! herself with @ yreat many Whims agyed iro divine es he came up to the Bryan euch an appea’ knowledged even by his enemies that ave quickly gratified hy an indul- youngster. i A @ in the eyes of the gent “You. will b t fact ‘ ii 1 to know whether | he gentler sex, [ Y " ave to rom # aband Dootop Blank was the preacher of this, ton of | i y back in my chair | any discussion of Gov. Hugtes’s @ \ we had left the office and Mtr. | Couroh.’ sy that I felt con-| ance of renomination,” deprecated Mack to the countless demands of hij "And what did vou sell bimty tin, | Mack, obviousl ove avin to cam et nd vere ) oO responde he tad we ‘ Mack, obviously gnnoyed at Ha\ing to campaign duties and w rolitag | arent Ar pou weave the oresent Sas ijap Ww unaffected deny @ woman anything, but hone the ampotiiy out ia Ue fasnily automobile | gymbrance” Whena Man =:- Buys a New Hat: Mr. Dubley Changes His Lid. : j shoes and that necktle my wife hought ‘me at a gato at Spuds and whieh I By Martin Green. have er had the nerve to wear.’ $3 Mr, Duoley A doposited his Entering the store, Mr. Dubley was Aimost Pan. approsched by a clerk who aeeded @ halreut and a shave, ! his In- ane svook tn “What can {do for you, alr?” asked ; % the clerk the office some- thing about the Mr. Dubley could not help but reflect upon the Intelligence of clerks, The clerk in a hat ste nothing ts sold but hats. always asks a prospective customer what he wanta to buy. as though a man would go into a hat store to buy a ton of coal or a highball, The took tt down and goo store clerk invariably approaches held ft up And g visitor with an ingratiating, ‘Well, turned !t around. gir2” aithougn he is a# certain ae ‘Beltove me," sald Mr, Dubley to him- shoe clerk can be about anything tha self, “I need a new hat. Strange how @ the visitor will answer that he wants to solor of the aky- plece attracted his attention, He gazed at the hat abstractedly, then ‘man can wear a hat and {t withers and look at a pair of shoes. fades, as it were, on his head, and he answered MY, never knows it, “T want to buy a hat,’ Dubley. 1 the clerk, leading yunter Picking ap & inuied, hanging up the hat again, ‘that dicer doesn't stand Mr Dublev to a me very much. This !s the second stay cloth hat w a dished-in effet summer l'va w {t, and {t only cost on top and the brim crimped like the t. Halt of $6.60 te $2.25, ede of a covered vie, the clork passed T've had it eaned (it to Mr. Dublev, who obediently placed tetsted three times, laun- | 't upon his head 4 bleached ones, The hat was apparently too small. Jt tlons cost ma from sat on the top of Mr. Dubley’e head tn Now {t looks ke a mos comical way. Mr Dvabley eug- gested to the clerk that the hat waa too The clerk looked at him fm mes an Fach of these ope uarter to 75 cents. a cate. sneak out th! vr small # afternoon and buy me one of those nifty when-the-sum- eredulously niereds-lying donnets-something strik- siza do you wear?” tnquired g, but not spectacular, for about two the clerk in a bored tone of voles. bones that will last me it is time T wear a seven,” answered Mr. Dut t w myself for @ fall derby, They who |g proud of the fact that mo n ng them on oye now.’ ner member of hie fami 4 e afternoon Mr? Dubley er than 6 5-8 riled a hat hey was qui » clerk took down reventeen bowed y bat In every box “eo je found a seven, He handed to Mr, Publey and Mr. Dubley on hfs head. was the gray style with the dished-tn crowa crimped brim, ashamed of t eran shelter for his thinning hatr that had served him so faithfully t ain and sunshine the hat confessed, he looked at eves ut this hat,! 45 war Au Mare, “How Do You Like the Hat?" Asked Mr. Dubley, nfldea Mr. Dubley toh thoughts “It givea me a k rakish 190k and it feels comf wish I conld get something else on this san own “J don't think thls hat looks good of a | on me,” ventured Mr. Dubley, | | | ‘Tooks a little strange,” gi{tly ex- plained the clerk, “because you've been ide-brimmed Panama. on ‘8 the very latest are selling them to our customers. Tt becomes you, being especially fitted to your e of face. You make a mistake if uu don't purchase that hat." Mr. Dubley turned down the eweat- band and looked all around the Inside, He inspected the roof and the walls and the basement and the foundations. He didn't want the hat. He wanted lemon-colored hat he had seen tn cna! long Mr Dubley was standing {n front of a show window looking at what ed to be about 2,700 st They wera {n all shapes and sizes and| t prices ranging from 87 cents to $1.49. ealy embellished with 4 to close out a in stock regardless ef cost e,"" muttered Mr, Dubler, “I don't want a straw hat | the window, hast buy t 1 | What's the wl buyltg a etraw hat! iow much ta this?” he asked, ‘Three fifty,” replied the clerk. “Wut you wear it and shall I wrap up the old one?" I'll wear it.” replied Mr. and don't wrap K it." | Mv, Dubley tramped out of the store tn |no pleasant mood. He had exchanged “4.00 for a hat he did not want, He ee- ‘called that he always bought @ hat he didn't want. He wondered why, That night when he got home ble wife looked at him curiously, He wore the hat Into the house @o she could get « good look at It. “How do you like the hat?” aeked My, Dudley. “Is that a hat?” rejoined Mes, Dob- ley. “Dear me, I thought it wee a bandage, I suppose you patd a lot of money for ft, too, and here it ts the middie of summer and that lovely Pan- ama of yours just e4 good as it was the day you bought {t, How do you dmag~ {ne I am going to keep things here against such extravagance as you paying elght or ten dollars ¢or @ me may be twelve dollars for at now" —— Looke a Little Strange. Mr, Dubley nad pleasant freee at night after reading the e' | He dreanted he wae out fn at lok now when you can only wear i about (A i te ee arlog Fasoent) oll three or four weeks?’ and vitriol over ® gray cloth hat and Moving along to the next Rat estore setting fire to it. Mr, Dubley was confronted by another tim window full of straw hats, 8till another show window of a hat store presented 5 nothing but marked-down straws. Mr Love's Phases, Dubley was becoming annoyed. By Ada Tucker Stiles, "Confound such merchandising!” he i) H, eweet ly love when love Dudley, up the old one. grumbled. ‘Just because these fellows new, want to get rid of thelr straw hats they And sweeter love when lowe don't show any other kind. And if I ts true. wont into any of these stores and 7 on ¢air is love whan love te kind asked for any other kind of @ HAY T Oy.’ geen ie love when Ic they'd put one of those straws over bg ewhen love 18 plied on me because tt was cheap.’ After much weary wandering Mr Dubley epled a sign reading ‘Advance Fall Styles.” He hastened to it and viewed a tastefully arranged collec- rlegated cloth soft hate and 0%. \ derbies, Sald Mr. Dubdley, And suve is | That lemon-oolored one there In the PUR, rare is | tong. corner would be afl to the bay rum for § And happy love that hath a song me. It would harmonize with my tan Oh, grand ts love when love te bold, And greater love when love {s told. Oh, love i when love ts gad, And love i yet when love ts mad core Is love when love Is 9014, ve ts 0M,

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