The evening world. Newspaper, March 5, 1909, Page 17

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Mi esai tenes Beit ta SM Retr oon Ce eee nee Ieee | soclety g cream | By Helen Reviend) off the husband market and the work $4 T SUPPOSE you think UM deny ity) ue girl has taken ail t there aT remarked the Widow, glancing | (8 nothing left for the middle-class girl up challengingly from beneath |—the poor ttle thing who is stranded her toque of on a social Island between luxury and spring violets, as drudgery, There are only two paths she leaned across & man’s heart now the little table at father's pocketbook a: hrough the of- Martin’ fice door.” “Dony—what 7 | “Or through the stage door," adr inquired the the Bachelor, complacentiy, “Put,” he Bachelor, lifting ded, “money is a x0 action, It i covers a multitude of 1 with a silent toast #48 an allurement all its ow in his eyes, “My |chilfon vell; but where does the work- perfectly evident, | ns girl come in?” 6 Ass of sherry open-faced ador—| “Come In adm "Your perfectly open-fac at there are 4," corrected the fork spitefully Into 1 an) dmitted the Bachelor, tn Wt enough cate statement tl ‘there feminina things who ¢ it-even though they might THI ‘Wo don't THINK it," declared the Widow, “wa KNOW It! Woe keep It ay nt our stays and o irtwatsts and our jabots fust as we keep the holo tn the tablecloth | hidden a dolly and spot on nounder a ture—but i owledge 1s there, neverthe- less. The day has passed when getting @ husband waa only a matter of luck @nd attractiveness, It's now a matter there first—of who can Love and Propinquity { the Bachelor downtown, office t9 right on the of game of!wion, by ‘Any chance, a pen to get the fever or ti ene of \tie courage to marry, Tha ste the huge rapher and the bookkeeper and t the Widow, “or husband, who'll get ishand, band?’ Just The ratio of mar- chorus girl are never out of touch with riages tn this country has decreased 2) /the matrimonial market. But, by the, ,Per cent. In thu last year—ond yet onl. ‘time they have skimmed {t and absorbed} @ week aco I read that our hundred {it, there Is no left but—the curds!" German girls had come over here in| ‘The @earch of soul-mates. If a da] "The am and feten , keeps tr ¥ and the supply dimin |the Widow — scornfully, fahing. ca will soon be exactly )sticks that float In to one lc tertained and made comfortable, the | jaeaweed on the tlde of fife, the UN- broke In ALL of} | "Don't blame ME!" | Bachelor, “Yd marry lyou If I could And yet,"" Jcastically, * retorted the Widow sar- en't done your share SE of us—yet." | pleaded the Bachelor, | | Give me tr iymeolnay tot the right to choo: And Ti bitterly, "tl are sitny wit & Venus and the the temper of ot wry one, but T've got one ned the Wid the rest, a perfect being sand the figure of ace of a hourt and and the mind a huge a dove kespeare and 0." broke In the Bachelor, with a h of desperation, “I'm simply w eS ee A retrouss a Freneh dol! we 1 ain t litte} “ME, Mr. Travers!’ exclaimed the 4 H gS have been} Widow, “I've had one usband ol captured by rich|ready! Do you think I'm | a BULL ,the market? Resi I'm a t t the tro wailed | WIDOW=and widows ¢ ; y women who DO} the cream and the |restour by the tlme the | vic | No Crowning Glory for John. ; gt HE PRE T have thing I pity a Chinaman for," 1 that erowning glory of old age, a head of nin « good many Celestials In my time and I have yet to first r queue. Men who, according to every other Hele sit are | past the | stage, will sport pigtails as black and giosey es ar {n Chinatown, heather gray hairs have been denied the Chinese by nature or whether they have been fought off by means of some secret formula, I cannot find out If the Chi we their immunity from gray hair to artifice they would do them- Belves and the public a good turn by putting thelr tonle on the market, for there aided Caucasian who would pay a good round sum to keep from telltale marks of age as the Chinaman’s queue.” fs many af Dis locks as fr ear HOO Toot Odo the Earl of “but keep aS possi- repli laweastle with some choler, } "Do as you Ike," The them out of my way as much Man From Home iis. atictcstonue's? er ‘One might stand a quanilty of badg- ering, Haweas' for three hundred thousand pounds,” at which the genial Earl would squirm nervously, A Story Based on the Successful y of the Same Title, _ By _ At any rate, the Simpson children be- fi A an to bo aeen In the second stratum of Booth Tarkington [London sootety, aut met ond bers of the shopworn nob! and |to relate, nover one of the truly j spectable, To those who know th i Harry L. Wilson. London there are several layers of no- Copyright, 1909, by American Press Asso- | bility, and the layer the ordinary {ndi- clation. | vidual meets, who has no soolal mrestige = \to begin with, {s composed of that pe- “DING CHAPTERS. | ouliar clase that lends {ts name to doubtful directorates, to queer prospec- tuses, to struggling milliners with an | » | eye on the main chance and who gladly rrento, Italy. | extend unltmited credit to thelr patrons ason fe ts'in return for modest and well-put ad- Hye oe | vertisement. | nim | Strangely enough, the Haweastle- “ites against | Creech combination did not diag the out, YOU] willing Simpsons tnto the glittering presence of the real set. On the contrary, with a somewhat dog-In-the-manger polity, they awak- |ened both the earl and his good sister | {n-law to the fact that they wished no sharers In those American dollars that John Simpson had sweated his brow for, and as a consequence they proposed a little trip—a quiet, ante-season trip— to Sorrento, where not a guest would disturd them and where matters might de given a chance to right themselve: And there, strangely enough, Simpsons met the Comtesse de Cham. | pigny, and were quite delighted to find the @ffted and drilliant hae td SYNOPSIS OF PR Pike, a sur aye dumbly 8 from Froin nis ‘ilrpaee" of ron his oie poey 19 friend, buch 7 douan't un CHAPTER II, (Continued) The Exiles, ed era Lity dear Haw she pronounced it . ors pronounce “fo'o't Was wont to say, “really, of course, they are quite Impossible, but the girl is an adaptable little thing, and I may be able to make something of her Jn time, while the boy—wh! I fear I shall have to leave dim to you and @. Au- byn” ; | marrying kind Mke—!fke""— Ve the | dshows the | but"—— | pide ast thi AS acm The eee evi Cre calinens Loi lool vewti‘als 5 | The Jollys’ Bull Pup x) Re ? _ by H. _Coultaas /BRIDGET (THERE 15 THE ) | n WHY MR RUSHIEY WHAT 18 THE wechd ila bk i LL i i nS els 19 C9; % | \ MOOD OD0000000000000000 0000000000000 Meditations ef of a Married Man by Clarence L. Cullen. POGeBOors, OBABL Y She's peevish about tt when you keep emon idm) her up by coming In late, But ahe'li made allow the gas to flare unt# all houre takes, But\of the night while she’s finishing the of record) final M8 pages of the novel she's tntere he married / ested In, HEAR |T OF THEM GING Th N OUR LAS NED i) CLARENCE L CULLEN. (ht ——_ = woman ur) Maeterituck revised: “On the high ae, won “temperament.” | road to Destiny some women meet noe / y j W ' n yut-and-out) body but thelr—dressmaker.” J sulk ste 1 s Says) What Few Women Know: Thad > Slt aGaietts a Ce a ye saan the adage, “There's no foot like an A wonmn Wears a dental smile that she| ld fool,” tas meant to apply to both ha t m the dent seres, ‘a ten Yes, Plilomena, man IS such a parae fi “ ololy for the purpose) doxt t that, while he may be of clain perlodieal drunk. pi quite fond of tt himself, he Just nature rr lex \ pt it because, through ally hates to see a pretty woman eating phy of t uefort eheese. ) betieve the: prosperous, tron-fawed, dlsile | bosses lusioued man of middle age would sure aves YOu What a Women Would Like render a great part of his hard won WHEN KE | jto Knov t of the chorus wealth to again possess the Ineffably COMES girls alchemy in tansmuting an $18! dreamy ideas he held of women “in the wore / salury into diamonds a automobiles. , brave days when he was twemty-one.” We know a hopelessly sad dog who gets away with it superbly at homa wot be hecauge whenever he meets hig wile downtown he buys her a huge bunch of violets, | Yes, Ermyntrude, we have known who possessed an tndtvidual than distillations of made by falries on asphoded} Hut they were harder than n the cardiac regton, Familiar Quotation (when starting ¢or vg out); “Now don't Kiss me HOS HAL | hale to be caught in whoppers is be- A THOUSHT | The main reason why some women | | they'y they cause ¢ afraid believed any w ed man of forty who still 0. | | $ medicine ov] fr somewh) aaa sweeter i tow meadows, nee, nw mon of tender re his wife that jitle mother doing in the old K wa an even the blossoms from the flower- 7 acne onnainan her| {ARD or my Ips'll all RUB OFF! hair, Later, during a apat,| Another one (after Based te FV peaeTbT EAM LAAs CAGE rektth EER) The black 1s not running from my eyelashes, Js It, hun?" o Hints for t ees ‘Biane Mange. Jof these two portions add gr OUR tablespoontuls ¢ J ne way of swe cornsta with a Mayonnaise Dressing. ts Inte three bowle, OLKS of three eggs, well beater ways known, he'd come from a} } Wives don't know it, but all the Beer notice how a woman facing same the husband who is able to pre+ | sudden reduced circumstances takes | tend that he actually enjoys hooking a he Housekeeper. + wt in being ostenta- up a twaist in the back twill bear o | heap of watehing. a gloatful delight Vegetable Salad. | E-HALE pa € tiously poor? Tapioca Salad. Cec aan My “Cycle of Readings,” By Count, Tolstoy. —— Translated by Herman Bernstein. ——= (Copyrighied by the Press Publishing Company, the New York World, 1005.) and cut in halves; thre two oranges, one cup of pineapple, all ir one eun of a cocoanut, (Copyrighted by Herman Bernstein.) placin 1 ream. one bowl, ance @ tard, one teaspoon salt a ; The italicized paragraphs are Count Tolstoy's other two In the aad ORL esta PLL Ty, (IND I * Flour Dumplings. yrivinal comments on the subject ; tity add red frutt color! tablespoona su eight faa IX together one pint Novy two | Gx ene ee cupiil of cleaned currants that vinegareand ti 2 raeNTT te $ baking powder, one e | na r and | wi abl Bese aueinidica chil on cup of milk to make reft bat only here in this world, and, there: favoring ther Add one-t ude of red and green Contents miist be bolling, Cover elorely fore, tf there is a purpose in our life it is also st ‘i hefore ‘using This wil served with cold sliced veal) and boll ten minutes without Liting ; here in this world e th lemon flavoring; to one ly! covered and put in Pea varcaberve here in this world. 5. HERE 18 no peace for him who lives among people for worldly aims, nor for him who lives alone for spiritual ains. There is peace onty for htm who for the purpose of serving God, OUNCE TOTO OCC CO ith because it {s hard for you to ve, The entire burden Jers of every moval being compels him to fulfll bis lives among people A Chicago University graduate, now a civil engineer, has won a hat. The hat looks like the old family umbretla, remodelled. an unlrella and a wash-basin confection in his picture. Why not adapt other household articles to this decorative mission. The ¢ f freeing one's self from this burden !s In the filmant of one's t You will be relleved only ater you have done the ‘ou. Binerson, eee consider himself called upon to fulfil a mission he cannot be Chinese Wisden. ROO COTS HERE has never been, nor is there now, a situation that hae not tte obiige~ | fons and its Ideal, Yes, here {n this miserable, poor, despised reality in which you find yourself at present, heve and only here (s your deal, Bring Hit to its realization, and doing it, belleve in ft, live and be free, The ideal Js within you, the obstacle to its realization {s also within you, Your position fs the material out of which you should work toward the reallzation of the ideal {t matters not what the material is nor what form you may give It. COLLEGE DEGREE } | You are suffering, tled by reality, and you are plaintively imploring the go@s ‘for a kingdom in which you could direet and create. Know the truth that you are | already 1h possession of that which you desire. Here or nowhere.—Cartyle, | eee H URE in this world is the place of our service, and, therefore, all our ! 1 efforts to accomplish our work should be directed here. Association for his design of a woman's | purposet gold medal from the National Milliners’ Artist Johnstone | HE prince: T slip that can de worn be SOO0g ww: rom) oS a SS | —j : pad) — a —e i=) » OQ o- So a) > & a a, | ot ~ = = i~—< wma So 1. wn a= = © dX foe od O < far) ra) f=) as > S a © fom) =, ~ as) oe SS fas) — =. ar Fae} = A: Be OQ = ta Vs. The second, know," he said, savagely. "It » arrival the gay Com-| easy enough to make It appea. *, and with a) for minx that ghe hat was oconlahing took | ba ler the widowly wing n for her own, And that | same morning the noble Earl took lls) equally 1 son Into the shrubbery and spoke to him, hy got to do it, St, "The family ma seurriloy back a enough.” The Honorable Almerte 1 “Oh, all right, old chap, 1 litt her to the Infernal heaven or whatever you cal! {t expect me to moon over } penny, and ma Aubyn,” he is at stake, the little fool! name {3 Sir What it her Fart off for hls mronin keep us going for another year or two, and {f Helene can capture the young | ass, Horace, I'll force her to divide with | me.” “But {t's such a beastly bore, Goy- ernor, " drawled Almeric St. Aubyn, and he flicked {dly at the rhododendron Ahotel of tho Regina Mar bushes with his stick, * stepped out upon the terr: | began to lay a clot He was a pale, washed-out youth, with | small round tables th an inimite ‘awl and a shimmering | the white marble balt of Intellect that might, if it had been given an opportunity, have resolved it- other side of the wall the mandolins and guitars of t self {nto a good Working imitation of a n. To ti nds he was “that ermen, and Mariano glanced up less asa,’ and to his enemies and iano, the upon one t stood « ade as the song arovo upon the morn lienzio!”” he erled, debtors—of the latter not a few—"that| the musie died down beastly bounder, St. Aubyn." | Mariano went at once to ti ‘You see, Governor,” the Honorable} upon which he had spread th Almeric went on, ‘it Isn't as if T cared | and placed silverware and for the lttle gal. I'm a queer beggar, you know, and It's fearfully rough on a| When Mlctiele, the cor chap to pretend Interest in such a little | peared at the top of a yulgarian, Of course, I know we're aw- ard up, and all that sort of thing, | the hotel, f: “Here |s ¥ His noble father selzed him roughly | sir," he said, softly, with a ba by the arn | lance over his shoulder, “You don’t have to live with her, you straightened up inatanuy with ight of so unpeasant ke to the States, and she can't Weill have that tlhe th H And that compact being settled, the ‘ace and | fan vould be heard and for a me china upon it, and he was thus engaged pmnissionatre, ap- teps that led Into the eastern wing of !ng on the terrace. in u Riblere to see you, | and Mart neath thin trans: parent gowns !s an exceedingly usefal garment for any girl to possess, Lt can be made from silk or from the 1 expensive mere cerized materiale old and OOOO DOOD DOO OOO maOOOO0! biere was an will bet of for Ri Rubiere patd little attention to b valued ac e in the art of tut opened a ok and removed a and over !t can bs be glad to go! soft Italian legal stealir un pen is porket. Mariano worn the almple Iit- ‘A tall, alert you vehman, clad shrugged his shoulders and went on tle frock of muslin and setting the table, then stopped and or the more elabo- ae inckeatah rate dancing dre ane leaEasnit tie honattig haga of net; Indeed, any- aples, thing that requires seventh | rican peoples & fitted foundation. D proached. volre to mins It can be made quite plain, as in this case, or {t can be cut ont to form nou The genial 3 . ed a warning finger. | nt said It 18 to be incognito, | gz walk “Haye [1 make her forget ft. We alone oti and Almeric to ke — |and yet yo tn the either a V-shaped iy good t and she MS engagement for a morning ri he muste burst forth again, and he first bre: the Would you w e shall or a round or square fifty thou. That with whirled about angrily In the direction withdraw his patronage?” He looked low neck with hin sleeves that are long or short or in three quarter length, and n grove, cried, with the man do not so off staringly at waving | "Soe that and turned again to Ho opened watch that he drew from » witha nce at them, nsulted It t akirt can be back within the 3 machine from Nas made with @ olrcus maitr Riblera turned a ing glance ! nll is to be lar flounce. To all ered In The quantity of matertal required for sherita, of the) “Let us speak F the aixteen - year lose to) derstand size ts 181-4 yards On th Mariano again bowed and spread o M1 or 2, 78-4 yards 1 or 61-2 yards 4 wide when nag figure or nap; It yards 2% or 24, 734 yards 23 or 612 yards Inches wide when material has neither asser tish- fet Misses’ Princesse Slip—Pattern No. 6270, Pattern No, 6270 {s cut tn e de! efor girls of t¢ and 16 years of age. linia Sanaa tre w up his hands Napotl Ape if How Call or send by mall to THE EVENING WORLD MAY MAN- despair and hia round eyes rolled toh Interested. To-day (ry TON FASHION BURDAU, No, 183 Bast Twenty-third street, Now heavenward. ranger for companton { Obtain $ York. Send 10 cents in coln or stamps for each pattern ordered, ckward) “Again incognito! Every yhar he come T remonstrate, Wh These IMPORTANT—Write your name and address platnty, and al- top thees hotel two, three or four| oneal’ thé houR® Patterns, ¢ Wass specify size wanted. @ emile day, Dut always Jncognitol” (To Be Continued.) ent , ‘

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