The evening world. Newspaper, June 9, 1913, Page 18

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MME TRIST | Talk Without Gest Taste Rather Than Eat, He Prescribes; Walk About the Room With a@ Greek Vase Balanced Upon Your Head, Wear Sandals and Be Care- ful How You Shake Hands. By Nixola Greeley-Smith. Firat—When in company do not appear to de too much inter eated in the conversation of others, Speak Uttle and without gee- tures, Be an enigma, Becond—When at the table, taste rather than cat, and employ studied movements to show off the Ddeauty of the hand and arm. Third—When entertaining in your own home or in a doz at the Opera, have near you several long- stemmed roses and appear to in hale their fragrance from time to time. Fourth—Let your words be few. Never speak without adying some- thing preotee. The beauty of many women is destroyed when they open their mouths. Fifth—To obtain suppleness of the back and neck, which gives rhythm to the walk, make several turns about the room with a Greek vase balanced upon the head. Sizth—Wear sandale, High hecls are abominable and destroy the BL PAKO balance of the figure. Beventh—The voice should be low and modulated. Eighth—It ts not permitted to remove one's cloak without a gea- ture worthy of Cleopatra, nor to shake hands with an acquaintance effountered in the atreet with a short and ugly motion. When you have mastered these rules you will be @ bachelor of grace, &s grace han been revealed to M. Nada, a French artist and illustrator, Sika. and beauty and {famous in hic own country for his @ ti post eer act fd turn has passed the revelation where candidates for and daca rows of the Bhubert their along to his admirers. It may be that ‘and dancers to be on| American women may cull gome wisdom from M. Nada’s guide to grace, ere must have been | which, as he uses the word, Woes not mean merely physical rhythm, but Girts of ai! harmony of the mind and spirit as well. » Thee re | Still, I can't say shat T care very much; Matters Ike the pink chiffon that ob- ‘Possibly have |fF the sumwestion that one should ta rep a peek-a-boo and drapes a bone, where nature | Without gentures, but should arranke fo; 4nd life has so many bones, So let aupplied the mikeup. jest with elaborate motions which wil] %0ur words be few and soft as marsh- Greased in thelr dest. | show off the hand and arms. It te pre-| mallow® Learn to prattle prettily tatest fashion, very | sumably. to and for men that these] Nang.” PE OtE aR: Sma ee ee home creat “4 Peauties are to be displayed, and 4!n@r/ VOICE OF AMERIGAN GIRL were in ev- is a bad time for attracting men, RAPIDLY IMPROVING, Pee cteut| thelr attention ie then fairly well Umit, There | cussed on thelr own practical but harldy slashed, and|Gelsartean gentures: The after-dinner creation. Some | period supplies a much better occasion. fall ia tempera-| ‘The recommendation to taste rather than eat has no novelty for the thou- sands of women who are on a diet for) *Pines, will wear them forever and ever, flesh reduction. They taste, rather than| The svaine iheun Jey and well eat new, And so long asthe fad for : Peas the astring-bean fiqure flourishes . they win continue to do so. must ARE OF THE RULE AS _—_. TO BEING “ENIGMA.” The recipe for becoming “an énigina’ 4e also er disquieting, If a young woman should follow too literally the , | Fecommendation not to appear interested ‘when in company” it might be « long time before she found herself in com- pany egain. Nothing seems ataler or more obvious than « riddie one has guessed, and on] musical, thé other hand the riddie that If Cleopatra wore @ cloak. which, in dificult soon exhauts one's pationce and) view of the Exyptian climate and her ta put aside for something easier, Alll generous deaire to display her charms, men are not Oedipuses, and anyway the! may beMoubted, she removed Sphinx riddle Was about the easicat of| it with a royal ind so one may them all. Even a vaudeville audience! do well to as M. Nada! would have had no trouble In guessing It. the ‘The rule for inhaling the fragrance warning that if you cannot follow mined roses from time to ti without effort you will do well to on exhibition in one's home or at) “return to Mother 1 ® very great admirer of that | t old-fashioned lady, aft { no acquired 1 the fluent beauty of @ ehild’ But they are likewise coquet: 40 Women who are willing to sui as some doctors say, to Injui heir could be ac- Placed om the dis man who officiated tables at which volcap are it aeems to me, peaks with @ sort of golden gar ler word honeyed tn tone, thor # understand the learned to spe: Demosthenes did, with « Uy ble were rolling around terfered with her enunciation. But at any rate the sounds she emits are stood from five feet ve feet four, Then show girls, five feet ‘The “mediums” were these two classes in sise. The were told to appear for possible of universal pplication. I should | op Thursdsy morning. | think its succeas would depend lergely Girls Were chosen first.) on the sort of face which would thus: challenge comparison with the flower|or the gambolings of a ki garden. Few human countenances are; Playful puppy. In fact if I had to actress the stage to where fresh or fair enough to win in such| Present a single formula of grace I manager stood, No amateur | a contest. |should say: Study the eat, {f you seek | were developed, however, on| Rule No. 4~"Let your words be few |to be lazily, alluringly graceful, but if) the akirts, which were not | 4nd never speak without saying some-|¥OU wish to Bach chorus lady | thing precit should be lettered in | snersy and power, gum before she took the trial | Sold over every woman's dressing tabir, | study the leaping | pictures of beautiful women, and who /DEPUTY DOUGHERTY TO Police Official Agrees to Take Part 8. Dougherty will become an actor on a show given under the auspices of the marks, are the|#trels and will dresse thg part—biac will be among the entertainers, ‘ coal VENIWG WORLD, MONDA ures, Says French Artist In Formulating Eight Rules for Grace “INHALE ROSES AT, THE OPERA’ BE BLACKFACE MINSTREL. in Amateur Show at Sheeps- head Bay. Deputy Police Commissioner George bet to-night at Sheepshead Bay at the Board of Trade at Bayside Casino. He will be the interlocutor in the min- and all. Joneph Paige Smith i# director and Big Men of Sheepshead Bay and Some Dyer, with Carlton ‘Women;" Matt Woodward others known in stageland Ex-Aasemblyman Robert H. Clarke, ex-Assemblyman John F. Jameson, J. Driscoll Tucker, President of the Board of Trade; P. Howard Reid, President of he Sheepshead Bay Ferry Company, vr Fred Lundy aleo will age. In the minstrels ford, will be Bob Clif-} Blias, the w. borne House trio, BE. Slee, T. J. Murphy, George P. Gilbert, the Bert McLaughlin Sextet, the Bay Quartet, the Osborne House Qua: a. Pullman, the Rockaway Point Four, Capt. A. St, inhay Belmont Rowe, it, M. Gordy, Joe Reilly, Billy Campbell, T. J, O'Nell, Eddie Van, Eddie Rose, Harry Weel, J, Cloonan, Joe Miller, John Sava. rese, J, Palmer, H. Breuhel, Joe Dyer, W. Fitapatrick, Larry Reinheimer, Tom iy of the | McDermott, Frank Winters and W. J, Mann. CASTORIA | For Infants and Children, The Kind You Have Always Bought we The wittiest and mea of French- | 40m, Still, Mother Pp Sala angi ‘once declared that words were | intimates, in somewhat behind the given to men to conceal thelr thoughts, tcta rues of grt Perhaps silence s given to certain to conceal their lack of ts, but not all of them take ad-! Boars the ie Ure vantage of the gift. We all know som ved ruminant, whom men ad- | a endow with mysterious at- tractions merely because she knows enough to realize that she has nothing | worth while to say. Anyhow, the popu lar notion of the correct feminine braiu continues to be that of a vacuum into which from time to time some charitable male may drop an idea, The woman who seeks to please any, save | the most superior men, must learn to wind Uke an empty plate ur words be few. I am not sure that M. ada je right in urging you td moke EARL & oF Ti This is the long point collar so generally worn, 2 for 25 Cts. sioner of Excise, tu whic Young Women’s Christia of Lacrosse, and Miss Amanda Cle! Physieial director of that 11 ‘ALTMAN’S BIG STORE TO HAVE EXTENSION This Will Cover Madison Ave- nue Block and Contain Many New Features. Renjamin Altman wifl enlarge his fifth department store to 1,000,000 square feet of floor space. Plans for a twelve-story extension to cover the Madison avenue block front jfrom Thirty-fourth to = Thirty-fifth streets, are being completed by ‘Thre «+ bridge & Livingston a6 architects, The structure will conform with the classic main building in architecture and ma- | terials, It will be erected by Mare Ei litz & Son, The old Delano, Chanler Bliss dwellings on the #ite, which hav been used for store purposes, will be torn down next month, and the new structure ie tmtended to be ready for long before the Christmas Several apecial departments and dis- tinctive administration features of Agtman store will be housed In the addition. Among others it will contain a big dining-room for employees with ail of the Inaest improvements, large quar- ters for physicli and nurges con- nected with the store ataff, directors’ | se quarters for the Altman Foun- dation, spacious offices for the mutual benefit association and the vacation fund, reat and retiring rooms for both men and women of the establishment and other rooms to be used for similar purposes by customers. ‘There will be private elevators for Jempioyees. The structure will contain all of the latest Improverients in ven- tilating and lighting. There will be many entrances and exits to guard against fire or panic. The stairways and halls will be particularly wide, light and accessible. A feature of great interest to em- ployees will be the profit sharing head: quarters. It is intended to develop a new system for making all employees partners in the business. Their inter- eat will consist of profits based upon their sales, There will be an elaborate system of reporting, accounting and bookkeeping. facili- tated by the early closing through June, July, August tember. The store will be closed for the week at noon every Saturda: on Fifth avent WOMEN’S FEET ALL WRONG. But ¥. W. C. A. Omcial Jem of Making The: the Knoedler site at tne Thirty-fourth street corner in 191. The completed ‘utlding will cover the entire block. ————. ANAC FOR TO-DAY. Sun seta, 7.201 eom rinee.11.08 be corrected, is the opinion of the Association the feet of the girls bot! with shoes on and off, and these, the diagrams—not the feet—she expects to place on view at a Public exhibition soon to illustrate the fils to which the feet of the women of to-day are subject. In the seventy-five Pairs thus far examined, Miss Clement has found none to be perfect, all having been deformed to some extent by being Fraternal Order of Eagles, began its annual convention at Carthage with delegates present from most of the sixt aeries of the State. Th will be a bu jon thie afternoon and this evening onvention will be formally opened with an address of welcome by Charles E, Norrie, First Deputy State Commis- State Presi dent James Conlon of Buffalo will respond. OF TWELVE STORES) sath street “Summer Resort” Ads. Last Year James MeCreery & | On Tuesday, June 10th SPECIAL SALE Laces, Embroideries & Robes White Embroidered Voile Robes in a variet; of patterns. value 4.25, 2.7: White Voile Robes,—hand-loom embroidery, combined with lace. ‘3.75, 4.95 and5.95 ' values 5.50, 7.50 and 9.75 White Hand Embroidered Voile and Batiste Robes, value 3.75, 1.95 Nainsook, Cambric and Swiss,—Edges and Insertions in Broken Sets. 10c to 45e yd. value 25c to 75e 65c to 2.45 doz. yds. value 1.25 to 4.75 Cluz:; “88 value 20 to 48c, 10c¢ to 25¢ yd. Venise Edges and Insertions. ...15¢ to 6.50 yd. value 30c to 12.95 Quaker Cluny Laces......20¢ to 75¢ doz. yds, value 50c to 1.50 Clearance of this scason’s accumulation of Short lengths of Laces, Embroideries and Nets, at 14 and less than 14 former prices. C/B¥A_ LA SPIRITE CORSETS An extensive variety of models for every type of figure. Made of Coutil and Batiste. 1.00, 1.50 to 3.00 Models for average figures,—imade of daintily flowered materials. 3.50 and 5,00 Models for stout. figures, —double boning, and three pairs hose supporters. 2.50, 3.00 and 3.50 RIBBONS Special Values. T 6 and 51% inch Light and Dark Ribbons, Moire and Satin Taffeta, also Fancy Siriped Taffeta in an extensive line of colors and White or Black. Special 19¢ yd, Black Silk Velvet,-—salin back..... No.16........23¢yd. No. 22........27e@yd. No. 40........32¢yd. No.55........50¢ yd. Satin Figured Lingerie Ribbon in Pink, Blue, Violet and White. No.1......20¢ piece No. 2......40¢ piece No. 6.. No. 113....27¢ piece No. 3......50¢ pieos .65¢c piece ww 43,764 More Than the Herald Note: The World’s Summer Resort Guide for 1913 will be ready for K REE distribution at all World offices and by mail about June 20th. The volume will be of large size, handsomely printed and pro- fusely illustrated. It will present announcements of more than 2,000 country, seashore and mountain hotels and boarding. houses as appear- ing in the advertising columns of The Sunday World. lor early copy by mail send 6 cents in stamps for postage only, to World Summer Pulitzer Building, A ss Resort Bureau, New York << DVS Shae Caled

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