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tsoeccles angles, the exact mid tle rection, you've won t Mhere have ance (thy @o unrearonable in his unalteralle fons that he always conte all Gaul, dle and Lower Chi and instluctively even then, I dertul a en fome such superior creature could go barefoot, arid sit on the fen poor gink had to ride @housy funkies stuc Of course, but there was worse punish- give him five whole dollare if he would | to uphold JOHN © BARRYMORE} Ot His Lean Days on Broadway, And How to Pick an 18-K.rat So- 1 ELLS $ ciety Man From a Brass Plated One TRYING TO convince THE ART EOTOR, “SISTER EvHEe AIDS IN JOHN'S PLAW TO CARW APive sPoT MIeZayad A Chapter Entitied “So | i LM ciety and ‘Ciass’”’ Fron. | NN John Barrymore’s Book | net “Leading an Open Ai| Life on Broadway.” ty’s a funny thin oe th ke ' audstance in the Mal tonne « ‘ We we | wear It Photographs and sketches) Ge SRA U RAY et iia aoa et pe ( ners 8") of hin sartorial dreams for the fair) mea Ree las fanll dares Ait night. tt on. tea Now wit sex have accompanied his words, It] ENT tun't the arat stuf that sho inne ‘ Weiter," ho Mra, and Miss New York aren’t/same material as Qin shirt and ap- ty over shining patent leathers Breen under the acid test Ant tak Wii Beer ink meres | Hotter dressed this winter than they! ? tare on ihre about So nelng divided Into three ye sister ant © aye se i i and] aver were before, you can't prove ft reseed hat es ed aE Bet eairacaenacbeuioi pte 8 Fut a ae ets wan aoling foe) nye har about Me New York?! ZAdS ds Ads out Max Golastein, F an fin ' ’ \ Poor man, who ever does tell him N 4 M ted and the pu tt a gS cad (Bue VR wid ‘anything about his clothes, anyway? ew York’s »elt-Maue Oy le te ctive be the eatin s " t what w What magazine devotes itself to ex | Max Goldstein, the consuitings . jae 4 wason lout w mluiaing to fain How Ho can makoval tive fo thy poll the Vifta street cons to hin own efforts, dumiawa nat i Hy wears long pants, fn thie ved and niadied. 7 Ww gt ‘ j Modinh raincoat from the partly worn only dees the boy resemble the stincthona vit : i . Hut she had t t conte r t dine, | cover of thy billiard table or a new hat! ajeutn of tetion or real life Although uta o “Consult Sisver uote. And t “ from mother's waste ba m that Win 1ife is in danger. fs folks ' . * mow 4 t ‘ i olumnes of instruction, rue) fro notte despern ae mon st af ihe © give ething t eneen hee litte tor the Yo thought [1 wns tu 1 = need Witte, a ri Hoste t ye Specimen haw a fe a ry aah bel iene MaLeetiate ae : ny wh R n nehlaman Hine Gwe At ‘ a wan eared about on Ote 5 the Soclety . t ta et ate ate fo: em Ruenian polileman fi eeeeiee x basement of six ncubad of blowine a! ee) mv on vilitior he one ; : ath ’ joovered that one reason why New York t aay nt at No, 28 S e poetry Ml a bom oF me 1aue War OF. aie : n marry forelyners {x because : ifto athe!) noni ton fash eres. ! Uh eM sit at the nex n. He was, t Ce) He tbl rve to oue hearts’ content, | tonate, T rad for is stranger: ‘ Any gray matter whe Av osm cl passing it c ort ut i ene Was immova Writer’ sat fa 1 . around w " n i accide y re " ‘ f ip sabes his nose at nie ty ne as Bh Barrymo t he had done and w ut & Vo heart of rt age with lis bhe wasn't Gighly c was it really ta tie Writer? wae] oo t a hind her wkirts aid he date do tha Mreapnr a. er Wf] had never xeon a real Society Man to] (i iee" Jhand him That? She almost t o He Knew “ Class.’ But TI was a phil » Might as well have told us to muy | hate Standard # eve i Company! T went from toue way che ie solemn winit Of a 1 asked sie would plunge wie converation~mor Sister I ihet I think she talk and Eve ad t rfiret t The m sat there He dropped lis monocle and st 1 this pa sat down t was that t and soit out apply seeds white Hit possibly have ing one, hut t a when I ers who were willin work and thelr roll, Finally, pAld ood and he tipped his > fBere on the fence. ile got s cloth. pairs—of the ting ment. When he had been particularly PaniaTEarS then} 1 ' nit pleture of how'| pastiforous., I wou my As he 6 8 he bunch o G@warette butts when with and A r 1 1 en ace ined to know,” them No, sir—nor | wouldn't Nn let! coats were s didn't bother me mad y ‘ me to Bam watch me take a puff of smoke, he “Apt te bit Do you ike ‘erave frult © alin 1 or butt in @xte& a glass of water and then blow rything looked r unt!l we sath: pered ! bad ten all about mu after @@ tho smoke, Ile tried to do that} ered in wv idio to drows for the big a alu had a I taogh at his mation Bbmeself once, poor k put of rae oo we @ y ad the fi wh I saw h at same the wean't In my class so he got indl- . toa gestion or diabetes or 1 wow 1 A t Proving how much real wid the D ’ 1 lage. ‘ ‘There was a ne, during my On Tw ‘ on @ehool days and when 1 was first trying | ts op two mo; Hh oa ba t® convince editors that 1 draw ngs it not ah to-morr aciared Rpec no L of Gevi! fish with warts on them were | Anita mea epee = As I to real art, that I didn’t think much rer un dt + the thm t } about Society. he had ¢ Then, come 1 didn't " a The sudject was brought to me sud-] dining our efforta with safety pins we ; Ay 8 ae nica Gently ono night by the “Writer” Tt] at last wot him into his am R it enc was while he and tho “Artist” and 1} fe was eraurhy a Mormon, And «t t adh ays were most strenuous tu death so c suse i 1 be yh aif theory—alwars te eo him ih tie glad rags and he'd wy ° at'y tween us the provi ! \ Nona ¢ : our ewn—when we could, Our most | ght for you,’ he slammed wagon w . portant one those days was when we weated ty t . t af y ems t next. And how | i s : vane riter” announced that he knew ‘oles Of tho Specimen who tent t ai ‘ DME nee ‘ do there was an editor who w poise slipped into the pantry ‘ eae Ud hadi hacientbalare them, The three of us distr write @ @ertain atory they had been I refuse to comment on exactly what |them in our pockets Then we red i Bightven Carats THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, era At, oat pads SEPTEMBER 27, 1913. M. Paul Poirzt Tells the New York Man How to S 1 ci H:s 1iz io Maich His Soul BINDING A SOULMATE MONS. PorReT PICKS His TIE ACCORDING TO esr MIS SoULS MOOD errect APRONS SIUC HAT UT FULS DRESS As a ‘‘Neat but Nifty” | Dresser the Great Pari- sian Gown Architect Has M. De Fouquieres Beaten at the Post. and Tvxe00 He Holds the Beau Brum- mel Championship of Paris and Wears Oyster Colored Vests and! Checker-board Trousers Marguerite Moocrs Marshall. THIS Is MAN'S NUMBER, That amiable and Intelligent Mon yee ur Paul Poiret has already told @ ost re Kable peddilng eos belongs to the real the women readers of The Evening World what to wear and how to BE A BACK GROUND’ For womanyt tN Fouguieren bea !New York men are ugly. phys And I'm afraid | agree with his ob Af not with the theory he des from jt But who knows how] mule New Vorkera would dest ty if they} han may velop the fatal ere encouraged a bit? and entirely urely within Joharming in anoth the range of possibilithe ta man » ta a forbidding epectacte ta one} cack sult may be matamorpiosed py] yf © { ther into a near-Adonty Anyway, ded that It wouldy't) 4 be fair to Jet the wonen Lave @ cornes | On the instructive counsel of M It fs true that that gentleman tunes, tracts nothing but feminine je repu | who visited and a ¢ verajhe last yeur hy the greater sensat When 1 ac used M. Vo. the eau Brummel td ia sana Wood if vay tt was 4 ante tad deeoro y 0 1 " vway, fur s . m es Hien n 7] ' ‘ 2 Por years he 1 Volvet's sweet ea t Blithe Mast Saute - . he a, hoe ‘ t m James riglit.*too, bell Down the Fifty Street to see where either side ue! the aw had been violited stripe, His wack cout was bla Really, 1 do not tke givtr on the subject of men's clothes, man I dres is mynelf,* » than five feet tye wera in detail the fne} t Mavor Gaye | deserintion of a sleu nor suggested for ernwtir @ single ¢ And @ man should wear Uttle jewelry.” “Do you object to the conventional collar’’ | asked, for the Ww M. Polret he were @ y locked up is! getting rid of ertmins ne die of tnanition time te walt to} but that is the] and 80] bands Max has waited talk of his suctess detective when alr © himself, He en wear a instead of a fi fo you f the New York mast is very sr Jd it was impossible te But 8 vnlee dow to this country ik. He Mux worked without foar or favor ¢ «ses, es @ turnover collar and oufls of the far into the uishts and be has deen a, Yiddish, 4, pgliah, Russian, German and Foam was just adout Ipovtiea Deer one buys ‘at the post. had to do with he ness of the colors I ean to a long felt yearning for the days when men wore gold lace and ruby colored velvet. (Need I a@é that no man of my acquaintance syme set) Not even M, Polret. ‘or when J pinned my faith on the © colored vest and, hoping agatnet hope, asked him if he really thought It neceavary for men to stick to Quakeress he aald he did! “The clothes men wore In other days utiful then, y they are not workable, For yeurs, now, men huve chosen the dark, plain colors, and 1m: cate no change, better for men to wear dark ‘othes as a background to the ees tumes of women » Poiret makes one exception te ck-and-white rule, and, incident- igwents a cheap and inexpensive soul-mate—not @ lady, but a necktie, nan should welect his tle to masa the great costumer told me “When he dresses in the morning he should take from the req @ necktie which harmonizes with we , the environment and his ewan If he ts Joyful he sheuld wear he admitted, elf would adve- If for no other reagon, If the world Is unkiad © he should wear @ tle that expresses um- Tuatthen I remembered a particulasty expreenive tie I had seen tn shop wine dow on the way upt Wiggles all ey Whether It was @ better r the soul of Pinney Earle or of . It had red ver it 3 was when M. Potret spoke (By the way, that morning bw own soul must have been slate-colored, i Brey-and-blue stripes the day Ber general 1 do belleve that the iplos of tho art of dress, ahoitd avers the well dressed man ts ¢he inen of well as women, Dut yas note of an striped turnover affair torial as bly shirt, (itt he dee a Wave of nis expreseive Taimply like tue roll-over ool. ju for rnyself " green piush hate?" I ouge do not mind them,” he repated # doesn't inind a single flower tm either, aithough he ye many ration, @n ond. ink of the general M. Polret @e Only he wears too much and toe co Surprised te 5 soft instead JAcdos and evening ‘ u don’t knew Sei afer all thie. » not my faalt ——— “Sea koum.” Was 4 pobibition State when ne Lonte Chto, the @umme