The evening world. Newspaper, October 25, 1913, Page 4

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os aoe erm ea a —o ee ponte tan atm emnenetutaatitnneatinneatanl Fascination of Furs Again a Lure for Women; Chic Afternoon Gown by Evening World Expert Civet and Leopard Two Gay Pelts Which Oc- cupy a High Place in Fashion’s Fancy— Prices for Genuine Furs Appallingly High. Now approacheth the season when eovetoussess burns in the eoul of the ‘woman who canont afford « fur coat. Nine out of ten feminine brains are busily echeming to secure furs, either by eajolery ef an indulgent husband Or paps, or by the sacrifice and elimina- tion of ether wardrobe necessities not absolutely essential to @ presentable exterior. No attribute of anparel—not even dia- monds—rer to ponsess the irr fascinations of fura to the heart when fur weather comes aroun: and well do the artful furriera recog- nize this fact, for in the window of every shop where f form a part of the stock, wraps, muffs, fetching little Reck pieces and fur-trimmed hats ure temptingly displayed, But alas! the prices of these entrance ing wearables are appallingly high: the average pocketbook. One might as well gaze wistfully at a Sheraton side- board or a Chippendale lowboy—lux- uries for those who have substantially backed eheck Dooks—as to caat Kreedy upon the wort of fur wrap o would lke to wear—that is, if vie ie just an ordinary ttle New York Woman, econoinizing with one maid 0 sons, or a business woman, helping out the folks at home and putting all extra pennies into occasional little treats at the opera or the p Tain seanon, however, there 1s cheer for the woman Who has wat §160 for s French sea} coat, to aay nothing of $00 for a leopard or @ Persian lamb coat; for some of the near-seal effects are admirable, and even the woman of fastidious taste may wear them with ferfect satisfaction in her purchase. For $8 or $0 may be picked up a most attractive little wrap of, say, broad- tail plush or motre caracut, with collar and sleeve bands of equirrel, wolverine or some other long-haired fur, And if one happens to have on hand a dis. carded muff of fox or skunk which the ttle furrier around the corner will make up {nto collar and sleeve bands, those on the wrap will be removed the time one's purchase ts made and a fair allowance made in the; .ce. NEARLY ALL SEAL WRAPS ARE IMITATION NOW. Almost all seal wraps, however cost- ly, are imitation now, for genuine geal may hardly be had for love or money vince the flat of the Russian Duma against trapping seals for five years, After @ while, of cout down im price, and doubtless at she same tume will drop in modishness. Meanwhile the best and most expensive imitations are French-dyed muskoat, called “Hudson seal,” and French-dyed @oney, called “Arctic seal.” A wrap of, the former pelt coste from $150 to $0); | @ne of the latter pelt may be had sor} from 9 to $160. Brocaded plush makes a charming jsccompanied by the new laced buskin 7 CBT OF CIT CAT, ANO ORAL with collar and cuff trimming of akunk (e ilustrated. ‘This wrap shows the emart tapering Ifnes now in vogue, and the cutaway effect at the front which Teveais the draped skirt beneath. As plotured, the wrap is worn with a shrimp-pink Jandedowne frock dansante, allppers and glov brotdered eiltk. Another modish wrap ie the model of Hudaon eeal trimmed with civet. The civet cravat, matched by @ large, flat muff, give this little coat apecial style, and there 4 iso @ band of the civot fur on the amall velvet hat. Such a of flewh-pink em- —t9 | cont, because of fur, not velvet or plusii, | about the may be worn at any time of the day o:| refinement, evening, and in thin ineten panies a trotter frock of com IN FABHION’S FANCY. fashion'’s fancy thi furs which makes up for tholr wilghtly bizarre character, Civet ts an oldly marked fur, with a lyre-shaped patt stole of civet, bordered with sealskin, show tho effectiveness If somewhat con- splcuous character of civet pelt, More agreeable to the taste of some women will be the muff and coilar of hn tassel streamers of taupe velvet, conpiete the thie season, canary being perhaps ih most vivid tint, though Callot have brought out a coat for Nivieru wear, trimmed with green suede und green fox fur, ——_—_ BAR SMALL WOMEN AND ALL UNDER 30 FROM POLICE FORCE CHICAGO, Oct. %.—Women un- der thirty years of age need not apply for pla on the Chicago police force because a new rule requires that th muat be be tween thirty and forty years of age, 6 feet to & feet 9 Inahes in height, and must welgh between 16 and 180 pounds ‘These specifications for appii- cants are laid down by the Civil Service Con ny In announ coming exal shape pieces would be pretty at the a Ghoulder straps A Rew wrap of black procaded plush | Mille, Lodewick’s Fashion Design for Home Dre making, the Most Help- ful Column Published for the Home Needle- woman, Shows a Pleas- ing Afternoon Gown. DESCRIPTION. This little afternoon gown for wear house 1s one of individual y unedium welght ma- terial such as French wool crepe, alb with | (ross, cashmere or crepe buttoned walking boots of patent] be used for its develos leather, mings PELTS WHICH HOLD HIGH PLACE! “* nent, with trim- of some contrasting fabric, such st green 1s A color hamonious with any surroundings for this gown ing tO most persons, waist, cul in one plece, is made to open acason, ‘There is down & dush and youthfulness about thexe| Pointed neck both Civet and leopard are two very gay|and is be: that the children may have music len- | pelts which oocupy a high place in ack and front, The which ‘daintily eck Is the only bit of trim- finishe: ming B] rathe) in white on an almost black «roumd. |eatin posed Leopard is tawny, with brown apots on| Kirdle, a yellowish ground, A now muff and| back is the straight, wide panel of satin e shoulder line and hang- butterfly bow of the front of the eatin Correspondingly effective at the inds upward in front, to hold & bias or slightly clr of the satin, which gives the effect of a i forms @ neat eeve and ends in a and also serves fox, dyed in @ soft taupo shade to] tunic tatiieur of taupe poplin, Long| finish for + of taupe cord, attached to] chic bow ° elegance of this fur vet. Fox fur js| tls gown a more elaborate effect could being dyed In every conoeivab. da] be mained by the use of wide lace band- | eing dy vs ‘ab.e shade while the width could | cut in halves and part used for a » skirt and the reat Ing for the panel, the girdle and trast prettily, d lowered ehalli ton for this d figure or background satin would be excelie -. > ANSWERS TO QUERIES. Dear Paahion Kall advise me how Inclosed wating to for afternoon, Was thinking of of the brocade, the two shades could make a and ¢ hay Alao ady Jof Mue go well together, trasting wir the of dandruff or falling hair and y Your colors clash terribly. 3f you have enough of either material for chiffon cloth for a waist cut with @ round Dutch three-q | most, will BAcn Star coay mA OP SiweT Cay plete the gown. 3f this arrangement is not pos- sible, use one of your materials for Tam seventeen years of dark hair and large black very pale complexion, with almost no color. What colors do you think best suited to me? Also will you advixe me con- cerning arose silk drese? I have two and a half yards of new material, Tho three-piece skirt has groups of tiny tucks from the belt down a ways, while the waist In surplice back and front, I thought of using long sleeves and vest of chiffon or net, but the black troubles me. MISS C. G, think er POLICE HERO DEAD. End Comes to Lient. ©. F. Casey, for Bravery. Police Lieutenant Cornelius F. of TraMc Squad C, whose nam the honor roll of the department for bravery, died at his home, 90 First Place, Brooklyn, to-day of @ complica- tion of diseases which had kept him away from duty alnce August, Lieut. Casey, who wax an intimate friend of the late Timothy PD, Sullivan, was made a policeman in 1889, He w at the top of the eligible list for leu- tenants at the beginning of the term of Commiasioner Greene, but was Passed over, His herole conduct at a fire in East One Hundred and BI street, where he saved several caused Gen. Greene later to order his Promotion, Casey ie on aimee Brighton Joly Five Re: ‘The Brighton Jolly Five will hold their second annual package party and re- union to-night at Frita’s Glenmore Hall, Glenmore avenue and Ashford aireet Brooklyn. The officers are: Richard Freyer, President; Edwin Remington Hicks, Vice-President, Freda Otto, R, cording Secretary; Al Valentine, ‘Tron urer, and Frank Resner, Sergeant-at- Arms, ‘TNR STOPS FALLING, DA DISKPPEARS—25 GENT | Save your hair! Make it soft, | ence how d it soft, fluffy, lustrous and beautiful, ‘Try as you will, after an applica i Danderine, you cannot find asin of «trace rascalp| a but what will please you after afew weeks uve, when yuu see new f fine al downy at first ~-yer=but really new hair-—growing all over the scalp. ‘ 4 will not itch pa a rh lg MLLE. LODEWICK’S DESIGN FOR EVENING WORLD company dancer, and THEREVENINGA WORLD, BATURDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1918. Busiest Week in Theatre ate cee ne a Brings Eight Productions ..:.." Ethel fenen will Be| a Seen in “Tantve”’ and Summer’’— Fantasy for the Little Theatre, and Two Comedies, a Do-, mestic Drama and a Musical Piece to Keep First Nighters on the Jump—Music Hall of London Type to Have Afternoon Opening. the coming week that Lew Fields is to open the Fourty-fourth Street Music Hall on Monday afternoon. The St @ rush of new playa will mark entertainment, modeled after the bille at the Empire and Alhambra In Lon- don, ts called “A Glimpse of the Great White Way.” Sain B...ard and his il appear in a thirty minute musical comedy, ‘The Modiste Shop;" Mado-Miuty, a French performer known as “The Human Spider,” promises to} be a novelty, and the third big number will be the “Carmen” ballet from Lon- don's Alhambra. Among others on the bill will be the Agousta, pantomimisis and jugeler:; ‘ rtajada, a Spanish ‘lark and Hamilton. eee John Mason comes to the iterion ‘Theatre on Monday night in “Indian Summer,” a play of American life writ- tus Thomas. eee Winthrop Ames opens the third sea- gon of the Little Theatre on Mondi evening with “Prunella,” a fantasy by Lawrence Housman and Granville Bar- ker, with music by Joseph Moorat ten by Au At the Empire Theatre on Tuesday night Ethel Barrymore will be seen in “Tante.” a play by C. Haddon Cham- bers, founded upon the novel of the same name by Anne Douglas Sedgwick In the book, the brilliant pianist Madame Okraska, known to her friends is forty-eight years old, but y she is ten years younger. The pay, while it appeal study of the “artistic temperament,” makes the woman less malicious than ehe is tn tho novel, Charles Cherry is cast for the role of Gregory Jardine, who falls in love with and marries Karen Woodruff, “Tante's ward, thereby precipitating the confilot with which the play has mostly to do, ee “The Marriage Game," a comedy by Anne Crawford Flexner, will have ite Production at the Comedy Theatre on Wednesday night. a The Fulton Theatre reopens on Wed- Mesday evening with “After Five,” @ comedy by William and Cecil De Mille. The scenes are laid in the bachelor apartment of a young New Yorker and in a summer camp in the Maine woods. The cast includes Forrest Winant, Da. vid Burton, Joseph Yanner, James Bradbury, Alfred Hickman, Jay Wilson, Jet Ralph and Ivy Troutman, eee A musical plece, “Oh, I Say!" will be presented at the Casino Theatre on Thursday night. The adagtation from the French was made in tondon, where the piece had @ successful run, but for the Casino production music has been written by Jerome D. Kern. The story is concerned with the marital experi- ences of @ young French couple. In the company will be Alice Yorke, Cecil Cun- angled Lives,” @ foursnet drama by | Butler Davenport, will bi John Mason in “Indian | action twenty-four hours and concerns eve lives of the Courtlandt Potter ‘The future of a Gauehter tee fected by Potter's activities feformer, Important parte will be YP by Mary Shaw, Beverly Sitgreave Bailey, Mirza Crest J Hudapeth and F For his fourth week at the Shubert! At the American Theatre will be “The ‘on Monday and Wednesday and Carr, and E nighte and Saturday afternoon. “Aice! iN BROOKLYN , "on Tuesday night, and “The Light That Failed’ for the remainder | of the week. “The Blindness of Virtue” will be the attraction at the Manhattan Opera May Irwin comes to the Grand Opera House with “Widow by Proxy.” The West End Theatre will have “Her Own Money.” Master Mind" will be at the, taxable in New York State are: A gold Bronx Opera House. wateh, $100; personal effects and cloths “A Romance of the Underworld” will | ing, $250; automobile, $1 be continued at the Academy of Music Jand manuscripts, $ The stock company at the Harlem) Lad House will offer a double bill, jaeterlinck’s = ‘sii i “The Tniesliner,” w oeane comedy. Fanny Weinmann: ed Jans 5 iy Robie's “Beauty Show" will be seen | total estate, # at the Columbia. John Bi Dave Marion brings his burlesquere! tite. #981) net value, $8,545. to the Murray Hill Theatre, “The Girle of All Nations’ will be at| tal estate, #13443; net value, $12.64 the Olympic. u “The Liberty Girle" come to Miner's People's Theatre. At Miner's in the Bronx will be “The Golden Czook."* VAUDEVILLE ATTRACTIONS. Missl Hajos will appear in “Queen be Clifton Crawford, Jack Wilson, and Guerro and Carmen, ‘ Wilkie Bard, at Hammerstein's, wit sod m) theukeusm ban foo eon." sing “The Night Watchman” and “She gramme will be Fatima, May W. Berrens in a musical act, and Bert Mel- At the Colonial Theatre there will be Lillian Lorrat: Granville, and Will Cressy and Blanche Dayne. Eddie Foy and the Seven Little Foya ee ae at the Alhambra. dim,” Farber Girls, and Morris and will hav nd Higgina ra Palmer, Waltere and Crooker, and Blida ener sat Keth's Union Square The James and hornton: Mra Louis dames In Mon and Bart MeHugh in the produced at) Housewarmers ‘Theatre on ‘Thursday night overs a period of lees than! te Joftreya Lewis, Cl os, Charles Meaking, J hers oe ater Cure” will ith Avenue Where othet features will ie Bergere in OA Bo y Camilie” He and her Ballet, and Pail Mer pel and Naomi Glaser ‘The song od | Dream’ wit be the chief attraction at ne{ the Twenty-third Street ‘Theatre, Marie nh! Panehinetti, dance i Johnson, Frank Patten, |st the Fifty-efelith Street Theatre Virginia Kline, Perdita | Purple Wir ail the bill at the ir Ramsdell, [One Hundred and ity-fifth Street cee | Theatre rand Off, Bidred pne Knimett Forber-Robertson will give! Nine Plano I “The Rosary” will be the offering ai the Gayet eee | “Reauty, Youth and Folly" will Ae seen at the Empire —— aie . | APPRAISALS OF ESTATES. lawyer and author, Items held to d¢ Adrian H jdied Oct, 1 900, amt vat The lbr 10 volumes,: Is consisting of prained at $25,000 net, value, 9,608, ffel, died Oot. 1, 1910; total es: | Philip Hollerer, died April 6, 1913; t enhols, died Aug. 4 $5,846. net value, $8,338, ct operetta, at the Pal- where other features will miaced tata Shells." Others on the pro- }» the pensar ills j, Contiveneas, tenn eee Pe i Cecil Lean, Berna: “Beauty Is Only Bkin Dee; On Monday, Oct. 27th, will place on sale (Finh Avent, beh aud 35th Streets, Nem Leas \f Several Hundred Pairs of Reversible Velour Portieres (Cystom made) AT A VERY SPECIAL PRICE. WwW. L..DOUCLAS $3.50, $4. 00 & $4.50 SHOES THREE KILLED IN IN WRECK. ‘Traine Crash on Eng! LONDON, Oct. %.—Three persona were killed and more than a@ score seriously injured to-day in a rear end collision on the South Hastern Ratlway at Waterloo because of a and an express telescoped ar cars of a standing local, RUF TDANDERINE” ence how dull, faded, brittle and se ju oth with Danderine caretully Craw it through your hair, tak- ing one small strand at a time, | i iate and amazing—your ht, fluffy and wavy, and rance of abundance; an’ romp: able lustre, softness and luxuri- ce, the beauty and shimmer of true Signals were confused hair will Ke Mi Get a B5-cent bottle of Knowlton’s e from any drug atcre or toilet rated Catalog 8 3 Nassau Street, 55 Broadway, cor. 8th St. rove that your hair is roadway (Times Sq.). venue, a VORUe Over 150 styles, kinde and shapes, [nail leath- ers, sizes and widths, to sult ovoryhody. W. L, Douglas $3. 50, $4.00 and $4.50 shoes are just as good in style, fit and wear as other makes costing $5.00 to $7.00, the only \ difference | is the price. Why not give them atrial? The value you will receive for your money will astonish you. If you would visit our factory, the largest in the world under one roof, and see how care- pee WwW. to Donen lerstand why they are warranted to look better, fit better, hold their shape | and wear longer than other makes for the price. The Best $2, $2.50 and $5 Boys' Sho When you visit our stores you are buying direct from tho maker. W. 1. Douglas shoes are billed to our stores at Aedes eliminating the usual man- ufacturers’ ing profit ts come to our Brockton, Mas This is the reason we cw | W. L. DOUGLAS STORES IN GREATER NEW YORK: 2202 Third Av., cor, 120th St, ana Broadway, cor, 14th St. 1848 Brom Broudway, cor. 36th St. 2779 Third Av.,bot.146th 4 147th Sts. ids Fulton Street, cor, . 345 Eighth yee ‘ 7 8-710 Dr ne Righth Avenue. | hag Broadway, ‘West 125th Street, 478 Fifth ‘Aves cor. te Ww. shoes the past year. This enormous ine crease ves thelr s st separ lor ¥ — the price. IN 18) Now TI thnoesr ER_OF 83.50 $4.00 SHOES IN THE WORLI shoes are made, you would in the World. id jobbers’ profits, A-asmall sell- il ‘we ask, Every pair of shoos rect from our factorios ut BROOKLYN lis. |adt Na ee ave

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