c new york girl it shore - library of congress · 2017-12-16 · h fads of the newyork girl every...

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h fads of the New York Girl Every Garment Must Have Sachet Nowadays oJ I k- i Its < When the Now York girl passes you o Fifth avenue this week you fancy tho wind has blown to you ovo an oldrfoahioned Juno garden Just th faintest whiff from tho garden ao dellcnt and that a minute after yoi Imagine It was fancy or memory that ha suddenly brought you visions of cloVer meadows and clumps of vlolcta by an and narcissus blooms that coma u III scattered bunches through a neglected gross plot But nil these pretty throughts wore no Just fancy It Is a fact that perfume li ii fashion again that tim Now York girl hoi given up tho whim that held that were vulgar and that there in just now t craZ3 for sachets for perfumed toilet powders for acented baths for linger umnrl R and for blicats odors in closats and chiffoniers and linon clientn- Tliu dayri of soap that llko laying an nsphalt i avem nt of tollot waters thai ugRst3d a hospital accident ward ol hair that ought to have been used with enforced quarantine are happily over It is no longer good form to scoff at sweet I smell any more than you would spurn I flowers for being common or color for being supplied by a limited corporation- And besides with fashionable sachet powder at ISO a pound and Cordova loathot sachet at tl a Hfjuaro Inch there is no of the Now York girls perfume fad becom- ing too swiftly popular And only the most delicate most odors am smart Flamboyant flavors soaking handker ohlsf blou 3 or hair aro ultraordi nary Vlvidmw of odor Is like a crude color it stands for lack of subtlety laok of cultivated Instinct Tho New York girl would no more think of Upping a bottle of cologne upon her handkerchief than she would of going out with cold cream on her mouth Per- fume cream toilet water sachet and bath tablets arc nil an Integral part of hur myster- ious process of good grooming Sho uses her pcrfumo as she USOB color or material In cloth to express her personality anti that with reserve and coquetry The most fashionable perfumes are dlf flcult to deaorilw They are mado up of a mixture of odors Different flavors are com- bined until a rare and unusual blend Is ob- tained impossible to Imitate and with a dozen of varying fragntno o like a complex and nxqutalte temperament It la the whim of tho New York girl to blend her own perfume Thus she escapes any possibility of and can bo certain of same expression of perfume feeling In all her garments her room her bath The exact proportions of various odors used are the secret of a Broadway txpeit to whom making perfumes la fine irt as it used to be In the old French COn Vents But the flowers that blend into the ex which she has copy are all those of an old fashioned flowerbed clove pinks sweet alyssum heliotrope lemon verbena and day lilies and she calls the mixture June Qtrdon and she is right as you will know If you pull on Fifth avenue If have not the originality or tho tune or the temperament to express your- self in an Individual perfume there are exquisite new blends already on the market that are too delicate to be overllkod and too expensive to be overused There U a from a dozen hothouse blossoms in ono new perfume and the beauty who decides upon this perfume novelty will have her soap her sachet her bath powders her face powder her toilet water ail to She will no more change her perfume scheme in a season than she would her color scheme May a leopard change his spots r a beauty her perfume Not If the opln of Is considered And frequently and color are a to expressive har that old lime lied ton 1M not danger a ulalte ha1atlon Iew f r r t t cent took ii i t r c t ° ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ APr M r roan Is busily fulfilling his destiny halt year he was devoured with props BMacullne indignation at the presumption f woman In adopting his socks This year lie not only meekly accepts the situation bu has further thrust his feet Into the stockf o to speak by putting on his wiles Ion hose and prof easing to feel happier mor comfortable and better dressed than ever felt before HP seems to bo not at all alarmed at tM of the established order of thlnge but makes the curiously feminine pie ln defence of the act that he has hitherto had much trouble In presenting a trim well gartered appearance t to the world by tho pressure of the maseulin garter below the knee and an ankle clothes In slovenly wrinkles of an ungartcre sock With a feminine stocking gartcrei above the knee he la neat and comfortable at the time Man should be judged leniently In matter for ho seems to have alwoj had a great deal more trouble with hi stockings than woman From the time WHICH PAIR BELO I n sr Jal and lie only the choice twcen a log same this I t 11 R h- bO be- numbed I I awWIIA- ct b- t ° mony sweotbrler iu and gowr in scent and wardrObe clove sachet and clover frocks clove pink bath and n carnation bedroom is tho thing In soap as well OH surrounding- And there are many new am simple perfumes be very JOnah vogue scent in a In It Is for tho young fo- tho personality that would wear white cynical about cynicism Mitt clover soaps powders waters are a fragrance Wholesome frank of clcanUncsu and sunshine- In a summer sachet one forgets that it is It site freshness rattier than a manufactured scent A far removed from hayfield i and clover meadows Is tho new pachnt It of roots and herbs and hark of trees and has tho fragrance of n tropical garden at sunrise- It Rweot and faint when not stirred and with tho mystery that comet when ones memory a mixture of scents or emotions A breath of It is a scarlet orchida whiff Is tho thiok- swuetnpHS of acaclnH then tho of a tropic shrub and the delicacy of some herb Tho New York girl is desolated that she cannot u o It OH Juno garden sachet but her fads are to her for as tho laws of tho Mccles and thd Persians and no with a captivating in her pretty brow Uio essence tropical junglo from her trust most hated friend will not discover It until she too is bound a solemn fad to some less adorably seductive sachet TIll Now mind not nearly as much that any ono she liked should u o because however lastingly delicious and ingratiating this wonderful leather may not new It has not the danger- ous quality of stimulating curiosity much more dreaded than giving pleasure was pew when Ita haunting made men see vis of romances and hear the tinkle coukl be n it was worth while sewing of it In frock and muff of ones handkerchief box and glove box with it and nf flaunting it a in nottrilH of tho l s Today this exquisite loather of Cordova Is an and an it was with the Spanish hidalgos and Sefloritos of the i but the New York girl has forgotten In to do entire justice to the fad the Now York a perfume sablnot to take to the country her completely stocked with Juno nence every form toilet water for her refreshment after or tennis tablets jo dissolve In her bath soap that leaves ler hands with the fragrance of hating sirrled a bunch of Juno flowera essences o sprinkle in her rooms poudre de rii of pinks and powder iweet as though it were the red from day cold cream and cream massage cream all with nd sachet powder literally by the For variety of shape nd In every possible convenient lace are secret tho subtle faint er salvo fragrance that is wafted to you from he Now this season ot ssenoee can possibly the intongtbla sweetness a properly managed of sachets can And tho habit means no little time and work A successful flower demands the time of a The minute the powder Is exposed sufficiently mist begin to weaken materially Somo will last a year sufficient is bound up In cotton Other more perfumes evaporate entirely la most aro the leathers and scented flannels and the most temporary are the Ingle flower odors rose especially in the summer time must ho powder fresh low odors lest three months in really worm weather And where would one wear a sachet aks tho Puritan spinster of tho New York irl Everywhere if are fashionable In your umbrella which has a at the end comer of your hand erchief hem in tho crown of your in ho hem of your stocking bow of our garter your chemise Puritan spinster covered 1lI irl n I l V Ill d dE or tiny mandolins twilight and when l just had to ask wherJ found per- fume retir- ing somo variation or the gaen scents over gar- den to allow to I powder six lid i Lbs century o ¬ ¬ ° ¬ > blem of Ce when the larger part of his person wit clothed In stockings down to the half lice of the nineteenth century his hosiery hiu caused him an Infinity of troublo though I and expense A close fitting leg covering was generally I worn among tho primitive nations of Europ by mon of all clauses from a very period and was probably Oriental In origin on a similar garment conspicuous In Phrygian costume The Normafis called them chnusscs but the conquerors learned to use the Saxon name for the long stockings which were worn for five oi six centuries Men of both nations an pictured as wearing short stockings li addition to tho long hose Bomotlmes with and sometimes without shoes Over the long rather loose hose were worn by way of garters bands of cloth linen or leather bound crosswise in such i a manner as to keep theta up properly upon OS TO MERE MAW e early the early C her etirs with herlandii Tot L tr heir tar three two American heroines and the saoh fad furnish anatural dividing line A point worth noting making tho use kind of cotta It Is wholly useless to make sachet without The perfume will esca from a of wool a or two And cotton with the slightest oil In will destroy tho New has hit upon the clever of sprinkling her on absorber Is absolutely clean and odor loss and also his texture f tho powder from leaking She use an appri case Press are made thin an flat the case usually to match the lining and caught the bust of or In of skirt or hidde In the of tho full sleeve For underwear the prettiest fa hlo- la perfumed ribbon In rosettes or run through Or the of ordinary bon are stitched together tin strips of powdered cotton treated In the sam fashion and the wide corset bow worn by the slender In place of the old time padding The stout a fiat band o ribbon with sachet enclosed tucked l- itlio curve of and inch fumed and run the stock- Ing hem Flannel is a sachet fo becausd it can be caught fiat In wrist without a trace of For a the sachet be hidden In a knob or a bunch hearts tho color of the shade li knotted about tho handle in place of butterfly bows These are a fad of the lash lonable girl and she has them fron the lights of her dressing room tangling from corner an the post of her bed and sho wears then in a lowcut bodice 01 hidden under tho roll of her hair Her is circular pd fits neatl1 In the crown of drossy i never a of ono ouung hat ani never a faintest whiff of for that matter In any sort of outdoor sportsmen the creams and soaps that one And oven more than the outdoor girl hould tho business woman be wary of times Toilet water and cleansing sweet smelling creams nd a both that her of lilacs nstoad of telephone oil but not the smallest clothes Fresh air and and a moderate amount of oposo aro essential for the charm of pet ume But no sachet Is too far a tho sachet lad which will be a groat to the woman who has time erosIon for it For all her sporting clothe that is for elf and motoring- tho York girl uses no sachet pads has her closets and chests hung of Italian orris root from the heart of the Florentine orris tho odorless portion of the root which moat powder These orris be used very in the nursery this summer a violet added when at sachet pads are made to in the and boxes Actual sachets re of course never worn children sweet smells are not denied them 10 modern method of vicarious perfuming irough closot and chest Curious Contest for a Bride In Tibet From th Booklorers Magazine Amonff some of the wilder Tibetan tribes i the Kokonor there Is a curious mnrrlnne ceremonial function This consists In plac ie tho rlrl on her wedding mom In the part of a tree while her male relatives on the lower else In the back of her fathers tent or hut white these relatives the each Lee the latter being armed wltb lolo thorn ticks The groom when these preparations have ten completed rides up anti announces Intention of seizing the bride This re for relatives beat him when attempts to r oman ho manages to his touch the toe of the sue Is- Is ho Is welcomed Into and com llmxnted on lila ardor Should tin rail o not only the Inconvenience of being Ifelesa hut the loss of cattle other given during the negotiations of a to one man thor does not his claims upon but to other suitors afterward until abe may havo halt a husbands Patent Leather Going Out of Style the Stalin Patent leather shoes for women will be of style not spring said Charles Torrey represents Boston shoe house Tans them to a large extent I nra w out with our line spring of lens ist should chnuir I not know lore really Is no accounting for thorn The fact tlmt tans ite In next market and that low cut will remain In patent article however which never has- ten n comfortable shoe for summer wear pores aro clogged airtight will a thing of past C minds are 01 It The plan er a single layer In two together In dress the t rO re soLs WIde ribbon double Is filled flannel B the ho low I lea rrume tho sweet of the and with rain test from Ne but baItS a with gen- erally bureaus but upper remain limbsor part entranceIn his flulre the the ant woman the presents her come dozen Fro out who will mere leather o baa and ohatii stored away stitched parasol dresses line By- e iri ililra slur > > turies tho legs and right here at this ancient date that pitfall for the careless the garth problem seems to havo been encountered Indeed Hamlet v Ith his famous stockings fould ungortered and downgyved to hi- ancleor oven the helpless flaccldlty of i modern sock wrinkled over the shoe top could not equal tho maudlin aspect of thi gartered those Anglo Saxon and AngloNorman nobles As to the stockings of the ladles they wen decorously and unseen a this early time but were undoubtedly worn In an Illuminated manuscript of the fourteenth century we have a picture of t lady putting on a stocking which Is pro Solv M hosenw of BoIrie or early U L U r TillS IS WHAT MAY HAPPEN T AT TIlE FAITh Conductor Polleemen and Others Cant Direct You Where You Want A Woman Who Arrived at Nl Rescue by Kansas and Wltoonil Never go to France unless you know lingo and your visit to the 61 lane Purchase Exposition until you hai bought and studied a map of St Louis Is not a very large or and would think that the big army of imports policemen street car conductors cabmen and might have been require- to give it a cursory glance It Is hopeless taskto try to find one way about In St Louis by tho usual method of asking questions Nobody knows vrher anything The street car conductors have theorle the ultimate destination of tell you whether the pass the hotels or not Th or some of them know th points of the jjoraposs but not what car t take to reach the Cnlon Station As for thi hotel clerks thoy answer superbly Oh dbntllvo Im NYork- A lone camein at 0 oclock on on of the many special trains carrying dele gates to the biennial meeting of women clubs She had engaged a room at a quiet little hotel recommended by a friend and after shaking hands a committee o local club women who tact tho travellers tha hastened out of the station and ballet i cab The Grant Blank ahe directed thi- 3abman Wheres that at lady asked the man Disconcerted tho lone woman graspee travelling 1 j and sought anothei- Mbmaii She dicl not fancy driving through the streets of a strange city at night with i abman who did not know his way Threw cabmen in rapid de their Ignorance of tho location ol Blank and the traveller sought i polloeman Ho pondered for a moment wd advise4 r to walk a north and eke a Page avenue car After asking four citizens and anothei lolioeman the traveller found a Page avenue car Sho boarded it and asked the conductor to stop at the Grand going in Uio wrong I bo calmly ringing up her are I dont know just where It is though The lone woman got out and walked back o the station Tako a Delraar car advised the omnls youth at the information with ty was nearly 10 oclock when the lone roman took the Delraar car and she was and frightened It to her of the C T U were She had read a great of the efforts put by that the protection of women visiting ho fair Miss Helen Gould sho remembered had Ivan a thousand or two toward the or anizntlon of a feminine force which as to offset activities of certain angerson at railway Where The lone woman had an hour in and of the Union Station and she ad spoken to a guardians of place a guardian had to with a pompadour nor any enovolent gentleman a nose But as on a in the crowded ar she began to bo horribly suspicious of ho other passengers car was through like wretched added to her Afterward she learned that St Louis la- ke in the number nnd plan of of its slums You to ass through a few slums to get to any the conductor collected her faro 10 him to stop at the Grand by this had come to regard t a sort of Mrs Anne Hotel eon icier took out a little book and studied it I dont we it he said dubl usly I you transfer to Grand The Grand Blank came n voice dl ctly behind her I am stopping there be happy to show you It was or some ono else who ho never trusted a German who spoke reach without an accent The was lade in perfect English and the L W Th And no farther for the speaker was Chinese in a blue silk petticoat a true The Torte woman gasped Should A tOlE 10AHINS LOUIS ANYONE Wi to- G the one is abut their tOy not from M tier cad Bank Your ray cent widow tire ocr W deal tort for station was out the ror that had slum pInt which M ron avenue Mid turing a she L I wOman tim matter motherly > d by of the modern shape JCtrthl day stockings for both men an women were of cloth and seem to hart bdeh and sewed to fit the and and well No modem giddiness in the shape of striped spotted o highly colored dazzlers could approach gorgeousness of this ancient Henry m of England ordered three paint of for his sister Isabella which with gold As the mon of all classes this was the eoasor of the particolored stocking and lots of it In the hose extended to the waist line upper garment was much Mans mae let the stocking for lat foot closely abbre- viated her ualplao to of who h with felt thatthe impossible the oar top at a crossing and the called avenue she knew It n satin Kansas Preaa block letters Now tim woman had newspaper affll and she metaphorically on of the man Are a newspaper man orlr desperately Ill irh know B try find Then Introduced lila Companion Im an said man from Kansas to the Morel of tho Wisconsin commission and may certainly on be youAnd he tells you said the man the humorous eyes to take this seat stay there till we whore will be escorted to yoi building They will be Ing well find Do you of Did she indeed Wasnt she a clu and what club woman of and it occurred to Mrs Lyon would probably dow had arrived that evening Never mind secretary Th of the Wisconsin is and shes just dying to I know she is wo agree oa and straightened her in the her left ear She gave dab At her nose with an powder purr and said faintly sho You wait and Now York club woman knows noi looks like At least she know that it must be something tho Building at the St exposition with a big room an fire nnd a sweet voiced lady saying how glat- i is to see ono As ton the secretary and the Man fron Kansas they Mmbershh In the W U and with no restriction an personal privileges GOOD SALESMEN SCARCE sill the Competent Drummers Have Jobs Some Merchant Think Have all the good salesmen jobs Thi question Is worrying many business met New York Some merchants wore llHcusBliig tho subject the other day Mid one I have a good line the faolU to execute orders and I spend aomi for advertising yet a good sales nan Is indispensable to my success Trj- a I men who put that heart In their work I myself havo not ho eloquence nor the persuasive powers leccesary to a drummer but I never go or ho road without coming back with more orders than any traveller ever brought dealer who does a very large uslne8s serving some customers at- luch on a of paper a day had beet istenlng I am afflicted the same 10 said My Is myself have tried sorts of men and more money in salaries to Incompetent Irummors In bad up heart to hear that nyC tho same experience whloh worries great sigh I Interviewed and nationalities who an ercd mv many advertisements Scarcely one but asks about the o I have Ikn church deacons and some who re embltxl touts In the hope that might desirable- I liberal and comrals Ions and havo the men opportunity and encouragement but Im to thinking all the good men have First at the Bargain Counter From the Indlanapolii News The first woman In the bargain counter yoUng good looking and well dressed Eclalmcd excitedly before she reached 10 counter pointing at It with both hands Oh that brown that beautiful brown Ivo mo of that grasped tho piece of which ad hw eyijj she lung It to other women at of know she said to save my could not a yard of it aCc n 1 a of s on a wit ton t ant you say er for to I dot But I m big man a ot brow I t OU WIt stat for you the I woman dot know Lyon But her Now hot not ting her hand hat thin Tat In moA wit I debt given hoe A third man what goo is ono that job rush she the clerk the pIec- eD et 1Mrsetr e b iM In the sot the Jewels In to s imposaiblo- bho wild and e countered the sympathetic lit man wearing his coat hu lire the lit anna abs are behi ave I transfer hotel Im sorry say madam that youll with brown humorous this tel to glad and morn know itfni Don gulp town wh moo every woman hastIi eer Wis- consin ice none ito and heaved ants salary required every caught while Adopting The particolored hose by no In pairs Each leg was of a Sometimes one was striped up and dow and the other plain or tho leis were divide Into sections on of which a dlfferet device was employed This the glorification of th stocking Never since that day Itre calved anything lIke the attention who must then have beet lavished upon It It has been the disagreeable custom o serious writers who think more of hard fact than of chivalry to respect tho story of th of Salisburys embarrassing garte Edward up with hi gallant Honi toil gut mel y Bu if the Order of the Garter was not lug geeted by this Inoldent It to yet a myster where Edward III got his garter to use a a symbol- It la very doubtful f men wore garter In at that day as no sign of auol- an to E BTXOOKESSION OF TMX I men Count Eland I was truly penis s I- I V f WORLDS VIA THK Shore R R OR VIA THK New York CentralT- he IxTraok Trunk Una- O eh xourclan In Jun on Saturday July 3d and avary Thursday In July TICKETS NOW ON 8AL- ETiVlc vii Short 1800 SSiSS i via York Central 2000 rataUoaR- etumlneyoft can stop t Falli and II desired travel from Hudson WvW Steamerv Tkket Agents everywhere will gladly jive fullest Information d fA 1 R IIr Wet 1 Wet e 5 fom Alban On 1 tram > SEVEN SECRETS OF A SMILE XV IMPORTANT CHARM AND TO ACQUIRE IT Why OiUdrens Smiles Are More Attract Than Those of Cultlvatln- a Cnplds Bow Cherry Up Out the Crows For a sweet seven of beaut are required These are com plexlon good teeth a Cupids bow mouth a correct noso expressive eyes a fasclnat- ing blush and a good turn of the head To this list one might add dimples- A child has the loveliest smile In world and the reasons are several A- childs skin is creamy its flush or blust- b natural Its eyes are smiling and laugh when the rest of the face laughs Allpeople love laughing children With the grown up smile it is different Few people smile well Before you can smile there are oertalr things which you must possess You must have good teeth Unless you have good teeth you cannot afford to part your lips If ycur teeth are not perfect and still you want to smile you must employ a dentist U put In shape bow mouth upon the shape of the lips Compressed lipnever how prettily They are together In a hard straight often they are colorless They are never and they have a cruel look which To obtain the Cupids bow mouth learn to bow your lips Learn to hold them easily and prettily Olve up trying to look determined Many women have a determined look of which they are unconscious They have fallen into the habit of pressing the lips together and they do that away all softness of expression Learn to tho hips just touch each other in a natural not try to press them together Never your lips if you want a bow the Tina nice so that will bow properly learn to use nightly a let tho lips or grow rough health Blue lips Indicate a poor circula tionNext when keeping nice to make natural lips should be a glowing red Cherry are in alas are morn be found in poetry than in natural life To make your lips glow should bo your aim It is tho circu- lation it is done by exercising them It la done outdoor cheerful And It Is also done by coloring There are little boxes of vegetable rouge which give the lips a nice but a these ladles of refinement are it teems a step toward the impossible still one sees very estimable women And after is It worse than face powder or hairpins or for that matter any everyday make the a Cupids bow if you have arrived at the are to make there Is a little art required You must have a bit of vpge and some cream colored face powder- Open your pot of vegetable and dip Now touch the middle upper Up slightly just sufficient to make an bow You will peed a little dab of the red for not good taste tc Use enough to be visible to take a little powder and apply It HOW Grow R bbl Feet pit the they tem pre cure bit blue out for our not thought day largely iever are look life ¬ ¬ > is Wifes H or Illumination of the time nor was there any need of them the long hose being by points or laces to the doublet the other hand It Is very likely that ladles Wore that little gold and jewelled clrolel then just as they did later In the seventeenth century Evelyn de- scribes this fascinating portion of a ladyc wardrobe thus Four pair of pas it toy shot through With sliver diamond buckles too For linen and for In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries gartera were avery important a mans dregs for it is then that we worth a copyhold and Stowe At this day men of meano rank weare garters and sues roses of more tan flve price They wore later small of silk tied in a large bow and with ends of point lace Stockings of were generally supposed- to have been unknown in England before the middle of the sixteenth century and- a pair of long Spanish silk hose was con nldered a gift worthy of a king At this time too the word stocking first Itself in the guise of stockings of hose that Is continuations of the trunk hose or breeches which were stocks while the lower covering of the leg was called nether stocks ted S aboe pot gar pound U rich presents 1- I corners of themouth This Is to shorten the mouth lt Is too wide and you the bow of Cupid You take an Inoh off mouth in this manner and can transform It from a slit narrow and colorless into something that greatly resembles the verse The rosebud mouth Is a of nature You cannot cultivate It This Is the little round mouth with heavy red lips and It mouth seen most frequently upon but very upon the grownup Still if yourmouth go In der arid little red at their thickest part You may suc- ceed and If do have a wonder- fully handsome mouth smile is nice without nice But ohhow difficult it not hard and by sparing are certainly not attractive harden the spoil tho expression of the eyesThe taking of crows feet around the an important for the woman who wants to happily She must her face and around her with a good cold cream Massage the lines ever so lightly with a soft cream and on it all your life A little treatment night bettor than a great deal of treatment once In a while To a correct nose one must diet a little Eat of fresh fruit and nit Bettor to turn vegetarian If skin ia not all it vegetarian complexion is one of those are of the meat eater The fascinating blush is excellent to ia not hard to get if the complexion Is la a accom plishment All women un- fortunately when you have reached ma skin is so bad that tho blush- Is not visible to the naked skin and pretty and you blush without half And for tho seventh thing thorn Is a carriage of the Hold your chin well and you will be sure to carry your bend right- A chin Is much more becoming to face than a lowered one Lift up your chin and learn to it lifted It a great accessory to a pretty smile Dress Clothes for Foreign Travel PMlttdttpftia JW fVttfl K tip for you said the man who as travelled to the one who is about starting nr the other side Take your evening lotbea but If you are travelling light leave our trockcoat suit at home Even the English of fashion no longer it ab o necessary to In rock coat beaver For myself Is the in which to about leaves his swallowtail at home is Is reckoning Over dinner In a lunch nd of men carefully even ng clothes Dinner a ceremony to dress- or even though one be not Queer old TUne Railroad Pass Front the Tyrant Pa Herald Col William ferris of Huntingdon en oys the rare distinction of travelling on a ennsylvania railroad Pass issued In 1850 which is without limit This pass Is a curiosity riving on it In addition to necessary the picture of an and two which are asmlglit be Imagined he engine is anything modern oacli time belly n which baggage was carried The Colonel reins he was one of the rlglnal stockholders of the company want It thick I I the i I your and corers with a ot pow eye me must bo kept one do by war j 1 not t for wear and however may I I you can Rot Do not mot is bad for goo covet Kop Fr- om 1 lan consIder Uk tho man who cock and len I Join cars to make look abort and like the Ia the very lips are Shorten touch late eyes can with much possible the if must glasses useful the vegetables take tmless well digested the ood She his Continent The takes his ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ > sicry In the Inventory which makes this dis- tinction ono taken in the Henry VIII are entries of a quarter grene velvet for stocks to a payr of hose for the Kyngs grace and of the quantity of purpul salon to cover stocks of a pair of hose of purpul cloth of gold tiasewo for the Kynge- As early as the third year of Elizabeths reign we road that Mistress Montague- the Queens silk woman presented to her Majesty a pair of black knit silk stockings made in England which pleased that dressy but astuto lady BO much that she would never wear any cloth hose afterward not only on account of the delicacy of the article itself but also In order to encourage this new English manufacture by her own example Not long after this a clever apprentice one William Rider was much struck by a pair of knit stockings brought from Mantua had seen at an Italian roerchanta He borrowed them and having made a pair like them gave thorn to the Earl of Pembroke This was the first pale of worsted stockings knit In England- Of the womens stockings Stubbs says in his Anatomy of In 1583 Yea they are not hose of all kInds of changeable colors aa green red russet tawny and else what not thin delicate hosen must be con Ingly knit and curiously indented In clocks else accordingly i i rig MOl i t worst i Abu ever pint wit white Those ¬

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Page 1: C New York Girl It Shore - Library of Congress · 2017-12-16 · h fads of the NewYork Girl Every Garment Must Have Sachet Nowadays oJ I k-i Its < When the Now York girl passes you

h

fads of the New York Girl

Every Garment Must Have Sachet Nowadays

oJ I

k-

i

Its

<

When the Now York girl passes you o

Fifth avenue this week you fancytho wind has blown to you ovo

an oldrfoahioned Juno garden Just th

faintest whiff from tho garden ao dellcntand that a minute after yoiImagine It was fancy or memory that hasuddenly brought you visions of cloVer

meadows and clumps of vlolcta by anand narcissus blooms that coma u

III scattered bunches through a neglectedgross plot

But nil these pretty throughts wore no

Just fancy It Is a fact that perfume li ii

fashion again that tim Now York girl hoigiven up tho whim that held thatwere vulgar and that there in just now t

craZ3 for sachets for perfumed toilet

powders for acented baths for lingerumnrl R and for blicats odors in closats

and chiffoniers and linon clientn-

Tliu dayri of soap that llko laying

an nsphalt i avem nt of tollot waters thaiugRst3d a hospital accident ward ol

hair that ought to have been used

with enforced quarantine are happily over

It is no longer good form to scoff at sweetI smell any more than you would spurnI flowers for being common or color for

being supplied by a limited corporation-

And besides with fashionable sachetpowder at ISO a pound and Cordova loathotsachet at tl a Hfjuaro Inch there is noof the Now York girls perfume fad becom-

ing too swiftly popular And only the

most delicate most odors

am smartFlamboyant flavors soaking handker

ohlsf blou 3 or hair aro ultraordinary Vlvidmw of odor Is like a crude

color it stands for lack of subtletylaok of cultivated Instinct

Tho New York girl would no more thinkof Upping a bottle of cologne upon herhandkerchief than she would of going

out with cold cream on her mouth Per-

fume cream toilet water sachet and bathtablets arc nil an Integral part of hur myster-

ious process of good grooming Sho uses

her pcrfumo as she USOB color or materialIn cloth to express her personality anti

that with reserve and coquetryThe most fashionable perfumes are dlf

flcult to deaorilw They are mado up of amixture of odors Different flavors are com-

bined until a rare and unusual blend Is ob-

tained impossible to Imitate and with adozen of varying fragntno o

like a complex and nxqutalte temperamentIt la the whim of tho New York girl to

blend her own perfume Thus she escapes

any possibility of and can bo

certain of same expression of perfumefeeling In all her garments her room herbath

The exact proportions of various odorsused are the secret of a Broadway

txpeit to whom making perfumes la fine

irt as it used to be In the old French COn

VentsBut the flowers that blend into the ex

which she has copyare all those of an old fashioned

flowerbed clove pinks sweet alyssumheliotrope lemon verbena and day lilies

and she calls the mixture June Qtrdonand she is right as you will know If you

pull on Fifth avenueIf have not the originality or tho

tune or the temperament to express your-

self in an Individual perfume there areexquisite new blends already on the marketthat are too delicate to be overllkod andtoo expensive to be overused

There U a from a dozen hothouseblossoms in ono new perfume and the beautywho decides upon this perfume noveltywill have her soap her sachet her bathpowders her face powder her toilet waterail to

She will no more change her perfumescheme in a season than she would her colorscheme May a leopard change his spotsr a beauty her perfume Not If the opln

of Is consideredAnd frequently and color are

a to expressive har

that

old

lime lied

ton 1M

not

danger

a

ulalte ha1atlon

Iew

f

r

r

t

t

cent

took

iii

t

r

c

t

°

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APrM r roan Is busily fulfilling his destiny

halt year he was devoured with propsBMacullne indignation at the presumption

fwoman In adopting his socks This yearlie not only meekly accepts the situation bu

has further thrust his feet Into the stockfo to speak by putting on his wiles Ion

hose and profeasing to feel happier morcomfortable and better dressed than

ever felt beforeHP seems to bo not at all alarmed at tM

of the established order of thlnge

but makes the curiously feminine pie

ln defence of the act that he has hithertohad much trouble In presenting a trimwell gartered appearance t to the world

by tho pressure of the maseulingarter below the knee and an ankle clothes

In slovenly wrinkles of an ungartcresock With a feminine stocking gartcreiabove the knee he la neat and comfortableat the time

Man should be judged leniently In

matter for ho seems to have alwojhad a great deal more trouble with histockings than woman From the time

WHICH PAIR BELO

I

n srJal

and

lie only the choice twcen a log

samethis

I

t

11

R

h-

bO

be-

numbed

I

I

awWIIA-

ct b-

t

°

mony sweotbrler iu and gowrin scent and wardrObe clove

sachet and clover frocks clove pink bathand n carnation bedroomis tho thing In soap as well OH surrounding-

And there are many new amsimple perfumes be very JOnah

vogue scent in aIn It Is for tho young fo-

tho personality that would wear whitecynical about cynicism

Mitt clover soaps powderswaters are afragrance Wholesome frank

of clcanUncsu and sunshine-In a summer sachet one forgets that it is

Itsite freshness rattier than a manufacturedscent

A far removed from hayfield i

and clover meadows Is tho newpachnt It of roots and herbsand hark of trees and has tho fragranceof n tropical garden at sunrise-

It Rweot and faint when notstirred and with tho mystery that cometwhen ones memory amixture of scents or emotions A breathof It is a scarlet orchida whiff Is tho thiok-swuetnpHS of acaclnH then thoof a tropic shrub and the delicacy of some

herbTho New York girl is desolated that she

cannot u o It OH Juno garden sachetbut her fads are to her for astho laws of tho Mccles and thd Persiansand no with a captivating in herpretty brow Uio essence

tropical junglo from her trustmost hated friend will not

discover It until she too is bound a solemnfad to some less adorably seductive sachet

TIll Now mind notnearly as much that any ono she liked

should u obecause however lastingly delicious andingratiating this wonderful leathermay not new It has not the danger-ous quality of stimulating curiosity muchmore dreaded than givingpleasure

was pew whenIta haunting made men see vis

of romances and hear the tinkle

coukl be n it was worth whilesewing of it In frock and muff of

ones handkerchief box and glovebox with it and nf flaunting it a in

nottrilH of tho l sToday this exquisite loather of Cordova

Is an and an it was withthe Spanish hidalgos and Sefloritos of the

i but the New York girlhas forgotten

In to do entire justice to thefad the Now York a perfume

sablnot to take to the countryher completely stocked with Junonence every form toilet water for herrefreshment after or tennis tabletsjo dissolve In her bath soap that leavesler hands with the fragrance of hatingsirrled a bunch of Juno flowera essenceso sprinkle in her rooms poudre de rii

of pinks and powderiweet as though it were the

red from day cold cream andcream massage cream all with

nd sachet powder literally by theFor variety of shape

nd In every possible convenientlace are secret tho subtle faint er

salvo fragrance that is wafted to you fromhe Now this season otssenoee can possibly the intongtbla

sweetness a properly managedof sachets can

And tho habit means no littletime and work A successful flower

demands the time of a Theminute the powder Is exposed sufficiently

mist begin to weaken materiallySomo will last a year sufficient

is bound up In cotton Other moreperfumes evaporate entirely la

most arothe leathers and scented

flannels and the most temporary are theIngle flower odors rose

especially in the summer time mustho powder fresh low odors lest

three months in really wormweather

And where would one wear a sachetaks tho Puritan spinster of tho New Yorkirl

Everywhere if are fashionable Inyour umbrella which has a

at the end comer of your handerchief hem in tho crown of your in

ho hem of your stocking bow ofour garter your chemise

Puritan spinster covered

1lI

irl

n

I

l V

Ill

d

dE

or tiny mandolins twilightand when l just had to ask wherJ

found

per-fume

retir-ingsomo variation or the gaen scents

over

gar-den

to allow to

I

powder

six

lid

i

Lbs

century

o

¬

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blem of Cewhen the larger part of his person witclothed In stockings down to the half lice

of the nineteenth century his hosiery hiucaused him an Infinity of troublo though

I and expenseA close fitting leg covering was generally

I worn among tho primitive nations of Europby mon of all clauses from a veryperiod and was probably Oriental In originon a similar garment conspicuous InPhrygian costume The Normafis calledthem chnusscs but the conquerorslearned to use the Saxon name for thelong stockings which were worn for five oisix centuries Men of both nations anpictured as wearing short stockings liaddition to tho long hose Bomotlmes withand sometimes without shoes

Over the long rather loose hose wereworn by way of garters bands of clothlinen or leather bound crosswise in such ia manner as to keep theta up properly upon

OS TO MERE MAW

e

early

the

early

C

her etirs with herlandii TotL tr

heir tar three twoAmerican heroines and the saoh

fad furnish anatural dividing lineA point worth noting making

tho use kind of cottaIt Is wholly useless to make sachetwithout The perfume will escafrom a of wool a or two

And cotton with the slightest oil Inwill destroy thoNew has hit upon the cleverof sprinkling her on absorber

Is absolutely clean and odorloss and also his texture f

tho powder from leaking She use

an appricase

Press are made thin anflat the case usually to match thelining and caught the bust of

or In of skirt or hiddeIn the of tho full sleeve

For underwear the prettiest fa hlo-la perfumed ribbon In rosettes or run through

Or the of ordinarybon are stitched together tinstrips of powdered cotton

treated In the samfashion and the wide corset bowworn by the slender In place of the oldtime padding

The stout a fiat band oribbon with sachet enclosed tucked l-

itlio curve of and inch

fumed and run the stock-Ing hem Flannel is a sachet fo

becausd it can be caught fiat Inwrist without a trace of

For a the sachet be hiddenIn a knob or a bunch

hearts tho color of the shade li

knotted about tho handle in place ofbutterfly bows

These are a fad of the lashlonable girl and she has them fronthe lights of her dressing roomtangling from corneran the post of her bed and sho wears then

in a lowcut bodice 01

hidden under tho roll of her hairHer is circular pd fits neatl1

In the crown of drossy inever a of ono ouung hat aninever a faintest whiff of for thatmatter In any sort of outdoor sportsmen

the creams and soaps that one

And oven more than the outdoor girlhould tho business womanbe wary of

times Toilet water andcleansing sweet smelling creams

nd a both that her of lilacsnstoad of telephone oil but not the smallest

clothes Freshair and and a moderate amount ofoposo aro essential for the charm of petume

But no sachet Is too far atho sachet lad which will be a groat

to the woman who has timeerosIon for it

For all her sporting clothe that is forelf and motoring-tho York girl uses no sachet pads

has her closets and chests hungof Italian orris rootfrom the heart of the Florentine orris

tho odorless portion of the rootwhich moat powder

These orris be used veryin the nursery this summer

a violet added whenat sachet pads are made to in the

and boxes Actual sachetsre of course never worn children

sweet smells are not denied them10 modern method of vicarious perfuming

irough closot and chest

Curious Contest for a Bride In TibetFrom th Booklorers Magazine

Amonff some of the wilder Tibetan tribesi the Kokonor there Is a curious mnrrlnne

ceremonial function This consists In placie tho rlrl on her wedding mom In the

part of a tree while her male relativeson the lower else In the back

of her fathers tent or hut white theserelatives the each

Lee the latter being armed wltb lolo thornticksThe groom when these preparations haveten completed rides up anti announces

Intention of seizing the bride This refor relatives beat him

when attempts to roman ho manages to his

touch the toe of the sue Is-

Is ho Is welcomed Into and comllmxnted on lila ardor Should tin rail

o not only the Inconvenience of beingIfelesa hut the loss of cattle other

given during the negotiationsof a to one man

thor does not his claims uponbut to other suitors

afterward until abe may havo halt ahusbands

Patent Leather Going Out of Style

the StalinPatent leather shoes for women will beof style not spring said Charles Torreyrepresents Boston shoe house Tans

them to a large extent I nraw out with our line spring of lens

ist should chnuir I not knowlore really Is no accounting for thorn The

fact tlmt tansite In next market and that low cut

will remain In patentarticle however which never has-

ten n comfortable shoe for summer wearpores aro clogged airtight will

a thing of past

C

minds are

01

ItTheplan

er

a single layer In twotogether In

dressthe

t

rO

resoLs

WIderibbon double Is filled

flannel

B the

ho low

Ilearrume

tho sweet of theandwith

raintest

from

NebutbaItS a

withgen-

erally

bureaus

but

upperremain limbsorpart

entranceIn

hisflulre the

the

ant womanthe

presents

hercomedozen

Fro

outwhowill

mere

leathero

baa andohatii

stored away

stitched

parasol

dresses

line

By-

e iri

ililra slur

>

>

turiestho legs and right here at this ancient datethat pitfall for the careless the garthproblem seems to havo been encounteredIndeed Hamlet v Ith his famous stockingsfould ungortered and downgyved to hi-

ancleor oven the helpless flaccldlty of i

modern sock wrinkled over the shoe topcould not equal tho maudlin aspect of thigartered those Anglo

Saxon and AngloNorman noblesAs to the stockings of the ladles they wen

decorously and unseen athis early time but were undoubtedly wornIn an Illuminated manuscript of thefourteenth century we have a picture of tlady putting on a stocking which Is pro

Solv

M hosenw of BoIrie or

early

U

LU

r

TillS IS WHAT MAY HAPPEN TAT TIlE FAITh

Conductor Polleemen and OthersCant Direct You Where You Want

A Woman Who Arrived at Nl

Rescue by Kansas and Wltoonil

Never go to France unless you knowlingo and your visit to the 61

lane Purchase Exposition until you haibought and studied a map of St LouisIs not a very large or andwould think that the big army of importspolicemen street car conductors cabmenand might have been require-to give it a cursory glance

It Is hopeless taskto try to find oneway about In St Louis by tho usual methodof asking questions Nobody knows vrheranything

The street car conductors have theorlethe ultimate destination of

tell you whether thepass the hotels or not Th

or some of them know thpoints of the jjoraposs but not what car ttake to reach the Cnlon Station As for thi

hotel clerks thoy answer superblyOh dbntllvo Im NYork-

A lone camein at 0 oclock on onof the many special trains carrying delegates to the biennial meeting of womenclubs She had engaged a room at a quietlittle hotel recommended by a friend andafter shaking hands a committee olocal club women who tact tho travellerstha hastened out of the station and ballet

i cabThe Grant Blank ahe directed thi-

3abmanWheres that at lady asked the man

Disconcerted tho lone woman graspeetravelling 1 j and sought anothei-

Mbmaii She dicl not fancy driving throughthe streets of a strange city at night with i

abman who did not know his wayThrew cabmen in rapid de

their Ignorance of tho location olBlank and the traveller sought

i polloeman Ho pondered for a momentwd advise4 r to walk a north andeke a Page avenue car

After asking four citizens and anotheilolioeman the traveller found a Page

avenue car Sho boarded it and asked theconductor to stop at the Grand

going in Uio wrong Ibo calmly ringing up her

are I dont know just where It isthough

The lone woman got out and walked backo the station

Tako a Delraar car advised the omnlsyouth at the information with

ty was nearly 10 oclock when the loneroman took the Delraar car and she was

and frightened It to herof the

C T U were She had read a greatof the efforts put by that

the protection of women visitingho fairMiss Helen Gould sho remembered had

Ivan a thousand or two toward the oranizntlon of a feminine force whichas to offset activities of certainangerson at railway Where

The lone woman had an hour in andof the Union Station and she

ad spoken to a guardians ofplace a guardian had to

with a pompadour nor anyenovolent gentleman a nose

But as on a in the crowdedar she began to bo horribly suspicious ofho other passengers car was

through like wretchedadded to her

Afterward she learned that St Louis la-

ke in the number nnd plan ofof its slums You to

ass through a few slums to get to any

the conductor collected her faro10 him to stop at the Grand

by this had come to regardt a sort of Mrs Anne Hotel eonicier took out a little book and studied it

I dont we it he said dublusly I you transfer to Grand

The Grand Blank came n voice dlctly behind her I am stopping there

be happy to show youIt was or some ono else who

ho never trusted a German who spokereach without an accent The was

lade in perfect English and the L W

ThAnd no farther for the speaker wasChinese in a blue silk petticoat a

trueThe Torte woman gasped Should

A tOlE 10AHINS LOUIS

ANYONE

Wito-

G

the

one

is

abut their

tOy not

from

M

tier

cad

BankYour

ray

cent widow

tire ocrWdeal tortfor

stationwas

out

theror that had

slum

pIntwhich

M ronavenue

Mid

turing

ashe

L

I

wOman

tim

matter motherly

>

d byof the modern shape

JCtrthl day stockings for both men anwomen were of cloth and seem to hartbdeh and sewed to fit theand and well No modemgiddiness in the shape of striped spotted o

highly colored dazzlers could approachgorgeousness of this ancientHenry m of England ordered three paint

of for his sister Isabella whichwith gold As

the mon of all classes this was the eoasorof the particolored stocking and lots of itIn the hose extended to the waist line

upper garment was much

Mans

mae let

the

stocking for

lat

foot closely

abbre-viated

her ualplao toofwho h with

felt thattheimpossible the oar topat a crossing and thecalled avenue she knew Itn

satin Kansas Preaablock letters

Now tim woman had newspaper afflland she

metaphorically onof the man

Are a newspaper man orlrdesperately Ill irh

knowB try findThen Introduced lila Companion

Im an saidman from Kansas to the Morelof tho Wisconsin commission andmay certainly on beyouAnd he tells you said the manthe humorous eyes to take this seatstay there till we

whore will be escorted to yoibuilding They will be

Ing well find Do youof

Did she indeed Wasnt she a cluand what club woman

of and it occurred toMrs Lyon would probably dow

had arrived that eveningNever mind secretary Th

of the Wisconsin isand shes just dying to

I know she is wo agree oa

and straightened herin the her left ear She gave

dab At her nose with anpowder purr and said faintly

shoYou wait and

Now York club woman knows noilooks like At least she know

that it must be something thoBuilding at the St exposition

with a big room an firennd a sweet voiced lady saying how glat-

i is to see onoAs ton the secretary and the Man fron

Kansas they MmbershhIn the W U and with no restrictionan personal privileges

GOOD SALESMEN SCARCE

sill the Competent Drummers Have JobsSome Merchant Think

Have all the good salesmen jobs Thiquestion Is worrying many business met

New York Some merchants worellHcusBliig tho subject the other dayMid one I have a good line the faolU

to execute orders and I spend aomifor advertising yet a good sales

nan Is indispensable to my success Trj-

a I men who put thatheart In their work I myself havo not

ho eloquence nor the persuasive powersleccesary to a drummer but I never go orho road without coming back with more

orders than any traveller ever brought

dealer who does a very largeuslne8s serving some customers at-

luch on a of paper a day had beetistenlng

I am afflicted the same10 said My Is myselfhave tried sorts of men and

more money in salaries to IncompetentIrummors In bad

upheart to hear that

nyC tho same experience whloh worries

great sigh I Interviewedand nationalities who an

ercd mv many advertisementsScarcely one but asks about the

o I haveIkn church deacons and some who reembltxl touts In the hope that

might desirable-I liberal and comrals

Ions and havo the menopportunity and encouragement but Im

to thinkingall the good men have

First at the Bargain CounterFrom the Indlanapolii News

The first woman In the bargain counteryoUng good looking and well dressed

Eclalmcd excitedly before she reached10 counter pointing at It with both hands

Oh that brown that beautiful brownIvo mo of that

grasped tho piece of whichad hw eyijj she

lung It to other women at of

know she said to save mycould not a yard of it

aCc n1

aof s

on awit

tont ant

you say er for

to I dotBut Im

big man aot brow

I tOU

WIt

stat foryou the

I

woman dotknow Lyon Buther

Now

hot not

ting her handhat

thinTat

In

moA

witI

debtgiven hoe

A third man

what goo is

ono

that job

rush

she the clerkthe pIec-

eD et

1Mrsetr e b iMIn the sot

the Jewels In to s

imposaiblo-bho wild and e

countered the sympathetic litman wearing his coat hu

lirethe

lit annaabs

are behi aveI transfer

hotelIm sorry say madam that

youll

with brownhumorous

this

tel

to

gladand morn

know

itfni Dongulp

town wh

mooevery

woman hastIieer

Wis-consin

icenone

ito and heaved

antssalary

required

every

caughtwhile

Adopting

The particolored hose by noIn pairs Each leg was of aSometimes one was striped up and dowand the other plain or tho leis were divideInto sections on of which a dlfferetdevice was employed

This the glorification of thstocking Never since that day Itrecalved anything lIke the attention whomust then have beet lavished upon It

It has been the disagreeable custom o

serious writers who think more of hard factthan of chivalry to respect tho story of th

of Salisburys embarrassing garteEdward up with hi

gallant Honi toil gut mel y Bu

if the Order of the Garter was not luggeeted by this Inoldent It to yet a mysterwhere Edward III got his garter to use aa symbol-

It la very doubtful f men wore garterIn at that day as no sign of auol-

an to

E BTXOOKESSION OF TMX I

men

Count

Eland

I

was truly

penis

s I-

I

V

f

WORLDSVIA THK

Shore R ROR VIA THK

New York CentralT-he IxTraok Trunk Una-

O eh xourclan In Jun on Saturday July 3d andavary Thursday In July

TICKETS NOW ON 8AL-

ETiVlc vii Short 1800 SSiSS ivia York Central 2000 rataUoaR-

etumlneyoft can stop t Falli and II desired travel from Hudson

WvW Steamerv Tkket Agents everywhere will gladly jive fullest Information

d

fA 1 R IIr

Wet

1

Wete 5fom

Alban On

1tram

>

SEVEN SECRETS OF A SMILE

XV IMPORTANT CHARM ANDTO ACQUIRE IT

Why OiUdrens Smiles Are More AttractThan Those of Cultlvatln-a Cnplds Bow Cherry Up

Out the Crows

For a sweet seven of beautare required These are complexlon good teeth a Cupids bow moutha correct noso expressive eyes a fasclnat-ing blush and a good turn of the headTo this list one might add dimples-

A child has the loveliest smile In

world and the reasons are several A-

childs skin is creamy its flush or blust-

b natural Its eyes are smiling andlaugh when the rest of the face laughsAllpeople love laughing children

With the grown up smile it is differentFew people smile well

Before you can smile there are oertalrthings which you must possess You must

have good teeth Unless you have good

teeth you cannot afford to part your lipsIf ycur teeth are not perfect and still youwant to smile you must employ a dentist U

put In shapebow mouth

upon the shape of the lips Compressed

lipnever how prettily They aretogether In a hard straightoften they are colorless They are never

and they have a cruel look which

To obtain the Cupids bow mouth learnto bow your lips Learn to hold themeasily and prettily Olve up trying tolook determined

Many women have a determined lookof which they are unconscious Theyhave fallen into the habit of pressing thelips together and they do that

away all softness of expressionLearn to tho hips just touch each other

in a natural not try to pressthem together Never your lips ifyou want a bow

the Tina nice so that willbow properly learn to use nightly a

let tho lips or growrough

health Blue lips Indicate a poor circulationNext when keeping niceto make natural lips shouldbe a glowing red Cherry are

in alas are mornbe found in poetry than in natural

lifeTo make your lips glow should bo your

aim It is tho circu-lation it is done by exercising them It ladone outdoor cheerful

And It Is also done by coloring

There are little boxes of vegetable rougewhich give the lips a nicebut a these ladles ofrefinement are itteems a step toward the impossible stillone sees very estimable womenAnd after is It worse than facepowder or hairpins or for that matterany everyday

make the a Cupidsbow if you have arrived at the

are to make there Is a littleart required You must have a bit of vpge

and some cream colored facepowder-

Open your pot of vegetable and dipNow

touch the middle upper Up slightlyjust sufficient to make anbow You will peed a little dabof the red for not good taste tc Useenough to be visible to

take a little powder and apply It

HOW

GrowR bbl Feet

pit

the

they

tem

precure

bit

blue out for our

not

thought

day

largely

iever

are look

life

¬

¬

>

is Wifes Hor Illumination of the time nor was thereany need of them the long hose beingby points or laces to the doubletthe other hand It Is very likely that ladlesWore that little gold and jewelled clrolelthen just as they did later

In the seventeenth century Evelyn de-

scribes this fascinating portion of a ladycwardrobe thus

Four pair of pas it toy shot throughWith sliver diamond buckles tooFor linen and for

In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuriesgartera were avery important amansdregs for it is then that we

worth a copyhold and StoweAt this day men of meano rank

weare garters and sues roses of more tanflve price They wore latersmall of silk tied in a large bowand with ends of point lace

Stockings of were generally supposed-to have been unknown in England beforethe middle of the sixteenth century and-a pair of long Spanish silk hose was connldered a gift worthy of a king At thistime too the word stocking firstItself in the guise of stockings of hosethat Is continuations of the trunk hose orbreeches which were stockswhile the lower covering of the leg wascalled nether stocks

ted

Saboe

potgar

pound

U rich

presents

1-

I

corners of themouth This Is toshorten the mouth lt Is too wide and you

the bow of CupidYou take an Inoh off

mouth in this manner and can transformIt from a slit narrow and colorlessinto something that greatly resembles the

verseThe rosebud mouth Is a of nature

You cannot cultivate It This Is the littleround mouth with heavy red lips and

It mouth seen most frequentlyupon but veryupon the grownup Still if yourmouth

go In

der arid little redat their thickest part You may suc-

ceed and If do have a wonder-fully handsome mouth

smile is nice without nice Butohhow difficult it

not hard and by sparing

are certainly not attractive hardenthe spoil tho expression of theeyesThe taking of crows feet aroundthe an important for thewoman who wants to happily Shemust her faceand around her with a goodcold cream Massage the lines ever solightly with a soft cream and on

it all your life A little treatmentnight bettor than a great deal

of treatment once In a whileTo a correct nose one must diet a

little Eat of fresh fruit and nit

Bettor to turn vegetarian If skinia not all it vegetariancomplexion is one of those

are of the meat eaterThe fascinating blush is excellent to

ia not hard to get if thecomplexion Is

la a accomplishment All women un-fortunately when you have reached ma

skin is so bad that tho blush-Is not visible to the nakedskin and pretty and you blushwithout half

And for tho seventh thing thorn Is acarriage of the Hold your

chin well and you will be sure to carry yourbend right-

A chin Is much more becomingto face than a lowered one Lift upyour chin and learn to it lifted It

a great accessory to a pretty smile

Dress Clothes for Foreign TravelPMlttdttpftia JW fVttfl K

tip for you said the man whoas travelled to the one who is about startingnr the other side Take your evening

lotbea but If you are travelling light leaveour trockcoat suit at home Even the English

of fashion no longer it ab onecessary to In

rock coat beaver For myselfIs the in which to about

leaves his swallowtail at home isIs reckoning Over dinner In

a lunchnd of men carefully evenng clothes Dinner a ceremony to dress-or even though one be not

Queer old TUne Railroad PassFront the Tyrant Pa Herald

Col William ferris of Huntingdon enoys the rare distinction of travelling on a

ennsylvania railroad Pass issued In 1850which is without limit This pass Is a curiosityriving on it In addition to necessary

the picture of an and twowhich are asmlglit be Imagined

he engine is anything modernoacli time bellyn which baggage was carried The Colonelreins he was one of therlglnal stockholders of the company

want It thick

II

the i

I

your and

corers with a ot pow

eyeme must bo kept one

do by war j1 not t

for wear andhowever may I

I

you can Rot Do notmotis bad for

goocovet

Kop

Fr-om 1

lan consIderUk

tho man who cockandlen I

Join

cars

to make look abort and like

theIathe

very lips areShorten touch

lateeyes

can with

much possible theif must glasses

useful

the vegetables taketmless well digested

the

ood

She

his

Continent The takes his

¬¬

¬

¬

¬

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sicryIn the Inventory which makes this dis-

tinction ono taken in the HenryVIII are entries of a quartergrene velvet for stocks to a payr of hosefor the Kyngs grace and of thequantity of purpul salon to coverstocks of a pair of hose of purpul cloth ofgold tiasewo for the Kynge-

As early as the third year of Elizabethsreign we road that Mistress Montague-the Queens silk woman presented to herMajesty a pair of black knit silk stockingsmade in England which pleased that dressybut astuto lady BO much that she wouldnever wear any cloth hose afterward notonly on account of the delicacy of the articleitself but also In order to encourage thisnew English manufacture by her ownexample

Not long after this a clever apprenticeone William Rider was much struck by apair of knit stockings broughtfrom Mantua had seen at anItalian roerchanta He borrowed themand having made a pair like them gavethorn to the Earl of Pembroke This wasthe first pale of worsted stockings knit InEngland-

Of the womens stockings Stubbs saysin his Anatomy of In 1583 Yeathey are not hose of allkInds of changeable colors aa green red

russet tawny and else what notthin delicate hosen must be con

Ingly knit and curiously indented Inclocks

else accordingly

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