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Show The Troublesotoe Sash. I I note that the sash still roosts high in lie estimation of the summer young nan. Where last year one abdomen felt he firm, clinging clasp of the silken sur-ingle, sur-ingle, this season there are treble the umber of sub-rib regions so beautified, 'rom an sesthetic point of view the eus-om eus-om is commendable. The sash hides rom view the aching void 'twLxt trouser iand and shirt, it conceals brass sus-ender sus-ender buttons with black thread inter-als, inter-als, and if properly selected as to color t should lead the eye by easy stops from he yellow of the sand shoes to the crim-on crim-on of the sunburned nose of its owner, lie trouble with the average sash is, lowever, that it shrinks from the public) ye. '' ; " In the effort to conceal itself it exposes1 nore or less of the shirt of the man fhom it possesses. Your youth will rise in the morning with summer in his esrt and his surcingle in his hand to ipend fifty minutes in arranging the ttter. When he gets through he notes 1 the mirror that be is parted into an ipper and tower zone by a divisional line f twelve inches in width. Then he goes ut to air himself. '. The sash begins to tow uneasy under the curious eyes that t meets. In a short time it begins to mrrow within itself. In ten minutes it n far succeeds that the youth who wears, t glances down by accident, and to his lorror finds that he is encircled by a iand of something that looks like a blue nd emasculated tape measure. Brook. yn. Times. j |