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Show A Girl's Dressing Tuble. A girl's dressing table is the pride of her room. She may have pretty pictures, pict-ures, a collection of photographs of her best fellows far exceeding in number Uiat of her envious girl friends: she may have a gum board of real rosewood, five dozen sachet bags and a nightgown case of real Japanese silk; yet with all these glories to outshine it, the dressing table is the pride and the piece de resistance, so to speak, of the room. The sweetest dressing table is all of glass and is provided pro-vided with two shelves, an upper Bhelf and a lower shelf. These are of beveled glass and are held in place by beautiful gold legs. Another kind of a dressing table, less expensive, has simply a beveled bevel-ed glass cover on top, and is just a plain table elsewhere. On top of the table go tho silver manicuring mani-curing implements, the celluloid brush and comb and the ivory backed glasses and brushes. BesideB this there must be the dozens of little faucy boxes, powder pow-der and puffd and bottle of cologne and perfumery. To make these bottles more ornamental manufacturers have supplied cut glass pitchers and odd shaped things filled with perfnmery of all colors. One can thus, if she be a dainty miss, and particular as to the appointments of her room, have her perfumery to match the general color of the boudoir. New York World. |