The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, January 6, 1901, Page 10

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10 THE SUNDAY CALL & never so dangerous as when er s dn’t the Portuguese ladies discover this adopted fans? Didn't Ca ic! know this when she fr into France? D& t x when she gathered en ars -seven fans with » kind? Thes psi= of a whole ro- marnce des of a fan. Watch it for & d ses how it changes ex- preesior will come to the con'u- - poMORNEMAL wan 8%y lord of the story book store the old crippled ng for a shop, and oid fellow out. I he was ailowed to C at I have taken him for free mending e fee I recelved for that my own lodge of- for a service » belongs to sever: itting in my of- ressed woman Her hus- hom she was but recently mar- 2 member of a secret society. tt t's perfectly horrid of him, too. she said, ‘to have secrets and not to tell them to me. When he married me he said he would ehare everything with me, rst thing I ask, almost, he won't t you make him?" longed and she told me the name of an s & versatfls coguette. s'or of coguetry is, after all, that ness, whimsicality, ould be well armed choose a its cost but for its grace. immense feather fan makes & showy “Yov BORE ME /5AYS THE LANSVID FAN addition to a theatrical pose, but it isn't beans for flirting. It is clumsy fan of gauze can be handled mors rea A little gauze and silver and tvory affalr is up to date and adaptive as well Now notice how it behaves when given its own way. Suppose the owner is entering into con- versation with a new acquaintance. She erit- is somewhat reserved and sec fcal What about she. Could any- han its clos se is to get past that defense. As conversation part. Its owner is s the fan takes d to have very Sttt @ of 'L'awgev's. order of which I Then she wi o ““I tell you what, If you will make him tell them to me, I will tell them to you to pay you for making him do what I want. That's fsn’t it? I should think you would like to kr ngs. Need ur bus! elf was a member. £s, you kn tee.” d offer from one woman ued the attorney, good to refuse, although represented h d after the s she wante POWER" SAYS THE RAISED FAN s of lace she showed me were ex- 0 I told her it would be all right. he gave me about ten yards of the lace, t was worth every cent of what was credited her for it.” paid in washing for a divorce I secvred,” sald J. H. Paul. ‘A woman came 10 me one time with a tale of woe about her husband, and wanted me to get a di- vorce for her. She sald that she didn’t want any work done for her for nothing, but that she was not able to pay money. She would do my washing for twenty-five weeks, though, iIf I would free her from her husband. She refused to let me act in charity for ber, and as she wanted a divorce so that she could marry another men I accepted her offer, and she washed eway, literally, her marriage ties.”—Mil- waukee Bentinel PHOTO9 BY THE FAN RESTS- IN MEDITATION PoeTtive opinions and the fan tap-taps to emphasize them. t is energetic, but still closed reserve is by no means penetratc Not u t occurs does it open freely. Once op 1t a myriad of whims it dis- plays. It doubts. See how 1 s back, paus- inge VP FiRMLY It grows angry. You can hear it flap ke a raging bird. A woman angry ls usually a sorry sight; but her fan storms more gracefully. It even lends grace to her fury. Agaln, “How you bore me!’ says the fan. Its owner may save her manners, the fan speaks for her. It is languid, full of ennui. It wafts ever so slowly and at last rests. It challenges a talker to be more entertaining. It can defy, too, and scorn. But these are not its charming moods. They are its ways of blowing cold. Watch it woo. Word that lips may not say it says for them. It touches one ca- : colleGe For REAT Eros! Think of it! A school for courtship! An institution whers the man and the mald may be so trained In the way they should go as to result in the upspringing of & new race, a race of intellectual and physical glants! A unlversity of examination into character, with the experts of the faculty passing upon the peculiarities of the stu- dents and assigning to each his or her affinity! The wondrous twentieth century Is looked for to produce undreamed of pos- sibilities, but it is safe to say that the projected establishment of a college for courtship will not take the least rank among coming novelties. When'the plan materializes the young man untutored in the ways of love, divinely ignorant of those personal qualities which are ever a mystery to the individual and an open book to the rest of the world, may make a journey to the university where is to be contained all the knowledge of all the ages, claim admittance and learn to know himself. Here he will be ‘met by the trained delvers igto cparacter. Here he will be studied even as under the microscope the scientist studies a rare find whose dis- section 1Is to benefit all the worlds. Here the young man will be informed of his defects, mental, moral, physical, and of his stronger capabilities. Here he will learn to ascertain in others the advan- tages lacking in his own ocomposition. Here he will be furnished with a diploma declaring him eligible to a life partnershin SCORN YoUs™s SAYS THE FA: (TAPPING BACK /AT e ressingly, it beck: anon, when he h him barricade, most back. Then, as he is behind the barr tempting him no more resist t song. In spite the chances are when the fan drog There are and he can lor at siren's chelor vows isfled only co girls she was yet Birdls, ¢ carved sandal wood g on blua r grandmoth- swered the You re st 1 these and watch 1 try to penstrate that sort of 11in a leaty design and thing. It is p a big summer cobs spreads in the most d the grass. This web, ainted, is delicately reads and the background natural fashion am tnste hat a peephole! And arranged, what s more, with the art that conceals art, for was ever anything more natural than to place a cobweb among the grasses? It is the gulleless little web that ensnares many a vietim. When the Enropeans of years back—the French, Itallans,” Spanish—first came to carry fans they were so delighted with their possibilities that they adopted vari- ous actions in handling them which soon grew to be a code o s. An old num- ber of the Spectator proposes a drfll in fan signals. The coquetts of to-day has more art than this. The keynote of her fan tion 1s spontaneity. Let your fan follow its own devices. It won't do so long without flirting and that right dangerously. 1 ool eibetme et @ Colrtshie. with some young person of the opposits sex whose character, having been inquired into by the facuity, has been determined as most suited to with his own As a result of this system th be no more unhappy there are to be no Consequently there ar arations of the once wedde: cupation of thie divorce lawyer, like that of Othello, will be gone. The world is to be distinctly bettered by this grand plan, and the demon of discord is to be pleasant land eme for the 3rooks. Mr. d. Chances wo Bro a £ th October 1 r came from brought your j lock? Are you not ¢ 1 by part of your physical health and we s—1 any gacy of weaith? A and mental in ce is catest legacy man can in A mate pair, a young couple of sweethearts, are St S0 . “If scientific ¢ and propagation were e ou of pecple reared up in two as far superfor to prese above the Bedouin. : itific principles to and propagation will mark the grandest epoch in the progressive evolu- on of the hu since the stars sang together. 5 ey it ls horrible to think of the haphas- 3 of present and past method: matchmaking. 2 1% “Every m should have upon him or he: mental makeup ulated charts, ¢ 1e person suited for a life companion panion ma known. A heavy penalty should be .:’: tached to the fraudulent use In any wa gt lhese chars. ~The miliennium ‘will ver come at a bound. It mus veloped. e & “'Guided and directed by compet perts in the science of human eharotes. every one fit t6 marry could Certainty a better half and. pestacity L dowered with a legacy «mfi".fiz :‘n“lrr'a:"l'hm wm:ld:u be. 1; &":‘ ablished

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