The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, July 26, 1903, Page 14

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14 THE SUNDAY CALL wholesome channels; she es of saddest experience her because she knows smooth the affair leaves its at she carries often suffers parents for account were it to that a mother's heart other's at a man view it seems a or a woman, a not h havoe to a tie and sep- g s eful, nothing ! from the mother who has s sh, not idolized it from the cradle €0 8¢ g s easonabl The 1s ur r love had g s BET K o - r and ush out the love e £ er spasms ¢ ng re she has it & w w d uid 2rTOR he wa - goes & w e q lities be B rs are fi ten when it en & f n of t beloved er exper a blindir excuse. e overworks our sends the 1t prog poth running vet there are many things that & girl should consider besides herself. gresses | s & ser n tk bearts, inSames our brains, sat Iin W b — THAT QD J,‘J?;LP7 orT i creeps up our spines, and if we do not get cross and dyspeptic then Providence, who has a care for children and fools, bas been kinder than we wot of. Heppy is the gir! whose love flows on The happlest moment of a woman's life is when she hears for the first time from the lips of the man who has won her heart the mystical words, “I love you.” Other happy sensations may come later Y ‘oL’ RATE= OHoulR FMAKE= HE—Q‘ TIMED IMARES HER SAD™ = HAFEY 1 T G ALY Love Foows in \WHOLEQOME™ CH, childhood to womanhood has a deeper | significance, because of her untried faith, than any experience that may come to her later. Other loves deep and holy may stir the depths of her woman soul, but the plquancy of noveity that makes its first impression on her own pure heart, her awakened soul with its responsive love that experience has not yet taught her to repress—all the beauty of love's first welcome she will never know again as a tender, conflding child. She accepts her first love lesson with all a child's faith, hope and love, and never again could she hear the same story with the same unquestioning faith. Later on she may learn to hate the man, when assoclation has destroyed her ideals and murdered her love, yet when ] INCE the Sunday Call issued the first of its exclusive series of Bry- son's famous women In cardinal colors, ‘“Love’s Confidence,” on July 12, innumerable inquiries have been received asking the most minute questions about the career and mcre par- ticularly the personnel or this talented artist and his method of working. J. Ross Bryson 1{s a comparatively young man and a Canadian by birth, hav- ing been born near Montreal of very well- to-do Bcotch parents. His future was as- sured, but at an early age he was appren- ticed to a firm of decorative painters, but the mystery of this broad world beyond his vision attracted him, and he jour- neyed into the Rocky Mountains in search of adventure and scenes to tempt his brusha, Later he returned to Chicago and began to study in real earnest before he opened a studio in Minneapolis just for the sake of the artistic atmosphere. 3 Then, in 1894, the lure of the world got into his blood again and he was off for in life, but to the girl in her beautiful | Europe to study the great masters at first faith in all things good, before worldly | hand and take lessons of the best teach- wisdom has tinctured with its acid her | ers. belief in all things sacred, the first lesson | Ballet daneers with their filmy draperies of love that marks the transition from |and dalnty poses particularly fascinated Ze very SMOOTH O ANNEZ, S she first listened to Love's wooing sfie heard for the first time the ravishing echoes of the music of the spheres. A first love letter marks another epoch. How she reads and rereads between the lines! There is a fascination about love letters that a woman is never too old to be insensible to. Not many months ago a charming lit- tle widow showed me the first love let- ter she had ever received. It was from her husband and written after twenty- five years of married life. He was her only sweetheart and his wooing had been very ardent and of short duration as left no time for letter-writing. They had never been separated during all thelr wedded life until after the quarter-cen- tury mark, when an accldent necessitated L T e e e e s ] THE CREATOR OF THE : NEW “CARDINAL” PICTURES him, and he soon won wide popularity for the skill and delicacy of his treatment of these pictures. And now comes this new serles, “The Debutante,” “The Queen of the Party, “The Lady in Green,” “The Coquette” and “Interested,” all of which beautiful art paintings will be given to our readers absolutely free. By speclal arrangement with the artist the Sunday Call has se- cured the exclusive right to these beauti- ful pictures and is having them repro- duced in the most exquisite tints known to modern art. Each picture represents a beautiful girl in a clinging gown of truly striking hue, who combines in her pose all the seduc- tiveness of Carmen with the illusive mys- tery and charm of Faust, and to make the serles more wonderfully attractive each picture is reproduced in a different combination of colors, especlally for fram- ing. ‘When you realize that special instruc- tions from the best framing experts in the land, telling you just exactly how to frame the pictures and what they will cost, go with each picture, you can gain some faint |dea of what a valuable col- lection this really is. As soon as you see the first you will simply have to have the whole series complete. Y, has wop her heart. her removal to a hosplt this t that her nd wrote t often preach, know=- two or three s each day, ti v will do as you ters being the first she had ever r ¢ y advice that may from hi t — marry & “Il as I was,” she said, “you cannot 2o - v jmagine the feeling when I read his » {hink he s you miser- letter, which began: t think, = bac- you. darling, this is the first letter I ever ininic’y wrote you To very few Women comes heart guch an experience so late in life, yet joy there is a somet} sweet and with y pathetic underl that appeals to every And a first en; 1 wonder woman suc do not think the m very much about the val it is the sentiment; but I s an heirloom more than another ring ¢ veral ti the value. t marry a pauper. An engagement ring, be supposedly ng when you have dy. apd’ dishwash- beneath you. A a woman’s superior- urg at her airs in the most dis- Don’'t marry a man 1 of women and t for them. A eve In good womea the first present that a man makes the girl of his choice, it should be as hand- some as his purse will allo Diamonds or birthstones, or a birth- stone set between diamonds, @re the g proper caper, yet many are old-fashioned who ¢ enough to prefer the small round gold T ring that later on does duty for the wed- man who d nner. oes t speak w ding ring also. After the engagement the intercourse naturally partakes of more freedom and it is then that a girl has a chance to study more closely the nature and disposi- i uoy @ Nt associate for the vilest that lives. He will be suspicious and cynical all the time. And remember one thing— when love is not a blessing it {s the most awful curse. COLONEL KATE.

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