The evening world. Newspaper, January 24, 1900, Page 6

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4 beginning of the extinction of Gov. Black. Payn's + Begging letter to William C, Whitney, asking for| | from ever again holding public office. ‘aud wrestling lessons for the past few weeks. He | fe ead to be very handy with his fists. But what Bees all bis life, and yet is not able to land on the “Tt was tmportant in that it was a good dinner In ‘ y Mager over. From the published menu It ts seen Dp the Pree Publishing Company, 12 to €8 PARE ROW, New York. saath Mate +eNO. 14,086 seeeee “ALAS! POOR YORICK.” A SOLAR PLEXUS BLOW NEEDED. OV. ROOSEVELT'S delay in naming a suc- cessor to “Lou” Payn is exasperating. Payn is notoriously unfit for office. He should never have been appointed to the | place he now holds. His appointment was the payment of a political debt which marked the end receiving $100,000, ought to disqualify him| Gov. Roosevelt has been indulging in boxing Ghall it profit the Governor if he takes boxing les- polar plexus of Lou Payn? ‘One quick blow would end the controversy. Payn would be “out,” and out for good. THE DINNER TO BRYAN. GREAT dea! of unnecessary comment in the newspapers has been given to the din- wer which Commissioner Keller gave to 4 Mr. Bryan last night. It is not important whether the dinner was offical or unoffi-| { ‘4 #0 far as the Democratic Club is concerned. @very sense of the word. And it shows just what Kind of dishes the Tammany leaders delight to that blue point oysters, chicken soup, Kennebec @almon, sweetbreads, roast beef, Philadelphia Gquab, with appropriate vegetables, fruit and “something to drink’ was served. If the diges- tion of the guests was as good as the dinner then they should all be very comfortable to-day. Bat is there not a suggestion in this dinner for a Rew and better battle cry for Mr. Bryan? Lat him drop the 16 to 1 fallacy, and make his eamvass on “A Dollar table de hote Dinner” as ood as that which he bad last night, and for @very Democrat in the land, every night in the! year, and he will come pretty close to being} @lected President of these United States. | A good dinner is much to be preferred to a dis-| Bonest dollar. FAIR PLAY FOR AMERICAN GIRL. 8 it not about time that the gossippers gave the Countess Castellane a little breathing spell? Surely this American girl has been maligned enough. More lies have been told about her, probably, than about any other! American woman. And her visit to her r tives in this country s made the pretext for all Gorts of sensational and senseless tittle-tattle. =| According to her own story she {s married hap- pily and lives in peace with her husband. That| fe as It should be. Whether she has permitted her Busband to spend much or all of her fortune should | Bot concern the public. That is her business. Her Money is her own. She may do with it as she! Pleases. And 60 long as she ‘eads the lite of an! Bonest, decent American gentiewoman the public | Bas no right to immerse her in scandal and gossip bout her affairs. Pair play for Anna Gould—just the same as if! ‘er name was Jane Smith. She has as much right to privacy in her domestic affairs as the humblest Woman in the land. Let her alone! RUSKIN AND PURE ENGLISH. | Py INCE the death of John Ruskin much has deen said in print about the simplicity and beauty of his style. It is all deserved Ruskin was master of pure English in every detail. But simplicity of words and the rhythmic sound of sentences are of lit- Value unless they are used to convey ideas. Raskin was a man of tremendous force and Great ideas, His lecture on “War,” although Many years ago, is worth reading and to-day. | } Mf simplicity in words is wanted, combined Jetty aspirations, why not go beyond Ruskin? ‘te the Sermon on the Mount. i | Fifth avenue ordinance embodies an effect. not to restrict, but to broaden the use WEDDING... .. ETIQUETTE. THE BEST FORM TO-DAY Rules to Be Observed By All | Concerned, O many questions are received ag to the etiquette of weddings and wedding presents that for fu- ture reference the whole ground ls gone over here in brief form The bride drives to the church with her father, mother or whoever ts going to give her away et the ceremony. The bridesmaids await the bride's arrival in the veatibule or pri room of the chureh, | The bride walks up the church with her father, taking his left arm, the bridesmaids and ushers pre- ceding The bridal guests ehould be already seated in pews the church when the bride arrives. The bridegroom's relatives sit on tl of the bride on the right of the al The bride stands at the brideg father, mother or dian who gives hi left hand. ‘The bride and bridegroom should be the first to leave the church, the bridesmaids following immediately after. walking with the bridegroom's 1 j!n left and those ft hand, her way at her ‘The bride's mother, father, should be the next to leave, eo that she may be at the home tn good time td receive the guests. ‘When sending a present address it to the bride. with or without a few words of congratulation or affection. The bride should never fall to acknowledge = wed- ding present on the day as {te arrival. While expressing own thanks she should include those of her fiance also, The bridegroom, with the best man, ahould await the bride In the church at the chancel steps. It Is usual now to have a wedding breakfast. If suah 1s provided, hot and cold viands, such as are given at a ball supper, suitable, Afternoon or early evening wedding are very much more fashio1 ‘ with plenty of cakes and coffee, champagne and ices, wedding cake should be in an important position om the table. Tt ts best to place the wedding presents tn a third room if posstble, one room being used for the tables, one for the reception-room, where the bride and bride- groom ind to receive the congratulationa of the guests on their ret from the church, and where the bride's mother also stands to greet her visitors. _——— FIRST AID TO WOUNDED HEARTS, See ee ae he Ie Bashfal. Tam young man of twenty, I know « girl of nine teen whom | think very much of. I wed hee often. She comex to my parents’ house nearly every nt to visit the people she lives with once, © lot of me. The young lady is very bash. . annot dance, but would like to learn. I am a first-class dancer, Advise me how I can win her. A.W. The young lady will get over her bashfulness prob- ably, You might try giving her tnstructions In the art of dancing. This would give you many opportunities of meeting her properly and of making yourself agree- able to her. She will gain confidence unquestionably before she has mastered the intricactes of the two step or the schottische. Cut owt, T have been going with a girl of my own for lastyear, and P love her. very much, but she sent by party and | was with her. Later I went away ant when I came back she wan with another feliow and has gone with him ever since, and we never speak now, What would you advise me to do? BEN CUTOUT. The young lady appears to have made her choice. I should let her abide by tt w to Give Her a Present. T am keeping company with q young lady whom I would Iike to make my wife. Yam hot ehenmed to her, I would like to make her @ more valudie p than candy or flowei not want to send a ring, Should I mall a presen Tam in the same town? It would be rather better form to prescut the gift personally, but there ts no objection to your sending !t by @ messenger or even by post if you so prefer. —9 = — N-SUPPORT, “are you going to support Bi hunter in the Kentucky mountain “Naw!” reeponded the lank native; “cyan't afford tt Have to rerateh an’ dig to support a wife an’ ‘leven chaps.” nt Inquire@ the i ns OUR LOVE, 0 love ts not @ fading, earthly flower; Its winged seed dropped down from para- dire, And, nursed by day and night, by sun and shower, Doth momently to fresher beauty rise. To us leafless Autumn {s not bare, Nor Winter's rattling boughs lack lusty green; Our Summer hearts make Summer's fulness where No leat or bud or blossom may be seen, For nature's life in love's deep life doth ie— Love, whore forgetfulness is beauty’s death, Whose mystic key these cells of thou and 1 Into the Infinite freedom openeth And makes the body's dark and narrow grate ‘The wide-flung leaves of heaven's palace gate, Lowell A bITTb Daisy Leiter now hunts the wild boar, Ani spears the rough beast with impunity, Bho learned the sport some years before As belle of a pig-sticking community. —— RIBWON-COUNTER CLERK. Peari—Charley Lavender got left when he tied ribbon on his cane to look swell Ruby—In what way? Pearl—People asked him tf those were samples of what he sold at his counter. —_— CANNIBAL EVIDENCE. thoroughfare. Only blind men get in the! reform. | Gan directors are quarreiling | fs wingular thet #0 violent a Board can ‘Weak an iNuminating product. terrible when a man feels like Count that French is a polite language. ——— Clipper shouts be notst by his fer up a+ Brg Bing. THE WORLD: WEDNESDAY EVENING, JANUARY 2%, 1900: In any case, inclose a visiting card with the present, 7 ® | want to pay "se money fer a sham? eee sa iy sonchlen Wha eee] (Copyright, a a Mew Tort year hie as ere, ean the oversiveees Satins THE GREAT SOPRANO. OST young women nowadays jook upon mar Says Americans Do Not Sing Ge Drs [ove Stowe WARISTBING JACK. riage as the one great royal rod to eternal happiness—the dagsling pinnacle upon whien Feats all of life's joys, comforte and delights, The thought Is very romantic and rosily beautiful as you pleture ft, my dears, But there is a great deal of climbing along the rugged path of married for a t ones; 2 i » you Y what is good and fine in music! It has takes you’ five years to learn what it took Germany @ quarter git Hy HH nae " YRAU GADSKI. of a century to learn, ‘Then why should you not tear to be a great singing nation? You yourselves should sing more than you do! You GEORGIE’'S PA PUTS ON THE GhOVES.|esezcmancrcmn behind the stars a wonderful ensemble of talent—men and women wflo sing the second parts as they have Gung the first parts in the royal opera-houses-—but you do not go home and sing the songs of the opera to- Gether in the family as you should. : ad family ainging that makes q great musical nation, In Germany, in France, tn Itaty, the young women and men of the family sing together all the time the Great airs from the operas. And so good music is @ part of the education. life ere you reach the pinnacte of supreme happiness. You do not jump from the altar to It. ertiee, Chose, arcane Tae Braatag World ‘es Mies 11 elustve'y, ty erretgement ‘with the Family Stery Paper, WHIL Paw and Mra, Bassett were the only ones who seen A more the joke, and {t seemed to Tickle them a Good Deal. ings and painting Porches or Ennything of that) I gess Aunt grace didn't like the way they kind, so paw joined a Jim nasyum, and is Laurning to| about it, eo she told Uncle wesley to go shed and pu be a nathieet. Uncle wesley wanted him to Join the| them on just te Bho that he had a Frendly Spesrut. golf club, but paw Told him he hadn't enny youse for] “Ail rite,” Uncle wesley says, “but of Corse I don't that game beooz it duzzent help @ Ferson to Larn the | purtend to Be a Boxer.” manly art of self Defense. We could see a big chance| When they got the Gluve on paw eed: in paw rite off after He joined. The first nite he came| “Now you See the Differunce home with a nawful Looking Eye, and a Few days| Wes, rou're neerty twict after that he neerly Broke a Laig falling offn @ Horry Zontul bar. “But never mind,” he told maw when she Complain- @4 about it. “They say these things happen to Bvery- buddy when they Begin. After I get a little ust to it T can stand a Blo that would nock @ nox Down ané ast fer more, and it's always a Good thing to no How to put up Your hands, becos you never no what mite Happen.” “Yes,"' maw says, ‘I've notust that, speshelly when you start out to Do ennything.” Resides going to the Jim nazyum paw fixt up e place ago the Dockter told paw he must Take resize than he Could get putting up awn- mortified to attempt it. ‘Then some member of the family would sit down at the plano and they would ali sing the sonorous chord from the chorus, even to the olf father and the tttde iter, ul i! i ii sitrit i? IIE LET PAW HAVE ONE ON THE END OF THE CI if @ person wanted to Be a: E it to exersize in the attick, with a Punchen bag and Injun clubs and a Lot more things to Give you museul, | Uncle wesley a emash on the Cheak, and t The other nite Uncle y-and Aunt grace and the| made Uncle wesley mad or seni. For he halled ° “Just bang eta Baasetts come over to make {t plesunt for us, and paw | off in His Big okward unsyentiffick Way and Let paw after Have one on the Bnd of the Chin. Plano the next day and sing it 14 fellow. 1% Got to telling them About the way he had Things rig- ged Up, and Mrs, Bassett sed she would give enny- thing in the world to See a Boxing match, becos she had Herd so much about It So paw Invited them up in the attick to see Him punch the Bag, and after he did that « While he ast Unole wesley {f he wouldn't like to put on the Gluve for a Friendly round. Uncle wesley 1s about a Hed] “Yes,” Mre. Bassett told him, “we could all see that talier than paw and ways 30 Pound before meels. plain enuff. If you wouldn’t of ebanced to be there He sed he Didn't care to make a munkey of himeeif/it wouldn't of tutched You. But what's the good of before the folks, but paw says: Byunce if tt Can't keep the Thing you Don't expect “Oh, you needn't be afrade you'll do that. I'll do| from always Happening?” tt For you.” GEORGIE, tn Chicago Times-Horald. While brave Count Bont's threats against traducers daily bigger grow, One French sheet claims his assets may be summed up by the figger “0.” TSE POINT OF VIEW. is WONDROUS FAITE. Mrs. Wabash (of Chicago)—Did I understand you to] Hix—Weeks seeme to have a lot of faith tn homeso- say your husband died suddenly? Mrs, Olive (of Philadelphia)—Yee, very. Tl ealy eleven months. We could see the Differunce between syunce and| you have gained, Broot strenth with the naked I rite there. Make singing @ feature of social After while paw set up and Looked around Itke if he | wn voice in such good condition that you will always wondered if He had onty Fell off the platform or if| prove « ready plessure to your friends. the Hole train Had Rolled over on'Top of him, and JOHANNA GADSKL when he could apeek he sed it was @ Chance bio, rf ‘ gag —— Olga Netherscle’s “Sapbo" may or may not Be incandescent stuff; But Comstock and Devery certainly got Te a big free puff, HARRIET’ HUBBARD AYER. ¢ Beauty's Secrets Revealed to Correspondents. OTHER, New Hampshire—It you wil fetiow tho) Limit year sleeping houre to seven et the outside He a | F i path; Dix—Never saw anything to equal !t. Why, last Summer, when he had an attack of hay fever, he —e——— married © grass widow. AGAINST sta! . —_—=—___ Barber—Do you wish a shampoo, TUE DoG’s O'Grady—No; Of want a genulne poo! Do ye t'ink O1| Never mind the small pup when He howls to get oat just to how fn, choces, AND SOME PHILOSOPHY STIC STUDY. “Cees at yearn beara” FON” i He Ht Servent—Master, an unfortunate mea ashe your oli. He says be hes eaten ae 3

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