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GAY NEW YORK. By T. E. POWER_S. ON THE ICE. ‘THE FAIR ONE—lon't it delightful to be om the ice again? I adore nkatlng! “1m inn't Hke any ekate 1 was over on before,” “A mom back there just fell through the foe, They say hie name was Van Weel." 4 “They gay 1 ought to have more self-confidence when I'm on the tee, but I CHORUS take no stook in the lon trust.” , or “Bhe's as graceful as a wwan--on foo.” WILLIBDOYS: | “Soe those cute little atari in the ice? {| made them all with my head.” “T had @ fall that would have crushed my ribs if 1 hadn’t been lucky enough to tall on my chrysanthemum,” “Nhle 19 faster than any skate | ever played at the race track,” \ “Why, the ico ta actually cold!" . By President udge Amold, Common rhe VORCES WISE AND JUST, b | for the very purpose of divorce’ he wi and # and Golommon, In conalusion he says; erally administered, iH tad an aduttery, JUDGE ARNOLD. deworied site whose hus-| +00eet eer breridsadaraegegs| remety for: “New York permite Aivoress to be ranted for aduliery only, Tho it} point wit faction to the la that Mtate should ponder upon ¢ A charge of denertion ts atten) cellor Kent's wine words on thie ' for a mote somos charge, {t{ ject, ‘TE had oevnston to belleve, PA Get of windom When auf jawe| said, ‘In the exercite of & Judlolal ¢ made It @ ground of divorce, higanoe over numerous causes of divorce HARRIET HUBBARD AYER ™™srs ried and to W sto hold t eaaliy prove the alway prove the other 61 uestions Ate Brrant Hasband, Ayer: d nd appears to love the chil Feed me very much, but ytd un out b say ar Ne il, while 1 have | Hidren oF Wty | meets quite cram, an rane | correct the! she ban that wacred harmony of diteult to wants to youn et iimake an error iny ine 0 he tells me wo attentions to other women, or [F them out, or to Indulge in any larity with them, and equally of B he should not arrest you in (he of your children, | exactly reoonelie your atate- your husband appears to love | Very Much, It reeme to me that who devotes himself to other ly cannot be very fond and fambly, but I admit that A" posal leat creatures, 1 do ) iin wi {fT Were in your place You wilt ha & quarrel by discussing falr int topics that distrens you at Want: Dear Mire Ayer ye the courage to invite (heme ere is py of @ letter written to to your house and to In | my husband by ® Wotan who has a hue Young mon as weil, \ band tiving and ip not divereed. She! Wil setile Heolt | Profemwed. 10 Jove mo and my children.) wit earty off 1 ‘Te!l me what wlid of a woman you) they will be we jal iat "My, Own Dear Bweet- Si. ng to see if Sa i va nk jeniMan to command my pattenee MORNING DRESS, ¢ to on has a chance ag lever in (hese cireumatances. @ part to play, but all Ie ‘Late Be a Olivistiont ange elt for havi y Av Ing alwaya, Porhape | h ta not in y: hte i world Aro concerned. ir, F, was out when I came tn, Rye at ou much t ‘wish 1 } unmarried pe (helt atrenat ther Im hates (howe who cannot be wedded \g \¢ o NO. 880 Published by the Press Publishing Company, 63 to 3 PARK ROW, New York, Entered at the Powt-OMce at New York as Second-Class Mail Matter. {TWO THEORIES OF DRESS: THE M’KINLEY AND THE BRYAN, Upon the avenue there is a “high-priced” tailor whose business } card has this interesting announcement, adopted from the shop- Rls, -enossoronmoveeeney Keepers in the capitals of Europe's monarchs: MA, MIKINLE YS TATLOR AND (PANTR. PRESOER.” Tallor toHia Mucellency the President of the United States, And down at Washington there is a col ored man who points proudly to a heap of : prossed or to he pressed trousers near the door of his little shop Ri and says: “Them is the President’s pants, 4! MoKinley.” ' On the really hot days of the Washington Summer the asphalt |¥ Bl softens so that your foet sink in it as if it were mud, Biter how hot it is, you will see Mr, MeKinley going about clad in a|§ Ri long-tailed coat of black, his black trousers carefully pressed, his |g | boots carefully polished, his tie and his linen perfect, his head cov : ered with a top hat, his whole porson irradiating prosperous re- 1% ‘peetability, Mr, MoKinley’s theory is that the people like to see their con- 1% spierous public men dressed in the moat emphatic kind of “Sunday |g ‘lothes,” And he lives up to that theory rigidly, His manners : He is nol§ ure as stiffly dignified and pompous as are his clothes, ‘ believer in the popularity of the hail-fellow-well-met theory, leas Court, Philadelphia, | hat the ain of adultery wen sometimes committed on the part of the husband “Tt la not aurpriaing that oraet and Varbarous treatment of @ wife by her huaband ts not mentioned in the forip- {vem as a oatise of divoros, for a man find a rinht to beat hin wife tn the afore time, But now If a man beats hie wife 4 puntehed as a wife-beater, ‘ay obtain @ divorce trom him, “It divorces were granted for Berip-' tural adultery only, no woman could ‘ever obtain a divoree, In aupport of this view (here are (he cases of Abraham “Divorce awa, aT have aald before, are wire, jist and neoessary, and the relief which they afford should be Iib- They do not ereate | causes for divorce; they meray afford a vnplainte whlch exist and will continue to exist whether there aro ii nhappy Wives, fomily. ts friendly with hie wite, while envying her her hue rob her of all wicked and brutal 1 find it @ litte your husband really & Ohrintian, ae you may nan Nas an earnest desire to ‘& epiritual life, he leagns fret of O resin jum such temptations as the one your husband has succumbed Please pxiee sal » man who a ebureh and MES, J. 3. Bunday school, ant carries on a Mirtar your husband hae no right ton wih hits wpewrien. n ton Ve m4 In the most abrupt contrast is Mr. Bryan, He carries the |§ Thomas Jefferson deliberately |§ ‘ affected slouchiness as a rebuke to the fop-|§ pery of the “gentlemen” who in the early |% days of the Republic thought they ought to!% Yet even he went to the lengths to|q which Mr. Bryan habitually goes only when trying to give an , careless theory to the extreme. SLOUOHY AND SUAT TORN WR, BRYAN, 1 cbetne-tntntetnb-entntntns) rule, object-lesson in democratic simplicity to some partionlarly haughty Kuropean Minister, Tn his recent campaign Mr. Bryan addressed many hundreds |§ of thousands of his countrymen in this garb; A travel-stained suit, rusty, ragged at the edges, bagged at all the jointa; dirty white shirt, dirty white detachable cuffs, caught to bis wrist- banda by only one fiap; instead of n collar, a black, dirty-looking handker- chiet knotted about his thront; boots that were the worse for @ few traces of a distant poli#hing; in one hand a dirty bleck travelling cap; on his face a two days’ stubble of jot-black beard, Some of Mr. Bryan’s Eastern travelling companions ventured to vemonatrate with hin, But he only amiled and shook his head, In the part of the country from which he comes the top hat and the long-tailed coat are the uniform of the genus octopus, Mr Bryan has a genuine contempt for dress, for appearances, a genuine belief in the theory that a public man of right principle is a workingman and, as moh, ought to wear working clothes, But Mr, Bryan is mistaken in thinking that the people hold with him in that respeot, He could profitably learn of Mr, Mo- , Ki The shrewdest observers of public sentifient in all ages—Shakespeare notably— agtee that in ostablishing a reputation dross is an important factor. The people look upon their public mon as representatives, In some districts it is a recommendation to a public man to look ‘as plain as an old shoe.” But any public man who appeals to all sorta and conditions of people will, if he is wise, be serupulous in his dress and manners, ‘The people, taking them by and large, like to be represented hy men who are better THR WRYAN “WWORKING- OLN ‘THRORY A PAILURS, ‘i: | dressed and more imposing-looking generally than the ordinary citi zen in his ordinary surroundings, One of the cloverest young politicians in a “wild Weatern” State said not long agro: 5 “The deeper [ plunge into the wilderness the more careful T am about dress,” And he buys his shirts, with their tall collars, in jeeememmensese Piccadilly, and his tailor is one of the most or fashionable in the Bond street district PoLaTiOnAN’s though, of course, his constituents do not WAY OF know it, The ple, his constituents, say of peor IMPRESAING mi THE PROPLE. him: pepaneaanenaed “Bill is a mighty fine-looking young feller, T'll het he shines up to the hest of ‘em on there in Wash- ington, Tle always looks like a bishop on the way to conference.” He's very partienlar, is Mr. But no mat: | i THE WORLD: THURSDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER (4, 1900, smoke one de site o' dat?’ ' 5 ’, Becond Byrtander—Why, ye see, he's Tt is pretty safe to say that Mr. Bryan’s free-and-eaxy manners | one o' dem guys wit a they were anything but undignified, because he is the personifica- |~ tion of a simple, natural dignity—and his sloven, slatten dross lost him tens of thousands of votes by creating or confirming an im- pression that he was a herald of revolution and an iconoclast of prosperity, And it is cortain that Mr, MeKinley has had no larger single asset in his career than his manners and dress, which are up to the highest rural standards of dignity and elegance, In these facts of the value of dress there is a moral for every man, and for every woman too, although the women are shrewd enough about the petty but powerful weaknesses of human nature not to need admonition in this matter, The young man muking his start, the man of any age who is dependent in part for his in- come upon the casual estimate formed of him hy those who meet him, cannot afford to neglect “front” or “free.” , To bathe every day, never to go forth iinshaven, to Aresd with conspicuons neatness yet without vanity—these matters are highly “Ymportant to a man in that they react upon his fouve WAN, } character and give him ease and confidence, Woon MART 1 But they are equally important in that they make’ in large meamee for forining public SOME MERRY MOMENTS IN LAUGHTER LAND. REFLECTED GREATNESS, HE TRUSTED EMPLOYEE. \e\g° . By Ferdinand G. Long. vy} || SSS eS = “What's got hold o' Chimmie?” “He's stuck up ‘cause Fitasimmons conversed wit him," What did Fits say? “Why, Chim nen to Fits, he sex, ‘Do you want to buy ile last edition? he , and Fits, he ses, ‘No,’ he q ’ A Prosperity Wagon. cc EX PLAINED FASTING. esis 10: 008 Crone 6 6 e orrore ere { QUERIES AND ANSWERS, | otro torte etn ore) One, How many (rials hae Molineux had? HP, Bride's Vareuts Shoald Pay for It, A mt the bridegroom must pay for Nie Intended wife's wedding dross. FH beta that her parents must pay for same. Who wine ”, 0, B Such Canes Arve on Record, A pays that a man can in one nights worrlment of fright get gray hair, faya no, Who wine? B. SENITAKY, “Between You Correet, Whigh i correc ‘at ie the ditter once between you and me," or “That ts the difference between you and I? L. WRIGHT, note Right, A bets that a Roman Catholle cannot be the President of the United States oven If elected. B beta that he can, Which wins? HF, M'CLERNAN, dn the Oater side, On which wide of the pavement should a gentioman walk when escorting two “ Amber Peto—Tendertoot, I'1 make you at your words, Tenderfoot-No, the doctor has forbid me eating anything for (wo days, oe Piret Bystander—ifow kin a guy “pull” “ ° 7 UNCOMFORTABLE SHAT, Morrell—Kvory rose has ite thorn, Bot z ; 7 “ eae pew | hadles? MAX |, SHAPIRO, ee on sreeeees osoers ine ere re tee 8 . ne ie THE HALL OF FAME. 3} wan you nina state wnat any oet.[*Wim tints mn uring bia be you ever sit on a pinnacle? ‘29, 1860, wast J.J, MAHONY, the $\- “ey eet Brief Rlographies of Men Whose Names Are First Chosen, 28-—GILBERT STUART, HOW TO MAKE PUMPKIN PIeé, OVEMBER (9 the heyday of the pumpkin ple. Here is a recipe for ft * (hte popular ple, given by the head pastry cook of one of the mont famous hotels Inthe United States; Take one quart of well stewed pumpkin strained through a wove, add half a pound of sugar, two ounces of melted butter, nine eggs, halt an ounce of ground ginger, one quarter of an ounce of ground cinnamon, one-clahth of an ounce of groand cloves. halt a teaspoonful of grated nut- meg, 4 pinch of wait and # tablespoonful of molasses; mix and beat well § together, add a pint and « half of milk, This will make filing for two large plo; bake In a moderate oven, ‘To stew pumpkin for ples wash and dry the pumpkin, then eyt In slices around the pumpkin. Remove the rind and cut in small pleces, Place the pieces tn a Kettle with one cupful of water and let tt stew slowly, taking care that the pumpkin does not barn, When the pumpkin Jp thoroughly cooked the water should have pretty well totied away, Do fot pour out any of the liquid, as this contains the richness and favor o the pumpkin. ' f thin stewed pumpkin into and add it i lene, of teaspoonful of preset of buteen one a Took up etudy of art aan 4, early age, Moved to Lon- don in 1788, where he soon acquired fame aw a portrait ~ Returwed to Atmertea in 11%, % where he painted portraite of Washington, Adams, Jeftorsoo and other pers of his day. 6 6) Painted over 7 portraits, Died at Boston, Mane, July, " paces AA