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HE tnvitation shou: Be edged clther through un 4 anes or a regret. If you OW pre Correct. Deer sire. Ares: ‘What !9 proper in rendinx out wed- Ging invitations for a daughter's wed- 4ing, my husband being deceased? Should I have printed rs. John Moore” or “Mrs, Mary Moore?" = M. Moor BE your husband's name 1! considered good form at presei to do so. Acknowledge All Invitations. Dear Mrs. Ayer: Our pastor's daughter ts to be married at church. All of the parishioners have been invited to the ceremony. Kindly tell me the duties of each reciplent of an invitation to the church. Mrs. pee knowl- te be neiaing further Is required until after the bride returns from her wedding tour, when you should call u If you accept, you should late the bridegroom and w*sh the bride happiness in case you attend the reoep- tion. You must also call upon the bride at her new home ff In sour neighborhood, 4 upon her parents. THE DAILY LOVE STORY. (Copyright, 1991, py Dally Story IM HE most careless observer among the Villagers might have noticed something unusual in the Rev. Mr. + ‘Wigglesworth'’s manner that night ‘That night, as he had gone up the + ateps of the church the Witow McLean, who was as comely and young and fpretty as any girl among his flock, had. | Biepped on her dress and fallen down- ward. Tne minister had lifted her to ber feet, her soft fingers had over his hand. “You are so good," she had murmured, and with a quick, spon- taneous burst of passion, and a modesty that was enchanting: she lifted hie hand, ‘pressed her warm, red lips to It, and Blideg Into the church. An hour passed, the minister had not moved from his cha another hour, he sprang up. “If she ever does it again Yowill marry her,” he declared enthu- giasticaily. ‘The next afternoon was hot Mngton, who had spent the morning the household work, had taken sewing to the cool, xhado: the grape arbor at the back simple home. Her sewing ta. in me untouched. She could not | knowledge that thoughts of the minister | had become a source of disquictude 1 All unaware the Ilttle love nestled {in her heart heart that refused to be old at thirty, that cried out for the rights that be longed to its womanhood. ° Into the quiet nook and upon the roll- tude of her thoughts a little negro boy Poor, starved with outstretched hands that held a fote obtruded himact Bhe read the note turned it over, there was no address, and read again Words that sunk into her brain, She looked at the small boy won- eringly, piteously. Mistake?" she asked “Ia there n Amidly rome was POINTS ON ETIQUETTE. PICKLES AND CATSUP. TO AVOID # 2 wf BAD BREAKS. Riebiieb ieee eb telieieini> By HARRIET HUBBARD AYER. Unually membere of a church offer they It 1s quite customary for the lovers to pastor's child a wedding gift, which |@o togeth choose the marriage ring, may be of the simplest nats put | which of courte the bridegroom pays | should convey with | fection. wishes for Jimentary Mourning. TWwho Chooses the Marringe Winwt | pear sire Ayer ear Mre Ayer Will you kindly tell me ho A says that the bride ‘et melecte should r mourning for a he wedding ring. a8 ahe has to wearllaw? “ame and knows IMPLIMENTARY — mourning what v more " montha Is n setter regarding atyie, | yoprefers Ho saya the bride. | room does the « ing, as he has to] Seite the BIN) Whieh on | ne and event | Jand white in pr ELT E RR Iaeexa | Wedding Aan | bridewroom tes | | with the | Pe earee | at ts yrope to send out Iesenttactietirs A mann| What is the proper t » send 3 | nie? Te tt necer- | and A woman's differ «o much on Peer thie one nolnt that It hay come to be HE Se | rearded am the correct cuatom to at Seat least allow the lady to designate ¢ a Ca atvle of ring she wishes ast ithreeaweeks yn old-fashioned ado marriage da cire (Ment, Juand, whieh the ardent lover ts has days of A marriage ring should be first of all jo two nostentatioux It fa a aymbol, and a} Miss sacred one, and it ahould not be flouted | Very tn the eyes of the bride no elects. Hace unless the jannoune THE MINISTER'S WOOING. ad es & # BY SARA L. COLEMAN. wt her hand, He didn't apeak, he couldn't break her dream of happiness at one blow. Sorely perplex the minister bent and kisned her on the brow, Woman-lke, to cover his embar- rarement, whe began to talk {na nery- hurried way. Of her gerantuma that had not done «5 well, of the vio- [lets that had finished blooming, of the beautiful, bountiful rowes in thetr wealth of flower. She told him timidly that she had wanted to send him some of them | | from the day the first violet had Ifted its head. “ied he sald huskily. Vinton of a | A sud vottage with | crimson rosea clustering on the veran- da came to him, and down a treliised walk above which crimson roses grew, Eliza, and not the widow, moved with eyee alight “Misa EM! asked unhest- tatingly gave him a look of nweet ) reproach Iza, was there ever an- wa ———— Jother?" * phe nald And you have loved me?" queation- slow to enter where sorrow had #0 re- cently dwelt, When the minister read the note that |irely, the colored boy brought him, uneon-| “From the first." she sclously he repeated the worda he had |The Witow Mc! used the night before he loves me.’ | twice. last Hut a great dlamay had fallen on the | from the tev, Mr. Wixglesworth’s mind, | man, ne her stile ntrvbght fr ona time wthough she did not remain the Wifow McLean, when tender thought of her former pastor came to her, feit ways a flush of slame when #he re- mbered that night on the church And to the day of her death site that by her unseemly conduct night she had lost the minister re int good man's love, and f any debt to the widow, divelt at peace, SOME BEST RELISHES OF THE SUMMER. for the “yes” that he so ardently 1 for had been written in a neat vind by another, by Eliza ¥ tly A oman hax wisdom m the gods who te silent at ‘The Rlory of the sunnet was upon the earth and aky aa the minister turned fn at the cottage whose portico was covered with great cluaters of erimaon roaes. He hud come to tell Eliza Elling: | n: ton, who was one of hin beat efuren|etens workers and a fatthtu nactentious woman, that the letter ie had received h need to another He would be very nder with her, he assured himeelf. The minister went forw sugar. two tablespe tablespoontule ground two | tablespoontins flack yepper, unt | ‘one tabl 1 oalleples, a spoonful Mix al) togeth rtew fr a@tirring often lex they si ren, P nopint ory quart: Jars. Ta Netous sauce for meat one | sugar spoonfu the mixture OR HOME DRESSMAKERS, The Evening; World's Fashion Mint. To cut his Birls of four yeurs inches wide wil gis ov No. 20, 3,4 and 6 will sCasbier, The World, Koes Citys"? | 2 need Awilt In the stde of the melon |tablespoontul of cloves, one of cinna- and extract the If you cannot {mon and one of white mustard seed, pout in this way, cut a alender [Cook until soft and tender and sweeten t saving tt tor y the] to caste, in strong brine for day: > —eerrees en peeremrens ry Drain off tae neund freshen in { euwentyecouriuiouemincreennars an Cucumber Catsup. tsar as Sy eT to drain for four or five hours. hoa cloth all the no squeeze t er r owdered over the ts large as a ple v two-gallon k er with can get out Measure: this water and p0lr over the cucumbers an much Vinegtr Season with horsera lish, salt, pepper and splee to taste. \ om i an igh for Fn with ¢ | Publianed by the Presa Publishing Company, 83 to 6 PARK ROW, New York. if Entered at the Post-Om New kork as Second-Class Mail Matter. A NEW FORM OF WARFARE THAT IS WORTHY OF OUR TIME Six persons offered themselves to the Cuban medical authorities 3 | for the yellow-fever tests. They were inoculated. Three of them $ As the result of the inoculations and the deaths, a theory of the disease has been ectablished which will able the saving of countless lives and will change thé conditions under which millions are dead, ° live. Here is the outline of a story that has many interesting sides. In the first place—the six persons. All of th®m had selected careers which compelled them to live where the yellow fever never dies out and where they would be in daily danger of catching it. As persons who have had it and recover are “immune,” these six elected to take the disease voluntarily in circumstances which assured them the very best chances of recovery. That is, they simply faced their enemy, whom they could not escape, on a field of their own choosing and at a time when they were best| prepared. The fact that he overenme three of them does not in the]: least change the sound sense of the course they pursued. But theirs was a most amazing, most admirable kind of sound |: sense. If you call it courage squarely to face the known, a tangible |: enemy or obstacle, what do you call it squarely to face the unknown, ODO Doceccccccccs 8 the mysterious, the intangible ? Is it not heroism ? Then there is the novelty of this form of risking life. There is nothing novel about risking life. Almost every man and every woman risks his or her life many times unconsciously, | times conscious]. War is generally regarded as the supreme risk, calling for ex- |: traordinary courage. But war only seems bolder because the peril 4 is seen long beforehand and comes in a concentrated way. And the real risk of war is not the bullets. They cause 2 comparatively small mortality. It is the dis- eases of the camp and the march. Yet in think- ing of war and war courage one rarely includes this, the greatest factor. But in peace, every day, all around us, men are taking greater | { risks of sudden death, Many of the forms of modern industry— notably those having to do with dangerous machinery—are as fatal as war if the factor of diseage be omitted from war's fatalities. Tt is no novelty to see people risking their lives, but in this yellow-fever experiment there is a novelty, not of fact, but of form. If these persons had chosen the calling of steeple-climbing or of de- scending in eaissons, nothing would have been said about their pre- But choosing a calling that lay in a yellow-fever country and making sensible preparations for success, there is a great deal of talk and some excitement. Yet what they have done is characteristic of our time. “One hy one the phantoms bow behind ue.” We have now come to the stage where we understand what disease is. And we seem to be coming to the stage where we understand what true glory is. As be- tween going to war and going to do battle for the cause of humanity Qecccccccsceco, seve) Decccececeveco 3 yew Form 4 ¢ oF anon ¢ QEAMILIAR FACT. § Deoccceceeceeed paring themselves for success. in the armies of science, which is the more As hetween risking one’s life to kill one’s fellow- ereditable as well as the more sensible? men and risking one’s life to aid in the de- struction of the foes of all men, which is the Oreececcssorr2® nobler, which the worthier of the civilization of the twenticth century? Six persons have risked life and three have lost it in a new vine leaves Ut a clone iid all, and six hours Worcestershire Sauce. not enor yin cold water un One-half bushel of lemons, one quart of etd: tomatoes, ten vinegar, one Fill wish the atumne © pound of brown sugar, te vack thread. a ae SATE bs Pacentt i A pound of ground all Jar and ny aiding fe, one ounee of ground clover, Cook er th At thls process tomether and etrain through a steve. times m at Intervals of J Add jutce of one lemon. Cork tight daye, then the up and ss away tna 1 hile hot and s» \ dry pace. They will not “rine | “hie Ret and seal up ey whl keep geveral Grape Catsup. | Stew five pounds of graper over a slow . fire until soft; then strain through a I _Pickled Watermelon Rind. J |ateve, Add one ant one-half pounda of i ae nugar, one pint of vinegar, two table. iM nde of drown ugar spoonfuls each of alt, cinnamon anit nie heant Bruise four ailapice, one tableapoontul of red pep- ounce innamon HY tWOl ner a few cloves ground, a teaspoonful tle in a muriin at lot grated nutmeg. MIX all together siwith the! y and tet boll until thtck, er the rind and tat y-four Remove jmain Nauta, sand let it st es bot One peck of tomatoes; cut out the yotile. mend and boll until ve not Tub 5 uch oa colander first and a sieve ! Put stove with one table | ful each of salt, ground \* powder oves and | Cat atx ontore and one peck of gree in masiin one teaspoontiti we Into thin silees, and one ten- one-half a pound of ground of oan aver of to- « ix how occasion a. the a ions; then j}ally untt last nour, then almost eon- and let stant ati nixbt In thel st Into aw stone Jar unt morning drain ant a : of good vi kreen peppers, Put ery ered, bottle, cor add a pint of vinegar and a neal) Keep in a dark place, HOT WATER AS A COSMETIC. corps of the grand army of peace and civilization—the corps enlisted to engage the form of the forees of nature called pestilence. SOME OF THE FUN OF THE DAV. A MILITARY PUN. Behold the military man, Who proudly bears his banner; You know him by his khaki clothes, Likewise his cocky manner. Washington Star. UP TO DATE. ‘ Doctor—What's the matter with that appendicitis case? Assistant Doctor—Well, he says he's an up-to-date patient with an up-to- slate disease, payin’ an up-to-date price, and he won't have a trained nurse who Se Hresesoeeosss, PARIS D0 G0OR.MOELS LPS LD SLOP ODE DD 9O18- 9629 9-9-2039909.0-0995.92900739200300 & 4 ATE CAREW ABROAD. THE DAILY MAIL IN TROUBLE. 3-9-8-6-2) The bad boy of the hour is Al- fred Harmaworth, who, to his . huge delight, ‘s pun:shed before the whole school—not for being 2 dunce, but for being too smart. His Majesty's Government, in its character of vil!age schoolmarm, has decreeu that naughty Alfred, for finding out oficial secrets and Printing them in his paper, shall be punished by no. long re- celving the casualty lst, which 1s only to be given to good little editors who do as they're told. And there's been a fuss about it in the House of Commons, and great statesmen have bent their mighty Intellects on a_ knotty question of boardschool discl- pline, 9995990999900 99004909100000909F-09009909 0909590959900969-9-99000.06-6- BODG RE O4-2-3 9-4 ICOPAAPORMPRODOS | A REMINDER. N MIND POWER. Walter — Beg pardon, haven't you forgotten some» thing, sir? t Brainy Bowers—De bull's a-comin’ all right, an’ I s'pose me bi- ographer, when he comes to write me life, ‘ll say de position was | critical, but cat's a lis. | “*Cause I just do de lightsome skip an’ den turn round an’ see do fun.” . say! Look th-ro! Ir I wasn’t nigh onto forgettin’ my wallet! can't alng anything newer than “‘Juanita."—Chicago Record-Herald. 2 : +++ _____ } > LIKE AND UNLIKE, 3! nrox@s. TFhenever a woman becomes reasonable it's attributed to her nery & Inn't that eingular? } ‘Towne—Yer, but the unreasonableness of a man ts attributed to his nerves, 3 And that’s atti! more singular.—Philadelphia Press, & +2. é VIEWING SEW SCENES. $ “Yen, Berkeley ts travelling for his health.” 2 eWhy, [didn't know he was ill.” : ¢ 4 “He {an't; but one of the men he induced to put money into that lead mine|@ o 4 he was promoting turns out to be an ex-pugilist."—Chicago Record-Herald, Sh a cORiehanAeaRG IRE ARNT 3 as vs FLUCTUATE. @ 4 “T auppose the cattle will ouffer a great deal from the shortage in crops," re- o marked the man who faye things off-hand, é “Posribly,! anawered the stock broker, “but the lambs are likely to suffer a 3 t deal more than the cattle do.""—Washington Star, AY ra mo) oon ay “And It's got a couple o' hune —_ of ee | dred good dollars into it, too! A TIMELY WARMING, “It's dese little exhibitions o' mind power what makes me t'ink % He—Do you think a man ought to wear braceleta? 3 dat pr'aps I oughter Incorporate meself as a company an’ give de ? She—Well, if a man wanta to wear bracelets I think he ought to wear them, 4 world at large de benefit of me brains.” gy so that everybody will know he ts the kind of man that wants to wear bracelets, | © y a 6 Chicago Record-Herald, ew BOD865096.00.0-98.000. O-3OO9OS —————_-+-___ "a goon Pas. THE DANOER. IN OLIVES. | dealer ronay for a bargain. The olives Firat College Professor—What are you going to do next to get your name in MINENT physicians prescribe olives| 9F¢ bought at bargain counter prices, \ the papers? largely for all sorts of nervous dis- | Pickled and plumped in brine or vinegar, \ Second College Professor—1 was thinking of declaring that the dictionary is eases, for indigestion and gastritls. | "4 sold. They discovered by their AR better for the complexion than | merely sopped upon the face at night, as any cosmetic compounded by a per-lorce a day ta aften enough for the acmib, fumer !# the application of very) After the hot bath dash on a liberal hot water to the face with a woollen | quantity of cold water with the hands washrag. A matron of ‘ifiy, whose | until the skin falrly glows. This is the charms are the envy of those of her| cheapest and most wonderful cosmetic acquaintances of half her years, has|known. A month of such treatment will ured this application many yenra. | trareform any complexion. My skin {e “Every night and morning,” she #. much fairer and rosier now than when [ “I give my face a thorough washing with @ plece of white flannel in hot water. Once in a grei nile 1 wu soap, but not often, as I have found the too wordy to be considered good Iiterature.—Baltimore American. <r NOT 80 STRANGE. “There is something strange about that circulating brary !n our town, was twenty. I had naturally a poor complexion, conrse and muddy. I tried many remedies, but they were very un- hot water, persistently used, very sat- {efactory. “Ef the skin has not been exposed toa great amount @ due the water may be satisfactory, until one da Whose skin’ I always, had admired Yor y jarance ga' the | ve. me pe. tried {t faithfully, and before long eaw with delight that my complex: fonwas clearing. ("at mY complex SEU RAINE CE are eG ‘Blitheraby. “What is it?’ asked Withereby. “It jen't big enough to go around.''Balt:more American. ee aa FOR THE NAMB. “Why is Richmann adding so many new designs to that house he ts bullding?"’ have an excise for calling it Builtmoré.’'—Chicago -™~ Prec d “Bo that he will jeral, y vA '~ ~ They warn only against poor olives which are far from healthful. A per- fect olive {s of a yellowish green tinge, hard, and when bitten the mouthful is ent not mushy nor spongy. Tho stone should have a pinkish color, and the smell ought to be fresh and agreca- ble, says Good Housekeeping. Beware of poor olives as of poison. Frequently during a voyage a barrel wilt burst or leak and the brine escape, ‘They reach New ‘York dry, withered and darts eolored. Still there ie always may be cheapness, their odor, like new, wot sole leather, thelr softness and their dark ue. ——__ FOR WARTS. AMPEN the wart and rub {t with ‘a small piece of carbonate of soda or common washing soda. 3 5 this frequently during the day, and in \the course of a month the wart will drop off. A little soreness may be felt 'm real obliged to you, young feller, an‘ hope I kin do as maueip fur you some tima®’~ =} > is, te ‘soon forgotten in se