The evening world. Newspaper, June 22, 1912, Page 8

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UDOT Oo ere rerio RE RE OP IT mon nS vVening World Daily Magazine. eriaracy: fous 82 OTT eaioiscoee _ |fPhe Retreat 3 By Robert Edgren Published Dally Except Sunday by the Preas Publishing Company, Nos. 63 to: 63 Park Row, New York. | ATI PULITZER, President, 68 Park Row, mi non BHAW, Treas 63 Park Row. J is y, 63 Park Row. fn Gecond- 7 nd t JOSEPH PULIT: nd th Ente the Post-Ome: Bubecr!; iow Rates to The Ev ‘Worle for the United States tn the International CLOTHES— THE — WOMAN! i ii ; if : i and Canada. Postel Uator. . 1 me be ame —-7 One Tear. 82.80] One Year."7., vetoes ITE | a lp ‘J 1 Re i One Month... One Month... | | ze 2. lan H ] Ateavans ea 4 Sr ai } VOLUME 52... ccc cccsmmeresecesesereccceseeseeNOy 18,568 | Ce i sn ton tes apie | © you wear "clothes?" : sama | 1 do not mean, simply, do you put on garments, change them / TO THE RESCUE! | Jinner, and take them off at nixht, ‘That is merely a habit. Weating | LOTHES"” js an ART, It is the most exacting, absorbing, s0u / TURE Meee Wineeenenaeousy oe ee racking obsession on earth, It is the oné thing that has retamg i i in © Ps ; | woman's progress, stunted her development, and prevented her from accomplish: 4 Library on the site of the Arsenal in peda Park. Isak) womans progress snted her developinent iH people are pleased, others, including the Mayor, are not. Anyhow, everybody “resumes first position.” What is to be done next? Are we to see Mr. Hunt's masterpi carted away to the dust heap or trowelled into foundation walls for , / Nobody can wear “clothes,” in the truest, highest, “foolest” sense, and do anything else, in this short (ife, Mothers—good, successful mothers—have never worn clothes," from Mother Eve down. Great actresses have nearly always bern great frumps off the ‘stage, They don't “wear clothes; they mefaly wane “hust Into clothing'" And, ae for the successful women artists and writers, | they are painful to the eye. . apartment hotels? Perish the thought! / You can always tell a good mother by the way in which her bodice wrinkles - Why doesn’t the Academy of Arts and Letters come forward at lin the bick, and a successfu? profess! j her belt quarrels with her safety pins, | ‘Their clothes seem to have taken a personal offense and to have a sort of aloofness, a detached appearance, an unrelated alr, as though t | longed to somebody else. It is only the “lightwelghts* who know how te “drea Oh yes, it's all very well to say that “woman's first duty is to make hersdt Attractive—to ma But why? Wasn't she born far mare attractive than man in the first place? And wouldn't she still continue to be more attractive than man, even thougt her only garment were a ring in the nose? Does HE pul tn | Ms ribs, pray, until they ache, and weigh his brain down with a mountain of |near-hair, and torture himself with collar-bones, that cleave his clavicle and | threaten to cut off his Jugular vein, in order to fascinate HER? | Far from it! He thinks himsef a martyr if he concedes to smooth big top hair and resists one dolled onton for her sake. He has vanity enough to delieve | that she wil love him just as Nature made him—and even a little worse, Yet, fancy any man loving one of us If she looked like that! Oh no! I don't yearn | to look I!ke a man. I'd hate !t—but I'd Ike to FEEL like one—ju | wonder he goes about with that serene, self-confident, superior alr! | cool, loose, clean, powdewess, curlless—how he must LOVE himself! | Did you ever stop to consider that the fine art of “wearing clothes" ine cludes seven or eight sub-arts and minor professions? In order to “dre: erly and effectively, a woman must have a genius for line and colo designing, an instinct for buying. a knowledge of fitting, dressmaking, tailoring, |bairdressing and maniouring, and a knack of ‘ooking like a saint, when she | Is feeling like Satan. It {s nonsense to fancy that you can put yourself tn the | hands of expert dressmakers and milliners and come out a thing of beauty. You are much more likely to come out looking like the wrath of Heaven—unless | you know how to foil them. fonal woman by the Way her skirt sags and this point and furnish a solution for the problem? The building | would seem admirably fitted for the Academy's use and a suitable site might be found. In spite of the gloomy assurance of Mr. Frick’s | erchitects that the Library “must now he demolished” and that “it would be utterly useless for any organization to seek to obtain the) bmilding,” surely a practical proposal from the Academy might have | etrong influence. Can this city allow one of its finest monuments to be “wrecked” like a worn out tenement house? The ideal plan would be to transport to a happier and lasting place of rest both the Library and the memorial to Mr. Hunt which faces it from the opposite side of Fifth avenue. Or must the build- ing perish utterly while the bust of its great designer remains to gaze sorrowfully across the street at the marble cottage with which Mr. Frick means to replace it? Oe GOOD SCHOOLING. ‘a re after all, the art of dres: sists not so m in having clothes } HAT forty-nine cent graduation dress made by a little girl all lene ciatioerie noe ie ate een ON Oi at pone q oa You may havo all ’ I " it l | es in the word, if you don't get them on right you will look as i] her own: self after two-months’ sewing lessons in a public ee peed, had flung them at you and they had hung wherever they } school may be set down as one of the brightest marks to the | stupa (2 luck «Your tout ensemble will be aothing but a “toot and i eredit of public achool education in the City of New York. Three | lp wall after you have gotten all your clothes together: shors to match your other girls in the same class have evolved creations for next week's | Retr, and hair to match your hat. and hat to match your side-combs, then— | THEN comes the supreme agony of getting into them! How you have to y to perne- i} ceremony at a cost of sixty cents, sixty-two cents and seventy cents sate the ean ito wrisele yourself into that inquisitorial instrument of torture— : ny a | | Which makes clothes “look right." How you sigh and groan, and moan and pray, | respectively. | during the sacred rite! And then, perchance. just as you hai he , | iter ; ance. j "i ve hooked | That these contests in cheapness are a thousand times better | H Yvon wintabes | last hook, and are drawing your first breath, than the old struggles and sacrifices arfd heartaches for a commence- ou Miscover that you will have {to tke it off again, because you forgot to put your shoes on first, or have | sf dropped your back hair on the floor and can't reach over to get It i ment dress to out-value everybody else's is too plain to need comment. \ Gaya oviatltey davarvert rosmauran Wie rate eT notion eee 4 But there is more in it than economy. The child who made the | more ot ‘ ; or warm days, it is more diMoult to tame than a wild ‘ ; roa | animal, more obstinate than a man, harder to convince than an anti-suffragtet. forty-vine cent frock put together her muslin and lace and “fixings Of course, it's of no use to wear “clothes” unless you pally a wih weet hersef. What better training in the true essence of dressmaking—- mae ttm i REIN hdd Eales LE i 1 nen + we hat's the use of protesting? It is nearly 2 o'clock, and if T he tasteful arrangement of simple materials? Any great dress- | —————__—__- ———— cut this pathetic wail short I shall never get my hair cured and @ moker will admit that, in spite of silks and embroideries and their | uses, the real artist in the business is she (or he) who with deft finger | ber Three-and-a-half foot wormed into a Number Two shoe, and a Ni rr el Ral oad alah olak al el ak ak al al ated etal el al oh ek anette ol akaial add hteen girdle fastened ‘round @ Number Twenty-two. we fit inte Oresrte touches made permanent by needle and thread can give softness and) @ grace and originality to humblest cotton or calico, : ner with @ man I know. I can hear hi: aly Mr. Jarr Has Lost $20. Now He ye geht Forty-nine cents at the service of gumption and trained fingers | tw Such {s our reward! No! there's might produce as fine a piece of sheer dressmaking as ever came from - use fighting against it! It Is born tn every daughter of 8 sartor padne his slavie le dl ' @ Sees a Chance to Lose It Again. |wcycrume ces ii aoriat mainess his siacen devotion to, clotae ‘) KALIL LSLLSSSKLSKLSLIMLL ISLA ILLS KL the Rue de la Paix. Y, murmuring careles# y: | us liberty or | sive us death!” But even when we contemplate deith itself, one thought strik | terror to our hearts; one thought a the soul-freezing, terrifying thought: yne fills, thrifls, dominat rk to town wouldn't take Stryver eck, all right. what T say every woman— WA automobile, this threat held no ter |» You'll listen to everybody jrors for him. check. I'll take his c — — -— be t ‘Will they do my HATR right when they lay me in my coffin?” | med to enjoy riding in Stry-|But it's four days ago and he hasn't r couldn't just bring to mind ne ais hei ieee oon F ver's car the o evening, though,” [#ent it to me yet. any specie objections Mrs, Jarr had LREADY the days are getting shorter! The sun rose later this | he suggested, “What did “ou the mon fon de at the time he had paid over the : ve * “Me? nig #0) d Mrs, J t| twenty dollars, but he only remarked o more davs this vear like veste: ' . \ ’ Huh! I was bored to death, I}like a big soft A Mrs, Ju , ry morning. No more days this vear like yesterday! The climax jthink Mrs, Stryver is the stupidest] was no affair of ours!" that he wished he had the twenty dol- T h e a a n e Ss e G 1r 1 come—and gone! | woman, and that man Stryver Iw an ar-| “It was our affair in that we were lars, as he needed a cuit of clothes. jrogant, cowardly bully, Think of peo-| stuck away out in the wilds, as well as} "Oh, T woucn't worry myself, It 1 NS Shana es ean [varie that waving: moneys! 1 [Ahab aet Sy to mer acl eee eens wives var Whats $ Her Daily Lite, Amusements, Work and Ambitions , ALTIMORE has been snoring soundly all this week, hardly Reb reminge: mes sala Dan. dary : ‘He has twenty dollars of only you had listened to me!’ doe by The Prem Muvueuiug C% | rather, I paid twenty dollars for him| marked Mis. Jarr, “it wouldn't have} man. "t need your money, He's a rich| rousing for meals, ‘The other gang will need sitting up with | Capsrigu, 191 By Mock Joya nl of that sort I get for.” nes ab ty The New Wardhs in cash when hie car broke down that{ happened. But I might as well keep] “I've always noticed that the rich| Pretty soon. 166 y JA. look at them!" cried Mr nignt and the fellow who brought us! silent, for all the attention you pay to) operate the money of the poor |_-_ Roemer a ie Ee One STE : 2 H Jair ins bitter tone. _ Sao ene itn rented pe eee Mock Joya 1 @ Japanese university man and writer who is taking of ¢ The “them in question vi ing ol and people with! Dp" ATES at Chicago are reported tired and short of funds, | rather well behaved automobile parts plenty of mon But I notice wh Chicago it practical course in American journalism, In these articles for The Rueniag World he tells the story of the Japanese girl and points out the startling diferences between herself and her American sister. 1 | the pasalng of whowe car at a Broadway “<1 Domestic Dialogues. {) iii: “Well, PN make If is only ti lerossing had halted the prow eee jand Mrs, Jarr, who were abro' jtown's main street this golden after- t ask } & 5 i | ima Wi ing Mrs, Steyver for it," declared Mrs, | Japanese wedding, and ther i te By Alma Woodward lise Need iit ot’ tumaes na ai | A= The Japanese Wedding. {0nance nouling, ani inere ina man "Who were they? asked Mr. Jarry, ¢ ; present T need a new palr of corsets, | % OST of the Japanese marriages} ceremony the couple report their’ mar- thinking it imight be some of Mra, Jart's) Copyright, 1912, by ‘The Press Pubilshing Co, (The New York World), wo of my ribs are broken, are still planned by parents. riage ty the Clty, Clerk aha ake a jeoclety friends, A HUMID IDYL. 1 want to—I'll have the bath tub filled) Mr. Jarr looked at her in alarm, Wl fut the wishes of the youns|record of it, There ts no tarriage How do I know’ retorted his good with tce and He in it, if 1 want tom) “T mean co: Wwhaleboaes, of course.” | people are considered by father] )),.,, q Fear a chorus! (Boter Mr, Brown, mopping his foreliead. His | 1.1) ' ’ | p Fee gee rae [license in Japan, aw = Fater count get the epeed of the train an tol- (ay “A lot of vulgarians an [collar Wise cot all ite pride: is straw hat is lier n ee ate added, “Ll haye to get a new cor- y and mot her before yh oe During the feudal period, when the } the the KAiior of The Kvecire Word Jawa, A. rall-de Sinty tent. Ioeae girls, most likely [sie Ao Ualane eit between’ the fin and) Mrs. 1B, ‘coldiy=Of course, you fet. T wich T could get mine made to|any decided step, It is not necessary to lctayy distinction was strict, the marflage ‘Thia letter tan't meant to be funn. are ave Gime teen ceeeee and @4) opney seemed all right,” said Mr, dare, | sec i Nertelitae of bie spinal Co iy muvee | Ahvthing you want to do, You wouldn't | order ax Mis. Strvver She thinks | obey the wish of parents !a the matter of | aor. place only between the people of ) but im written to get advice from wise] that i. it follows t because some people have an au | 8 # wither . [think twice of leaving ehind a young nothing of paylag forty dollars for hers, matrimony, but it is a disloyalty (line sume class, but since the I hat th joints in the mil ’ | 1 ' " testora: readers. 1 keep a borrding house. 1] x, cae 'etomobtle (and ft may be a stolen autor) Winie dn sympathy)—Are yuh hot,/ Widow and a Little ehild So if T get the twenty dollars back I'l]| Marry without thelr consent or @gaINSt lion there is no class restrictiot Now let Mr. kK. 8. proceed { pathy: 5 fi T m, and pride myself on everydody having! yng when ig xnaiown 1 » count. | mobile, cr an automobile not pald for, | pa» Wille (briltiantlyy—Then yuh o ot anice new ” \ thelr wishes enough to eat. A young man came tol op. lows lmve been told or somebody else's car, or one being | Mr. B. showing bis teethi—Oh, no, marry a rich one, cou ie th (i'm not hot! ‘Mhat’s liquid frost you # Mr. B.. fairly crackling \ a week, The first al he ate is at more money than we have) is that any bon my foreneael thought) ton) etwee nample of all the rest, So 1 will tell the two minuies equals reascn why they shoukt think them= Ott, He ate three plates of soup, tour| thitty miles per hour, ‘This method wit aeives better than we are?” auked Mra. MS 1. (avothingly)=Now there's yuh, Ma M board with mea few days 4 0 fury, starts toward marriage is free between people of all ranks and occupations, ‘here are a great number of Japanese marrying foreign wives, Many of those who mar- Jave saw Ke the time, Sas two minutes have|demonatrated to people who have no elapeed in the counting: then sixty min- utes divided by prospects fora ready | A young man picks out his mate, who summer sult g lima ing if the may not be known to his parents; —What are advanced twenty dollars was returned, the girl Is of good character and ts to the distaff side of the fam: yor golng to do? You don't suy , 30 he| approved by them, ithe reat. goes. 98 foreign women are occupying high y biting the child's head off, Henry. | for a minute that that child knew what ally ved that he would go to #moothly as can be, In case his parents Jomcial position in the government. &nd 004 helpings of roast beef, nix boiled! Probably hold good up to apeed of forty | Jarr. : e pee i aera front himsélf to get the money | object to the girl on some ground o Jare in the best soctety of the country, dumplings (large), and took four cups ORO Sirah, © H.C. tuted Mn Fe Rete i payers.) Sanh thcande Gut here's no economy in cheap cors|/1ne them to consent to the marriage, wives of the Japanese, !s that only a ‘of coffee, Besides thin he muat ha A Right. Tk manad me alck: the cheap sort of | (heertully)—1 only ast an eee oe ian an oxnre sts," continued Mra. Jarr, whose mind either the marriage !s stopped or the! very few of them are American women, eaten at least nine slices of bread, Am| ‘To the Kaitor of The Kwening World people Putting on alte raing. in thelr) yub look Ike yuh were so darned ie eee tity) oh, was still upon this confidential adjunct | #0n disinherited. ‘German, French, slish and- ther he finished he said: "You set a good’ A claims the book “Les Miserables’ Een yer Anateee Sb WAV iBR: OME | ht) Pal satunus little co to the femule attire, They last no) In Japan, both young men and sirls!teuropean women make very happy mar: table. If I didn’t believe in being m | was written by Victor Hu H clans |teriy, . | omy. B. (torn ldn't ride ty of th gz on him fervciously)—| erate I would be tempted to overeat! the book was written ouldn't ride jn one of the by Alexander yOu pups te Hi Stop lookin’ at ime! at such a good table” He tx eating | Dumas? Which i right? things if you were to give it to ne | How. | cer ; Mrs, B, (unconsciously adding fuel)—| me out of house and home at thin rate, As Mr. Jarr wasn’t golng to give her] 20% it Ot Mr. B.—Some ( time, and when the mark, Madam! Do you realize are not worth [! you're saying? Do you— pensive so warm! Is it warm?" Winte (scenting danger)—Ma dida't) The di start to go they ean propose aking over, But an e! air can always be renewed. irse Was Invading regions of girls is from elghteen to twenty: and the number of Pro-|riages with the Japanese, but {t posals by each sex is about the same. | seid that «a Japanese marries an he marrying age of the Japanese) Amer woman, and it {a still more ve. 1 am not atingy. I love to @ee my » Cooper Union, ‘ seldom that they are happy in their i ; : en they | mari ; : Sesh ST Mr. DB, cbolling with rage—I8 IT! moan it, Pa. We'd be awful sorry If wh Jarr had but the allghtest| Those who are not married when they'| marriage, Even those Japanese who ar . To eho Faitor of The Rvening Workd jmean it, ed be awsul sorry Le Teive yeata of age are.nutlin thi ’ , , boarders eat heartily. 1 hate to order Nave ; 4 |WARM? Ob, no, I've just been taking! yun died, Pa, We'd ery awful! An’ put . vo he kept his mind upon| reach twenty-five years n this country seldom marry Amert A man from my house just because he he spy elle codigos and t} A Wild Prophecy. Ja little (rot up from the Battery to Ket|iog o° Howers In the semmiterry g’| Planning how best to ket back his own | rexarded as eligible, and would provably |women, while a large number of Jap- Sy eats too much. Readers, advise me, puitivated ai waritacs con can have it] 1 in circulation! OC course,| waren the plante an’ we'd tle a fierce ney for his own have no chance of marrying. j Dat OM anexe in thix country marry European will you not? MRS. W. ! cast or tree not warm, What do YOU do! yi¢ glack bow on your chair, an’ “Look at that wotean!’ erled Mrs, |Malds are almost unknown in Japan. | women every year. x¥e | w tin a cool, darkened | ne uae ae the ty! darr, poluting to a aviphitke form ahead.| Every young man of moderate means}. ig gimcult to poly out the regeon bn . | (BR ee A a petra Pe ala ; 1 |t* supposed to marry before he 1s thirty’ why marriage between the Japanese and ‘ | The | apartment drinking teed) stu! a ay ‘t's chee for 4 Look bh she's s ored to ma 3 Yiwh riage betwe he Japanese and 4 To the Kaitor of The Krening Workd “inalge” W A fa sere | eet nie eay ie chearsul. for 8: oan BUM Were’ aaked Ady. dare, (are 010. RBGIRDA MISITYIBG GE MON OVS! |(he Amarsan women ia tare Ana ieee Tn answer to Mra. K, S.'s letter awking | To the Kastor of The Bveniog World jand eating strawberries and cream Ito come home half dead from the heat! “Does it hurt he HEE ee ee eee eater iat ap tiene ie BOL TR merce ramen 1m Far Ae If any vehicle D1 r Mrs dndignantly)—Oh, yes, thatslang have his fly finial act and not caring much, y aFR SHAE OS i y are nd py after thelr marriage; for a method of telling the speed of @ any vehicle gos around a corner} alts and have his family finish th Ae Preven ait Tagnaulaiiie. “bokeat sai old maid in Japan, there are very, Very | put the difference of the {dea about the yallroad train by timing the click of tha] at @ high rate of speed which whoels jail | domiike funt then discuss the aftermath Wille (anxious t wheel I wish to say that possibly for- leave the ground, the “outelde” or ts ty-five years ago, with the Mght care and the poor rai! joints of that time, the| D., Ridgewood, N. J, click of the wheels passing over the! Pi pada hi Joints might ~ have been pronounced qo tue Ediior of Ye Kreving Wort enough to have given reasonatdy aceu-| 1 love to talk politics rate data wherewith to compute the/ every one ele nowadays, speed of the train, but In these days of| everyting in sald and done | kuow the perfect roadbeds and heavy cars mount: | jeountry has al progressed and| ed on six-wier? trucks, what siige there | crown greater and better, no matter! help)—D'yuh want! Mrs, B. (irmly—Willle, leave the) hurt Ik a cheap one, of course few old bachelors, and there is duty and position of a wife between # solutely no woman-hater, these two countries 18 one of the Main sum tee, Pa? WM get yun a hunk o' ice, | poom! Mrs, Jarr, “In fi ne hardly feels | 89 ehamna jolemn, ‘but | Pa, an’ hol’ it on your neck fer yuh.| Wille (rebelliously)—T didn't do nutn-/a good corset no matter how tight, But| The Len ney ae the, bride: | reasons Ok bie UORARDY $0G10g Of $68 { . pag ; P00) M «| American ai Mrs, Holt you'd sit down and stop! don't want Pa tuh croak—~(woudn’t makes it hurt Mr. Giiy the relatives and few close friends ds Hfussing, mot likely you'd cool off very /do ME no good, Mat tent x vw» of the bride and bridegroom attend the A . b Jquickiy, You Just make yourself hotter,| tre, B, (lercely)—Willlam, he thought that 118 a cheap one!" | O° Em OOO te natate (1 the drinking | ncient Incubators. thinking about it! room! apped Mra. Ja 2 of wine nine times by the bride and GGS have been hatched in Egypt Mr, H, (viclously—Say, you know a) Mr, B. (with cold caim)—Yes, William, | “Oh, If T get the twenty dollars back | igegroom, ‘They drink three times, | in ovens for hundreds of y an Was killed downtown the otier day, leave the room before you tell the Vil give it to you'” sald Mr Jarr wear- ingide”’ wheel So does But when | leave the | ' ' ut of three different cups, and then Incubators that hold from 40,00 = | , See a eonteaie (for saying much that same Ching! Don't] truth Ly ee 7 4 | they use the same cups, Other peuple} to 60,000 eggs are still in existence, | io 19 80 o | | fi yw that's the \orst. thi | (William eates and Mr. By surveys Mis, 8. iy. Who else would you give it tot ‘ : ot drink at all where for generations about 70 per who was elected. S01 keep sane. How! you know that’s t rst thing you! + nad at the ceremony do not drink at a \ where for 6 ns a pe question if any count could be Kept. ay others do? E a | loan say to # person prostrated with the | "ih murerom Mit ae headi—i don't S*Ked Mra, dare In ridges the parents of thoj}cent. of each heating have been suc ‘Taere ia o method, however, which ie| el EE heat? Pesan nine recat init BR a PTS young couple a man or a couple] cessfully hatched, Egypt is a great irly accurate, provided the road is) | Mrs, B, (with scorm)—Proatrated notn. | KNOW, Wiwe vewre looking : A PAIR OF PINCHERS. Whom they kk and trust ay the! exporter of eggs, as many as 83,000,000 Souble tracked. Let Mrs, K. 3. take 8 VARIOUS CUSTOMS, tng! ber Syl en ba asite ane Hans st fruit man down at the corner | eyggdieman, Kthough he has noleggs having been shipped from that noat oo et Bae serah She tren: : “ia Cube a fine ts Imposed when n | Wille Ginxtously=D'yuh want te) On, T guess it's Just the humidity! Hat souked rather diavaurened oe actual hand in the arrangement of the} ancient land 4n one winter, Even in joolbel eg Apo) Pare ey feel arn ees, oleae clataans Al Bape oles 8 tet mo tell you, Madam, 11° take more WAL if the Areuble ictal seapec! ° n, I don't know, Liver notes what We! marriage. But to this middleman atl! this country it would be considered @ Mrs. B, (quickly)=No, he doesn't, He'll ‘sill eee as the train moves along the| happens when a buat comes in jate, in “From now on the days will begin)... 4 | asked at| than @ little measly heat to put me | difficulties and aif rences that might very large undertaking to handle an xy putting ice on his arteries joe yOUR WAY, Bo don't valve you Dissa business no good,” he answered | arise between the young couple are| incubator large enough for 60,000 eg shadows of the splice plates at the rail/ this country | to w shorter.” whe ywerheated! in ton hight Z gloomily, “De lady she pincha de frult;! brought, and his advice and decision are|In Egypt. they do the trick tm brick oral which are particularly noticeabl fo; what happen: | “Yes. | suppose in a little while} Mr. 2, (laughing mirthiessly)—Now, Me cali with digolis.) a da badda spot—de lady she pincha| final, This man or couple presides at! ovens which ave heated for tem days the sun ds shiving on the rails, These he Je prompt'y dockeJ.""~-Washing- | they'll b rely twentyfour hours! whu's been telling you all those fairy] Mre, B, (left alone)-Oh, I HATS ult and de cop he plncha de pea-|the wedding. nd then require no more agteption—- @atows the can Leng” tales? Sure, 1'l1 put ice on my neck if?eummert er? a ‘There is no religious ceremony, in @] Galjipolla Tribune, ee —d_ rn ae

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