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haw SATURDAY, JULY 19 1919 hs } |Be a Better Stenographe And Earn Bigger Pay 'W TO SPEED GP YOUR INSURE ACCURACY, INC: How to Read Character at At Sight THE MOUTH—THE VOICE— THE HANDSHAKE Best Mouth Is Well Formed, Medium Large, Cut . Straight Across Face, Lips Moderately Full, Jaw “Firm, Teeth Well Articulated. ae Best Voice Is Low Pitched and of Moderate Volume— Best Handshake Ys Warm, Elastic, Slightly Clinging, With a Firm, Even Pressure. Becond of a series of articles, extracts from @ course of lessons pre- gered by Dr. Katherine M. N. Blackford, the famous charécter analyst, Dr. Biackford's odservations are the result of studying 18,000 men and | women, JazZIne” Divorced and Remarried in Forty-Eight Hours |# Edith Gaynor Vingut Sets New Record _ In Family’s Rapid-Fire Romances Matrimonial Adventures. of Late Mayor Gaynor’s Children Now Include Three Elopements, an Annulment, a Divorce and Quick Remarriage and a Real War Romance Ri ae _" coppntght, 101%, by ‘The Prew Pubitihine Oo, (The Ned York Brening Wort) HAT does your friénd’s mouth tell you about him— when he is not discussing himself? What insight into his character do you gain from noting the timbre and inflections of ‘this voloet | ‘What do you learn from his handshake? j Perhaps you have never thought of noticing these ' og Conotuding ertiole of « series of twelve written especially for ; vapher readers of The Evening World by Court Reporter Herman euthority on the subject, i a ; By Herman J. Stich 4 Hrening World.) Speed Training—Experience—The College Man— How Long? | never did any scientific speed practice; that it is unnecessary; it tm & waste of time “get away with it.” Which is just about right. : But for very obvious reasons they never “get away with” passing out ing in @ shorthand apeed contest; they are never asked to report diffoult dnstehcathas Bes: thee ail eee pen \ speakers. Their lot is the dregs of the shorthand field. Their income ts 5 can interpret them intelligently, cere Narn aT ine ieee . d , wondi — explained by Dr. Katherine 4 H. Blackford tn her new | | ender you keer 05 ue 0 of | StuA Sbil. a tukes ea: GI @ tight Gx. But the founda- \ Tounded by the Independent Corporation. must be there. You creep be- | itory tracts and peural perceptions to “The mouth,” she says, “mdves and moves more orthosilisic and hypophosphorie acid run, You must build your foundation 5 wal expression ef the mouth over a period of years finally sets it so that | first. And the only foundation for! day requires his presence at a leSture: ey it tells its story unmistakably when in repose. on Shakespbare or Macaulay, “He ~ SHOR, world’s champion high speed shorthand writer and Internationa « Cevpright, 2919, by The Prem Publishing Go, (The New York HERE are many free lance reporters who claim, boastfully that they “ And in proof of their contentiqn they tell you that they manage te” court reporting ¢xaminations; they never “get away with” @ decent show- Uncertain and their Livelihood is exceedingly precarious—with little hops | show you how to get out of Coarges, utilities and disutilities, aud- i fore you walk. You waik before you oraiuminuy orthosilicate, work im the shorthand roporting pointers” on the person to\whom they belong if you | course of lessons, “Reading Character at Sight,” easily than any other feature of the face. Yet, little by little, the habit- “One cannot go smiling through that smiles all the time, nor can one |. @ whining and complaining through the years without acquiring a mouth that always whines and complains, whether actively or not. 5 “Here t» the Gasirable type of mouth. @ee whether you can culti- vate such an expressio& yourself. Also look for it in other peopl: “The normal, balanced or desir- @ble'type of mouth is well formed, medium large, lips moderately full, *well curved and pink tn color, The tecth are well articulated and the people thi: with ite accom, halt won if. the writer possesses @/ annual or semi. periods. For Soy Pare, 9 Tbs the Np are Heh 1S avae Acssecintiads persiotenee, broad general knowledge. The ability] weeks or months at a ti wate nepeeseee ser mga Me cur |and oftentimes a good deal of etub- to write faat necessitates an acquaint-| may be no apparent gain ih |your | across the face, the outer angles being even with tife centre or tilted slightly upward. In conversa- tion, the lips are. tree, mobile and ex- pressive, At rest they are firm but Kindly in expression. “Of course you cannot make your ps ‘moderately full’ if they are very thick, but the way the lips are hev4 and controfied is under your furiediction and power, and is really more important than their thickness or thinness. Naturally the only way you can give your mouth a desirable expression is to cultivate the kind of emotions which reflect themselves in @ desirable expression of the mouth, “One of the most important mes- | wages conveyed by the mouth and one which is read with the greatest }ease by anybody who umierstands the principle and {s at all observant is that which tells you whether its posseAsor loves praise and ap- plause or is indifferent to’ such | things. “You doubtless know some one who is very susceptible to flattery. If you db, praise him, at the same time watchfhg his mouth. See if his ‘upper lip does not instantly rise, curl EASY WAY TO TAKE , | the years without acquiring a mouth up*under the nose and show his up- per teeth. Now it Is perfectly ob- vious that an upper lip which can perform this act most easily te short one, that is, one that is short , | from’ the nose down to the red part. So it comes about that this short up- per lip shows a very keen appetite for praise, appreciation, applause and even, flattery. “The long, stiff upper lip, on the other hand, indicates independence, certain amount of indifference to what bornness. If the long upper lip is also full and protruding between the nose and the red part the individual is so indifferent to what other peuple think, and so abeotutely sure of himself, that he is oftentimes exceedingly egotistical and self-satisfied.” Dr. Blackford divides voices into the high-pitched and the low-pitched. ‘The former, she tells us in “Reading Character at Sight,” “is the voice of intelieat and nerves, rather than of emotiog and vitality. It therefore in- dicates a certain afhount of coldness and jeck of emotional and muscular | vigor. “The low-pitched voice, on the other hand, is the voice of emotion, warmth jand muscular and vital vigor. While the high-pitched voice, therefore, is characteristic of the thinter, the low- pitched voice is characteristic of the | doer and the enjoyer. “Loud, high-pitched votes ehow great mental energy, uncontrolled, | while soft and resonamt high-pitched voices show mental energy well con- trolled, “Soft ‘but thin high-pitched voices show illness, weariness, queruious- ness, indecision and sometimes @ con- sciousness of the untruth of whet the Marguerite Mooers Marshall. . O daughter of the late Mayor Gaynor, obtaiped a Reno di- a from Harry K. Vingut on Mon- Two—Mra. EXith Gaynor Vingut Journeyed from Reno to San Fran- cisco and obtained a marriage license on Tuesday. Three—Mrs. Edith Gaynor Vingut became the wife of Lieut. James Park on Wednesday. NE—Mrs. Edith Gaynor Vingut, husband, one Salvatore Guiffi, sued her for divorce, She must have been field is a #ound All-round education with @ speed of from 175 to 200 words a minute—something not many shorthand reporters are capable of. Don't be in too much of a hurry to give up your speed practice. Pro- paring for shorthand reporting is @ rigorous and severe training—more #0 than for many of the other pro- fessions. Keep it up. Stick to the finish, A word at this point to ovilege men. In the ‘acquisition of a high rate of speed in shorthand the victory ts ance with a vocabulary extending over the widest possible range. Our entire tongue must be familiar to the reporter, ready at @ moment's notice it into requisition. strange that a who above all other tural course of things mould exhibit an deliberate or uninten- profession success in already half won? of the battle may correct methods @ rounding out by it kind of dictation. matter of the dif- ; with the char- ‘of addresses and reci- public officials and students, with the opportunity to take down Student Council pro- ceedings, with an unsatisfied demand existing for somebody to report the minutes of the class meetings, where but at college can this most benefl- dictation he had for the asking? At college the shorthand writer passes from @ lecture on economics leaves this to become acquainted with pathogenic bacteria and he sometimes wonders why organisms so minute ap to require @ powerful microscope to make them visible shall Haye names like staphyloccus, baciiiug prodigiosus and streptococous. 2 This kind of dictation is Priceless, But It all goes to waste (as shorthand Practice) because the majority of the students have not, learned stenog- raphy. ‘ HOW LONG. One cam discuss the rate df ress of the shorthand writer speed. But all the time storing & reserve supply. One day Glowly but surely increased, that for @ whole month past you have been writing with greater ease than formerly. If you practise Falth~ fully and regularly for at least’ two hours a day you it to progress as. follows, Assume a shorthand writer of av~ erage thtelligence who ohn’ wxite 100 words & minute, If you px along the lines given, at the six months’ practice you should write at least 125 words a minute At the end of a year you should write 150 words a minute. At thé end of year and « halt youjshould write around 145 words a minute, and at the end of two years you should write afound 175, wordsia ute. At the end of the you should be able to write 1% and 300 words a minute. / When I say one hundred enty-flve words a minute‘I solid, straight matter for utes, at all times and under con ditions, with ease and with Perfect accuracy—an accomplishmenf rare times the realization caeed Coad denly. Sometimes dawns on you — 3 4 you wake to find that your apeld has. i 4 7 4 ec] YOUR O PICTU: “The man who is boastful, aggres-} Which probably makes tt a wedk,|@n extremely attractive young person, to @ lecture of psychology, thence to| among pee signa: writ wae” “4 MIRROR etve and egotistical usually talks in &| 80 ¢ar as the latest Gaynor romance |44 In 1911 she was wedded. for @ third a debate on the League of Nations | have slaved five to ‘five 4 Wa Bosee “TAKING PICTURE “STUNT” almost every ama- teur photographer wants to try by the time he is used to ail the tricks of his camera is to Joud, heavy, rather round or oratori- tal tone of voice, while the man who has an undue appreciation ef his own dignity speaks in measured, round, pompous tones of voloe. “The secretive, cautious, rigtily self-controlied man epeaks in « low, even, rather monotonous tone, through lips scarcely opened at all.” And here are few of the things is concerned. But the rapid-fire di- vorce and remarriage of the charm- ing and impulsive young woman who 1s so popular in the Long Island polo and-country-club set to which both ler past and present husbands be- long, recalls the remarkable matri- monial record of the children of per- haps the most original and forceful personality that ever occupied City time, the bridegroom being Nelyon Gammons, a Harvard sophomore, said to have given up for her sake an inheritance of $100,000 For ten years after his first ifh- Pulsive affair’ of the heart Rufus Gaynor remained a bachelor, But a little over @ year ago he figured in a| e second and much more charming ro- mance, when he wedded Miss Mar- ar Me f NOR RAQMRS or the referendum and recall. He years.. Here Are Government Tables From $900 to $1,500 Goin S uppor: How Do You Spend Your Money? 1H lower your salary the greater! N. J. The table deals with expendi. take a photograph of himself, The|you may learn from shaking hands/Hall. Arrows may be good enough |garet Haskell, a graduate nurse, who NON percentage of it you spend for | tures of 301 families of seven ase q mirror affords @ medium, but,if the| with each person you meet, according |ammunttion for Cupid's ordinary vic-|brought him back to health’ and| ‘ - food and shelter, according tn | income groups. ; picture is taken looking squarely into | to Dr, Blackford: tims, but apparently he used a strength after ho was sent home the latest Government cost of living Four families whose incomes, were it the camera is bound to show. “The cold hand, whether dry or/chine-gun on the Gaynor family./from service as an ambulance driver Elopement No, 3 came tn 1911, the ]and Mved there for several months. | investigation. under $900 @ year averaged per year Hare, however, is a method sug-| moist, goes ‘with a cold nature. ‘Three elopements, an annulment, alin France suffering severely trom| year after Pdith's, In fact, she and] At her wedding a World reporter,| Tables compiled by Lahor Depart-| for food $365.40; clothing $100,87; rent gested tn the Illustrated World,| “Tho normally warm hand naturally | divorce, a remarriage within forty-|shell-shock. Mrs. Margaret Haskell|Harrv Vingut personally conducted | sharing a pew with Brother Norman | ment experts after study of hundreds | $176 25; tuel and Nght $63.01; furniture hich the above picture diagrams, | indicates the warm-hearted, enthu-/¢ight hours, a marriage of the sol-|Gaynor comes from an old Now Eng-| the surprise wedding of Mayor Gay-|Gaynor, asked the yo@tngster about |of family budgets show the actual) 15.92; miscellaneous $100.52. The ay- Simply place the camera at such af | sjastic, well balanced, genial, natural/ dier son to the war nursé who saved|jand family, and her mother has done|nor’s oldest daughter, Miss Gertrude | his rumored marriage to a Southern| cash outlay for food ad )rent || erage total expenditure per family was { angie that when you look into the! personality. bis life these are a few of the chap-| welfare work for years at Chelsca|Hmily Gaynor, and William Seward | beauty, Miss Betsy Page of Fairtax, |greater in families with thé Yaigher | $21.29 and the average number of pers ‘ miirror, as the illustration shows, you “The individual whose hand is us-|ter-headings in the real-life love af-| Settlement House. Webb, jr, grandson of William H.| Va. incomes, but im the average fe VY | sony per family 4.3, Three families in will be looking straight tnto the lens | ually hot, either dry or moist, is pas-| faire of the Gaynor boys and girls,| ‘The execedingly recent Mrs. James| Vanderbilt, The ceremony also took] “If you'll go to Miss Betsy Page and | the expenditures for these necessitlt®. this group reported surpluses which of the camera and not see any part | sionate, emotional, hot-headed. which surely contain the makings of| park was the heroine of the second Place in Wilmington, Del., the Rev.|bring me back the answer ‘yes’ I'll be |do not Increase as fast as the income. | averaged $24.38 per family, while ene of yourself, When in this position “When a man’s handshake is warm, ! more than one best-seller, Gaynor elopement. While her fath-|J: .. Stonecifer offictating. Mr.|} mighty grateful,” responded the In Baltimore, for instance, thirteen | nag a deficit of $157.35, the camera will only see you. By at-/elastic, somewhat clinging, but not! Psychologically speaking, should weler was Mayor of New York, in June,| Webb was employed by J.P. Mor-|eager lover, Whon The World called | families with incomes under $900, Seventy-five ‘famitios with: Seam taohing a etring to the shutter re-|too much #o with a firm, even pree-|be astonished at the adventurous|i910, she went to Wilmington, Del,,|#"" & Co. and it was understood | up Miss Page on the long-distance | averaged expenditures of $282.95 for] ¢ sveuty ive Mam $1,800 reported fease you can snap your own picture | sure, \t expresses confidence in you, |joustings with fate undertaken by|with Harry K. Vingut, Harvurd|that neither family objected to the! phone she didn't say “yes,” but, on} food and $120.44 for fent, The avers penditures that avera, oa teed whenever you are ready. friendliness toward you, and in gen-|the descendants of William J. Gay-| graduate, broker, clubiman, gentie- |T#rriage, but that the older folks} the other hand, she didn't say “no,” age was 46.5 per cent. of the total purciurey Mat Averaged 8 $200.94 on eral © warm, open-hearted nature, nor, himself ® sophisticated, intelll-|man jockey and polo player. She|@d urged the young couple to walt) And that marriage took place jeas|incont for food 16.6 COP Fale | Os ane Hatt $te.eer tue peeps: CITY AND COUNTRY. “Unless the man is a relative, or|sent, keenly alert and alive individu-| gaye her age at the time as nine-|& bit They, too, were promptly “for-|than three months later in Fairfax |The families whose incomes were imtocella hates pli emt % BCRETARY DANIELS said at a! intimate, close friend of yours, be on|@: during all the years of his career|teen, and Vingut acknowledged that|#!¥em" by all the in-laws, Courthouse, Va, In 1916 the arriva) | $2,500 or more, however, averaged) pe family aver Martie op. dinner: your guard if he overdoes the ca-|in New York? he was thirty-eight, ‘They were mar-|/ Tho former Miss Marion Gaynor |of a Gaynor grandson was announced | 18.6 per cent, leas for food in com. | LT Ber Tally Avertigied BLAISIT fog “When the layiaan tries to/ressing, clinging business when he} The first Gaynor of the second gen-| ried by, Wilmington’s “marrying par-|was Cupid's next victim, and was|in Brooklyn. parison with total income and 116) °° Siatwiiaee tarallieg ena y talc nautically he| shakes hands with you, or If he bolds|¢ration to leave the beaten road of| son,” the Rev. Dr. George I. Wolfe,|only sixteen when she became the| One of the guests at this wedding | less for rent aGah Wi CA LAE ae — ae thar poga ke] makes 9 many|your hand so long that tt beoomes|convention for the primrose path of|in the office ot Andrew C. Gray, At-|Wife af Ralph H. Isham. On Jan, 9,|was E. T, Bedford 24, grandson of| Showing how much more cheaply the $198.00, ning’ experineeee oa hy, MeireRt mistakes as the|embarrassing. He ia elther over-de- |romance was the oldest son, Rufus. |torney-General of Delawaro, who|19l4, her mother denied that even an | the Standard Oil magnate, In Sep- | higher salaried families got off in other | $1258, nine ext Pe tl city girl on the} monstrative and effusive or he ts de-|In December, 1908 while he was #|served as best man, while a Brook-| engagement existed between the two, | tember of tho same year he became | cities are these differences re flees : bol while tor Nomnarnaa farm. signing. He wants to make you|student at Amherst, he eloped with a|iyn friend, Mrs, Halstead Swan, was|but on tho 28th day of the same |the husband of Miss Helen Gaynor at | Pittsburgh, food 15 per cent,, rent 7.5| thelr books evenly, “This pity girl|think that he is very much more|young woman, daughter of a New|matron of honor, ‘The runaways}month tho ttle girl, hardly out of | St. James, L. L per cent.; New York, food 6.7 per cent,,! Eleven families with an income of was smoking -her|friendly than he really is, Better|London barber, whom he knew as|were promptly forgiven. school was married quietly in Trinity| Lite Ruth Gaynor, “Baby Toodies" | rent 7.3 per cent.; Boston, food 4.9*per | $2,500 or over averaged in their exe after-dinner ciga-|keep & sharp eye out for him and|Miss May Queen, a Boston music| 4 few days ago, however, Mra, Vin-|Church, to the sunprise of many of |ot the family when her father was| cent. rent 5.2 per cent.; Byracuse, food|penditures for food’ $914.42; claching rette in the ham-| find out what he wants. student. Two years later the mar-|gut sued her husband for divorce in| her friends, although the members of | Mayor, one of the charming child | 4.3 per cent,, rent 19 per cent, Scran-| $476.99; rent $250.36; fuel and ligh mock on the lawn| “The man who almost breaks the|riage was annulled, as it developed| Reno, allegisg cruelty and failure|her family were Present, She and |riders at the horse shows and chosen | ton, foog 3.7 per cent, rent 6.4 per] $95.16; furniture $127.33; miscellaneo when a cow began to low mournfully, | bones of your hand and GQngers, with|tbat Mises May was already @ wife/to provide. She was granted her|her husband had @ unique honeymoon | to dedicate the National Maine Mon. | cent. $664.31, The total average expen The city girl blew a smoke cloud into|@ hard, crushing handshake, has too|when young Gaynor thought he piar-| decree, and once more made a swift/on horseback in the wildest part of |ument, is, at fifteen, the only Miss| How families of varying incomes |tures per family were $2,527.89 for the alr and sald: “adsten to that poo! e helfer, mew- fai for her colt!’ "We Star. much energy, too little consideration, | and es a general rule is of @ coarse nature,” _ * ried her, She wag born plain ‘Oddo, and six months after her elope. | ment with the late Mayor's sun har matoh—this time with Lieut. Park, son of Mrs, Hlizabeth 8, Park of Wheatley Hills, L. L Mexico, for Mrs, Isham has always been noted as a der, She accompa- nied the former Mra, Vipgut to Reno Gaynor. spend them is indicated by tables show- Next? Ghe must forgive us—but| ing average expenditures of different marrying ip migh @ Gaynor habit! aqjoure tor Philadelphia and Camden, average family of 7.6 persons, families reported @ surplus, a surplus Was $400.43, S $