The evening world. Newspaper, August 29, 1919, Page 13

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FRIDAY, AUGUST 29 Should a Newlywed Pair Show Their Affection In Public ? It Is the “Innocent Bystander”? Who Suffers Most at First, but Experience Shows That After the “Newlyweds” Have Become “Longmarrieds”’ the Couples Who Quarrel Most Are the Ones Who Are Most Affectionate in Public, While the Deeper Love Proves Its Existence in the Home. By Fay Stevenson. Copyright, 1919, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World). HOULD a young martied couple be affectionate in the presence of others? Jobn and Mary are coming home after an extended honeymoon— shall they show their deep feeling for each other in public? every time he looks into “the most beautiful eyes in the world” or shall he be dignified and act like an old married man? the evening meal when the whole family are gathered S and not rumple his hair until they are alone together? Grandma will tell body's appetite away. “But if I don't seem affectionate how shall I ever let people know how perfectly devoted I am to my hus- band?” asked little wife Mary. “and if I don't show my wife a Httle attention during the evening meal and send her a few wireless kisses or chuck her under the chin people will think I don’t give a rap about her,” sighs muchly married Johnny. , And yet, Mr. and Mrs. Newlywed, your demonstrations of deep love which you wish to impress the home folks with do not work exactly the way you would like to have them. ‘When you are a little older and see @ ttle more of the world and its mar- ried couples you will fin’ that the couples who quarrel the most are the ones who are the most affectionate in public. All the husbands and wives who fight like dogs and cats have a peculiar Uttle knack of calling each other all the pet names in the lovers’ vecabulary. They have a way of por- teuying little love scenes and stage settings of ideal lovers as cleverly as Mary Boland or John Drew. And yet when they are alone together—presto Nttie cupid and enter little horned demons! And then outside of this desire to make the right impression of “real Jove,” young married couples, make a tremendous mistake in displaying their affections for one another in public, because sometimes either the trusband or the wife is a little sensi- tive about this utter lack of modesty. In many cases the man is even more annoyed than the girl. Not long ago a young bride and bridegroom paid a visit to his mother, a strict old-fashioned lady. The young wife }_,t rumpling her husband's hair when they were re- ceiving callers in the town, slipping her arm around his neck and calling him all sorts of absurd little pet names. The bridegroom had not paid @ visit to his home town since he left college, and his wnole ambition was to idea that h man in a large city. clinging-vine wife blushing and stuttering and saying all embarrassed. Somehow this over- home trip. queer look in his mother’s eyes, and spoiled his home-coming. neck, The surliest, ugliest husband I ever met in my life delighted to kiss his wife whenever she was giving a bridge-whist party. He would get off give her this lover-like kiss in the presence of her feminine acquaint- ances.” Whether he took delight in embarrassing her before so many friends or whether he kissed her merely to give them the impression of what a dear,eweet soul he was, was always a mystery. All the world loves a lover, but somehow the married lovers never seem to recelve much sympathy when they display their affection in public, forgiven, but the folks are more smiles than sympathy. spoony married Bathing Furs Late Summer Fad. members of the Narragansott Pler colony shown in the above photograph to appear on the beach in their furs. At first startled by she innovation, feminine Narragansett quickly grasped its comfort- possibilities, T™ cool days late August brought this summer inspired the young Shall John blow a kiss across the table to Mary| Shall Mary’ slip into John’s lap after, in the drawing-room the way she would like to or shall} she discreetly take a shair at least three feet apart her to take the faraway chair and old grandad will tell John to “cut out” those confounded fool kisses at dinnet time and not take every: | F impress the folks at home with the & successful business But with this he found himself display of affection rather dampened his honeymoon and cooled his ardor! for his wife, to say nothing of depriv- | ing him of half the pleasure of his) | Several times he caw a when at last he came to the end of the trip he had counted on for months he was actually glad. If too many cooks spoil the broth, certainly too many kisses and public caressing Some men have an idea that thelr wives liked to be kissed when other women are about. Perhaps there dre certain individual cases where they do (among the quarrelling couples for instance), but generally the wife one sees kissed in the presenge of a large group of friends blushes not a gentle maidenly blush but from the very roots of her hair to the glands of her especially early from the office to The spoony engaged couples can be inclined te excite manner of things he would never have said if he had not been so frightfully wel Pp ERR SRN SIN EF NEE RD Ze" Young Shah of Persia, Who’ll Visit Rules Amid Relics of Old World Splendor Boy ‘King of Kings’’ Will Leave His ‘‘ Arabian Ni Background of Oriental Pomp and Splendor, Jewels and Palaces, Harem and Obeisance, and His Gem-Encrusted « “Peacock Throne,’’ to View New Wonders in a New World Here, ights’’ wt ie ih i By Marguerite Mooers Marshall Copyright, 1919, by the Prres Publishing Co. (Tie X ‘York Evening World) HE young Shah of Persia, the “King of Kings,” is the latest to join the grand tour of mon- archs to the United Proaching visit to! us has just been announced. Will he bring with him his diamonds and ru- dies, as big as pig- eons’ eggs, his trunks full of pearls, his astra- chan hat set with | the Sea of Light—companion diamond t© the Kob-i-noor, or Mountain of Light, his gem-encrusted dinner ser- vice and gem-studded belt, his flour- ishing harem and all the rest of the Arabian Nights atmosphere which still surrounds this twenty-one-year- | old monarch of the East? It was in 1914 that Ahmed Mirza | was raised to the Peacock Throne of | Persia and had officially conferred on him the tlitles of King of Kings,| Shadow of God, Centre of the World, the Exalted One, the Well of Knowl- | edge and the King Whose Standard Is the Sun and Whose Splendor Is| that of the Firmament. Apparently no levelling democratic ideas hav yet affected the nomenclature of Per- sian rulers! He rode to the palace in Teheran | sitting in a glass coach drawn by eight white horses, The wonderful | Peacock Throne awaited him, the value of which been estimated at $15,000,000. India in 1739 by the great Persian ruler, Nadir Shah, It ts made of ebony, ascended by silver steps and stands on golden feet set with jewels, It derives its name from its orna- mentation with two open peacocks’ tails set with diamonds and rubies. The Shah's crown is made of solid gold, and is so large and so much ornamented that it welghs several pyunds, It contain one ruby as big as a hen's egg. According to the Persian traditions, it is three thou- sand years old and belonged to Sala- din, a new stone being set in it at each coronation. For Shah Amed Mirza a magnificent emerald was added, After wearing this unwieldy headpiece for a few minutes at the time of his coronation, the Shah re- moved it and substituted an’ astra- chan hat—but one fully suitable for occasion, since its algrette was od with the Sea of Light dia- " anh It was carried off trom| States, for his ap-| |: mond, carats, When the present Shah's grand- father died he left jewels estimated to be worth $200,000,000, He was called the richest ruler in the world, Among other items of his collection were a belt to be worn on state occasions, studded with diamonds and weighing weighing over # hundred|Star of diamonds, It his take notice the Persian Order of Lion and the Sun, made of choice grandson brings along similar costume, “Diamond Horshoe” will sit up and| ‘Kab for the Shah! I fancy even Shah Ahmed Mirza was chosen to succeed his father after the latter's} the a the been educated by tutors to speak French and Russian, and he has Studied military science and the ele ments of international law, He rides |and fences well and plays tennis, _ | Forks. at least eighteen pounds; a aword| flight and abdication, when the boy ag | S all in the point of view” ts studded with diamonds and valued at|was only eleven. At once his people true of @ good many things, and $1,600,000; a silver vase containing | demanded that he be officially married | one of these may be ques- |hundred emeralds, one so large that | despite protests on his part—the nor-|40% “What ts elvilization? he names of all the dead Persian| mal protests of the normal Aree The Japanese sit on tho floor, set monarchs have been engraved on it.| year-old boy, who has absolutely no|@0W® 4” umbrella with the handle to All this old gentleman's raiment was| use for girls. However, in 1918, four|t#® ground, add show in the bigger buttoned, strapped and braided with| years later, the Shah was reported to|t!NE® In thelr attitude toward life, precious stones, while from bis! be equipped with the essential harem, | tht thelr COSMOS Is a complete an- national head-dress, the tafboosh| Doubtless it is still in the making,| Uthesis to ou Ww the true |diamonds stood out Uke headlights |The Shah's grandfather, ording to} clviliaati dependg, it seems, on the |It is possible, of course, that the! the records. was runner-up for Solo-|P0Int of view present young Shah may leave bis} mon with eight hundred wives, They| The Chine nly a fow ndes ago |jewela in the Persian equivalent for} qo say that when this courageous old| burned their criminals In oll, imprin= safety deposit vaults, thus KViNg US| gentleman visite! Paris he wag still| Med others in vases which permitted no glimpse of them, but if he fol-lin the marrying ring and dropped his|t® head to grow while restraining Jiows this prudent course he will not|hanakerchicf at the feat of every| the body, and because Nad ae pattern after bis grandfather, When] pretty woman he met. women than men mer y exposed the latter paid @ visit to the then] mohanimed®All Mirza, fathor of tho| to the elements their girl babies Kaiser of Germany, this is what he| present Shab, had only one official] T° Ket thelr trade and incidentally |wore at a simple morning diplomatic | consort, but 1t was his boast that the| Pe thelr door to some of our elvili. reception; A blue frock with bran-| most beautiful women in Persia all Perry had to threaten to dy- denborgs of diamonds, intermixed} potonged to his household. He sent|Pamite the lock! day they wear |with rubies, four rows in all, @nd|omcial connolaseurs throughout his|¥es and stunt the feet of their |containing thirty-four brilliants each | realm on reaching the throne, so that| Wen | as large as a hagel-nut, On hi8}nothing might be missed, And he| As late as the seventeenth century | houlders were large epauleta of| was go proud of :'s semglio that he| the highbrows of England were yet to |flut-set diamonds, with a centre] oven had it photographed | be astonished by the advent of the | plate of enormous emeralds, and] ‘Tho size of the family of the pres-| fork. It was introduced by Thomas | |with fringe of diamonds, His high!ent shah ts not a matter of record,| Coryate, the famous wanderer and \cap was adorned with @ gor-|'There probably always is room in it| Writer, who said of it in his “Crudi- geous aigrette of diamonds and| for just one more. Any ca ties," “The Italians cannot by any rubies, Hanging from. his button-| for the job of Light of the Harem? | me endure to have their flesh hole was the celebrated “Sea of| its lord and master has been do-| touched with fingers, seeing uu at bis side hung a diamond- | ecribed as short, dark ond very stou’. | ™ gers are not alike cl | hilted scimitar, and another st He has close-set eyes, a drooping | For this he was long ridleuled, Prey called him the man who “used @ fori | ing ormament that he wore wa 4 mouth and a determined chin, He has at feeding.” FRIDAY, AUGUST 29 Summer Girls of 19% DIAGNOSED BY A DICKY-BOY’S DIARY. Copyright, 1919, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York Brening World). Girl. T most expensive English kid, MAN ASS SAMA VW ee No. 11.—The Riding Girl. HE summer was beginning to wane before I discovered the Riding The first gray streaks of dawn had intruded their wel- coming contrast to the inky darkness when she dashed madly by my window at The Inn yesterday, The fleeting glimpse of the proud beauty in her pefect fitting khaki riding habit, smart stock, booted in jlver spurs a-glistening and saucy black sailor partly concealing a wealth of honest-to-goodness blonde hair, was sufficient motive for hanging about the stable until she returned. } Jordan, her black charger, dashed up, the lather flecked upon his Jet black ne and through dangerous dales. The Inn sugar bowl. nostrils dilating from the brisk dash o’er wild meadows “Did Clare ride Jordan too hard?” she asked as she tendered the dumb beast a lump of sugar, filched ‘from “Sweets to the sweet,” I volunteered, handing her several tumps 4 myself. ‘ The next morning two prancing beasts vied one with the other "4 in racing o’er the dew-laden dusts, while the shortage of sugar at J ‘The Inn was never explained. Ignorant Essays 3 By J. P. McEvoy. Copyright, 1919, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World). AUDIBLE EATS. OOD which used to be di- F vided into animal, vege- table and mineral and sub- divided into cheap and expensive is now divided into two new classifications expensive and damexpensive, and these, in turn, are subdivided into nolseless and audible, It is with the latter class we are concerned to-day. An audible cat is one which submits to internment only after violent struggles and loud out- cries, Some can be overpowered rather easily, while others re- quire a definite technique. Crackers are rather easy to subdue as smorgosbord, the na- tional flower of Sweden, Celery is one of the most plangent (ook {t up, we did) of the many tubers, so called because it ts shaped like a tube, The cry of the wounded celery to its mate resembles a cracked phonograph record of a Ohinese love-song. Other audible eats are (or 1s) soup, asparagus, nuts, vinegar pickles, radishes, chow mein, lobster, Saratoga chips, arti- chokes and green peas, It might be noted that the green peas are audible only when they roll off the knife onto the floor. aghetti is one of the audible a well con- eats which require ceived approach and a special technique of attack. First you want to determ'ne whether or not the spaghetti you are about to destroy is the smooth-tread or non-skid kind, We would ad- vise the beginner that if he dis- covers that his spaghett! Is of the smooth-tread variety to put chains on it, The non-skid should be beaten with the handle of the knife until It ceases to squirm, Then it should be cut into short lengths and tied In bundles of ten, You then have an accomplice turn in the fire alarm and during the excitement you eat it. If there is sufficient excitement, the spaghett! can hardly be heard Of all the audible eats, the most interesting noises are ex- uded, by vinegar pickles and choy\ mein. The native cry of anise the vinegar pickle is remini of the sound made when @ sourt mule pulls his foot out of the mud. Sort of a “swo-0-op- cafoosh!” The chow mein, which 5 is an Oriental tragedy, speaks tm the language of its forefathere— ) @ language utterly devoid of soft . : Iabials and cluttered with harsh words of one syllable composed ot of guttural consonants who cam- not get along together, sti hs ln ce ALFALFA SMITH. Yours truly, a friend by paying CASH. You will never lose leave it to you. man, Is this fair? I account of one sending out bills all on entering on their books and packer lose valuable time the butcher, wholesaler and pass over the fact that ¥ an filustration and we will * pay the packer, This is only the wholesaler, who fails te ¥ Second, he falls to pay to cash customers, a crime and unjust on his books, This is cover the bad debts profit for himself to the bills of others a things, He adds on to In most cases, two business, So he does, & profit or go out of man's bill, He must make tied up to the extent of that to pay him, ‘The butcher ts theg owes the butcher and falls see just why, A man the community, Let us ‘" moral, He 1s dangerous to Kd not pay his bills ts tm~ The man who does her debts? if every one paid his or happen im the world to-day 9 one question; What would 4 Permit me to ask you ‘, these things. an to inquire into the causes of by and so on—It seems fitting 4g high cost of living—profiteering We much these days about the We hear s0 RE YBODY D (th Coorrigat GOING UP — 0 New Evening World.) 19, vy The Prow Publishing Ge, x eee

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