THE WEEKLY BULLETIN ? J MAGAZINE SECTION. GIBSON GIRL WEDDED. MRS. NANNIE SHAW, SISTER-IN- LAW OF ARTIST, BRIDE OF WALDORF ASTOR, 4D0ne of the Five Virginia Beauties.-A Daring Horse Woman and Fond of Exercise.—Five Million Dollar Eng- lish Estate a Wedding Present. A “Gibson Girl” is the talk of all England, for she has married a young man of that country. who is heir to an estate of more than $400,000,000. The bride is none other than Mrs. Waldorf Astor, and a sister-in-law of Charles Dana Gibson, the celebrated American artist. Mrs. Astor is one of five sisters, all natives of Virginia and belonging to a family numbered among the F.F.V’s,, standing high in the aristocracy of the South. She was a Miss Nannie Lang- horne and later the wife of Bobby Shaw, from whom she was divorced. All of the Langhorne sisters are re- markable beauties, paying particular attention to every detail of face and figure. A Virginia lady who knew them in their girlhood days stated that their rules of living were something like this: “Breakfast early and exercise briskly for an hour or two. Have a luncheon and exercise again, this time riding. Luncheon again and then a long, vigorous tramp or a cross country ride to hounds, just for the pleasure of it, then a hearty supper, then a long | walk in the southern twilight, and then bed.” J mond, given by Mr. Astor to his daughter-in-law, which later on is to be reset and worn on her presentation at court. This historic gem belonged to Charles the Bold, the Duke of Bur- gundy, and fetched $100,000 at the sale of the Demidoff collection in 1865. It was secured by Mr. Astor some years ago from a millionaire parsee, Sir C. Jeejeebhay, for $170,000. Mr. Astor also gave one of the finest tiaras in London, (which cost more than $100,000), as well as the title deeds to Cliveden mansion and estates, with the many treasures he has added thereto, including a magnificent suite of old Chipperne furniture, and some wonderful French china, originally from Versailles, and once the property of Empress Eugenie. The value of this latter gift probably; exceeds $5, 000,000. It is understoo@ (that ithe young people plan to make their fiome at Cliveden, In 1893 Mr. Astor purchased SSR SRR ESET. y WARSHIPS NOT WANTED. “FIGHTING BOB’>’> EVAN'S SHIPS ORDERED TO LEAVE NEW ~ YORK HARBOR. United States Battleships and Cruisers Obstructions to Naviga- tion—Thousands of Gallons of Oil Released by Fouled Anchor. New York City in its hurry and rush of business did not seem to stop for patriotic reasons to enjoy the sight of a dozen United States warships an- chored in her harbor. The American fleet riding majestically at anchor in the North River, attracting the at- tention of thousands of sight-seers, was requested to “move on.” The stalwart battleships and armored cruisers with their great length and in command of no less a personage than I ese LATS SPLENDID WOMAN RIDER. With a strong horse beneath her, and the pack in full cry, to see Nannie Langhorne riding to hounds was a sight for men and gods. In the days of her girlhood, at the Deep Run, in Virginia, she was Diana stirruped, and it is no stretching of facts when one avows that men came from far afield just to see her, with her pink cheeks aglow and her fair hair loos- ened to the breeze, pound the sod in a madcap abandon for the brush. Nothing daunted this young Virginian in the way. of ditch or fence, hill or hollow, and at 16 she was famed as the most intrepid and brilliant horse- woman in her native State. Two things won for Mrs. Langhorne Shaw the heir of William Waldorf Astor: the beauty of her being, when on horseback, and her bubbling ir- repressible Americanism. Young Ase- tor, when he beheld her An-Her glory | ne MRS. WALDORF ASTOR. One of the Five Original Gibson Girls. caught his breath just as Bobby Shaw, her divorced husband, had done sev- eral years ago in Old Virginia. And this was not strange. Waldorf Astor, always, breathing in the compressed air of His father's house, timid, re- tiring and studious by nature, had not much opportunity for young girls society, and almost never that of American girls. To him Mrs. Nannie Shaw was a revelation. For seven months he wooed her, and at the end of that time he was three-fourths American and four-fourths in love. Glowing, he followed her across the Atlantic. It is only fair to young Astor to say that he has never been so aggressively British as his father, who spurns al- most everything American, or his younger brother, John Jacob, who is an out-and-out ¥rzlishman. BXOLUSIVE WEDDING SERVICE. *“. ne wedding, which occurred at London in May, was a very quiet af- fair, only 17 invitations being sent out for the ceremony. The bride made the loveliest picture, standing, as it appeared, in a bed of lilies and roses near the chancel, A work of art, in- deed, was her wed “mg gown, for it was made of the ost expensive silk obtainable, adorned with rare old lace. Amorghthe many wed), presents, the mos. %otable was the Sancy dia- | People to plenic and to walk through RES Yao) CLIVEDEN MANSION ON THE BANKS OF THE THAMES. the oeautiful country house from the Duke of Westminster and paid $1,- 250,000 for it.