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} tee] himself ‘full of dayy.” monks far where useful ex mnatter, ‘the dearned professor a mortally. dangero! rb: waste basket. © Noah Was 600 Years Old. «, “DON'T LOSE YOUR GRIPY* . Live’Right and Get There. Prof. Metchnikoff shows that man’s vermiform appendix is & mortal dishar- must go back to herb-oating creatures like stence we the rabbit—in which ft*fulfils a notable function in the digesting of raw vegetable In. man it in nothing but a death trap, one Paris hospital having, treated 41 cases of appendicitis in five years, As for the great intestine, it 18 a den of pu- trefaction, swarming with microbes, serving only to shorten man's existence, say: From a.digestive 8 ating ancestors the great intesting, swarming with microbes, ing almost anything. ‘Pho stomach 1 another orgun wg of tho-corsplete cutting out of a cancerous stomach the patients survived and di- was essential. eonld do well without. It. te, sa \ commentary upon our scholarship ahd our civilization that the average life of man to-day should be somewhére between thirty and thirty- five years,, With all of our aclentific ad- vance and our knowledge of hygiene and sanitation ‘we have\cut down the life of man to nearly one-sixth since the days of Abraham and Isaac. We have it on good authority that Abraham lived 179 years and that Isaac died at; the ripe old age of 18, being ‘full of years and of days.” Job's life was full of trials, bolls and vicissitudes, and yet he was 120 years old when he gave up the ghost, Prof, EM Metehnikoff, of the Pasteur Institute, has fixed the minimum limit | of man’s natural life at 10 years. Hav- | img, lived a natural and. scientific lite from birth, indeed, man rfeed not expect to shuffle off his mortal coll at 140. At that time of life he will merety begin to ndpoint it plays no rofe at all, It Is les In numerous cases BY VIRGINIA EARL, STAR OF “SERGEANT XITTY.” “Ratting” the Hair. average woman theatre-goer ssons from the stage. E | to me, insomuch es she seems to draw so few | And by this I do not} mean moral lessons from the problem play, or les- | sons ‘in matrimonial diplomacy and coquetry from the society play, but just plain simple lessons in the A Lesson in Hair-Dressing from the Stage. ® mystery A Colffure that Softens the Features. gested their food with the small intestinéa and the pancreas. So Jong as a man is burdencd with a grea quires, 80 Jo intestinal waste basket he must be a Ereat sater of well-cooked vegetables, not so much for thelr nutrition as to furniely his great intestine with the large Guantity of waste matter which it re- art of making herself pretty and attractive, The matinee girl raves over her favorite leading | .,¢ which 1s natural, which suggests that sort of hair which was bow softly kinky, and clinging in womah or ingenuc, describes her frocks and her hair-dressing, and imitates her little mannerisms, tiny tendrils th iclaivae fapay accotints on the other hand of How |tccciteris young and’ dell peculiarly young and delicate. Eat. Man cant enty.end eighty, ox he does now. Fra Elbertus says; @rk—don't lose your srip.” And what Is the scientifle conclusion from all this? asks q writer in What-to- jot wall for his great intestine to disappesr in the gourse of ages, and’ fie Woes not care to run the risk of having it cut out. ‘5 Aad yet it is the theory of Prof. Metehnikoff that. the phenomena andold age is due directly to, inlvrobes of the large Intestine, which are contin- unlly breaking down the higher cells of our structure, The only course ts to fight the intestinal inicrobe, and a& there.are 128,000,000,- 00.00 of Him formed each day 1t will be seen that the ‘The professor speaks itighly of buttermilk, and warns us to oware of all un- enoked products-of the ,microbe-infested earth-salads, artichokes, strawberrle melons. onlong, cncumbers, celery, radishes, turnips, carrots, cabbage. Unless they cre thoroughly cooked they should not enter into the human organism. _By rigid adherence to this theory of allmentation and needed of gertain cyidtoxie sorims man may fight off old age: S Noah was 600 years oid before he knew how to Bulld an enility job is no summer day picnic. tleally. In He will not rownpld® at Mty-eave knot, m gary. | | The Old ° #4 9069000009000 \ M. A. E. gn! Cerere W nivik, Ma Tue. 8. PLCs Trot Ious A. ! f ‘ Veuci tf | < , Typewriter Supplies Won by Mise Mary Mushandmilk. . PR 1 sald, ‘De you call Mquor your) Wouldn't a Avlenay Big fe 1lo snid, jo; it-made.me miss her.” BENJAMIN H. HOLT, * ing Afire. Prof, Josh M.A. Long: Katherine—I¢ he wealthy?. Edith—I don't know, She fots of: money Ins : STENOGRAPHER, 310 Thames Building, New York Jokes’, Home ——— a By Prof. Josh M. A. Mary’ Mushandmilk Wins Typewriter Supplies. animous vote of the Beard of Trustees of the Old Jokes’ Home, Prot Long, Old Dr, Lemonosky, Dowle 4-11-44, Me Pewee, OMicer Sullivan, Lew Bockstader, Thomas Q. Scabrocke, Marshall P./ Wilder Day. tho. typewrltor ¢upplies have beén awarded to Mary Mush- n and Stenographer of the Old Jokes’ Home. Tho Board of Frus-| toes having resolved without a dissenting vote that her elopement ‘with Charlit why she cond} thaye hed Yong to give her away, is the best joke of the weck. rich and a Few Drinks. Weary Way. accompanied: by Marlo Chul fe Ft M.A. Laps, * od thcge few sokes to the Old | une Ines @ tg win the typewriter sup: p : aie f citer, my tecth are full, of cf G © cagt eaten, club sandwich.” “<< frierd Jones shot at his mother- ir ly three Umea. while, intoxicated, { saw him in his cell th{s morn: No. 174 Hast Ninety-first street. his Would Set the Thames Build. Elixa-+Loulsa may marry an optician. the character woman dresse: and yet she does not apply the moral of all these clever observations. that the ingenue would not look half so dainty, and girlish, and lovable, if her hair wero drawn back tight or arranged in a coiffure eminently sulted to & Queen's drawing room. On the other hand, the poor character woman or comedienne might be very pretty, if her hair had not been dressed fantas- making up, akes a woman look ill-temp and arranges her hatr, | the actress knows that certain styles of dressing the halr will accentuate certain efiects she desires to attain. screw curls always seem to accompany a simper, halr drawn back tightly and dressed in a knob-like For instance, Smooth, glossy, well-groomed hair in pomp! dour or puffs somehow indicates placid, material, comfort and dignity, while hair waved: to just the Men one feature which a girl girl facing the unpleasant she can only be a kinks out of her hair and cork- a and vine- able Ittle thing, talk grandjloquently pable, competent women, women who can become She does not stop to realize | appreciative, intelligennt life-partners, but they de- |Wberately turn round and marry the girl whose fea. |tures are softened, made girlishly innocent and ten- der by a halo of daintily crimpled hair, for as she does her hair, for there is no other fea- ture which so holds ‘masculine attention and disarms masculine criticism of imperfect features, If a young ter to him will just brush the uncompromising knot, the young may will accept his fate with resignation, and, taking one farewell look at the transformed head of his dethroned idol, wonder. why he ever thought her such a pretty, lov- I have seen a debuntante whose fluxy, parted pom- face, makes the features about the need of sired height. ‘There is no should treasure and caro padour, and task of telling a man that draw it back in @ severe, taken, it Is Corkscrew Curls. padour made her delightfully girlish, turned out by @ professional coiffure builder to look like a blase so- clety belle of half a dozen seasons. The gathering up of the natural waves by the Marcel waving machine, the ment, comple! gives way to stateliness. month or so earlier nt her coming-out tea\stare at her in wonder and decide that society makes short shrift of youthfulness, and never lay the blame where {t belongs—at the hair-dresser’s door, The crowning offense of modern halr-dressing is “ratting’’ the hair. 1 belleve this consists in drawing the pompodour dver the face, and with a fine comb shoving the hair backward Into a roll of matted hur, which is supposed to raise the pompadour to the de- ft, correct puffs, the elaborate orna- metamorphose her face. Girlishnes! Men who had seen her a done the Unleas this is very skilfully matted hair beneath shows through the waved pom- explain’ why all stores post signs that combs and hair ornaments will not be exchanged. fhe pompedour has been greatly abused by the American girl, for in an exaggerated form it Js try- ing to the face. to part the hair in the middle, and women imagine that the part will age the face. Word comes from Paris that we are But they are mis- infinitely younger and more softening than the tragic pompadour, which should be associat- ‘ed only with court trains, court plaster and French heels. If the hair is fluffed around the part, ‘pullt In dainty, loone puffs, and finished with a soft bow, the ce beneath will look demure—and kissable. + Long O14 Jokes’ Home wedding and worth on: the yplano. in joke “cracker, : ) os GEORGE W. Bay. Seeasirin ohew , | Butt Yours, if Prot. Toa! ‘Tone, During a .te¢ent; pérfotmdnce in the Metropolis’ Theatre “the leading actor addrdaged the 1 Indy thus: _ “Would that T had a fvindow in my hreaft that you couldsee:thé emotion of TAT! Hustling through the Bridge crush crowd, smashing hats and corns, Butting in with head that seems to wear galvanic horns; Jamming, pushing, jostling, for each porcine feat agog— Butts in, breaks through, crowds past, whirls on, the loathely Tro.léywog. Elbowing old 6r crippled folk in manner 1é5s than human, sere Knocking ‘the. shopgir! off her feet, upsetting fragile woman; At last his grand ambition’s won! His joy in life's complete! He's left a trail of woe and robbed some woman of a seat, SYNOPS! murdered pects the Bante fo warn ‘The Bo; in in your stomach do?” Nw! 769 East One Hindred and Beveh A . 753. Kast One fifth street. * ae iee.eg Reventy: A Bunch from Bedeila, Prof, Joan M. A. Loni i earl the I have a sister stoutet than myself | y and T also have a sister “Lena.” Lena got her finger cut off and she ts now a Shorthand writer, She felt goal ed hips y that she was gueorived to na the ink well and the pene all write (right) Lenn asked me tory and win the type writer supplies for er, bat t aaid yoo could not move them because they were atationary.” HEDELA MtCHET. Freshpond road, Dvergreen, 1. I, Thin o: the Erte Ratlroad. yuck worth isck Arrow.”” with Alling ‘thi to Kill the 1ad. Joan n Dlx. fro. plight the to each othe: ond | Brethren of 0 sir Daniel hy base" at Hein and ‘gains an interview with i ie a te ta occur, ridegroom at the altar. 1S OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS. Dick Shelton learns that his father was by, Sir Dane Brackly. guardian. Bir y acknown as Th Ri_the avowed object of ent, Winding that Dick sut- nature of his fainere death, air rapea the 5 Hey “Krrow, Hearing that hed Joanna to an ol; hi if as & moni joanne in Sir who discovers him there. churely qhere. the weddlni ar ‘Dick is captured. ————— CHAPTER V. y Who Became Richard MI. 'T sunset Shelton was summoned be- fore Lord Risingham. He gave & ‘clear account of the happenin: which had led to his arrest and clinched the good impression by handing to the letter Sir Dantel had written a ear before to Lord Wenéleydale, In tho letter Sir Daniel had offered tq se- for Wensleydale the Earl of Ris- ingham’s own estates, Risingham's rage against the knight was boundless. He freed Dick and Law- less, but bade them hide, as he, could not warrent them open protection. ‘They left him vowing vengeance against Bir Daniel. tude. I am Richard, Duke of Glou- cester, I can bring you to fame and fortune, Dick was eyeing the Duke with amazé- ment. Boy as the latter still was, there was already in his face much of the wild courage, unbridled ambition and es | cold cruelty that was destined one day to place him on England's throne; to send him down to the execration of t| posterity as Richard UL, and to sweep him op at last to his death on Bosworth Heath. Meantime Gloucester, in terse sen- tences, was explaining his own presence there. He had pressed forward by night with the vanguard of the Yorkist army, 700 strong, bent on surprising the larger Lancastrian force that held Shoreby. and of attacking and carrying the city by storm, The Yorkist’ reserves would follow later, to complete the victory or to protect the retreat. Dick told him the numbers and dis- position of the troops in the town be- low. Both realize’ that if the first tm- petuous attack failed, Gloucester’s handful of men would be cut to pleces before the reserves could arrive. Gloucester gave the order to advance and his force moved toward the town, The quarter of the town upon which, by the advice of, Dick, Richard of Gloucester first seized, consisted of five small streets of poor and ill-inhabited Trustee Ge W. Day Aske One. « Prof, Josh M. » Long: This one swived from Dockatader's 3Unstrels: Bones—When is a oor like a: plate Of Wi full of orange marmelade? 1 eof Siding fet heen Labor per don't know, Mr, Bones, 1 free te f4 u ~ oor : 19 sikce * : ing, the ¢ld mi cates — @ plate. fu of Te Be induc Prof, Josh M, A. Long: on the ® door is like a plute full of orange marmalade? .-y me) Interlocutor—Yes, Mr. Bones, 1. would like to know when @ door Is like @ plate ull of orange marmalade. Boné—Then I shall teil you when a oor} te Ike:,@. plate full. 6f orange fag agate Infer.—Very wel Prof. Jouh M. A, ‘Long: the typewriter supplies for these: { 1 “T doa'e ae about typewsiter. Mr. Bones, tell us 0 that. bu rnenvaaoge ia dike opiate full of] spulgn't rune $0 nave her i j18 Uke a plate fullof|. -Teacher-In what battle Gen range marmalade when it has left the ole wien heats ee eiotorh erste | q ‘te now oh indie thie titee ss mogent his an on! ‘Surry. this morn: Ison, ‘No.’ 233 Bast ‘Thirty-minen aiteee fe Milo’s Lest Occusatio: A rural letter carrier thade it a prac- tice for the last fifteen or twenty yours ‘of waiting for @ train on one of the en gd cab. at ene ‘These for the typewriter supplies or eroner the Venus de t Bes pier inet ot Bat hain, Groen the trpas, "7OU-ahall cee my grate Lime were eo clowe ut Early the following morning as Dick was stealing secretly from the town and had reachvd a hill at some distance be- ‘yond the outskirts he heard a blast of & horn followed by a clash of arms. Hurrying on he found several soldiers Attacking one man. Springing to the latter's side he espoused his quarrel, ‘and between them they held the assail- ants at-bay until another blast from the. horn brought a throng of men at arms from @ neighboring wood to the rescue. The soldiers who had attacked the stranger were, at a brief command from the latter, disarmed and hanged. Richard noW had an opportunity to look more closely at the man he had rescued. He aw, to his surprise, youth no older than himself, with a pale. face distorted with pain*and a slightly deformed body. “You came in good tim lad to Dick. “You fis houses, occupying @ very gentle emi- nence and lying open toward the back. ‘The five streets being each secured by a good guard, the reserve would thus occupy the centre, out of shot, and yet ready to carry aid wherever it was needed. To Dick the, Duke assigned the guard of one of the five streets. But, as soon as Dick was gone, he turned to @ little shabby archer at his elbow, “Go, Dutton. and that right speed- fly," he added. ‘Follow that Ind: If ye find him faithful, ye answer for his safety, a head for a head, Woe unto you, if ye return without him! But if he be faithless—or, for one instant, ye misdoubt hlm—stab him from behind," In the meanwhile Dick hastened to secure his post. Meantime the body of the enemy had been steadily drawing nearer ucross the market place, and by this aid the sean my ven- geance,” pointing to the men hanging whole The Black Arrow, By Robert Louis gave the order to return their shot. immediately, from behind the barrier and from the windows of the houses, a counteftblast of arrows sped, carrying death, But the Tancastrians, as if they had but waited for a signal, shouted loudly in answer, and an to close ut a run upon the barrier, the horse- men ‘still hargirg back, with visors lowered, ‘And then the full weight and impetus of the charge buret upon and scattered the defend Dick with @ supreme effort rallied his men and drove back fie assailants, ‘The battle was won. For from the distance could be heard the shouts of the Yorkist reserves, pouring like an avalanche into the town. Gloucester dismounted from his horse and came forward to inspect “Richard Shelton," he sald, pleased ine, Kneel,” The duke deliberately drew his sword and dubbed Richard a knight upon the apot. Dick hastened to Sir Daniel's house in search of. Joan, only to learn that the knight had fled toward Tunstall at the head of @ large following, including bis wife and Joanna, Hastening to Gloucester, Dick begged the loan of fifty men-at-arms to pursue Sir Daniel. ‘The Duke gladly granted the request, and Richard set off at the head of the troop. All day they followed Sir Dan- fel’s trail and at night encamped in Tunstall wood, Suddenly Dick, reflect- ing that their foes might see their camp fire, ordered it put out. ‘Then he climbed a tall tree. In the distance from this helght he espled a potnt of light. Recognizing !t ns Sir, Daniel's camp fire he lea his men toward the plage. ‘When they were near he bade them surround the party at the fire and to creep in on them. Then he drew closer, At last, through an opening ‘of the wood, his eye embraced the scene of the encampment. Around the fdmes there sat not quite a dozen people, warmly cloaked, but though the neigh- boring snow was trampled down as by a regiment, Dick looked in vain for any horse, He began to have a terrible misgiving that he was outmanoeuvred, ‘At the same time, {n a tall man with a steel cap, who was spreading his hands that pefore the biase, he recognised nis old Sfevenson. —_—— friend end stitt kirdly enemy, Bennet Hatch, and in two others, sitting a little back, he made out, even tn thelr male Ciszuise, Jonnna Sediey, and Sir Denlel'a wife, “Bennet.” sald Dick, “old friend, yield ve. Ye will but spill men’s lives in vain If ye resist.” “Master Dick." sald Bennet, “it goes against my heart; but I must do my duty, The spinta help you! And therewith he ratsed a little horn to his mouth and wound a rousing call. Then foilowed a moment of confusion; for while Dick, fearing for the ladies, still hesitated to give the word to shoot, teh's little band sprang to thelr weapons end formed back to back as for a flerce resistance, In the hurry from her seat and ren like an arrow to her lover's vide, “Here, Dirk!" she cried, as she clasped hia hand in hers. “On!” Se cried. ‘Shoot,* boys, and keep to cover. England and York!” But just then the dull beat of many horses on the snow suddenly aroi the hollow ear of the night, and, with Incredible swiftness, drew nearer and swelled louder, At the same time, an- swering tuckets reveattd and repcated Hateh’s call. Rally, rally!" -erled Dick. upon me! Rally for your lives But his men—afoot, scattered, in the hour, when they hac counted on easy triumph—began instead to give ground severally, and either stood wavering or dispersed into the thick- ets. And when the first of the horse men came charging through the open 5 ally taken avenues. and fiercely riding their Gteeds. inte the underwood, a fow Stragglers were overthrown or speared amdng. the brush, ‘but the bulk of Dick's command had simply meited at the rumor of their coming, Dick stood for a moment, bitterly recognizing the frults of fits precipl- tate and unwise valor. Sir Daniel had geen the fire; he had moved out with his main force, whether to attack his pursuers or to take them in the rear {f they should venture the aseailt “This ruins my favor with the Duke,’ he groaned. Then, with Infinite cau- tion, in order to Sir Daniel's pursuing followers, led Joanna through the forest’ toward Holywood, where Lord Foxham was amped. At each step he cored to be shot dows, _" 2, -_ The Soul Has An astonishing covery has just |veen made by Prof. Elmer Gates, direc- ‘tor of the Natior chology and Chase, in the suburbs of Washington, b,c. This eminent scientist, Who, with the ltypical scientific mind, accepts nothing am truth that cannot be demonstrated, announces t¢ the world the over- |whelming fact that the soul can be seen and nt that seen and that It has been plainly descHbed at’ the mom: it shuffled off its mortal coil! Heretofore Prof. Gates, in accord with most of the leading scientists of the day, has belleved that there has been absolntely no proof of the continuity of life beyond what we call death Now he presents to sclence the amaz- ing fact of hin discovery and gives an ofMelal report; a plain, straightforw: story. of a actentific demonstration, which he aaks shall be fully invesigated Important discovery that followed The shadow on the wall is the myst three men, the shadow of the soul, or is If this can be done with a lower an human being, and then, if science can Director of the National VISIBLE PROOF OF 11S EXISTENCE. © The Shadow on the Walk Prof, Gates here tells the story of the experiment, nnd the astonishing and and Psychurgy. Been Seen. ort now. “Inj this shadbw; seen by-these & it the soul? anit te Jmal It can also be accomplished with spoak to this visible sonl, the tuftruthrly of the existence of life after death—nnd in ghostly duplicate of the body, wl . living—will havg been indisputably establishe ce BY PROF. ELMER GATE Perera Psycho Laboratory of “ogy LIVE rat is placed in a hermetically seated glass tube held in the path of light. rays about five octaves above the violet-nnd before-a sensitized wall coated? “* with rhodopsin, the visible purple of the retina, the seeing substance,of the! > A As loig as the rat remains alive it casts dow. of thelr change of plare. Joanna sprang | slaughtered antmals. ly transparent. At the same atomic body of an animal. evidence that it still possessed animal lous ‘should properly be termed only for adult, ue wore 3 gn the mother to scrutinize ‘that for themsel: but the the mother's Genuine Casto: eye, which light acts,upon. This substance is extracted from the eyes of Srey ot a “Amen shadow having breciaély the ame shape’ al’ the animate A./ seen to pass out through the glass tubeand move upward on the sensitized (walle Two of my laboratory asgistants claim to have distinctly seen the shadow, the full course of its agconsion. As soon as we can definitely prove this tovother scientific men we will have demonstrated that some organism note anatomic, perhaps etheric and capable of passing through glass, thus leaves the ay rea killing the aninial it iq found, after a certain lapse of time, that tt becomes The Kind You Have Always Bought.” Taissseions Now, if in any way this escaping organism could be caught and made te s'yms@ mind, then we would for the firet have an inductive iaboratory proof of the continuity of life after death.....+ ~~ ee oe it ELECTRIC LIGHT BATHS. Amusements, OHAMPIONSHIP HOCKEY MATOH, | CRESCENT A.C. . Toma AT wis Ocrotk. & vs. AUTOWOBILE SHOW MADISON SQUARE GARDEN. 10A.M TO 1P. 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