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CA ZINE +» STORY SECTION. | SATURDAY, Circulation Books Open to All.” | MAY 23, 1908. RACE at sea between the towing Ing, missed the most 5: ing of a \ } | romans esa eecanrmevmemmunncane f iBetty © fx: Vincent’si ° Advice Courtship and Miarriage. —_«—_— A Question of Age. Dear Betty: I invene your wi Unless one le that fs, elghte one for a boy, th uted. He Blushes Reedt!y. Dear Bett AM minoteen mach, but whe pany with them I the slightest remark to ovorcome this, It Is hag spdiled many an on m for it ks under the age 1 girl a age is not being K Umit, twent nest! | like the or I and am in com- blush at always me. ry low annoying an You blush because you are ectous. Forget yourself In ent the girls and you will,soon stp blush ing. x e Do Not Marry Him. | Dear Bett AM twenty and twenty-five not know wheth ‘ as he Is, extremely would Is It ake a better to than a young advise me what » does not account of the “ee m years be an to di approve of the difference In our love the would well merry ‘him. You injustice him Sfor he, of course, ! love with him if yourself to him. ® she truth at once, not man be d as yourself, supposes you are in| you haye engaged It is best to tell him to as 4‘ COMMANDER oF THE CEOR O-+ e: WHITE: STAR: LINE => Hele! one ently figured that he was far enough ihead to inake up the windward dis- ance and cross our ow. Accordingly | @ came over on port tack and headed for ux As the Bythswood bore down on us it was hard to tell whtoh one had tbe best of It. At one spelt ft looked as though she might make it. But being on starboard tack and having right of way, we held on our course until the decisive moment. The Bythswood was not more than a dozen ship's lengths to leeward of us wien jt was plain! that she could not meke it, and wes| compelled to go over on the other tack | right under our les. As we shot by while her safle were} aback wé could hear plainly the ‘main. tops'l haul!” order from her captain, and while we el! shouted deristvely at ths faflure to sccre a point our cap- tain sarcestically bellowed “Do you want a tow?" Such manoeuvres were frequent while we remained in oompany during the finst ehteen days of the marvellous pas- kage, and then a blow came on tn whic! | gether again until the end of the voy- age DOOD OOOO OC | By Diane de Morgay: WO new styles of hairdress- ing have been launched !n different parts of the world in the same week. an event of national is really mportance, stnee the colffure of the women points an age and goes down to history. Mme. Agnes Sorel, one of the beautiful actrosses in Parts, at the ii0 Francaise, has adopted the first of the new styles, and the Genev colffure originated over here in honor This |of the popular dancer, Mlle. Adeline | Genee Mme. Sorel's headdress is unusual be: [cause tt brings back the bang—the much-reviled frizz. But in this picture lit has such a delightful and softening effect that ft cannot help but attract attention and serve as substitute for the pompadour. The high pompadour will be out of fashion by the fall, be- omuse smaller hate will come tn and | exaggerated headdresses will be en- cut of place. Rea eae Sere} colffure recalls the chignons f the early 70's, The hair Is all combed} ae UM Bet T oack except the amall soft bang, a band | ; , + wint {Of black velvet ribbon is tled Immediate: lWcweruinns ly drew away |'¥ Seve It, and then the rest of the On F « We had a very | Hair ts colffed loorely over a pad on erceptiole slage when the wind |he orown of the head, twisted into a “ nd to tae southward and | dig coll, which comes #own almost into had to beat the nape of the neck and ends at the Per un exciting nour once| side in a curl which falls over the shoul- tae wind nad hi et ligntatioweaiduriadvante ‘The curl, of course, is not a real one, , Ty ad batnd ty GhGTS: | not grown on the premises, Way should \ at a mile on our tow.| we ever bother with real curl. when \ W th oO arboard artificial ones are so much more prac- shen the Bythswool skint tleable? RADDA 0000008 (NOW WILLIE. THE BISHOP WiLL] DINE HERE TONEY, SE A sovPs ARE SO FATTENING. we all three separated and were not | AUSOAOTOTOODOTOSHODOVOTOD What’s This? What’s This? The Bang, the Frizz And the Usly Chignon . Are All Coming Back! EDS OF THE INEHS oh that time which are never seen in these days, Includ ing skys’ls and even moons'ls, and some | that are not even heard of now. T were bonnets and the Jimmy Green ul Bonnets were orescent shaped and from the foot of the courses when both) sheets were aft and down almost to) the deck, wille the Jimmy Green was a triangular shaped plece of canvas from the end of the flying Jtpboom to the dolyitn striker like an Inverted Jib. These we used in the light trades, an what @ Fi eo Was with everything set and drawing! Well, relt that we had met our Watertoo when we got Into that rqual off the Cape in February. Sou'east bust ers we call them A black spot appeared on the hor!- zon $n southeast, and as tt ap- proached we stood by to let go sheets | and halyards after the light sais were clewed up. You can’t tell until they strike whether they are wind or only rain squalls, but that one proved to be wind and plefty of it right from the jump hit us with such ferooity that almost before the started the sails were begin While blowing the flerces: suddenly veered around to the nor'we' and then there was heli It did not last re than forty | minutes all told, but when the wind | blackened we did not have a piece of canvas gloft big enough to make a sailor's peajacket. We ent on the extra putt of salle | which we carried and made !t up the | west coast to St, Helena, waere we made the fatal error of putting Into that port expecting to repair. But after dickering around for three days we had to come away with only a case of whiskey and @ rock from the grave of Napoleon. I believe t we had kept on to Du: ai] we had we would winner of the greatest ocean race on | record, ‘| {s clipping your nails. THE MANICUDE GIA HAVE A COMPLET By 'Margaret Hubbard Ayer ON’T imagine keep a se your from manteurist. And don't flat- ter yourself that cret lots of e whose trade we don't she has not sized | w at all r inst the man who | up your charac-| thinks because he's having his nails manioured he's going to have his hand ter, and sized it eee eld sndetini We get rid of that up pretty correct- ly, too. Likewise, be sure that if you hav any foibles—if you are stingy with your ti rude or overbearing, or self- Amportant—every other girl in the shop knows it as well as the girl who Every manicurist has a system of signals by which she conveys her im- pression of the customer she is at- tending to the other girls and to the owner of the shop. “That's what makes business so {n- teresting to us,” a soft-eyed and very experienced wielder of the file t me yesterday “And it would be really too dull !f when we found out curious things about people we couldn't pass it on to the girl at the next table.” ‘What do your signals consist of?" He ARCHED nO I asked. ‘A COMPLAINING CUSTOMER “Well, Td hate to give away the | tind by never wilting upon them more the girl, “but, anyhow, 6 first time. the code's different in every shop. You| “A man of the hand holding vartety | see, sometimes it 1s really necessary to| will urag along and get you to work on} get rid of a customer politely; for there! his hands ty as long as you would DOOBOHDOWDOGOHOSHOO PEPDOOOCAMAPBO He GENRE COIrruRre. Not only do the a Al cur! n place, but they can be had In vary- ing colors, and, as ey ry one knows tua | the ends of the ha are Hght his wint little an artificla the roots, we may expect slight shocks| which framed her plqu ich shi aved and n Princeton effects pressive face are remin tt is Madame Sorel, no longer a Victorian fawitos ‘9 and young as site was, and yet is one of the | were supposed to be me ene most beautiful and admired persons in | ind demure. When | ne capital of deautiful worhen, has| The gorgeous Lady B! the sides chosen in this new headdress a style | ‘Thomas Lawrence's. piciuir Let of the eminently suitabie show off the| hair in a similar manner ri are not beauty of a woman no! exactly in her | peautles of her ag d ificlal ones Zi this style of ha fe in inder The Genee cotffure is Interesting be pooming with a low : vate cause it does’ away entirely with the | a low brow can be simulated by length- ‘a comb w quickly put on & VRARPRCUUAAAAAA EARUUEREVAENDAGERAUAEEEESEEAAN E4458 Funny Stories Told Around Town : | look: | doesn’t MAGAZINE + STO _ SECTION. | on anybody else's. The man who cama =A woman who owns a manicure par- tn just Defore you was that kind. [— lor right off Fifth avenue, and whose had to stop several times to fix my customers belong to the nicest of old hair and fuss with my pompadour. In| New York people, says that the mani- fact, the rude thing asked me what was gains an insight into people's the matter with {t, and told me {t characters, into their lives, loves, hopes very pretty the way tt was. He|and ambitions, that is sometimes ap- didn’t Know that that continual fussing | palling. curist with the hair stiowed every girl in the) “I think ft spehke very well for the room that the customer took up a lot|girls in the scissors and file business of time and gaye no tips. He'll know | really are seldom the cause the next time he comes here, because | ing from gossip. It's able ar: we'll all be too busy to wait on him.” | v ‘But supposing you are not busy when he comes {fi?"" I asked, “Then we just suy we have appoint- ments to manicure customers at their! homes, and get {t that way.! ‘There are other people we have to got rid of, The owner the shop | care about the ustom the woman who wants to get waited upon before is hb turn. Usually sh has made such a fuss before she gets tu tle vople will talk when ir hands manjcured. girl and set ‘her to No matter how discreet and sensible a busl- ness man he may be, in a very little while she knows more about his life than ar of his ordinary friends do, Confidence seems to ooze out of the | finger tips. ‘Ho may scarcely know her name, and probably never sees her outside of | the shop, but she knows all about his |domestio troubles, not that he has said | anything about his wife—he's far too loyal—but from his almost impersonal conversation she makes her deductions, {and her conclusions are almost always | right. “The manicurist 1s a good desl of a palmist—no joke ‘ntended—and in my years of experience—I've been at it fifteen years now—I can tell a man and “Take a pretty work filing away at a man's nails. too. ot DOOOOQO000D ODO OOOO DODD OOOUDO000 0000. SORES COlFFURB PoRBEG UB and with the fringe andy ening the part in the middle and soaping nose delightful ringlets] the hair until it ts pasted er st d by Mile. G: part longer it really e This One Is About the , Boy and the Bishop. : By Gordon Nye; |W0 THANA YOU.S NEVER UNO MOTHER? ABOUT THE HORSE AND) i | WAGON. JUST ASK THE| 4; , OLO GEEZER /F HE f a | CAN SUCK AN £GG,, : iN j drepping |& woman's character by their hands | and the state of their health by the con- dition of the skin and nalis.’ “How would you signal that a person | was not in good health 1¢ you wanted to convey it to one of the other people in the room?’ I asked. Well, ft would depend entirely upon what Was the trouble. And, anyiow. that 1s handily a thing we would signai wound the ‘room. If you look over there in the corner where the girl is polishing the gray headed man’s nails FHE WANTS TO MARRY MEw ble that the preceding customer was hoyed and the manager has been illed to explain to her. With a cus- tomer like that It's only necessary to raise your eyebrow when you cateh the girls at the other tables, and mer that to walt on personally?” spend a good deal of er, change the water signal to the girls by handkerchief, which ea cust ke 11, then w on the custo: often and the and tapping her foot gently on the floor you get the algal for a burry customer who {8 good pay, but makes the girls nervous by being in Tush’ they can't. ah goed’ works they hurry like that, and thoy don't like to wait upon such customers; an expert mantourist takes ag much pride in her work as any other king of an artist.” The clipper of finger nafla, too much curled of hair, overdressed and per- fumed, figures quite often on the stage as a foolish and offensive person, wit silly notions and @ great affectation smartness. In real lite, however, when ehe ts @ successful manicure, sh very prac- tical and common scnae person, end has to concentrate her mind as ‘idealy "on on her work as tf she were loyed in iat" ie called a" more mental obeupe tlon. ‘A pretty blond girl, whose manicuse table is on Twenty-ninth street near the corner of Broadway, where inter esting things happen on the atreet ev: moment, is so intent upon her wo that she never has time even to look out upon the passing show through the window befora which she works, “How do you signal that you are tured?” she was asked. But there was no signal for that, AAAAAAAAAAAARAAAAAAAAAAAAAY, Who Is Master of the House? By Helen Oldfield. and tradition for many ages have ordained that the husband be the head of the house, and the ordinance, like most of those has {ts root in the fitness of things. But It 1s of much firmly eri EHAPIS 4 MERRY WIOOWART means: ‘This customer belongs to me, Hands off!" Lt USsTOM all long established. {importance that the man gnall be able to rule wisely, and! well, nich comparatively few men are. Just and gentle government, which has at heart the best interests of all concerned, {s one thing; the domestic tyranny, selfish and exacting, is quite another. There never was any woman, ve a fool, who did not enjoy being t the man whom she loved und to whom she was proud to look nose love was the crown of her life, Many wo fail to get by asking for It; whether humbly or ssively, matters but little le ud is to take ft cheerfully and a 8 ga t e's husband, being the dearest and of men, Is, a wife be y and ertable, H ri hat this applies to minor mate lor ‘ . t her huge 1 will disupy Me te 1 and will sure t rin 1 list ed ion, of which, indeed neonselous. \ Ason Why We fa danagin e y are inop- I A i e wrong way, and, k w t 5 instead of retres in ood ugain a s . yinit tin k A and selz gsently and firm W ‘ : 5 ut; the exe 1 \ 1s ui ‘ , men es w 5 : nical, With such ' a won! bold tis a case like that of w a a slums, in w \ street arab says of his fathe useter lick mom, but Maggie kin lick him, and #0 we has peace in de fambly.""—Chicago Tribune.