Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Ras 7 ‘y "Magazin THATS RIGHRSON. LISSEN- Rai FOLKS + AN TEL. Fiss Here 1s. sey er LIAQLE TO BEA WIMPUS NEVER AROUNB. A WIMPUS JUMPS OUT FROM BEHIND ices DOORS AND FOLI'S THAT TELL FIBS “4 “E,verybody’s Doing It!” ‘3% (-atthe) 3% By Carmichael TOIT Peeves THE CARPET | FROM BAGDAD Dy Every Woman Her Own Beauty Doctor By Andre Dupont Copyright, 1912, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York World). Good Living as a Beautifer. ry ILL you have a cup of tea?" said the Woman of Thirty as hee W friend the Average Girl dropped in to see her the other afternoon; “or would you prefer to join me in a glass of buttermilk?" f ue R readti clear The Girl smiled, ‘Wouldn't the latter be rather crowded?” she z Q Droot of where aie steed enccth ; said, Then as the Woman frowned at her she continued hastily, ‘ r | where.” The h “Forgive me for getting off such old jokes. But what on earth are you drink. ing buttermilk’ for this time of day?” mH “First, because it will do me a lot of ALL THIS g00d," sald the Woman; “and secondly, YouNGeR thirdly and all the time because It's tho GENERATION finest beauty sturt that I know. But- THINKS we _ 3 roses tal termilk is one of the best things for the ort f° | arenily, are not complexion in the spring. It Is good for m yanne on Ny ral the liver and also does all sorts of be- neficent acts for what one of my friends modestly refers to as ‘the department r of the interior.’ at Grain ome, then, just as ‘quickly a . “J “mother and the Major would sald the Girl. “My nerves P Yor tort 9 ; OH, YELL, WHEN to a frazzle lecting my Easter outfit. And these warm spring “THEY GET To BE fy Age THEY'LL CUT days play the mischief with my com- piexion.’ The Woman poured out a glassful for OUT ALL THAT Me: her and gave it to her, advising her to ademas ward t e } drink it slowly and to eat a cracker with Get CONE re 4 quite content to wai it, One glass of buttermilk at a time You'vE <OT To MAKE ) CHAPTER V. There was wt Was enough, she sald. But two or, ALLOWANCES FOR Continued.) than the others. Her > better, three should be drunk during the THE YOUNGSTERS, 4 The Girl Who Wasn’t Wanted) Horace, which the M N APPLE A2DAY.” day to get the full benefit of the health. THEY DON'T KNOW . ¥ dear Fortune, how you jump | inj \@Ving properties of the beverage. ) ANY BETTER t, at conclusions! Did I not of- “I went a dinner party last night,” sala the Woman, “and eat next to Prof. Dermis, the great ‘skin specialist. When he noticed that I refused one or two especially indigestible dishes he looked at me with approval and sald he thought I was a sensible woman. He said that society women were always coming to him for ‘cure-alls’ to be taken Internally or plastered on the skin; instead of remembering that health and beauty depend absolutely on a well regulated dict. I agreed with him so sweetly that before he knew what he was about he gave me several valuable hints. I flatter myself that I am one the few persons that ever got any advice from him free gratis, for nothing, the children say. You know his fees are enormous.” “Don't be stingy,” said the Average Girl; “share your knowledge with a devoted friend.” ‘ “He sald that nothing will so quickly improve the complexion as $) eat freely of vegetables and fruits and that meat once @ day in the spring and summer is enough for anybody He talked a lot about eating fruit and ad- vised having it at every meal; and said there was more truth Ahan poetry in | | | fer hifh o draft the very fret thing?” ~ “Knowing that at such & j Moment he could not possibly accept it? deristvely, “Sometimes I hate you.” feared him: a toat | fear, she had fo ar these days ‘Allal devotion fe # 10st) jis) “Samiration. iN (these “No, no; it 1s flower parents have physicals streneth ane ee ee. ceased to cultivat the only man, amon, And there wan in the tone @ strained | peared at the Villa Fi note which described an intense longing | stely van to be loved. For if George Percival Al- s Mage a Gea, gernon Jones was a lonely young man, It was the result of his own blindness; |r? one day and departing pa ia Prep sont oan ther thither searc! 8tlit was as though she taken which she never could find, The widel seat among the ‘audlence in the Lyblan desert held upon its face @ lone-lof the second act. She could it, Spring and the ite ‘uth on nya ne Tai fein ck Everyday Human enti She Dad never sean her father, If a portrait of ° FY - il; it i i é i 33 i $ i fi] “An apple a day Keeps the doctor away. *T @hall order a peck from the grocer on my w “Bettcr price them fir: sald her friend, “‘and then get ‘two for five.’ Apples, like everything else, have But the next thing he recomended wa’ much cheaper. It was water. He said that most women drink too little water, and that it war best taken between meals and should never be iced, as this stops digestion. Three or four glassfuls @ day, he said, was the proper quan- tity. “Me for the water wagon,” said the Giri. “Then he launcled off," continued the ‘Woman, “in a tirade about the foollsh- ness of women—Jjust as if men were not foolish sometimes. He said women went the atcon tyne Epoch Makers IN MEDICINE Ey }. A. Hosik, M. D, haif-ctrele complacent : alt= him existed, Fortune had not yet seem, ; Copyright, 1912. by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York World), Copyright, 1912, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York World), I should be sorry to} it, ited his lonely yet: a grave edbreast in the park. to you, knowing how |, year, in the Protestant cemetery, and - .F. .|A2 child he was educated in tanguases) By Sophie Irene Loeb. |"yor's bare . ; Herman L. F. Von Helmholtz. pe ee Nari arte y Sop ooo soid [nage “te him who in thé love of nature bes 1a | dreamily tried to conjure up what iN r *y tors OT inuch longer will holds coms ner of man he had been. One day % A MONG tic distingu'shed ViSlOF8! of tim that at school he used to work N a a munion with her visible form Arch-enemy of smooth complexions. | plied her old Italian merse with quae | home," said the Girl, he World’ ui Expo- she sbeaks a various langua: And ‘Ttion held. in Chicago in 308 Out Problems relating to the passage laughed away by smiling Old 80l-|sh¢ will be speaking every minute from |" "It tat a wemely hone ie ehomead” tant cl ry. there was o great | cc ueht through @ telescope, under his The tnevit@dle/now on, And verily he who runs may| “I grant that. But « Perctv long ton, ental CE mztEe hoa German sclentist,! ing their leewone in hese oer hatin spring poet Wil | read thereof. There Is the everlasting shed | scribe him to you.” Mt rom ‘Helmbolte, | tetera emmone in Greek of Latin. endeavor to ryrm|charge against the city individual th It was one of those pleasant| “Dia he drink?’ Behind thie quse Men of learning | L4ter he studied at Potsdam, and after- hnings along 44 he Jy ignorant of Mother Nature's m sounds that caused persona within hear-| tion there was no sense of moral oble- a ‘and science flocked ward, much againat his wish, he took the resurrection | ifestations, and especially is the wee ing to walt for it to occur again. quy as applying to th vn Po ect Saar ort ee cies aay as. § “Come; let us go up to the room. It| “painted Seare! @idn' cpring — @PIBTAMS panded, ne Contre OF fe #0 Fe lig 9 dull, dusty journey in from Port up the study of medicine to preparre to that city to de eommae 10 tale himself for the duties of an army sure, Said. on reckiessly, year after year, eating geon, a slaplgrams| Thus it behooves y unreligi man, Perhaps no an ius tt behooves you and me and all quantities of candy, cakes and pastry, rae in Matory| Hi# natural powers as an original tn- will come —4Mto/of us to take the tots out Into the sun. her heart knew nothing but| -t'ndyrr hecrd at une bicryd nee, Laiheae and then was possessed of Mas diabiald ue soon recognized, how- play. ty, [Mant that they too may hoki communton lect, indifference, injustice, wondered why they looked and felt ever, and he was excused from active But, willy-nilly, | with nature's visible fo nding, the chill’ repelience ow badly. He said that the average woman so many varied) modical work to become a professor of era of caestnaine tee but when the signet, the mortal 1 Poor | FIRST messengers of awakening life—|that always met the | outreaching of the child's affections, the unaccount- able disappearances, the terror of the married bim she thought was not till later years that For st ary of spring. | Many a viewpoint has been changed |benind’ which inet wae sie tenorance ‘gramped the true of would look and foe! better if she avoided “SU TTERMICK & BEAUTIFIER wiekmente es Vou|P2YsloloRy, which post he filled at sev- very rich dishes and fried food th the spring. Eating a great deal of candy is Mpeg ars He |e"! German universities with great ae Nay bad for the eompiesion, 48 are much tea, coffee and chocofate; though = studied and worked aly and distinction, In 1871 he was al kept, une these beverages may be drunk in strict moderation without harmful effect, - professor of physics, and this positio: he office boy I tnerer this statement. It ilumined many may { . out problems in a 8 position ithereby and for the BETTER, Often alupon these hate had bullded her Good living (by which he said he meant sensible living) and good looks went a pede hy he held till the end of his life, whistles LOUDER, business MAN! now light, a naw coloring, 1s put on a|and brooding retreat. Tot, never ‘did She, copped oll: ata 7 * y, hysios, o r hand-in-hand, Women who lived well had clearer skins, brighter eyes and|P!¥slology, in phys! tothe! 1 1881 Von Helmholtz gave to the views the pending transaction with les® | situation by ACCEPTING the spring the mother come within the radius of | Couctuding wisely that her mother,’ if remained young much longer th 1 and {n music, It was he who world his n "4 pte ee o foraeted : she were minded to speak at all, could © “And I think that's so, PM gesig: who did not. world that most useful instrument, th nis new invention of the ophthal- gloom, the “I-told-you-s0” man forget#/a harbinger of good. It spella NEW |her sight that she did not fail under the| Supply only the incidents ‘the Qecaiie, | vhich {9 go essential Moscope. He recetved many honors. to tell and even the grouch has difM- | resolutions, NEW plans, NEW possl-|#Pell of strange fascination, enchaining, pseex 4 mr gehnalnoneny gers of dis- 1m 1896 he was awarded the Von Graefe culty in FINDINGea new grudge. ne Dilitles, Tn a word, Mt Ix the BEGIN. Aght against tt how | RS It was warm, balmy, like May in the eases affecting the e medal in recognition of the discovery For all the world 1s glad and the NING of things, And no matter what |Craitio and she wound hate nee ne | northern latitudes, Women wore 5 of the ophthalmoscope, Piano manu- spirit of spring reaches the city JUST the end has been there is a fresh , dresses and carried sunshades over. Previous to Von Helmholta's time the! tacturers went him one of th “ es to the highways |g arma about the other woman's neck. | ineir shoulders, A good band played eye was indeed @ mystery, and many @ 7°), alga ne of thelr pianos As SOON as It comes to thi tpi START, But the touch and the mother-smit airs from the new lght. and at ‘an grew blind for want of some treat- foF his studies In sound related to and the byways in the remote cornera | for with every despalr a new hope is|never came. She knew, she understood de of the pp Bn ie eyes coe men F wit " Ithowt the ophthalmo-|™usle. On the occasion of hig seven- 11 is in the alr, and each has an equal horn, Like a moving street car, the|she wasn't wanted, she hadn't been jaasling Mi wpasnion ment ‘when, he “ tbility. When Von teth birthday a great celebration was snare of the dividends thereof. In fact, ‘spirit of spring always has room for|Wanted In the beginning; to her mother | tables popee aes “a aacihed WAuiten eye held. Emperor William IL, the Kings to catch the spirit of th 1 YOU lone more, Tut of course It won't wait |e wns as ihe young of animals, in-| oi0, but it Bee anit looked into the human | f Italy and Sweden, the Presid f have & NEW lease on life with @ re-\tor you 1f you do not try to catch it. [teresting only up to that time when eye by means of the newly discovered | indeed who 40€4|the first pussy-willow or the first ar- not Hsten to the! putas, Betty Vincent’s Advice to Lovers baolutely Df id atend faite. to pretend that they did. When they France, all sent him tokens of esteem ate attachment on the’ smmediate! “yor goon the call will be to the tan |My could mand alone | lcained they discussed the Spanish dan- and a Helmholtz gold medal was struck future. | tumber. While it is easy, perhaps, for well-fed, "| cer who paraded back and forth across The Girl’s Decisi long as she is und ; Instrument he became excited and crled| 11, is honor, | And there isn't very much wrong with|the rich man to find HIS epring or Seg i na the tea-lawn. There, the first halt lecision. je is under age and living at] out: was over. Ail down for tea! He died in 181, at tho age of seventy- the man who in a crowded section may| summer in the dead of our winter, yet|some Jeweled trinket which (again that | Hewohalis hes vafaiies 10 ue rane™ i three, one of history's greatest and notice a sprouting blade of grass In & at present he 18 no richer than you|sense of menace) she put away, but d ne | most versatile men of science, remote bit of earth or an early robla) and 1. home. goodness! = George was happy. le was never wore. The bright pertods were! too, He saw the glances, the fet So with old Omar we might say:|When they left her in the little villa approval, He basked In a kind of “Come fill the cup, and tn the fire near Mentone, with no one but her old hine thi was new. of spring Your Winter Garment of and faithful nurse. There, with her| “1 had “N, M." writes: “I am in love with a young man and he loves me, but I don’t! Want to marry as soon as he does.| Please advise me.” It fs always the girl's privilege to fix w “W. 1." writes: “A young man has} oreq: been paying me attention for eight] j¢ was indeed a great discovery, which || ——-—————~ enone |months, but I don't think he has kept ossib 11 tutare {mes th0) 0 0. saanaapsRMAahGARAAAAARARAAnnnAn | |three engagements punctually. What| made possible for a very | | the wedding day. Can't you come tolsnay 1 Intelligent study of the eye and its dis- Th D ° G d S ri , Sting, ‘The Bird, of Time {Norse her books and her flowers, sha night, a most interesting one, all I do | t Ttopentance fling, ‘The na | Naren Der Denke and a ver? ~ r ght ‘, a was at pea eek Into week and George, who was no longer the shy, © compromise with your lover? Make him watt for you a few times, | a#ee It NAB Nate no ae av A e ay s oo ories });:; uta little ‘while te flutterand month into month ahe was let be Never | blundering recluse ‘They "were om the 8 " ea’ the Bird ts on the + letter came, save from some former! way back to town, “3, D." writes: “Would It be proper! “G. G.” writes: “I am a young man| Many 4 man from the loss of his power Istays but a little while, to leave room |gchoolmate who was coming over ant| ‘Tell it me,” said Mrs. Chedsoye, Jeft the room rather nolsily, whereupon the ee- for me to send flowers to a girl who 1s! of nineteen and am much troubled by | % Vision. Too Hasty. cc LR | for the sumnfer and the fall, and then | wanted letters of introduction to dukes! He leaned over from his seat Beside in the hospital, though I only met her| shyness when I am talking to girls,| Outside of this practical boon to man- EPP Foes een Oe Bag ‘mean that {t should be done in! winter again, Therefore “Gather ye|and duchesses. If she smiled over these the chauffeur of the hired automobtle, td \rosebuds while you may.’ letters it was with malancholy; for the (Hang the expel on a day like thist) once?” What shall I do?” kind, Von Helmholtz unfolded to us ogee oe ree tee teen they’ in some | cach @ burrs Tt would be quite proper and most) y, rt ; the mysteries of Mght and sound, show- parte of America the number of men was -—— \"'No matter what the trials and tribu-| dukes and duchesses who fell within, “A fellow brought me a rug last night, kind. , o te Anepyrea tnt pene 7") ing just how tight penetrates the eye, cmmderanly lecgey Wan tet A vomer, ot be The Life-Saver. liations the cold winter has disclosed, Singular orbit’ were mot the sort one of the rarest outside the Muauean —_ pt es i. and explaining the mechanism by which | *4¢e4 humoral: von 8 dearino one may foretell the Future, And |‘? Whom one gave letters of introduc. | How and where he got it I'm not fully,” tion. jable to state. But he had been in Where her mother went she jolent struy «ed: At Dachelor If perchance he sees the little |ene toast idea. She might be never had Violent re t pley with the first dandelion, the great ports of the world, anywhere that he had gone in where ma a ject the “villas” of the {¢ holds much—even for @ hardened old ich they both b ht of her long life upon her sweet, placid ce bearing but On “A. 8." verites: “I have written to my| “D. 1.” writes; “I am earning a good| sound !s transmitted through the ear; lover twice and have recelved no an-|salary, Do you think my being a me-|to the brain, One of the Breatest scl- ewer, He lies outside the city, What] chanic should hinder me from marrying | entific Alscoverles in the world's history grate to that part, would you advise me to do? |the girl I love?" was made by him, It ts known the few tokens of ‘her pi years of earthly; Come out {nto the spring! between New York and Port Said. The of death lurked. It was 4 ‘Can you not write to one of his friends| Not if she is the right sort. “law of conservation of energy,” and Gieriaaee, be wee mo do ask her, “My dear ———_——- Major generally disappeared at the! Some one \nd find out if he is ill? jb teaches that no energy Is ever to: Strength. and austenance Guriag all. three’ yoni IN A QUANDARY. same time, Then, perhaps, she'd come aplehed it uo, ae “R, 1." writes: “A young lady gave| Energy simply changes its form, What has appealed to you as the real bass of| “Is she @ suffragette?” back from @ pleasant tram-ride over y ry our unusual vigor of mind and body and bas been to you an unfailing comfort through joy and orrow? ‘Tell me, (hat I may pass the secret on ith. MY writ ‘Iam very fond of aj] me her address and asked me .to 1} wen heat Is changed tnto electricity [i of seventee but her mother Ob- | her up on the ‘phone. I did so, and she| or electric energy into motion, feots to our friendship. What shall I| seemed glad to hear from me. Is she| Von Helmholtz was born at Potsdam, to ottbre, end, if possible, profis by it myasie | eho Souk thaik 7 Interested in me?" near Berlin, in 181, His father was a The cid woman ‘hought @ moment, then liting| “She can't make up her mind whether Wonmnunicative, rather quiet. ‘These or [color was not up to the = I don't think you are justified in ask-| Jt would seem that she took at least | distinguished scholar, His mother was hee even, diam wit jet Kodling with sweet ‘sy @ republican or @ democratic vote|sences, toi not wounded’ fag the girl ¢o disobey her mother, as! & friendly interest, @ linea! deacendant of William Penn. oA,2ung nomen peree’ im one of tie teat roe abet she wants.""~Detrolt Free Press ‘strative reappearances, “No, Bu 4 lke to be.” to Nice and find them both at the villa, | a Te maid and luggage, Mayhap a night or e'd Uke to be? Then why te't! iy, and off they'd go again: never 2 | Stet Leceoting!” Mra &s