The evening world. Newspaper, April 22, 1912, Page 17

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DoAs Hey used Fe thu US BACK Po? Here 1S ACROSS You Can Be Your Own Beauty Doctor By Andre Dupont Copyright, 1012, by The Press Publishing Co, (The d THE SMILE CURE. HE GIRL sat in front of a long mirror and smiled broadly. Then she pursed up her lips as If she were about to say “Prunes end prisms, ike the good Kttle maidens tn the old fashioned copy books. And then she stretched her mouth in a smirk that extended nearly from ear to car, The Woman of Thirty stood in the doorway and watched in amazement ‘You make me think of the Ohes: in ‘Alice in Wonderland.’ she sald, “who vanished and forgot to take ‘her grin ‘with her, What are you ing to qualify for an en- mination to Bloomingdale?” 1 turned to her friend. m glad you came in," said. not a bit crazy, thank you. 1%n only trying the latest beauty stunt.’ “That's a new one on me then,” said the Woman, “What kind of beauty cul- ture is grinning Mke a Chessy cat? What is it supposed to do to you any- way?" ‘Do you remember Loretta Sulkwood and what a grumpy sort of girl she used to be?” ‘ THE RADIANT SMILE The, Woman nodded. “I met her last night at a dance,” continued the Girl, “and you never saw @uch a cha) in any one tn your life. She looked positively radiant and her expression was so pleasant and she was 0 jolly and such good company that I heard several people remark that Miss Bulkwood was growing very pretty. Now, between you and me, she hasn't a feature to her face. So I was wild h curiosity to find out how she did it.” York World), “Did she tell you?" asked the Woman with Interest. , “She iad to," satd the Girl naively, “for I asked her. And what do you think she 1? It seems that she got all run down ohis spring, so she went to mn of those sanitariums where you pa Jes, just to rest about five dollats a minute, more or And there was a wonderful doctor who had invented what the called a ‘smile cure,’ and who made all his patients who were nervous or ‘blue,’ or whose ingrowing selfishness had ‘brought on ‘isagreeable moods, ait fm front of a mirror and smile at thelr own reflection for ten minutes throe mes every day. At first, Loretta sald, tt seemed absolutely idiotic to sit and grin at nothing at all, But after one had done this for a fow minutes, almost fnvarlably t so laughing. And ‘the “dlues’ and all other fancied miseries vanished lke magic.” “There might be something tn that dea,” said the Woman thoughtfully, “I remember when I was a Uttle girl What tt was a very long time before I grew to like my first teacher and when (my mother tried to find out what was the matter family tradition declares @hat I gave as a roason that I hated teacher because, though she talked kind, @he had a cross forehead. “The docior said,” continued the Girt, “that a smiling face was always an at- tractive face no matter {f the features were plain and that ‘Laugh and the fworl@ laughs with you’ should be the adage for every woman who wants to b- de popular in society, or anywhere elso §=J2FED LY, for that matter. So I'm trying to smooth out the frowns in my forehead and follow the plotographer’a injunction to ‘Look pleasant, please. "§ really believe that you are right," said the Woman. “A pleasant smile 1s moe becoming to a woman's face than all the beauty lotions in the wort," LE, Betty Vincent’ Advice to Lover Love in Springtime. Sree is really at expensive pleasures of to the long walk, One of the pleasantest here last, and I wonder if the readers of this column quite appreciate one of the In- the season, I am referring ticularly benefited by several hours in the open alr at least once a week. It's rather lonely to take a tramp by oneself, fout tf one has company the exercise ts both delightful and beneficial, Try it these warm Sunda The ‘Thank You to love @ person I have never seen?” I suppose you have been carrying on “L. B." writes: “Is it always neces-| one of those silly correspondences with se ry to thank @ man when he treats you) stranger. You can never love a person to soda unle: you have seen him a great many It 1s the merest courtesy. | times and really know him. ‘SH. K." writes: “A young man in the fwiice where I work gave me a !ox of candy for Easter, My flance was angry Certainly. “YY, T." writes: “I am very love with a girl of seventeen she does not reallz much tn ou it, How shall Tm wita mo for accepting it. Did T do] her acquaintance? eros?’ jet yourself introduced in the proper ‘An occasional inexpensive gift lke) way and then pay her the usual atten @his need not be refused, but don't make} tions & Practice of accepting presents from men. “LT have met a once, and am dee Shail 1 gain his love own natural writes: oung man, bi Ashamed of Her Lover. | wi.» 0 oI. B. writes: “I received a picture) act my ef my flance this morning and my par-/ mee _venta made fun of his looks, They do not| That !s the surest way, ‘know that I am engaged to him. Shall Ss T'admit the engagement or break {t?"'! dD." writes: am in love with a Your love must be indeed feeble j|eirt T know, How can I win her affec- You are inclined to give it up for a bit} tlon?"’ er self waen we af ridicule, Call on her, take her to parties and ‘ — pay other pleasant attentions—that's the Mh LA" waite: a it possible for me yeual way, Them Was the Happy Days 2% Geel Ant Ts Gren, dna? Seems Like The Goon dun Pris, DonT IT? 7) Contam, 1918, 17 AY The rice tubing Co. (The New Tork Werld.) ( Copyright, 1912, ‘Thre Breas Publish ng Co, (The New York World.) Dont You wish ‘Time, bad OLyteo 7 oe A ae? NestYes! ) & By Dwis Do You Rememeer Tie ditredt When WE HOoMeY THAT SCHEME THE DORG HE He-HE- i By , 4 WenT WORITED PRETTY GOOD POP, ONLY (Copyright, 1011, by Bobbe-Merrill Co.) SYNOPSI4 OF PREGHDING CHAPTERS, A aytulic of clever awindlers go to Kaypt to ro Riven an merchant named cy ‘ianes, who vat iyanne has sigien from carpet bis va." ‘Vie ‘steale a. cablogrem sand forges ‘on anewee to. It. ere of We gang Cat Veantine of the “Yhiontes "ty Vengeance far the theft, Ty ne to tira the Arab's upon Jones, Mo! mn and, seeing the adven. 1, tend ven. rowdy Mohamed My later, rns trot sim that dy hy BS rug. urges Mohamed to > preteeet, to hold no a mat nveape. His Sag lada Ra eae, a) tor ale are ki CHAPTER XIV. (Continued.) Mahomed Offers Freedom. ASN’'T It the note you wrote to met Ryanne took hia head tn hie hands wearily, a I Copyright, 1912, by [bloom In that s¢ thing, he proceeded into the market much as he would chase of anything else. He bean rea- Fables of Everyday Folks By Sophie Irene Loeb ‘The Pres Publishing Co, (Tho New York World), ways for @ young man and ne ; WEAN (0 spend Sunday ahernosne de te tate e tram], net ene, Younes mac's taney welsh through the parks or over pleasant suburban row T's [HERI turned to thoughts of fe Matted auch infinitely better fun than a atroll of w few blocks in {ceeded to turn JUST aw lightly to A the heart of the city, with long stops in the ico cream par. |{NOUsHt# of MATRIMONY, going on the 3 lors or the moving picture show: theory that one good turn deserves ersons who are working __ |another. P #0 WOrKIDE IN © Sip GF Oftied Ste par MON sate to avery matrimonial in the pure j1—What were the * 42—Why is it colder on onin, to what kind of a wife he Hi 4 ee a Just as he would choose % 4i—~How long ago was NECKTIE, 4i—Why does a bag or So he asked and anawered himself the! of it? following questions; "Shall I have hy Vght or dark?” Being spring, LIGHT HESE questions will seemed vole. Made up’ varl- Mata ianuiries ety?" No, the one that is easily ar (Why do dist ranged, "What style?’ The ver days because the m LATEST, of course, (Although, he rea- ia aus evan ihe 6 soned for a moment the “latest |15 very faint and ts visible on @id not wear as well, and one m| us and an objec: looked at TIRE of them easily.) those far away are seen thro Now, strange to say, !t car he aoe Aas chia Mgnt in that that being a fi Monthy, Otherwise, this fable Would not first water’ when it ls vt and hea itho 7 POCKET ven Wonders of the World?” @ mountain top than in a valley? j8—Why do bees sting? shorthand used? @ balloon collapse when the air is pump be answered W nesday, Here are th ills look blue?) The ad tiny apecks float ys" ant sky om ms Ing in the atmoap ft of the sunshine great wtret This nes of atmos: t Epoch Makers IN MEDICINE By ). A. Hasth, M. D. by The Prees Publishing Co, (Th - 5 gj have been written, Those who turns Caperithh. 28 In the Spring a Young Man 8 |usntry into love “step lively” into mat-| JOHN BAPTIST MORGAGN: Fancy Lightly Turns. rimony, Yet to pass out of it, the NCE upon a time there was altread is measured and g#ometimes the Father of Pathology. O young man, “In the spring a|Way {slong and hard, which this young T the famous medical congress young man's fancy Ughtly turns}man found A held in Rome, Ttaly, in 1s, the to thoughts of| Given a lady moon, a loose strand o world’s famous German patho- love,” says the/@uburn hair, a Dutch collar and a logist, Virchow, poet. So this|waistband and the trick ts done, took as the sub- young man was no|bargain made, WITHOUT counting th foot of his speech exception to the! cost. the Italian phy rule, | It Is ao easy! Where de th sician John Baptist In truth, e/had been two souls with but a SINGL Morgagni, In hits turned to every=|thought, there were two souls with NO" noted addrens, be: | thing If@htly.|a single thought. For they had thought fore a gathering Now, according tolonly of a SPRING TIE, which loosened of sclentists Vir- the poet, the love/at the first gusts chow conferred rket must RISB! They had not reckoned on the wear- the title of in the spring an | rey h all the seasons ate “Favher of Pa. take a SLUMP in OR SHINE oR thology” upon thts the fall MORAL: A YOUNG MAN'S FANCY | Ttaltan of the seventeenth cen who But in the ine[ WHICH LOO LIGHTLY TURNS IN| In those days laid the foundation of the | terim several PANICS take 6, es SPRL WILL LATER HIS WINTER | study of this science, | pecially in summer moontights; for the|GARM OF — REPENTANCE] ‘To-day thia ranch of medicine stant WALL flowers are plentiful and in full | PLING, at the head of the medical selen i out T while nearer Wille retain thelr nat or x! #0 thick @ layer of atmosphere as to ar vlu PME BEING, mich as the : @ white one of the tle, So the fancy was satisfiel in the : 1 more sleep than do Krown poop P erring. whose full growth ts attal ep » Jet nature mak But spring doesn't last very long, for| ail tear which the da vialled 1 on old Father Time hastens summer and| repair wasted tissues, but to e the th, ‘The ba . fall and winter upon the scene, and the}enough sleep does not ga 1 growth young man's fancy had lghtly turned| %—(Why do we see lightning before we hear the accompan AGAIN~away from the spring fancy, |Phunder and lghtning ave simultaneous, But tight travel so much a The flame went out at the first cold|than sound that the 1 is seen before sound of the accompanying thunde blast. 5 ean reach our ears But now ft was not so EASY to turn (What is meant by a “diamond of the ) A diamond t ut flaw or tint New York World) and numbers among It students somo men, h deals es of dineases of the world's most famous Pathology is the actence whi with the origin and cat and their effects upon the tiesues and organs of the body, and ts Great and Important branch of medicine, It iw directly concerned with the wel- indeed a wrote you no note, For- tune; I have never written you a note of any kind, You do not know my hand- writing from Adain's, Why didn't you ask your mother or your uncle? They would have recognized the forgery at once, Who gave !t to you? Mahomed himeelf."* ‘Curse him!" Ryanne grew strong un- der the parsing ft of rage. ‘No, don't tell me to be allent. T don't care about myself. I'm the kind of a man who pulls through generally, But thie takes the spine out of me. I'm to blame; it's all my fault, “Say no more about She believed him, She really hadn't thought him capable of such baseness, though at the time of her abduction she had been In- clined to accuse him, That he was here, A prisoner like herself, was conclusive evidence, a0 far as ahe was concerned, of his Innocence. But she knew him to be reaponatble for the presence of Jones; knew him to be culpable of treachery of the meanest order; knew him to be lacking in generosity and magnanimity toward a man who Practically hie hat does Mahomed bally rug, Fortune. And Jones fare of man, since It strikes at tho who had it, seve thet 1709 aa very toot of disease und aime to wipe ished, masic-carpet-wiee,” aup- it out, Once the cause of a disease a] Ana Sone wuld have given it up.” known {ts prevention and cure are mire| “And a thousand: ike ite If we could to follow, and it Is to pathology that|have bought you out of this.” ve look to-day for these great epor ‘@ managed to making discoveries that are ever going Jon, ever Improving health cond!- | F ihe wumar ue foinaauan aels TAD 1 you have tet to | iat adlenee Wan laid be Jona {Mf Jones his thousand pounds 5 | a ' Yes, and everything else T hav vraag. honestly Morgagn! was born at uF n't worry any more about the gnit, Italy, In His early edue ' T know where it ta” Hy AChE ane vie" orled the tWo men. nt to Bologna tos “Yo, Latole it, Tdld so, thinking to i Here he dlaplared such an. {avert this very hour: to save you from " harm,” to George, “and you trom doing ability that he was choses | a contemptible thing,” to Ryanne, “It at teacher Valaalva to aamst ty in my room, done up in the dig iim in carrying on the Investigation and! xteamer roll, And now fam @lad tha study of the structure of the human|l atole it." 0 After four years of study he ¢ | Rr laughed weakly |tained the degrees of Doctor of Medi-| 2 ree soe nd of Philosophy, At the early |{empttole thing twenty-one his love of study anc such @ degree that he was often 4 usual ability manifemed themselves | | Mah ymed’a words tn regard to Ry: as the latter lay insensible in the sand. Ryanne, quick to nelge the oppor- \}tunity of solving, to hls own advantage, adventure. Here was a simple way out of the dimeulty. “softly,” said Ryanne. “Let us come down to the fean facta. If that rug is in your room, Fortune, your mother hae discovered it long before now. She wilt turn it over to your estimable uncle. None of ua will ever see it again, I'm thinking. The Major knows that Jones @ave me a thousand pounds for ft.” Struck by a sense of impending disas- ter, Ryanne began to fumble in Als pock Gone! Every shilling of it gon ‘He's got that, too, Mahomed; the cash you gave me, Jones, Walt a moment; don't «peak; things are whirl. ing about some. Over nine ‘hundred pounds; every shilling of it, We muatn't let him know that I've missed {t, I've wot to piay weak in order to grow strong. © © * But they will at least start up @ row as to your whereabouts, Fortune. thoughtfully; T do not “No, think they will.” Tho undercurent was too deep for George. He couldn't see very clearly just then. The United Romance and Adventure Company; was that all Was there not something sinister behind that name, concerning him? He looked patiently from the girl to the advea- turer, Ryanne stared at the yellow desert beyond. His brain was clearing rapidly under the stimutue of thought. He him- eM did not bell that they would send out search parties either for him or for Fortune. He could not fathem what had given Fortune her belief; but he realised that his own was based upon the recollection of that savage mood when he had thrown down the mountiet. Now they would accept ft. He ‘had run away with Fortune as he had boldly threatened to do, The mother and her precious brother would proceed at once to New York without him. He had made a fine muddle of it all. But for a glam of wine end a @rain too much of confidence, he had not deen here this day, Mahomed, himecif astir by this -~ came over to the group leisurely. three looked like conepirators to his suspicious eye, but unlike sraceee ies they made no effort to separate use he approached. He understood; as yet were not afraid of him, That was one of the reasons he hated white men; they could seldom. be forced to show fear, even when they possessed it. Well, these three should know what fear was before they saw the last of him. carried oF ki , & cowhide whip, bash which he swirled idly, even suggestively, First, he came to George. “If you have the ¥hiordes, there ts still a chance for you. Cairo te but fifty miles away. te several hundred.” He drew the whip caress- ingly through his finge: “T do not ile," repiied e truculent sparkle in his eyes. “I told you that I had {t not. It was the truth.” A ripple of anxtety passed over Ma- homed's face, “And you? turning spon Hyanne, with suppressed savas nean. How he longed to lay the lash upen the dog “Don't look at mi answered Ryanne waspishly, “If I had it I'd not Se here.” Al, for a bit of his old strength! would have strangled Mahomed then and there, But the drug and the beat- Ing had weakened him terribly. “If LT give you the rug,” interposed Vortune, “will you promise freedom to ally’ Mahomed stepped back, hadn't expected any this quarter, I have the rug," declared Fortune aimly, though she could scarcely hear ‘er own volce, her heart beat so fu- have {tt Mahomed riously, “You con: fused. Here wae @ turn in = road Which he had set no calculation. All_ three of them! nonplussed, information upon n to deliver lecturer in the place| the puggle for George, and at the same) 4!) of Valsalva when that master was for |time gulding Fortune away from a tople, ae peg sehige te ery ti aoa aetna taba was the young |the danger of which she knew nothing, | Rorare fe all, 7 will put, writing tate [water and 10 go directiy to mature fore ee eee ete ne eee ae agnea| 4 White man would have blushed wn- help and thapiration In his work, Hol At ine wien T laid before. you the pros: [cer the reproach in her look, Mahomed organized & goctety of young sctentia'#| pectus of the United Romance and Ad-|*Hiled amiably, pleased over hie clev~ ewes hele alice hi ia s there! Repeat #.. 1| “The Holy Yhlordes. Where ts itt > she oO aly ad the ‘That T refure to tell you, Your word studies and Investixationx and not tol se ty into {ot enor first, to bind the bargain." | rely upon the author! what wan |i a ‘ Mn Ly that time| B¥anne laughed. It acted upon Ma- lout Gaines ook of rose days, |S" surrendered the rug.| homed like a goad. He ralsed the whip, Mecsremal ae ea ape sh ae the here of 2 sale aed Rywnne's gage swerved the ge ne a bf fy Rah ae Bitieae of an inch the blow would have othe hu ‘ veeaa ine vvled Mahomed widespread : athena tnd oat ain with your ut at one t ’ : o facts instead of} Haug’ 1 German 6 believe a word of your honor.” returned Mahomed n when he ¢ Jeap'te the ad-| He Wondered why he held ae Mtlona , ‘ ie. velative{ii# band, “I have matched triekery - 4 ts made to her Injagainst trickery. My honor has not aa ayes been called. 1 fed you, I e you peg 1 vitten,”” was George's sole| int you lied to me, dighon- i sf r reathed easte for ne eyes of my friends, and s 4 a fact verifie ed at once, and! one of t you killed,” h ears later, It Is "8 hay inter back for the It was my life or his," exciatmed " romany 0 ‘ kwented Fortune Ryanne, not relishing the recital of thie \ at ° vy J u ne. |plase. “lt was my life or his, and ke fe utle Father Fle died at the aye of els ) diately.” George felt Detivy Guan he Dad @t any stage of the Was..upon my back." i (To Be Continued) |

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