The evening world. Newspaper, May 11, 1912, Page 10

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RLS WHO PANT THER FACES MAKE TENSEVES LY New York’s Streets Filled With | Maidens Who Are Ridicu- lous Frights. Wash your face!” | Magistrate Voorhcon gave that sar. Genie command to Miss Florence Ack- @rmman, the pretty little elghteen-year- 8 runaway who was arraigned in @ Breokiyn police court the other day. The bench #aw that its decision was better," commented the Magistrate, And as I stroiied up Fifth avenue I felt inclined to repeat the Brooklya Magistrate's decree to just about two- thirds of the young girls I met. Cer twenty. It ts probably no exaggeration to say that at least two out of three paint. out of thp employees’ ent Wg stores, other little girls in the ele- Afternoon walk, elaborate young women of eighteen over on the avenue—all ap- Dear to be rouged with the same rabbit- foot. And it's so unskilfully handled! One favorite style might ve termed the our-besutiful-youn; roine makeup. Ie consists of @ deep pink spot, about im the form of the regulation Cupid's the mouth, The eyebrows are artificial- i 2, the Palmers |She laughed again when I wanted to put |the profession of @ gentleman unless one Roll Cut. 4 t' with | o popper on it, but she would let her fath- | Could hide one’s {dentity; yet he felt . 0) ul } 1 ‘arched, and small black beauty | tne: Senieaed “Palmares ks lowe as O | Slim sateen epee You have ao | Pwrput a little dish gravy over it if te |that the publig should be educated Dy ' spot is aMxed directly below the left] thought I was going to an inn of some| “Any friend whom my Cather brings | were not palatable. Late tt, not because |this means, He was a Democrat, but Lbewol kind or to pay, my board I had not|to us is welcome, Mr, Palmer, but we|I iked it then, for I would have eaten | beHeved in a high protective tariff; he Picked out with Diack greaee-paint. Then the young woman who has per- petrated the fell deed looks in the giass and admires her own resemblance to Mra. Patrick Campbell. Variations aod modifications of these two designs fill our streets, and the worst of it is their chief exponents are Hittle girls in thelr teens. Where, oh where, is our natural bloom of youth? ‘We may leave the ethics of the case! out of conalaeration. Granted that the trl who rouges breaks neither the Ten Commandments nor the statutes of w York, To be sure, Mr. J. M. Bar- makes a Painted Lady symbolic of “things we never mention.” And a 00d many men continue to regard the girl with the artificial blush—well, to regard her in @ rathor unpleasant man- ner. It 19 nevertheless perfectly true | that a great many perfectly nice and good iittle girls use paint and powder, ‘The more the pity. For would they dp it if they realised how ugly they look? ‘It is a hideous thing for a pretty girl to paint herself up like an Indian,’ ys Magistrate it a bit too man, he grasps only effect—and condem: Be ing @ woman, perhaps I can analy: the reasons for the resulting atrocity. In the frat pla & young girl never los. Her tg- norance is proved by the very fact that we criticize her, The skilful cosmeti- clan, if I may coin the word, ts like the skilful criminal—never detected, Her face 1s like a Worth frock, so artificial that It seems only simple and natural. I frankly admit that I am not familar with her seoret processes, But I sus peot that she uses the most expensive materials on the market, materials not even known by name to the average woman, and that she ures them very sparingly. What doos the little “painted girl” do? Buys a Z-cent packase of rouge over the counter in the neafest department ‘That ex- ven If @ young of the make- eve no result #0 pleasing as ber own satural, soap-and- water, fresh-air complexion. ‘To gtld refined gold, to paint the lily” ts true art compared to rouging a girl's roses, Powder and paint were originally in- vented for poor old raddled women of the world, who wanted to recapture youth. It's so utterly silly for a young | persen to think that her beauty needs such artificial assistance. She might just as well walk with a cane, because grandmamma, perhaps, needs o Suppose your cheeks are not rosy. A healthy pallor with a flush that comes and goes is exquisite. Or suppose you have the traditional milkmaid bloom, Be thankful for it, and don't make « whited sepulchre of yourself with rise powder For a Healthy and Clear | COMPLEXION | BRADFORD'S Blood Purifying Pills |, (Ovaranteod under the Lute Food & Drugs Aci P| ‘Wor all disorders of the Stomach, Laver and ney cleanse Us tem ‘of all im Box of 50 Pills, 250 at al) drug stores | For free sample write to | See: l y fri show you the door.” ‘The makeup habit seems to know no|{ Class distinctions, Little girls hurrying | houses and immediately offered me the | €oblet neces of the! horpitality of your roof." “Tale a “The Turping are not farmers, Vators of the big oMce buildings, mat-|they are planters, and if we have to| assembled for dinner, I will ask you to| Inughed heartily, but grew very red and | said he had nover heard her play tt be- inee maidens, sohoolgiris out for an|Cook our own meals, we serve them forego the pleasure of @ chat over our| showed some annoyance when he re-| fore, and though I asked her often after their : ipe D. E. IE CO. Had Gen, Oglethorpe himself arisen to after the dissppearance of the rouge| Confront the Colonel I do not think he | MAJOR BRCHIBALS BUTT [rine lhe TH 4 xrace of man-|rice and that I was eating it becauee| judged that the former and two or| away in his own sult cases. The rob- | OTH SID SHIELD ner and the exquisite potae of her head| she had fixed {t an@ told me to do #0. I| three negroes did it all save in thejwere had gone so far as to tear the turned A Romance of Love an By Maj. Archibald W. Butt} | cmewnat ty “surprise and) you must! would often say, "Wil you have your One of the Titanic’s He-oes and exouse many things, but we make you rice with cream and sugar on It, or a| Link's Ho Palmer, ¥ but cam & n grave davaget thir Tntites. Valmet (0 fume ‘ask a certain question, CHAPTER I. as to form tles of blo tainly not to of playing billiards with Hilen and taik.| After dinner wo went on the porch, Former Military Aide to President Taft playing | I hope rn for me any cone E EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, MAY 11, 1912, frank, open face. I 4 beautiful then, I the heavens. I heard Bud and the Colo-| closet ransacked and 62,000 worth of nel discuss the work on the farm, and| jewelry, cut glass and clothing taken 4 not think her! we would both taugh. She seemed to was unprepared | relish the idea that I did not like the and the patrician face that wi made this fact very plain to her by the| picking season. to me without any sien of embarrass-| faces I would make in swatlowing it. (To Be Continued.) d War ment. whatever, Her oyea were large) She confessed afterwards to a iittle —_ > Se aE i aa ar ge a Akon Us| UReee Trey weann teeltken ie tnc| COST $2,000 FOR JURY DUTY.| GERMAN WARSHIP STARTS. Robbed Whii eving tn Coart feathers trom Mra. Link's new spring | hat. He} KIL, May 11.—The German crutser Moltke, which together with the/ cruiser Stettin from this port, and) itis with father I have @ good) where Bud brought us piper It cost Robert Link of No. 65 Weet| the cruiser Bremen, now on the Amori- | you like the pipe,” h One Hundred and Vorty-fourth street}! wan station, has been selected to re- right welcome; and when you get tired little pepper, Mr. Palmer?” was The young man who was addressing me an old briar-root; “we have given | more than $2,000 to serve as @ juror in aid last June to this mo was iall and big, and when J had up elgare Iately—on account of the tar-| the Geventh District Court last Wed. [turn the Uist pall lanl file ty tie Mt red Thad mistaken him for a iff," he added with a big, good-natured | ee Ti ie a cigar manufactory |DOt bY been 1 ee Ee Son 1 hore ho was, iaugh. I said I did; that it was my|TOMiSy. Pink vine a eet rundred and | United States Atlantic Mieet, salle | Feta" vag it ing me welc ¢ ease of a chiefest luxury in my university days, | porty-fitth street, where he went after | morning by way of the Cattegat gnd | om my etna. my shijtrea have fad, courtier. Mrs. Turpin was a small, and I preferred 0 clgars. Coll nig jury duty. Later in the evening,| the Skagerrak, round the north of | mend it to my friends,” i dojleate-looking woman, but was gowned | Turpin sald that if T did not object to| with his wife, he went home. The door | Denmark, for Cape Ilenry on the Vir- So Throat and @ faded royal 3’ vel mastic Elen would play us something: | Was tiarricaded and @ latch on a ‘window | ginlan coast. sore dently the remnant of that she always did when he took his | ppoken. ‘The cruiser Stettin will follow to-| RADWAY'S RWADY RELIEF, et "You young people can make plane at| after dinner smoke, I said that 1 could| Inside Link found every drawer and| morrow by way of the Kiel Canal. RADWAY & CO,, New Yo the table, In the mean time Eilen's not imagine greater luxury, and I daned roast {s getting cold,” said the Colonel. | back prepared to undergo any amount Then I remembered about the cooking, | of torture and outrage to my artistic ood, and cer- Jeration on that core. Seoling ike «| 804 thought for a mom t what @ sacri. | nature, for I knew something of music, KL, there is one Mt-|culprit, I threw myself tle thing 1 should like | determined to leave the ness is business, you! offending my kind old hort know,” I said, laughing, to have settled. Busl-/firet moment I could do so without he found me prepared to do ms Justice to anything in tha | table was made bright and chert by] “T do not know if you care for Cho- lege it would be devour anything |as my father had been a splendid per- prepared by those lovely hands, but @ former on the plano and had given me idden convulsive pang of hunger ban- the benefit of his knowled: Instead ished my sentimental thought and I) of hymns and waltzes, however, there offered my arm gladly to Mra Turpin, | floated through the window to us the while she Jed the way to the dining- | sweetest notes I seemed ever to ha on the bed, Pines at the aid not Hke the . 7y / enforced, too, and protesting Mise Ack ogy ce aigntte tne. suidcnly anumed CHAPTER I. Foom, Ttyas, in fact, an tmmense hall heard, T ant dreamily thinking of this @rman was given soap and water treat: | at she mention of business, ‘In Juatice ( go ig pickaninny, Sam, ibeve the. pansivag vere. # ined and, Woes tke bpp red atthe ‘wintow ond ment by the police matron before being | to both of us, 1 ought to ask you how | nocked at my door to t . : allowed to piead her cause. “That'e| much will be my board by the week.” | me that ‘diner war (Cp tell | ao tar a9 1 could aoe, oven mouldy. Tt | asked if there were anything I liked oe: was & gloomy-tooking piace, but the! pecially. two big candlesticks, On the table was| pin,” she said “Father does not know . we mote a han | Way of food which might ib be. and powder and artificial eyebrows, “It| coWd have shown more surprise SH00| tory me, Thad beet travelling sr ake | @ profusion of dishe fiver, | t fe Chopin, but it ts the music be tikes 1 not only ridiculous, but a hideous! Himself up with a dignity which was | © ail intents and purposes without Ee ee Stary one Gee lGrnete tine. thing for @ pretty to paint herself ly co ding, and, speaking m @|#fything to While anxious to ‘ out] : Pe a up Ike an Indian.” sugpreaned velee, he asked 6! |antisty my hunger, yet it was with| Which wee not broken or chipped. “The truth is, Mies Turpin,” I said, “I ‘When have the Turpina adopted the |#2Me feeling of embarrassment that 1| $e0h steamed wih some savory Tegete- | #4 not think of what you were playin, and then back down Broadway to-day | Custom of guests, I beg you to tel were not a kinsman of my dear |otioning me to follow England when I waa a boy. silent watohes.”” talnly vome one ought to say to them:| 1 stood covered with confusion, "/0n the outside, with thelr rims com-|' “Me conversation was ensy and home-|" My wpeech sounded like flattery, and e “Wash your f humbly beg your pardon if T have of- | plete sir i at bak Li like, and I saw at once that I wes not| § blushed as the thought oame to me. ‘T > ( No one with an observing ey: a| fended you, Colonel, and Tam Greatly | sown he hae sea. ihe o = K the | 100Ked upon as @ stranger. No questions | hope you will forgive my praise {f It \ WN Se ug A Q ® live in New York and fail to notice the| Mortified to have ao Areply wounded |Samn he hav one and took the! wore asked me about myscit, for whioh | seemed extravagant,” I said, “but I only , wideepread use of commetic you, but until this moment I thought ae I A T was thankful, and I soon aaw too that| said what was in my heart without re- . \ b sirls between the ages of fourt you had been kind enough to receive me ate years, Mr. Palmer,” he eai4,! the Colonel did not intend to relate the| flecting that you might take it for fiat. ’ asa boarder, I felt gratefd enough for|"We have abandoned the time-honored 4 you should not put me under | custom of drinking mint tlons which Tecan never repay and |Our dinner; but in order t ot hat you may a@udden tmpulse fear, was given to flattery, but I would f your smo have obviously made the acquaintance| which I have no right to accept. But |feel perfectly at home and rest certain fuest at the Pines. Go, means the endo y Of the rouge pot and the stick of biack | You yourself are somewhat to b I air,|omly while sitting, but as with no lems degree of hospitality than | juleps and drink standing. when @ mgger stood at each door at the ‘beok and call of everybody in the room.” “Col. Turpin, I hope you will forgive| It was the first julep me my stupid blunder or else let mo) tasted, and T a 9 your houre at once." ‘Ai an moh and @ half in diameter, piaced|!n the matter. But we exactly midi ittle sensitive down he His: dint bore proliey wnreem that /torget all about it, and, what 1s more, | the occupants w 1a} t With o thick |gon't ever mention it to Kilen or Bud, ver of rice powder, The ilps are|for they would think thetr old father | my wife, Mra. ‘Turpige to k Coated with a greagy ealve of a some-|had teen lacking in dignity, else a| Klien, and to my bon, Howell Cobb, | section. She covered it with butter and |mever under his own nam». He chose . itchi: ill, -when you ti the what deeper corailine tint, sketched on| mistake of thin kind were impossible.” | whom I hope you-will soon address as | sprinkled a little salt over it and, hand. rather such no de plume as “Vox : sto; swii ng—as you will 5 y ip When ho left mo I fell a prey to| Bud, Ellen, my dear, bid our gue " bow, regardiess of the natural shape of |rearets over my stupid blunder and, | at ‘Then there te the vampire effect |thought it worth Bvery bit of natural color is arefully | the mistake into w buried under a mask of dead-white |fallen. I felt it to be too late now to} yours.” paste, The lips are made very red tn. |ONfes® that In all likelihood there was \ aS eS" |what delicious force the jthe liquor against th face relented into a amil you say, lad, T am not blameless © getting aland I was ushered into And now|where we were evidently | Mr. Palmer, welco emed worke, Kinaman of my old fri ¥ apparent deve . started downatatra to meet the Colonel. aking ONY ie att “it | He met me at the foot of the steps and, | Of, handing plates around the teble an4/muste. Your playing seemed to me to a to ® room in one of the side win, ny eo" t 01 i} i, the Palmers, I would at “oncn | 70, 'T saw two silver goblets, fro if pledging my heath. for you end trust to pleasing father,” lclous fuld should be etpped jon what the | and going back to the piano ahe played Thousands of other m | health, #ir, and that of your kinsfolk,|a farm in the county, and especially | heard it: yet the straii the friends of my young manhood.” when reference was made to Squire | through my head when sit in the p P 1 had Hawkins. I shall never forget how-my | Moonlight or He awake at "4 ?, — hover Corset with | Plate looked afte 4! nad gone around | tng ef Milen, nt Tete think couldn’t pay them to change—they know. w mouth. The goblets were soon emptied, | every sort of vegetable on the table.| with some resemtment, Col. Turpin expected, for | that I did not know how to eat rice, nor | he was decided in his views, though So A » beg ner’, standing. would she content until he had | somewhat mixed in his politics, 1 found And if YOU VE had enough t ‘Mr, Palmer, let me present you to| taken my plate and arranged it accord. | Out that he was addicted to the naoit of 8 for ihe J come on account |so much sawdust had she tol it | disclaimed being a jingo, but thought it = 2 ‘Sho extended her hand, which I took, | sowed some rice, I would look up to fina |# foreign power. And so the night 2 BF in the handy can. Your dealer— deed, and every separate eyelash is|"° Kinship at all, or if any, so remote and for the first time looked into that |her eyes fixed roguishty on me, and thn | Wore on and the moon aroso higher in wh je or meat, and I soon fell im Che way! but wae merely feeling the effect of the hetping others from the dishes front| be « part of the ecene out here, as if it him, Jed me) oF near Just as wo were wont to 40| were an accompaniment to moon tn im the ratiroad eating houses in New| its wanderings or to the « im their details of our meeting that morning to| tery.” I had been accustomed to pay juleps before | acoount to the other members of the| compliments at will, and sometimes, I not have had this young girl to think of the fact that I feel no resentment on cor refrat | m é i Meas Cae Sone natn coe consent, we ined | me guilty of euch ill breeding for any- troubles for all time. y. for I aw that fe, I have | trom making any reterenc thing im ¢he world. nded. “You told me the: | taken the liberty of asking you to join and I determined to 1 “Lf that ia the way you feel,” \- might get board tn one of the farm-| ime In one of thet ir,” ay feel,” she an: holding the | Colonel to make any explanations which | swered sweetly, “I will play something the family i*| girle had said about Jim, at which she | eomething—I do not know what. Bud didn’t know how m I pledge your | lated what they had said about choosing | that to play it for me again, I never ven now go f Lucky Strike Roll Cut. Now ¥ i could be—until they began puffing 1 load 0 atraw threw|the table. It had left my place empty| She disappeared after a while to clear Re they’re well ° root of my|and came back piled to the brim with | the table and wash the dishes, I thought af the parlor, | Mise Ellen laughed when I confessed | talked politics, and I soon learned that g out” —if moke can Wer dachtes |ing to the manner of eating rice in that | Writing “ploces for the. papers, ‘but dowant the companionship that a re: ing it back to me, bade me eat It, telling | Po! citizen," or sometimes ‘Patri- ¢ me that !t was a part of my education, |ot.” He did not believe that writing was ani fill up with fragrant and delicious Lucky St ry now and then, after I had ewal- |the wrongs of any people persecuted by |the duty of the Government to avenge , Roll Cut—all ready for your pipe— 1 ] range id oot = 2? trains, with its load of golden fruit, is for the | “et This Orange Spoon , a * | rree-Ripened “ Sunkist”’ Farmers Sale Oranges—-Special: Prices! 2” Four trainloads (4) of delicious “Sunkist” | Choose From These Fourt Oranges from 5,000 Prize Orange Groves “Sunkist” ~have just been shipped. One of these giant | Silver Premiums Families of this cityand surrounding territory. | s-- “satis” ome. Spoon, actual size. The California Fruit Growers ship in great quantities when | Geiss Roger andot g For cach ° g + “ 3 ” of 12 \ ft “ the fruit ripens, and they have chosen this city as a “Sale Point. 7oe 00 sane at Le \ wom A big, rousing sale, lasting a week, will be held right here in this city! | aca 120 to help pay : . charges, packing, etc, Read Special Prices at Perfect Oranges For each additional Careful Your Dealer's Ripened on the Tree | ie wnspersandize. (WW a Beginning Monday —_ Learn the difference in flavor be- |, Rend caretully dre tions at right. w J fi 8 Wi ave | n | tion, number of wrappers iP bast drat. Do net th nt Mead ” viata past. Each “Sunkist” isa sweet, juicy, | and amount of cash nec- pty, . leg seedless navel. Each is tree-ripencd, | essary % secure each [California FrsteGro Give your family a delicious and a ea batt * article. Exchange, and ed . picked with a gloved é your te He to the , heal io and provige your able hand! Each comes in a valuable “Sunkist™ Bachan v2 ~ with valuable and exquisite Rogers’ wrapper marked “Sunkist. Premiums petiole Silverware. See further particulars ible Kolfo Table Fock through the mallas at right. Economical “Sunkist Elle elle i on remiums with “ Lemons GBF Balto | “Sunnie Lomee Thin-skinned, extra juicy and each Coffee [iicig ; | wrappers or "hed comes in a valuable ‘‘Sun- Salad Fork ‘as ‘Ay || merely send trad kist”” wrapper. Insist on Oyster Fork |) H rit buy ont? Seah them, as they go farther Child's Fork Pe pad than other lemons, They Orange Spoca 4 | fruit of the finest lity, : cost % more, and the wrappers Fruit Knife Teaspoon J fiiced, ad you wil are of same value as “Sun- Tablespoon a¥9 ROUEN HER kist" orange wrappers. Recipe Butler Spreader the beautiful table all ‘Tredemars Restoteres Booklet free upon request. Chicago, I

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