Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
The Evenin ae ere AH-H-+-H-H-H¢ NOW FoR A NICE AFTERNOON NAP ¢ World Daily Magazine, TuesdaysJuly 23; 1912 ole, You Can Be Your Own Beauty Doctor by Andre Dupont 9. ie Copyright, 1912, by The Presse Publishing Co, (The THE SUN’S KISSES. HE Average Girl was iooking at per nose in the glass. It was @ pretty tue nose and most people would have been quite pleased at the sight of it, But hot so our heroine, As she gazed a frown crept slowly over her forehead and tied up her brows in an unbecoming knot. ‘There werey. New York World), there was no doubt at all about it—five small freckles, the exact color of her new tan tles, clus- tered sociably on the most prominent feature of her face. “Those came from playing golf all the morning without a hat,” sald the Girl to herself, “Whatever tn the world shall I do? And the Country Club dance only three days off, tool” She tried rather half-heartedly to conceal them with a coating of pow- der. But unless the whole nose was covered as thickly as @ frosted cake they obstinately refused to stay in Bo she ‘e up the effort in 4 and, donning a clean shirt. ah t NN waist and a presentable pique skirt, she ran over to the next seashore bungalow, which, at the moment, was sheltering PNE“ FRECKLE GUARD’ no less a celebrity than her dearest friend, the Woman of Thirty. The Average Gin came upon the object of her quest lying ly in @ ham. Mock reading @ popular novel, “What do vou do for freckles?” she inquired, without stopping for any Preliminary greeting, “Do without them," said the Woman, yawning and laying down her book. jut lve got rome and I want to take them off. "* replied her fri Qnclents called thém the Isn't that pretty? “Much prettier than the freckles," said the Girl, peevishly. “Perhaps your back number friends didn't have light hair and falr complexions, or they wouldn't have admired them so much “I can give you no data on the subject," said the Woman. thirty, but not a day more, I swear. Anyway, I don't look “AM this airy persiflage or whatever you call It doesn't help me @ bit,” A the Girl. “Can't I do something for the freckles?” ves, a good deal,” said her friend. “In the first place, whenever you go walking In the sun you can wear a hat that shades the face. The old fashioned sunbdonnet was an ideal freckle preventer. But any hat with a big brim will do, When you motor tn the sun and wind you must wear a vell if you want to nd, unfeelingly. “The ‘I may be bo Keep your skin clear. te “Yes, but for those I've already got?” 7 “Tf you want to take them off quickly have the druggist mix you @ lotion 2. composed of four ounces of lactic acid, two ounces of glycerine and one ounce a ‘of rosewater, and dab it on the freckles several times @ day, using @ clean » camel’s hilr brush, The most obstinate freckles will usually yield to this treatment.” 4 “Painting the lily, as that trite old quotation has tt, Ww be a cireum- ftance to the way Iam going to begin aposed | covered Jutce s to ey were Hut to remove t Is, freckles seated on the fea- 1) of co! lemon wn enesia and and T kn hem off ¥ avant summer f yermanent fr tt remain ca ives all the y takes a h sy vad Mt fe an exce 18E—We lad quite a prominent actress As | fee ; ft bard > entertain bert he | Re eee sl ake tarused beret for Mauss, : | We dust, idea ner” a bunch of | pbotograpbe, be Lady Maciet, APPLYING LOTION mong which wore several of her owa,—Ca re rresolutely J Oe 3 # ended her quotation weakly, ‘foolish spot.’ * q s hon enaad Ber, AUOTE TGR li Ms The Come-Back. Ade out, Why 14 Shake OT ati city folks are oo ignorant of the! nd conundrum about; Why did Shak cll s 7 de oor Sgnoran tte in answer was, Because he was too m fe A i a PY 80 in the usual way. by ap incident tn tbe stay of @ young New York | et on a New England farm, te a = ee -- | young man," gaid the farmer to hie ler, Who was up early and looking = “been olit to hear the haycock rue, 1 al- ry 9 aly old chap winked ot bls ve Betty Vincent's) ar | ia be e | Judge's Library. e See ana is fa Advice to Lovers} Half and Half. 4 | LPH A, CAMERON, who was defeated for | from bad an offic ‘ | boy. wi ‘every’ iovnivg to 42 with . 3 mythic Agure of Opportunity has been representad | £ ‘ig cooler in. the ante-r00m, Cam. bef Fm wevtele Reise af Onnarhaniiy hae Dawn rearensty | fy particular that this water shoud ‘with one tong lock hanging over his forehead and the| Co, war Tey Partiouer thab Mer ahiould back of his head quite bald, ‘This ts to slanify that dak troat the cler sud’ ten glared at the of b i ” ot a Bai € Nee ber, it 18 quite Impossible to cateh Dim « ho has passed illest hee Gemande’ stacnls, (ts thle: Saber It seems to mo that the fate of the little god Cupid | trent” might exhibit the same tonsure, For the gtr) who lets love | i snawered the boy without meeting slip out of fler grasp isn’t Boing to get It back again in a) oi fayaied the bose, “are you ure tht hurry, water is tres! ~ ‘A young man pours all his honest affection and ad-| _jWell ai, ot it ts ifle miration into the lap of @ silly yo nm, And she} ——— laughs and tenses and plays with hin n she is tired | ' ie thes ' were tlmes when MeFee glori Ih many letters, she finds out too late that he was the ‘real Al eae tiene thee Meas stetied 18 the ven one,” and she asks how to win him back. | even if they were on the line of the alp SEY T can't tell her, But why, why, didn’t she know her | rerbial tuman stenladder, but om the day when be ~ fighty Little mind tn the first place? [eee Svaltcg along ‘Ste tay | ure 5 ymy heart to give her up. Do you th wien ue was baled by & policeman, who eaked: ing Another Suitor. that a# a gentleman I should do so Agar, ou what oa been dafe't und writes: “I am tn love w 4} You must ask the girl, and let “Weil, sbat'e the crowd following you fort’ | to- but I have found out tha:|clde according to her Happiness. | aude, ing young man ts calling on her.| | Lopes see # De you think it would be wis» to stop| Monopoly. | No Change. Ard my visits to her?” “E. 1." writes: “I am very much tn E has agked an unsuspecting friend to take \ If you do you will be easily discour-|tove with a girl and she has promised a rove country malk, and ad picked out « ged will naturally have numerous|she does not want me to fo out with! Sreuepted every last one of them to view the ers. others unless 1 ask her consent, Do orchanl, te meadow, Lie deep tangled wildwood, 3 d every loved spot wiileh hia fufancy kuew, 7 — you think she 18 asking too much of | 5.17 ne pointed to @ tery small mod pand, “HL. ©." writes: “I have paid attention | me? | rout zou believe tt, when 1 maa @ boy toa girl for some time, but recently she| Are not you asking the same thing used to,bathe to that mudbolet” 4 | Ne ee ee ecceaeaaie lat hanes ea ratakiee ine tan eaae dows" tosh, sovtnoueh “theg’ Ned! auaaged “kt Uiet'e @teBuume, 2h Would Usariy brewk te saucy for the sander, Setar eine," —TusIohna heart. The Day's Good Stories Clever Host. The Summer Girl 3 (2522343?) 28 The Summer Girl met her match in the Bachelor, r (Te'New York World,) The P RM kl ‘Copyrgut, 11a, by The irese Publishing Vo, (Tue New York World). sé W vere naan coming t0 tue defense got $7,000 while those New York to be operated | for the State received only $5,600. | on.” He doesn't say The defense seems entitled to the de-| whether he is going #9 a hospital or|cision by two thousand dollare ma to Wall street. jority. i “Speeder jined $8." This scems Qn outrageous price for careless driv- ing, until we learn that he endan gered the lives of eight people, “Man convicted by own testimony.” He is in the same foolish class with the man who flaes the tait I his automovile so the police can read his number, The votes of a national convention ‘ini | are the only things that can be) py. amet should be the emblem divided in such a way that three EY'G THING, 11 LAS imme THAT ‘Lb GIVE You TWOT3ITS FOR !T ~ 25 tlun’ ON YouR INV, By Eleanor Schorer Cupid winked his eye us she wasted her time trying to make Gn impression on his asbestos Vacation taken on the lawn, price, $8, includes five wooden poles the n ary ropes and yess, ‘The circular tables, with centre oper- ings for a canop: © another excel addition to the lawn. The tables painted green, and in wood they $3.00. Those 6f metal are $} | canopy of striped awning {9 in the shape of an umbrella and 1s easily adjusted Very neat metal garden chaira have the backs in to the table, These are $21. scroll designs, They go well with Clothing UT-UF-DOOR life conveniences are now demanding attention. ‘There are the palmetto tents in which such comfort can de RED PER CENT STMBNT The Man in the Brown Derby of Great Summer Story of New York By Wells Hastings ° Copyright, 1811, by Bobte-Merrill Os.) SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS, and sank down out of sight, while the Other resumed his Jelsurely round. But now that I khew where to look, Maso Serer. oung New ¥: from time to time, I could catch @& Sree ts banda, a pot cod” Slimpee of the forehead and eyes of the {ncome "to “wary ‘Boud, man on the roof, as he peered cau- Ephraim ‘wants of tiously through the castellated barrier; and I thanked Heaven that I had hid- den myself, and way douoly thankful that evidently 1 had been able to hide myself unobserved. Apparently at six o'clock the guards were to be changed, “petaytranie. fart, lore with ecb other, Le and I wondered if the place w , norma wr place way 80 fees inepred.. fie traces "ber ty watebed and patrolled both night and iickingham where she and another woman end day, I knew, at least, that the ni ‘ote Would be dark, which I had Marbury, would no longer make the moon, the world too bright for prowlings of my own, T settled myself down behind my bush, ort Srna pine Maw t (AS anonrmon Wevlor elle Mion love... There. among ment” tet sSecmeinan igohena, dhe" imovk, elation, Leaving the anloon, ‘meets stretching out my amped Imbs to wait atieman namet ) @ best I could the coming 4 hom he telle hie story, Oxilby lends him ig darkness. be . k ice or twice some country A a conveyance, rattled by, but no one the brown derby’ pam eo the man CHAPT: 2 XX. Nancy Agajn. |B found the eanitarium at last. Certainly ite architecture was sufficiently horrible. It W Eases architectural freake more ¢.mmon to forty years ago than to the saner present time, and was built, I uppose, to represent a Rhine castle; for it was broad and rather , with here and there an unmeaning turret, and with ite flat roof bidden by castel- lated battlements. In stone it might have been @ dignified eyesore, but in its palpable wooden imitation it wae @ ludl- crous one. ‘The place was somewhat tn disrepair. Here and there @ battlement had rotted and fallen away, or an oblong discolora- tlon of the walle showed the lose of @ plank that had once hardily masquer- eded as granite. Even the ivy, that ran darkly over its walls, and stretched lighter tendrils to the roof itself, seemed not so much the happy refuge of @ thousand twittering birds, ee all deceat ivy should, but rather some great wave that had swept sulleoly against the rot- stopped or made any attempt to go into the sanatorium, Indeed, I thought the villagers who passed me quickened their pace a little as they w by the grounds 4 cod the ominous o!d jomething to fear. At 10 minutes to 6 the watchman who patrolled the grounds passed tn front of the butiding, and at ten migutes past another man, whom I supposed to be his © o'clock relief, came into view. Thi man, J noticed with regret, was muc! Searsenne and alert, probably a more ¥ person for Sate Bar gent the diMcult night that there were twenty minutes be! each coming and going. And I hoped, once darkness had set in, to be able o much in those twenty minutes,” ot Course there was always the watoh: on the roof, but if the night were dark enough I thought my chances good e8ca pli observation.” * a darkness, which tn o lay seems to come go unexpeot. if It were thrown over the world tke'e Great bdianket, lingered unbelievably. ‘The tender glory of sunset grayed into twilight as slowly ae if some new and not quite omnipotent Joshua, unable absolutely to stop the sun, gd at least malignly retarded it just below the hor- {gon line. But at length twilight was ting, tawdry splendor, running its de &n accomplished thing, and with it Vourlng Angers to the falling battle- windowa in the building opposite faced nts, @ wave that must.slowly recede here and there into barred oblongs of ain and with {te next surge engulf this obstructing corruption In its o} When we had driven past, and I looked back at it, the windows on that aide reflected in distortion some bright+ aun, and | saw for the frat joy were barred. Mra. Lath- me gave & litle brightness,” until dark shades @rawn, and the windows were only thin, Pencilled, golden parallelograms in the sombre blankness of the impenetrable wall of black, It was ten minutes ef nine before I judged it dark enough to make my attempt. The watchman, I tought, must just have passed, G ‘hrough my long watch I ha: Myer you cold?” I asked her. the place vary carefully, in tmaginaries No," ehe answered shortly; nor @ur- Pacing over and over again the rosa T ing the rest of our drive, waich I nyw should take to the bulld ng, #0 that now made aa brief 4# possible, did she vouch I atole across the road and the soft tate anotier word, But when We had grass of the lawn, going without stums fone up to our private aitting-room ehe dle, as softly burglar might, until turned to me, with my hand wall before me. armed 19 me. n the place where the ivy The and Ing to do now, Mason Heat) wusworth?” whe asked. sti for it was to be my are ‘um golng rignt back," I sala, “as ladder to the rooms above. Now, as I are| quickly as I safely can, I don't quite #earchea gently among the leaves for Tne|fnow what Ian going to do when I the giant parent stem, I heard a little, half-suppresse? cough. I had come a moment or two too soan, Tt had grown ao dark t! the watchman, who wi re his face made a darkness, and the Ing to et there, but of course I am going t find Nancy if possible, and it I can't, I'm going to reconnoltre and see how I can get Into the place." ™ aWell, hurry,” said Mra. Lathrop. ou may be sure I will do that, Mghter blur in for the Prohibition party, No other| metal garden tables and are $3.25. | renied, “It was yourself who ady white Ine of his collar showed. mors people can truthfully boast of a sub- animal can come 60 near going for-| For camping, the collapsible rubber! ine to go #low.” ae distinctly beneath It, I turned up the stantial majority, ‘ G0'NG 1Or| wash basing are most convenient as| “I know,” said Mrs. Lathrop, “and collar of my coat to hide my own, and ever without @ drink, they take up #0 ttle room io the bag-|of course you must go slow, but for ull with my head bowed, backed close to -__— J | a uch aw you can; foi e wall Into the cool, soft m: of jwaxe. They are $6. that, hurry as much as nj for 4 , | act at it was until long-stemmed tvy lea) ‘Hotels refuse $0 take bach) wy, jgited by mistake.” It fa| The Papyrus dishes that can now be a4 Lisl i sNeart In cold with it yet; Ido not know whether he heard any- strikers.” In that case the waiters)” mistake to jail i gg} found In any department store are ideal! saw sweet young 1ac in there, thing or not, but he stopped just in would be justified in continuing the|"CVer ® mistake to jail a man, He ts) tor camping, ‘There are plates in afi|and that sweat souk ot front of me, and I could distinctly smell an always guilty of something, sizes from 6 to 18 cents a dozen, Disha | *" Lae verourse, ts absurd,” Tans the hot lacquer of his closed bull's-cye strife, for serving meat, salads, vegetables, | wwered.” “If anybody is rerponaible, lantern and hear hie Dreathing even —_— ‘i r varlu’ ‘eo her out of there, &bove unding of my hear nen ; “Man watke ten miles to church." | a, &e, are in Various neat shapem) i, Tut I shall have her out th ne, ,Gueve ihe pounding of my n A third party will at least be al at nominal pric throp. ic L have to hurt | As some might say, he is giving his| f Mra Lainie bia neck and continued on his great convenivnce to the professional | 0 | Sanitary towels are another camping #0 c i aa ¢ . When I wae sure that he mu: tacans. sole to save his soul, feonventenes, and when one can get a "Hurt anybody vou MMA" ane olla, Botner T slow peer, ike package of eighteen towels for five snapped; “Im ruse they dewerve I iy togan my climb, fee pina cent mor nalble to en only be gir mighty sten A its looped a “We will some day have a woman, “Author goes to Canada for atmos. than is alien) dase en “as t trouble P Pitniets Root £9 KP branches, holding” mgsolg’ tent President." Then, of course, her|Phere for new book.” This probably | require washing, : ee to the place again £ Ryans ih want Ranned Sa the aarks husband, “The Firat Gentleman of explains why 40 many of our new| A travelling set includes an trom, eM yf myself velint a dig cluanp of dusner mounted ten feet, when the Land,” will have to give a har- books are composed largely of at. 30.0) i ledge Pkg hel TIS Se ene a false window,” a Bian he greatest h n the quicke: me, jy arm land, h the wall afias tha one mony tea to all the husbands of the musphere and a receptacie for holding the alcohol 1 felt Lee want hs ee dayn OF arch defeated candidates, Supt These are $% and the entire outs and aoly f 7 ey cer aed the — | “Contortionist breaks bac He ft measures 6xox2, to studying “How can I control my fftcen:| was probably trying to make both) With one of te recently mentioned Bi)\, peeving through year-old son, who disobeys me?” asks ends meet. With the high cost of five | gui oe anit can be used ina wash base, {0M WANS y a mother, Begin fifteen years ago to ing tt will break any one, hand @ supply pen underwear that yuard was lees ant fs make him wind, | alse 78 : th HA RUD ROMe LM torn: eGrner af ee ‘cinchol ie he vhirt waists an the ¢ ‘ “Convention used unit rute in vot-| ince pieces, the laundy nem du yoked ano ha ewutio a Pe 5 uid the inan on the “Survivors of the battle of Bull ing.” Then why do they arrest a|the vacation days is eas ed, mea fe ‘ Hee: er rf, Run organize.” Then why not or- married man for voting twice in elece| In travelling at Wey ee aenn Voice anawered, “what tat? | Don't, Know! tho hele ganize the survivors of the battle of tions? | arrving the necessary mending tn Hota chin: oan asked , | ts he form ¢ From nie ements 0 Bull Moose? eeeneniirrers |roll, ‘These are not more than alx roof another fi r DID HI® BES Hiong and less than two he sa and tossed “Barkers want truth.” We al| ‘You can’t sit up with my daughter| eter, They contain two spools of cotton, ae 7s man Oe ruth—adou atter 11 o'clock two balls of darning cotton, ping “Wat time ta tL) Ni tate an on want the truth—adout some one ele. | iy 1g you mind telling her that, sir?| needies anda thimble, These neat litte Petcare rere Fe es arueed I have been trying to get home early| sewing rolls can be had in tan or black piv In a sanity hearing the altentete for tor six mouths."—Lite leather at 63 cents, "an an T! anid the man on the roof,