The evening world. Newspaper, September 23, 1912, Page 15

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WELL WHATE ‘THe TROUBLE WITH POPs LITTLE MAN P 1 Tdinn 1 Dip Some THine You wit SCOLD MB FOR. A MAN Wu2 AT THe ae ASKING FOR fe HEATHEN, AND- AND You GAVE AWAY SOME OP ‘YouR LITTLE Possessions | SuPPos& ” You Can Be Your Own Beauty Doctor THE FACE LAUNDRY. By Andre Dupont k ked the Coprright, 1912, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York World) We are you heating an tron for at this time of night? AverageeGirl as she sazed at her friend's new olectric contrivance, which occupied a prominent position on the centre of the living | room table. } “I always thought you were a good housekeeper,” she went on. “A fiat- fron in the parlor! Whoever heard of such @ thing? You're always giving me points—now let me give you one, or! rather two. The first ts that the kitchen ia the place for laundry work and the second Is the old rhyme: “When the sun is in the West Lazy folks work the best. ‘The Woman of Thirty smiled at her impetuous young friend, | “IT mignht reply like the old darkey that I deny the allegation and defy the alll- gator,” said she, “but on second thought 1 think perhaps I had better enlighten | your ignorance. I am about to try a| new sort of beauty stunt, Did you ever hear of a French face laundry?” “Almost every other kind of a French | tollet preparation, but not that."* “Stupid! I am not talking about a cold cream or face powder, but a new kind of beauty shop. Laura Van Swoll| has just got back from Paris ‘and she told me all about it this afternoon. It seoms that at these places they iron the! wrinkles out of faces just as a laundre: IRONING WRINKLES. smoothes cre: out of clothes. She aid sho had tried 1t and—now what are you giggling about? You look as if/ Yeu dicn’t believe it!" *“{ don't wish to say as the lofdy's tellin’ les," quoted the Girl with a very good imitation of the Coster dialect, “but she's ‘andiin’ the truth wery care- leeely.”” The Woman shook her head emphatically. "Don't you fool yourself! It's no rosy dream T'm telling you, but hard facts, Why, Laura looks ten years younger and her cheeks are like a rose, And, best of all, she told mo just how to do ft, and I was getting ready to try tt as you came in.” "Go ahead; don't mind ie," said the Gtrl. “The first thing 1s to fold a thick towel in a square, “I'd Itke to watch the stunt.” A Turkish towel Is the | “PoP DOESNT CARE WHAT You GAVE 41M You woud Give AWAY THE CLoTHes OFF YouR BACK, You NEEDED CLoTde AND- B for that toadstool. f EAN VON TB KAA SLE ran down the steps of the porch (where her mamma had asked her to stay) and went out into the field, She had heard that the door to Fairyland could be found under a toadstool, and she searched Tt was a sultry day and Bessie fell asleep in the field, Mr. Dream Man came and led her to the right toadstool. 1/)Bessie’s Visits to Slumberland { "Saye t Coprright, 1012, by The Prees Publishing Oo, (The New York World). It was a beut to use for this purpose. Dip this into water as hot as you can dear ft and|uge one with a heavy door in the stem and a giant toad sitting on top, hold It against the face Just below the eves in the way the Harem ladles wear ooking sternly at Besste. thelr veils, Keep !t there until {t ts almost cool and then dip it in again, squeezing only enough to prevent drip- ping. Wo this three times and then take your electric tron, which you must have cool enough so that you can put the palm of your hand against ft with- out scorching or burning it in the least. Smooth tho checks with this, pressing the flesh upward gently until you can bear the heat no longer. Now put some eol4 cream on the and with the tips of the finrors lightly spat or strike it in. “The cream should be allowed to sink into the pores for at least five minutes, and then | yod off and the face water, which ends the operation,” said the Woman as sho Went Into the joining room to com- plete the proc she had just de- scribed, “You certainly do look hea! to say the least," remarked the as her PREPARING THE PACe friend returned in a few minutes with a rosy face, “But you must remember, she continued, fearing the effect of this flattery, “that beauty és only skin| deep.” aid the Woman, "I'm no canntbal.” ‘That's deep enough for me,” Betty Vincent’s| Advice to Lovers Against His Will? i a woman really loves @ man, does she desire to keep him against his will? The problem (s raised in one of the recent playa; raised and left unanswered. Personally, {t seems to me| that there can be only one @aswer, If you care for a pers | son you want that pereon @ be happy, If the heppiness les apart from you, your “ary love says: “C Pride usually eays the same thing, but pride ts a side- | iamue with the average mortal, Whether love is bis or Ilttle —that is the real question which the test decides. And there ie thie much encouragement for the great lover. He or sho ts usually of a feotion once won. NTy forgave her, Do you think she will ad He Care? respect me for being ao easy with her?’ “Y, B.” writes: “Every time T change] sno certainly should respect your my boarding place a young man friend of mine asks for my new address, Do you think it shows that he cares for oP, KK." write: “T am a young me?" man just entering my high school At least ho doosn't want to Mae) course, Am I too young to call on & track of you. girl my own ay or should I wate till “ I'm through ol?" “gs, W." writes: “My flancee Bald ips ou ahauia’aniey the acciake of aint vited to a dancing party. She pew friends, but you are too young for do not dance, and so she Went With! ove i aying, her brother, though it was nat} Do you t she] “A. 8." writes: "I am @ young fel- ‘low of sixteen and recently a girl / my express wishes, was doing right?" An engaged girl {s not supposed to 80} neighbor tried to induce me to go out| out without her flance, But tf she Nkes dancing, why don’t you learn? “L, F." writes: "My flancee quarrelled with her, But I haven't any use for her and don't want to pay anybody regular attentions at my age. Now her mother ts trying to make trouble big enough and fine| enough personality to keep without conscious effort at: | H | | “What do you want?" he croaked. “I want to go to Fairyland,” said Bessie, very much frightened at this gruff voice. “Wei her mother's wishes. “Well, we shall and read something from it. you good to-day?" he ask Copyright, 1812. b (The ‘Tho Preys Pubits\iin N Nd), . York World) NERGY and Steadines# m: Nke an Antithetioal 1 y Sound eting mans! en tf you ATUS « Hounded, don't "Dog It!" ‘Tho only Surgteal Operation that most of us N fs the Amputa of our Vanity Ver- miform! used We but {It's @ Great Winner for Hu-/ Ocea-| ed. Pay you'll b ‘Story To | Winet The Res'inr Feller | Down-in-the-Mouth merely because he | Happens to be Down-at-Heel! The Trouble about \'# that they Lead into Bind Alleys! The Zig who Peremptorily Declines to Have his Friends him Ain't Got NO Cl the Long Runt Apologize and the On Aa between the Rum who Refuses to answered Bessie, thinking of how she had left the porch against satd the toad as he opened a large, heavy book “Cheer Up, Cuthbert!” 34 By Clarence L. Cullen} Reoounting the Hard Luck) of Mind’ ay over the Walnuts and| Dutch—but we DO Suggest that they Disdains to look most Short Cuts Pass the Hat for| hanst to Lose in © who declines to {Mooings of a Belle Moose, By John L. Hobbie. ole ty Copyright, 1912, (th A husband will ask his wife to Isten to reason and at the same time expect her to listen to him, by The Press Publishing Oo, wk World), VERY man trains himself to be a fool In at least one direction, According to the best auutuorities over half of the men vote wrong !n every election. Some dellove that the o * Ufe for a woman ta to m miserable by reforming some scoundrel with me for no just cause and threw her engagement ring at me. @he came to me and with my parents, What shall I do?" Leave the girl alene; you ere quite end E justified, sionally iy “Abused” unt!l Telepat pt an Apol ey we're Inclined to we were Getting the Ha-ha! Consider tt a Cate of “Boy, Fetch us pen | Another Deck—this one ts Gummy!" “shinny on Your Own Side” Sounds Iéke a Pretty Good Slogan—but we've) A Bird in Han@ may be Worth Two Noticed that the Fellera who don’t Lean |!) the Bush—but we Know a Lot of Too Hard on that Stuff are the Good Shots who Don't Belleve that who Cop! Wheeze! Just as Well to Fasten the Thournt! No, we're not Molterin’ for Folks to In the Tack of the Bean that Some Oid| Work Themselves into “A Happy Frame le Vis e 861—What ts near 302—How fast doe! “flat” when the kevs 304—How is works) producect surface to linen? awored We replies to b—(Why eek the alr ZA POCKET VYCLOP Ovpvyrigist, 1912, by The Press Pubiiahing Co, (The New York World. ‘sightednesa? 8 sound travel? 363—Why is a musical instrument are unstrung? green fire (in fire- $65—How does starch give a glazed Co flying insects ‘# lower regions in | Wet weather?)—As such thmes the lower fair in love or war unless he happens jinsects seok it, ie te be the ene who topes, Si-(Waep wil water run through progress, A man will insist that everything !s|air ts warmer and for this reason tre THE Fercar SAw yar NEW Fur OVERCOAT ON THE HALL RACK AN 48 SAID IT WOULD Do VERY NICELY ge ann: Orl-H-H Tur Be Auten, “PRESQNTLY IN ON cal BY ee: My tay Y 7 me > ey aes 2 ’ AVL BN HAND AUR eSahuny. <8 tg FU pa sh oe eer MENON WLR ee The door in the stem of the toadstool opened wide and Bessie went in. Bverything inside was as she had expected, beautiful and sunny, with many pretty fatries, but very warm. There was a beautiful fountain in which the fairies and some kiddies who had come there before Bessie were splashing adout, having a fine time and keeping cool, Besse wanted to go in, too, but one of the fairies said that she could not becouse the toad had telephoned to them that she had disobeyed her mother that day and must be treated accordingly. And #0 it wae during all her journey through Fairyland, She was not allowed to take part in any of the frolica. When she went out the giant toad was still sitting on hie stool. He said to her: “Come back some day when you have been good. Then you can have a lot of Jun. 1 wit know because I write tt all down in my big boo! When Beaste woke she hurried home to the porch and has been a good girl ever since, in hope that the Dream Man will take her back to Fairyland for a lot of fun, ELEANOR SOHORBER, when they're Undeniably In) Got Four Snort Wagons, each the Size of an Ocean-Going Tug, and he Gtves ALL the Girlies a Ride and is what you'd oall Bure-Wnough Warm Medi- cine! Take a Hopeful Glant at the Future if Onty that they May Climb Out. Better be Buffaloed than Self-Bunked! The Gink we Fall For ts the one who, though there's not a Remote Chance that He Htmaelf ever witt have to Ask for @ Chance, Still is Willing to Give the Other Feller One! Hate Baps the Vitality like an Open ‘Wound—but Love ts a Bullder-Up! We Honestly Hate to Think of How ‘any Benighted Zigs who, Bragging in the Flown Years that they were “Only ‘Hitting the High Places,” now are Jes’ Limpin' "Long! to it that they don't Out-Game You! We may be Wrong, but Somehow Belleve that Fetter to Get the Gate than Jes’ Barely Pass! Often, when we become @ Leetle too Chummy with Ourselves, we Suddenly Wake Up and Begin to Wonder what Orneryness we're Trying to Square Our- selves for with Conscience NOW! Acknowledge the Corn To-Day, that yo May Not have to Eat Crow to-morrow! The Ohronic Chinner was Ne‘er Yet @ Bure-Fire Winner! The Minute we Drop Into that “Leav- Ing-Well-Fnough-Alone” Humor we Ao cept our Tioket for the Tobog! Stick Around! Once, back in the Flown Years, we Sogged Up a Perfectly New $12.60 Sutt of Clothes, Pulling out of the Water @ JustaJilted Pal who was Bent ‘On Doing the Dutch Aet—And Now hi from’ Astigmatiam! PICKED UP FROM HERE AND THERE. A thin paste of fuller’s earth and water, allowed to remain a couple of ayn before removal, will remove gr spots from floor matting, at DI pipes to the top of a hil?)—When its source of supply ts from some higher place, or when it da artificially forced upward, Water seeks its level. *8—(Whatt causes @ radnbow?)-—When the clouds opposite the aun are very dark and the rain Ie still falling from them the raya of the @un are divided | by the raindrops as they would be divided by @ prism. %9—(Why dors a To lessen the labor of one feature of housework there has been invented a comPined implement that scrapes aide of a dith and mopa the other at ihe same time Caps and masks made of aluminum ap bubble usually | tubing, through which etther hot or burst wefore touching ground?)—Bo- | cold water can be circulated, have been cause the water runs down toward th?) invented bya Vienna sclentiat for use ‘bottom of the bubble, leaving the bub-|as surgical compresses |die's top too thin to reatet the alr| a preasure, Twe French + have patented | %0—(Why cannot we hear sounds as} a propaller wi ades extending well !n wet weather as in fine?)—Tho| far forward and hack of the hub, and #0 falling rain interferes with the sound waves’ undulations and impedes their and ne vacuum is formed around the sl They may Out-Scheme you, but See | #!! The “Show Me" Man gonerally Suffers | : | one haped that the water js not churned! e Diamonds By J. S. Fletcher : bin snd Hy. ¥» Hrttts udalus'e Doettt, © ered 28338 a ne be come: tiche were with the Ft yaring we discon CHAPTER xu. (Continued, The Furnace in the Glass Works. INNEY was not the man to re- : iinquish anything of value that that fell into his hands without meking an effort to retain it. He knew that chance had Piaced a» fortune in his power, and he there and then Cetermined that it should not easily be taken from him. He had no fear what ofa hepnbaa being made Cor Holling on Bie premisee— tain beyond the ebattow of @ doubt that no one had recognised the ex-warder at the station or in tne outekirte of t town by which he had guided him, or had seen him admitted by himself to tho glass worke yard. 80 secure was time In thinking of the matter, were other and more important matters to think of at that sade ee meait up to thinking o! \. wre tree pong the immediate dimpowal of the dismon Finney, under an- other name, kept @ meager bere uae a Leeda, ten miles away, with a frm bolleved him to be a respectable one- {net ssemed ot lexged gentleman posseared of house property, and did not know that the ;,, considerable aums be paid into hie ac- count were the proceeds of usury. His bankers kept various little matters for him under lock and key; Finney deter- OP ice ena ghovel inined that the diamonds, hidden from jig what wae aight in a carefully led. parcel, ine chanee tat eoute, should be deposited with them next o¢ the cottage or ite day. a fancy te carry owt them up For My wend iaid them in eufticien| in Bis determination ourely of the corpse The only plan sna it room ations, The In an old flannel wh {9 Dut the book a hiding place of Ms own which it w: 160) ‘eed up the ‘extremely unlikely that anybody bUt ine yard of the ry =m himself could find, clase works to thinks further. & goot—the diamonds were ia about te - ° But what of the ¢agnion, Finney waa pos vein Gisposel of Holling’ body? He looked 44 by the answer to Me at the poor house of clay ae it lay OD neq waited, ‘2 pure the bed end felt by no meang wall close to one of posed toward te late tenant. Aed them, which sweating ith the coolness characteristic of him, grawing out he locked the door upon the bedropm at and it contents and set to work tO snowed prepare hie breakfast. fealised what While he and drank Finney ©on- was jus sidered the question of ridding himeelf o¢ of the thing in the next room. At @ret he thought that he would go to the per ‘station, tell the inspector that 4 ceme to him jete at night, beg: tor seins, a08 had died during the night. ‘That would shift the responsibility of mem! Gealing with the body from his own ¢e1) into shoulders to those of the authorities. whem not « He could my that he did not know the molten that Holling wes wanted for murder, 1¢ Holline and thus escape any charge of collusion ne would be with the dead man. But @ moment's fe- end bone, within & wa flection convinced him that this plan ney had sow found the eolutien of his would certainly be attended by €nt consequences All sorts of questions would be aaki the body would examine th would ba @ coroner's inquest; his‘em- through ‘ot ta! ployers would certainly have something the dev should be done that very night. y to him as to his harboring folk on premises who had no business to the Furthermore, he would be eq Holi obliged to put back into Hollins's pock- conolusi ets at least some considerable portion fourteen atone jof the money which ad abstracted up the cottage |from them, and to tha’ the town, and returned an heur or two ceedings he had @ strong netural objec- ister with « large, stewtly fashioned 6 decided that, wh else sack. Into this eack, during the windows, It was every nc managed, being an ‘ndividual of great musoular power, to get the load on his back, to yas the yard, and to climb a planis led to an opening in the brickwork he furnace. 04 are profoun’ What, then impossible to keep a dead m: |house for an tndefinite period-—Hollt tnly be burled within the n fa so diMeult ‘to dispor body, whioh, unlike ¢! cat, cannot be thrown upon the nearesi dust ‘he notion of casting the body tnt: river occurred to him frat. The er was but a few yards away from cottage—he would have nowiln but to drag the body out ther dge of this, preparatory to ewingin, his burden into the glowing mass molten fire twenty feet beneath, when a voice, harsh, strident, astonished, fell upon hie eare from the darkness below What the devi! art i} {t \r | do at night, weleht tt |wharf. But he |thia experient crossed mind work; the weight of os that are thrown Into rivet body pulled him aside A nasty trick of ng to the surface ways, the man coming out of the dart. at unexpected mo th they present themee: and ness heard the olght watchman utter « ts plereiog yell of agony, and saw tim to them questio: sure to stretch unavall! arms to the stare eg and inquiries inatitute he and his burden fell Into the bell of quite ¢rue that he might eas fire that reached out leking anmy te re. ily throw Hollina’s body into the river, ceive the dead and ¢! 106 he theme meabehiz

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