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THA WOE Penden Ae SM Nortel COST WHAT IT MAY ‘Youth Should Seek Youth,’ a Nice 7 heory, |” pedal ait THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, JANUARY 27, 1918.” That's ail, and by that graft we hope! | true "edoeen ‘ai =sS GAS Gane The “Queen of Hearts” and @ bunch of | clever tricks, That chumps might play for—'ts an ae- piration Enveloped by @ mist—to try to win! ‘To win, perhaps a wife, aye, that's When we #0 biindiy swe to follow ull ¢ But the Young Men Are Generally Broke |..." For who could smooth the jars and | Jolts of atrife. The lectures hong, the coarse mald ser- 2 4 — Q mf 2 a In a-Contest of Silence Every - Man.Loses and Has ta Paya Fine, © ad rus Gongs 66 amas Giers, to tom the Bedell Mail Order Depert- a ope’ anh, r " No The landtord's calls and the obstreperous ats yeh the retail stock, and tobe ‘WOMAN WINS THE RACE. DEARE, Wit YOU ag dune sold at clearance sacrifices to- That gay and obstinate collectors make, Meanwhile the Sheriff calmly stands be- low To make good his legal traite—who would this genus face? But that some deeming soft, designing wenoh, The crafty siren from whose influence No man escapes, so lures us on AN OLD Man's Mrs/Frank Lane Doesn’t Speak for-Three Hours and , Thirteen Minutes. Bip eoes another fallacy! Of course tt doem't sound plausible, but there are a score of witnesses— church members, too—to corroborate the assertion that man, and not woman, has the most agile and willing tongue. This has at ast been established beyond all : question of doubt and, incidentally, the eerie have all the virtues and chief demonstrator, Mrs. Frank Lane, most of the beauties of those you have gathered in the world’s championship Only makes us sigh and seen priced at $20 which only the fround “and letty allanoe, "Hier tite © But plan, likewise tush hegerlbe rrr edhenad lens rou! an 5 ir ju ’ jush, the crown is ‘undteputed, having been Mytorarat, in thy rantings, be my wild to put out at $16 and $18. {1 ition, {bute numbered, "Wire, Lane to's Philadeiptian, bat ahe Facet e TCI BAN.” Double-Faced Vicunas OP ap eee Park, a Lena a lots and Friezes Ne Ju heretof 7 Chevi 4 tame meioly through ite sposeaion eas ean cute Rich Kersey Coats of the on! in the Stat can , call himselt a Progressive with capital prc Cut on English lines or the “P." Investigators are of the opinion Actress, Who Suffers Attack of | more closely drawn French lines— every itr opel rolling and Lge \ce collar. tl Mail Order favorites whieh: have the blending of Quakertown and stilly Jersey commuter camp go far to explain Mrs. Lane's record-breaking Ptomaine Poisoning, Ordered by Doctors to Rest. Culmination of as Pretty a Romance as powers of taciturnity, but this in nowise detracts from her truly wonderful Ever Happened?”’ Asks “‘F. L. M.” ST, LOUIS, Jan. 27.—Mise Julia Mar- established a nation-wide vogue. Sac- achievement of maintaining, in hot com- lowe, who was stricken with ptomaine rificed to-morrow at $6.66. petition, complete silence for THREE polsoning on Friday night, was so weak | MOURS, THIRTEEN iNUTES, FOUR | KOE U Ey or ag manny |“Whether You Embark Early or Late in Life, Know| 'xxy—vouwaaats_MaRRY Tet to sAnow bet lmovedlats choages| ALTERATIONS FREE IW AID OF A CHURCH BUILDING] WEALTHY OLD Widow! Where You Stand Before the’ Plunge Is Taken, |_WweAactey Ovo MEN |™iiute rent wan inainted upon and TUESDAY SALE AT ALL FOUR STORES ae sit cereals rea ene Else Blame Not Either Party for Your Own follow: ste je Seeeny ame home of Mre. R. Rankin Stagmer, No. Indiscretion,”’ Advises ‘‘R. Y.” CUPID NOY BOTHERED ABOUT |friend. It was said her illness was not | 20 Kast Westfield avenue, Roselle Park, : THE AGES OF VICTIMS. considered serious. | Dear Madam: Cupid decides, irre- spective of age limit, but putting " | BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. tentiment one side and trom rensos's Jager ‘of the aleasenger, service of the “Youth should seek youth,” proclaims one advocate of early marriage | *t#¢point, youth should seek youth al Telegraph Company at No. 215 in commenting to-day on the ideal age at which to take or to become a as Rantrinay, tls Tr erilin oa ane a rey. ‘Kiarew J. Coline with whom he wife. As yet no one has been found who agrees exactly with Prof. Sharpe| known waters, is fraught with perils, | boarded at No. 606 rs One eeeres of Boston that twenty-five stands at| which are hidden from us all until Bik a uaiey wal dana tad the zenith of desirability in marriage. poilaragibantved ; Naf foaniedd you HMekert said that Hennessy, who waa forty-five ¥ or late in life, know where you | years old, had died from natural causes, But there seems bd be a very general! stand pefore the plunge is taken, elve | probably heart disease. opinion that “if ‘twere done ‘twere| blame not ether party for yor ——EE>——————— = well it were done quickly,” that so| ‘ndlscretion, R, Y. (Husband). “ tnecr yw - long as we continue to marry at all| AGE OF DISCRETION PRO- FAGGED-0U WOMEN the hopeful twenties furnish the beat] NOUNCEO THE SIGHT ONE. — ear jam: LJ leal age for A i i opportunity and excuse for @ Wed-! marriage should be when both man | Will Find a Helpful Suggestion ae ana maid have reached the age of In This Letter. | ere are, however, readers who eretion, that 1s, when both are Overworked, run-down “fagged-out” urge that for the woman who confides | Liege pelea) to take women who feel as though they could her fate to inexperienved youth, the) yp ad piel petal ag bet ett ati hardly drag about should profit by worst is yet to come, “Never marry, if the bride-to-be is twenty or forty | Miss Richter's experience. She says: @ man who has not sown his wild, 8% long e measures up to the | “ast winter I was completely run * . y her lover, oats,” advises one masculine philoso-| say thatthe. Unloa of down and felt fagged out all the time, during a “mum social” held for tho enefit of the building fund of the First Methodist Episcopal Church. There was present a great throng of Roselle Park- ere al! anxious to help swell the duild- ing fund and eager too to prove it really isn't 90 very dimficult to sit around fm eompany three hours without once speaking. To-day, with the sole ex- ception Mra. Lane they agree that it i “considerable achievement” after all, 5 W-tE Ves 108 Sood a 12658 Stred! NEWARK |. cor 12th Stredi 4 LARGE STORES ‘The idea of this novel race was con- ceived Mrs. M. L. Bronson, mother of Mre. Stagmer and curiously enough Mre. Bronson was the first to break ailency 4 thus fall out of the running. quests assembled they were permitted to exchange greetings, but at word the race etarted, stiliness first to speak wi punished by a fine ef five cents, It was them the offender's privilege, ho to devote all or her energies to dragging the others into the class of the loquacious. After the race started absolute silence prevailed for nearly half hour, All hands tried to look unconcerned and assume an “I should worry” air of con- fidence of being able to stick it out for several days if necessary. The flelé was running neck Mrs, Bronson began to show signs of could stand if if i ! AITKEN, SON &Co BROADWAY, corner 18th Street FIFTH AVE., corner 39th Street if Eng ist i & Eeis? af NOVELTY LACES pher. But surely @ person who ad-) the forty-four-year-old heiress and | W&% nervous and had indigestion. Ny Ca ih Commatiees of Real Erich and: Biles, mires himself in this role of a sower! the railroad man of forty-five was “One of my friends advised me to Pere OUR A HY of wild oats must have read about) "t the culmination of us pretty take Vinol and it has done me great Also a large assortment of Alencon, Mec! Chantilly intensive culture and a rotation of} [ttle romance as ever happened, good. The tired, worn-out feeli and Shadow laces with flouncings and i Se crops, #o that even were the modern Milde Ged thee Sitaoeiucs *Jall gone and I am strong, vigorous and lasti ‘thi by APM: AAS tia OF" tO: @eNl® Wi) wall, ‘The momach trouble sean: dik: Complete sets of Cluny and Valenciennes lace suitable for fine Lingerie. [nixour GREELEY: Tia | girl meek enough to enjoy the once) out @ single thought” whoi appeared and now I eat heartily and Popular task of marrying a man to reform him she could never be sure suit pair cet that the last wild harvest had been gathered. But girls to-day don’t relish| ner’ pide tuarsrelu pi ptadie lg lonure | aye perfect digestion. I wish every the task of acting as head nurse to the moral convalescent, even when| the man who has sown his “wild ties wont ieee beh hpeedbegh there is no fear that the patient will havea relapse. If they undertake it,| ats.” Such a man has seen the elles thai ha te ae pa Mgrs § in it 1 geperally not for romantic reasons, but purely for the worldly goods worng ana al amerecia aM. that I spent for Vinol.” Marie jchter, | with which the personality of a husband has nothing to do. QUESTION 18 WHETHER TO WED | Detroit. Mich. GIRLS PREFER RICH OLD MEN, ™oney very seldom ete even the ‘Thousands of women and men who were formerly weak and sickly owe AT ALL, money. Of cou Is not happy and : __ TO POOR BOYS. she connot possibly réapect herself or| Deaf Madam: At twenty-seven I ; ag A New York man remarked the othe’ |iione that. dee ‘vill reapect | Wrote the Inclosed verses. Ten years | their present rugged health to the day that he no longer sees girls of six- |), later 1 am a “Newlywed,” which, of | Wonderful strength-creating effects of teen and eighteen in the society of course, proves nothing except an |Vinol. We guarantee Vinol to build wholesome boys of their own age, that} of rich men in New Yor! instance: you up and make you strong. If it they prefer men of fifty and even #iXty| cisewhere, wha live in a chronic state|, What Hamlet Might Have Saté, | does not we give back your money. who can spend money on entertaining | oe destitution and dependence, who are| 7° Wed OF not to wed, that Is a stun-| AURikerand them as the young fellow with his mod=| purposely kept in this condition from ner. si in New Y tat firat Job cannot possibly do. Hel one year to another, and have not as| Whether ‘tis better in the end to battle teres added that in New York restaurants] nuc}) money in thelr hands as the girl| Th cares and sorrows of @ bachelor one sees most frequently very YOUNE|henind the counter who sells them the Ife, women with middle-aged men or else gowns and'gaces for which their bus-|OF take up woman against these lonely, very young men with elderly women, |pands pay—Jjust as they pay for the feed trials that {f you want to view roses with De-! and the grooming and handsome har-| A" by matrimony Increase them? To comber, ice with June, to paraphrase @|noyses or collars for the other 1 live, to love; femiliar quotation, you have only to] it seems essential to their state to Jook about you at places of amusement. | quire and maintain, Youth no longer seeks youth, app ently, because it fecls that it hasn't ¢ Reve io veatiy the mest tatetii- price. gent form of selfishness. Those who put it aside for supposed Many mothers unfortunately en- WawLy courage their daughters to gree seen senily vietimize pea prefer | themselves most of all. There are commuter, promptly allowed: the society of old men because they . human beings, of course, for whom 5 too! regard felo’ Eckman’s Alterative ‘There was some consolation in being peas, f° Ufe is always modified state of coma, and if they prefer their coma out of the race, however, for there Was ‘A “i Highly Praised |sidit; ‘of exciioment trying to knock| me Om” a0 ft t uonally put, | Sonne Sie cuMby visions of use * some one else out of stride. All sorts| BUS aay cleam young man with » less and expensive things they are f shabby trick: re employed to dr: fair brain and « fair job is from ‘A Valuable Remedy for Threat and Lungs | Of Shabby tice ogrom the persistently | the mowt selfish point of view more harming no one, for they are in- capable of giving or inspiring love, an ex-competitor| eligible than a cold-storage suitor of fifty or s0, no matter how much and they were created specially to money may come out of the vanit provid erly widows and widow- ers with second mates. y hadn't been safe on the bed| Wath him. upstairs in the guest's chamber, and six] For the young girl who marries for The views of Evening World readers shrill Instinctive cries of “Oh! put ai more wives and daughters out of the § i VEILINGS An attractive assortment of Veils and Veilings in new fanny meshes. Auto veils and hoods especially adapted for motoring. I pay m whoop and @ confident smile the othe settled down to a steady plodding ga! counted out, men folks atill in the running. D HER TOE AND EX- CLAIMED “OUCHI” But there were occusional disappear- ances from the ranke of the women, too. One young woman essayed to cross the room an@ stubbing her tve on a foot stool let out an “uch!” that quickly elim- inated her from the competition, An- other, when a collation was served, just couldn't help biurting out “That chooo-| § Faqs, we:> late cake looks s0 0 must tey some.” Allan Gibbs, who ie in the] $ yoo armtul ty people Whe went ot ce business in Manhattan, evilently Forgot he was in a race, for presently, with no particular relevancy, he ob- serv “I hope that anged 8.13 font half an hour late again to-mor- row." Hingfall was the unkind cause of another @ripping and falling by the and of course Alexander's Shoe Sale Closing days bring exceptional economies in many small lots at still further reductions. in your mot bad tate In your mouth Andrew Alexander PAINetES 4s Olive ‘Tabietors Sixth Avenue at Nineteenth Street Ir. stitute for calomel——were prepared b wards after 17 years of study wit | yet have no oly taste. Thy ose s Yer Th Ad t ° I eitlyoateank a dee pink acter bedakt e ventures o ne-Volliar Di | no pimples, a feeling of buoyancy i , you must get at the | lets act on the liver and bowels like calomel—yet have no dan- | gerous after effects, rt the bile id overcome constipation. That's why | When Sufferin from | millions of boxes are sold annually at 10¢ and 25c, per box. | ; | C ti ti | Every little Olive Tablet has a move-| onstipation | STUBBORN COLDS are easily relieved by Scott’s Emulsion, and it does more—strengthens the lungs and upbuilds the fe folly to bellve that Consumption 8 from every other | in not quiring the use of any im: For a number of Adventure ¢ { met a friend the other day who's made @ goodly hoard Of money advertising “Furnished Rooms” and “Wholesome Board.” “There's profit in this business,” sald my friend, and so I went accumulating. ogo Me k was passed, At the two hours post there were barely # dozen still “running 4 followed by|Frank Lane was still running strong and ‘onsumption. 1] alone, the only other surviving competi- winter of! tor having just been taxed five cen ment all its own.” ‘Take one or two nightly and note the pleasing results. oa! aantitin tt . ie bir | fat easing Moe HED Mreconds ot JUST TRY | j | in Ouro Tone Companys Salen: | And found » good-sised Beasding shee interes simon, terrifying silence Mrs. Lane smil- | PERRI-WALLA TEA Houses World Ad. showed forvent. ; uae Pe 9 = ROASTED COFFEE mae seek gt i aie meee eee a" STRAWBERRY JAM [iT You sti Baron th aatiner namorhagt'and |emjie anda nods, Wve een Tae The Delicious Chocolate Laxative CANNED CORN Peerage bl “acta ~~ ¥ . Everything I an be verified by my famtiy and EF. LOUGHRAN effective in Bron or i|of ‘the men Envious as they are of Mrs. Lane’ hard-won laurels, the women of Roselle Park are very proud of her. They are | also proud of the feat of others of thetr sex, who stuck tt out longer than most ent. In stances couples hed would remain in the ra Almest invariably it hear his wife Ex-Lax does not look like medicine. pure chocolate. One or two Ex-Lax chocolates will cleanse vour syster oF any peplaasant ofter-effects. It is ha: : aily. Chil ren love it. TRY A 10¢ BOX TO-DAY At All Drug Stores. 0c and 25e, It looks and tastes just like fine, FRANCIS H. LEGGETT & COMPANY anne seees a wosld Telief in aS Trase wondert| pain reileve tants, Imnomwrants or habit fr ‘wangoll nerves For quick results, believe me, World ads, are the proper thing, Little ls the Wonder That Jere Weve Printed 5,429 World “To Let” and “Boarders Wanted” Ads. Last Weeh—3,273 More Than the Herald.