The evening world. Newspaper, May 22, 1913, Page 19

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? . 7 . . ee ,r ‘ j ‘ cn “eageaees The Evening World Dally Magazine. Thursday, May 22. 1919 \ BY “S’Matter, Pop?” : { ceetha} « Be x BF «x By C. M. Payne i Gee wiz! “TO,.NA ANY TIME... A BouT- THE > AMURMENSCUTNOFIGURA § WHEN “THE te MY AUNT NELLA MAICING ICING YOR | ACAHA! WANTA COME OVER AND Heep scRaAPe THE You Can Be Your It Can’t Be Done! «Own Beauty Doctor KEEPING THE HANDS YOUNG. The Silent Bullet An Absolutely NEW Type of Detective Story By Arthur B. Reeve 1918, by The Press Publishing Co, ist (The New York Bvening World), ked the Average Giri, (Coppeight, 1019; by Dott, Mead & Co.) said the Women. “Her face is young, but her hands ere he ‘a ieble for asenees to ihe bate, . Ghe spends « lot of time in beauty culture of the face, in having it mas:' according to his agreement with nd treated and so keeps it smooth and young looking. But she neglects | beds ‘Now you can’t do that if you want to cheat Father Mme. For the é J 1 ideas at the univeralty physical joendttion of the hands will give away the secret more quickly than esses tory, pe: have flown in big machine, and “But you can't do anything for the hands besides try to keep them elesn | ite aw Walter, T-want you to get ri Bei- ana the nails once in awhile?” more assignment from the tar | 1s what most peopl think. Whichjls the reason why we see eo many and ge out to the aviation meet with ugly hands, Now, the lands are al-' me re coats most as much in evidence as the face, ith, “Til take you op the Geld, around the and @ thin, sorawny pair, red as a thee hy pote min Machines—you can get enough local Ra the color to do ® dosen Star apecials later plece of beef or yellow as a bird's oak elt aon, on. I may.add that devising a flying | claw, will @poll the appearance of the 1 IRo"ssaeS cd the tourdeve, N° fnathine capable of remaining station’ most beautiful woman, When the AE ree camemegpend i air means @ revolution that inde tte thin they shoud be mas CHAPTER VIII. wih Wetahes aif ether mnoninen to the eng cream or ofl and given a a (Qumttaned.) scrap-heap. From @ military point corn meat soak. And if they are skin: ry pontaneo Com vm» View It te the one thing necessary to bound sr tee fat they should be ox = VHICH REMINDS ME VA = THE ONLY wiety "TO KEEP r Te ost pe roe srery compart to tae aiigisie™ nr THAT IHAVENT Seen A AN OFFCE. Boys MIND ON HIS m ‘The aia handset” said the Girl, Wire > eon eee over tinesinin My ares Meaaed ieee at it, =, ma! stretching them out for her friend's in-| Loi. 1 Cour see By His mortgaged wp to the limit, the next morning we wore out and Lewis refused to lend park where flights were BXPRESSION “Thar My TALK me more even until I could get Ieabelle Sain” me happily married. Now Lewis's goes to We ‘4n outstder—Harrington, boy, take cate of Isabelle, fortune or no fortune Good" — Someone aeised James Langley’e arm ‘he preesed an automatic revolver to ie temple, He reeled like @ drunken man and dropped the gun on the floor with an oath. “Beaten again,” he muttered, “Fer- Leqnen move the ratchet ¢rem ‘safety’ 0 ‘fire.’ Like @ madman he wrenched himself loose from us, eprang through the door, and darted upstaire. “I'll ehow you some combustion!” he shouted back fercely. Kennedy wae after him iike « fash, “The willl” te cried, ‘We literally tor nly are a drawback, as) an old lady I know once called her grandson when I arked her at poal- | tion he occupied on the Yale football team. If you do an I tell you your luaads will look so well that in a short time they will not even be a half- back to your appearance, which of old lady really meant. re jus lttle akin bound and they are too thin and rath yellow. : “Go righ( on,” said the Girl, ‘don't mind my feelings in the least.” “Ag if I should let a little thing Wke that trouble me!" retorted the Woman, ‘When the skin of the hands presents a yellow, drawn appearance {t is due to im- | preper Gurface circulation and is called ‘skinbound.’ This is often seen in elderly | peepié and occasionally in girls lke you. It can be best remedied by first soak- the hands in warm water and then massaging the back of each hand with @ngers of the other, using fresh cream or cold cream containing oll for the purpose, and then promoting the circulation by traversing the entire back of with the thumb and forefinger of the other, picking up and rolling | between the fingers.’ “ly nails break all the time,” sald the Girl, holding up a disfigured finger tip. | “That's because they are go brittle. You must rub cold*cream or olive oll every night before you go to bed. That will stop them from breaking ying leap at him. Juat enough of the will was left unburned to be admitted to probate, rererrererrrerrr rere rr errr rere ree CHAPTER 1x. Hiligest avoostins tho ectsle co 3ee wo bly Mrs. Jarr Fails to Translate The Terror in the Air. Rm push it back with the tip of your “ ” - ~ LE eye Bl . The ‘‘Baseballese” Language fj [ 5:-.. ‘that ts at the base of every well ? oem , Freer ere rrr rer rere re rer creer rere es caught ig headline in the pounded by the St. Louis team, and Mo- Graw took him out of the box in the last edition of the Star, which I had brought uptown with me, “Do you mean to tell me that te hu- asked Mr. Jarr, office? Huh! “Read papers at the much inter- ai} re i lent plan if you want to give them a corn- i i F We are\ too ested in playing hop scotch with the eixth inning and he went to the olub- “Queer?” I echoed, “Unfortunate, ter- jmaeal soak ev now and then. Put house,’ pepiled Mr, Jarr, ridle, but hard, Pp ty to | house,” re i } ” y queer, Why, it fe a gaucy things!” Englisi, then ra, Jere. Loula team bit che ball and wot to arat; | that tf they keap at it long enough they water on it and Jet it stand until luke- But Mr "It wouldn't be baseball if it was told mn . hg eae. | will " Seaton: 8. Jarr took the paper from | that Hersog accidentally kicked -Whit- | Wil! all lose thelr lives, was easy werm. Goak the fingers in it for five him, and her eye falling on the story | !n ordinary prove,” said Mr. Jarr. s yond “Yon, I know that,” rejoined Ken ggit, phe minutes or 20. This softens the cutic! ehape. It also whitens the skin. If your hands perspire, as they are likely te Ge at this time of the year, dust them frequently with powdered boracic acid mixed with « little pulverized starch. This will in great measure overcome tou! Ndgother ariticiem I would make ts that your nails ere cut much too pointed. ‘When the finger tips are rounded it only makes them look broader to cut the nails @e@ you have done. To make the ne appear as taper as possible the Advice to Lovers in love with @ certain young man. I The First Call. | sreaventiy become angry with him and © girl should | sometimes I despise him, Other times N have friends /1 it I couldn't do without him, of either sex! Ought I to marry him? whom she is not} Not while your feelings are as unset- willing for her|tled as they are at present, mother to know, it tine Mot, the Arar] 93, #1” writes: “Tam in love with @ young lady who, I think, cares for me, sere cud: tre tne | DUE who Ie gubsect to moods of indit- troduced to moth- | *erence. Please advise me what to do.” By your attention you should try to chapgronage ob- taining abroad, whleh ‘never permite s young ein to| 2Ae Engagement Ring. reoplye her men callers alone, is not) “E. M." writes adout to be- erally the rule in this country, But|come engaged to a young lady and have “ the mothers need not remain: bought a ring which contains three dia- fe parlor during the whole evening,|™monds, Gome of my friends say there af young man comes calling, should be only one, What shall I dot’ frould be made acquainted with all Don't worry. It's just as well not to her daughter’s acquaintances, offer the absolutely conventional goll- ‘Tre right sort of young man will be | tire. to meet mother, and ff he demurs retty good sign that he fears her “E, 8." writes: ‘Is tt proper to go out to read the papers down at that old Mre, Jarr‘'s ideas as to the work-a-day above remark, were rather hazy, be so busy playing pinochle with the boss and engaged in tag on roller skates with the rest of the office force?” i Just for the Fun of It eo. with a young man }f another !s paying —— heeled the : — you attention, though you are not on- ‘#1 euppose your dotly will be a euffragette.” ‘ “Waiter, I've been sitting here for over twenty minutes!” Reon Scntiad We 10 Oe east Tene In “front. of. shed. *&. WH." writes: “Zam eighteen and gaged to the latter?” ' don't know, Aui 1t will all depend on how etraight she ca, | “That' . Wa won't mai galnet you! was oha . about, [3 chguld Mie Go Gmew if 3 am costly Cortetny, tan, when che oreee uni” 3 A () far that eles” _ ‘Mente esked me to look inte Me sions is a Bess, “You have of the baseball game she read aloud: =| ‘with his fadeaway in a atate of ex- treme debility. He put over the pill ‘with @ eoupcon of languor that was irritation to the buge. His trajec- tories were full of fosh and the Suf- tragettes slammed them hither and yon with eclat and abandon, Where- at, in the sixth, Monsieur McGraw, 7 “What bosh is this? What does such @Wherieh mean?" asked Mrs. Jarr, “Why ite plain as day—Matty got| “And isten to this! eald Mrs, Jarr, “Then Rebdel Oakes drove a dew- Gropper down the dingle, Hersog tangoed the pellet with his terminal facliites, while Clinging — Ivy ‘Wingo bunted to sanctuary and lo! all th to double Harmon. But Merkle was that is Muggy hight, did ordain ye | Jinxed and the pill bounced out of marjoum, Rey nafle should be trimmed to correspond with the ourve of the tips. routine in great downtown business) 61, and low jurisdiction with right .| his mitt and Whitted ambled ‘in over | Wondrous see green marquisette, with Coreg ra eee end 2 lcose- concern, it may be gleaned from the! o 9 ormain, and, inetituting the | the saiver, while Wingo made his |& ruffle of lace to simulate foam over ‘ rmaner welch ory which Doyle loltered « little to retrieve and Whitted ducked In un- der the Big Chief dab’— Coprright, 1918, ‘The Prem Publish (Tha Now York ironing W. vay) @ ted's bunt and Wingo hit the ball just “Never mind your explanation. It is even more confusing than the original report in Choctaw!" “L oan't any sense in baseball, av. bow, W the Fashion Not "Oh, Meten!" she cried, ‘Th tion of Longchamps was @ Callot orea. tion called ‘La Submarine.’ It is of a Dhoreacent effect"— “Hallup!" cried Mr. Jarr. “Hallup! Oh, baseball, where is thy sting?’ By J. K. Bryans nedy; “but, W: Any one would have ft just yl yroscope to an aeroplane? I can't say I know much about either the gyr2- scope or the aeroplane, but from what I hi fellows at the office say It em to me that the gyroscope not to put on it,” experts say, that anything which tenda the thing seems to work eo well certain point—that the accidents jappen sooner, Why, our man on viation fleld tells me that when that poor fellow Browne was killed he had all but succeeded in bringing his machine to a dead stop !1. the alr. In other words he would have won the Brook Prize for perfect qotioniesmess in one place. “And then Herric&, the day before, ‘was going about seventy miles an hour when he collapsed, They said it was heart jlure, But to-night another expert says in the Star—here, I'll read it: "The real cause was carbonio acid gas poisoning due to the pressure on the mouth from driving fast through the air, and the consequent inability scope patents are to expel the poisoned al: . ‘The tron- been breathed. Air once breathed is That's so, tent ft? eee een ‘ot | MaKe yourself @ more positive factor in practically carbonte acid gas, K the young woman's life, “When one ts passing rapidly Go it te rebreathed, and the result is ual carbonic acid gas poisoning, Produces @ kind of narcotic it us see flection, not. 4 qould eve ei I iad Desa rash ta talking so long. Kennedy had only write it?! We nramtaad. fascinated by & man of | i ° 1 & | which had right, by George I'm Gi ; Norton took the cus, “Now hen {t waan't the gyroscope im that newspaper men aro the fret that I've case?” sald Kennedy with @ rising in- allowed in here,” he said, “Can I trust your word of honor mot to publish a 1 admitted reluctantly, “perhaps line except such ae I O, K. after you As Norton direeted, the meutasioinns led. he agroplane, out ca the fla w ; a th z @ little bit teo, and the bases were full wee iritation that are present and pes) Mister Methuselah Matty Lake te the Maimer; for Onl¥/ nq then when Catcher Meyers tried Be May gt mee oe makes it easier to trim the nails in mind onto the lawn zestersay ! to make @ double play and"— Watt his ewa i - fterward came in | the pulwarl ‘The overdrens falls 1M lio keer f hing fi ad th exam. Norton's “How can I have time to read the| freferendum and recall, the old Mas: tercentenary and al 0 Keep your machine tn one position . , tered off to his hermitage’ on @ goft roller off Huggins’s hick- | rippling folds with @ shimmer of phos-| is just what you don’t want in an sero- whe wae net etty V incent’s Pemepnone Conn At ths ORre WANS FN ree oegh I Twat dows plane. What eurpriees them, they say, was i through the air this carbonic acid gas committally, as if he had never heard of fe pushed back Into the lungs, and only the Patent Office or the gyrase: a little can get away because of the his life. The men were If rush of air pressure into the mouth. er or not from loyalty I could no! tA 6 ne, I mean it t@ you call 1," in h t tell,

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