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wes —w OS _ Si proveme and Exercise Lessons DEVELOPING EX Developing Course. Lesson VI. ESSON SIX shows an exercise for abdominal thinness, and this Movement also benefits the thighs, loins and ‘mportant elim- inative and di- gestive organs, which Is most es- sential if health and flesh would be built up. ‘To-day’s exer- cise is a trifle more advanced MME FURLOM% than those show: ‘woek, and it may be practise) the others, if desired, for five ites at a time, several times each day, Practising a wide variety of movements, providing, of course, that do not over-do the exercises, ac- plishes more beneficial results Women Who Wish to Reduce and Thin Women Who Desire to Develop Their Figures. Conducted by Pauline Furlong. Coprright, 1016, by The Presa Publishing Co, (The New York Brentna Worl), For Description Read To-Day’s Lesson y PAGE Svening World’s Figure\' nt Contest in New Courses for Stout ERCISE—NO. VI. CIRCLING Frening World Daily Magazine Gan You Beat It! «xxttths., WE Don’ CRARERN Fon’ EN PRY ON ; By Maurice Ketten Aas NOT CRAZY ABor in More Marriages—Or Remaining 66 | bacholor, I shall women have positl A class of sia stout women who wish to reduce their weight and one of siz thin who desire to gain weight, eight weeks are competing for two man or NONE!” Not all women, cone ne . BEN, Ged at ae THINK OP (T. | Don'T Like IT than the love of a ‘more than the woman Mare Antony ‘The greater fastidiousness of the female is not confined to the human race, but ts recognized by all breeders of animals, Now, tt ta logical that prizes of $50 each, to be awarded the woman im each class who accomplishes the greatest im- provement in her figure. They will follow the courses of diet @nd ezercise lessons prepared by Miss Furlong and published daily for the beneft of all EVE- NING WORLD readers. will be very slight, You can nearly efface this through constant daily massage. RAISINS—GERTRUDE M., Raisins are fattening and healthy and will not harm you, them in a shorter space of time. TO-DAY'S EXERC! T® on your back on a soft rug, hands on hips. Stretch the | out to full length, draw knees d chest and keep feet together. large sweep or circle with both keeping the knees and ankles er, Bring the legs from the up and then over to the right side down and around. Then lower and relax before making another Repeat this ten times several 8 day with any of Inst week's SUGGESTED MENU. "WO giasses of water before breakfast. Breakfast: Orange . juice, soft boiled eggs, bran t cocoa. Luncheon: Brown and honey, glass of milk and Dinner: Broiled steak, baked stewed corn, rice pudding. HE narrow-chested woman can never hope to make a good ap- pearance until she has devel- the upper part of her body and wht the neck, shoulders and bust rounded and lovely proportions. ry flatchested woman knows tht alothes can set well and make « ish appearance where the neck and are scrawny and undeveloped. th and strong personality is the full, broad and well developed it men in history, regardicas of loped chests. here are two good reasons why the woman should try to overcome unhealthy and disfiguring condi- In the first place, extreme thin- {fe the surest sign of bad health @ constitutional weakness at least, e second place, the extremely thin an grows old and ugly with at quickness, Vitality and @ Ba papscular development and per- qth depend upon well nour- ues, The thin woman may feel ill because a nervous, hy al energy is one of her symp- » but the fact remains that her nes have not ithe and are not eelving proper plenishment and ishmont from the blood, ‘The food Not being properly assimilated and nourishing elements are not being ized as they should be tn the won- rf! chemistry of the body, In this calymn to-morrow compa' tables will be published show- the progress made thus far by the stout women entered in the Re- feing Contest and who are following course of reducing lesso! Evening World i the Developing Cours nswers to Queries. + DIZZINESS AND CONSTIPATION RS. GRACE M, Eat bran in some y day, Grooa vegetables a salads, fruits and much water inking will help you. It is not what pu shi uild avoid in ‘ue way of foods, 1OULD eat, that areoming constipation op the drug medication at once and etise trunk raising, body twisting bending. LT WATER—MRS. IK Any » pul will injure the health if \e1 habitually AUS. ALR, B, The eyet rehead can be removed operation, and (ie ecar ALTH AND DEVELOPING AIDS. | of the greatest indications of | , and It 1s said that most of the | ir height, were noted for their well | SHORTNESS OF BREATH.—MRs. GLADYS R.: Most fat persons suffer from shortness of breath because de- posits of superfluous fat crowd the or- fans together and make them wholly incapable of performing their right- ful duties. When this condition ex- ista it causes a greater accumulation of Yat, because when the breathing is shallow proper oxidation and burning up of the fat cannot take place, Deep and regular breathing will probably help remove as much excess fat as diet and exercise and improve the blood eirculation, eliminative organs, complexion and all parts of the body meanwhile. It {s a well known fact that profes- sional guides and mountain climbers are never bee and they possess deep, the creature with the faculty of cholce highly developed should do the choosing. On the other hand, since marriage in our day carries with it a promise ;ot lifelong support by the male. it seems only fair to concede to him the right of selection which he can back with his pocketbook. Biologically, therefore, woman should propose mar- riage. Economically considered, man bas and should keep that right, The most intelligent women realize to-day that they bave sold their birth- right—the right of cuoloe of the matd ~for @ mess of pottage which they can easily earn for themaecives, ‘The most efficient women choose their mates without regard to their status as pottage-providers, And women who can and do support themselves befor marriage and intend to after marringe are entitled to propose to relatively fow females of the human epecies. Only women who havea economic independence have emotional tnde- pendence. It .is because more and more women are awakening to this fact that they accept gladly the necessity of self-support. They be- Neve that work is the greatest of all emancipations for women, since ft must carry wifh it eventually all the others. When all women havo achieved the emancipation of WORK, ‘We shall have no more Beutinger no more Jersey Juries who hesitate to declare that a woman wi Justified in killing tn self-defonse a man who had made her one of the white slaves of marriage. SWEET the chosen mate—a privilege exer- WEEE cised without question by the lioness a N or the she-elephant, but porsessed by MRS REUBEN aw ais os > H A N D I Cc A P P E D Alone in the Big West, a Tenderfoot Finds Himself and Makes Good By Jackson Gregory BEST NOVELS PUBLISHED ON THIS PAGE COMPLETE EVERY TWO WEEKS. e 1018, by the Prank A. Munsey Co.) OF PRECEDING cHAnT rich man’s son, amt Tt Hapgoot, dilettante, "Wart ‘cn’ $300, (Copyright, ayxor's [Teer USniicn Wt Unk wh isin: for self-examination of mood and ‘Ussing Bart's sleeve, drew him to jieve, out of goat's hide with the the Half Moon country. It's forty cony was guessed more than seen {iene to purpose and character. the door. Conniston could hear thelr yilry “side out!-—spurs, quirts—in Miles further, they tell me.’ through the green and red and white | gufn ight and } “He had done well enough during his Yolce# outside; and, alchough | he short, all the necossary paraphernalia | “Uhuh! That'a.what they call tt, of clambering roses. Midway between irs four yeurs in the untverslty, not be- oud ae ee oh their words, he knew and ‘accoutrements of a couple of An’ a damn long forty mile, or I'll the broad front ateps and the edge of fos tS cause he Was ambitlous, but simpy eee tee nt i ie Weare, Knights ef the cattle country, If they Put in with yo the little toy lake was a summer because he was not a fool, aud found (M&W igor ply re~ Jose the two hundred dollara we win "And," @onniston hurried on, “if house, grown over with vines, its | a mild satisfaction in passing his ex- da hie Sea the two outfits, And to-morrow, in- bod are going oan (are going the broad doorway opening toward Con- | CHAPTER II. aminations. fang made him & proposition. viston stead of riding in @ Pullman toward Same Way, aren't you?” niston, | a {Geatianed,) He had spent the money which wont smiling back to the hotel, Jim. Si Francisco, we straddie a hay- jure! I'm agin right straight to And sitting within its shade, a book 'F young man learned that came in a steady stream from the mie and Bart were pinying again, burner for the blue rim of mountains the Half Moon c laid idly in her lap, her gray eyes the town took its name from &mMple coffers of William Conniston sr. each with a hundred dollara in front 1" the south!” hen would you ming tf my friend raised gravely to meet his, was the ' apnoea His had been a busy life—filled with $f pum. And in the early dawn both Jimmie rode vith you? I'll pay whatever is girl he had seen upon the Overland dinners and dances and theatres and = and Rart stood peering out from be- Taht.’ Limited. than ran through It to spread races C 1 hind the corner of the barn at the two The other eyed him strangely. Conniston rode along a gravelled out on the thirsty sands And now, under the calm gene of ‘HAPTER Ill. figures riding rapidly southward into _“l reckon you're from the East, walk toward her, his hat in his hand, a tew miles to the north, where tt t@ desert, he found himeel? turning OGER HAPGOOD lifted his the morning mists, Pighenhens Saeane® “Good morning,” he sald, as ho Jwas absorbed by them; that the iM thoughts inward, He had been even from the pages of his It was nearly & o'clock in the af- rea. From New Yor! Grew in his horse near her. “Won't and from the mountains beyond them, came into Rattlesnake Valley and trie yet gone. not go a step farther. And they were thanks, to where Ha ‘ Nf oe eek Be ‘ % A i 5 PRood was ait- ‘Good morning, Your Majesty! Into @ land of wide-reaching cattle «Arer ail,” no told himself, with a _ “I hope you've been enjoying your: to lwhich they, Had started, nearly TK UP And the red-headed man Will you delgn to forgive an erring ee a team dtive Out thal way TMOM reckless little laugh, self in this Eden of yours,” he eal y¥ miles to the nearest cabin and sinees from hin seat and began to subject for so long delaying in vow | a at the ‘ ‘ot? “sine 7 mo unhiteh his horses, ne his allegi shar the ec eke int eal ee, eer 8 sourly, jag bed. Coniston unsaddled the two “" . . ing e niston carelessly. "Headed for one , 'e@ turned and went back into the Gonniston sent his hat epinning horses, watered them, and staked oe inten ae at wien up Jeat “Why ail this deference and humble of the cattle ranges, I suppose?” the Brightent aht eee ot anne Oo" across the room to lodge behind the them out to crop the short, dry rrass ‘Besta, Wa won't move on, until oie cout ‘ured, and whi 1 vas Jo FO) he brightest light crept our into the Ho determined to wait until the ht ¢ (Marys Oo One wHiepere: Moree ee ag from the Halt night. And with itcame men'a voices, bed and laughed: x cool of the evening, and then to per. Morin’. and being ne how I ain't st of mysteries, I heard and followed “The girl's father Sigel ‘attie Having a desire for compantonship, “I've laid @ bet, and ita wedged ide Hapgood to ride with him OF ome right smart time, I'm goin’ And now since | must needs be in rang’ out there” cattle and not craving Hapgood'a In his 60 and hedged so that I win both § the hills. te shaw real soon. Han you gents the Land of Enchantment were { ) The H C . present mood, Conniston stepped in at ways!” * F ; te not blind not to recognize its queen? | Uhub, The Halt Moon an’ three Pre"inw door und golog te the. ber, “A bet? What sort of het? Tt wer 4 be hard: but it seemed not They assured him that they hed Again ehe laughed with him, mer- Jor four amaller ranges. He's olf MAN cation for a glass Of Deer “Tmo hundred lovely ducats, my only Lust, but almost the only wav. not rily, unaff ly, as though they |Crawford—p'r'haps youve beard on ee it a acien mea vale if! Just that and nothing elge.” So Vonniston filled hia pipe, thought — “Then if you've got any chuck hail known each other wines child. ac ee ianiciiia head ready there, among whom he recog 'wo hundred doilarat You don't. longingly of the clearettes he hed left you want to warm up you can sling it Se eT nave ‘ear out to nized tho proprietor of the hotel and mean that, Greek? * Conni dian “Hear Hapeeed cemoked aod. Time ce en, You are very gallant, Sir Wat on’, ay ar ® the men with whom ‘ha had been , “lL mean’ exactly that” Connieton down near Hapgood, smoked and @ didn't bring anything with Stranger! And now that-you have | Hin placer int bad. Let's see, It's Playing cards, and also the cowboys tonued to the bed a mall handful oF ene tassel, Cenuuing ceoie win a us" (onnlaton told him. “We didn't come unbidden into the Land of En. Oh, ‘a Re who had dined at the table nevesa the greenbacks silver, "That's all hour pa nk" —— hantment, and have discovered the | ifty miles tothe hills, ant he’s about Foam trom him and Hapgood, Te the that is left of the firm of ( onniston start, A man ine buckboard, drawn The newcomer stared at them A Fetreat of. ta queen, to whom aul | riy mile fy" Be eet ax ous labia op centre of the room, under # big #nd Hapgood at present Ebates Are Oy ce ae tea eile hie one minute, scratched his head, and then black art is an open book, into what | uge running from somes Mckeled awinging lamp, a man was jue twenty-seven dollars and sixty il iiaT at the trough, He bar hich: AUARS AES Novice & alae to DANe HAE where along the main lice?” dealing faro, waile the others stand- °*nts here. 4 korose tip BA UnINMtARARID hon of the We ich fT go on reco: 3, aayin' folka change you?” | Hy ing or sitting shout him made their . Hapgood ran @ hand acrosa his all the way from Noo York has got A Conniston answered = her | amn narrow, stranger. You can {De brow. bronzed and lean, ‘The long hair 8: some funny wave of soln” burners WANE | walk it you're strong for that kind “i ‘his far from home—thia far caning from his battered gray hat ways of doin’ business! . eadily his eyes upon of 6 . Mos’ folks ride, Goln' ey man won and lost, bis from anywhere—-and only twenty- vied with his long, drooping mus- .* mm ma face always inscrutable, titled side even dollars between Us! Are you tache In color, and’ they both, ehal- CHAPTER IV, oe aan eect hia. ratorten tc ek rntner @ long walk," Connie Wise as tv closed one eve againal drunk, man aa “4 the flaming crimson of the PTER a night on the ground quickly. And he eaw that. under his Shortly afterward, hearing a clang- Which he turned round and round 1 told you f had made a bet! I Conniston told himself that he had and another meal from ateady ase the color crept warmly ling bell up the strect in the direction between his pursed Npw. have lala a wager with the Fates! never aeen hair one-half ao fiery, or Lonasome Pete's store, the Into Wer cheeks. of the hotel, he strolled away to his combufe shove , via la of the two And right now, my dear Roger, eyes approaching the brilliant biue- Uttle party started off well jut cven the black art is power: nlm away'to the Ititle diving roown, his feet, shrugs ng hin should ‘ust At the. local igh’ of the pladder to wee a fellow human being, ing in the buckboard, The way Friendship must bee “If you feel like exelt) ment’ be- , Clean grunted laconically, Barre] there Is & game of “How you?" he cried, scram, aremed endless, but they finally ap- rows. think T oha » Conniston, Jerking hig head in “imine me a drink, Smiley. te faro now in progress. Two young b & to hin fect and, nding with ached what their guide assured 204 0 a ltt Petethar we the direction of the card-room. Hap. ny n’ you # bet,” sald Con- gentlemen, Jimmie and Bart, punch- heavy feet to the buckboaré Moo sy itated ant ‘ good interrupted shorty Pr ni quietly coming toward them, ers of cattle, are deciding things for “Howdy, stranger?” anawered the ‘bem was the Half/Moon. He healt 4 moment and thén "No, thanka. Tve get a magazine “i don't mean any offense, and Iam Roger Hapgood and Willlam Connis- aded’ man, his voice strangely Here was a long, wide bench of answered « {n my sult-case, I'll go to me twee Rt Sure of your customs out here, ton jr, of New York. Bach of the low-toned and gentle land, which had been carefully leve | twin afral i nay my resents for] foot-xuiare room ard fead It Lwup. Put Cll stake you to five dollare and amateur gamblers—and they actually “My name's Connlston,” went on eled, ‘Through the middle of it ran COMIN At all are too complicyted to poe Til sit up reading It until mong, tke half what you win. do play very badly, Roger!—has be. the young man, putting out a hand, 44, es Wabdina the waterfall pe Sts OD ONG Sone Soman cid ing; I certainly am not going to Jimmie grinned and put out his fore him a hundred dollars of my pate Y the other took after eying him 6 creek, ne water: was | try D tell them. ou yy REL ECA A MOk SUNS acd money, If they win to-night I get ke & dam, its banks steep, its floor seen £0t off the train in Indian eG : "Which I call good custom, East back my two hundred dollars plus "Mitne's Lonesome Pote,* reptied through the clear water, white sand, Of lilo cunlosity to sea. what the 1? In the morning?" or West! half their winninga, and you and I BG -Teaded MAD, And it wan more than © dam; it waa Wen vork And then we Tite oat i eae of Fo few minute oled as r oe Si ‘ranclsco! ‘Part ick 0} ethin’ 2 ¢ \ ow ¥c ne be ie FOse ou Thank ‘God there's a> train. Guo cnoueh Gonntanne comet wine cuine nnn ® train tom BSn Francieso werner AGG (OF ‘pomesniN’® a tiny mountain Inke, A drifting ar- toward tho hill. ‘One of your en a : + out (2 teirleve the ® mada of apotiessly white ducks turned father’s men overtook us thore, and Conniston left him and went out pyie had already twonty 3 -c Cc yal their round, yellow eyes upon the as he Ing this way, and as | are, by the saloon, along the short, “hunch, a staking of everything on ~ rs of atone steps led to the water'sedga, country, a dusty istreo nto the dry one play, and Jimmie sat back with A Modern Mystery Story With a Real Plot And the fiat tabloland, bordered wilh broke calening, rns lds beyo he road nothing to do but roll a cigarette. aA rar; Se , & dense wail of pines and firs, wax 4 u nee, AR is hard to make for perhaps a half mile, and then "1 might have returned your fver Begins in The Evening World Nov. 13 grent lawn, brifilantly @rsem, thick sound sensibye, We just came!" turned aWay to a little mound of @ minute go, but now'—— On ennnnnnnnnnnnnnnWARAnAANAAAAAAAAAARANAAAARARMAAAA® if v ics Witt fused wad Keranluuie and (T/ Bo Continued) creck came from the hills to the south When one crossed the brown hills he earth rising gently from the flatnese | about it. And there he threw him- self upon the ground and let his eyes “If they win! lose?" Ye shall take it as a sign that the a riot of bright-hued flowers Conni- ston did not know, He turned his He ended by licking his brown cigarette paper together. “if the stranger,” put in Bart, “has And what if they "No. Just fagged out. We came all the way from Indian Creek since mornin to the house wander to the south and the faint got any more money he wants to Fates have decreed we shall not go "That's real far, ain't it?” remarked itself, It was a ¢ two-stort dark line which showed him where piay"——~ to the city by the Golden Gate, but the man in the buckboard, with a wide-verandaed building, with # the hills were being drawn into the _ Conniston laughed. “Much obliged, shall tarry here for a while! Both little twitch to the corner of his ctous doors, deep-curtained windows, I think I'll quit with five to-night!” Suddenly Jimmte got another of his “hunches.” He cast a swift, apprais- ing glance at Conniston, and then, embrace of the night shadows. Greek Conniston was not an intro- spective man, His life, the life of a rich man's gon, had had little room a tower rising above the red tiles 6f the roof at each corner; everywnere tho gleam of white columns, Each tower had its balconies, and each bal- Jimmie and Bart are provided with saddle-horses, with chaps—chaps, my dear Roger, are wide, baggy, shaggy. ill-fitting riding breeches, made, I be~ mouth, but much deep gravity in hi eye. “Which way you goin’, stranger?” “We're going across the hills Into upon Jimmie returned to Conniston driven out of hie father's novse. He had been called a dawdler and a trifler and a do-nothing. He had been told by a stern old man that he was @ disgrace to bis name. And it was I thought so's you might hail from there. Well, stranger, we Won't quarrel none over the payin’, an’ your frien’ can pile in with me.” Conniston tufned, murmuring his you get down?" He swung to the ground with no further invitation, his horse's reing over his arm, and made her a bow in his beat style, ternoon when at last they came to a spring by the roadside, lapgood sank down ring that magazine and regarded Conniston with a look from which not all reproach had And here wearily, mut- he could not and would Superiority to Average Workman, Which L. G. Asserts, Result in Husbands only women are capable of thing as the ONLY wom | friend, Why Don’t Men Propose > What Are the Reasons for. The 1916 Husband Famine? Would Exercise of Proposal Right by Woman Result Would Her Educational Unchosen? By Nixola Greeley-Smith. HIS fs leap year, and put an end to the husband famine?” Inquires, Why don't the girls propose with frivolous intent, @ lonely consider the subject of proposals by women seriously, however, because I believe that only ve and vital sexual preferences, since saying, “I will have THIS , of course. But the love of a woman for a man is always more personal, more individual, man for a woman, There fs no euch Cleopatra herself was never PREFERRED. a sounds, you see, Lonely, Bashfyl One vet th Interesting, ne of the mon thoughtful and intellige: Pecters Tt have ever received is that ed 1. 4 which discusses another phase of the husband famine, DO WOMEN STAY SINGLE FQR LACK OF EQUALS? Dear Mise Greeley. Smit I believe that the highest type ‘of women and those most fitted to be mothers, from a racial standpoint, remain single because their equals among mon from an ed iy standpoint are so scarce, The econ- omic argument does not hold water. There never w time - tunities for the trained spe {were so plentiful, but you must know your business, Unskilled labor always was and Is yet poorly paid. There no reason why the young man wi devotes his spare time to foolish can cxpect to compete age market with the urned midnight ol] to bet- hia services and Improve himself. mi te The theory that a man should marry between the ages of twenty-one and twenty-five is this reason: 4 ttle timeworn, for In the days of the ap- prenticeship system, at, twenty-one 4 man was out of his time and drew « journeyman’s rate, very nearly as much as he would ever draw unless he became a foreman, ‘The man who aspires to something better than being an operator oF a plain clerk cannot expect to get much headway before he is twenty- 45 will be twenty-five next A while I studied (@teadily rahe, i along the same lines of business, I never learned how to sell my services: for an an adequate price until twelve months ago, and it will easily be another three years before I get $30 a whieh I consider the minimam wi for a man capable of thinking marry upon. If a man is capable of being anything but a beast of burden, It is useless for him to expect to find a wife in his own class to marry bite on an income of $15 a week, abe can earn at least another $15 and give up the idea of ever having children. The present high cost of living is a stern reality, The rate of wages has also advanced, but not accordingly. A man should not waste time bemoan- ing the struggle, be should work and Ket above it, Sometimes I get away a little early and come up in the subway with the girla from the Wall Street section, These girls have all the appearance of being able to command ,real living wages, I have not lost all my faith in human nature, and I belleve a girl can dress well and yet be right on the level. Where does such a girl get off to marry @ man who can barely earn enough to keep himself, and where does a man get off to expect her to? The main trouble is to bring the eli- gibles together, I work tn a factory where there are 300 men and no women, I do not go to church, and I do not dance, If want more amuse- ment than I can get from my books and music, I go to a show and forget my troubles for a couple of hours. That leaves me absolutely no chance to meet a suitable girl, because I do not expect to meet one in any #chool I may attend to study either machine- shop efMctency or the building of in- terchangeable machinery; yet I realjze that life t# incomplete unless I meet and marry a girl who will be a real partner for me, If | wefe born and bred in New York I could mave in the same cirele with my old ach mates and neighbors, and kids ° friends far easier than grown-ups, be~ cause the sex Issue Is not predomi- nant, The fault does not ie with the men, the women or the system that persons of the opposite sex carmot meet unless introduced by a mutual he stem was de- vised f he rtion of both women and men. lieve there are scores of woine ady and willing and able to be real helpmates to men who strive to make themeelee worthy, FEAR OF UNHAPPY MARRIAGE A DETERRENT. Dear Mise Greeley. Smit One will admit that the average girl of to-day, especially the New York girl, could be more home loving, but let us look at the other pe oft story—the men, 1 Ary rf seen and read so much abfut unhappy omar. so deep that” do not think T ever want to parry, simply because I'm afraid, It poms to me that the first year of wfarried life is quite a happy one, dw what Ihave » i heard of the years that follow feel tha’ ‘I'm glad i'm f "Why don’t men propose?” Please let me vite my ease | A very well educated and perfect kentleman hax been calling on me for the past seventeen months, He has a very responsible position and could certainly support a wife and would no doubt make an ideal husband, Now, | 1 am a young lady, well educated and have quite @ responsible position where I come in daily contact with some very-lovely people. I love pretty clothes, the same aa any woman 4oes, I Uke to go to church and I ike to go |to a theatre. I can cook, I can aing {and play, I am considered #004 look- ing, I use a little powder but and I Joye my home--Why ‘oan PM propose? A NEw YORK , (