The evening world. Newspaper, November 25, 1916, Page 11

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HOME PAGE Evening World’s Figure Improvement Contest Diet and Exercise Lessons in New Courses for Stout Women Who Wish to Reduce and Thin Women Who Desire to Develop Their Figures. By Pauline Furlong by The Prose Publishing Co, (The New York Bening World) ne DEVELOPING EXERCISE NO. XVII. For Description Read To-Day's Lesson Coperigt FIRST POSITION Developing Course. | Lesson XVII. | for the shoul-' 4 class of si2 stout women who wish to reduce their weight and one of siz thin women who demre to gain weight, for eight wreks are competing for two Prizes of $50 each, to be awarded the woman in each class who accomplishea the greatest im- provement in her figure. They the courses of diet O-DAY'S exer, der and arm muveles is nothing more than the crawl swimming wh stroke, well hasehabis ‘ ei sene } eHl fottow exorcigen shown % @"d exercise lessona prepared in the course, aa! $ ow Misa Furtong and published it brings tuto § @atly for the beneftt of ali EVE- gentle action! $ NING WORLD readers, nearly a the | Beairun runout Muscles of the,” - | Mabby. Use alum | flabby chin~-two DP) alum and one t out, solution on the tablespoons powdered pint hot water, After twenty-four hours #1 in and use very body In fp tising this swimming movement ke the bead well up and the che and all the arms , down | cold. st daub it on the chin and let with a sweep each t us though | gar You were pushing back the waves. TO REDUCE BREAST—Mrs. Le On account of the deep breathing this) Be: Carphor destroys the inik glands exercise compels, it stimulates the {4d should therefore not be used to Teduce the breast. Hirh, tight corsets lungs and | nereases the | circulation. wable one art 4 isay stop the clrculation fra gas cause it to nrough the breast flabby and _ Evening World Daily Magazine (“I Don't Give a Han SOHN WE ARE GOING To FREEZE THIS WINTER, — WE CAN'T AFFORD To PAY THOSE PRICES For COAL SAY! Do You WANT THe PRICE You g ICE You FoR COAL a. DOWNRIGHT widening the narrow chest, filly jn ptten to grow ormal size, hi he neck, and also causes | Bathe the breast water for jollows in the neck, and al causes | twenty minutes Kaa t6 bony or overfat shoulders to bec ome|t winte { epsom salts rounded an. shapely | on pound bicarbonate of = Ja. ‘Then apply alum solution, TO-DAY'S EXERCISE lwhieh is astringent and hardening to baat) the flesh, Strenuous arm exercise, TAND with feet about 12 Incas such as arm swinging with dumbbells, @part, grasp small flat trons and bax punching will help to reduce firmly and work the arms around fat from breast and backward and forward, up and down, exactly like a windmill. | SUGGESTED MENU, | THE BRASS \ DON'T GIVE A HANG]! Breat Vabllahing oh Krening ” Compete. 1010, 4 ! Realy 1ECK A Master 'WO glasses of water befors ———————— breakfast + needle, an elbow on the edge Breakfast: Grapes, boiled BEST NOVELS PUBLISHED $ of the sh . emes, graham bread, cocoa, ON THIS PAGE COMPLETE } \ Nin, | nS ap Use Luncheon: Chicken soup with ric, ¢ EVERY TWO WEEKS. ‘Oh, no," Jenkins modestly dise cup custard, claimed, Man named Henderson Dinner: Roast pork and sweet po-! rung it, He's out now, at the bank. (Copyright 16, The Prank A, Monsey Co.) tatoes, stewed tomatoes, atewed corn, . rice pudding with raisins, wi H, Jeudina, Sem baamage chek HEALTH AND DE SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS, picka 1) @ cigar clerk ‘Then House aren Jenkine for LOPING Jentina decides alos. yA mgstery and claime T makes little difference whether he hes aitagie@s 8 you ure trying to reduce or de- ine a eure, whiery “sine Diem te 4 deveteial uno a minster ercaad of which by knows nothing, with inetmictions wo Yelop when doing the flatiron ox- ercieen, 45, after ail, it is the happy medium you are trying to attain; find on @ certain Connecticut form, that {s, either to gain flesh or take |b? meets Sally, © hired gis), who eeeme atrangely and Jooada>, owner of the farm, Thene | % % veer, of unhealthy, superfiuous fat. | Bhe proves to be tent on the same errand as exerciaes also act as a powerful mas- | Jenking. ant departs wudteniy, leuving « note gage, which can be applied to the ‘elling dim to oewet to Hamilton,” “Hamit ton" la an iteane avium, woe Tankian ls body in no other way, and quickly taken to te @ manana! dislodge and remove heavy rolls of ise tad Gale Ac o fat from the shoulder Uludes or put lant ai will be error is dis healthy flesh on thin ones corent and he avin a S09 Shere an ate It 1s not so desirable to have large | ey ee ne ae Muscles or great skill in doing the | dor. aud finda @ coffin on the truck with an exercises as to improve the digestion, | soto inmate inside of it The man taxa of dJenkine’s money, agmuring him that be | be rewasded, and driven away, Jenking wales bach to New York aud calle on bis old bows, CHAPTER XVIII. HUST a little more than a week from that hour Jenkins sat ings, liver, circulation and other im- portant organs of the body, and long, tedious movements which require great practice and skill to master are not necessary. Small fiatirons, which may be burchawed in any ten cent store, can alone behind the counter, be used for the dumbbell exercises. |f reading @ magazine story ‘These weigh about seventeen ounces And scornfully comparing it each and are of sufficient weight for|with his own recent adventures any woman, whether sho is desirous! Mur tie blue-eyed ar plump of reducing or developing ali} elbowed one till, in absence, sad wooden dumbbells, costing about} dened him $Y cents & pair and weighing about) Jenkins, having thought the two pounds each, may bo used by| whole problem out, of trying to those who care to do wo. There aral/find her, had decided it ws y vi es of dumbt sex 1 Of the body. They are always more | whatey: that would give him or lesa interesting and by holding a| the name of the detective agency he welent during Be movements an ©X-| had been cutting into, by mistake; naturally plac ii 4 the muscles, greatly to their benetit, | ANd 48 £9" seeking "Dexter," the very idea was absurd, Answers to Queries. Jenkins, ax 1 said before, was sit- ting back of the coun reading a VERMIN | HAIR—Mrs. Frank | A tai Saturate the child's hair and afso | magazine and smoking his pipe in ree the scalp with tincture larkspur, ‘Tie | signed contentment, with an appear- \¢ up in a towel over night and in ance of bronzed health on his open morning give a good castile soap sham-| face and « comfortable feeling of poo, epeat if necessary in few f reserve strength ull days, This is harmless und efective When a custome shop. VELOP BREAST—Mrs. I inking laid his magasine, Cheat raising is best for you, Cocoalarose and stood butter may we a fine growth of/ ually he observed t aston down to appear if used too often and| perceived a large, lean, red- head too strenuously, Bome persons whe A gormi- hum have not a tendency to superfiuo noand a lbe halr may not notice the growth ext olladio When this condition exists it Is best straw hat on the rant to avoid all grease ingredionts as aT) is pr ' massage, wnoed tot nek DOUBLE CHIN EXERCISES Mrs, iinme < GR: The head should be thrown as! fentins han The far back as possible and then allowed individual made af f w t@ drop on the chest in dead weight. | ingly choosin working ‘This stretches and develops the neck the old 4 nat swe ise msclea, which have become soft andjand then, lighting one ai the gas- I'm only clerking for Mim. Want to see him, do you? Line of goods to show, or something?” “Nix on that! No, «ir, thank heaven, whatever I may have pushed Up against, | never Was no salesman, That's one thing I'm grateful for, an’ the second one is that {'m goin’ to blew this qu 4, blink-blunk burg t forty-five minutes, Blow 1, . for all points weat never ome back no more, 1 hope, not ta a thousand years Jenkins eyed him with interest. “L gather you don’t fail for the hattan stuff very strong,” he relighting bis pipe, which the ra huts Ju wel got this exclaimed din he trouble, t x.y.z, strong! here souvenir,” noved his hat Jenkins beheld the drassings of an ugly wound, "Oh, yes, [ fell for N. ¥., O. K. But never aguin, mister—never again!” What happened” queried Jenkins, sympathetically. “Well, to put {t brief, I ain't been here an hour, by your Ingersoll I gets mine, an’ gets it good down this sa! Sixth Avenue, mister —up beyond here a few blocks —I tries to alide off an open car, when zing- dowie an atito catches ine “They picks me out of the gu shoots me into a hos) ta. Know much, but for a we Know nothing at all there. bean whole job L « to pull off goes up the what's 1 I loses out of eu epends on. And take | nd, Manhattan hands very raw 30, a® 1 said before, me for all And me hither on 4p by, Job" Ath Avenueinjured x lost ont of his pe ey ever senda al ith x man—some- in tae t was it you lost at was it?) Oh, o baggage Jenkins started but himself and steadied hin A brass check, w er!) Why how something in the ontrolied OT ats paper ne. prevaricated excltem means Jenkins, with he dissembled by pip ' about 4 stran, “What did ya re emember oveh now Onty 1 yemen rt vt in th paper Was a brans found, wil Lat me * ‘ ed ar atyen tt ti Aty-ni 8 Where fame g Who's Wher at i anda nical . 1 guess VN font Va ind i 1 Abe stiange:s leuolon relaxed He rer node sented. now. color fe ve acroas.” Jeniing sm 1 guess she's nixc Well, never mind, joba where that would have panned out @ mighty rich y yours truly if I'd of put ber sintied sadly and self In back as: Ho grabb relighted it fri nd," nroune by ‘Lhere's other from, Only It on come the closed! Fooling very tl, Sale” button and tnapecte tied wanly. the for his magazine, cash had left it open. uf the cour 4 for his and register tlon and mental stress, a was just when his Jenkins punched TO ystery Story That Baffles Solution Till the Last Chapter's Read 4 let him mmude spe r ‘ Mekly plot Maleolr AM GOING Wick TO THE COAL MAN $$ pipe it paching had thelr way ye fell kept you there for Ww He about it, BL Now, now it was Way—not by « only proves: what money and brains and nerve!” nm nodded, Why Don't Men Propose? | What Are the Reasons for the 1916 Husband Famine? Is Our American Idea of Marriage at Fault in Thai the Approaches to It,as We Landscape Them, Are More Bowerlike Than the Garden Within Its Gates? Is the Kitchen-Garden Con- tinental Idea More Inviting? By Nixola Greeley-Smith ‘ w the American view, the highly wotic beautiful view of young People whioh mumehow does not work out quite #o weil as we might wish, Is that marrioge is the domestication f A great rormance, which should last forever, and if it doesn't, why, comme on, let's (ind another one that will, deo, ‘This brings us to divorce and tt {s the greater num-| besoming more and more a debatab! ber of their com. | QMeetion” with ma whether divorce iianite bay Women oF not. munications th@t)” io many divorces divorce but one the right KIrl.! pergon, Men are able ww turn away, ; deweribed as/and do turn away, from an old Jove ‘ “the old fashioned | 44 ® eat turma with the cron’ atl a jon bis whiskers from an em; home loving, home| tiucer, Ja there bot mare erence making woman 1® which, for the time at least, come ANY teavons have beer M sented for tho 1916 famine. nrg men plead poverty, others the tmpos- stbility of finding the right girl. It appears trom Homey Hine aemuty about extinet. rioher to be crunk from saucers of The young women assert, on the| fresher pattern? For the man there Jotier hand, that only the feather {1% But the Woman—have you ever | brained female has a chance with the Nae maar tp ap pe bah ror to a double divorce, jmn of to-day, ‘They add that he h marrics again, but a wife does not want to marry anyhow, and | Who from pride or puri that the great number of girix who | love mometines divorces entertain no thoughts of marriage, | derelicts f ity boarding hou [but look merely for “a good time’ fountry hotel plazas, with no real the prospects of those who} terest, no real occupation, nothing but a cheek for alimony to remind her of the days when she wae unhappy perhaps, but at Jeast alive? I believe divorce shutters the old- fashioned woman, the woman highly specialized for jove and marriage The professional woman, the woman with active brain renewed daily by her work and first hand contact with rnestly to become partners and helpmates, Hoth young men and women vlow matrimonig! problem with a new rtachment, Both #eem to realize arrlage is not such @ sure in- nt an it looked to thelr grand~ } and grandmothers, — The | {if may Pass on to new interests, ‘young women have learned how to|g@imple creature whase whole fe bes support themselves, 0, self-main-| been tn some ony else, whose the | tenance is not the searecrow {t used | Umphs have been vicarious, whose to be, ‘The young men have grasped faves caly ed bade them- the fuct that the assumption for life] the only way In which ghey Rat of the support of another human|exprensed—what about her? — Mvorce makes marriage more of a hazard for women of the old-fash- af highly specialized type, and sometines « girl hesitates at betting her life on @ inen when it is likely that at forty or fifty some younger woman may sweep away the atak being Is not lv po Undertaken with. much thought. here are just two waya of look- ing at marriage, the Continental and j the American way, Burope views the union of a man and a woman with the cold eyes of duiilusionmont, It doea not say that] [don't think America is quite #0 |t marry they muat love eagh ot Well pleaned with the romantic point jmadiy, particularly It doce not say | of view as it wan twenty years ago. ‘The busband famine proves it. But, of ‘ourne, we are still a long way from the alternative—the Huropean mar- riage of reanon, the dowered wi vows in perpetuity tempered by ea- that their love must last forever. To the Continental marriage te @ part- [nership undertaken to found a fam- lily. And because he believes that , the woman sl Id contribute her fair 'rinancial sha the undertaking, a | @Ppade. dowry Is provided for her ARE THEMEN: HE) Bey 4VP In Europe marriage existe for the CAL OF ALL? family, not for the husband and wife. The Buropean wife does not demand | Dear Mit Nicole Greetey-Smith Tthat her husband shall love her for" Why don't men marry? you ask, Lat rand ‘oes not diverco him If bi8 mo tell you the real reason in thie pagan city i that which one of your men correspondents gave, “There are By George Allan England o question they didn’t have their Which do; jong | plenty of ‘sporty’ girls, and mai |!s not necessary.” That ts th ub! and it is heartrending to the ‘good? young women. Of all the dosen men with whom I have been out, ranging from twenty-four to thirty-two y of axe, some refined, educated men, hot one wrote to m ain or cared to wee me again, after taking me out once, becuuse 1 am not “sporty.” Yet 4M good looking, twenty-six yeare affections Ktray. _ walled from New York for Marseilles. ‘ At ¥ ociock that evening bis day’ 1 Work done, kink sat on @ bench uuder the t near the regurgitant fountain ta the Square and smoked his |? pipe. | The day had been slrivelling; but| Old, have been a stenographer for now from the sea a certain cooling |Hine yea have studied a» iittle waft of alr gave the panting city French, as well as violin, dancing, pite. cooking and Ane T epeak German, “I'm sorry,” he murmured, “Some- the cash drawer You're right, fathor.” he answered, ‘wee Pyros beg tab Melty the whedon pees Soe, Mears for NAUK Ga Ne gut” RRM” PENT CleRNeS Oe raven was pal after separate wayn under the bright lehts, /am five feet four inches tall and heey "h—huh, . and he @lanced Iie head swam, There had been, hat letter, and ee ee eee eon eee adn model's 34 Agure, dance well, om his watch, “l reckon I've got to he knew, a inatter of $450 In billn man. and all hy Jove” So minalia decimal in the Lodger of! sitie cat peat the same time sen. So long and change—Just the ue that Sally laughed. 80 amall a decimal In the Landger sible and '» rious minded, and now I g. Say t ye ander a! a } ne he 1 mus nifows, ona, the verne it winging at night and eing | ay, walt a minute! u sudarmen Lert tare when he hu Pr wat ui Nt fan neu vat nkins sm kod wih eocletnetien. (church cholr on Sunday. I have See ‘Have a amoke on I don't "The emergency was terribly pr run into anything quite no mys. fis heart though | sti now at peace. | 22% And blond hair. 1am jolly end ‘ou to leave little + Y. with tng Hendy would be back in lows Just what did that letter habit ‘Ave & very companionable dispost- that my shout!" DP li Jenkins put back the box of Snip- out ns, took ved them ¢ is all cheese, the milk of human kind- Here, this ta evitably can three regallas and Geri du. over the counter, tled everyth jeri dug. tato hi Jenkins ing on than one minute, and this los in- filcted by some aneak thief, 1f discovered, would in- he anguished ket n quick and clever and nt red-headed one pocketed the denderson had p h an ad. Upr Me Jumtnously, and vance un first we sala ‘ Jenkina st d about $4.76 or B46 said he. "UM nto the drawer he sm ft all Jeast one white ituw he was going at, tll Sal man in this doggone hamlet!" uray, he knew not. Nothing mat Jenkins's hand and his met iD WB tered, only this, that he must make p of friendiiness, Then the good‘ and do it now. The drawer stranger turned and with a wave of his palm strode out of the little shop. “4” his h nickels, eck Ray ys Rees ing and reading aseiduously, He might mont feched 10" and dronaed themesing Rave wondered at the strange vagary pounded. S.nc fee Loch ppp that made Jenkins hold the maga- who aig? . co zine upside down; but this he did — "Who?" ech Before he had time to shut the a ‘ caonetes drawer again, ted Inapira hot notler ban he won struck him, That man could give him millar with the whole « clues to the whereabouts of Sally CHAPTER } malt ty By rhe. Wa nking turn ftly, flung up the WO anehes ire enone Bee PRE RE Apter and are The first, a luxurious u u t, ran out on the e fir + Icon peered down the cabin, en suite, aboard the must have n {-haired stran- Prince do Monaco, five days A aotit ‘ B Up the "Li" out tran New York, bound [/Gn pie Be o northward, a red- for Marseliles and the Rivera. understand ev wa Ming to eatch Three men and a woman were ait- now {ng for a step @t ting there in wicker chaire—for t Jenkins gave cha 1 4 almost the dimensions of ran, dodging murprised AWt@ HAG almost the dimensions: of & hatiess and with flying #all drawing-room tiking ad- Venturous tines and speculating on !n vain. From ie beginning cortaln factors still unknown lo them he knew it was futl etore he had Panes ten made half a block the man vanished f rae rodve : up the statra of the men were elderiy; the third Groaning, sick with despair, Jens youns, The eideny geu en were kins halt in, His gn of misery Gorke Leverett auu bie fell on another man, across the ave. Henry J. ‘Vow ng wan, still pu hue, coming up it under full sall— from Jong and unlust contin Henderson ineat in & Madhouse, w Y busin Cee whiz! Lf he gets back there tivala had incarcerated him, bore ! finds I've let ¢ joint all the name of Malcolm isverett, son of ane « Ul ‘ now fear, ¢ nin with Mus aly J taw ne tu) Jerson t ¢ eltering ounter, beheld the atran, lenking atared after him, hirl, His eye, falling to PUming o saving w doswifly 6 see him the Sully, of with stealth, well, doub’ much as pos ein ¢ § stream of (hat matte to the elgar The yo with exer his cl closed with @ bang. rtly figure darkened the door. swabbing bie neck and beaming expansively, Jien- dergon entered, to find Jenkins amok- little, By Clinton H, Stagg ont cae hone, red “That, Showing How a Loser Won in a Game of Honor we Begins in The Evening World Nov, 27 diy utter Cornelius E colm broke {t, eald he, astonishing riddle ever he didn't do the job, M Prine orett, the old gentleman who had intrusted the miasion to Jen- Kins, drew a paper from bia pocket and re-read it, out loud: New York Cty pi Tt wrt tio uP A little #lence followed. Then Mal- “Introduces the pro- 2 Bally “And wher, 4 what did he get ? He seemed perfectly , and acted ta- a more sur after all, @ have been” ned to epte * put in the He | ne, fintah Mins you mem unploas: rq himaeit Far aloft he giimpaed the constel tion of the vast clock on the tow 4nd beyond, other and fainter co: stellations, numerals on the Time~- place of Eternity, Aud as he sat at ease and smoked tion, What more in thia world man alive want? But hecause T am wood, no doubt I will have to remain lonesome and without some fine man’ love, ar there, pondering, « certain broadening | UNWILLING TO SHARE YOUNG > of Viewpoint, a new grasp of life, an| > Inner satiafac nm Caine LO m ‘eal- | MAN'S POVERTY, [antiOk in bin Buk. Phe porupecdve | Der Mim Nave Greeley faith Sof the stirring past evanis torough | Girls living in New York nowadaye “{ which he had wo feverisily lived now/are not to be blamed for the 1916 begun ty forum itself before ble mental | husband fan: ne. The food prices ar vinion greatly increasing; workiagmen Ne longor “ertbbed, cabin'd and|but « low salary, So why should confined” to the city, reached out| girl marry « i? man and and took hold of the other, outer|his poverty? fe quite tree thet oa aa well, No longer viewing ex- | they may love each other very deari; But at the present time one camnat live on love alone, There are ty of nice girla in New York one wishes to find them, but thea the isi¢ men (the majority) wish mostly for the palate ,freakiah doll. Naturally the nico girls keep at @ distance since they are not wanted, am @ young girl and am passion. atoly fond of musle and books, but woud never marry @ man who ts poor. dured and done. Failed! No, Strengthened body and freshened widened viewpulnt and larger all were his, You call thie be bed not falled. ay different, a . had he be: aly three weakn veture! How many facture tad] J quite believe contributed to that metainorphosis! | dont away with te Jove eenpry ood His contact with rough, human folk, n both ure of @ toe frivoloos his pertis, his trumph over diMeulttes | nature. BARUO! Bid and reat hardshipa | iM. her man in him to RIGHT KIND OF GIRLS AT a Goalies had come to light that, in PREMIUM, due time. he know would win the | bear atte Niaie Grecley-deith: . arger axpecta of success; qualities till 1 undreamed of, unsuspected and known ‘Through all the Diundering | and all the seeming defeat the soul There are two reasons young men of to-day do net =r 1. The lack of the right kind of trl ( Jenkine fluttered new wings and) 8! found that it wae strong. 2. Econowte conditions, Failure? Ah, anything bu. that! I do not mean to eay that there are Jenkins relig: * pipe. which BO Ment Kind of girly, but there are had gone dead th reveries; POt envugh of them. I, for inetasce, ed ft and ought of Sally | ha¥e Leen going about with girle for now und smiled tho past olwht youre, and of Dun. ne time, somewhere,” by mur- 4red (almost) tha¢ I know, there te 1 CN atack uo et that lit. only one girl that T would make my ime again, and when I do, when wise SUN, eeonenmale conditions would not permit hing in the popu- This girl Is well to do and her par- Agant avcompant: @nts—from my Understanding—would fountalp, pl terht, made p 7 onus his flections Jenking | like to eee her married to a man of ke ied dewp and was content means, a man that could provide nt fon't. know!” quoth luxury and comfort now, it was pretty 9 [, carning only $25 at present, can d anh fan hink Unese | barely support myself and eave a fe sve anything on [little for a rainy day. What right hen ¢ unity ktok my dave I to think of marriage and as- 1 even though she handed me sume the responsibilities connected * +k Hter she didn't find me| wich it? When [ “arrive and am. f g Not by long shot she abla to support a hor in proper § jstyle, then [ may settle down end r Next) marry. 14 Ne cout If girly and parents would net ny na NOH Jen: aspire too high and would encow k at 2 da young men to establish themsely world we Would be better off and we wo! jhuve more weddings, Le Siete of Sere oe ad <a Game — ores

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