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WRN neem crt ere CPE yp Pe = HOME PAGE Evening World Daily Magazine Diet and Exercise Rules For Beauty and Health Through This Column The Evening World’s Physical Culture Expert Will Answer Readers’ Queries Regarding Diet and Exercise Required for Im- proving the Figure and Bettering Health. By Pauline Furlong Coorriaht, 1916. by The Prem Publisiing Co, (The New York Breuning World) 1) ieee of the chest, collarbones and shoulder blades, known as round shoulders, is perhaps the most common of all physical defects to which most persons are subject, and the effects of this are often far reaching and really dangerous. The bones of the shoulder blades, collarbones, ribs, vertebrae and trunk are locked together like smooth stones in an arch, and the misplacement of even one bone will. often throw the entire bony structure out of gear, This condition can be corrected, but it is more easily prevented, and the readjustment of the entire bony structure of the body must be brought about in y, order to correct round shoulders and improper car- Pune rua riage of the body if it has existed any great length of time. It must also be understood that many vital organs which Me beneath the bony structure of the body are also out of rightful places in the flat-chested, round shouldered person, and when the condition is exaggerated these organs are pressed together or hang down, unsupported. until they are wholly incapable of performing thelr important functions, ‘The ideal figure for efther sex is the flat back and high, full, round chest, ey acne eat Theiits and pepper rai vice ar are Reg witch MOFe or less injurious to the health, ig desired by all. | OLIVES—MAKGERY R.; Olives are ‘The cure for roun:! shoulders, flat fattening, expec ly the ri e, chest and hollows iu the neck con- (it olimlon that res eplokied tn wists of systematic practice Of €X- brine, and most pe: eroises, certain postures and move-| them’ after getting used to the ripe ments, which bring into action, dur- | ives. arte ing their execution, the muscles in these ‘parts, and make them strong CONSTANT THUMPING,IN HEAD and firm enough to hold the entire stipation will have to be cur y in the correct standing and sit- | feel sure this is the trouble, expecially ting position, without strain or fa-) "hen you say you have pimples and | to tgue. _— Several special exercises for stoop) HOV FLASHES—MI LAURA shoulders have been filustrated in H.: Some nervous disturbance causes past lessons and among them are this. Warn or tepid baths, fresh alr, * ching and tran. /eep breathing exercises and a clean chest’ raising, stretching an ans | Orc} gom swinging, which must not be) dition, performed by any but those who are | — practised with the first two men-| | CHOCOLATE FUDGE—ANITA R.: | tloned. }Chocolate fudge in large quantitles ae [would most certainly be most une i wholesome and likely cause diges- geben ied »,| tiv pio disturbances” “and nervous | —E. | troubles, H.: Get this at any drug store. LaRSapRE “SLIPPERY ELM"—E. 1. 1: This) YR RTIGO—GEORGE torte has no medical value. could cause this condition, TO PURIFY THE BLOOD—AMY R.; You do not need a blood purifier in the form of a medicin abundance of exercise In the open al ‘copious water drinking, and eat pur wholesome, easily «digested foods, Do low constipation to ex! IN WATER—MRS. CHAS, ma age with any pure cream, meals may corr wolding those which encoura cing a glass of water with the jVOlln ct urs ff helt a lemon could never jrvunle, such as sweets and ver Yany one. Lemon juice and all ult frait juices are wholesome. | ‘Can You Beat It! IT SEENS ONLY Yestenbay t WELCON' ALITTLE Boy CIRE THAT GOOD BYE 28 B MY TIME [S NEARLY UP ED You You HAVE BEE! SO Good ue ICAN'T BEAR To HAVE You LEAVE NE ones, It} ons cannot eat, \ KNEW THAD. NO BUSINESS ) To EAT THAT \ PLUM PubdinG WAKE uP! You ARE SCREAMING ) em will likely overcome this con-| SCAR—MILDRED: The scar, if} slight, may be removed by constant HEARTBURN—MKS. 8. J: Sey. | eral teaspoonfuls of olive oll before t this, providing, of! that you eat proper foods, | SHAVING HEAD TO SAVE HAIR MAURICE C.: There ts a wide dif- este Bee | YSSEY OF TH I have known many who have had the hair cut closely and many who) i). y CTE have not and all say something dif. | (oMre ack Jon Au Rignte ferent about the effects on the hal However, I do know that cutting splitting ends will benefit the growth. Splitting ends are due to dryness, SALT AND SUGAR—ESTITOR M.: The less used of both the better for fupiies uk the health, and certainly all cond. | SYNOPSIS. OF Kid RECEDING INSTALMENT on with Ow _ _ 66 WILL talk of the things which were, in my own T ie the time for making Ni Year's resolutions. And there ee ated ace ei wh ey {deprived of fire one which might profitably bel promethean gift may vanish at any made by many of the young men and) moment. 3 women who read this column, It is;the slush-lamp, and placed it so its “I resolve to be courteous, even | iene falght, fall upen we as at the {narrate ice slid his body ove to my friends.” | the edge of the bunk ana juined t I think the person who wrote tbat} “I am Naass, a chief, and cynical sentence, “The Lord deliver | 4 chief, born between a sun: us from our friends—we can tako/"#ins, on the dark seas, in my care of our enemies,” had in mind ieee a as gaan, palling jack of manners, gentle consideration, which mo intimates show toward h other. storm, The salt spray froze upon my One should be nicer to one's friends| mother's breast till her breath passed than to apy one else n the world—|with the passing of the tide, But I except one's lover, But a girl and a/T raised my e with the wind and young man often celebrate their] storm, and lived w]| He of the Otter Skins drew over to have been pt and a th- nd the Worn lik! for each other by a rudeness dw in Akatan’ wether would show toward a pre usked Malemute Kid stranger. “Akatan, which is in the Aleutians; — an, beyond Chignik, beyond Kar- ” ring|dalak, beyond Unimak, As I say, wo “A. RY writes: “In embroidering | dalnk, mak, 4 Ay) M Initials on the bridal linens should the |(Welt in Akatan, which les im the initials of the bride's surname or the | milst the sea on the edge of the ‘oom's be used?" world customary to mark all the} “I was ferent ny people bride's wedding presents with the in-|/n the is of the be were the itlals of her maiden name, | crooked rs ad Wave-warp id “C, V." writes: “When valking with |} mnie ‘ boat us h as my be ple two young ladies should man taka] hever built nd 4 remem var o a the the place between ther an the out. [point of the Island which overlooked te ways there st " th side next the street ay th br, procedure Is correct. |pine tree which never grew. ther The latter, procedure Is correc Dine ite ae au er me Pe ‘wo Me said the two men ¢ to that ppot, qT en. . turn about, through many days, and “A, 8." writes: “Two young men] watched with the passing of the light ire in love with ine and want to marry! “These two men eame from out of me, Iam very much tn love with one | the sea in the boat which lay in pi of them, but he Is four years younger jou the beach And they were white than I, and so I have tried to forget |Jike you, and weak as tho little chil- him, But there seems to be some kind | dren when the seal have gone away of magnetism which draws 1 him! and the hunters come home em and makes him irresistible, I have| know of these things from t tried hard to like the other young|men and the old w who man better, but cannot m to do| them tre he and mothers Bo, What would you advise me to/hefure then eno st do?” Jmen did not take kindly to our way Marry the man you really love,| it first, but they grew strong, wha Although there is an added element | of the fish and the oil, and Heres, And of risk in unions in which the wife is | they built n each his own house, the husband's senior, they may turn id took Lhe pick of our women, and out happily, You would be certainly |! time chidren came. ‘Thus he was WARBOEY it you, married one man |! Res: while loving another, Ih a ee eae sut when they “¥. G." writes: “A young man has | An! there wor’ asked me to marry him. 1 have re- |{Nrie ARN fused, and feel that 1 shall never re. | {Vt consider my decision. Is it wrong for) caui sp the length of an arm me to cc .tinue to receive friendly at-| through the other's body, Their chil- tentions from hima provided I do not | dren took up the fight, and their chil- decetve him as to my attitude?” dren's children I. see nothing wrong in such a sit-|hatred between them, and black de uation {f the young man !s Willing to ings, even to my tim ch with the other, And The Price ‘That One By Jack London | E NORTH _ the blood of them that Of my blood L was alone; of the other man's there J . [thought him a gi but he showed me also that Unga was to go away him in his ship. went before. Was not strange, for the blood of my fathers was the blood of the men of Macha miner, takes @ tock imine Do you unde had thought it an easy find him I sought, once I got his own people; and when wo and ono day, and passed | father and my father did not come ishing one night; back from the Tho blood of my hers flamed beach on the big tides, and they held very close to each other. people wondered the hatred between the houses, men shook their heads sald the fight would go on when chil- n were born to her and children to Unga was older than 1 by with my spear of the bottles had from my arm, and he neck, #0, and knoc looked for perhaps as many schooners re were fingers to my ships lay against th for miles, packed lik fish; and when 1 chief, and it did not 1 “But a ship shoved her sails 4 took me by th went among them to ask for a man with the mane of a sea lion, they laughe mo in tongues of many peoples I found that they balled from the ut- termost parts of the « into the elty to look And I was made weak like 4 new-born child, and my legs would breath of the ad. 1 will begin “And they said I must hurry, that my blood might be the older and grow strong before hers id igawered and worked ha Advice to Lovers _|! at the besianing, and Seaseseuame tell of m If and th woman, and, | after that, of the on ngs of the house with h maiden till one night coming back from the fishing. was lying, so, low and mighty man, wateh- commands with 4 His eyes were t arms, and when and are afraid the they were like the cod when they ran racing with Of & sudden the kayak of Un- driving past looked upon hair flying like i 4 sound Ike that of the big b alemute Kid pricked up that of a sea lion. yellow, like of @ southern harve yarns which s “So, after a long tin to the port which is b: with her black a cloud of night and Only Yash-Noosh was a man, on the head with lay with his face in the 1 they struck him this was the first ach of Akwtan e son of to hunt for the the east of the warm land which runs , the sunlight was full in the eyes, and I was a stripling; but someh and I knew it to be he sails to the sound of the'r the ship went away or lren ted to the houses, wh rung our bows and wa ars in hand ul of kind whipped ahead she looked back with- space of two strokes—looked woman Unga it as the call of er's comiak, All of a night the een shipped with men of his own ra und went after of|cast out the waves which threw an H}upon us, and we fought with the people suid n took no notice seal pack and harried waiting tll spring of th when I put fish and ofl tn ripped past the lazy oomlaks and left ft north throug But she was quick , and my heart was like d I did not gain, crept back, nds and many ro men grumbled and the belly of r ? wind freshened d, and, leaping lik fog, and over They would not work bore presents pathway of mane of a sea lion, and they out of the | them tokens Naass was crouched half out of his of one driving and I was head Somewhere held the tossing kayak and the flying he voice of the wind soft as they axked ie ship, and Unga, and the with the fall of much and straight arms folded, upon his nostrils, she made the shore, and ran to the house up the sand and led her ‘The last noise when the chief of rookerles of tossing floor passed on to the east, rid growing ever house of her mother, ‘o0ds of Yash ends of the neither gods nor Noosh, which rd of the ship, nor in Kk And #0 | came a rocky land, ys in the mountain we drank and mad Yash-Noosh, only @ strip! hunter who went to the where our salt And in that n of Unga, heart as light as to my own house re ready to come fog lifted on the edge Jamined down silent among the her eyes wide. And he with the ma strange white . till my pile was the fingers of one upon us a schooner the cloudy funnels of morning came, went down to the beach, casting out of the corner of my Then his men ca ye at the House voatth auch an wan ome the father and plunging the women ty things one to th and powder to help work came to talk after their manner, become ehiefs, e men to face these strange nd cunning toc lika of whic When he showed t Romance of Mystery Even Written | By W. Clark Russell such a price been offered; and t I added more to the pile, 4 put bestde it a kayak of well-tanned h never yet had swam in ut in the day it was yet strength of blood I carry drove his sent her below when the gan to talk with three feet to our two rudder lift gre I swinging on Here 1s the Strange THE FROZEN PIRATE __ Begins on This Page Tuesday, Jan. 2, ~) and there was great crafty, and I grew angry at the shame in which I stood before my people, So that night I added till tt became a great pile, and I hauled up my so that in each accept it, family but one lived to pass down | The New Y ear Resolution | _A Time-Honored Custom __ Although Annual ‘‘ Swearing Off"’ Is Said to Have Originated During the Reign of Louis IX. of France, History Records the Egyptians Renouncing Their Follies in the Days of the Pharaohs, and the Japanese “ Clean- ITH the beginning of the New Year is born the resolve to wipe out the errors of the| past, and order our lives anew. To the Influence of the modern may be attributed much of the trreveren in which the New Yorker's vow of amendment and reformation is re- celved. Time was when the New Year resolution of the sinner was re- garded as part of a solemn covenant The Japanese, with whom, among all ancient peoples, originated the New Year vow, held that the New Y¥ should mark the assumption of a new conscience, and Inward and outward purification, In days 300 years before which haa lasted to this day, of wip- ing out all fouds of the old year and friendship. As part of the plan of reformation were cleared away, all enimities were ended under penalty of the law, The dwelling house was swept and gar- Jnished, old furniture and old elothin w out the lind in whieh the festival ex. | tended, it being held that a quarrel! on the first day brow inevitable punishment in the shape of a year of jsorrow an misfortun Then it was ithat the J. anede m. looking retro xpectively over all the acts of bis lif made eran mise at the altar of his godw that his Ife should be so ordered aw to fit him for entrance Into | eternal fi . By con orary peoples was the New Year Day regarded as time of solemn renunciation of, all follies and an amendment for the future, In the \days of the Pharaohs th Iwignalized their purification with elaborate baths and fasting, the Per sians and Phoenicians greeted the |New Year with prayer to the heat Jimuages, with the flagellations prac- Feised in| to run before us, that he might Christ they followed the custom, | reform beginning the new in amity and/anese gradually cense of to-d the New Year had, fm | following the beginntn mas era, been tr jsaturnalia of vic bauchery and wild excess. Yet out of this, strangely ene [the Christians the vow Jtton. bo Mave tine though the day was observed as on Vmatd te twelfth century with France, who ¢ day of a cer r4 of his army should take a vow @9o to refrain for the whole y fndulye rages by the monks and | 4 | however, | th indulg ‘ont much ‘of th i that in these times it ing the Slate” Twelve Centuries Ago. |with burning of incense as accoms ent to thelr promises of 4 tion But with the advent of the Chris. tlan era the semi-heroic religious w Yoar's observances by the Jap- legenerated into 1 dissipation, so that the Jap and rema eding sev suc bration, By the pagan peo} n days of the es the arrival of 1 the period im diately anterior to the Christ. 50 . drunkennes arose among reforma- in the third ¢ rs of St. Ambros St. Au- gustine and St. Chrysostom, carrying thelr sacred mission wert, and reprobatin and supe yer east and the erlmti stitious practices oft tern peoples, pre rations, direetin. on the con- \ cast away tn exchange for new |trary, that the Chrixtian year should-7es jin the belief that the assumption of a. te ned with a day of prayer and new consclence was ¢ iplete only ff «. humiltatic and vow of fue with the assumption of & new cover- ture amendment. The festal charace ing for the body ter, way not overlooked, Universal peace prevatied through. aye Th have origin ecreed th in new year the sol r, from, nee in strong drink. ” With the passing of ¢ the gradual growth of to luxury and self. old New Year ir so! tend: the favorite away while we were caught. And! subject for jest by the humorists, —_ they knocked our masts out of us till] we ged into the wind Ilke a Kull; but he went on over of the sky-line—he and Vhat could we? The fresh hider spoke for themselves. So they took us to that to us to work in the mines to dig salt And % died, ‘and—and some not die. Naass swept the blanket from his shoulders, disclosing the gnarled twisted flesh, mistakable Prince hasttly eovi not nie to look upon “We were there a weary time sometimes men got away ¢ south, but they always cam . So, when we who hailed from Yeddo Hay rose in the night and took the guns from the guards, we went to the north. And the land was v larg with plains soggy with wa ond arked with the un waterp! and unbre machine, ‘thin slices of co: striations of the knout, even thickn d him, for it was block of cork, say Monthly. The slic » chemleal baths in order to remove th 1 the result of new French process, It ts nof, a non-conductor of heat, kat By using a spectal k of an 88 are obtained from @ Popular Science placed in production, 1 Ruawlan port, and after ORK fabric 1s a recent French lone country, where they set ( ; ts which make cork more or less brittle substanea, on thelr removal the cork sheets resin sus pa y become flexible and may be come!) 1 in tus respect with thimejgy and | great ts. And the cold ' hn Pal eae ch came, with much snow on the ground, fet ycee ttt teen hg and no man knew the way, Weary! )°0 80% i months we journeyed through th endless forest—1 do not remembe how, for there was little food and often we lay down to die, But at last we came the cold seu, but three were left to look upon it One had shipped from Yeddo as captain, and he knew in his head the lay of the great lands, and of th place where men may cross from one | to the other on the lee, And he led us—I do not know, It was so long Ul there were but two. W we came to that place found five ¢ the strange people jeh live tn tt country, and they had dogs and ski und we were very r fous in the snow till they 1 othe ing the cork sh » cloth, 4 a thin ot or, an of matertal is ob esive preparation ts the cork to the ment is sheets are placed of cloth. The has a decided advantage .ry ralnproof mntertals be+ permitting ventilas ary raincoat pre- the cork ts very of it Is said to market las Neale Te ee ioe aa oa [Paes Danger in Filtering | ie gale trom ihe wont jut | Gasoline Through Chamois! lovin Ray, Va tlk and the priest ROM a well known authority It the wea was no r fruitfut strain gasoline through chamots and those who went ip af SMa SRaUL the éallowing: sane eae Naeie ig ines na, says Popt nce Monthly! ains and of those [ soug So 1 turned aw from the ocean which and went among the landa, trees, the houses and the n ait always in one place a t move. | journeyed far learn many things, even of reading and writing f It was well I should do tt came upon me that Unga these things, and that ne day en the t stand, w which raise a sail to the wind, but cannot steer. But my eyes and my cars Were open always, and [we mg men who travelled much, for L 1 but to see those I nem by At last there & man, freah from the moun with pieces of rock in which » Kold stood to the size of pe 1 be had heard, he had knew the men had no. word |W ge whole of Man said en gasoline is poured on a s static electricity is created, and it is apt to fire the liquid, As funnel fits the tank open ng a ground is formed and there ta park, but if for any reason the 4 el is held up or ts not in contage ss from the funnel to thi tank with disastrous re. tanks are set into the seats 5, consequently the the ga he through the cmois in the funnel sets up the and if sufficient amount te up & jump spark issuing ber funnel and the tank will y to cause a fire with sertous > attan Island was valued at $24 leas than 900 and liv where they years ago, Building plote tm drew th the ground some sections of the island now gall »neluded) at the rate of $40,000,000 an acre, i While maintaining Intact albu? jthe ancient religious observances all outstanding accounts and debts| footw it his duty te be drunte on New drunk during 5» 1 Immediately 5@ ated as an ancient 4M 8, de amy tury thel@p ibited all future yan centuries, fay mn import, #o° of Cork Fabrice __|hiowg # With gy tank, a spark ts likely toss