The evening world. Newspaper, January 20, 1917, Page 9

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' 4 c- HOME PAGE Frening World The Evening World’s Perfect Figure Contest This Contest Begins Monday. Its Object Is to Make Perfectly Proportioned for Their Height Women Who Are Now Fifteen or More Pounds Over or Under Proper Weight. The Contestants for Twelve Weeks Will Follow Diet and Bxer- ese Lessons Prepared by Miss Pauline Furlong and Published Daily in The Evening World, Beginning Monday. The Exercises Will Be Illustrated. $100 in Prizes Will Be Awarded to the Six Contestante Whose Figures Most Closely Approximate Perfection at the End of the Contest. By Pauline Furlong. Courrieht, 19 The Pree Publishing Co. (The New York Evening Workt.) T* Perfect Figure Contest lessons which start Monday should be fol- lowed with persistence, not only by the contestants, but by all women readers of The Evening World who are desirous of improving their figures and health. All readers will receivo the same instruction as the contestants for reducing and develop ing, each day, through the columns of this newspaper, and they alao have the same advantage of obtaining help by correspondence through the query column. This is an opportunity which all women should grasp, especially since they know just what a thorough physical culture course has done for women in other contests, and what it is capable of accomplishing when carefully outlined and faithfully followed. ‘The exercise lessons for stout and thin readers will be illustrated and described on alternating days, and any woman, in apparent good health, has it in her power to mould her own figure to normal and beautiful proportions, as nature intended it should be. Nothing impossible to accomplish right in the home will be suggested amd no expensive apparatus or outfit f@ required. Will-power, determin tion and patience are the essentia’ for reaping the greatest benefits from the lessons. ‘The course must be followed just as it ts given and readers must under- @tand that to hasten tho treatment or deviate from the course will likely do more harm than good hs | present: fot wert sea are the bent I am hoping to make these more/remedy, and sometimes it intéfesting and far reaching than any | Becessar lessons waich have t Past and ail readers are invited to write me about anything they wien | to know or which is uot qltite clear! GALL STONES IN CHILD—! bo baht |FRED i: Gall stones are seldom Questions and answers will appear | prevent in children, You should con- @ach Gay with the | One. To-day Is the last y that we @hali | Accépt applications for entry in the contest. Applicants whose appoint- ments to be weighed and measurea have been made for next week will los@ no ground nor be entering the contest at a disadvantage as the first | we ‘9 leasons will include no exer- olees but will be devoted to diet rules relies, and other information necessary to eee possess before beginning the exer-| BARBER'S ITCH—HAROLD G.: Claes, and all contestants and other | phig is an infectious dis and may readers—have onl) read | these! easily be transinitted from one to an- articles and keep then for frequent other in unsanitary barber enon reference during th course, — ne Paaasrem runout {s an acute inflammation of the ton- ‘ils, which makes swallowing very dificult because the throat has be- come very much Inflamed. You should consult a physichan at once, as ton silitis often is to diphtherla if u rated, FELON ON FINGER. A felon may be supertic round the nail or very deep-seated under the covering of the bone. Inflammation lanced, HEARTBURN—-F, G.: It te possl- ble that cigar e smoking is causing the heartburn. Too much and wron| jeombinations of food may also caus and indigestion or nervousnes: | may also bring about this condition. (The cause must be removed to obtain ABEL T.i} may be: | y to consult 4 physictan and, 1 given In the | have a leech applied or have the felon, sult your physictan at once about this, - \ U Daily Magazine HERE 1S ANOTHER TLLGO RIG FIFTY- BE SURE THERE Is THIS To a WHE! SHE'LL NEVER, FINO ir HERE HELLO JOHN Nou BEAT HE HOME To DAY HOME it AND HIDE By Maurice Ketten HT \ MAH, HOW MANY SPOONS OF PEPPER MUST FPUT IN THE IT Was SO SWEET OF YOu To PuT THIS BILLIN \ PCL LET You KNOW IN A MINUTE IT'S UNCANNY] How Did Tap | TRE Coo Boor | Watch them talking with thelr fin |how much they can ask in selling and The Evening World’s Kiddie Klub Korner __ Conducted by _Eleanor Schorer THEY SAW MEN WAVING THEIR ARMS AND TALKING with THEIR HANDS, 4 |Dicky and Dot in the Wonder ‘City By Mary Graham Bonner. | ore New Fork Hetwing Wer Om The Curb Market. ‘cc "RE going to Uncle John, “how @ great many people lose money and make money. And I am sure you will both say you have never seen grown-up mon act in such @ queer way. Dicky and Dot were very curtous as they went along with Uncle John down a narrow street and then Into another street, where they saw ever so many men waving their arms and talking with thelr hand: “Oh, what @ shame!” Do * “What do you mean?" asked Uncle John. “What seems such a shame ‘The men are all deaf and dum! exclaimed hey are making signs to the men in those office windows above,” said Uncle John, ‘They are finding out buying, They are not really deaf and dumb.” “But T don't see anything to buy,” ughed Uncle John, “we don't see what the men are buying or sell ing, as it's all part of a great business very bard to understand." But Dicky was shrieking with laugh- ter, ‘They're the queereat things I've ever heard or seen,” ho said. “Not only do they wear auch funny hats and tickets on their coats to say what | firm they belong to as Uncle John ex-| plained, but they call each other the| She had Answers to Queries. EPSOM SALTS BATHS FOR RE- DUCING—MISS A. 8.3 You st usa the cpsom salts fresh every night when reducing the breast. Use one pound to u bowl of hot water ; each time. (Copyright by Jowe L Lasky.) ing her, Erlc begs to be assigned SYNOPSES OF PRHCKDING INSTALMENTS. BIET FOR REDUCING—NIS. H. . Send two cents and repeat your PP hog iar eA ena t con a ty « Query. The exercises Tay 2180 Oe et een en sctents that tall obtained for two cents each paper. arene oor ote won the annies of | weak King, ‘Toe English have seized more then CASTILE SOAP FOR DRY|Fak King. | lori arte rar it chr are | Erte Trent, # young Englisiman fighting in the France of v-day, finds an old sword, and in the | otebt Joa tort fecalp. Falling hair may be caused by dandruff, nervousness, poor cir- culation and other conditions. DARK CIRCLES AROUND EYES —T.C.: Dark circles around the eyes indicate lowered vitality and loss of rest. TO MAKE EYES DARKER-—ES- TELLD P.: You can muke the eyes pear darker by “shadowing” them, which means darkening the lids with an eyebrow pencil, This is done by most women on the stage and some use the blue pencil before the foot The range girl's bravery and spares tho father, As he talks to hor one Guapart, « peasant quitor of Joan, attacks him from bebind, ‘Tee one on at their captain's, orders, amd the townspeople are beginning to retura. Joan takes the wounded Evglisiman and hides iim in hay loft, Baio recovers and gets safely away ee Joun refuses to wed him, prompted by the away her life, Ten she t to 0 French armic to Nights, It is my opinion that, this |feels the wil to lead ti d m0 ie better way to use makoup, |{0) aid nets our ta sw ine King, After | because it does not smear, like when | dy Noa, and ‘seade fer at Needs® tae ale : elle. force’ to euccor’ the city Placing the pencil along tho lashes. |Get if eteged” sun “ieteste ‘trp. ingliay Charlw at Khelms, In sole recom BREATH—A. The | ones’ fori sacnibvements. ake eka that fete hg a be tured. ive bh free breath can be kept sweet only through + who bas beeu captured, srecelre hi fe hyglento living, and had teeth, ca- ik Bike scree bee Eric, bas aw 2 fateh, indigestion and constipation |futiiled sad sormwfilly, refer. OAT Tanatical will taint it, The only way to make | bries, shoe enmity, soe bad incurred, mache me sure the breath ts pure Je to Weep | Disitiy “iaterenia tie “confidant, well end care for . WHILE — NURSING (Continved,) ; ones s.: Winere te motning | ¢ HE Spider" brings 1’Otse- @ould give you to take to reduce leur to the King, to repeat raing the baby and would ao asvite yeu to follow any reduc- ing course while dolng wo, If you breathe deeply and take fresh alr walks you will be in fine trim to fallow the course later. TONSILITIS—N. —— the story of what ho has seen at Orleans. Shrewdly “The Spider” argues that the thine has come to pout poison in the King’s ear against Joan; and Charles hears with a certain jealous fear that the people of Orleans knelt to Joan, L/Olseleur adda that the soldiers even whisper that they'll |make her Queen! And that it is his firm bellef that Joan is a witch! Again, superstitious thoughts take |hold of Charles, who fears that ke jmay owe bis power to black magic, and Tremoille keeps adding fuel to K Tonsllitis Hotel Kitchen Will | Absolutely Clean | ANITARY precautions, the equal S of which perhaps have never been taken by any other hotel, are to be observed in equipping and operating the kitchen of a very large hotel to be erected in New York City, No food of any sort will remain un- covered in the kitchen, unless being cooked in an open dish, and yet all food will be in fll view behind or under conveniently pivoted lar covers, says Popular Mechanios, *” raw materials will be conveyed rom one receptacle to another by mia. chinery. The bulk of the work, which helpers and cooks have former- ly done by hand. will be done by ma- chines, such as paring fruits and veg- tables, making bread, cutting butter patties, mixing salads, &c, All em- ployees will be trained to be as scrupulously clean as attendants in a hospital operating room. Each one will be required to take a bath morning at the hotel and to sa daily examination by a health inspec- tor, the flame Hearing that Joan is about to ride secretly to Compiegne to aid the be- sieged French, Tremoille sends news | of tala Go Cauchon, and bids him seek |qut the Duke of Burgundy in his tent {before Complegne and warn him. |Cauchon does so and Burgundy iv | overjoyed at a prospect of capturing Joan, | Erle rrives to report to his chief, for further the Duke of Burgundy. service, telling him that he haa only | Just left the prisons of the French | Burgundy explains that he hag 1e- Jceived information that Joan is to jride secretly along a cortain road to {Complegne, with only a handful of to gouse him to b knights, and tells Eric that at last ransom money to Joan in gratitude be may avenge Ns comture by seiz- for what she has done for him. The vacillating Charles to some other duty. Burgundy, Spider" for money to give to 1 he could rid England of Joan forever the paper piqued’ that Eric does not apprecia'e but “the Spider," Ch ‘9 by burning her as a witch. This the honor of capturing so great a refuses to give La Hire the mo! would sult England, as she could prize, ina! When Erio still begs rousing the King’s superstitions then contest Charles's coronation, be- to be let off, Burgundy believes that Erle is a coward, Telling Eric what he thinks of such cowardice, he commands bim in the name of his English King to capture the witch matd, Joan! And E is obliged to obey. Eric waits with his men and Joan, riding with Gaspard and her little he wishes to would make stead! And #0 Charles help Joan, and his Ge angrily breaks his sw Charles and tells him with his @ervice, La ransom herself ©, eee surrounded and Jcdm @aiken put their moncy togeth prisoner, Erle ¥ miserably bythe to the tent of 1 side of the road as the soldiers seize themselves, to r her. She is taken by the Burgun- their purses are p dian soldiers to the tent of their against Cauchon's ba master, the Duke of Burgundy, who gold, and Joan greedily holds her for ransom to to England, I elther Charles of France or England choking Cauc! whichever bids the higher Hive La Hire seeks the King and tries Cauchon hay only duty of sending his revenge, and after thrown into an celves the idea that turns again against Joan by asking him if does nothing raldine Farrar now starring in a film spectacle based upon this story to cause he would owe it t of a witch! land forever of a witch who Queen in his the This also would rid En) “witeh spells further aavance his own ambition If Joan, o the power which England firmly believed Joan had been exerting on he intimidate them. to neral, La Hire, ord in front of that he is done Hire and Eric is brought But, after quisition, witchcraft. “THIS PAPER CHARGES THAT THOU HAST RASHLY SINNED AGAINST GOD AND HOLY CHURCH,” r soldiers to Joan, with Cauchon leading the In- to trial for a hundred ther and come days of less questioning, Joan indy, to try, 69 baffles her tormentors that u Joan, But Cauchon is ob} toop to the nadequate contempt kery to gain t bh his end, Hoe falls to bring Joan by Burgundy fa eans to return to the garb of nly saved ffom a woman fuithfal La So ¢ ion has Joan brought to th the prison and edt tain he With l'Olseleur and tout other Joan has bean hooded Inquisitors, invelsies her into ish prison, con ing apor promising to return be could still to woman's garb, and the exhausted ? on the verge of collapse, signs Cauchon, when Joan has sorrowfully returned next day to woman's dress, orders the roughest scoundrel he can find to be placed in Joan's cell as night guard. He shrewdly figures that the guard will attack Joan, and by morning she will have returned to boy's dress and ho can then declare her to be a ro- lapsed heretic and burn her in the public square! The guard arrives and Cauchon, from a trap in the ceiling above Joan's cell, sees all going as he wishes The guard attacks Joan, when Erle Trent enters and starts to fight with the guard, thus saving Joan, Erie, who has knocked down the guard outside Joan's door, tells her that ho has horses waiting at the prison gate and that she ts to hurry and dress while he disposes of the vara Joan dresses once more tn her boots and doublet, while Eric drags the oll fighting guard outside her cell But neither has reckoned with Cauchon, who, having seen all this, sends his monks for soldiers, inter- rupts Eric as he ts ohoking the guard, and dispatches him with the guard, Just as Joan is ready to leave, Cauchon comes into her cell, asks her why the boy's clothes again, and, refusing to hear any explanation, pronounces her a relapsed herette in front of his monks and condemns her to death by burning, at dawn, Meantime, Charles is giving a wild bacchanallan feast in his Castle at Chinon, far away, With wild ex- travagance "the Spider’ or. dered for Charles's amusement at the feast, @ fountain which spouts real wine, carried on the backs of Jester: In the cold dawn, Joan is dragged has to the public square to be burned, with the full sanction of the “Ins quisition,” the brightest legal minds of France and England! Eric, in an ecstasy of grief, has been watching the fagot man all throw$h the long night, pile his fugot@ tlowly on to the stake. Joon enters tho square in an ee ecutioners' cart, followed by joering rowds, L’Otseleur, in a fit of ras norse, Joan'a forgiveness, rune | THE BLIND | ning beside her cart. Cauehon, with his revenge finally sated, seats him: self with other high prelates on bis stand, When Joan ts fineliy taken from her cart, he bids the executioner do his duty, Erte pushes away from the soldiers who hold the erowd back} and, coming up to Joan, gives her a rude cross which he has made from | the fagots, begging her, over and| over, to forgive him. Joan bids him| be of good cheer, Kisses the cross and mounts the ste of the st » Eric collapses as the fagots are lighted, crying out, “God forgive us, we have burned a Saint!" St, Michael comes once more to Joan in the flames and comforts her, #0 that she cries out 4x ona who looks on Paradise—"My voices are of God; they have not de- ceived mel" Swirling smoke closes then gradually disappe and we are back in the English trench "“Some- where in France.” Eric waking up, ‘nds himself kneeling by his bunk, his candle burned down, the clock three minutes of midnight. with diMeulty he brings himself back to 4 realization of things. His bunk mate ts still asleep, Eric knows now, beyond all doubt, who the man Is who will carry the bomb to explode the German trench for France. He rushes to the Colonel's trench and asks to take the bomb just the clock shows midnight. Eric given the bomb and crosses the dark the scene, and empty battlefield. The Germans! | catch him just as be t# about to throw the bomb and a volley of Ger- man bullets reach him effort Eric throws the bomb across the barbed wire entanglement and,|/ hardly able to see, finds the electric| “ button and pushes it as)! is|* * He fulis to the ground, dying. With one suprome| ® never scen anything in her life #0 interesting as a street jammed wit men who waved their arms abé' and who were really and truly male ing and losing lots of money sign of and buying things They called some people bears! said Dicky, “and some they called bulla and others lambs. Now, and bulls and lambs aren't friendly. ‘They couldn't all belong to a club oF be—well, chummy.” es who think the stocks are way up are the bulls,” said John, “and the ones who think they're going down are the bears, The lambs are ‘the Big Public Mke ourselves who don’t understand all of this” “ICs a wonder ff over there was sald Dot. “Money going Up, coming down, money being lost and being made, and no money in sigh. T haven't seen any one even jingle & few coins. And as for the sight of ® dollar bili! Woell, it's: wonderful think of making money and dol business by waving the arms." “It's too wonderful for me to derstand, id Dieky, “But It n fine names for ther bulls ein bears, both so fine ng, and lambs for the pubbigy who follow thé leaders.” The idea for to-day'’s story age, age Sal te "Worthen uid, No, 62 Pare low. Cousin Eleanor’s “Klub Column” DEAR COUSIN PLEANOR tell me if ther te a et Rat om wit pleane Clana? Sty mether COUSINS ALL-—Santa Claus le related to Christmas tn just the same way as Uncle Sam is to this fino land we live In. He ts the spirit that pervades it, The whole world at Yuletide teed his great good influence that turns the thoughts of all to kindlier things, He makes even the world war to take heed of him, turns gta Ieemen from bugaboow into jolly play. mates for children and as for mothers and fathers! Well—there are precious of them who do not buckle to and help him just all they can tn bis please ant work. ” Many sit up night after night sew Ing dolls’ clothes and making sl under the direction and guidance of the mighty Santa Claus, Nothing ag@ no one could be realer than the love ing, generous old saint working fo! a Merry Christmas to all. ‘ And, Cousin Joseph, if Santa tne deed did not bring the things yeu asked for it was probably because your cholco was not wise, You must have wished for things that were not best for you to hav So Santa, bes Ing quite as careful of your welfare a ho 1s of all other poluts that tend to happiness, brings you the gifts that his wisdom thinks fitting, ge ta so wonderful! Kvery year that you lve you will understand his world-wide spirit more and more and your love for him will grow with your understanding, Then you will realize how rea} genuine he is, Just walt and see at you don't! COUSIN ELEANOR, Brownle and His Tingle-Tom, « ! > ‘h 0 V7 Piew ap (maelf into Hane, wh Test wherera be By William MacHarg and Edwin Balmer Begina on This Page Monday, Jan, $8 The entire Ry Rost BCHWARTR, German trench is destroyed, No. 823 Kast Thirteenth Street Into the debris and wreckage fades Se | How to Join the Klub | a vision of the sainted Joan. Kric| can barely crawl to her fect. He} ———_—_— looks up and with his dying breath begs to know if he is forgiven—and for answer Joan of Arc smifes ra- diantly on him; and so the modern| | Eric ‘Trent dies, and the scene fados f i entirely, leaving nothing but the wth ie te head of the warrior maiden and her 7s h D radiant hi | AS (The End.) MAN'S EYES PIN COUPON EVENING WORLD “KIDDIE KLUB” % pouse | } }

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