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The Evening World’s | erfect Figure Contes Conducted by Pauline Furlong To Make Perfectly Proportioned for Their Height Women Now 165 or More Pounds Over or Under Their Proper Weight. Oopyright, 1917, by The Prees Publishing Oo, (The New York Evening World.) Developing—Lesson XVII. ' Exercise for Strengthening Hips and Thighs. Sire with the feet nearly together, hands on the hips, Slide the right foot along the floor and backward and around until it ts on the left side of the left foot. This ts purely a hip twisting movement and the body must be held rigid above the hips, Do the same with the left foot; bring !t around the right one in the same manner. Do this with each foot ten times and relax between the movements, At each backward ewing of the foot it must be brought as far to the opposite side as possible to reach. Thin readers should practise this exercise with some of the others for at least five minutes several times each day, Lesson Talks and Answers to Queries. OOD health is entirely under the| pint of hot water. When cold strain a/a@nd brush into clean hair with a guidance of the individual and) iit brush. This is vegetable an {t reste with each woman tO/harmices, but will rub off and must = gain and retain it,| be repeated every day. not for mere relief from disease and Blather For REDUCING— | E -: Do not depend on guffering, but for/ so nhor spirits for reducing’ any personal = pride! pasts of the body but the breast. Of eppearance andj course, it is astringent, but its effects health. Who can| 0" superfluous fat are not fur-reach- 1eoke, with any- | 'n8. Bo satisfied to try the obesity diet and exercises and let nature take thing but genuine | its course, because there is no healthy sorrow upon the| Wiy to hurry the reducing oth H than Vs “ |diet and exercises, Two pounds lo: Ra PR «Woman Who 15) Lach ‘week show @ healthy and nate chronically 11 and/ ural reduction. suffering from various, often imag!- nary, ailments, including self-pity? wf EESPIRING FEET—MRS. L. 38. : turpentine 19 effective. to These women should be made to un-| 4 perspiring feet, but rie derstand that such thoughts have bad] just ‘aa effective and more wieesane influence upon their organs and weak-|to use. Turpentine {8 especially en the nerves unt!l the brain be- Pore dar aageyn for soft corns also, comes obsessed with the idea that] saturated with turpentine beeten something !s really wrong with cer-|the toes each night and the corn tain parts of the body. When this| Will soon disappear. unfortunate condition exists the re- race laxed nerve cen annot possibly FLOUR nO MATH DARK Perform their important utes of di- has been published repeatedly ‘end recting the b functions, the cir- Will be sent you on receipt of two culation thus becomes sluggish and Cents. Evening World Daily Magazine | But, On the Other Hand— wzt24., By Ferd G. Long , The : Stage = | Kiddie Klub Korner | BY ASSIDUOUS PRACTICE ONE MAY_IN TIME MASTER THE Conducted by Eleanor Schorer IDIOSYNCRASIES OF A SLIDE H , ZA | peel TROMBONE — |} Cousin Eleanor Invites {5 ALL KIDDIE KLUB MEMBERS TO MEET HER AT WASHING- a> TON IRVING HIGH SCHOOL, NO. 40 IRVING | PLACE, NEW YORK CITY, ON SATURDAY, - MARCH 3, 1917, AND JOIN THE Kiddie Klub Community Chorus DOORS OPEN AT 1.20 P, M, DEAREST COUBINS: When you come to the big gathering of our own Community Chorus, day after to-morrow, you will find Roy Scouts standing at attention at the head of the stairs at the Fourteenth Street eubway station, waiting to direct and take care of you if necessary. And on each block (there really are : | only @ fow) from there to Washington Irving High School there ‘a will be more boys in khaki. Thoy will be our mile posts—or, rather, “ws they will blaze the trail, It will be impossible to go astray, with these able, trustworthy and courteou IT 1S POSSIBLE FOR A MAN TO HIREA | ‘The sesetth AGA Uéhors Gad’ doorkseoers Wil bil Wear our IKiub ” DRESS SuIT TO FIT HIM IF HE HASN'T. colore—blue and gold. Ik would be nice if you could manage to ONE OF ; wear them too, my cousins, under your pins, as we wore the red t | The Evening World’s ribbons under them at the Tree of Light at Christmas time, HIS OWN But whether you do or not we shall have a jolly time at our first chorus meeting, and no one will be happier than I when you sing and smile and are enjoying yourselves, aa | know you will, Be sure to come, I am anxious to eee and hear you. All who have Kiddie Kiub pennants, bring them. Won't that Dig auditorium look gay and the singing sound merry? Love from | Cousin Eleanor |Dicky and Dot in the Wonder City —$By Mary Graham Bonner—————— Copyright, 1917, by the Press Publirhing Co. (The New York Evening World) A Creamery. eS OMPTIMES,” sald Uncle hn, “there muat be special won- ders for Dicky be- cause he is @ boy— like the Juvenile Po- Nee, which would be more interesting, naturally, to him than to Dot, But to- day I ahall go on @ trip with you both for Dot's special benefit.” ne 1a poibeesaren Poder DICKY AND DOT LAUGHED TO THINK HOW a very nice brother BOSSY COW WOULD ACT. 3 and 0 enjoyed having Dot enjoy her- | ™ilk. Dicky liked bot chocolate bet- nelf just as mmuch as he always did.|ter, but Dot really iked milk better ‘That was what made them such fine than anything-except perhaps tem! companions and such good friends, |°Dade In the summer when it was, 4 ‘Dot smiled, for she was very happy very hot. But in the country «he over the prospect of “her trip.” And) had always had milk just after it they started off. ev tlaees ahlacial bakers eAoMil. 4 jobn thou; mare on Negi Det ee eee Sl he had planned would be tateresting THE THEORY THAT TWO CAN LIVE AS CHEAPLY AS ONE SOUNDS DLAUSIBLE — T- ON THE OTHER HAND— the capillaries lose the power of re- for her. sisting common disorders and con- tagious diseases, Thus we see that depressed spirits, imaginary allments and morbia jon of the mind WAN DERER Based Upon Biblical Drama of Prodigal Son, Being Presented at Manhattan Opera House By William A. Page They went to a big creamery © « where the milk was arriving from tho farms. Never bad Dot seen so many cans of milk really often b about conditions conducive to serious sses, which ROVE Coe es otherwise would not exist ELIZED The busy, active woman ts indeed i BY MAURICE V- SAMUEL® the happy one, and she who spends 3 . Ls. her timo and other people's money | come yy we ere filtting from abop to dressmaker, | VM by Willan Eula. Ray Comstock teas, dances, otc, and throwing away many valuable hours, w might be used to good advan soon grows critical, gelfish, pessi migtic, until the final day’ arrives ¢ and whe finds herself face to face with the situation that the world |{# owes no one a living, and that he who sows in youth shall reap the re whore they wea him hee dat they were shown the various rooms and the inachinery which ster Mlized the bottles and ringed then and lay there, overcome by weakness ment. I will go within to thy mother, and the realisation tbat at last, after avelled far?" @he inquired sympathetically, “And in rags, Tam She paused, not realizing that abe but if the stranger comes eend for ar, @orry.”” was about to give her confidence to keeping everything absolute me.” “And thou art a beggar?” And thus {t was that the wanderer a beggar. But Jether, «till averting @!l of bis trials and tribulations, be else Ue ein oe tie st And, though Gaal promiaed to do “Aye, a beggar.” came home! his face, sald huskily waa at the place he once ca 4a into bottles held undor a big tank y 60, he promised himself that he would “Then it has fared hard with thee “Then it was thou?* though now verily a stranger “role. | They noticed how all the men wera” oq forthwith stroll down the road to- elsewhere. I bave heard only near CHAPTER XX1 “What meanest thou, olf man? in- beggar without that hallowed olmee. | 11 oh i terms to make everythin ¥ w Hebron in an effort to find the Hebron havo there been abundant aal, quired Naomi. A rough, heavy eter keda him into| /ook spotless, si st rand bid him continue on his harvests, Hisewhere from Dan down f AOMI did not recomntse “Nothing, i did but think it was hin. A, foot bait Kicked him Nato) locy Sooty they work,” sald Dot here 4 ine," ! 4 5¢ othe action, there ta famin: | Jether, as indeed few could po idle saying hata mothor loves action. He looked up iin MMrother|ae sho watched bottics, filled in al { bh 01 gar? Eve: who thad known the lad v4 ed oud Gaal. Instant ey almoat acem to be wool upon nearby brambles in the thou do, who art old and weak? ‘Thy Vigorous manhood he had went astray?” oried Gaal roughly. “Yet that the Wens r City Invention for doing fields, where sheep had strayed and plight should melt even tho beart of left home many months bef “In all this world no man ts more law says wo must kind to bem |# deal of work in @ very short thorns had torn their wool. ‘Thus it Master Gaal, 1f augbt could melt that “Thou hast no need to fear that alone than 1,” sald Jethor. "And gars I would net the dogs upon thee, | tim Journey without visiting the house of to Heershe Jesse “Aye, Before Gaal could go far his ava. “And th ricious eyes detected aeveral bits of thou wouldst work, what ne ward both through happiness and |i! 'y ‘ happened that as Gaal stepped one heart of fl thou wilt leave here hungry,” she thou, who didst see this man tn ain, But T would know If thou hast trav.) | Next they aaw the bottles covered cuse in old age. him to forewear @ side in the gathering dusk he did not ‘Master GanT™ cried Jether, pite- said, generously. “Hissah, prepare when didat thou tell his mother?” elled for in the landa of Dun and be nealed (and then they watched Of course, tho nervous, lazy, child. |4)\« ar, notice a figure clad in rags and sack. ously. “He rules here then? poma food, No atranger comes “I told naught save that the kina- Hphraim? em put into boxes ready to be sent less woman finds the tiime-worn ex- | sy . with a mere piece of hemp tied through Hebron too poor or mean to man whom [ visited had heard no Jethor crouched before him go that/ out to the people ‘cuse that she is maktng a homo for|s round the waist in place of a girdle, ‘ bo a welcome t at Huldab’a word of Jether, What ]aaw I locked the brother might not recognize bim.| “They could never belleve in the her husband, but catering to self and amas tte. gil Gulekly nd leaning heavily upon a etaff, pass 4 for he might bring tldings long in my own heart.” “Aye, and beyond. coun r said Dot, “that so much vanity constitutes tho day's efforts,| him on « wha AU his many’ s ng the road toward the hills which H ed of one who’ ‘Then hast thou been kind to his And where hast thou found the|troubie Is taken over milk. We jus paused as @ sudden thought mother," added Jether famine worse” Bet It from the cows and then drink until dinner time, when the over-| stripe Lim of his last posemios and. ai worked husband ‘ts forced to ait|fo™ through a morbid evening of com- ‘ cee plaints and more self-pity. stories. CHAPTER XX. How much better for idle women N the house of Jesse all was to find some real purpose and pursue nue, Eeuld) it? Have a hobby, but let the health beware? uldab came and hobby be the most important one, If went, but her heart and her you would know the joy of living thoughts were elsewhere, and busy, active, happy existence. Naomi worked upon her TO GROW TALLER—MARTIN H.: | ¢™broldery and did the usual house- All exercises will help you to grow | !ld tasks with the assistance of the taller until you are twenty-four years | f4ithful Rissa, but there was a old, Stretching is especially beneficial | S"bdued atmosphere tn the household for this. with never a sound of laughter or pee wayety, Stern old Jesse never once BLEACHED HAIR—NRS. K. F.; | Mentioned the absent son, and it was Nothing Will restore bleached or dyed| #0 Understood thing between the hair to original color and nature will | three women never to even allude to have to take jts course, You can|the erring Jother in the presence of bleach the hair at the roots as it|‘"e aged patriarch, grows in, and make {t the same color Only Gaal dared to speak of Jether, as the ends, but I would advise you|and he only once, for tho remark to let it alone and treat tho roots and | ¢ forth these words from J scalp With olive oil massage, as the| “I have but one son now, Gaul, and peroxide dries the hair, makes it brit- [thou art he, ‘The boy whom once we tle and causes it to fall out. If you] loved 1s dead—speak never of the decide to bleach the roots, roll eac | se strand up and pin It to the top of the} Yet even Jesse was not able to ban- head to keep the perox from run ish entirely thoughts of the absent hing down to the ends and making | boy, which came to him ever with the them lighter, full of night, for one day he came to on Gaal in great excitement and sald: AGE AND WEIGHT—MRS. K. G.| On tho way from Mebron I met a F.: Lf you are thirty years of age and} man on the roadside who sald a welgh 130, and are & feet 4 Inches) stranger in the village had passed tah you ere about the are on srelnnt | with tidings of our Jether,” ge certainly makes a big difference| + ther?’ repes a in the weight and two or three pounds | pine” nano Hee Gast, scorn might be added for each year, “L know not,” replied Jess rowfully, “I have sent am dressing for obesity diet has been re as ree pews of Jether in Jeru- peated in this column many tim BO eae aoe it my message You must not eat oll on salads, nor | TeAehe in any other dishes. Send me tw Then come thou into the house cents and tpeat your question and 1/24 rest, my father, Thou art much will mail the dolled salad dressing | Wearied directions, Nay, If the etranger comes with | tidings of Jeth answered Jesse, “I SHAVING ARM PITS—MILDRED Ist await him here.” N.: I know many women who do thin |, Ciaal vored to persuade his regularly and never complain of any |fither to re-enter the house and let bad effects from it, him deal with the stranger, for he omaun feared what these tidings might be RIDGES ON NAILS—rnarma RF: | and he wished to hear them first, Acidity may cause this and also the| ‘lt me awalt the stranger, father. brittleness, Rub cocoa butter on the | Perhaps bis tale ts one of lies to gain nails at night and follow a careful | #ift from thes, Let him meet my dlet to overcome the acid condition, | aiiest (Batata 7 gazed at him searchingly WALNUT HAIR STAIN—MRS, K.) Is mine u ding no longer H.: Do not use walnut powder, (Get clear? Su ight unto thy mother, the dried walnut shells at a drug) Much as! hope, | have been taught store and use @ half pound to one to meet calmly with disappoint. rlooked the hospitable home of 80. 1 her “Hut now,” cried Naom!, suddenly — “in my mine own heart,” anawered|/it! ‘That's all! To think of all these i a t {ndst thou perchance but mot struck with an idea. “Thou shalt do Jether simply People and all this machinery work ments which possibly clothe a human rk heard and told thee aught of Jether, on mine own nd. ‘The riously, "Speak not to m riddles,’ We have to be careful 4 being. The sandals upon his feet eon of J . thou eo ist have the « that somewhere Just he sald sharpl “If thou wouldst eat |) ereat, bie place, to have every’ Ware tramimnte ot ledines “tite Gale ‘> heat this house affords to take with thon hast forgotten—-thou didst remember 1 like only the plain speech | Clean,” sald Unele John, “for it's was long and matted, his face cov- thea upon thy travels. Hadat thou dd Sethe " of servant unto master. | different from the country when your ered with dirt and grime, and upon : Jother, stung to action by the bitter jorn family or your own men loc his legs were many eecratches and § of ¥ id memor f those days when Gaal had | after milk But Dot was laugh worked not overmuoh, sought to dictata to him, eprang to|ing, “What ts tt?” asked Dicky. sores, Ha could scarcely stand, yet ‘ould question, Say that thou . 7 “What ld L + with faltering steps be gained the they would question, Say that thot hls feet and faced the elder brother hat would our old Kossy Cow 4 eminence overlooking the home of Bese Waerd (Ras for Ais fer fre RAS denne ina creamery?” asked Dot, “Woulda + Jesse, and @ighed with relief. Yet ng fi “Thou art not my master,” he cried, | she be frightened if she saw this new winsome eves, thou hast heard—some- where—a@ woman's heart felt for hin and cpened a gate to honor for him. ‘Tho elder brother, catching a new |and wondertul way of treating her note in the voice of the supposed beg- be | SI 4 4 ; Y a for This shalt thou tell his mother enrie NO, DI Lah ad ra va ‘by, Elizabeth ‘Torna Jether shook his head sadly. nrew ® bessar un en, No. 504 Henry Str: “T could pot lie to her, he @aid, that the light would be better, stepped | tym, thera was pain in the The beggar came house, and slowly descended the hill, He paused when but a stone's throw @way, and sank upon @ rock, wearted to exhaustion, rie. back and Inughed ke i “How still it 1s,” he murmured. “As eT tt may atill be true,” insiated — “Ho—it 1s. thou—at leat, and tn | Weater thy Dertee, "Pit te if death were about—or ta It peace? iy "thal tase Nak GREE” ks Cred, Gentes 4 Bembarsin ceri In these days of famine upon the Jether, humidly, yet still doflantty, | eaing World, No m8 Park How, ‘New land when so many are starving, is ot Me to her,” answered held out his hand tn aupplication. it possible here, too, they suffer? And Gaal, L bunger.” bo anid, simply yet while I hunger, I fear to go for- ward, Should father see me, I could not face the fire in hia eye,’ Or are and atiilbe — ¢ orang out in trumph, | t hath all come true, as I pre- | a ® ere A pave sald those eyes. forever closed in. sleep et Alclad, | oF nt, wee neem and is my brother Gaal now the mas. ' SE TRHGT Magh iRe RUS ca: ter he And my mother—does she ‘ sid 1 Jethe is alway my wish that one | up the har that he sows, und sit with sad eyes look- ing at the place where I was wont to sit at table? And gentle Nacent-— vine well ney and « : a ba nued Gaal, sermontaing ‘Thou is she perchance now the wife of while and I didat wow Idlene ¢ € Gaal? 1 dread to go forward and ROTA ch On Whe ARaRTAA a Oona find out the truth—yet if L turn back Jother could refuse the Acorn of us who swoated in the falda, | now, I shall starve, But could 1 but 1 into the house and he, ‘ in take thy portion y. Thou didst take thy portion 1 now thou hast spent thy portion. t, thou that now thou canst back and take that which ts seo my mother from afar—only for a moment, secretly, #0 that @he might not know, ‘There they all sit and eat, no doubt, even the meanest servant, whilo I would grasp at what they would throw to the dogs.—But I may From within camo the clink — /0/ber mk bie head. | i not ask. I will but see my mother sliver upon crockery ay Rissab baid 4! pre sald aught of that?” be once, and then go back to the wan “ ” the table for 6 eve moal, Oar i Ae eran here an are weant ‘A BEGGAR, AND IN RAGS, | AM SORRY,” SAID NAOMI ET ee nine vit "Put thot art here” thundered n sky, and to the hungry days Gaal, with new bitterness tn his votes. 1 to hin feet, and sup: n the ataff, slowly # that lod to the main doorway of the house of of bitter roaming where famine rag ile his father Jesse lives,” heard such tidings’ Jother'a int [ plan to keep thee from - - s eth, Buck to this and_on only until ah, resontfully voice ¢ 1 a8 be murmured to thy father and thy mother, for thou | B BQUYNING wim, ent, na I fall a let the dust blow over me, ‘ Jos ives,” wighed b t ‘ ures for me." art 4 disgrace to ue all, and thou Rut, oh let me once see my yfuily, “But hast thou n Kuch d ere her Hy v9 T say If thou wouldst eat mother's fi intstre eyes from the wuten ¢ r to MN thou can not y thou The wanderer rose, and slowly and — "'\What is that to thee?” inquired belo! upon his return ar * for the night, I painfully made his way toward the Rissah, suspiciously T have seen t with wad n nh 1 shalt apend the house. rom within came the lights A woman's heart, when kind, ts pty alr and smile upon er rf pa ma of tne dog kennels yOu ust which Indicated th the eventng meal kindest.” tea n he “ 1 wl 1 f a dowt elong, for I hate | ME, YOUR AGE, was about to be By the well At this inoment Naoml! came from r led Jether, the 4 * 1 always have “Klub Pin,” ly SR the wanderer dropped from exheua- the house to find out the reason for neredulou ! t 1 Ww (To Re Continued.) am wasted. "Chitinase | tion, ju as he Was about to sooth brin. 6 water. t 1 ‘orst t sae his parched lips with a drink of coot e that a ®, ' r - ; == = n a ing water, And eo K ore and ev an, But wome THE IVORY CHILD +b By Sir Rider Haggard ie 1 found him. 4 k ft 5 f-—t rv" 1 pave ’ ¥ 5 ; ir : *ThOW Boor ward, She knelt a, but at in reve wit Last and Best of Famous Allan Quatermain Stories PIN COUPON |° . Rissa. ‘Wou! Jether averted his f womar and | 7 “ " ether nodded, She filled acapeand "A begwar, and probably hungry wine—that day | was In t { Begins on This Page March 5 \, “KIOOI8 KLUB @ drank feverishly ae well as sick and tired,” she cried, yet #til I'-—— sae — - Ls —_— EVENING WORLD