The evening world. Newspaper, March 2, 1917, Page 17

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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. Sie Conrrisght, 1917, by The Pram Publishing Co, (The New York Bveniog Work.) Reducing—Lesson XVIII. Leg Swinging Exercise. the leg swinging exercise {llustrated in this lesson reduces the hips and strengthens the thighs. It also lends balance and poise, Stand with the feet nearly together, hands on the hips. Swing the right foot sharply around and over in front of the left knee, up high and then back to starting position. Relax and repeat the exercise five times with the right foot and five times with the left, If it does not tire you. Exercises for the lower abdominal muscles, such as the one shown with this lesson, are valuable for all persons, These movements stimulate all of the internal organs which are not exercised during dally duties, | Digestion is alded by physical exercises and the process of digestion | fe @ chemical one, consisting in the melting or liquefaction of the solid portions of food taken into the body and the ch g of the ones which cannot be dissolved into material which the body needs for nutrition and Mfe. Many kinds of digestive flulds are contained in the body, and the feats accomplished in the alimentary canal are more marvellous than work @one in any chemical laboratory. | The alimentary canal, it is timely to state, is the great duct which conveys food to the stomach and carries off useless ma eliminated from the body. | Lesson Talks and Answers to Queri ANY things|and not trritate t ! cas are neces-| tile soap for shampooing dry hair, sary t° RHEUMATISM.—L. K. 1: Faulty Keep the various) dict, retnined waste in the system, r cireulation »plous water ¢ st be ex king, digestive organs|and f J juices in such |} dee yreathing and fresh alr exercises, condition that ; they can sustaln| MOUTH BREATHING.—Sarah M.: the body in| The chin strap will prev snoring health, and/ad mouth athing at night among them ae) FATTENING FOODS RN exercises to stim-/and raisins are fatteni Water | Slate the blood|#hould be drunk freely” betwes meals, and copious water | wupply to them, drinking. Many times I bave tol) BRITTLE NAILS Rub | siadere that w ation causes! cocoa butter on the nails each night | : the moat This will p nt and remedy th many common ape t Ridges on the nails a waient ; constipation, acidity stion, which ts the result of ind The mixed dict is ithy one THEY SAY A WOMAN 15 ONLY AD OLD AS SHE L0OKS— Evening World Daily Magazine ‘But,on the Other Hand- = ante, BUT- 0” THE OTHER HAND— © Friday, March 2, 1917 By Ferd G. Long Constant. 1917. Advice in the Selection of Materials and Styles for Ali Types Furnished by The Evening World’s Expert. | By Mildred Lodewick Coprrigh!, 1917, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New Tork Evening World.) Description, ere ee ee HBR ts no de | partment in | he soheme of everyday economies |that women are | called upon to prac- tee which Is fo apt to ant offers such manifold temptations to do the wrong thing as the department of dress, It isan amus Ing fact that women | who take considera. conftus BUT- ©’ THE OTHER HAND - ble pride tn expert division of the food allowance and other household expendt- tures often prove ox- |travagant in their | dress allowance. To choose wisely olal garments that in with one's activities and surroundings re- quires more thought than some won willing to give or the # tone nsider neceasary But both happiness and economy le In & well chosen ward robe, Almost every woman needs a mod for morning when on er- made neces- wear randa \T 15 OFTEN SAID TAAT A CHILOLESS HOME | EMPTY HOUSE— BUT AN | BUT ON THE OTHER HAND— sary by the number- Jeux mmall yet im- portant details of the day's routine, Tho sign shown to-day suitable also for th business woman nd the school girl, Of light weight serge or velour, the watat shows & smart point- ed collar rolling away from its rather high neck line, which, V/ @ however, Is height Sw) ened in effect by lines of fancy stitching finished off with hand-worked orrows, ‘The plain lower waist is relieved by the Points of the tunic, which adopts also ye which finish the pockets, the same trimming a the collag, harmony with the either embroidery ‘in atlk, Beads ov } MODEST AND PRACTICAL STREET ORESS. jness of the Wf | part o: dashing and it is an est 4 fact that when various foods are avoided for why length of time certain digestive Based Upon Biblical Drama of Prodigal Son, Being Presented at Manhattan Opera House — ——|xoutache brald may be used, or @ —_——— ———————— =e contrasting fabric auch am striped e }eatin applied acrosm the corners of By William A. Page the points would give a pretty tria- Juices, which contain the necessary edients to dissolve these foods, ’ i power to st them when }NOVELIZED FROM THE PLAY} $ Mee eta cates, Thue we sathet 1H BY MAURICE V. SAMUELS, } digestive , like the muscles and TO oy Willem bint F. Ray Comsoce h are not constant! and Morris come weak and Aether, the son of Joww and Muldah of the trite m the functions for ° Arig se time Of Kg eated, other organs wh used, eventually | powerless to pe which they were Gentle exercises aid digestion w Btrenuous eftorls so much blood to the 8 they naturally t and ri exercise ter a meal ore the meal have tho opposite effe yetard it No physical should be taken directly and a half hour's r is also beneficial HOARSENESS—S Yamon juice, sugar this several times a day. “COLD HANDS AND FEET.—HI. " WH: Plunge the hands and feet | ke a little yeerlne tor Yot and then cold water and massa eat them wel! with alcohol. Poor cireu ‘HL RXXU. lation causes this. Deep breathing CHAPTER XX1L. will remedy this condition also, HE angry Gaal almost struck 4 . his young brother as ANAEMIC—RUTH R.: Wholesame father. with allie atrenath foods will make blood, Grapes, « / as eatrengh Vegetables, fruits, nuls, raw eggs any 6 could command, face milk are also recommended, bim deflanuy, But bis will er than engt nd be could only say BOW - LEGS—RALPIT This ondition cannot be easily remedicd| ‘L will not be treated like a beggar at your age, It may be corrected |1 am thy brother if, however | ldughec early fh life, by : ual laughed, i ee LARGE ABDOMEN.—-MKS. BD. ¢ hougnt thy prid ‘ Trunk raising, body bending,| to crawl home and the best exercises for| ness. With a whol large abdomen, Diet is also} to bide thy face ee thought to the master tn thy BRUSHING THE HAIR.—Mrs, TI.| silly way dost come look S.: Brushing | 1 for dry s worse t leper might and dry dandruff, Brush with a sttf | thou cat except n brush, which will penetrate the halr) And be wee » thou canst not Ino man-—not even my brotae Therefore, If thou wilt but go 4 nply kennels, L myself LICE HEINE, the only @ food aa an ewer ty ds ere’ an old pair lying PX woman to ¢ the house that the dogs } —and suffer the disilluste upon sport ney will of being the wife of a soverely bett And I shall bring thee an old horn in New Orl fifty-nine year) coat to cover thy naked ago. Her father was Michael Heine, a of t for 1 do despi e Jewish banker, and her mother Miss ecuuse Une law te kindue Amelie Miltenber who came of @) to a be pe prominent Louisiar uly “Th t yet more hard than J had Having made a une | the ead ¥ Orleans, Michael H 1 justice doth Prussian war Jee retorted the noted finan: brother. "I do not have t Ku became a bride of the Duc ith thee. I say this to thee: quickly Hichcteu, selon of an ancient } fore a servant sees thee, thou shalt line. 6 him aw son 4 into the goat shed and there wait daughter, after which he died. The | for me. Thou shalt have thy food son inherited the title, and a few years |thy sandals, and @ cout, and straight ago, followed the example of his father way go thy road the first thing tn the by taking an American. wif Miss | inorning, without a word to anyone.” Eleanor Douglas Wire of Baltimore d bitterly 1 thy Al Heine, Du a of 1, | te he sald. “ST have n remained dow man # to take 3 fror she Was won Dy the I mot neither ¢ f of whose fF marriage 1 and " » a ' 1 Dongia Han at, Eng Ae | would glve om 1 Vv 1 \ tiny country of M ‘ har elpally f { . ea N ed Ga n ¥ Monte Carlo hot f rones, | angrily. "That 4 and she soon tired of tt Prince | Nor ' look upon t was given a divorce, ‘tather'w face either, when for bi pride’s sake He bas told as the neigh- al) BUD rn Gut nou, bors that thou art greatly honored in within and bid thy city many da ra from here ranice u wouldst stand smitten by th satning of his r. ‘Thou coutust not look Into yes * Jether bowed bh 1 in. submis- ral otners sion. After all, what Gaal had doghouse must be true, camo a I did but seek to look upon him H barking 4 hidder and seo also u 1 hath found comfort in forget- ting thee,” lied Gaal, hoping to send him aw quickly i fearful of the com vant hou wouldst not comfort from her by fin rag him indignantly he cried My moth y mother,” be convinced that a wrong, he called to wld hath not forgotten How can thou know my mother, thou wh heart is like the stony ground My ther yearns for me. From the day 1 went away, IT know her prayers have risen to i for me, And were she here, her arms would be ind me though all else would shrink to bee my sores. Thou liest when thot vest my mother hath f tten m With a snap of the r Gaal turned away from him. “Rah,” he sald, rou “LT could thee to th t ith my ona r, yet IT spare thee. And 1 spare thee, so would [ spare her Should she see thee now whe strength fails her almost unto death @ the art when I have told ith spoken wis nd that thou hast won honor in distant then her death would be upon thy head The thought of the pain he mieht cause his mother should his presence become known was the last crushing blow to Jether's pride. Humbly, he I} have indeed caused enoush of r lor the kennel ! thon wishast, — f f thy portion, A c v kinder heart tha al down beside © Oh—on out into the wly his faltering footsteps car ottering, weakened frame 6 courtyard and into the en ure where were kept the dogs and the goats. And Gaal, strong, haughty Nd-hearted and obdurate, looked after the and slight figure , who had heen the you andsome Jé beer into a we 5 es “1 HAVE HEARD THAT A CHAPTER XXII. STRANGER SAW OUR SON IN barked. Then anothe JERUSALEM,” SAID JESSE another on there was silence for a moment telah, W 1 s Jesse strode forth fromthe tua 3@ to listen, wonderingly , wal staring toward the ) anxious eyes them a little remain here? 1 Is {wrong with jng auiok Hur go thou wit ‘ ql V a He “ ' A be barking of t ra) plied ad Ki k a id et worat, t to thou w ithe {ming touch | The suggestion at the right ts for dogs, What dy bark (ion of the sueds. ‘Phe voice was that were but a child again: “Mothe! mat i , BO angely of Muldah, aod anguish was in every oy omy beautiful boy,” she in and serge when the ogilar ang t : noted harking of f , cuffs, which are of the latter fabrie, the di But come 1» withi Through the gathering darknes S attracted by the outburst, could be overlatd with white organdy Jose. Toe evening meal awaits thee.” Jesse auw her aiding Shelah to aif came from the house and surveyed | or georgette crepe. A lout ory from Shelah interrupted carry, half drag « limp abd sensoloss the scene just as Jother embraced he v Ile ame to them in great @s- / a clad only in rags. He started his mother. cite nt. * toward her eagerly, but something ‘Mo then,” he sald, contemptuoualy, | y i ; Maste he cried What shalt ' made him pause The mother to the boy, il thy promises to Answers to Queries. do? “Livros Was a man, a DeREME dropped her Vurden at lis feot, and te, thou baat revealed thyself after | Pasion Halter, Kreaing Wert a n by iJ A My iy he aw that it was the b y of «@ all to thy mother!" Will you they had turned from, "Ho lay’ up falnting from exhaustion, Ie " Huldah, slowly comprehending tele orviq na ie ine Ravice aa to what ne id in agony, def leaned over, when the mother, facing knowledge that Gaal had known of]! Could use for collar and cuffs on & im. plteousiy, eriod Jather's preacnee, drew. beraeif up| avy blue broadcloth redingote made : ‘Uur boy! Uur boy has come indignantly. with a @haw! collar; so what kind pommel “Thou knewest?" she cried c What?" cried Jesse, stricken atthe “Aye, and for thinn own #ake, 1/0f 4 *kirt to wear with same? Would night of the man lying before him, kept silence,” replied Gaal It be all right to wear @ navy bilge and remembering, in spite of bis for Thou knowest—and yet told mo} ™essiiine dress with same or pot? nor analely over Jether, that he bad noe?" whrleked, the. mother Am thirty-clght years old; weigh 123 eworn # mighty oath that never He scorned to take food of me," | pounds CoM, &. should the boy look upon bis face rted Gaal, curtly, “Besides, b: Riot uu es again. ‘Our boy? Nay, | have sworn ) deserved naught else. He went bed Silk OF satin in tan, gray or bo whall not look upon my face y of bis own accord, He should white could be used, Yes, the messa- aga Wi have stayed away then,” line dress may be worn, otherwise a “0- “Huldah shook her head plain blue satin skirt. ban imperious gesture, he aed ae ae te tae Thou hast w hard heart, Gaal,” abe Sweep of bis Band carried. the 108) anid, “Where idee thay ges IL J — rig n ; ! i. agg rh 4 a tN foal not soon forgive thee this, Now| Fashion Yalitor, Evening World p and ove head, 60 1elp me to carry Jether in.” ely Ae, ae neice, dle mood “What? ‘Touch him? Haat seen I am sixteen The mother, alternately sobbing Bears foe her = eRe yoara old, very ver her bey, ‘and pleading with the Pilla HE sim, weighing 100 ar "a tht tom We him to mite He shall not come into the house, ¢ pounds, Would Nke Bee eee ee ur bow our dether,’” whe cried Gaal, sternly, taking haart from \ your advice con ged Nee what the world hath the fact that the aged Jesse had cerning a French ihe 4 neither spoken nor uncovered his face ¥\ voile dress of dull 1 } atoad ¢ nilent, she 1 the absence of parental authority 7 : ol her worde'to the bo¥ UBd al felt his word wan law, ‘The wor yay) blue, having a tiny bs aaceenow mbeddingy a Yants, who had gradually been at-| rose design over tt mother urs, and who lay silent fracted by the naws of Jother'a re 4 Would like it for @ asen \ the grass befure ‘Urn. fell back before his glance. y poe contne uoesied heman Gt The mother, defled for the first ttme Sunday drese thie On, om Le sobbed omy int life, spra to feet ; spring, F boy. ne back thus, when ,,“This ts thy father's house, not ALICE W. thou wert like the ning, ‘Thy ba Des ie Aaa. peaudly ; 4 nou t ather' silence apeaka, an it W how thin eo0u wwered Gaal. “No more than F would Mi Hlue satin belt, 1 off brown eyes and Jook upon t's his disgrace thrust upon us ‘ cuffs, and front of i oe We have told all that Jether ts an ri Collar and waned the prostrate figure ! iman among the high ones of c ° nd A tho ting which dather #till d now shall thia thing give euft ings © 4 thi y @ whall not enter lack velvet 1 ' r sue (o hungers, DUC my ring is atl "Anger Marldah r head sadly — upon his finger, when b re a fen t t my bo Thou speakest only for thyself,” H 1 Dave DOMBRE [O0G, OD ey nie she sald To MRS, H: Design for Miss L.A te Oh, fay boy, take my strength My father hears yot speaks not," W. would be pretty for your tan serge hee, my strength, Jether Ob, om " G A man muat judge! white satin collar and cuffs, and t rn wh t the ono! nis) ‘ bo gracious unto ue and spare f, ns bie fener nt Nt | black velvet ribbon Ly AP red the water, sneak I will p orders here, But | —_ 1 Jeune au Lm 10 on nuat w ile ‘here an F need tos Bat prening World hin won, the r ered aloud h vto him. If thon wilt) I have six yards no wath done this ta t ho jetly, T aball have him! 0, navy blue satin H ? venient f Cursed PAY for bis care until he can move| and would ke to he t and the on \ t \\ \ fe their la od may the And a# Gaal reached over and) Row how make at “when the hn. and wrer they looked closer at the prostrate fo {t for street wear : ' yt uahe tonbed, Datweer Vand | Am 6 feet 2 inches : w ‘ art-breaking: ery T have asked the wr nT} tal weigh 180 ‘ ward proatrato those who have br t b ; ba ‘ forward thts colleh pounds, bave dark from him and close the = A rat ' the hair, lots of color pon them r He ‘ MISS L. A.W ’ thought ' aah Hlebron # r afte 1 any mome He ¢ nae ae 1 ; THE IVORY CHILD ++ By Sir Rider Haggard ; ; : P 1 Litt { Last and Best of Famous Allan Quatermain Stories ted in Blue || | ' r et Ps velvet ribbon around { ay Begins on This Page March 6 waist line 4 (

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