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Fvening World Daily Magazine The Evening World’s erfect Figure Contes Conducted by Pauline Furlong To Make Perfectly Proportioned for Their Height Women _ Now 16 or More Pounds Over or Under Their Proper Weight. Copyright, 1917, ty The Press Publishing Oo, (The New York Prening Work.) Developing—Lesson XVIII. LOT OF SOCIAL DEBTS— THEY SAY NO HiS WIFE— Exercise for Calves and Ankles, TAND with the hands on the hips to lend balance and poise. Place the heel of the right foot in front of and near the toes of the left one. Then raise on toes and heels and rock backward and forward five times, This is a balancing and poise exercise and strengthens calves of legs and arches of feet. Rest a moment and relax. Then repeat the exercise until slightly fatigued through the leg muscles, Keep the knees rigid. Standing in front of a mirror while exercising helps to concentrate the mind on the object to be attained, and it is a well known fact that the blood flows with greater force to the parts of the body on which the mind is centred and which are being exercised. Physical activity for women ts @ matter of organic necessity, as two- thirds of the body's weight consists of bone and muscle, which must be kept in condition to perform their functions for the body through physical exercises and hygienic care of it. ENTERTAINING A CROWD AT DINNER PAYS OFF A But, on the Other Hand -- sx72tthe., By Ferd G. Long _ The Evening World’: BUT- ON THE OTHER HAND — . Kiddie Klub Korner Conducted by Eleanor Schorer } Cousin Eleanor Invites ALL KIDDIE KLUB MEMBERS TO MEET HER THIS AFTERNOON AT WASHINGTON IRVING HIGH SCHOOL, NO. 40 IRVING PLACE, NEW YORK CITY, AND JOIN THE Kiddie Klub Community Chorus DOORS OPEN AT 1.30 P, M, ¢ TO-DAY | DEARPST KIDDIE COUSINS: | To-day t@ the great day for ue—the day when we mett to | @ing and make merry and prepare for the big outdoor city | Pageant, Come to Washington Irving High School by way of the eub- way and get out at the Fourteenth Street station. It does not matter which staircase you take up to the street. A Boy Scout in full uniform, wearing our Klub colors, gold and blue, will be The health and strength of the entire body depend largely on the IF AT FIRST YOU DONT SUCCEED-TRY, TRY AGAIN,” ° * @ality and tone of the muscles and blood, and the possession of large 600D i muscle area {s necessary at times to relieve blood pressure in the brain 'S OD ADVIG and pelvis. Lesson Talks and Answers to Queries. N order to! sterilized knife and place a smal) maintain al Piece of absorbent cotton saturated te| With turpentine betweon the toes. healthy state) pind this on and repeat the operation of the digestive| if necessary. organs various ee 4 WANTS WEIGHT AND MEAS. and definite con-| UREMENTS—EDITH R.: For five ditions Bre @s| feet four you should weigh 129; neck sential, No meal) 1 Past te aad tae chest should be eaten| 9% Dust 38, waist 25, hips 87, thighs when the body is 22, calf 13, ankle 8, in @ state of ¢X-| JET BLACK HAIR—GERTR' haustion oF f&-/ Ts nly /@ chemical dye will oolee tigue and a short rest should be taken ay air jet black. It" te better to both before and after a meal. ve this done by @ professional, This does not necessarily mean in-| BLOND HAIR—RPNA M.: Noth- dulgence in sound sleep, which cause ine bole bleach will keep the hair debility and depression of the clreula-/ HFN", | Peroxide bleach the hair, tion, which retards and sometimes) often undiitenn? 7u” tt If used too actually stops the process of diges- Pi PRUNE FURLON —. ae ey R RG oi tion and proves fatal. Cheerful con- Yersation after a hearty meal is about cae of the best aids to d.gestion, be-| ccuse this stimulates the heart and blood circulation without taxing the om brain, AARAAAAAAAAAAAAARARRAAOAAAA OU LO LhY BerVAnLs Ald COUMLunY Many authorities differ about the NOVELIARD FROM THE PLAY $ them to obey me.” al H vater drink.ng during AURICE V. 8 Jether slowly opened his eyes an effects of water It sould by taken | Comedie by Wille Flot, Hay Oomstock He looked at hia mother and suiled, Sree patra end cleanest for. tbe the sc gt Jowwe aad Tudeh of tee tripe th? silent Jesse, and then sadly aso stimulan o or ut sod Tuld B Ps § lining of the stomach and greatly during Stl Si Kine gh ot reached out his hand to his mother. A “This what I bave wanted, os Wagaieh liver, Revere) fteeon | ied maar mother,” he said, weakly. “To hold in hy hand, Mother—at last.” and it should | fi)", thy to clean the’ stomach and | ts tha bre Hulda held him convulsively tn her not to fill it, For this reason it 1s) Tei ne 6 be arms and wept, while Gaal sneered. more beneficial to the system when | fi" taken during the day and between meals. If the waste matter of the|} ris lalt system 1s not removed every day the| whole digestive em will become | clogged with the worn out material | 2 and this poison is absorbed ate, the | to Jets BAY oe meother blood and distributed in this condition |fiality tor the uewcomer 4nd ‘agree to go with to the tissues and nerves, weakening |gma’he y's: | All his inouey gone, Nading them and making them wholly unfit|forth, “Finally ho arrives home and. meet to direct the bodily forces and rebuld Rewer is abe ota forbid i, uae Us and repair it with healthy new ma- | a"siowte fas i ia the dog kennels, where jor its upkeep. Retained pol- Totber Ju port met of aha desires, which Jether Fetus te “Beg from thy mother—bah,” he ha chide Tiaba, telling et that Jether paid, mormuged, and Nay, Gaal wrongs me, mother,” an proiaim answered Jother, softly. “I would beg jove, naught save thy forgiveness, Father was just. I took my portion and I Tera: Babylonian company OP hee tr} to terelrs. oon afiemart (9, la introduced to Tiahe by ber imother and te mutter in the boly 7 : ee cause @ wearing out of the organs CHAPTER XXIV. and tlasucs, which is not imagined by | 66 AOMI — Rissa -- come ye the sufferer until too late. a During this course ¥ shall be pie aed Cae tesateas acer iine cs to have readers write and ask mo Bey About various organs of the body and the prospect that Gaal their functions, because I am trying! yoo, op, might yet be able to send to make this one of the most com-|Jether from her, cried cut aloud eo plete 1 published, and I shall take ot Aa might peer m sladly any suggestions from them. In], /t 1s our Jether,’ she called to this way I shal! know just what read~ mi as the maiden quickly nm e' ow and Ww = A et gaw before her tho beggaf whom she OBESITY DIET LIST—3IRS. L. H.: | had left but a few moments ago, She Bend me 3 cents and repeat your| leaned over lim, A single garment query. There are many private gym- | Wrapped around his neck was the only maciums in New York, I am advised, |‘"!ng not of rogs wpon his body. me My scarf!" she cried. “He weare tt CAMPHOR FOR _ REDUCING ken I gave nim!" ponded BREAST—MRE. H. ¥.: You will have all of ye," pleaded Hutdat, to to uso the hot water to open the the servants. “Jether, our son, natty pores before using camphor or any|Feturne] to us! Is it not as we ai! Gtue: astringent to reduce the breast, | @xpected when tha city called him oe from us? But he comes back very il EXHALING WHEN DEEP/ HH! in great miser Though he now BREATHING—N. ¥.: Keep the| looks #0 wretched, ve remember how ot loved both when inhallog and| fir he was, und ‘how bis smile was like tho sunsbiye, slo has boen groat ly wronged, a8 mon are in the city CrET CORNSOE. Mt Bathe the} Who come as trusting ones. Iam old i . and cannot lift my child alone, but ye hot water and soap to soften! wi, "love him too shall help’ me to bear him to his own room, careful of bis wounds.” Gaal fiercely @wept both women aside and stepped toward the boy as be lay upon the grass, “That ye shall not do. Know this 7 HE anproachtng tercentenary cele- | of Jether. Before he went away ha i bration of the voyage of the May- | hat flower and the coming to Amer-| fering insult to our aged father. The ng. orn. {t with a Bh + Almighty hath brought him to this, Wasted it, I sinned, too, Ob, in #0 his arm waa slung a gourd of we fe. of the Pilgrim Fathers ts likely to Tor him be taken elsewhere, but not y ways. And once I saw God's and he walked with t 4 of a6 re\ ive popular interest In the works into thy master's house. Touch him tng hurled agatust me “I co! 5 of Jes of Jane Goodwin Austin, best known not at thy peril.” urned toward the fa ra for her Pilgrim stories, She was born Huldeh turned to Jesse, who de4 thou atandest th F in ‘Voreestor, Mass, on Feb. 25, 1831, never stirred, but stood, ailent «6 wa ok at me. But let me Boy t ® id not come to be welcomed 1 threw that right away nd would t Wohilo atill a girl sho began to write, image, with at first purely for her own amuso- prostrate Jether. ment, etories of her New England| “My husband,” she pleaded, “bid Pilgrim ancestors. She was induced thy servants obey thy wife. In these to offer 6ome of these stories for pub- many, many years that I have been va bade ther lication, which she did under a pen- even #4 @ part of thee, never before bees faa eaPealie tate name, and they were immediately ae- have | been made to speak saat * ear nes ee tonto nal tee cepted. Her most popular works of thy servants, who now ; pore mem BU; Golieey Haat mae tee fiction dealt with the old times in cause they have heard the command gtrong and ean work? bor | would Now England, and were admirable of Gaal, lor now in thy silence Gaal work, father, Kladly if I could, forany pictures of the period. Among would play the master. Our boy {8 one, in any way. And when Iam but vels were “The Desmond Hun- 111, #0 very {ii that my heart is trem- gtrong enough to go | shall go. And dred” and ‘Mrs, Beauchamp Brown." Ditng: Shall be be kept thus waiting? { promise thee that until I have wiped ) % back toward the oul iny sing by labor and good decds no man shall know ¢bat | am Jether, on of Jesse,” Huldah turned once more to Jesse, full of hope, “Trou dearest, Jesse? This is our boy, und he ts sorry and repentant, He is flesh of our flesh—thou wouldst not turn even a beggar from thy door, Bhall our eon plead in vain to thee? Naomi—kneel before thy uncle and add thy prayers to ours so that our Jether may ptay.” move # step @ strange voice w heard among the gathering and stranger pushed his way through tl t Mut ere Naomi could do more than hrong. He was rugged and travel standing attention at each one, anxious to guide you. And there Will aleo be Scouts stationed along the short route from tne station eteps to tho beautiful big high school where we—you and | T and all our cousinship—will meet, You simply cannot lose your way with this ¢ecort in at- tenance, and net only will they be at thelr posta before, but aleo after our rehearea). They will see you safely to and from the aubway station. So long as you keep a Boy Scout in sight you a are going the right way. Be certain to wear your Klub pins, Mr. Pigott, our clever chorus director and singing teacher, fa quite aa eager to welcome each and every one of you as I am, Just between us three—Mr. Pigott, yourself and me—we are fotng to have more good fun than any other group of cousins in all the wide, wide world. Come early, I shall be looking for you with «reat pleasure. Cousin Eleanor, creep = “eas Taser gE ies Dicky and Dot in the Wonder City | aes By Mary Graham Bonner ————= Copyright, 1917. by The Pres Publishing Oo. (The New York Erening World.) The Cable | AM going to send @ onble,” eaid Unie John. “What is that?’ asked Dicky. ‘os & mensage which goss under the ocean on great, enormous wires, fust as the tele- exclaimed “Anoth any wonder!" “IT'® A MESSAGE THAT GOES UNDER THE ‘The obitare OCEAN ON GREAT WIRE! watched Uncle John write a few|sald Uncle John, “failed twice before words just as If he were sending a|!t was proved to be a gucce! telegram, but the eddress was the! “Wasn't he brave to keep at it!” name of @ place on the other side of put' in Dot. “There ts nothing the ocean! hant as to be made fun of, I think. “The man who invented the cable,”| “The people told the inventor he was absurd,” continued Uncle John. “Jot “They said that @ cable could not be jPut under the ocean so that mos |eages could be wont to friends over he seas. And when be falled, how id laugh!” | "What was bis name?’ asked is my father,” replied Gaal. “Nay, woman, hoar me. It is right past found peace, no man on earth | Dicky. “He did wend for thee for what he that all should know. With mine shall take it from thee, It is thy|,, “His name," answered Uncle John, would no longer have—news of his bwn ears | heard a wanton tell, while greater portion, Look inte mine eyes, “Wis Cyrus Weat Field. He tried he stood mute, denying naught by that I may soe it.” different experiments, and no one son Jether.” word or deed, that out of love for her Jether gased into those kindly eyes, | thought that the cable could be made Hagegal bowed. Then he spoket Jether had sacrifioed unto the Bab and fell in hie fachere embrace. bates g ee Mn caien. aves a “Tell bt then, that Jether hie eo: ontan gt ees Ishtar. o hal Father,” he sobbed, 4 he « ts een “Gone hand smote him at unced the God of Jtides,” “Thou sbalt come into my house | trough?" asked Dot Ff » G Huldah and the rest shrank back again, Thou shalt there regain thy|_ No" said Uncle John, “the great Jerusalem, in horror, Only Jesse remained un- strength and there thou ehalt abide, Wie are protected from the ocear Naomt interrupted him indignantly, ™OVed, his face atill covered, his body with us.” j@o that even all the water tbat “Why payest thou that?” she de “NE 2a" manded. “Art thou his enemy to tell Haggal. erect as a status, “IT ehall ain abide with thee?” re-|@bout oannot touch the mossagen — | Do I Het demanded peated Jether, dased and yet happy. |W . "Thou shalt not leave home agein,| Th® children watched Uncle Jobr such @ le?" Jother slowly struggled to hia test, orp th fend another message, and @ tar Thao i bemed dake, faced him. and said, humbly: “Thou atonement, “Thy vourne hoch parang [explained the wonders of the cable from thee.” to them as they looked on, “It is no He, as T know tt. Rut that “Then look into mine eyes,” cried “ “To think that every day there are stained, and his beard and hair 2 ‘At | oh my father, thy words Bing showed the dust of many roads, Upon Tam his enemy {do admit, as must Taggal roughly, ‘Didst thou not put rength into mer" [Petronas aa lise ectae tanec heathen and aay @ thing eo terrible Hl the neighbors,” continued | years,” Uncle John informed them. eat oe ee dee aoe ae Joese, raising his voloe and directing |7{ijth ‘the children laughed, and fat, my ry pervanta to scatter over the country: | nicky gaid: " Jether nodded, in thou gide, "In the house of Jesse shall be | >!" t speakest truth, And in the awful I suppose there are wonders tha CHAPTER XXV, ai HILE all ¢ and awe at Hagga! continued “A servant of Jesse bade me come } r in the name of God. Art thou he wh nee ‘a anh law of God by of “HOLDI" CRIED JESSE, “LET NO ONE STIR. | HEAR THE MESSAGE.” ta {eveictan. In a world of famine, here | 9+. 91\1) @bundant harvest. A coat for my |""%y", Dot, ore th ton—the best my chest contains, He | the cn Gor iicie we the foc more then the wonder itself 1s the fact that th: all recelve my guests and do me linventor kept on working over ! aa hed rans hig oe have when it failed at first and when every live and suffer and atone, I should we FO ra have one laughed at him! And how proud have parioned ners." i ould walked, he haa gone out and travelled |he must have been when at last he Huldah, with » piteous ory, clutohed #tohier roade—and yet he has returned | guccaeded!” Jether's erm und gazed inte his eyes, t0.U®% Spread a great feast where all| “He must have been proud, indeed. ‘Thou hast dots that thing?” she #7 welcome, Divide the season's lagrend Dicky. “But to think of the cried, sobbing, an vered her face 8tore ainong the needy. He who was|cable going Under the water and none with her cloak. Jether held out hig [0#t i# found, He who was dead, is/of the water touching It! How can storin which followed,” he added tensely and with awe of the Al- nty, “In that storm I aw the face 04. And but for something that spoko deep in my heart and bade me rT that we have not seen” A ee now among the living.” | people ever think of such things?” eMothert” na cried, “Dost thou de- .,2a#l turned away angrily. Hulda |The “dew for to-day's story wee aa other ite wee Mon fe 2 et came to him, placed her hand affac- | suggested by Walter ly, aged thir pe AEB Be Fe gp orl tlonately on his shoulder d pleaded: | teen, of jo, 233 Wither Street, “Our son ia with us once . thy brother—thy young Wilt thou not Join with in welcoming home the wanderer? Brooklyn, Huldah looked at him with eu preme mother love, grasped his hand, and sank sobbing at his fest while a. aed he strove to comfort her. Gaal moodily refused to anewer P Gaal sought to bring the unhappy Jeiher poke g @oene to an end. “Into the house, Gaal,” he whispered, “my broth- % of ye, and thou too strar ae P y | ° wilt be our guest irectod. “At this Iaat appeal the etern heart Hagga! slung his at water of the elder t ther rela + Per t a over his arm and ped LI8 haps he felt that he too had been t partly to binme for the miaunder e Not of @ house accursed,” he #atd. so of the past. He hesitated ‘ gruffly, and strode off down th ; Rig’ pinthar road, The servants started to obey and t h veshey the voles of Gaal, as Jether moved } paused, and caressed bis mother, when #u in arn er embraced the hitherto atolid ‘figure of vet Hand 10 cnnts, grace or oon. a moved, With an impertous gest “Gaal he boy gta ear, ee RE e's he dropped the mantle from his face When the brothers clasped. « xis Gave ymir name addrem end tbe and with a smile upon his cour other, and Huldah and Jesse em- p of Joust tomers our cate nance, aa though Inspired from praced for the eake of their two ahil fa — dived heaven, he turned and lifted his arma ¢ the servants silently gave way om 1 tan bermant, 39 by Ay and attention. them. Naom! rushed to i 7 ar bine and gid * he cried, In a great voice ‘aside, and arm tn arm the two wie cuplem cad leten ia waite, 3 es though speaking a holy message, + e the sweet cousin and the need “Let no one stir, [ hear—I hear.” AP atriarch and his wife turned ae Ho paused, as if letening to a dis- » more re-enter the house of a A = ’ sm the angels. t hrs, there to fittingly eele- (|, HLow to Join the K-ub , I hear message,” he orted, joy- brate the meal and prepare —— true sons of Abram, Once Ct ¢,, Our son 18 once more with the foast kagiving for the re- | EGINNING with any wumber ell; out els of yt t to prove his fread |; turn of the prodigal the pie coupons printed In the Klub Karser bee one of Us 560 want to Jether and looked at And, In the «athé@ring twilight, ! he did what no man , + all present al 1 wt reshold acroes never forgive. I have ! , sit escent Gaal: a ted aeeen ur maiden, to bring @ cloue BA ey. lovingly sehold, but ye did send inund the natn nm and gald, {1 must speak the truth a Bp el Hie J Apne rot ute uate hast known God's wrath, and arti (THE END.) o'arm as he gazed up Yor we "YorR & ts ss 7 “ae ‘tated a4 eee fitewn, or a mecnbers, very member la prasonted with t eiiver gms Klub Pin and © membership cate eald Hoggal THE IVORY CHILD ‘fF By Sir Rider Haggard tee dead. Meth i, oF rev Last and Best of Famous Allan Quatermain Stories PIN COUPON : ; i "hi, 5 NING WORLD oried Hul | _ Begins on This Pag: March 5 __