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~ (“sews race] Evening World Daily Magazine [Reser seen n ei] Along the Company Street Somewhere in Camp"’ Sun May Spoil Complexion, but; Mental and Facial Habits Make | Unsightly Lines Hard to Erase. | By Pauline Furlong Coppright, 1017, be The Pree Publishing Co. (The New York Breuing World) HE eyes and skin should be| Anaemia is a common cause of! well protected from sirong| shrunken muscles, and the entire) rays of the sun, because {t/ system must be built up and re not only darkens,| juvenated in order to eupply the! or reddens and] weak, soft muscles with the rich blisters the skin,| blood upon which they feed but also causes) Facial exercises and upward, gen-| wrinkles, fine lines! tle massage, as well as applications and weak ey@s.| of hot and then cold water, followed The habit of] by @ rub with ice, is the best exter. scowling and mak-| nal treatment for sagging Jaws and) ing faces whgn in| sallow, flabby skin, but the practice the sun eauses| must be persistent and followed out FRITS yore wrinkles| each night to bring results, than old age, and the eyes should] When women determine the causes be protected with smoked glasses or| of unsightly lines in the face they a dark-green chiffon veil. should alm to avoid them as much Facial grimaces, such as drawing) ag possible, and this will at least the lps from side to aide, raising; prevent the lines from growing the eyebrows, sneering, or violent! geeper and render them easier to outbursts of laughter, are deadly | remove, mies to the smooth, child-like} Worry and undue fatigue spoil complexion and produce ugly lines,| __ T | welht and also for diabett To Keep Facial Beauty, . Avoid Its Foes” many otherwise lovely comp! and the habit ef calm and poise not only keeps one cool but improves the skin also, Women who notice many fine lines and undue dryness of the skin should take the rest cure and use epld cream very freely meanwhile Answers to Beauty and : Health Questions FORMULA FOR GLUTEN AND BRAN BREAD—MRS. HARRY I. This bread, on account of lack of starch, is best for those trying to lose One- half cake of yeast, two cups luke- warm-water, three and one-half cups gum gluten flour, one-half teaspoon- ful salt. Soften the yeast in a little |of the water and add to the dry in- gredients; then mix to a stiff dough and knead well, using more flour if necessary to keep it from sticking to the board. Shape into a loaf, place in a buttered pan for about two and one-half hours to rise, until the dough is about twice its bulk. Then bake for forty-five minutes. If desired the dough may be given a second mixing after the first raising, letting it rise again before baking. Gum gluten bread may be made the same as heat flour bread, with the excep- lon of shortening, which {s not re- quired, It is much cheaper made in the home, For bran bread, which is recom- mended for o pation, follow the nG Peo WE SE OF WESE SHOES, m or gluten bread, using one part to four parts of gluten flour, one cup of moisture, If the bran ie inereased the moisture muat be lessened. Hoth of these breads are nourtshing and healthful and should be used In place of white flour bread, | TIRED, ACHING FEET—MRH. Hi, LK: After bathing in hot and then cold water every night, apply some of the following mixtu Chiorol one spifits camphor, rine, two our rter witch pint: Ha PH | When possible to allow the feet som air GOOSE FLESH -EDITH G: Rub over the skin on the back of the arma with pumice stone and then apply glycerine and rose water, SALT WATER BATHING—CARRY |G: Yes, this is very beneficial to the | system. and also the skin, providing you do not stay in the water too long or in the hot su NOURISHING D ERTS—MRS, WALTER F Bread pudding, rice custards and puddings, corustaroh udding, bak apples and cream, aked soft custards, tapioca, jun- ket, &c. FALLING ARCHES—MRB. G. D. M.: Heel and toe raising exercises will help strengthen the muscles in the ankles and feet. Braces or lifts should be worn in the shoei while. wrinkles and flabbiness, and they must be nourished end kept firm and strong from the inside as well aa. ee r 4 wn FIVE MINUTES Atos) myo — Tae ( r Ne oot | ON THE LINE |) | mats on YOu T | sent mer (| out woay | 77 | Rete, AND |) ams out: |} Hissus | ) | FALEO Mt —- ———"( ROOKIE, — } AF ILR An HIKE By Jack Callahan HALT! Fe “Pardon down wgain. “I you to explain she sald, sitting think | would like what you have just The Girl Who Was a ‘‘Good Fellow’’ By ‘‘Ma’' Sunday waid (Wife of Billy Sunday, the Famous Evangel: “The reason | vane to you to HE had @ room in @ house) ‘Bure!’ just as pleasantly #8 you) night,” she céntinued in a low, s where | was staying for al please troubled voice, “is because some while, and 1 had an oppor] One Yvening trene herself came] thing very unpleasant has happened. tunity to study her close 1] bursting into wy room, very pale. 1] and i don’t know what to do, You had wanted for a Jong time to see] knew something was wrong sec, wy employer and | have always that particular type of girl at close; “What is the matter, my dear] been very good. @Mfends, He has often range, for | had a, theory regarding] child?” I asked taken me to l0meh oF brought me her. “I've come to you to tell me some-| Gowers, but always in return for Irene was a stenographer, and a] thing,” she said in a low volee,| some favor I had done bim, such as successful one They sald in the] Whatever her agitation, she was too] staying late or doing extra work house that she drew a good salary,| strang-minded a girl to show much] “Now somebody has gone to bi and was always in demand | knew| exeitement. “Do you think that I} wife, and she has made # scene wit! | that she had an alert, keen mind, for] am a bad girl?” him about m her glance was direct, and her whole Startled, | looked deep into her “Here is my address,’ I concluded. manner confident and yet unassum- ing. My attention had been drawn to her, before I saw her, by a bit of con- versatiofi between two of the men. “She's certainly @ jolly little pi one of thom sald warnily, ‘No nonsense about HER,” other agreed, heartily. large, gray eyes, and then | shook my head. “No, I do not,” 1 said, with con- vietion, “but 1 will tell you some- thing. I think you are on the road to be one.” She sprang up and started to leave the room, “Remember, you asked me the truth,” I reminded her. “Write me if you feel I can ever be of assistance to you.” I did not think I would ever hear of her again. She avoided me during the remainder of our stay, but a short time ago I received a letter from her. She wrote: “Lam so broken-hearted that I am going to overcome my pride, and write you of what has happened to the “You can call her up at the last minute to go somewhere, and to take the place of a girl you had asked, She had a good mind, that girl. and she'll say She saw the point, me. * young mining engineer was in- as the outside, for no amount of flesh foods will build up the mus-/ cles wher. applied externally only.) CRAIG KENNEDY, Bits of Science to Make Work Seem Easy. pyright. @reatly increase the life of shoes and clothing. In treating shoes with this mixture it should be applied warm by means of @ brush. Clothing may be dipped into it when cold, The) solution 1s waid to help preserve tie| @oftness and color of the matertal to which it is applied. In the case of uniforms, they can be so treated with- out removing metal buttons and other ‘Insignia. MAKING SCISSORS LAST LONGER F a palr of scissors are hung up, the blades open, they will last longer than those which are put away with the blades closed, Many scissors have the blades lightly ‘owed at the tip, which helps to make rately. eek earings pa eed be constructing burglar alarms out of for any length of time the blades lose|!* The thief will think he Is per- bh ire they comme to. | fectly safe as he flashes his bull's- their springiness where they come to-) 6. lantern wbout—untll it strikes @ gether. selenium cell concealed somewhere. (Continued ) ry} OW did tt work?” 1 asked “How was the electric gun fired automatically, like @ trap gun, at the proper moment? Of course, we can't see, but it {# reasonable to sup- pose that there ts a connection,” Kennedy drew the grayish piece of material from his pocket, which he had pried off the wall opposite. As It lay in his hand he regarded it with in- terest “A selenium cell," he answered. “Selenium is a curious substance— an excellent insulator of electricity in the dark; @ good conductor in the light. Some day, I suppose, they will GETTING THE HANDBILLS8 DOWN | Then the alarm, will be given, and »pkeop' plo} he will be caught in the act. It ts VERY shopkeeper has had trouble} 1 eciess, odorless, and, when heated, in getting handbille off his show | civos off a red vapor that is exce windows, There are many lines|{ngly poisonous, and It has to be of business where it 1s customary to|h carefully, "In this fori tt 7 7 hard, slate-colored, metallic sub- , to. , paste these bills on store windows, a, statencolorad, metallic sibs announcing bargain sales and go on conductiveness of electricity in light Often it is a tedious task to got the|that it has in darkness. > mer ve “Open that door across there, you bills down. One merchant solyed the ‘Open t , ; : let the light in from the outside, Phat problem by fastening a wafer razor) Qoig'on the selenium cell in a fow blade to a wooden handle and liter-|‘iome.s, closes the circuit, a. sys- ally shaving the bills off, OUR BIG INSECT CROP. T 1s said that insects cost the ] United States §100,000,000 every year through crop ravages. Many schemes have been tried to lessen this expensive pest, the most satis- factory of which {s setting one in- sect to catch another. A species of insect that became epidemic in Cali- fornia threataned to seriously im- pair the State's orange groves, v= ernment experts imported another kind of insect from Australia, which was anything but friendly to the first, and the trouble was soon in hand. The claim is made that the Imported insects are harmless, tein of rélays concealed somewhere Is put into action, and a powerful elec- trio current 1s turned into the gun opposite. It is fired automatically, and the unsuspecting intruder, en- grossed in the discovery he has made, ig shot dead, without warning o: clew. ‘The secret 1s dead with him,’ Pembroke and Lloyd looked at each other aghast. “We sent Snead to his death,” they exclaimed, “that night when we al- lowed him as @ committee of one to BEST NOVELS PUBLIBH ON THI8 PAGE COMPLE eKs. EVERY TWO W THE SCIENTIFIC | DETECTIVE, UNDERTAKES ONE OF | THE STRANGEST CASES IN HIS LONG | CAREER OF BAFFLING CRIME Street & Smith.) syNorsis OF PREGEDING CHAPTERS Siig Kennedy and bla, newsacer partner, Waite dertake,(@ spive the mystery, ot teed te ANS nuvected of lianne eaiings here apyeat’ to be several women Int WATERPROOFING CLOTHING. dae cmt a ideas ste its mea 10, ftnd out what is ynder the sures Y mixing one ounce of paraffin claus of Birth wi rego that dhe really i¢ frlondiy ori, beg bus. with one quart of gasoline, says rary ‘di aed Ry the calla a tuo-maguetic gun, hid ine « French eae Hefei sek eseiwad by oeans capt LAS “hls death, “Keabely Yel ube ‘saner men’ ing materia! can be obtained that will CHAPTER XI. examine the contents of that com- partment. Who has done this dia- bolical thing?” From a small satchel which he was carrying Kennedy drew out an atom- iner, “When a criminal handles anything nowadays near the scene of crime," he said, “it is a hundred to one that he hag left a valuable clew for the detectiv By handling unless weirs rubber or paints his fingers asl have he Virtually signs the Warrant his own arre That is the heritage to scientific erlminal-cateh- ing which the famous scientist Galton bequeathed — the ible finger- print system. If you discover finger prints, or even have reason to think there faint Impressions, @ ttle powder, known to chemists as ‘gray powder,’ will settle the question. It 8 & mixture of mereury and chalk, Sprinkle {t over the markings and then brush ft off with a camel's-hair brush, ‘This brings out the imprint more ‘clearly, 1f one places his dry thumb upon a piece of white paper, no visible impression ia seen, But it the powder is sprinkled over the spot, and then brushed off lightly, ten to one # distinct impression is seen, Here I have a sort of atomizer Alled with this powder m going to blow it over the gun and the safety-de- posit drawer.” As he sprayed the various objects and carefully brushed them off I could clearly see finger prints appear en the metal, “That's ev than the re- sults would } non paper," re- marked Ken ne set Up & a whi down browhit oxraph those b, and ¢ laboratory and with his prints while large them study them. Whose finger prints were they? I asked myself, Who Was the arch flend who had contrived this ish manner of cov ter in my only to be brought to ju by the acute and analytical brain of Kennedy? The suine thought must have heen running through all our minds at once as we stood specchiess, Only Pem- broke's mind ran id of mine, He had much at stake in the case, “What wa ut was concealyd?" he asked nervously, anxtous to know the skeleton at the same time f “I suspect that I already know what the secret is," rep Kennedy, folding up his camera. ok at the cash reserve if you have nerve enough to know the trut Both Pembroke and Lioyd looked, turning over the big piles of bills hurriedly. There was fabulous wealth to me. Here were thousands aod hundreds of thousands of dollars, a fortyne beyond my wildest dreams. “It seems all right,” said Pem- broke, “Do you think jt is worth while to make a quick inventory of it and add it up?” Kennedy carefully selected a bun- le of hundred dollar bills, tore off plece of paper that held them to- ther, and done in the light Under the magnifying glass, “Notice the fine network of line in the part that is made by the ge metrical lathe,” he said quietly “Some are broken, some are dark, some are light; some lose thems and run into others. That never happens in a genulne bill. No, gen tlamen, the cash reserve is not all right, On the contrary, it ts prac- ‘leally all gone, and in its place, as fast as they could be manufactured thousands and thousands of dollu worth of the most clever and decep tive counterfeit bills that were ever made have been substituted, That was the secret Snead discovered, and in discovering carried with sealed lips. CHAPTER XI. 'T was late when we left the trust company after the amazing rev elations of the evening and the streets were long vistas of alte nating glare of electric lights and deep shadows tn the dark recesses of which almost anything might lurk, 1 would have preferred going to the Apartment, but as the trail grew hot ter Kennedy found it less easy to rest. If it had been possible he weuld have finished the thing up without delay or sleep, Everything that crossed his Path to the goal he was aiming at 2: seemed to chafe him. FE the rapid transit, which late at night really de eserves its name--when you ar for- tunate enough to catch @ traine= seemed too slow for him. “Where are you goin asked, as we came to the stall eat our Apartment, and he still kept his seat “Yo the laboratory,” he repled. “L fee) that | must make a start in de veloping these pictures of the finger prints.” His tone was go Inalstent that I did not remonstrate, as I probably should have done had my mind been clearer, The fact of the matter was that | was Bo excited by the clearing up of the mystery of the money vault that a moat every other thought, except fa tigue, had been knocked out of my mind, Not so with Kennedy Aa we Neared the laboratory, he hesitated and began to look sharply The Chemistry Bullding, his workshop was, stood facin, campus on one side, and # atr ound to the grave | the other, We hed it from tuside of the door, about the levwl clever enough to have @ clockwork the street, but his | tory was on of our heads, was a plece of plank, bomb, also.” the other side, facing the campus, and on it was fastened a queer look- 1 did hear something, and we inasti- and in the shadow both of the elec- ing arrangement, composed of a nol- tuted @ thorough search of every nook tric lights on*the street and the moon, low, cast-tron cylinder, and corner of the laboratory, At last which was sinking in the heavens Kennedy approached it gingerly, We found the cause, # worm washer on “What's the matter?” [ asked, for and examined it several minutes, be- a water faucet in a sink. his manner was not Ike his usual air fore he could make up his mind to If you have ever been dogged ay af ark touch it, hunted heemnleedy, 20m con a ee othing that now of,” ne re tt mu vii . ate our feelings in nce of tl plied atch an Ragclaste oF door midnight, We were now in the midst “Phat’s the trouble, You baven't have used" heesttce length. of alarms Every sound, every crack ‘tten the second Black Hand — Careful ‘not to disturd the equillb- Of the furniture, every gust of wind Have you? We have had a thing even by a frnction that blew @ shade had Its effect, 1 ty quiet evening #o fur—that ts, of he removed the top cov- “iouwht bitterly that we could never {rom interruption. I was just ering, inserted & palr of pincers end More have any habits, while this thing nking what would be tl drew forth one after the other the /4sted. Once Jet it be known that we ple spot in which to atta two thin glass vials of liquid, apartment, did @ certain thing at @ certain time, Then he took the thing down and with its hallboys ona we were marked for the slaugh- 1 people coming and going at ull laid 4t on the table cally, as if he We could never go to the same irs of the night. Why, the labo- were examining a specimen that had taurant twit at the same hour. ratory, of course, Whoever koowa been sont to him for analysis, Wo must observe the most extreme anything about me knows «bout (nis half expected an explosion even yet, ¢4Ution In approaching any of our . That was why {| took but nothing happened. He turned the f4Vorite haunts, We had received no the things out of It this morning, 40 thing upside down over a newspsper, Word from the Black Hand that was ax to make sure that whatever hap- and @ large quantity of fine ex more iwuwsome than this infernal ma- to it I ghall save the most ive, mixed with scores of 6! chine. They had not forgotten us. le, But [can't keep away from pieces of metal, ran out of tt. vhat were we to expect next? We ven though { feel. that { must bottom were some yellow wax Closed and locked both the door and approach {t cautiously.” and resins the culate window, and mounted the Inside the general hallway he was “Only dangerous when the explosive St#lrs to the room above, where Ken- 1 nedy had now established his tem- sniffing as if he might smell smoke » Haulds in tho two vials come porary quarters, “For Instance,” he went on, “it 0 gother,"” he remarked reaswuringly. Poruy, auarters. scene Wh curs to mo that they might leave “Hut, aw tt was, the slightest motion trayeq the tact that he had nerve some Kind of arrangement with ha door would have turned over bean to get things ready for dev no fuse to explode when they think the two liquids, started a chemical oping the photographs we had taki Lum likely to be here. I don't ameli combustion, and the door und who- OF the finger prints, en anything just now, and, besides, they ¢ was entering it would have been atched would hardly think I'd’ drop in after *attered to atoms. This is really, I As I watched bim and turned the case over in iny mind, I felt that now Inight. BUll, tt won't hurt to look Hs what would be called & Be- Wo were making excellent progress In wround A thing Hike this with only the clearing things up, and that it would As I smelled nothing, et © ts & bomb, Filled with all be only @ question of hours before we turned and looked out of the it Is an infernal machine. could run down the real murderer of the shadows of the campus. 8 # distinction without @ Snead and the looter of the trust waying of the branches of the trees, enee, In this caso the machine company, Therefore 1 was soon ab- buf under ordinary elrcumstances “8 Put Into place, and the two sorbed in watching Kennedy develop i ould net have n all, now ‘ ORED a the top, were in ed the plates, had ® gruesome Was tt 1. Then the dynuimiter made suddenly @ terrific explosion shook hgir shadows I was exit by the window, knowing too the building to its very foundation. aman figure skulking hy a the danger of the door, It would Hoth Kennedy and myself were lump of evergreens near the I’) take very little to upset the tubes, thrown by the concussion off our feet : Pada bP aha Peale pairet T inate the liquids through the 1 down on the floor, Every pane ssed me when I looked d-—the sequel is tter sé in the Chemistry Building an Dillane on the experienced, This 1s vattered, ‘The n lights” winked ene most delicate kin “A little ofl lamp toppled ince 3 of in lismissed It jective impression of my own brain In some the tubes und blazed up. Instantly “Kennedy 1 could not repress™a alight shudder at the top and made of seized a ug and threw over it, t ‘as { thought of the un > glam, as, for instance, sinothering the Samos, know anger that might be hidden ring bombs full of explosive and As I pleked myself up Kennedy ra about us, th two tubes, one in each heml- struck a mateh and lighted a stub ct ng his own laboratory door, “her of the ring." a candle which was lying on a table, ty Was just about to pu fe he pulled the door open care- Tosether we gathered up the seat- | when he seemed to he i ng @ long window polo for tered negatives. Some were broken, *, lest. there might be 4 din all probability the preetous in. ie who hesitates isn't always 1D or a cap placed in some mation could never be duplicated, | sald, as, instead of opena- way that it might explode by toppling but as luck would have it, several | walked around the outside Over or by being ®rodden upon in the Were still intact, We placed them in talidian, amas ehied ine Aart 4 cabinet, between folds of cotton ws of bis lecture room and work lie found nothing, but he paused felt for safe keeping, and groped our shop, which were on the ground tloor. for @ moment, and listened way in the inky blackness of the rey f them was unlocked. Do you hear something tckin, hallway downstairs, That's suspicious,” he mused "y he asked. “These Black Handers (To Be Continued.) know [ didn’t leave any of them un ph 4 9 _ 4 He sed (he sash and steppe! tn acruck aiigne win ante, $ AEE THOROUGHBRED I 1 not see anything, as vas RTT abortus aalp| aae ae Read What Happened When a Butterfly Wife { te quickly, “it's Was Put to the Test. nin {Aid hesitate about open 5 I ntaeaiiae ; The Story Begins on This Page Monday, August 27. T in through the window f aurrigdly, Hanging om a book op tue & enamel D troduce) (o we and seemed to be dit j ferent in @ good many ways from the othe so | turned to him ee werly. ‘tl wae Pleased with the att tion and deference (hat he gave me. He er addressed me by my first name. He waited for my per mission to sit down when he was with me. He drew back my chatr for me at dinner and opened a door, or shut @ window, according to my comfort, and in @ thousand ways showed how much he valued my Lappiness and my opinions. “I was happy, for—1 may as well | Adhit {tI soon grew to love him. “And then be began to.change..He was careleas, He grew bolder. And gpe day, without saying a word, he suddenly kissed me. When I erted he laughed, and said that a.good pal of a girl like I was ought mot to mind a kiss, “Some of the men I had were my good friends had Uber tafk- ing to him. I found it out Im the course Of @ bitter quarrel with him. He sald I need not pretend ang longer, As long as he thought I was an innocent gtrl, of course, he treated me Itke one, But his attitude changed at once when he thought I was not. “Can you imagine how I feel? For I have never done WRONG—you un- derstand, don’t you? But I am afraid nd man will ever really care for me unless 1 go away from here, where I am not known, and try to start over. “And my employer has begun to ‘worry me, too. He 1s no longer just @ good ‘pal,’ but a man who makes me afraid of him. Oh, pray for me, write to me, help me. For {t will take me years, I am afraid, to live down that reputation of betng’s ‘pal.’ “IRENE, ~ | Qmat sumpant ‘thought Poor little pal! T am hoping that Irene’s lesson has not come too late. (Copyeigtt, 1017, by the Rell @radicate, tne.) » Tin Wate ‘ing Pan for __the Poultry Yare Yard CHEAP and satisfactory wa- tering pan for the poultry yard can be made of aa ordl- nary funnel cake pan. Secure the pan to the ground by @riving a stake | through. the funnel hole and into the earth, says Popular Science Monthly. |It is easily changed to any desirabie spot, cannot be tipped over and will serve @ dozen or More chicks at one time without danger of hurting them, piaaaman aise AN EXPERIENCED PAIR, URING President Lincoln's first iD visit to the Springfleld peniten- | tlary, an old inmate, looking out through the bars, remarked | Well, Mr, Lincoin, you and J owgtt lto be well posted on prisons. We've aeon all there are in the country,” “Why, this is the first T ever yis- lied the Chief Executive, somewhat astonished "Yoo," was the reply, “but I've been in all the rest.’ "—Chigage News. r