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i How to Keep Your Youth PAULINE FURLONG’S HEALTH TALKS Gorrignt. 1017, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World), | Stretching Exercise. 1O-DAY wo have a good stretching, ~mat exercise that should be practiced with knees drawn up the soles of feet resting lightly on floor, Bring the arms with a \aweep from the sides of body way up beside ears and stretch backward as far as you ean reach. Take a deep breath as the arms come up ami ‘then exhale as you, mall that young girls are more in- bring them back to the sides. Do/terested in keeping the body in this about eight ties with arm| health than women later in life, when muscles tensed and then relax and/in reality it {s the middle-aged and slowly count sixty. older persons who really need them, To thoroughly relax means to let| because they are naturally less ac- go of yourself entirely and feel heavy tive than {n youth. Physical exer- and limp. Close the eyes and let the|cises aid the eliminative organs in Jaw drop as though you were falling p to lazy indifference. It is a that most nervous women need to learn how to relax and practice % more than they do exercises, | especially strenuous ones, which stimulate nerves, already too highly strun; Many ttmes I have told readers thet there is no time from infancy to ripe old age that the muscles do not readily respond to intelligent and persisbwt exercise and it never fails a“ ‘matertatly to our health aad baleen Taking position shown, sweep arms from sides and extend them beyond head, breath- ing deeply and stretching meanwhile. Then, during exhalation, resume former position, eimilate and digest the food, thereby building up the body. Suitable and sensidle practice of exercises con- tributes greatly to our efficiency and they are actually just as essential as food and rest, but they are neglected because the need of them is not so evident or immediate. These easy mat exercises allow the groatest amount of abdomina) de velopment with the least possible etrein or fatigue, and most every woman needs stronger muscles Vgate > “aprossion from My! through the walst, sides and back Answers to Health and Beauty Questions. L@Qn--MRe A RM. Esss ar@|quite young. This prevents flabby at veiled than tried and bot- Ohio trom toralag and hanging loo ds upon |(¥ after the fat has disappeared. Ex- ter stil) paw. Thinneas anes Aaa erciges are also necessary to build up many thinze tesidee Get and YO") the gott muscles and make them firm Should cvrrect the cause, whether tt} enough to support the flesh after ie nerves. voor circulation, indiges-|one has reduced @ great number of tion or other tnternad conditions Yes, pounds, toe Is (atteniny RELAXING ~AIRS. TIJOMAS F.. Most certainty relax between the ex- ercises, no matter how others do them, and the stiff, rigid position of the body during ten minutes’ prac- tice of the movement will do mora harm than good. Consider relaxing efy Important part of every single reise, OBESITY DIET— following foods are al \ PAIN IN THE BACK—MR&. G. F. Re: Indigestion probably causes this and the only connectton it could pos- sibly have with candy eating is the fact that too much sugar causes in- pees and consequently palo in ac PUMICE STONE FOR TEETH— MILDRED A little pumice stons ence in a m clean and whiten the teeth, but used any aor often may destroy the en- amel. IRS. G. B.: The! in the) ridding the system of waste matter and poisons and they also help as- nth or six weeks will) MR. JOHN Is NoT AT HOME SIR. ONLY HIS FATHER BY HEck| T WOULD HAVE BET MY SUSPENDERS \f SAW HIM IN HERE pies, ‘puddings, pastries. PRIZE WINNER—MRS. G. VitvThe winners of the $50 prize in the con- test for six fat and six thin women “i to reduce and gain weight were as follows: Thin winner gained twenty a pounds in two imonths; fat one lost : thinty-nine pounds in same length of Ali Baba Lays time. BODY BENDING EXERCISE — RS. MILDRED H.: Many women cannot do this exercise ¢ if they are in splendid trim, and very short arms;or long legs often make it & duces large abdomen, overcomes con- atipation and strengthens weak back. THIN ARMG- POLLY IL: Chest raising will develop the upper arms apd correct round shoulders. ‘Tennis and ‘rowing will develop lower arm. A game of tennis will make the un- used® muscles in forearins ache for olemome fruit the thin woman can it. Yea, they are fattening. et Seed iting blast siring how 'and: his band of robbere far * Sper enter the cave, toting sb Bet wit Here chu Chin Chow. buys. badrat aul of Wroachery and orders that abe be CHAPTER X11. ) SWOLLEN FEET—MRS, HB: Different conditions may cause this | and kidney trouble or some other In- ternal disorder may cause it. : ALI .OLIVES—MARGARET H.: It makep little difference how the olives aré packed—in bottles or kegs; but ripe ollves are more wholesome than green ones and they are fattening | ‘Too much olive oll should not be! eaten, because many persons with weak digestion canot assimilate it. GOLD. lesser dregs of FAT FACE—MIs. J. G.: Massag>| nese escort of the great Mandarin, will reduce fat fac nd other parte | Chu Chin Chow. Upon the floor of @ the. body, but when it is app “fa SR ARRIETA reap at Bete tly aie It has to pe s2| Mis carriage lay many bage of gold. ‘onuods that it is likely to break | Jewels sparkled on his fingers, and mm the tissues (which is its ob-| his servants carried many more bags My ject) and make the face sag. Two| of gold—all the rich loot from the 7) pounds a week ts all one should lose] paid on the slave market. { en trying to reduce weight, unless} Behind the rickshaw, escorted by So the jeweller in question devised! Abu side @ watch and will stop its fur-|when the rickshaw stopped, ther operation at a time decided upon yood, Thou hearest, Zahrat vance. When the watch stops lover is waiting for thee. stomer invariably calls on the and chain her Ike’ obtains his own watch and jewels above his surns the one he had borrowed, © my desert flowe: ' ily about one week ts allowed thy lover and have the work, and then the little at- and tell him of the great ent comes into play, speeding shown thee by Abu Hasan, ineas for the jeweller. At midn obesity diet: all meats ak greeg@ vegetables, fruits, Ts tis swea}s, fats, starches, ‘i wera ida wp Basu ft bait 3 a ca ap Had lunar Bie eatuced 459, BABA AND THE BAGS OF two armed Chinese, who made sure Hasan chuckled and turned _an attachment which can be fitted in-|to the slave girl, who had paused e in the cave of thou shalt see ech with him mercy whom thou didet betray to mine enemies. for Fine Raiment Purchased With the Robbers’ Wealth at the Manhattan Opera House By WILLIAM A. PAGE (Based on Oscar Ashe’s Play) (Copsri@at, 1017, by William Billott, F, Ray Comstock and Morris Gest.) . SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS, several days, which is ample Rroot of roiom. the anit, i soeretly at Apts +f a atten! nl, reveals to Alcoloia that ae as which mu ure affected by this w° Ee’ algo tells her that, Oba’ Chin Chee ie ot splendid, healthful game. oaUng to Diot Unvacnery, axaipat Kealia Haba, Then the tw. n u Magianal bith to! oti erontens id in ing: Bay ith BANANAS—MRS, G. B.: Bananas va Neanin, “abet la Jenga) ac when thoroughly ripe are the most Gish ‘although he hiwiselhea'g oegger, Hans, to. pec, rom ta Dil Babe ‘ice, ed, HROUGH the main street of Bagdad, pushing aside all the humanity, roughly shouldering the bean- sellers and the merchants out of the way, caine the rickshaw and the Chi- — viens x |that sh iid not escape, walked ris Device StopsaWateh nrat-al-Kulub, the desért woman, This Device Stopsa' | Renate enn eee cence rere But Speeds Business Hasan of Khorasan, _ yw | In front of the very house of All | Baba, the rickshaw paused, as has found a] through the crowd came Kouzaymar, way to make his customers |one of the chief aids of the robber call promptly for watches left| hay Who bowed low to salute his chief. fo be repaired, It haa become @ unl- ireeting, O Chief,” he murmured, Vas@al practice in the trade for a} softly. dweller to | his patron a wateh ‘Come hither, Khugaymah,” di- While the other is being repaired, In| reeied Abu Hase, beckoning ‘to hie many cases it may be several weeka,| fentenant, | "Faou hast formed or even -mochs, before the custome7, tay bidding calla te get His own watoa, return| "Yen, O manter. Zahrat-al-Kulub's thé borowed timepiece and pay his |lover is now chained and gagged in bill, the lower cave.” “Breping World Daily Magazine — RR tge,, By Maurice COAN Me YouR SWITCH WIFEY. A CoP Is AFTER NE FOR SPEEDING, | SAw HIM ENTER HERE GOSH DARN IT . \ CHINCHOWS HE ARABIAN NIGHTS BROUGHT TO NEW LORY pomegranate blossom,” cried Ali hi- lariously. “Pieces of gold. Never more shall we talk of beans, but of rich flesh and fish, of sweetineats and rare fruit, and rarer wines.” thou art mad, or drunk.” . Nur-al-Huda, and thee, too, Marjanah,” cried All, running to the corner of the street. Around the His Tatters 4 ~~ physical impossibility, so do not), : : A house came the two young lovers, rey about it and do the better |NOvelized From the Play Now Being Presented ieuting a donkey laden with mans exercise—trunk raising, which re- bags tied upon his back. “Now will we reveal our wealth unto this mother of sourness and om, Auatrows Chu Chin, Ch Fast thou no words with which to thank me, O My flower of the desert?” Zabrat looked at him_ scorntully. “No words of mine can alter the de- cree of fate,” she cried, “Allah, the. ‘| All-seeing One, who hath made me to didst come from,” this gold Marjahah. big jewels of wondrous value,” cried Nur-al-Huda Alt “And yet more and more—dost hear the chink of 1l? And dost see these other bags, all filled with golden co shouted Ali “Where gottest thou this? asked the overwhelmed Mabubah. SAMPSON ROCK OF WALL STREET THE STORY OF A MAN AND AND A F Begin It on This Page Monday, Nov. 12 Ketten | The Evening Wortd’s Kiddie Klub Korner CONDUCTED BY ELEANOR, SCHORER The Press Pabieiing The New York Brew ‘‘Under the Sky’’ Stories} ‘ “ , ‘ ‘Tom, don't Aren't you ashamied®" crted ‘May, coming upon Tom tn | the act of shoolng a small red squirrel out of reach of a bag of nuts from which Ke was fecding @ gray aquirrel “I did not think you could be really mean!” “Tam not mean or ernel,” answered Tom. “I Uke gray squirrels because {f you feed them they will not hurt the wild birds, Only when they are starving will they rob nesta, Gray, | black and fox squirrels make won. derful pets, I know because my Uncle Harry ased to catch them alive and ship them away to far-off woods | where there were none, Nobody ever wanted red squirrels shipped to thotr you bet!” | have @ few chestnuts?” with. All bis Kind are pests and de-|none," said Tom. May only emfled. 4:; stroyers,” answered Tom, holding up| She was happy tndeed that she ait *” the baw for his chum to help herself.| fot let even a “destroyer and peat” ! May, only pretending to ent, slyly get away neglected and hungry. 6ho threw ‘the supposed shells over the| thou ot @ favorite fence, whence the scared Httlé red| vers creature ‘had fled. When the nut bag was quite empty Tom, Jumping up, Informed May that ‘To bark and bite, Yor God hath made them oo.” it was time to make homeward! “It was God, too, who hath mata tracks. “I'm glad that old reddy got! ‘old reddy’ #0,” ehe sald to herself. gon o se ° "i > Cousin Eleanor’s Klub Kolumn } $ vay ‘i 7 | Cousins who have received honorab!> Dear Cousin balsas hits |mention for their splendid work cou! | HAT can I say that will ¢X-/alno appear you readers would be "°F press how ploased I am with | atile to get all the pleasurable enter- ++ you? At the close of ehch| ininment Has, T pave Bad. but the Fr : aoae > Korner ts not large enough t> fo ontest you surprise mo WIth | Rocommodate much a multitude of Thanksgiving contributtons. sk month! your clever, correct and entertaining writing or drawing. ‘This time it te writing. The compositions on Thank: giving wore better than I dared ¢: pect, and the hours spent In reading | through them were hotirs of real pleas. | Work. i ure and entertainment for mo. HONORABLE MENTION, j THE AWARD WINNERS ARB: AGE SEVEN. } My compliments to the award win- fers, honorable mention winners and to all the other contestants who were only @ little behind these fm their ALICE gat siz, No, TL Bright] Max Olfbeume, Renjomin Pili, eet oreey ityy 8 rapes Ts TORS TU STILY, age coven, No, 899 Fourth . Rion Aingp, Btith Honneit, Adaline Peery, SATB Bp ICE LUN, age gays. Mo, 68 Queen Anne | Joes eit, “Bussne "hovers. Atian : | Kidgetio f : ROTI. GULL ESPLE, age nine, No, 887 AGE NING, a treet Brooklyn, MARIE biZKOURTS, thang arene, Hrane WN UNER. wom 11, bers 9 twelre, No, 008 Bargwoline aro IWAN. Age thirteen, No, 431 lors a1 Moments fers ea Gia, Ma: a “« ngellcn a Certotta’ “Lrving. “Marian K a Lem, Billeateth hitler. ten, No, 180T Ao. lo, # With Btz8st, Abbot! Went Ne ROBERT MAGOW AR. STORY NPWS wee fourteen, No, 1900 Third Avenue. New Yor Fig ORNER, fitters, Borden Guee ‘Honmonth Hearh, Now ‘The compositions will appear in the Kiddie Klub Korner tn the order of the authors’ ages. It 1s certain that cousias and friends will enjoy reading what they have to say about | |, Fiormes er, Lenk Cotteatel4, our great national feast da ney, toda Stina Anna Koe Ties - Lange, oNt only the compositions of the Lares Youteeguts, AGE ELEVEN, ig anondale, Drdol Revilner, Harr Albert Card. Gi fe Wrancee dariten lich ue Korine k Stes. Homie onli 4 0 Stack Bain, tes alaskense 1, Becky gf AGE TWRLVR. ard z pe AGH THIRTERN, no Honmfield, Grace if 7 Tiare, ; 1 Marian B, Terry. Anna. Townsend, yen Orden: Tea AP |. Tether Ven aa AGE FOURTERN, at Blake, Rowe 4 jarearet Dorathes Ler, Peer Hong Delae. Doroiny Derr, oll, Marian Dwyer, ieaime Edwin, Ethel Fiddle, Gallager, Phyllis Highton, Abe je Helen’ Kaufnas, Natalie Kr jertrude, aa A MAID HT FOR MILLIONS 408 FIFTEEN, Marte it Law Will ing Noah ong 4 Allah is bountiful, O mother of in- A win ie! Mestre,” affirmed All, sole checkered silk and trimmed with'many -Morjaanh, before marriage, sweet as Cousin Eleanor, “pat teat it ani) plumes. The younger people wera fhe sugar cane, pliable as the willow ¥ * efled abubah, picking u more modest in their selections, but twig, yet v thou hast attained e = a handful of coins and letting they All scattered gold broadcast through thy desires, thy sugar sweetness will Award Winner }3**® p one by one, “One-two -three the silk market until all mafyelled at turn to vinegs thy yielding and FP the display of wealth of the former. bending to carking:and barking.” October Contest Nay." cried AM. “Trou canst beggar of Bagdad. N vat it will be so with ¢ = @ount until doomsday, yet wilt thou st 4 7,» Tc ned upon nich me,” M tenderly : mever reach the end of this sudden na in front of the silk stall, Nurs 1) THINK Thi e Wealth that hath come to thy. all. -Huda surveyed his father in ad- of soothing ankepiving. he. yep knowing husband. Forty thousand ation, and sald: Yow that thou art rich, father of plest day in the year, On that day we thank our Lord for all pros+ worries from him, way and never doleful, farliore, thou wilt be having thy own 7 wil sod | will laugh only | perity he has given us. os harem.” % when my lord pleaseth.” We aro all happy on Thankegtving nlite’ peponded All proudly, and All made a WEY FCO. nan tota | 224 redolee in Hie blessing. ‘This year” Tich 80 JRAsIrn'e feet, RE (SC ne ne ee ted eye ee COIs $0, make eur solélexto . 6 before wa dic 6 pro! a Y Diets and then I shail be a Wazir of way how 1 | Nuredietuda.” Lene rey and help Uncle Sam win... i aid Marjanah y By ALICE M'QUAIG, age six, N r canst thou not become even a “Ang now | hate my Mah-babubah,” | 71 Bri rc A ai Cay Cn Sve oF ORIAGT” ARERSITG mocked ‘All, shaking hia h BRE Bicentenary Vir te . nad “Yeh, or even a Chu Chin Chow,” ’ * , agreed All, laughingly. o harem CHAPTER XIV. will be finer than mine, and I'll have ALI BABA PAYS HiS DEBT, plenty of wives, none of them old, NCE more in Kasim Baba'a either, ke Mabubah, All young palace t was spread, It ones. was night after he had ‘Acwaye be brigt . Frantes Me me Met Doma 7? \° q ary in ra Se | Ae see, hath written in the desert sands But Nur-al-Huda thought of other é the Gold and the Blue.” - that death shall yet befall thee and things and rore to his feet entertained the Chinese mer thy band because of me. And leat “Come, O father, end thy dreaming chant, and, though Ka had been thou dount that which I now foretell, ene nee. ig clone Upon @Mevously iil all day, he had left bis let that fortun ler show thee your of sunsel n to ee cole. | Three, tho and oars the whan then wit Ls hasten to Kasim's house.” bed give another ‘seast in: 98) By Worn HOR. mn thy doom, O Abu Hasan of Khoras- Hut, wherefore, O son of haste?” bration of hia recovery, Also, this |Sreet, Monmoutt: Besch, N, an, thou whose word is worthless as ested All. en x , wis the n when his poor brother, 3 ow the grass of the desert ‘To pay him the forty thou ; iat pay ine tania hot 4 Abu Hasan frowned. He clenched pieces which thou dida tid last night Al! T se rte Rated he ci ae his fists in anger. Then he composed for my Mafjanah, and which we have "4 Gihar : ori, 3 himself with an effort nted into these pagw,” replied the jana s won, Nur-al-Huda, a6 “Enough, thy say is said,” he cried, boy would jose the object of his heart's If T bed @ penny and you had none Shs “Away with her to the cave, where But All was not ready yet to leave gayent {aan y, Same, that pas. aa she and her lover shall henceforth the silk stall. hes: enterta sie haat’ shou 1 Kind news for me aad som, si livo amid wealth uncountabl First would I purchase me yet oF i | YPrESPELT 408 Alabama ‘The Chinese coolies moved forward more rave apparel that I may fill provided for the feast, to-night, Alb- | Avenue, Brooklyn with the rickshaw, Ch Chin Chow the eye of jcolom,” he said dullah?" i} . a se HAR WHINAR TRO AIETRy HNO Clone. Jay, All,” explained Marjanah Keusin Baba, seated with the falr| HOW TO EARN A CLUB PENNANT behind him, guarded by two armed is not what she sees upon thee, b 1 the dishes arrayed | A TWHNTY TWO.LNCH felt petnant, made in Chinamen, went tho slave girl, Zah- what ghé knows within thee, wi the Klub anions nd aid, and: bear rat-al-Kulub, toucheth the heart of a woman. The lipe of Persian play ing the Kijadie Kiud vawe, will be atven ‘The fortune-teller, standing nearty, lies the difference, as the poet hath o steward, “who who had heard part of the prophecy sail Man boves the woman, but the tras history and of Zahrat, laughed Jove ofthe woman ts for the love of f the woman Down the mean street, singing a a the man, Oh, Nur-al-Huda, tell 1 and a jealony hus. he came, maudlin, hait-drunk R AGI BABA TURNED TO DISPLa¥ THE WONDERS OF HIS GORGEOUS igain that thou wilt ever love thy pleasure to pass th still half-sober, appeired Ali Baba, REGAI Mirfanap?” art before the sin9) sate the soupoiis may ob gas Dancing with joy, he pranced up to 4Ourne™- eta All boastfully, as be races clinking on the ground—forty “Oh—Hlsten to her," watted Atl, if ending 10 conte sik tame © OT = grtrance of him humble homie, unfastened one of the bags of gold thousand-—and yet thou s4i)ty. ly Pgs Hh ar,” replied the | 4 © s0 | just 1n time to meet Mabubah as she ou drunken rogue,’ protest ach the end. O wife ot ow many thousan mes hast came forth from the door Mabdubah. Ue ome. Se oteye aie Shakin te belt t nou heard my answer?” sald Nur-al ist) of the: danct HOW TO JOIN THE KLUB AND}, “Allah's blessings on thee, head wite to glean thy hovel, but thou mast - Huda, tenderly taking her tn his and the | the players the OBTAIN YOUR PIN. pe of a Grand Wazir that 1s to be,” bring in thy aes to help thee soil our p arms ¢ame an Inter nin the shape of ” . cried Ali Baba, dancing around her. courtyard?” id CHAPTER XI. bh." laughed Marjanah, ‘“but @ gorgeously attired st » Wear po | Mabubah reached for a bamboo pola All carefully spread a cloth upon IN THE S/LK BAZAAR OF BAGDAD (oth @ woman aver tire of hearing ing silken robes of the reheat hues, ao with which to hit him, the ground, and then emptied a great with much gold, All Baba WbAt she feareth to be untr 10? W who came down the steps of the pal- 08 “Thou hog’ of drunkenness,” she heap of golden coins upon it. 841 ne SAUOD EO 1 Bab® shou devote thy life to me anu al. # a inte great dining hall ov | said angrily, “where is thy wood? ting beside the bag, he ran his ha end two young people, Nur waye care for me? Art sure thou Ka looked n in amazement A fou must } oe Have T not pounded here hour after through the coins’ looked up at All and the singing wilt not forsake me soon” Alolom gave @ startled cryt-yot ; AGB / hour, waiting but for thy pieces of @mazed Mabuban, and amiled Marjanah, made their Nur-A!-Huda Ali closed her ques. a 64 her own senses vet fuel to botl thy mea! to fill and swell "Golden «: * he orted k basaar of Bagdad in {08!nm lips with @ kiss, whereat All ¢ rpeous ang prostrated yrore of aa PY j thy worthless carcass? An‘ now gold, thou of wealth.” ” faked " Baba raised his hands to A and wit before K ) Baba and eried ae Ae lls WY oat comeat thou with talk of and Mabubah fell upon her kneos ¢ ane Atting raiment aa cried Y i * ; Wasgirs! Tl! have thee before the examine the coins. eon OW stations In life, “Awah, awah The wi of a \ ail to the Grand Wagir that COUPON NO. 237 | Wastr of Police, thou rogue.” "Gold? ghe cried, In wonder. All pers selected gorgeous war- woman are indeed beyond the wit of be | “Nay, J bring thee pieces, my sweet “Yeh, and vast sums of the eame nienis © great towering turban of man to understand, Here art thou, (Ta Be Continued.) ' |