The evening world. Newspaper, May 7, 1919, Page 25

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§ | Pauline Furlong’s Talks On Health and Beau Comrright, 1919, by the Press Publishing Oo. (The Now York Evening World). Exercises for Beautifying the Body. © women can hope to appear at their best until they stand, walk ‘thd sit properly, no matter how goad looking thay may be nor how weil groomed, ‘The woman who waiks with abdomen protruding and shoulders and chest sunk in, will not only appear care: + “fens and sloventy, but will soon'find herself in poor health through improper and shallow breathing, from incorrect posture and crowded lungs. Try the following exercise tor correcting stoop shoulders: Take the kitchen broom, if you have not a wand, and, after bending the arms at the elbows, keeping them close to the sides, place the broom at the bend of the elbows and force the shoulder blades back unt] thay meet in the back. ‘Then roll the shoulders around anid back to correct standing position again, and repeat the movement about ten times at each practice. Never resort to shoulder braces to correct round shoulders, and ft should be your aim to make the muscles in the back, chest and shoulders #0 strong that they wili hold the body in the erect and healthful pose, Of course, a ane or umbrella will answer for a wand, if necessary. Another corrective exercise for straightening stoop shoulders fs to stand with the feet togethor, weight on balls of feet, hands and arms extended in front of the body, fingers meeting. Draw the arms backward until the bands meet in back of the body and then forward until they are ‘in the original starting position. Do this about twenty-five times at each practice. It is wonderful for thin neck, with unsightly he'lows also. Keep elbows rigid during the movements. Still another corrective exercise for strength- ening the muscles in the shoulders ts to stand with closed fists, arms ex- tended full length near body, and work the shoulders around tn circles, working toward the front and then upward, backward and around. Do this movement about ten times and then open the clenched fists anti » Felax all of the muscles for a time. Remember that relaxing and resting between the movements is just as mecessary as tensing and holding them ‘aut during the exeraises. oe ‘ NTMENT FOR BLACKHEADS— HARRY F.: Bran and o1 are Cleanse the face with|not really fattening foods, im the er at night and then some of the following mixture: joated zinc ointment one ounce; walicylic acid twenty grains; gum camphor, ten grains, Use no cold cream. }FATTENING FOODS — mrs, Advice sense you mention them, not a hard matter to overeat of anv foods and-cause superfiuous fat, espe- cially if you are inclined this way. Too much of any kind of bread will prove fattening, but dark breads are ones. By Betty Vincent How to Forget TMF—and, other interests! ‘That |sot want to be forgotten, he will find is the only answer to the pite-| Way to reach you. ous question, “How can I for- met?’ which ts asked by Broken- hearted, H. V. 8. and others. Look about you and you will surely * eee that it is harder to stay in love than to fall out of love. Note the couples who break their engagements me ‘wy mutual consent,” having found that what they thought was lasting love bas degenerated into mere liking | or even dislike. Observe the married eu. S0lks who jog along in humdrum bore- dom. They had been drawn together ‘by physical attraction, passion, ad- ftitration, or what not. But these have gamed. Time and close assoctation are the two great levelers of love. ‘To those who WISH to be free of fove, or what they fancy is love, be- cuaee it is unrequited, or forbidden, the World War Ed Harmon, tn © came re ag finding b recrul miata ats, © ial tte nies Bae diem fined wo weeks’ ayes ‘er unwise, or for whatever reason, I ee, ‘adviee other interests. It will be bit- CHAPTE: ‘erty bard at first to cultivate a pale Me ‘taste for other interests. The person ‘who ts disappointed in love yearns to mew! into a hole somewhere “and aie” Fight this tmpuise. Stir about, oven if you have to do ft mechanical- fy, as one merely “going chrough the motions.” Put on your best clothes, your most welcome ones, and £0 forth for a oar ride, if nothing more. Bee people, Contact with other human ‘Deings in itself is a consolation, Cul- vate friendships with both women ‘and men, Go to the theatres, dances @od other places of amusement. Never stop home alone and brood. |. Avoid lonesome owilighta and soli- tary walks. People wil advise you to take up HEN, Joe, we was took over to where a bunch of/Australians was trainin’ some of their own gang and we was told to keoh quiet and watch so’s we could soe just how to do this thing. I won't forget that for a long time, Joe, and it took all the laugh auta us, believe me! They was nothin’ funny connected with them gu: idea of playin’ with the baynet, No, Joe—-this here was the real thing’ ‘An officer gives the command, and, boy, you should of seen them babies pilin’ outa the trench on the run, Not only seen them, Joe, but heard 'em! ‘They ain't no gun livin’ could drown ‘em out when they get hittin’ on all cylinders, and the yells they give is somethin’ to raise hair on a bald- headed guy’s dome! They ain't or- dinary yells, Joe, like “Oy boy!" or “turray!" | Oh, no—them "guys qeme sort of work, This fe wise If} groan till you’ can feel the blood ft ts work you like, There ts nothing | kinda quiverin’ in your veins. They Mike work to take the place of the|claum their yells is the way @ lotta ~*aeet human interest , Qifferent wild animals howls us. human interest. It isa't the) traiiu when they, got jumpin’ tooth- game; it isn't a8 good; but tt ts the | acne or somethin'—can you tie that? mext best thing. Besides, it often | Well, Joe, Bey crash into Sher Aime: leads Many @ business | mies, and all you can see is the pay hee me re A pale wish and flash of the baynets in the By the mere passage of time, your heartache will grow less. Presently you will find yourself taking interest ip things—people, places, activities of @ll kinds. Some one elso will come along, and presently you will find that it is not one particular human being you need, but a type of human beings. Im other words, we do not fall in love ‘with personalities so much as we do ‘with kinds of persons, There ave a few unique souls who are capable of “the grand passion”—just one love of @ Lifetime. But most of us can be more or less satisiied by any one of @ number of persons, . H. V. 5. seems not quite sure she “wants to forget her young man. her first of all to decide this, It to me as if the young man does ‘ot particularly care for her, It is tty plain that what one feally ts, one moves heaven and earth ‘apave to forges ian, me o bawls their instructor. “Clean killin’ fe what we want! Kill tem sweet and clean! Wipe the Ger- '000-—eeeeee! | |" Oh, doctor Biff—Bang—-Zam! Over goes the first line of dummies, and them guys is chargin’ into the next, yellin’ like devils from below, Every one of them birds, Joe, ts built like a heavyweight champ, and when they go into action they are stripped to the waist, They don't hear no com mands to halt tll they ain't @ livin’ thing left in front of them, They are sure some scrappers, Joe, K serious and That's the way Well, we'd mi but it is less apt to make fat than white flour n Courtship And Marriage © ana OVER THERE is BAcK You DID A DARN Good Jos ano %og DID tr Quick ROM B Hot From the Box, Ed. Harmon, the World Famous Pitcher, Slides Into SYNOPSI8 OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS, bt, 1948, by Small Maynard ths Lbs, ives tne gat rane. ‘aymy and starts for siarts intensive (raining under an Bug! seriously and they guy the Sergeaut and the Germans don't care to Dilay with them “Tecan hear them guys yellin’ t! ‘Weill, when ney, Ret Prrourh, os doughboys looked at each other very i throwed out our chests, it was done, eh? them guys to fight alongside of us before we got and Scores Big. ts fired off the team and. ‘scrap. i lor the sitaunes toad an ettostive opine | BSAZieg, 8 cree, Sureeaat ees to: the wide cuffs,’ A corresponding | bodice closes, marking aleo the lett drapery on the skirt is formed by! side line of the panel. lengths of the material that drop from the back and are gathered into Pwtle Paw. rer: beownid che: ta each sido of a long front panel, The foundation skirt Is gathered about nants of materiale 4.5 which match per Ga fectly and I think . . is & fy dress if you will help % ( me to design the, 2: eo 4 style for it. One piece thes i ” of Kumsi-Kumsa te xs By H.C. WITWER. 3-4 yaa, andthe 7 , other, of crepe de brains fs concerned. What a man back when the gentle stranger rainin’ as usual, They's one thing thrillin’ job of repairin’ trenches, ‘ wants to drink for when he can look chimes in. “C'est . votre!” gays you can always figure on in France, where they had been knocked out of Chine, is 21-2 yards, at a dame like this aud get the same to me, grinning like a wolf and slap- and that’s rain, They may be short true by sholls. . both of salmon ptm kick they is in gin is past me! Even of everything. else, Joe, but they’s Joe, we been doin’ that ever since color, Would eppree Windy Haskins, which thinks nobody I hollers, gettin’ always plenty of that, Sometimes we been up here, and they is cer- yr or nothin’ on earth is on the level, ad- the book to the in the restaurants over here they tainly a lot of sore guys In our oat- Giate your advice, mits that Jeanne is champion good first page I come to. I figure I'll try to pass it off as soup, or coffees fit which is champin’ on the bit to MISS B. ro ee he world, Only. he says, pull a litle French on bim anyways, au lait, or vin ordinaire (a burlesque be heroes and they ts nothin’ Uso te ees an the girl's insane, #0's he won't think I'm, np dummy. on wine); bat, Joe, it's rain al right, stirrin’, . Chine for the lower “What d’'ye mean, insane?’ I hol- “Je ne sais pas nager'! answers fo matter what they call it! Ihave woe was give a supply of masks lor lors, gettin’ ready to nail him, pie, no sate pas DageEl” canneinda drunk fr and had We, pour on me ia ant Ateet Gvech netaes Deters we part of skirt, lower. "Well, I'll leave it to any twelve puzzled. Then I seem right under- the streets, and I know what I'm come up here and also a complete sleoves, &o., an glo 474. guys in the world,” ho says, “if @ neath that is the English, and it talkin’ about Joe! Gutht of winter scenery to keep us pom Sa Ue Game like that can 'sec her way clear means “I don't know how to swim,” | Well we relieved these gays one by yood and warm. Joo, It gets we ‘cold to stall around h you, she’s short which ain't got nothin’ to do with one and I says to the bir as a half a dollar's worth of ice in ferry et can get ® laugh out of of somethin’, din’t shi 1 let him get away with it, Joe, be- cause I scen then it was nothin’ but a case of jealousy, and, besides that, this Haskins guy is bigger than Bos- ton. But what I started to tell you was this here, Joe. I went around to Jeanne's farm when I'm off for a few hours, and I'm takin’ life easy by choppin’ wood for what's left of her family. I ain't put more than threo blisters on my hands when I happen to look up, and there's Jeanne with some bird in a French ‘uneyform. Jeanne is smilin’ that million-dollar different ‘set of guys than we was before. They ain't no kiddin’ among those present this time, Joe, and it's all we can do to wait till we get the command, I sneaked a look around, and every one of us looks like he was goin’ after a guy that had insulted his girl_or put sawdust in hie to- bacco, We're a pretty tough lookin’ ice—go!” barks the sergeant. Oh, doctor! Joe, I'm tellin’ you they never was no baynet charge seen before like the one we pulled off right then and smile, and her new-found friend is there! In three minutes we have tryin’ to ssinate me cold with gone through three lines of dum- one look. He's the smallest officer in mies, howlin’ and oussin’ like wild animals and tearin’ up the earth like six-inch shells, We didn't leave no dummies or mothin’ else standin’, and if this sergeant and a lotta other of- ficers hadn't run after us, bellerin’ for us to halt, we would of gone right on through to Berlin and points west without no stops. They wasn't no- body that wasn’t bruised or scratched up @ bit, and most of us had to be pulled off them dummies by hand. ‘The Australians stopped to watch us and, Joe, they throwed up their the deck—a second lieutenant in the French army—and he's got a medal on his chest for every hair in my head. Joe, I'll give you ten guesses how I felt, and you can save nine of them for future use, I dropped that ax right then and there, and I feit like some doctor had just told me { had three minutes to live and that only if I cut out fast livin’ Yell, Joe, the French guy turns to Jeanne and cuts loose with a volley of adjectives, nouns, and verbs, wag- gin’ ‘his _shoulde and shadow- hats and cheered till they was black boxin’ with his hands at the same in the face, That there charge of time. I don't say a word—I ain't got ours put new life in the whole camp, none ready, I'm tryin’ to figure and the littl Engtish sergeant comes puttin’ up, grinnin’ from ear to ear, ‘he first time I ever seen him Whether to bean this old sweetheart of Jeanne's, and prob'ly cause a war between us and France, or to quit track a smiie! like a dog and beat it. He kee) br % “ . at it, ps on ‘Lor lumme!” he pants. “That's the spiitin’ chatter a mile a minute, and way to fight, my lade—you bloomin’, although he's usin’ French, @ guy murderin' Yanks!" from South Africa could see that Thats us, Joe! what he was callin’ me would never Yours traty, of made my parents stuck up, This an , BD. HARMON. gets my goat, and I reach back in bloomin’, murderin’ Yank.) my hip pocket and yank out that ouspeer wemagaped “French While You Wait" we all CHAPTER VIL carry and try to folley him, Joe, BAR JOE: Well, Joe, I hope shy on control, Finally, nature could by this time you have re- stand no more, and he quit for membered that America is Preath. In butts Jeanne, gettin’ as red as a stick of lip rouge, She not only your address, but gays somethin’ in French to this guy, {t’s your country and the place you noddin’ and smilin’ the while, I don’t make your livin'—and have got inside know what she said, but it went big aU, Bh coeetcrm with the newcomer, ey) swings around on Foo, remember Jeanne, the Game fy wou of w gun if le dou'l hiss me fondly hope to wed one of these days? Well, me and she is gettin’ along now like J. P. Morgan and a ‘3 right smack on the cheek before I can lift a hand to defend myself! Jeanme brightens right up and laughs. “Soit, mon frere!" she says to me, pointing at him, That: don't tell ine nothin’ ' ja the book for & Wednesday, May 7, ‘Mr. Overhere! PAGE By Maurice Ketten HEY OVERHERE Come BACK! FINISH Sour Jos y Sy Original Dress Designs For the Smart Woman — By Mildred Lodewick Copprtabt, 1019, by the Prem Publishing Co. (The New York Bening World). Printed Voile Prettily Manipulated. WOMAN is 4 dresses. This statement, though true, does not imply that a matron of forty should try to wear the clothes of the girl of twenty. It does imply, however, that the woman be tween forty and sixty years of age can make herself appear younger by dressing herself in smart clothes. The stylish alr which such clothes lend a woman is re- markable in its sug gestion of youthful- ness, If one stops to consider, I am sure any one can oall to mind examples of this truth in women of the same age, but some of whom, in their som- bre, plain, out of date clothes, appear so muoh older than their more stylish friends. The motto is, then, that a woman should never lose track of Dame Fashion, My design to-day ia for the matron, a charm of gracious dignity pervading. Printed volle or Georgette In a large scroll pattern is a pretty medium, and could be yhosen in such colors as rasp- berry red on @ @ty or dark blue back+ ground, or dark blue or black on a white or gray background. ‘The bodice ts kimono style, the sleeves om- anating from the waistline, which would not be very comfortable were the sleeves not short, so that they can pull up when one wishes to raise the arms, Tiny cordings on the shoulders allow futness both front and back, and on the sleeves the the waistline and again at the tom, where @ nine-inch band confings it, An appreciable bit of trimming is the taffeta or bands that bind the shawl collar and, the in = skirt panel, being of a color to the printed pattefn, A velvet ribton the sabject, and this guy must think “How far away is the German's kid I'm a nut. By this time I'm wild, “I no speak not the American,” he Joe, and also makin’ a boob outa whis) “How many soldiers from myself, so {£ throwed this French the Etat Unis are there now book in a ditch and eet to beat France?” it, a broken-hearted guy for your ven million!” I hiwes back, fe! But Jeanne grabs me by the seein’ he wouldn't tell me nothin’— arm, still laughin’, “not countin’ me.” she says, “you “But, mon chert This it is do not the comprehend, my brother.” ‘Oh, boy! ‘They's just one thing I wanna say about me and the Frenoh language, Joe. I thought at first I'd plok the thing up in a coupla leagons like checkers or ice hockey, but I'll be on the level with you, Joe; I don’t it now, and I won't speak it sever! They ain't no guy on earth but @ Frenchman ever gets where he oan talk it right, and you can’t learn it from no book ro more than yoa oan learn plutnbin’ by telephone. No, sir! You can't study French—tt's ® gift! ‘The French has got our talk fig- ured as bein’ different from the En giish, Joe, They’s a see te guaney grocery store that handed me @ BIE- the same way, and holes known gle, so I'l pass it along to you. This ins trade as shell craters, which is what it says: - “English Spoken Here.” deep enough to bury the “american Understood.” Yoars truly, on hin way, Well, Joe, as a matter of fact, th distance between us and mans, The space that keeps from where I sit it looks more i! swindies than anything else. and takes you out scription, here and own your own somewheres else.” of things; got me? They mountains of mud, barbed wire, us bullets and shelis, lakes, helo! home same. ‘We eased into them trenches as (First in war, ants tein quiet as possible, so’s tho Germans Stlli landlord for me I either Georgette ot nar Sy Towlan't get wise to the fact that hustled over to the little grocery store saa ae ——— they'd go to bat against American She runs in this French burg where thirty. doughboys the next time they got We Was stoppin’, and there's one of eight years of age, & CHAPTER VIIL to mixin’ It. We was to be in the Our doughboys standin’ there kiddin’ | |. feet & inches tal, Viveta, Frames, nature of an unpleasant surprise, _ er, = 1 wanna grat to you in weigh 149 pounds, bust PAR JOU: Well, Jom we are We Beén't been in there Ave min: Pits Nok the ays to her, “Give 38 inches hips w 0, befor ades jet loose! this hic finally lookin’ at the war icy ‘must have dopeal it out in | “It has come the time for you to inches, MRS. A, Mi from the orchestra, Our some way, because shells come over leave, mon ami,” she tells him, pre- Combine taffete for’ outfit went wp last might to by the barreiful for about half an aad me with sane ans you plein ont Neve the French birda in the hour, They give us everything they Make anything in the Follies quit. portions Percrow trenches, and they all bad from soup to nuts, and the noise | This big stiff turns around and sketch, White or grag” went out Ike guys at intermission would have made a boiler factory gimm> a sneer. First come, first ~ earl buttons, to get a smoke, or a glass of cracked sound like a deaf-anddumb prayer Served!" he says, ‘ Tl leave when ———_>-—_— a jee, or somethin’, The only differ. meetin’. As far as I could find out, good and ready! HIS MARKET, ence is, they don’t figure on comin’ back right away to see the rest of the show, havin’ give thelr @oor checks to us, No doubt you got the idea that we shook hands and cheered each oth and prob'ly drank toasts and th like, but such was not the case, don't see how nobody can drink roast milk toast; to the war at last. Y We come back at ‘e tor playin’ trump every time they led and and laid off. Us doughboys natu) though: Whe weal Ging on the vill Sach was not the case, Ase SSA PP RNR, AAR AEM NOOR REI I relieved “Sacrebieu!” he remarks, and went ain't over thirty cents im a taxicab the Ger- a@part is called No Man's Land, and one of them Long Island real estate You know, them places where the agent meets you at the train in a rowboat to see the plot they have awarded you for your sub- “Buy @ plot of ground One of them kind is young horses which died game and is still German Army in and sooner or later will do Un none of our outfit got beaned, but whilst none of us was scared, Joe, 1 must say we realized we had come while, tty soon they called it a day fare would be one of them grand, emashin’ dashes over the well-know: OP eee the chats ef the Aaae = i these here trenches after a day's rain, but we are fixed up now s0's that’ even if a blizzard come along in we could jJaugh at it, ‘To show that our heart's in the right place, we make it good and hot for the Ger- mans too, this chilly weather, by throwin’ shells over at ‘em, day in and day out. Nobody knew we was comin’ up to the front, with the exception of everybody in the camp, until almost the last minute, The first real tip off was when they served out the identification tags. These is little lead medals which you wear around your neck, and on ‘em it's got your name, outfit, nearest relative, and why—and a lot of other interestin’ facta and figures about a guy, so's that in case you accidentally bump Into a bullet you get due credit for same, Then they was a lot of orders give out which it's no use repeatin’ pre be- cause none of the censors is blind, ed 1, Joe, of course the first thing ts, I did was to sneak over and tell Jeaune fare-thee-well, for the time to bein’, I must of wrote about this is dame before, Joe, because she's bet~ ter-lookin’ than Alexan inshoot in August, and ever since I got my first flach at her I wanted to give her the honor of openin’ my mail and much older, Will you give me a design for @ dark blue taffeta drema, easy and sirm- ple to make? MISS M. B. ey ko This is a youthful, Practica’ style, Em- drotdery may be done in white or red. Feshion Witter, Wrening World: j How woul ‘you ads! yerds of blue ané white striped taffeta Ina dress? sm anxious to use it, and how good you are," re regdy right now!" Well, Joe, we went to it, whilst the Jeanne looks on without lendin’ of us, Instead of screamin’ and faintin’ like the ordj- nary dame would do, they is some more roses come into her cheeks, and lly Nor eves eparkies 2 ef yon set etther one of them in OVERNOR BILBO said at @ CG dinner in Jackson: “The mam who succeeds easiest is the obe who works on the queer, the in human nature, Like the chap turned up at Palm Beach with @ twelve-cylinder car, you know, | written & book called tf “Hh Beautiful bib es ea tng reception clerk, as eom< o his . locker, |‘ m could of a ring and hocked it for a jy! francs. ‘Chis we vine me to use twa! can match color ta:

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