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Qbd b4 aS uline Furlong’s Talks On Health and Beauty — + errant, 118, 07 the Pree Puntioiing Co. (The Kew Tork Brasing Weld), it Facial Massage. \ [yD te wes oe wateay's Corners of the nose to the corners of [yD te wes oe wateay's lace, espeolally if they are of long stand- ing. \They usually accompany the desp line which comes between the eyes and often termed thought lines or of ol eter. How- (#787, no matter what thelr name or cause, no woman ly wants them, and they may be successfully treated If treated early epough, Several movements are boneficial in removing these lines, and one is illustrated to-day, and should be , Spplied as follows: With the thumb of right hand pressed along the line on the left oheek, fingers curled under, mas: the face upward over the cheek-bone ond toward ear, This stroke may be applied with firmness without danger of the flesh, but the movement must always be Do the same with the left hand on the right cheek and allow about twenty- five strokes ab tach ‘ ‘ Many facial operations performed by poe nr dermatologists for thése lines after they have become too deep tb respond to ordinary massage, and the results are really ‘gil. wonderful; however, if the home treatment is applied reg- Mlatiy very noticeable Denefits will be derived in time. Here on I shall sound, the warning to avold unnecessary facial "Wttnaves Ctiltivate cheerfulness, for nothing will #0 quickly bring @beut “the down-in-the-mouth” expression which causes these unsightly mouth lines to appear as bad temper and worry, Keep the corners of the mouth turned up, as when smiling, if you would do much to eradicate my Ue lines, Many women use adhesive plaster strips across mouth lines at night during the day when convenient. They greatly ald in keeping lini Darts of the face trom getting deeper ey help to provent others eadey ene aa Strips about a half imoh wide may be applied across Radey mace and narrow tape may be used on forehead lines and. the fine @n@ around the eyes. he —— FATTENING VEGETABLES — x. 4M. Bt Turntps, pumpkin, squash, Perenips dre pot fattening. Of course, they should be eaten with- DEVELop AaNs AND BUST— BETTY V.: The chest-raising exer- Gine, Very yo agg og déscribed, is the Lest 3 ba ge OE a ate, bust upper, ari @ following is in} juable iy ae: Stand ot tended in arms come back shale as they go forward again, TTERMILK—GRACH C.: This not fattening = te highly nour- Bring. It may be y man: ‘women wae ae, take sweet milk, account of billous tendency, ‘Advice on Courtship And Marriage FOR LINES’ FROM NOSE TO MOUTH PLACE THUMB OF bhi HAND ON LEFT CHEEK silencer and get off at fair ‘ran By Bett Vi “Old Carson himself,” thought Lee. half a imile and up, with a tele: y Incent qieoking for, the “hold-up MAD. scope sight, und it's real nice fua Finding. Your Mate, | 1 sev always tett the stato mould | {ipa THeyt never And him {hls picking folks ott Sg shots" he ex: MONG the many letters I receive consider the mating of its ygung peo-| Another mile, and Bud Lee was rid- plained, “got it in th left. side of on the question “Where shall| Pe Just aa it considers their educa- ine thse ha agariag with fre = the neck, Tf ded Wook at that hole in I meet @ Desirable Friend,” 1| ‘on and their well-being in other| (ilits of Squaw Creek Canon looming the little fir tree yonder. . kh on hie left, when suddenly and “1 doped it out while I was rua- fill print one that 1s typical and. well | WAYS. But the most serious thipg in| ajuulutely vefthourwarning, his horse ning,” he went ol “Look at. tho “put—from “H. E.” the world—the mating of the buman pe gar ree io for a wild way hag Werapac, Bagi here. If a ery Ay race—has sve plunge, staggered, stood @ moment was on the cliffs shooting at me, an “First of all,” she writes, “t-am me Poa ira ae ery haphaarg trembling terribly, then with a low coming that close to, winging’ me, a flirt, Non am J w be in collapsed why, he'd have to be off to the right. way, Seed’ & heir Gibb Notice wos wa Dale nd yr isfon for MAM had heard fnotshou Mothing be- ‘These big pines would shut himeott educated high choo! girl who ts be- bles to be carried out. We legislate | Youd the metallic pounding of the from the other side. It’s open and against divorce, but not against mis- alliance. We punish people for going wrong, yet we do not start them right. We urge them to matry, and opeh'‘no avenues of selection, There are also opportunities social acquaintance ‘ginning jo long for the normal com- ‘panionship of young men of her own class and tastes. *. “Where shall I meet any ‘young men? * © “You will say ‘in your canteen work’ vi in various edu- T Leave It to Lou | A Story of Western Ranch Life, in Which a Red Blooded American Girl With “Pep” \Vins Out Against Big Odds and Uets the Respect Due Her CHAPTER VIIL (Continued) HE road wound among the pines, climbing. Lee raced his eyes bright in and ved his horse a@ little, shod hoofs on flinty road, but there from an ugly hole in the neck the suddie horse was taking note of the ten thousand pos- sible hiding places on the cliffs, “Two miles left to the border lino,” (Copyright, Seribuer’s SYNOPSIS OF PABCEVING CHAPT HIS. Baus bane. always and keen, watchful and suspicious of every still shadow or stirring branch. up thé two-mile long Cuesta Grade, he Coming top..of the mountain, before he again followed a winding road bac tu the river's side, he saw & horse- man riding a’ distant ridge; the giiuted upon the rider’s rifle, Sona.) wins te ie Pcaives ‘hallenged Wo rue Felugp, tae wisest morte ga Heese Phe on one of your Poland-China “Not getting nerves? Are you, Doc? And Judith spurred on dywu the valley, Before she came to the spot where Bud Lee's horse had been shot she came upon Lee himself. A rifle across hig arm, he Was looking up at the clilfy of Squaw Creek canon, “Well, ye suid, you ‘muke of it?” “Using smokeless powdér nowa- days is # handy thing for a map shooting under cover,” hé said. “Then rig up your gun with # out on, ‘rom sun shut there were darn good shot wo of them, And “he added dryly. “Indian Head,” Pouring out its broke in Ji ne blood. gazing upward. ' “Bud ri “Smakeless powder and ® Maxim herse you're right. silencer!” muttered Lee, his eyes m said Lee, swinging from the saddle, “I'm going up there to have a little look around,” In an ins:ant the girl was at his ‘Or ‘at church.’ But I tel) you thezo| cational and_ politic: he estimated it. “Afoot.” side. rote oF aciwdintance are both an-| which have. hay gid is oped, Bi acer a TH Rage To Co eal lay et : iy hen: ie whine of a ullet, He simply. éohutely unsatisfactory. In the nice| classes in which worth-while giris| thought that the shot came from the | He looked at her curiously, Then ‘“Wdnteens they do allow you to dance, |and boys gather. cliffs just at the head of Sqnaw he shrugged his shoulders, An angry ut ‘making dates’ is strictly Creek canon, But he could not be flush came to the girl's cheeks, but pro- hibited, #o that only the undesirable Young men try to do it, and J dy not ‘Woat that kind, “fn church it is just as hopeless. 1 . ave tried for one full year to get acquainted with some boys in churn, but there are few socials, and there Unquestionably, as society is. now arranged, it is a very diMoult matter for the average young person to find even a tolerably suitable mate, es- pecially in large cities, where fam- ilies are small and live in crowded homes and have no time or chance for the little parties.and social gath- the canon,” amazed expression running horse. the pther boy: pounding out the jast fifteen mile the canvas bag beating safely against hia side. sure, “somebody up on the cliffs, head of panted Lee at Tommy's when Lee camo into sight, “Killed Go after him, Tommy. And on he Tell she went on with him, Not a word sed between them during the en- ire hour required to climb the steep side of the mountain and come under Indian Head cliffs. Jn the clump of brush, close to the ovter fringe, behind a low. broad shoulder, a man had Jain on his belly no longer ago than yesterday. Broken twigs showed it, a small bush my sit for. “what do “Latest thing in an up-to-the-min- ute Savage,” he told her. “That gun 1s good for twice the distance he used nas a e te i 1} luck to be ‘mountain-climbing to-day, I guess! Hurrying back to their horses, they rode to the ranch-house where Judith, with no word of adieu, left Lee to go to the house. Lee madé a late mngb, saddled another horse, and when the bunk-house clock stood at a quarter of four, started for the Upper End. “That girl's got the savvy,” was his one remark to himself. CHAPTER X. LUE LAKH, while but threo miles further — eastward, flashed {ts jewelled wators into the sun from a plane fully five hundred feet higher than the tall chimneys of the ranch house, About it stood the most precipitous found tracks, this time more clearly | many granite cliffs to be found hereabouts. They rose, sheer and majestic, still unother five hundred feet, here and there cight hundred and a thousand. ‘The jake, haif # mile in diameter, cir- cular like some polished mirror pre- wented by an ancient giant to his lady love, was phut in every by puers crags &nd cliffs save at the west, ere the overflowing water, going Yo swell che turbulent. river, poured like molten crystal troug> 4 wide gorge. Lee, coming to the waters edge, sought to guess where the old Indiag ruil came down, And hero dguin, starting him for a second time, Ju- dith rode up. she, of Das had @ fe horse; fom; raw ee ode 216 avons x Pr 4 1#e frowned, hat makes you so certain, Bud" was her abrupt word of greet, ng, “that Bayne Trevors is buck of this deal?” “When did t say thet?” he coun- tered, With that sho spurted by him, taking the trail which léd off to the right apd so wus sre cliffs and to the mouth of a great, ragged chasm, In spite * bim, Bud Lee «grinned atter her, And, seeing that she wae not to be turned buck, he followed, “Look!” exclaimed Judith, “Some one has beon repairing the old cabin. He's made a bench yonder under the hig tree, too. And he has walled in the spring with rocks, and. . . Who In the warld can it bo? ‘There’ even a little garden of wild flowers,’ Behind her back Lee smiled. i “Going in?” asked Lee, in well-sim- ed carelessness, she told him, freezingly. “Why should 1?) Would you want people poking about into your home just because it was in the heart of the wilderness and you weren't there to drive them out?" “No,” answered Bud, gravely “Now 4y no other time in which I can be ae: Mig?) arace oquatry-town lite,| Judith. in the courtyard, watched rushed gown eid of it the meine ee Seah Non Onn er 3 wouldn't. Let's Bo Y posi im ride in. e looked sw! at his tor so of e| rq a 3S 7 aa dendly toward them. Now, just where | (4 Cay Bosallay meet some possibie | Tir, from the watch on her wrist. ¢’aimed it eloquently, And, had | “But,” continued Judith, “not being you grown-up folks think young |) (°7 where one works, | rier eyes brightened, It lacked seven other signs been required, there they @ fool, and realizing that’ ono of ther ple can get acquainted? ut At is not often. Or at the home | minutes to 6 o'clock. As Bud dropped were two empty brass cartridges men we want might possibly be in of some relative. Or friend, But it|the canvas bag into her hands she where the “automatic ejector had hiding tp there, 1 am going to peck api few parents ever think of] is a slow and uncertain process and|fashed at him the most wonderful, thrown them several feet away. Lee in.” | ot ipviting other young folks to théir| calculated, as in our friend H radiant smile thatthe long horseman picked up one of the shells, Not being a fool,” he repeated after KE nigh des- homes. They think the young folks gan make their own dcqualntances. ‘Well—many of them do—in th® wrong way. Now, I am absolutely positive that the social evils of New York City cpa never be cleaned up until some way is provided for the average young man and young woman to know each okber without having to flirt on the I am well-nigh desperate, and I know scores of other girls who dave the sme problem.” This matter of providing @ pl.:0 where young people may make one another's acquaintance Is 6né of the many natural responsibilities of pa- renthood to whieh few parents give any thought, Persons who move in the higher circles of what is dalled “society” do make such provisions. And they are the ones who need it least. “How It Started Why We Eat ITTLE did Lord Sandwich, alias the celebrated Jemmy Twitcher, think that he was founding an international institution when, im order that his dinner might not inter- fers with his continuous gambling, he ysed to ask the waiter to bring him “@ piece of meat between two glices of bread,” which he ate out of his band without stopping play. “ Notorious for his personal and pol- iti@al vices, of which history has pre- werved many tales, the Fourth Hart of Sandwich was the most hated man of bis time in England, For unlim- ite@ and flagrant corruption, his ad- ministration as First Lord of the Ad- miralty stands alone in the political * epeals of Great Britain. But his case, to make one “well perate.” There is in itself nothing offensive 'n one human being speaking t» an- other human being to whom he or she is drawn by some quality of person- ality. It is simply that society, hav- Ing set up an arbitrary rule for the protection of the many, shuts off from the discriminating few the inost natural channel of communication. it fs not the lack of Introduction that | makes a man or woman less wortiy, but the fact that it is often ths un- worthy who are willing to sep aside conventions, For the sake of many inquirers like | ‘—. B." 1 should be glad of any sug. gestions trom perwons who believe | widespread problem, ° ‘* #*s very By Hermine Neustadti a Sandwich. Breatest offense against pubitc| opinion was his prosecution, after he had come into power, of his old pal, Wilkes, for crimes in which he him- self had been a partner. This ear: for him the name “Jez: Tv pe lish politics is Lord Smmadwich fa: but by our own beloved Hawai, liome | of night blooming cereus and the| ukelele! For Hawaii is one of the Sandwich Islands, named after him by their discoverer, But with what lustre are rep! lite-saver of big business, the’ yn- taxed, soda, fountain possibility, American “bite’—the saadwic’ had ever seen, brown hand hard in hers. with Hainpton, Major. Bud Lee, leading his horse away. turned for a word. horse for me to-day, gently, and his eyes rested steadily | upon ‘Trevors. the man who put him up to tt, I'm going to get him right.” O frank enough to voice the suspicion: “{t'g just a stall for time! last week's rumor cone for them, preparing them to expect something that would set aside the customary | But when they | had seen Charlie Miller's oruised heaa| and heard his story; wher they had sat-on their horses and looked dowa | at the animal which had been shot| | under Bud Lee, And, .besides, when they ceme in behind Carson from a| fam fruitless quest, their pay was reazy| i for them as formerly, in gola and silver. he | monthly pay-day “Bud, you're a brick! Mrs. Langworthy had just come Trevoi and “A man kille “If I ever get him, CHAPTER IX. was more ready to scoff at a robbery like this they long ‘Trevors, with little to say to one, took his departure tn the fore- noon, extracting from Hampton the omise to ride over and see lumber camp some day soon. @ by a lot) of first-of-the-month details, did not |« get away until that morning. Judith, held at the of close to 11 o’c! ‘Don't know, Judy, She gripped his lean, she eried. " he said very N the Blue Lake Ranch there) than one man idea of " go much were silent, after dark ‘Then she rode swift- ‘iy down the river, a purpose of her own In mind, Just below the Lower End settle- mént she came upon Doc Tripp. | was in one of the quarantine hox- the smudges oh the escutcheon of | Corrals, his sleeves rolled UP, Dus~ Jemmy Twitcher by that lunchbox | yied look of worry puckering his boy- luxury, the quick lunch necessity, the | {sh face, “What's up, Doc?” asked Judith, ‘8 what ' gets my mad up. Just pasteac™d in out the da OF one, any the lock ate TOTAL. BHOWN IN THowGH THe eZ citi pair ieyatntate ts win xow ~~ Cost Or i THE Bote iss A gokaKol 5 HUB ©: ‘ASHION BE MADE A Summer Hat for 25 Cents her, adding gently, “and boing a girl, which means filled with curiosity. A disdainful shoulder gave him his answer. ‘The. door was unlocked, after immemorial Western custom and Judith opened it. Lee heard her little of pure deligh a rf dete, the man who lives here @ announced, positively. “You can just tell by looking at his hom “I'd like to look inside his books! she confessed. “But I won't.” Aguin, leaving the cabin, sie went vefore him. Going gtraight one could clamber up a steep way to the ridge. But there, in a narrow defile where loose soll had filtered |for the novelty of down, were tracks left by a large | them, and the spice boot.’ Lee went down on bis hands and knees to study them in the dusk, |‘¥6Y, lend to thelr He got up with a little grunt and | Wardrobes, moved dowh the trail, Again he| We ‘have seen varieties of defined, So dark was it now that they had lighted several matebes, | #Port sweaters, poo- “Pwo men," he announced wonder- |kety and tunics, but ingly. “Fresh tracks, too, Madeline latest innovation this morning oF last night, I'll bet. Ono coming east from Indian Head. The other coming west, from the |falr I am offering to- here. Pkiteau behind us, Who's he?, Where'd | night. It ts half-way he come from?" “Give mo a rifle and something to eat and I'll defy an army out there. And think of iy ‘Lrevors's work, if Ne means busl- ness, think what two gunmen on these heights could do to us. They could pick off a three-thousand- ‘dole Jeorgette, lar stallion down in the pens; the could drop more than, one prize bull and,” shé added sharply, M4 sheye ah be M7 ora men think, thoy could % on scaring Judith Sanford out of ¢ countr: Leo stared pt her « long, time in si or my nt ave said,” ho neh te mit Bayne Trevors prc quite so strong a play as that. 4 Without warning, without a sound | of explosion. caing A wiry, whine Into the still air, a lifve venomous ping, and # bullet sped by Juat over their heads, But, through the gloom, they both saw the flash of the gup as dt spat fire and lead, and, as though one th pulse comman Judith rifle and Bud Lee to their | shoulders and two reverberating re- ports rang out in answer, | “Lie down, damn cried Bud) Leo to the gril at his side, as again there came the flash from the cliffs off to the right and as again he an- ewered it with bis riff “Lie down yourse snapped Judith. And once more her rifle spoke with him, For one instant, framed against the darkening sky along the cliff edge five hundred yards away to the right, they saw the silhouette of a man, leaping from one boulder to another, 4 man who looked gigantically big in the uncertain light. They fired; ho jumped again and passed out of sight "Got his nerve.” grunted Lee ho pumped lead ut the running figure, As an answer there came the third flash, the bullet striking the trail tn front of them. And then the fourth | flash, from @ point a hundred yards to the left of the other. That's No, Two," muttered Lee. ‘They've got us in the open, Judith beat !t back to the cabin.” m with you,” said Judith, be- tween shots, just foolishness” 6 WARE oe “sticking out here” . bang! “for them to pop us off.” Bang! Bang! They ran then, Bud slipping in front of her, his'tall body looming darkly between her and the cliffs whence the shots came. He al along the sharp slope to the plateau, putting out his arms toward her. And as she came down Bud Lee grunted and cursed under his breath, |For there had been another flash out of the thickening night, this one from the refuge toward which they were running, A third man was shooting from the shelter of the cabin walls. And Lee had felt a stinging pain a8 though hot iron had ncorched its way along the alde of bis | leg. | “Hurt much? asked Judith quickly. Without waiting for an an |swer, she pumped two shots at the| | flugh’ by the cabin, | sunted Lee, "Just scared, | And now whet? T want <9 know.” | CHAPTER XL UD LEE, in the thicker dark- | B pes lying elong t ge of the plateau, sat with bis bok agajnst the rocks while he| gave swift first aid to his wound. He/ brougbt into requisition the knotted handkerchief from about his throat, bound it tightly around the calf of his leg, and said lightly to Judith: ‘Just a fool scratch, you know But I've no hankering to dribble out a lot of blood from It.” Judith made no answer, Lee took! up his rifle and turned to the spot where she had been standing a mo-, IN ANY DESIRED SHAD) —_—-- She waw not there he grunted, Liowving into the blackness bhemming him in. “Now, ea cee across | sult the plateau, she showed him where | taste, tting me | Way dressy, ee If this} of crepe de chine, tered’! yarn cord and tas- New and Original neaell ‘For the Smart Woman By Mildred Lodewick Couyriaht, IDSUMMER weather al- » Ways brings out new and un- suspecting adapta- tions of the mode to its own fickle Women adopt thom oftentimes just is tho sleeveless af- and = half- being sportive satin, or even Iinen, oF transparent crepe, with a hand-worked Dlanket-atitch finish- {ng all its edges. It ‘s cut on the lines of a coat, opening up the front and held at at the neck with @ sols, while at the waistline a heavier cord with tasseled onds confines it slightly to the figure, Above and below the waistline bands of self-tucking are in- jserted as @ distinc- tive trimming, which aids in the dressiness ot the effect, This delightful coat-blouse made in any bright color could be worn ¢ over @ dress or a frock, in ing or afternoon. The blanket CREPE DE orn. -atitoh 7 The Prewe Publishing Co, (The New York Broome World.) ¢ ' A New Coat Blouse. ¢ CHINE OR LINEN 16 BLANK! STITCHED ON ITS EDGES. all white blouses and skirts, may be in & darker or lighter tone of| "22 & white blanket-stiteh would be the fabric. If linen were employed for this lip-on ft would no douvt be worn what do you suppose si Vainted, most likely.” Again no sought Judith, callmg (uy, There was no answer. Once ore came the spurt of flame from the shelter of the cabin wall, Then fifty yards off to Lee's right, some fifty yards nearer the tabin, another shot. damn the girl!" cried Lee angrily. il get her fool self killed!” fresh thought locked his hand steel about his gun-stock, Sup- pose that Judith, in the mad thing she was attempting, should actually succeed in it, that she should brini down the man she was attacking’ How would Bud Lee feel about it when the boys came to know? What would Bud Lee answer when they asked what he was doing about that time? “ivursin’ @ scratched leg? Mos’ likely! duh!’ He could hear old Carson's dry cackle, “Three of them to our two,” he estimated, “counting the two jasper on the cliff, Two of us to thelr one, counting what's down here. And that’s all that counts right this minute,” “Why the devit doesn’t he run for it?” wondered Lee, But evidently, be the reason what it might, the man had no intention of running. A bullet cut through Leo's sleeve, At last Lee answered. He ran in closey as he fired and, run- ning, emptied “his revolver, jammed tanto ns walstband, clubbed his rif * * and realized with thing of @ shock that there were but the two rifies on the cliffs to take into consideration, That other rifle, | Out of ammu- Or = playing at the cabin, was still nition? Or plugged? possum? Which? Stop shooting!” Judith, “im bim. Almost at the same Instant, he whouted to coming!" she cried back to their two rifles ready, they came to the cabin, Between them on t. » ground a man lay at the corner, moving belp- jesely, groping for bis fallen gun, falls ing bac SIMU Crowdy!* Almost before {aoe he saw the canvas bag tied to! his, belt, he himself had brought from the bank at Rocky Bend. (To Be Continued.) | the same color smart, Black, however, would also be effective, An unusual effect could be gained in & georgette crepe interpretation of this design, when for instance a purple color for |t could have bands of palx wreen or yellow georgette rt averted broidery. The Seance taseels coal hold both colors, oe pe Fashion Balter, Breaing Wor; {- What would advise for « “satin dress for wear to a fashionable sort? I would ie d to make myself a Practical frock that can be adaptable tor many occasions, You have helped me br- fore, and I shall de- pend on your sum gestion, Am §& feet 3 inches, bust #3, weight 106 pounds, MISS M. RB. A black velvet Sion jacket, black accordian-platt a bag Identical with the one} |satin ekirt, sheer white betiste oF net blouse, with plaited frill, | Assan | Peniow Raitor, Erening World: | Will you kindly help me as you have heiped | others, with a suitable | style for a grey and /’ blue Georgette dress like sample. As the material ts rather old! old), I would like @ style that would be Kl more youthful. Please | make It simple, bow- | ever, as 1am going w sew it myself, MRS, M. R. W, In this design the youthfulness of the Viouse Is counteracted by the dignity of the draped skirt, and f hops you. it, Plain blue rytties amd