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EDNESDAY, JULY 23, 19 9 : low to Read Character At Sight _ | SKULLS SHOW WHAT IS UNDER THEM. ss ay _ High Head— Ambition, Self-Control, Humor. _ Low Head—Little Ambition, Material Desires. R _ Long Head—Intellectuality, Constructiveness. is VOAZ _ Short Head—Imitativeness, Little Self-Control. _ Wide Head—Energy, Thoroughness, Courage. _ Narrow Head—Superficiality, Recklessness. ___. , Third of a series of articles, extracts from @ course of lessons pre- | Peres by Vr. Katherine M, N. Blackford, the famous character enatyst, _ hoe observations are the result of studying 18,000 men and women. By Marguerite Mooers Marshall (Copyright, W9LA, by The Prose Pubtidhing Co, (The New Yous Brening World). ’ RD you « high-brow ore low-brow? ‘The shape of your head has more to do than you imagine with your character, intelligence and efficiency, That skulls show what ‘Wnderneath them is a conclusion one cannot escape after reading tne interesting analysis of the different types of heads @iven by Dr. Katherine M. Blackford in her course of lessons on “Reading Character at Sight,” founded by, the Independent Corporation. You cannot take an X-ray view of the “gray mat- ter" of your friends and employees. But you can apply to the outside of their heads the simple deductions! given by Dr, Blackford for “sizing up” an individual by the shape and style of his cranium. In “Reading Character at Sight” Dr. Blackford first disounses the Anglo-Gaxon ekull, which shé says medium wide or narrow—that is, we delong to a “high- race. i ) i E é 4 I i fed g ut it gEEE ; i F always wanted to rule the world. “The flat head behind shows dis- : iH ; ! tE i i | ; g 3 . Bince almost every American is the result of the mingling of two or more } HY i ! | this country. And in picking a job Dr. Blackford suggests a ‘new method of “using your head”—she rays that according to the shape of it you should choose your work. These are her sug- gestions: The high-héaded man should avoid | i Hit z a? u i with ideals in it, The long-headed man should take to law, salesmanship, the hotel business, medicine or executive work—vocations in which: success depends largely on the ability, to make friends, marrow head, and you have the Anglo-Saxon shows in delay- work requiring great enersy and keen financial sense, The wide-low-headed man ts best ftted for the brute- stréngth jobs. ' ‘The narrow-headed man should neck @ vocation requiring tact and peace- ableness, rather than driving energy He ts successful in the professions and is to be found among the clerks, bookkeeper, barbers, cooks, skilled mechanics, draughtsmen and privat secretaries, The short-headed man should fine an occupation where he does not havi to meet and handle people, Among suitable flelds for him are agricul ture, engineering, forestry and manu- facturing, and transportation outside those posts where he is brought in in- timate contact with the public or other employees. “! points out, “is not quite so mot quite so efficient, as Wide-headed man. This is re- for the Anglo-Saxon ten- to superficiality, lack of thor- preparation and somewhat methods of doing things. Meficiency of light-heartedness, "3@ Geficiency it is, coupled with his " his natural belief in other “people and in bis own future, ‘¢ ard his resourcefulness, n the Anglo-Saxon to be some- 7) What’ gay, reckless, happy-go-lucky, ima inclined to trust to luck or to his | Wn ingenuity in emergencies rather faces, we have all types of heads in| | | ‘The wide-headed man should pick; / “blind-alley” jobs and choose work|) | Black Satin Evening Dress With Novel Decoration Gold Brocaded Evening Wrap . Of Sumptuous Design “Whan to take overy possible precau- ‘This is why in s0 many things the Anglo-Saxon trying to through.’ Ce the Latin races, such as the Portuguese, Italian and yh, Dr. Blackford finds three types of head: the high, jung, (head, the high, long, narrow ‘and tho low, wide, short head | "Phe tow head,” sho tells us, “is te to indicate lack of high ambi- 5% and aspiration, although there phe plenty of determination to more purely materialistic The chort head indicates less ual keenness and power, tendency to imitate rather th: leas self-control, more impul. and.cunping, leas love of frieads, people generally, pets less consideration for and By Herma Copyright, 1019, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World), The Greatest Cheerer, LL the pity, all the pathos, all the fre and all the desire, all the longing and all the hunger for the holy and pure, latent in the human breast is expressed in good mu- sie, From the crooning lullaby for the babe to the impassioned trumpet call for the charge, good music plays upon the heart- ling of people, strings, swells the emotions, wide head indicates great en-| reg the flames of the finer pas- Sherenannses, grant 40 sions, instils hope, faith and ¢ to as Nip nat n J. Stich of the guitar, the soul of the vio- | lin, the peals of the organ waft | us away entranced and enchant- | ed to the domain of the gods, there to be uplifted, and | Strengthened by celestial mel- ody, Sometimes dominant, some- | times soothing, sometimes plead- | ing, sometimes commanding, the soul of music sways and spires, arouses and rules, Good music with its golden tongue and exquisite appeal al- lays the mind and heart of the savage, turns and melts sensi- bilities of stone, quenches the centre the divine and spiritual, leading him ever onward and upward. The home without good music is like the sun without warmth. Good music in the home means happiness in the home, love in the home, kindness and happi- ness in the home, Good music is the rarest pleasure and joy, ech of angels," the uni- versal language of mankind, When things go wrong and life geems shorn of song, go and lis- ten to some good music. It's the greatest cheerer in the world. SAR ates IS 6 ' FIRST SHIP BUILT IN AMERICA. _A Foretaste of Fall’s Evening Wear peat Ine DRIAN BLOCK built t! ship at Manhattan I: 1618, Bhe was called the Reat- less. in her he sailed through Long WEDNESDAY, JULY 23, 1919 The Husband, the Wife And “the Other Woman”, When the Husband’s Attentions Are Centred on One “Other Woman” Then a Wife Is Right in Being Jealous—But Then Is When She Needs to Choose the Way to Bring Him Back, Not to Drive Him Further Away, and Here Are Some Suggestions in Answer to a Troubled Wif Letter. ' By Zoe Coprright, 1919, ty The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World), T what point may jealousy begin? “I am a young married woman with a baby, wife. Beckley ‘ " writes a worried “Some time ago my husband was sent far away on business (I am tto follow later), and since he has been in this distant city he is very lonesome. “He has chosen for his company his employee, a young girl, and ts" nstantly seen in public with her. and even breakfast, and for rides in “Naturally the townsfolk ‘talk and say ugly things. He seems to take it more or less for granted that I will not be jealous, as he says 1 should not doubt his love. He has always been a good husband to me, but 1m afraid now I am jealous. It hurts me dreadfully to think he seeks the society of other women. Do you think he is perfectly right?” He would be righter—at least safer—if he did seek the society of other women, and not just one woman. No reasonable wife or hus- band nowadays denies the right of some freedom to the other. How much freedom can safely be taken is as difficult to determine as how much alcohol is safe in a beverage. It de- pends on the individual who drinks it. Time was when people believed more in fairy tales and black magic than they do now. Lots of folks be-, lieved that the instant a couple were Pronounced man and wife, each of them automatically lost for the rest of life all interest in the opposite ex. Along with prison reform came the idea that steel cages were as bad for matrimonial “lifers” as for the con- vicb kind, The more solitary the confinement the more ways they tried to escape. It is an unusual wife nowadays who begrudges Husband his night at the club. Moreover, Wife finds it tremendously refreshing to spend that evening at the movies with her woman friend. Or evdn to have nics comfortable old Tom or Dick or Harry drop th and take her mind off the cost of beefsteak and the baby’s shoes for an hour or, so. It ts only, as in this Worried Wife's chse, when Husband marks one woman for his constant attentions that he is inviting calamity. It is then that any normally affec- tionate wife may feel justifiable jeal- ousy. This is not the selfish jeal- ousy of mere posseasion—the fear He takes her to dinner and supper his motor: car, that some other woman wii! be given the things that belong by right to the wife. It is the protective jeal- ousy any good woman feels for her love, her home, her children and the happiness of her husband, ‘Women are better artiste in love than men are. They are maternal, even in their love for their husbands. ‘That is one reason women know bet- ter than men do which love is best for them. That is why when a wife who knows her own value as a wife sees her mate drifting into the rapide of a frivolous attachment, she feels both pain and a healthy desire to rescue him, It is only the wife who doesn't care who makes no effort to seve her man and her home and the happiness of all. There are many ways of throwing out the lifeline, Homeopathy ia one method, “lke oures like,” Go thou and do likewise. This often acts quickly and efficiently. Another is the use of moral suasion, The good-fellow brand of angument: “Come, Jack, do you really care more for ber than you do for me? Shan't I come out and start a new little home in the new city? Or would you , rather have me drift out of your lide —and get a job as stenographer? I could, you know.” This is one of the most workable waye—teally it is. There are other methods, and many variations of them. But it is a good rule, whatever means you decide ‘upon, to refrain from nagging, from weeping, from creating scenes. The wife has the strong weapons on her eide—law, the affection gathered in years of intimate companionship, and the powerful magnet known as habit. If she is a mother, she has another great asset; fow men are without the tore one. Pride that belong to father- hood. ‘Nhe “let alone” policy may be ex- cellent in theory, but the “go after’ Policy when deftly followed works best in real life, . By Fay Stevenson. HERE was a time when folks T failed to mention the fact that they had their fingerprints taken—but now, how things have changed! To-day society men and women are passing around little |Pasteboard cards, about the size of a calling card, with their own dainty little fihgerprints upon them. “Charming!” Have you had yours taken yet? In 1917 a soctety was formed in New York on behalt of general finger-print- Hash in Season And Plenty of.Seasoning in the Hash By Neal R.: O'Hara Copyright, 1919, by The Prese Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World), Christmas for the guys that did their Christmas shop- Ping early in June, Think we'll hang our stock- ings, anyway. Senta Claus may not know the U. 8. has gone dry. If he’s hep, however, we'll get water in the hose. As we dope it, the President's salute is 21 guns because he's attained a majority. Less than fourteen points have "°c going to be @ Merry won a lea championship, Any big league manager’ll tell you that, We know the correct answer to “Where is my wandering doughboy to-night?” It's Times Square, Orator tips us about the poly- glot patter of the East Side, Distinctly un-American, he ad- vises, Orator should get an earful of the plutocratic patois they spill only when a traffic cop speaks it. Society writers assert Prince of Wales will take America by storm. As we recollect it, the British lost America by storm somewhere near Yorktown. Prince will view the Great American Republic from New- port. Some view. District Attorney appoints feminine Assistant Deputy to guard interests of girls In court. Figures heaven not sufficient to protect the working gal. Girl-and-music shows suffer from prohibition, and patrons suffer from prohibition jokes. Prunes are 26 cents a pound except when they're packed in crystallized fruit. New York's ticket ordinance will prevent pers from cor- nering seats every time the Phillies play at the Polo Grounds. Wilson's finding it dificult to lead the league in Washingtona— when there are only three vot- ing. Almost every girl has an ivory set. Of teeth. Or brains. Peace Conference is over and sauerkraut is back in the dic- tionary. Since the flu died down, open- face sneezing is in style again. Feller that saves his old tele- phone books is a collector of fine prints. Ate at @ swell hotel to-day, and the only item not listed in French was the French pastry. And the check. Check was in- accurate, Guys that tried to make near- gasoline are now busy on near- beer, So far they've got the same results, Amesican Anti-Saloon League trying to make England dry ought fo cement friendly rela- tions between the two countries. Takes nerve to open the drive in England, but the Antis have got it. * “Hope springs eterna] in the human breast” is the same a6 “There's one born every minute”. on Ayenue, Avenue folks Your Fingerprints on a Card Society’s Newest Innovation | ing. It was called the First Natfonal Scientific Registration Society, and was organized at the home of Mrs. John King Van Rensselaer “for the protection of life and property.” Mr. Bruce Falconer was elected President, and other officers were duly chosen, and then owing to the fury of the war not much more was heard of it, Now it is becoming active again. A few days ago I called at the home of Mrs, Van Rensselaer at No. 157 East 87th Street and asked to eee her finger-print card. We were sitting in her spacious living room, filled with antiques and heirlooms handed down from generation to generation, and I expected to see her open a chest of drawers or delve into a mahogany tabourette in search of the card, when lo and behold, #he daintily lifted the #kirt of her gown, felt in the pocket of her petticoat and brought forth the desired object, “I always keep it with me," she ex- plained, “so I shall never be lost or unidentified. A finger-print card ts the best possible identification one can have.” There they were, dainty little tell- tale fingerprints, tit-tat-toe—all in @ row. I immediately felt lost and alone without mine, “Our idea in having these cards,” said Mra, Van Rensselaer, “is a mere matter of identification, Any mem- ber of our society who carries his finger-print card is well protected. He can never be unidentified or taken for any one else,” Upon examining Mrs, Van Rens- selaer’s card carefully I was eur- prised to see there was no name or address upon it, simply No. 1 (Mra, Van Rensselaer being the first mem- ber and the gociety organized at her home) and the name of the society, “The fingerprints are all that are necessary,” said Mrs. Van Rensse- laer, “they identify me far better than my name, ‘There is a minute system of classifying them, so that they can be card-inuexed they oan ed and found So if you want to keep w modern iimes"and society folke "wea know “Who's Who," just have the fingerprints of your whole taken, including the pawprints of-dhe dog aid oat, eat ae) ae tm