The evening world. Newspaper, February 3, 1920, Page 17

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)}TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1 A NEW YORK DOCTOR TELLS US HOW TO— Make Women’s Eyes Behave ‘Women Who Would Be Beautiful Must Learn to Control the Muscles of Their Face—To Register Seductive- ness, the Direction of the*Eyes Should Be Changed Slowly, With a Dominant Downward Tendency—The Muscles of the Mouth Should Only Be Contracted When “On Duty.” ° Copyright, 1920, by The Prees Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World) AN you make your eyes behave? Or your mouth? Or your forehead? You can. You SHOULD, if you wish to be beautiful You can manipulate and control the muscles of your face as completely as rea eontrol those of your arms or legs, and the result is beauty or the re- verse. Here are the rules of face control for the conservation of youth and beauty as given by a well known Néw York physician, Dr. James B. Kelly, in bis new book, “The High Road to Health": EYES.—“The eyes, ‘the windows of the soul,’ are often the best ex- Wonents of its messages. The eyelids should be relaxed or opened mod- cerately, without exposure of the white above the colored portion, which “theuld only be partially visible. If seductiveness, not an uncommon de- @ign, be premeditated, the direction of the eyes should be changed slowly and gently with a dominant downward tendency, often observable in the “Mair sex.” MOUTH.—“The muscles of the mouth should only be contracted when ;fom duty,’ particularly that muscle which encircles the lips. The other Orescles that draw the portions of the lips in different directions, upward, )Cubward and downward, should be relaxed, as they are the primary agents wof those disparaging creases in this vicinity. r SERVE FOR . ( Sfkone EMOTION Onm"DUTY CAN YOU MAKE YOUR EYES, FOREHEAD AND MOUTH BEHAVE? FOREHEAD.—“The forehead % wrinkled horizontally and the brows elevated by the anterior portion of the muscle that moves the scalp for- ward and backward, most markedly, in some instances, similarly in the monkey; vertical wrinkles in the forehead and the contraction of the brows are accomplished by muscles running outward from points near the centre of the forehead to the middie and outer third of the pads of fibrous tissue and fat on which the eyebrows rest. “The action of these muscles should ‘be reserved for the expression of our strong emotions, as by their frequent or habitual contraction most disfiz- uring wrinkles are graved, and only by their quietude can ‘time write no wrinkles on thine azure brow’.” “There is almost no one,” deciared Dr. Kelly, when I interviewed him at is home, No. 66 W. 11th Street, ¢who gannot make plainness develop at- tractiveness and attractiveness de- velop Into beauty by following these simple rules and a few others. Two of the greatest goods in ‘life are health, and ‘beauty. The two are interdependent and one cannot ex- ‘st in its completeness without the other.” Dr. Kelly is an authority on both health and beauty, for during the thirty years he has practised medicine ang surgery in New York, serving on inf staffs of several of its largest hos~ witals, he ‘has performed the most critical and delionte operations in the surgery of beauty—the reshaping irregular noses, prognathons chins, beetling brows, chasm-like mouths— “f have made many of them most kissable,” he recalled with a smile and a twinkle in his blue Dublin eye. His book has much valuable infor- mation on what he has named the “six essentials of health,” persever- ance, air, water, exercise, dict, sleep. But it ia the chapter on “appearance” ‘which will most interest women. “People twist their faces too much. Dr Kelly oxpiained his careful direc- tions for muscular control. ‘Nhe muscles indicating emotion are those wh = make wrinkles when over- worked.” “But surely a face which docs not express emotion is lacking in a great element of beauty.” 1 argued. “One reason why most pro- fessional beauties fail to make tm- pression is because they are so devoid of animation and vivacity of be A of xpression. Can a woman follow your instructions for the control of facial twuscles without looking self- . conscious and artificial?” “at first she may be self-conscious, answered Dr. Kelly, “but after she has schooled her muscles for a time, it will be a matter of habit. And I do not say that all play of expression should be banished; only that it should be restricted to the expression strong emotions. For the wrinkles Which come quickly to a too animated couritenance certainly disfigure eeeOteaity, which is Incompatible with UNE Know? Copyright 1920, by ‘The Prem Publishing Co. Tue New York Evening World.) “1, What wa the first foreign state invaded by Germany at the beginning of the war? % Who commanded the English fleet t the Battle of the Nile? "3. How many fiddlers did King Cole have? 4. Who founded the great Chinese religion? rereieD what people were the anctent \aghways of England built? 6, Who invented the steam engine? 7. Who is the Surgeon General of the Government Health Department? 8. How many votes are England and her possessions entitled to in the League of Nations? 9. Of what American University 1s Herbert Hoover a graduate? 10,'What former President became "famous at the San Juan Hill? if. What king was defeated by Will- vam ‘the Conqueror at the Battle of ings? ay Who wrote “Hell for Sartin”? ANSWERS TO YESTERDAY'S QUESTIONS. 1, Tea; 2, 6; 3, Roebling; 4, oysters 5, quinine; 6, 60; 7, onions; 8, Passion Play; 9 Cairo; 10, Morgenthau; 11, «Deschanel; 12, Disraeli, Poor Little Income Coysrigt, 120, By the Frew Pibiiwnine Co, ‘Yue New York Evening World, HEY, HOUSEHOLD BILLS INCOME HAS ESCAPED us | either health or beauty, is, as I have said in my nature's chastine- ment of gluttony,” and the remedy is in @et and diet alone. Instead of consuming fat, burn what you have in your body and stick to tissue-mak- ing foods, “The complexion depends health for ity clearness and charming color. Wrinkles, as I have said, are due to too much use of the muscles of expression, thus effecting an absorption of the fat in the tissues of the true skin and degeneration of the fibres of the outer protective on its has the usual masculine and medical contempt for the vagar- fes of women's clothes, and refers scathingly in “The High Road to Health” to the cupola hat, the one- | legged trousers (of course ‘he means the narrow skirt) and vhe corset, which, he says, is only excelled as an instrument of torture by the cincture worn by a Scottish king, | who reduced an iron chain by one link annually to expiate the murder lof his father. HEAD HIM OFF EXPENSE ! THE LANDLORD WILL SEE THAT DAD DRAWS You Gor SOU) HE IS MAKING FOR THE SAFETY L By Roy L. Copyright, 18: & Mr. ¢ 66\7 OU never will wear your over- | shoes!” whimpered Mrs. Jarr, “The finst thing you know you'll be laid up with a cold and the cold may develop into the influenza and then pneumonia may follow and} then"— but here Mrs. Jarr visioned crape on the door and floral tributes and she choked and sobbed. “Oh, I don’t need rubbers,” replied Mr. Jarr carelessly. “And, anyway, I won't be out in the weather, the cars take me right to the office and I'm in fine’ healtu and I'm not afraid of the ‘au’” “It's terribly damp,” said Mrs, Jarr, “and I want you to bundle up warm and wear your overshoes, I suppose you have lost your-overshoes though,” she added. ‘Was there ever such a man! He loses every umbrella he takes out, he loses his overshoes, he'd lose bis head if it wasn't fastened | on him!” “Oh, never mind, never mind,” said | Mr. Jarr testily. “I left the overshoes | at the office.” | “You did nothing of the kind,” said Mrs. Jarr. , “I saw you take them off when you came home the other night. ‘They cost me two dollars, Every-| thing is wo dear these days, I re- member when rubbers only cost 50 cents a pair and now the cheapest | you can get are a dollar and a quarter!” “It doesh't matter,” said Mr. Jarr, who was in a hurry to escape, “I'm sure I left them at the office, and as I told you, the walking is fairly good. So what's the difference?" “It's @ great deal of difference,” said Mrs. Jarr, ‘ don't know why it is that 1 have to look after every- thing and everybody in this house! if my back is turned one minate the children are out of the house with- out their leggings or without their mittens, and the first thing I know The Jarr Family ). by The Press Publishing Co. (Tho New York Evening Worid.) Jarry Again Sees That the Eternal Fem- inine Is the Eternal Enigma. McCardell took them into the bathtub apd he playin’ boats with ‘em and they sunked to the bottom.” Mr. Jarr went to the bathroom and Copst nnn: “do you want to get pneumonia?” “Why, your coat is open at the neck | and u have low shoes and high - | skirts and thin silk stockings! You'll | # thing to do with it,” replied Mrs. pheumonia yourself!" replied Mr, HW other day I went into a shoe Jarr, “It just goes’ to show that|Jarr. are _ ; a every responsibility in this house !s| “I will not!’ replicd Mrs, Jarr, ier ane aaron tor # maleate left to me, If I do not look after} “I've this fur neckpiece: and’ I'm hat had waited on me before, everything and everybody"— warm, You never mind r He was busy and I could not secure “I thought you were going down-| Just them Mr. Jarr his services, #0 I town with me and go shopping?" | glimpse of her fect as she ef regia grumbled Mr. Jarr. ped a puddle. g'Well, by George, if| meh Deary wHere “I intended to,” said Mrs. Jarr, “but | you aren't out in low cut | he was fitting you've got_me so upset that I de- clare I don't know what I am doing, I or what I intend to do!" hese shoes!" Mrs, Jarr retorted cuatamer. “I hate to wear rubbers!" growled | “They look too awkward. I had ‘in ! could not help Mr. Jarr. “They draw my feet and| visible rubbers,’ but I must have lout overhear this cus- give me a headache. But, just to| them somewhere.” : satisty you, thom’ if you'll] “Well, then, consider I'm wearing foraer. She want tell me whe uN invisible rubbers, too,” grumbled Mr. ed certain shoes, a “They are where you put them Jarr, And as they parted he mur special kind of “I put them right here in the hall!”|mured: “And the women never do| $” d pvide “Mamma, Willie took papa’s rub-| catch cold at that—how do they do| gcurewera, Wid. and pvidently bers,” said the little Jarr girl. “He! it—how do t do everything?" thought they were in their “sale” shoes. any rubbers yourself b can’t wear my high rubbers over Maxims ofa Modern Maid Copyright, 1920, by The Preas Pub ing Co. By Marguerite Mooers Marshall (The New York Evening World.) DIVORCED man points out that one husband ought to A be enough to support a wife. He usually is—but not to support an alimoniac in the style to which she is ac customed, Entered for the Anti-Climax Championship: T. 1. Masson's slogan, “We stand for home, religi We must revise First Timoth wch's sake,” and make it read, "U sake al A woman never “sees anything in” In the philanderer’s manual! of arms tt is written pretty fool for her wit and wisdom; admire the nose woman.” A word to the “wise” girl: Look before you America and Leonard Wood.” ‘se a little wine for thy stom ttle water for Mr. Anderson's the man her sister marries. “Praise the of the clever year!” The best valentine any husband can give his wife is to look her in the eye and say, without prompting, Rachel was the first victim of a | ‘she thought #t was worth it? When @ man decides to be “neat” g does he always hang his coat on the they have terrible colds in their heads!” “But what has this to do with my wearing overshoes?” asked Mr. Jarr. “It has nothing to do with your wearing overshoes and it has every- on the closet floor instead of in the Marriage is like a “dry tinner—it to escape being an awful bore. {f at first you can't d Try, try again! oe ee ee meee shoe nto a ball and stuff them between the closet shelf and their hook » “I love you!" jong engagement—I wonder if and put away his clothes, why k of a chair, put his shoes £, crumple his pajamas has to be awfully nice if it is ivorce: shoes on another He assured her that there were no such shoes in the that was ad- vertised, but said he would be glad to show her the shoes from the regular stock—which he did. I waited for nearly half an hour for the man to get through with this cus- tomer, but as it looked as though she would hold him there for another halt | d 10 get some else “sale” hour, 1 to get my shoes ‘This woman was very petulant and impatient None of the shoes suited ier and she still referred to the “sale” shoes, also she took issue with the salesman when he was out a little onger than she expected him to be in trying to find something for her, Finally, during one of these little “waits,” she called the proprietor of the shop, whom she evidently knew, and burst Into a tirade of abuse as to why she couldn't get suited, seeming to put the blame on the young sales- one Consideration and Kindness Is the Keynote of the Happiness You Can Give to Others | man. |. When he returned again with an |armful of footwear and saw the pro. | prietor there I imagine he didn't f very good about ft, although he ga no sign and proceeded to try | another pa | In the mean time I had bought two | pairs of shoes and on my way out 1 feared that the young salesman might suffer by the incident, and knowing the proprietor, 1 stopped a moment to on 4 The Impatient Shopper — By Sophie Irene Loeb 1920, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World.) to him that I had seen the whole proceeding and that I knew the young salesman Was @ conscientious worker and that I had particularly asked for nim when T came ‘nto the atore. The proprietor miled knowingly ano said he understood the case per- feculy. The woman was just @ plain impatient, cranky person, He went on to tell me that it was most sur- prising that she should be like this, since she herself had been in the business and had beap through all the hardships of pleasfng customers, though she was now married to a man well-to-do. It often happens like would think that she of would in accordance with her early work realize the discomfort and the trouble she was giving the salesman, and be 4 little more considerate. But here she was showing her tem- perament, or rather her temper, and evidently trying to put on airs. The proprietor also told me that the salesman Knew all about it and Was just being courteous; that he had “her number," All of which is to say that T hope every saleeman or saleswoman really has “the number” of such people, and does not take offense or take tham too seriously It is too bad that al! proprietors don't know such buyers, as in this case. Very often the salespeople are blamed for holding a customer too long or for not making a sale, when in reality the fault-finding and procras- tinating customer has been In the this. One all people ‘ Several times in these columns 1 have urged consideration for the salesmen and sileswomen. No one has a right to infringe on their time which to them is just as precious as one's own, Evgry moment counts, and while they are there to please there is a limit to their sense of tolerance. It is such seeming disregard of what real service means on the part of the customer that causes the spirit of rebellion and dissatisfaction to arise, Consideration is the keynote upon | which the happiness of many people TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1920 ’ THE INTRICACIDS OF, AND PITFALLS TO BE FOUND INe Wall Street Wall Street Is the Most Expensive Farce That Has Ever Been Played Off Broadway—You See More Bears Than They’ve Got in the Ziegfeld Chorus and More - Bulls Than They’ve Got on the Trail of the Sill Thieves. A Good Buy in Wall Street Means Good- bye to Your Money. By Neal R, O’ Hara Copyright, 1820, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York Ereming World) 6 ag’ Stock Exchange is a fine place to spend a pleasant afternoon, but you should quit your spending right there, Ir you want to get stung, just poke @ hornet’s nest. Or if you want to get cleaned, take a Turkish bath. But keep out of Wall Street. They do things too \horough there. The stock market advances and retreats and also fre quently does an aboutface. But it never leaves you as you were. . UST to show what chance a piker in Wall Street has, a Stock J Exchange seat sells for $110,000, That's the regular box office price, without buying a seat from a Wall Street speculator. And it's no front Seat at that, Yup, Wall Street is the most expensive farce that has ever been played off Broadway, You see more bears than they've got in a Ziegfeld chorus and more bulls than they've got on the trail of the silk thieves. Also more lambs than they've got at the Lambs’ Club. LAMB is a pathetic creature. It’s a human animal with a lamb face and a dumb brain. A lamb is just crammed with wool. And a broker simply pulls the wool over the lamb’s eyes and tells him he's wiped out. Next minute he’s swept out—which means the broker is cleaning up. Wye a lamb comes into Wall Street he's all wool and a yard wide, Also a yard thick. And when he leaves by the rear exit he’s all skinned and $10,000 Short. Mary had a little lamb in the old days. But the big HE WALKED RIGHT IN, TURNED AROUND, AND WALKED RIGHT OUT AGAIN, idea to-day is for a broker to have a flock of ‘em. A spring lamb, like a spring bed, is pretty soft. Armour was the first guy to realize the value of lambs. Which is why Armour is rich to-day. IL stock is a great thing for filling up the almshouses. An oily guy comes along and tips yourto buy Skinnum Oil—it's going up. You buy, and his tip is good. Skinnum Oi! goes up right away. It goes up completely. Same with Bunkum Oil and all the other brands—they all go up sooner or later. There are only two oils that are safe to gamble on— Standard and castor. ROUBLE with oil schemes is that most of the oll is on the broker’a— tongue. Half the Wall Street robbers that are now drilling oil wells * should be drilling safes. And they bad as much chance of striking oil at their trade as they have of striking it now. Even the oil stock that IS worth something is usually pretty well watered. Which makes a fine combination for illuminating purposes—oil and water. ROFIT in Wall Street comes from stock, which is why brokers go to Palm Beach and other watering places. The stock goes up and down, same as a pump handle, and produces the same result—which is water. You simply can’t beat the market. Wall Street is short, but it takes a long time to go through it. Nobody cleans up in the Street every day except the white wings department. Trusted messengers have taken more out of Wall Street this season than anybody else. GOOD buy in Wall Street usually means goodby to your money. There is no sure way of getting dough. A broker may win on points, the same as 4 prizefighter does. But the broker's got to be inside the ring, just as the prizefighter is. But even the Wall Street operators sometimes get their own wires crossed. Which shows they're no different from some of |our best switchboard operators, ROADWAY may be the place to spend money, but Wall Street is where you throw it away. The only difference between Wall Street and Broadway speculators is that the Broadway specs give you a better show. A guy that’s sweet on playing the market should know that when the market breaks ft has a chance to recover. Which is one more chance than a sucker ever gets. And the favorite Wall Street quotation is, “Sorry, pal, but you've been wiped out.” ES, indeed, friends—lamb always has green peas on the side. Just re vG member that. And anything green is a broker's favorite dish, whether it’s customers or just plain cash. MINUTES OF OPTIMISM By Herman J. Stich 20, by The Pree Publishing Go. (The New York Evening World.) Faiture simply means you haven't tried hard enough. Many a general has been defeated in battle but successful in war, What if you stumble, if you stum- ble FORWARD. THE GREAT ENGINEER endowed ry man and woman with an in- xhaustible sandbox—filled with the stuff that promotes progress, levels upgrades, and takes us chugging on full steam to the top of the hill. KEEP YOUR SANDBOX BUSY. Keep Your Sandbox Busy. “cc ENTLEMEN,” said Mendels- (@4 sohn to his critics every time he was about to play, “STICK YOUR CLAWS INTO M Mendelssohn knew that a man’s crit- ics are his best friends; they may not tell him what he LIKES to hear but they tell him what he OUGHT to hear; and if their judgment is often unpleasant, it ia always safe and| should stinrulate. In the long run it is better that a man be kicked than coddled becuase when he is kicked he is compelled to kick back and so learns to give and ADVERTISEMENT. How N. Y. City Children Care for Their Teeth take | The principals of New York's A certain religious denomination | public schools allow the children to keeps in the library of its adminis-| receive only such dental preparations tration buildmg and requires stu-| 48 contain no grit to scratch the dents to carefully study everything | tender enamel, no drugs to inflame that is or has been written or said|the delicate gums, Mothers should be equally careful at home. againet its tenets, This is on ne ee irene ee aoe ot Public theory that when a man knows his) School 78, and Mr. Romeo J. Perretti weak spots he knows how t strong. ‘The demon “seuback” : like momentum—it keeps men going. “Bad breaks" sometimes put a man on his back, but it is only that he srw | of No. 85, both of New York, are | glad to have their pupils use Albodon b} Dental Cream. They have investi- gated and know it is both effective and safe. Albodon is calcium car bonate, saponified and mixed with «may look up. | 3 “Returned with thanks" is the pis-|the well-known antiseptic oils of tol that starts every writer on his|cloves, cinnamon and eucalyptns, | hurdle race to the tape making a composition one-third Hindrances and snags are priceless cleansing, one-third polishing, one Spurs—they force man to take ; third antiseptic. Authorities agree one pine, pet discourage. |''*"4°4 | this is best for women and children, Kvery man who CAN and DOPS| A tube of this cream containing a sufficient for 85 brushings can be be has been ground to usefulness depends. You can't preach about it,| you must practise it, , To give the daily, Kindly courtesy 4s you come in contact with the worker it one of the things that 1 sure to alleviate the prevailing state of unrest, and each must do his part in order that all may benefit, tween the millstones of opposition boughs amar nteed at any drug storm, Ady and determination, t Ln ae ne ee oe ee ee + ee ee

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