The evening world. Newspaper, July 7, 1921, Page 19

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Is Your Face “Convex”? This Type Produces _ Quickest Thinkers Are Perceptive, Practical, Quick to Act And Have Foresight and Initiative— But Often Miss: Valuable Information by Jumping Too Quickly to Conclusions ’ This is the third in a series of articles written especially for read- era of The !vening World by William Judson Kibby, the noted char- acter analyst und industrial psychologist, whose services ure retained | bya number of big business corporations, Mr. Kibby is first teaching | Ais readers to analyze themsctves. He will later help you decide whether or not you fit your present job, and just where your best opportunilies for success lic. . : By William Judson Kibby. Copyright, 1921, by the Press Publishing Co. (The New York Hxening World ) AVE you a@ perceptive forehead, or a quick chin, or an initiative nose? H These are some of the facial characte istics which stand out in the convex type of quick-temperament persons. I will touch upon these | characteristics briefly in this article, but [ must warn readers not to attempt to apply the character analysis principles which I lay down to-day, nor in my previous articles where 1 described the clements of analysis indicated by the color of the hair, eyes and skin, until they ha become acquainted with more knowledge, for there are too many of us who try to plunge into the application too soon, ‘They are apt to become confused and disappointed because they are un to hit upon the truth or apply these principles in a practical manner, Let us study those we know well and see wherein these principles are correct, realizing at all times that many of the unsolved or perplexing problems may ve ared up in the succeeding lessons. In the ompanying illustration | show the face of the Quick Type. In general profile the face comes to a in shape; a point, somewhat convex keen, penetrating, quick-thinking in- tvidual. In the case of the forehead, this individual cannot thnk slowly! ‘The moment an idea hits this fellow his MBughts will run ahead and he will often jump to a conclusion—rea- son out what the ena will be. If an answer is needed, he is prone to think it out and be ready to give It, often befure the one doing the speaking has completed. This type often misses very: valuable information, lights and hades of thought connected with the wory. He tive, He looks ahead, Always planning for the fu ture.’ He never thinks of things which occurred in the past—but always of things in the future. This type pos- sesses the forehead which deals with practical things, He loves to see the result of his labor. He is not so ap to reflect and reason upon what he aces, ‘Nor to test immediately the practicability of hia first-hand obser- \ \i1) "imagine that we have two TatlOnse individuals standing before us—Mr. THE PERCEPTIVE FOREHEAD. 4 and Mr. B. Both with equals This person possesses’ the forehead short chins, Back of the very A where the perceptive faculties over chin of Mr. A. ts a very cautious the eyes are fully developed, He is prain and a lack of confidence in him- often shrewd and can take in the sit- self. He would be backward and uation almost at a glance, He can timid, Back of the chin of Mr. B. is remeniber perfectly things he sees. He a combative nature, fv inclines to the gathering of facts. He fidence: He would be vi s per person is apt to be impulsive and as inickly regret it. He is quick to g and quick to torget. Do not, however, judge too hastily sho of self-con Impulsive \s very observing. We have but to In my article next week I will recall the achievements of such men Write upon the slow or concave type, With some very practical suggestions, Depew, Lincoln, Washington, Lee, Which will be followed very Grant, Sherman, &e., to prove the the- 8¢ self-analysis 1 ‘choad TeAters to apply / ory of our principle in this forehead non themselves respect soon by charts for 3 Darwin, Spencer, Admiral Dew ir to their friends and THE INITIATIVE NOSE. @ The nose is characteristic of nearly all great leaders in the commercial Copstight. 1 Secretary of State Hughes THE QUICK CHIN, The quick chin Is the sign of action and denotes that its possessor is quick to act. It is no virtue in this type of individual to do things quickly. He cannot do otherwise. It 1s not nec sarily a weak chin, and it is an er (Tee New ¥ World VR since The - began publishing my new series of articles on weight reduction letters have pouring reade a from who ul help in j ask Sa weak chin. nd most efficien® thing Some of the finest « PCIe eel Cond ay, people we have seen have been the Fare possessors of retreating chins, With fount ay . fulp balance of caution, the indi- PIBRCERY Mir cSBs swering as many vidual possessing the retreating chin makeS a very efficient type in many * svendiés of usefulness, Tt is extremely iticult for a man of this type to put ff uftil to-morrow what he can do 1. mon day. In this respect he often my ald, witness the np& at conclusions in his desire to from “William J.:” do things quickly and awakens to the 1am trying to follow your in- fact that he has done wrong. This structions as to reducing, and now of these letters I possibly n ot all of my DORIS bOSCHED correspondents | men have asked following letter Courtship and Marriage By Betty Vincent © Copyright, 197, by the Prow Peblising Co, (Mh “ce EAR MISS VINCENT: Is it fair for a boy to take a girl from one of Now York Evening World.) been married for six years and my life was most unpleasant. My husband has recently left me and 1! want to forget all my sad ex his good pals? We all attend periences. How can | do this? the same church and recently “A. B.C." the young lady of whom I speak Simply forget the pust as you i would an unpleasant lent or and®who has been my girl for Would an unpleasant nccMent on overa year was ill, | called upon this young woman and she seomed glad to see rhe. But | learned that my pal had been to see her first and made quite an impres- sion, | have always liked my boy .pal until he beat me to it fon éalling upon my girl, Do you think he has treated me square- ly. FAITHFUL RICHARD. and beautiful things of life and you will find them Dear Miss Vincent: 1 young man of twenty-two and would like a little advice. | am engaged to a girl who is twenty- one and think a lot of her, but there is one thing about her which worries ine, She knows a man of forty-five who is an old friend of the family and allows him to give her presents. What can | do to am a a eand war, Richard Ru ied la } oye bite . i Z make her forget the old gent? che oung woman was mere OIM.” pleased becuse a church mem Since he is an accepted friend of alied upon her. Do not allow your- the family, Ido not think you need te t@ be jealous and perhaps you worry ab this. She bably re gards him as an uncle or older brother have no cause and he has probably een giving her ‘Dear Miss Vincent: | have presents ever since she was @ Liny (ol. to consider that a short chin implies ‘ igual e robd- 4 weak disposition, ‘There is no such ™ ‘or that reason, instead of § fa EATER ACRTIEE: ¢ THIS PLACE IS FULL OF MOSQUITOES thirty-six years of age, about 5 feet 4 inches in height. Eat very little for lunch and take a glass of buttermilk with my meals. Is it fattening? What should my weight be? What exercise would you suggest to reduce the abdo- men? WILLIAM J, For your age and height you should weigh about 136 pounds. 1 would that you do net lose your t too rapidly. During this a light diet will be beneficial and will heip you to reduce. Buttermilk has but ten calories per cunce, which means that it has no more fattening effect than skimmed milk, and therefore I think it Is a very good thing for you to take with your lunch. [ have advised many men to take a deep breathing ex- ercise and they have derived great season benefit from it, both for reducing the 4 abdomen and ‘improving the figure Along with this [ would suggest that every night and morning you take the log exercise described in the first les son and also the trunk bending and circling. Would you please tell me of some reducing method for the up- per arm, A. Mcl. ‘The arm circling and the arm re- duction exercise illustrated in’ my articles will be very beneficial to you. Am seventeen, well built, with the exception of stout limbs, and | would be very grateful to you if you can suggest a way to thin them a little. M. B. I would advise you to exercise night and morning, following the ctions given for the exer nkle, and the | a few nikhis ae shoes that exactly fit your foot: that support your ankle t part of the day and al- mm ecireling the cise published worn at 6 ways in sports or when hiking will keep your ankle from swelling up and being enlarged from strained cords Massaging with a strong, firm stroke t ond morning, you will find very 1am eighteen years old and weigh 168 pounds, my height is 5 feet 3 inches. Would you kindly tell me how much too hanvy | am and how to reduce? A. B. You certainly are too heavy for your height, you should weigh 125 pounds, and Ll advise you to follow out the Instructions in this column very care fully both as to exercise and ‘liel, as 1 am sure they will bring you @ How to Reduce Your Weight world and war gencrals in the past Napoleon Bonaparte,’Foeh, Haig, Per ring and Charles Schwab, Elbert , ’ #3 > Gary, John Plerpont Morgan, the Doris Doscher’s Answers to Readers’ Questions Wright brothers, President Harding, weigh about 154 pounds and am normal weight 6 o ex-Presidents Wilson and Taft and be Pol pore wat by the safest and @ 1 ama housewife and am 39 years of age and anxious to re- duce my weight. I have given up sweets and starchy foods, but | drink a great deal of coffee. | tried giving it up, but felt faint without it. | cannot take outdoor exercise as you suggested, be- cause, besides other household cares, | look after an invalid. Lc. B, Do not let the effect of your house- work interfere with your fisture im provement, tb ause housework, if done correctly, ts a splendid exercise to make you graceful and to reduce your overweight You felt the need of coffee because you have possibly deprived yourself of the kind of foods essential to your wellbeing. Follow ths column for a sane dict that will reduce you wit out impairing your health. Try deep nm cxercise as @ stimulant and yourself only one cup of coffee in_the morning. Fat green vegetables and fruits of a laxative nature. You will find your entire condition improved. 1 am a high school girl of sev- enteen years of age and weigh 117 pounds, and | am 5 feet dig inches in height. and lately my legs and ankles have become very stout in proportion to the rest of my figures, Is there any- thing | can do to reduce them? D. K. nights azo and mornini firmly with twist the leg the leg, will Fixercises given a few and massaging night by clasping the ankle your hand and slowly s the hand goes 1 h yee your nd ankle 4 careful to wear the his tied quite snugly at the an}: d in cise - ! have been greatly interested in your wonderful column on how to reduce. | am 15 years old and weigh 150 pounds. Could you tell me what exercises and diet are necessary to reduce during this summer season, JACK M. Your weight of 150 pounds at your and height is entirely too muel Tum glad to see that you are going to #tart to reduce. You will ave to rem her that it will require infinite sports and exer patience and great perseverance You cannot grow to be a strong, ath letic figure when sou are so out ¢ proportion by you we) ' can give you no better adv 1 to follow the instructions in tua column from day to day. At the end of the course you should have the twenty or twenty-five ound that you desire, 2 The Jarr Family By Roy L. McCardell ~——ee « conn 1081, by the Prem Publishing Co. (Tho Lit makes ore and your wife 66 ELL PA , { eyes to see you two fel- Yeure lucky lucky lers!" sald Mr. Slavinsky jn and heartily, as Mr. rand Mr. New York Bvening World.) is speaking to you, And then you come run my pla ret Slavinsky, "Loan ran my plac my Little lazy, who goes along with m enters his glass-put-in ore nn ig Phe eantlen? ou got #8d Kives me a hand, so smart that Woes ene Aen Sine VOL ROG and to inake out a bill! Yow no Nomes? There's a little ow what can figure “Look here, Slavinsky,” remarked ia breakage and everything Mr, Jarr cozvlensly, “it L have told “And if a customer kicks at the dl. ( the bill, T aay: ‘Miss you Once never to insult me cordially L te itanit the wimming have said it a dozen times.” ra 4, ite a Nttle y “M inquired the surpri Sla up Is, mio yeu ain't vinsky. yuld I do more to make Re a Ae apart them feel at home in my place than her had learned him wrong in hie to hurry up and insult people? What wns in sums” As for ul s belng thirty by g ie it 1 should do? Get a weskit made out of a doormat on which it hax twenty when it really is only eighteen “Velcome’ and lay down and may, DY twenty-elght, it was thirty by Hidase vipa your (eek on me twenty before it was cut, and the “1 don't know what is the matter, {fimmings is no yp me. With a anyhow.” sald Mr. Rangle glumly, Dutcher ike Bepler that is another trimmings maybe, but nothing but a thing msg “mit 1 do not think you Insult peopl in a real friendly way, just as fd darr says, so if you are out of debt the talk!" Mr |WHATTxo"? | tittle punches shop mot it then and play suggested Mr Know « for me, please,” said Mr with sige Yes, we've just been playing cards at home,” suid Mr. Range QUESTIONS. My sympathy you have,” sald Mr 1. What is the second largest city in glavinwhy, extending his hand, “Many England? nth 1 when my wife says te 2. What American orator and me, ‘Wh » piny two-handed statesman gained fame as an oppo- | {ty when before And nent of the Stamp Act and as a rev- * ROU es olutionary leader in Virginia? 3, What island lies south of the western end of Cuba? 4. In what South American country is the City of Bahia located? 5. What name is given to the rotat ing horizontal drum used for winding and hoisting? nose younwite wont 6. In what country did Alma-Ta- ine about you™ dema win his great fame asa painter? 1. nal 7, What State is popularly called eel the “Panhandle State?” m 8. What was the name of the pub lishers of Amsterdam and Leyden je ¢ who became famous for their beaut! » r ful editions of the classics? ww insky Tt ot: 9. What plant of the aster family m ghel t was thought efficacious in driving tot." 1 away fleas? 10, What hard bituminous coa distinctive for the clear, bright flame with which it burns? Is ‘4 ANSWERS. Wirmingham, 2, Pateick Henr “M ake Mr Slavinsky Isle uf Pines; 4. Braz windlia ra i. Vingland; 7, West Vie vires, 9% 10, cannel-coul 1 Mr. Slavir 1 know mm osaid Mr yout rround complain Slavinaky ur feabane = Men’s By Neal Yu by TW opera wile because she's got ‘em. All it’s second place. The gals trill about equal rights. We let ‘em vote and now they want to sit down in the subway. Every morning a guy gives his subway seat to some fair wren. Every night the rame thing again. Only one place a guy can sit without giving up his seat to a frail, That's in the bath tub. But that only happens once a No one rights bi Dames use ever hollers for mon's there aren't any. to go through a hus band’s pockets and frisk all hia sil ver change. When they go through his pockets now they don't even leave ause his cigarettes, Old fashioned wife never touched hubby's pants except when they needed patches, ‘Times have shuffled a lot since then. Love, honor and obey to-day doesn’t Include a patchwork clause. Only thing a wren patches in her lub's pants to. day are the letters she finds in ‘em all torn up ‘Tame wives are rare. You've heard of the tired business man. Well, it's his wife that makes him tgred. She can ring up the office eight times a day and never get the wrong num ber. They take your name when they marry you so they can start some new charge accounts, Spend all your dough on lingerie and furs and then kick that you don't dregs like Wallie Reid. Woman's idea of a good husband R. O’Hara Prone Publishing Co married men True, man’s place to-day is in the home, but the trouble is that Rights (The New York Pyoning World). - AY average man is a guy that gives up smoking fo get his some new lace curtains. Then he gives up smoking are average men. about a cottage by the sea, After the wedding bells ring off, it develops that cottage by the sea is for the summer s on only, Got to have a flat for the rest of the year, close to the delicatessen d When Paris or less, trict (olls ‘em to wear Little married frails all follow the dictates, Then knock their husbands for buying them so few clothes, Dame won't even give husband credit for that little, When Paris states yokes all have to be deep, wife brags she furnishes the neck. All hubby buys is the that goes round it low frock Powder sex doesn’t realize you ean drive a man, but you can't ride him. ‘That's why married men are fond of train riding, especially to West on one-way tickets. St that out of 50,000 that disappeared guys wives pointa istics - have two didn't behind ‘em. Charley Ross and Grover Bergdoll exceptions fo the rule. But Grover left because he didn’t want to fight, which, after all, is @ married man's excuse All women show only ave are alike when mar. ried. Give ‘em an inch and they want yard and a half. And then they give you back the inch to use as a sample, Buy your wife a soda and she wants a straw to go with it, Buy her a suit and she wants a straw hat to go with that. Frail sex is not only highly improbable. It’s mpos is a guy that hates to read itemized sible, And man’s rights? Try and bills. Before marriage she purrs get ‘em! rs FS What to Do Unt the Doctor Comes By Charlotte C. West, M. D. GR ) Copyriant, 1921 Hay Fever. AY FBV ma, ro and periodic cory known, some persona take cold peri- ly every June and do not r until, autumn, othera being 1 asth cold, Summer catareh a. Ax ia well oR is also cal cover stricken in the haying season and 80 on. curious thing in connection with uly visitations is their ‘ha ; for instance, it n observed that chronic suf- ever on undergoing either through the vd one or through seri- ferers from rose profound & death of a lo or reverses in’ fortune, en the time of the year in their deeper absorption, and so Jave escaped their usual attack may Be caused by the sta and certain plants, eed, golden rod and su ¢manations from mals, by sug fever expec nd westion, as in nervous coryza. It has also been found that extreme veidity of the gastric juice ise nose to tery solu ally esgic, dimeuity of the inner membrane of the sweil and to discharge iw tion, Certain foods, rive rise lo respiratory in asthmatic nature An attack may come on very sud denly, or there may be preliminary xyinploms of lassitude and nery linrest to warn the sufferer. If thes: heeded and immediate — steps are by the Prem Publtsing Co, (The New York Favaing World.) iaken, the attack sorbed, surest me is sometimes ab- climate ia th ting #0 gratify~ result, fever (and al- snditions) may prove so trou- blesome asx to completely disable the patient The catarghal symptoms, consisting of a continuoas watery” discharge m the nose and eyes, with inces- vant ite) of these members, often ke life a burden. In some extreme ses these yimptoma become un for hivy ing a Jied bearable and yurse must be hadto rarcotics and local anaesthetics, The continual discharge b pleting the ofound prostration erlyitue cause is frequently ml completely, as, for ins fice, when due to hyperacidity of the gastric juice. In such @ case treatment with alkalines would either abort or cut short an attack, Should certain foods be responsible, utting these out of the dict abso- ly miht prevent the condition. rons who are susceptible to pollen are now being given treatment with the particular pollen giving rise to th We arrive at the of- fending pollen by placing a drap of a watery solution up scratch on the In five to ten minutes there is a, red elevation and itching if we have hit upon the right pollen. ‘The sufferer ts then given hypodermic injections of this solution and a quick cure effected ‘The application of adrenalin solu- tien to th na 1 walls sometimes proves effective in acute attacks. Thousands of Actresses Use It! Actresses depend upon their beauty and charm for succ¢ FOAM becaus shampoo that 8. the HENN use They have found it the only imparts radiant tints of brightness to the dullest, most lifeless hair, while at the same soft and curly. time it thoroughly cleanses the scalp and makes the hair fluffy, HENNAFOAM is guaranteed not to change the color of the hair. It only height- ens to the fullest its natural beauty. Try HENNAFOAM tonight luxurious, foamy shampoos in a large Your money refund delighted with the magic Thess are five de bottle, At all drag and perfume counters. By Parcel Post 60c. La France 410 Lafayette at nce f you e not al effects of © shampoo, Laboratories St., New York. 1g gia? SUNSHINE FOR YOUR HAIR 4) ENNAFOR

Other pages from this issue: