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y Their Families Pay The Heaviest If They Could of Their Children They Would F athers Penalties Only Look Into the Hearts Wake Up. By Sophie Irene Loeb. Copyright, 1992, (New York Evening World) by Prom Publishing Oo, OR months past I haye been in touch with this girl—the girl who is suffering for the sins of her father, and my heart aches for her, the ‘burden bearer of the family, a young slip of a girl. He is in jail, this father, and of course she thelieves him innocent, but nevertheless she ig the sole breadwinner and has taken his place as the pro- vider and comforter of her mother and the other children in the famtly, And what a fight this young thing made to get her father out of prison, She has left no stohe un- turned, and I am hoping that som thing will happen soon that he will be liberated—if only for the great fight that this girl has put up in the whole miserable affair, She begs me, as she has begged others, to help her, since he has been ia prison for some time. “He has paid,"’ she cri “and we huve paid with him—every day—every moment. The thing is ever present with us. We cannot shake it off. The low sald he was guilty. I am not condemning it or even trying to con- cione his offense through that law, but surely, surely, we should not be com- yclled to go on and on suffering this way, without some justice to us."’ And now she has lost her job. All lecause she has to give so much time to the great effort she has made t ing to get a pardon or parole for her tother, And the spirit of her is unquench- uble. It will not down. She is seek- jog another job, and still another ave- hue to free her father. This girl has the stuff of which real heroines are mnad but she does not realize it and it matters not to her. She goes on rying her cross quite as a matter ot course, If any one has ot her father, tht 1 as the othe family. In lesser way, but just able, young people are ffered for the sins young cirl has, members of the as unbear- dd upon to ind the stigma and suffer the shi ci what some parent has done. | know a young woman whose futher is intoxicated nearly all the time. They are not well off, but 1» always has the means to buy on ery time she brings some ung friends home 1 sure to be this condition, and worst of alt, he fvsists on making himself conspicuous fore the young peopl ‘The agony of mind that this young n goes through in front of her ends is indescribable. ‘The foolish ectacle of her silly father has giv more sorrow and suffering than «on be estimated. ‘Then there ix the daughter of a 1 umbler—how she hates the very name nd «* gambling! She bitterly resents ivels keenly the fact that her you iviends will not come to see her he- cause they know of her father's pro fession. ‘True, she has everything that noney can buy—the material things. ut the knowledge as to how her ther makes this money is a con- tant crushing force, above which e does not seem to be able to rise; she presents a sad picture. I am acquainted with a boy whose tather has been apprehended by the police several times for the selling of ‘ivugs to drug addicts. ‘This boy is i splendid young chap, and it is only because of his innate strength that he has been able to resist following in the footsteps of his father, But he cannot lose the suffering attending thereto. He is going to school in an effort to become a professional man, hut always he is confronted with the deeds of his father that tend to hinder him in no small degree. Ihen there is the mother who is overfond of gayety and the nignt-life. She leaves her young children con- suintly in the care of strangers who have no interest in them, This woman does not realize that they are forming habits—habits of de- velit to gain childish desires. Only this mother can be held responsible if tney amv up with bad instincts, Another case comes to me of 4 man who makes his money arranging cer- lain shady contracts—contracts made with poor people In which they never et their money's worth. There are « and a girl in this family. They snow all about these unsavory deal: id are humillated because of them. It seems that in the course of their parties they have come in touch with oung people whose parents have lost They their him on pccount of such contracts. e of to have learned the injus fatber’s acta and have gone vovut It, but this parent only to Tover up his transactions with ex cuses, yet continues to cause his chil- cn many sad and sorrowful times. And so J could go on, setting forth the various ways in which the sins of the fathers are visited on the children every day, every hou the trouble with i all is that such oplé are selfish, They do not stop + think how their acts will react on ewehfdren, They are living oniy in mmediate present. They are glut ine for gain—gain that hurts rather Hea helps. “any such people if contr v wrong-doings would nted With y that they + acting in the interest then ren. If they could only wok into earts of their children and reclize miserable they are being sade .se of the misdeeds of their father 1, hevet py Would Weke up—xome of tev nt Teast—to a realization of what ‘ sins actually develop yes, even la the Ld and fourth generacon ‘Why Not Look; Your Best? By Doris Doscher Copyright. 1923, (New York Evening World) by Press Publiehlng Gee ACNE, F all of the things that detract O from the general good appear- ance of the face acne stands Acne is simply the name for skin eruptions other than black- heads or pimples. The eruption usu- ally contains some pus substance and is of many varied kinds. The persons whose misfortune it 1s to have even the slightest trace of such a skin disor- der are bound to feel very sensitive about their appearance, because, to put it mildly, one does not wish to look twice at a face marred by these disfiguring blemishes. ‘ paramount. The real cause is usually of a rather serious nature, indicating a diseased condition of some internal orgah, or dyspepsia, indigestion and disturbances of the liver, kidneys ond even the lungs. It is nature's way of forcing through the pores of the skin impurities that through some congested condition she has been unatle to eliminate through the natural method. But there are many cases of a serious ure which: come from nh a readily treatment, the slightest ne un nervous condition respond to and general At ign of form the general condition should ned and its cause de- termined, But if you are « sufferer trom such a condition you will find to your joy that even an apparently stubborn case is immediately cured when the diet ts changed from too rich and heavy meals and replaced hy a diet containing more fruits and vegetables, ally those of a lax- nature or only is this nece a ative sury, but the blood must be purified by spending more time in the open air, and the system must not be im- poverished by late hours or dissipa- tion of any kind, These general upbuilding tions mean as much for you as would the prescribing of drugs. When the general diet and mode of living have been attended to a little attention to sug the face will greatly improve the condition. One of the first things to remember is t the secretion from these eruptions is often infec- tious and that it is spread from one part of the face to another by un- sanitary methods of wash It is also well to be careful that no one else touches the handkerchief or towel that has been used on your face. The effect on different skins of course varies, On greasy skins many blackheads will be visible and later on little pointed cicatrices, but on dry skins the congestion is liable to leave the face scaly and with many prema- ture wrinkles. You will find that pay- ing attention to the general health will give you a more satisfactory and speedy recovery than will the applica- tion of any outside lotion, but I also ant you to beware of either soaps or salves that contain any strong alkalis that are liable to aggravate the condition, as this sometimes leaves a permanent sear, The following cream is very soothing for an irritated coi dition: 0 of va 40 grams Lanolin f 40 eras OL and aqun calcla..). 40. krama With a muy prefer After you have cured the irritation and the general health has been im proved through diet and systematic exercise, you will find that you will not so readily have a recurrence of this disturbance if you are faithful in the facial few drops of any perfume. sou m ge, directions for which have already been given. As meny of the cases of acne are due to slight cong proved cireu will remedy tion of the skin the im- tion from the massage this. ONEBO! EH Bre oor (New York by Press EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, JANUARY 24, 1922. | pI PEI SRI PETE DE NCTE BCC SEE SC HE CE ICE RTA By Maurice Ketten THE LOCK : SONETHING'S WRONC] WITH, & 33 (np STR TH HH IHEP # x x es te % gc Copyright 1933, ( be MISS VINCENT: 1 am a young girl, still in in my teens and am go- ing about steadily with a young man two years my senior. Now Miss Vincent, | love this young man dearly and | am sure my love 8 reciprocated, but when we are together we quarrel! almost con- stantly over the most trivial things. Do you think this is real love, for we can’t seem to give each other up? “PUZZLED PEGGY." Young people who really love each cther are very apt to get into a little narrow rut like this. Try to avuld the subjects that worry you, Get the young man talking about business af- fairs, sports and the things wiich take up his ti Above all, retain a sense of humor and this will make your bickerings easier to forget. ‘Dear Miss Vincent: | am a young man of eighteen and have been going out with a young woman one year my junior. | like her very much and she also has said she cared for me. Re cently we went to a party which I did not care to attend. We had a little tiff about it and | did not give her a Christmas present. 1 am very anxious to go out with her again, so do you think it would be all right to ask her since 1 did not remember her at Christmas time? LOVESICK." Hy all means try it again. Do not let the non-Christmas present stand between you, Besides, one doesn't have to wait until Chrismas to give OE HERS BE 909 20 BE OE RE ERI aE ne eae a a aE a r x x I the multitude of varieties of apples now cultivated in vari ous parts the world, bu especially in North America, the first wus the fruit.of what, in its wild state, is Known as the crab tree. All of the delicious apples now displayed the fruit stands are varieties of amail ond bitter species which ia the jent times w wild in parts of nd A The cultivation improvement of the apple un in Burop 1 for centuries ago, but it Americans to make the progress in this direction the first of these benefacte was Loam! Baldwin, who was born How We Happen to Have Apples Peete ee et Te o He was by profession 177 years t an engineer, but while prominent in that capacity he would long ave becn forgotten but for horticultural experiments whieh re sulted in the production of the famous apple which bears his name. The Raldwin ts still one of the most pon lar varieties of the favorite fruit. The United States now produces the major part of the world's apple crop, ana Cu ta adds largely to orth Amer- jean supremacy belt extends f Frane Apr in New “ealand, countrics, The European apple am Norway to Southern cultivated Vaswanla and other ire also ” ny 4 Courtship and Marriage By Betty Vincent York Trening World) by Press Publishing Co. presents any more than one has t wait until Saturday night to | bath. Dear Miss Vincent: A young man of twenty-five and myself are in love with each other. | am of different religion and my par- ents greatly object. On this account | am obliged to termi- nate our love affair. Do you think my parents are wrong in marring my future happiness, or would we be happy under these conditions? H.R.” Better have a talk with the of your different churches times these marriages haye 1 i very happy, but it seems to me you would be better off if you consilernd your step very carefully ined the advice of both chureh } und your parents. “Dear Miss Vincent: During the summer and fall | went around with a young man | learned to love. Then we had a quarrel, and, although he tried to make up and asked to take me out, | refused, About iwo months ago | met him at a social gathering and, while he spoke to me, he acted rather indifferent 1 would like your advice how gain his friendship. D. and B Of course the youn): nian w “rather indifferent’ wh is offer to make up. = to out wit you, I think justified in w inviting hin fuse invited perfectly little note Dear Miss Vincent Have been going with a youny wor for almost three years, but many times we have broken off and ‘re quently | am out of t cently after coming ba>k t from a six months’ b @ id she was going athe chap and wanted to be true t him, but that they Fte: uarrelled, Then a few days @ she wrote thrit it was al! off » him and she wanted me t back ae a good friend think she cares for me Many young couple this, The very fact thu a ut the other honesty and open-hea ‘s no reason tn the ‘ #beuld not renew your ¢ ' Do you A Which Man Will Peggy Choose for a Husband? ‘The story of w typical New York girl, Vesey Dayton OER HDS PTH I HSH The Heart of a Girl By Caroline Crawford entered business a ly Bracton, her years her senior, reas T" 3 moment Marion Minton told Jing this story ¢ Peggy that & stenogeapher own a The offs da; Eyery instalment anew eighteen, who I Her heart iy divited and opens new experiences, brings new layers. epivode i JACK REED IN A NEW LIGHT. wor “Tes fu going to y RR HOH 1 s ulways Fy hy Harrison Townley, 1 well-to-do bachelor, ten Hegin eesy's affales, conversation for oy watel didn't drop lized mn 1 too Reed is ‘Soe kept BEADS Ta aeseaAi E Hs i @ abort time, but she found be fe He BIW constantly watehinig ler t of jealousy At and wondering why Juci the time Peggy In & moment, At 4.50 she tossed one of Ne wasn't comin® Had Marion Min ton an en ment with him? Jack's orchids tO “ewe, pf omust run alan Marion and told nounced Gilly in vat her to “zo to it velee, “invalids musn't te A fe. Von." akan 4 “Oh bo wets besacedt an to wonder what attitude toning tac LHiet Uy, but Bilt Would take, Would le puy any at- on his feet and + in tention to Marion? Would cave if T suppose Resid |e > he shot as a pointic 1a ag orchids, and only Peggy hid enjoyed firs more like | ' Kk he y from the office as he said: “Well, old top, Vil ; being “88 to-mot neant a sprained ar 1 being eh propped up ina big chair, With halt yeced came ti s she bp Khoa dash of an es number of girlish rey a suns ! to decide whe tok bese ; larrison Townley or | i racton Would Did she appreciate t 1 planned to to-day and rust 1 le nost fatherly Ee knew | could € her senior, or d ind Methane are t yish, en laughed Peet althoush han aft Kit Bo mom were silent bik definite decisions, Casto yey 1 » ta om, dual way aut ist us she y tug, No wonder V Marion Minton bustic her Jack Vou stand why . deere ndmiiration What right had Ma une | Huon 4 Manes : i lee Were 1 Urif «1? Marion came how ty a; x ankle was ¢ LO atl a onversation was Ma a eon ah to Jac mile lu It's too Vad you de Taaiieriiea iw my, Peg,” Marion hac at ; flattered her a bit et ae of admirers 4h 1 dlanit : he announced ‘ reba would “eat tn ae UG That evening Billy ca I SRB? Benim well knew he would, 8 10 mile a funn 7 ih Spirits and did a GD NeuaraNielcanct Why didn't 1 slip 1 To-morrow—! Jack sprain my ankle too?’ bes eed. continues his proposal. iP RN TR RI IR 7 RT CHT CR HE ' The Filmaster General H i Movies Will * Now Undergo New Process of Haysing From 2-Cent Steel Engravings of George Wash- ington, Hays Leaps to Million-Dollar Pictures. By Neal R. O’Hara. Copsrient, 1038, (Now York Evening Worl by Pree Publishing Co. Be HAYS, our enterprising Secretary of Stamps and Post Cards, és on verge of fading out from Job. eral, though. from movie magnates and stay on Federal payroll just the same. DUAR BT III IDOI : f The Jarr ; : Family ; § By Roy L. McCardell x Copyeteht. (New York Brening World) vas Publishing 0. 66] T'S from the Cackelberry girls, that is, Irene is writing for the both of them, and T suppose Ml have to hear the infliction of an- other visitation from them!" And here Mrs. Jarr tossed aside the letter she had heen reading at the break- fast table “Why will yo ave to let those two willeals visit you?’ Mr. Jarr inquired, “1! elphia muy the City of Brotherly Love, but judging from thoxe two young lady demons it is also the City of Sisterly Hate." “Well, they only fight each other when they have no one else to fight," Mrs. Jarr explained, “and { have to invite them over hecause Jack Silver has been writing to them, He don't know which one of them he likes hest, nor do they: and that's one thing they | to quarrel about and you can't blame them.” “But Todon't see why yon have to have those shojppy sisters visit’ you from Philadelphia just because they re trying to murry Jack Siiver, the poor simp.” ck Silver isn't se young as he Tito be. He's ut the dangerous ge for an unmarried man, and somebody will marry him and it be ) know,” plained. “What good if he marries a choru one else T do not know? “What good will It do if he marries might as well Mrs, Jarr ex- will it do me ‘tor some one of the Cackelberry girls, they'll do nothing for you?" Mr, Jarr in- quired, "Oh, yes, they will—just to show off—just to show me they have more than I have, Do you think Clira Mudridge-Smith would have taken me to Atlantic City and done all the other things she has for me if it wasn't because I was an old friend whom she wanted to make envious?" ‘This was presenting the matter of feminine friendliness in a new light to Mr. Jarr, but he only said, ‘Well, Jack Silver seems to be the perpetual bridegroom-elect--only he never gets elected—the lucky stiif! Clara Mud- ridge was to marry him, but she mar 1 old man Smith, my boxs—and now “Hut Jock Hon't you see?) Mrs, dare int “tut gol money and Clara Mudridge-Simith's he: broken, She says she threw her life away on old man Smith; nd she doesn’t why Jack Silver couldn't have died of a broken heart on her secount, instead of not seem to care all that jilted Silver lost his money, upted n ty sees now she in: she him Yes, tor ‘ mober Chest Midrids Mrs. Smith and hyphen as she is now called Javk Silver ‘a hall room boy? when he went br y now she sys if he was broke shi n hi and Jilted hin he should hove » broke In the heart too? “That's it, and won't she be just furious if Jack Silver does propose to one of the Cackelberry girls and mar ries her?’ Mrs, dare replied. “Oh, that's it, is ite’ Mr. Jarre in- quived Our purpose as a broker of Cupid is a double-burretied one. You want to be on the spots, and you w to make former sweetheart ‘Oh, don’t talk so muck! snapped Mr fave con ty. Shall T your love? wend the © As Filmaster General, Bill has charge of the first, second, third.and fourth class movies, and there’ are certainly plenty of each. He gets twice as much salary as Prexy Har- ding and practically the same amount as Douglas Fairbanks’s head valet. In other words, Bill grabs $150,000 per annum, And that is enough to buy almost anything except an élec- tion in Michigan. Bill is also im sured for $2,000,000, in case the movie barons talk him to death. After one year in Post. Officesme- partment,, Hays runs Governmént contract through cancelling ma- chine, gives farewell name and’ ad- dress to fellow Cabinet members and hops off for movie land, Hughes wishes him better luck in Calffor- nia than he had. Glycerine tears \— stagger down countenance of Gabi- net boys. Laddie Boy wigwags grief with stub tail. Bill is off for his new posish. As mark of respect for departing Postmaster General, all U. S. mail stops for forty-eight hours. As celluloid ezar, Bill will uplift the shifties. No more rough stuff! Bill Hart will pawn his guns and ‘kill off bad men with pea shooter. Doug Fairkanks gives up jumping into second-story windows as bad exam- ple to our youth, Charley Chaplin srabs official order to quit kicking guys below the belt. The hard- boiled stuff is being Haysed, Uncouwth scenarios are on the skids, Scenes of fires, bootlegging and railroad wrecks under G, O. P. Administration are positively nix. Tdeal shots for movies weeklies will be annual flower show at Sedalia, Mo,, and parade of Boy Scouts at Lincoln, Neb. Everything on the up-and-up, That is the motto of re- juvenated movies, Bathing gals on Pacific Coast get two weeks’ notice to get clothes out of hock. Under new and antiseptic rules, Callfornia bathing guties should be sun-kissed in spots where tern mermaids are too modest to be sunburned. Looks like Filmaster General will throw 500 one-piece tailors out of work ‘end’ ake 10,000 two-ptece seamstre. busy, But when bathing beauts cx vort in two-piece woollen make-aps, it won't take U. S. marines to guar@ the males. Under rules imported from P, O. Nepartment, It will cost each moxie actor 19 cents to register love, hate not or anything else. When scenario calls for something to be wrecked, simply send same by parcel post. When identity of character in plot must be established, boys from money ordér window must give thelr oO. K So far as the salary goes, there will be some change in Will's new Job, but otherwise not so mueh. Movie magnates with million-dollar careers in back of ‘em don't oute G. 0, P. boys in the Senate, Starving supers in Hollywood are no more numerous than starving ex- Democratic Postinaaters, And super- pletures that film dukes get out are better than 2-cent pictures of George Washington that were basis of Will's old $12,000 job. numb wort Litt le Economies CeCe CCC EC eT. Sei Td RNS, By Emilie Hoffman ¥ Which rive is boiled yo much stars to te ar also is tk indation for souy N hould bey excellent for nel th 1 thi which dee vase ma the rubbers ) fasten them W use on t ms tee rice Mt buying at is not on Financial economy but Mix one two ounces ounces of n excellent ousewife who ind bakes a great & powder in large t into several tin these Mghtly One-half one pound eream of tartar ind cornstarch—= rh th keep the wider dy uid to it the o fia i) insures purity in quality irhonate ef soda. Vof tartar and three ou will have cov yemula iss ms times, rand sift again wovder is then ready dozen Woof tart sand lima 1 variety unt for halt just as good The thn ind seasoned, the cannea, to eoasider r beans cups of cammed the aan i they are t , { purees edd pens Bill will become Filmaster Gen- « Idea that he will be Judge Landis of movies is all wrong, If Gill was Judge Landis of the movies he would grab extra job i Pe {